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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67610 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67610)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Three Loving Ladies, by Mrs. Dowdall
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Three Loving Ladies
-
-Author: Mrs. Dowdall
-
-Release Date: March 12, 2022 [eBook #67610]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE LOVING LADIES ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THREE LOVING LADIES
-
-
- By
- THE HON. MRS. DOWDALL
-
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
- HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY
-
- 1921
-
- _Printed in Great Britain_
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- KATIE BURRILL
-
-
-
-
- THREE LOVING LADIES
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
-
-Messrs. Burridge and Co’s pantechnicons bumped majestically along the
-streets of Millport early in the morning. Mud seemed to be unaccountably
-falling from the sky through a close filter of smoke draped high above
-the town; for although there was no fog, the great stucco offices on
-either side of the street were slimy with coffee-coloured moisture, and
-the people who hurried along looked cold and slippery, like
-panic-stricken snails compelled to leave their shelters. The same
-mysterious mud oozed also from below the paving stones, and would
-continue to ooze long after the sun had penetrated the smoke filter and
-made the houses and the pedestrians comparatively dry.
-
-Millport is one of the largest cities of the empire, and one of the
-richest. I have never heard of anyone living there for choice, or for
-any reason but an alleged opportunity for making money. Those who settle
-there are in the habit of transplanting themselves at regular intervals;
-removing to a house further away from the premises to which the
-breadwinner carries a neat bag or attaché case every weekday morning,
-between eight and ten. The removals mark a rise in the social scale, and
-are celebrated by new responsibilities, in the addition of servants,
-greenhouses, garages and acres of ground requiring “upkeep.” The heights
-of Elysium are, in the end, reached by train. Between the main railway
-station and the outskirts of wealth, lie nearly two miles of shops, and
-a professional quarter where the inner darkness of blocks and terraces
-shades into the dim glory of semi-detached houses. The next stage of
-grandeur is seen in the increase of laurel bushes and gravel paths round
-each semi-detached pair. When the flower beds in front, and the tennis
-lawns at the back, reach a certain standard of importance they flow into
-each other by connecting paths between the buildings, and each house
-then stands alone, detached, in the full radiance of encircling
-“grounds.”
-
-It was nearly ten o’clock before Messrs. Burridge’s stately
-pantechnicons reached their destination, a large, square,
-cinnamon-coloured house, standing in about two acres of ground on the
-borders of Millport’s largest and most satisfactory park. General
-Fulton, who had taken a five years’ lease of it, wondered many times
-what had induced him to leave his comfortable little house in
-Westminster. He had meant to retire from the army at the end of the war,
-and had been turning over in his mind many agreeable plans for the
-future, when he was offered the command of a military district of which
-Millport was the centre. In a rash moment he confided the offer to his
-wife, hoping for some entertainment from her habit of commenting
-seriously on matters which he regarded as trifling. To his surprise and
-disgust, she surpassed his expectation, and pointed out unanswerable
-reasons why the command must be accepted. She confronted him with facts
-about his income, which had hitherto been sufficient. But he neither
-read the papers nor practised arithmetic, and, as she observed at the
-end of the argument, “seemed to suppose that girls’ clothes grew on
-their backs.” His reply to this last shot produced a silence which he
-knew to be ominous of a settled programme; he knew that he had thrown
-away his last chance by “saying something coarse,” and that any further
-excuses would be flung unregarded into the flame of her spiritual nature
-(a possession which is supposed by women who boast of it, to guarantee
-also a sound business judgment). He appealed in vain to his daughters
-Evangeline and Teresa. Evangeline said carelessly, “Oh, do let’s,
-father,” and left the room to post a letter. She informed the maid whom
-she passed on the stairs that, “we are all going to Millport, and isn’t
-it fun?” Teresa ran her fingers through her untidy hair, done up for the
-first time, and said, “If it is by the sea couldn’t we have a cottage?”
-
-General Fulton, avoiding his wife’s eye, mixed himself a whisky and
-soda. It was the only way to drown his bitter regret at having ever
-mentioned the appointment. “You’ll never get another house as nice as
-this,” he suggested feebly. “I’ve been to Millport once, and it’s a
-filthy place. There was a great black church opposite the hotel, and
-drunken old women poking stale fish about.” Teresa shivered, but said
-nothing.
-
-“I don’t suppose those poor old women ever thought of drinking until
-they were taught by their husbands,” said Mrs. Fulton, glancing at the
-tumbler he held, but she added hurriedly, before he had time to protest,
-“and I believe it is perfectly necessary to poke fish before you can
-tell whether it is fresh or not. You would see that kind of thing in any
-town you went to, Cyril. And, anyhow, one doesn’t live down there.
-Father and mother lived in Millport for years, and I know father said
-everyone lived right out.”
-
-“Well, I don’t think I want the thing,” he said bravely. “I am not going
-to take it.” He gathered up his morning’s correspondence. “I’m out to
-lunch, Sue.”
-
-“Do you mind paying some money into the bank for me as you go past?” she
-said gently. “The last quarter hasn’t been nearly enough. I suppose it
-is the income tax and the price of everything.”
-
-General Fulton looked at her in exasperated admiration as she sat there,
-quietly warming her toes in front of the fire, meditative and candid;
-the typical gentle wife who patiently adds up the problems of life for
-her husband, and leaves his wisdom to unravel the answer.
-
-“Why didn’t you say at the beginning that we were in debt?” he asked.
-
-“I don’t know that we are, dear,” she said, looking at him in perfect
-innocence. “I only said that I couldn’t manage on what you gave me. I
-don’t know what your shares come to; it is all Greek to me.”
-
-“Well, have it your own way, damn it,” returned her husband. “Perhaps
-you’ve inherited business instincts, and they always go with turpitude.”
-
-“I wish you would think a little of the children sometimes,” she said,
-glancing at Teresa who sat lost in thought by the window, hearing what
-they said, and trying in vain to understand what the argument really
-meant.
-
-“Do you want to go to Millport, Dicky?” her father asked kindly.
-
-“I don’t know,” she said. “It is on the sea, isn’t it?”
-
-“It’s on shrimps,” he replied, “and docks—things that open and shut at
-you—and it is as black as night, and people walk about with bread under
-their arms. Well, good-bye, dear; your mother says we’re going, and she
-knows—she cares—God bless her.” He kissed Teresa affectionately, and
-left the room.
-
-And so, the course of time showed Messrs. Burridge’s pantechnicons
-casting the contents of Cyril’s happy little home into the ornate
-cinnamon jaws of a house that he said made him think somehow of the late
-Prince Albert. “The sort of thing he’d have built for the head
-gamekeeper, Sue,” he remarked after lunch on their first day there. “And
-the park is the very thing for ‘interments’; you could see them winding
-all the way from end to end. I hope it will come up to your expectations
-in the matter of wealthy consorts for the girls; or is that not part of
-the scheme?”
-
-“I don’t like joking about marriage, Cyril, you know that,” she replied,
-“it may mean so much to a girl.” She sighed. She had been very beautiful
-twenty years before, and would have been so still, but for the fact that
-years of quiet enjoyment of her own skill in getting what she wanted,
-and a conscious superiority over people who “worried about what couldn’t
-be helped” had obliterated the delicate lines of her face, and given to
-the fleeting dimple, which used to be the despair and delight of her
-lovers, the coarser appearance of a crease in a satin cushion.
-
-“It may mean something to her partner, too, if you come to that,”
-returned Cyril. “It will to Evangeline’s, I should think. I wouldn’t be
-in his shoes for something. She’s like you, Sue, in some ways; with all
-the naughty little point of the story left out. I never knew such a
-rough rider in the field of conversation. She’d never have been able to
-stuff me with the stories you did about the injury to your pure young
-mind when I kissed you. Lord! think of it!”
-
-Mrs. Fulton kept a dignified silence for a minute or two, and then
-sighed again, as if to waft away the possibility of looking at Nature’s
-beauties with a man who had been blind from birth. “How did you like the
-people you met to-day?” she asked.
-
-“Oh, some of them weren’t bad. Hatton will be here to breakfast. He’ll
-always be about the place, so I hope you’ll like him; he’s my A.D.C. And
-all their wives will be round soon, I suppose, to pay their respects.
-Hatton hasn’t got one I’m glad to say; though I daresay he’ll be as
-preoccupied with the subject as if he had. I wish I had gone into the
-Navy instead of the Army.”
-
-“Why?” she asked, though she knew that the drift of what he was going to
-say would be somehow unflattering to herself.
-
-“Because one’s subordinates have always got a neat woman in lodgings
-somewhere, and they just clear off in their spare time and keep
-themselves employed until one meets them again. Their wives don’t litter
-about the place and fight with each other.”
-
-“I don’t know how any woman can care to be a mere tool like that,” she
-replied. “It must make them so one-sided.”
-
-“Yes,” he said, “but think of the feelings of the happy man who can say,
-‘This little side is all for me,’ and knows that she has no other to
-give to one who might like to have it. Why, it would make life a
-different thing. Where are the girls, by the way?”
-
-“I think they are arranging their rooms and showing the servants where
-to put things. They seem to be the most curious creatures that we have
-got; but it was so difficult to find well trained ones. They call me
-‘Mrs. Fulton,’ and tell me what they have been accustomed to. I think I
-shall engage a housekeeper, Cyril. I do hate explaining, and these
-creatures want to argue about everything.”
-
-“Can’t the girls do it?” he asked.
-
-“Oh no; they have other things to do. Besides, Evangeline turns
-everything upside down. I had the greatest difficulty in getting the
-dining-room table put where I wanted it. Of course I want the dears to
-have everything as they like, but I do wish sometimes they would be a
-little more help.”
-
-“Oh, well, we managed all right in the old place.”
-
-“Yes, but then these servants won’t do nearly so much,” she complained,
-“and they have more to do as it is. I must say I think it is only right
-that we should consider them more than we used to do. It must be so
-dreadful to work all day. I am sure that new girl Strickland would be
-more satisfied and likely to stop if you kept your room tidier, Cyril.”
-
-Evangeline poked her head round the door. “Father,” she asked, “can I
-leave your books and have a lesson on the car from that magnificent
-Fitz-Augustus person of yours? He says he is going some messages for
-you, and he wouldn’t mind——”
-
-“Anything you like,” said her father, “so long as I don’t know anything
-about it; you can’t drive without a licence. Also, if you’ll make Dicky
-go for a walk with me. I must go into the town, and I must have some
-exercise, and I won’t walk alone.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I don’t think we’ll do that business after all,” he said as he left the
-house with Teresa half an hour later. “It only means a small additional
-coolness to the heels of an unknown gentleman in an office. They’ll warm
-up again to-morrow, like a lodging house chop. You’ve never lived in
-lodgings have you?”
-
-“No, never.”
-
-“Well, never do. When I lived in lodgings and used to be a bit off
-colour in the morning I used to see ornaments about everywhere. I
-remember I once saw a china dog, with a basket of forget-me-nots in its
-mouth, on the Colonel’s table in the middle of his papers, and I’m
-hanged if I know to this day whether it was a real one or not. I could
-never make up my mind about it, though it gave me such a turn that I
-went round to the chemist and got something.”
-
-“What else,” asked Teresa. “That’s lovely.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t remember anything special; but they never clean the mustard
-pot in those places—that was another thing. They’ve no sense. And I
-never could find the matches. They’d be at the bottom of a vase with
-dried grass in it, or that kind of thing. I think this ought to take us
-down to the docks. Would you like to see them?”
-
-“Yes, awfully,” she agreed, and they walked some way in silence. “They
-are nicer houses down here if they weren’t so dirty, aren’t they?” she
-said presently, looking up at the windows as they passed along a street
-to which some bygone architect had bequeathed an indestructible dignity.
-Their restful proportions and large windows gave her a sudden sense of
-relief after the turrets and variegated excrescences, coloured bricks
-disposed in geometrical patterns, and twisted ironwork that adhered to
-the semi-detached quarter they had passed through.
-
-“Yes,” said her father. “I expect all the old turpitudes—pious founders
-and all that—lived down here. Our place was probably a marsh or a coal
-mine or something, till the influence of the Late Lamented overtook it.
-A man I met yesterday was talking about slaves. They were up to all
-sorts of games down at their warehouses. The negro still flourishes
-apparently,” he added, as a group of black men passed them and turned
-down a narrow street, where tousled women stood at their doors, and
-children screamed in the gutter. They crossed over a thoroughfare at
-which main streets intersected one another, and accommodation for
-sailors was advertised by mission rooms, clubs, public-houses, slop
-shops, and reiterated offers of beds. Blocks of shops, shipping bureaus
-and warehouses split up further on into single gigantic buildings, the
-offices of the state and of great trading companies, full as beehives,
-and glittering with prosperity; all the organism of a seaport in touch
-with continents. The sea air was fresh in their faces.
-
-“That’s good,” said Cyril. “We’ll go and hang about.”
-
-They went precariously down a sloping bridge, slippery with mud from the
-feet of a stream of hurrying workers intent on their home affairs which
-lay on the other side of the river, and stood by a line of iron chains
-that stretched indefinitely along the gently heaving planks of the stage
-to which the ferry boats were moored. A red sun hung above the chimneys
-on the opposite side in a slight fog that was creeping up the river,
-and, from mysterious shapes behind this veil, hooters, syrens and
-clanging bells answered one another in warnings to the capering atoms of
-whom the drowning of even one would affect, in some degree, the life of
-the city.
-
-“Do you know,” said Teresa presently, “that I haven’t seen a single
-person—what we used to call ‘person’—since we came out; nothing but the
-kind of people who make crowds.”
-
-“That’s because you don’t know them,” said Cyril. “I saw a millionaire
-get off the boat a minute ago, ‘walking quite unaffectedly,’ as the
-newspapers say.”
-
-“No, but the dressed people,” said Teresa, “you know what I mean. Where
-are they?”
-
-“My dear, how should I know?” he replied carelessly. “That’s what I
-tried to explain to your mother before we came; I thought it would put
-her off. But I shouldn’t be in the least surprised if she took up
-philanthropy.”
-
-“Do you mean that she’d go on committees?” Teresa asked awestruck.
-
-“She might quite well, and if I were the committee I should just tell
-her what I wanted done, and leave her to do it her own way. You’d find
-it would work out in the end.”
-
-“But those kind of people are generally so interfering,” said Teresa.
-“Mother is not.”
-
-“No, but she is a master of strategy,” said Cyril. “I used to read about
-Napoleon when we were taught strategy. Did you ever hear of his
-battles?”
-
-“You mean Waterloo?” she asked.
-
-“Yes, but that didn’t come off. His great success was before then. She
-may meet her Wellington on the playing fields of Millport for all you
-know. We shall see. Let’s go back to tea. Have a taxi?”
-
-“No, let’s go on the top of a tram,” said Teresa. “I want to have that
-rod thing arranged over my head. Did you see the conductor running round
-with a string and hooking the little wheel on at the back?”
-
-“Well, I don’t mind,” he conceded, “but the smell will knock you down.”
-
-“What smell?” asked Teresa.
-
-“Demos, a crowd,” he replied, as they made their slow progress between
-the jostling workers who still poured uninterruptedly across the bridge,
-“see also ‘Demosthenes’ and ‘demon’— and ‘demi-monde’,” he added
-reflectively, as a whiff of strong scent struck him from a girl with a
-sharp elbow.
-
-“What a fuss you make about smells and things,” she said. “They’re all
-life. They mean all sorts of things.”
-
-“Well, they don’t mean anything I want,” he grumbled. “I believe
-everybody in this damned place wears fish next the skin.” This was said
-with profound disgust as they took their places on a little seat at the
-top of the tram staircase, and other swarms of people with pale, serious
-faces and drab clothing pushed past his knees to the glass shelter
-beyond. The windows became fogged with human breath and clouds of cheap
-tobacco, and as the sun disappeared in the drifting fog from the river,
-the mud began to filter down once more on to the roofs, and to ooze up
-from under the stones of the pavement. The car swayed under its heavy
-load, with occasional grinding squeals, stopping every few hundred yards
-to take up new burdens in place of those who had reached their
-destination. Teresa watched the squalid forms and weary faces with a
-new-born ecstasy. Some veiled desire, a love for something unknown,
-which had led her in pursuit for as long as she could remember, had
-stopped and shown itself to her for a moment. Then it fled again from
-her reach.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
-
-One great source of mental nourishment that Evangeline relied on at this
-time was the Press. Two thirds of the things she thought about each day
-came from the newspapers, plain or illustrated, but not political; that
-is to say, not political beyond striking headlines and a short—very
-short—leading article. Her mind made curious pictures of these scraps of
-state information. Perhaps the best way of describing what she thought
-Parliament is, and does, is to imagine oneself very agile, very kind,
-very interested, perched inside the roof of an immense building, looking
-down on hundreds of elderly gentlemen all of one type, but some with
-familiar faces. We, from our perch, know that each of them has gone
-through a period of anxiety and expense, connected with loss of voice
-and terrible boredom of his supporters, who have to sit behind him on
-uncomfortable chairs and wish he would pull his coat down at the back
-before speaking. This period of trial has ended in an election—ribbon
-and scratch meals—and then he got a “seat” here on something or other
-benches (Evangeline had been at school, but she wasn’t in the serious
-lot, at least, not the brainy serious. Her set used only to discuss
-things like immortality when they felt really friendly.) Once on these
-“benches” men become political, and lose considerably in spiritual
-value, except when they call out the army and navy. Otherwise they spend
-their time henceforth in committing blunders (the meat blunder, the wool
-blunder, the tax blunder, the housing blunder, etc.), to the perpetual
-inconvenience of the public, until something happens to the Cabinet and
-a lot of well-known people who were IN become OUT, and it makes no
-difference at all, except as a frail raft for the drowning in
-conversation. But the rest of the paper is worth reading; there are
-things to interest everybody. The eccentric behaviour of criminals,
-landladies and leaders of society; adventures, and reports of shipwrecks
-and calves with two tails. On the last page there is often expert advice
-on physical fitness and the complexion.
-
-On the morning following Teresa’s walk to the docks with her father
-Evangeline began to try the effects of the juice of an orange
-accompanied by half an hour’s deep breathing before breakfast. She had
-walked and deep breathed in the park, and returned full of exhilaration
-from the sight of the dewy grass, young tulips pushing through the heavy
-dun soil and the song of birds in smoke-laden trees and bushes that were
-budding as irrepressibly as herself. She stood on the edge of a pond and
-watched the ducks performing an ecstatic toilet. Their guttural sounds
-of pleasure and the grinding of distant tram wheels were the only sounds
-besides the chorus of chirping. The only people she met were a policeman
-on one side of the pond, and a dressmaker’s assistant on the other, and
-she felt that God was the friend of both as of the ducks and the Spring;
-they were not at all in the way. When she arrived at home a man in
-military uniform was standing on the doorstep. He was young and had the
-face of a reformer.
-
-“Good morning,” she said. “Are you coming in?”
-
-“Please,” he answered gravely, and said no more, while she fitted her
-latchkey. She led the way into the dining-room, where breakfast was
-laid, and looked vaguely round.
-
-“Shall I tell my father you’re here?” she asked hesitatingly, and then,
-with sudden uncontrollable interest, “Are you the man that hasn’t got a
-wife?”
-
-He started and frowned. He was embarrassed, and felt that the question
-was not one that should have been asked by a stranger. “No, I am not
-married,” he snapped.
-
-“Is your name Hatton?” she asked next.
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Oh, then Father told us about you. Do you want to see him?”
-
-“Very much,” said Captain Hatton with emphasis.
-
-“I’ll fetch him,” she said, “but do sit down and be comfortable.” She
-went out and called, “Father! Father!” at the bottom of the stairs.
-“Father! Oh, drat him! I believe he is still in the bath.” Captain
-Hatton, erect on the hearthrug in front of the door she had left open,
-heard, and winced.
-
-“Dick—y! Dick—y!” she called next.
-
-“Oh, do come up, Chips, if you want anything,” he heard a small weary
-voice say upstairs. “Father is in the bath; he’ll be out directly.”
-
-“Well tell him to hurry up; it’s Captain Hatton,” said Evangeline, and
-she plunged back into the dining-room.
-
-“I am afraid my watch must be all wrong,” he said, as he glanced round
-the room in hope of moral support from an accusing clock. “I thought
-General Fulton said breakfast at half-past eight.”
-
-“So it is,” said Evangeline. “It is only twenty minutes to nine now.
-Father won’t get up if he has an interesting post. What time do you get
-up?”
-
-“Oh—er—a quarter to seven usually,” he replied.
-
-“A quarter to——? Gracious! Do you mean in the very middle of a minute
-like that? It seems just as if you said ‘up goes the hand of my watch,
-down goes my leg on the floor.’ I couldn’t do that. I have to yawn a
-long time first and then get out by degrees till it gets too cold not to
-do something about it.”
-
-There was silence. Evangeline felt depressed. All her gladness in the
-awakening spring had gone. “Would you like to look at the paper?” she
-asked with a sigh. He said, “Thank you,” but as he stretched out his
-hand to take it from her he saw that it was not _Country Life_, but a
-lady’s paper. Doll-like faces with no noses, shameless trousseaux,
-ridiculous young men in black, scent bottles and wigs met his eye on the
-open page.
-
-“Er—thanks very much,” he said, “I think I’ll wait for the morning
-paper. What time do you get it?”
-
-“I expect it has come,” said Evangeline. “The boy generally flings it in
-at the kitchen window.” She rang the bell. “Breakfast, please,
-Strickland, and the paper if it has come,” she ordered.
-
-“I was waiting till Mrs. Fulton came down,” said the maid severely.
-Evangeline sighed again. “How obstructive everyone is this morning,” she
-thought, but said aloud, “No, we’ll begin please, and anyhow I want the
-paper.”
-
-But neither came and the silence grew heavier. She wanted to rush out
-of the room; she knew that her hair was untidy and two of her finger
-nails were grubby owing to having restored a strayed worm to what she
-thought a safe place on the bank of the pond, where a duck had eaten
-him at once to her disgust. But she could not move from the sofa where
-she had taken refuge with her rejected paper. The barrier of Captain
-Hatton’s eye stretched between her and the door and she felt that it
-might touch her as she ran past; if it did she would have to scream.
-Suddenly—“A—tish—u!”—a fearful explosion. Captain Hatton had sneezed.
-There was a dead silence while Evangeline held her breath and dared
-not look. Then again the awful sound; and again; eight times.
-
-“I beg your pardon,” he said when all was quiet again. “Extraordinary
-how these attacks come on.”
-
-The great friendly creature cheered up at once on this crumb of
-encouragement. “I like sneezing,” she said. “It almost takes the place
-of swearing. You feel better and no harm done to anybody.”
-
-“Ah—h’m,” he agreed without enthusiasm.
-
-“There’s Mother coming,” she said thankfully as a gentle rustle was
-heard in the passage. Susie came in in a soft breakfast gown that
-avoided conclusions with her figure. Her hair was beautifully done and
-her face delicately cared for. Captain Hatton, though he approved of her
-evidently careful toilet, took a vague dislike to her because it had not
-been carried through at the specified time.
-
-“I am so sorry my husband is late,” she murmured, “I am afraid we got
-into bad habits in London. Everything is so late there and the morning
-is really the loveliest time, isn’t it? I remember once being out at six
-to catch a train and the birds were simply delightful. Do you sing at
-all?” she inquired, her eyes brimming with sympathetic interest.
-
-“I do occasionally,” he admitted, heartily wishing that his chief would
-come and relieve him.
-
-“I hope we shall often hear you,” said Mrs. Fulton. “I always think
-music is such a happy thing. Evangeline dear, ring the bell.”
-
-“I have rung twice,” she said.
-
-“Servants are very unpunctual as a race,” Mrs. Fulton observed. “I wish
-they would get up earlier, but I daresay they are often tired like we
-are.” Strickland came in with the hot dishes. “We shall want some more
-toast, I think, Strickland.”
-
-“The fire’s not hot enough,” answered the maid. “The cook was late this
-morning.”
-
-“Then just run up and make a little at the gas fire in the General’s
-dressing-room,” Susie ordered. “Will you help yourself, Captain Hatton.”
-
-A few minutes later Cyril entered hurriedly in his dressing-gown. “I
-say, Sue, what the devil—hullo, Hatton, that you?—what the devil did you
-send that woman to make toast in my room for? I’d nothing but——”
-
-“Cyril dear, never mind,” his wife interrupted. “The kitchen fire wasn’t
-quite ready; she won’t be a minute.”
-
-“Well, I can’t go back to dress now,” he complained.
-
-“It will teach us to be more punctual to-morrow,” said Mrs. Fulton. “We
-must set them a good example. Dicky ought to be down too.”
-
-Teresa came in quietly and shut the door without looking at anyone. She
-was flushed and seemed preoccupied and had evidently forgotten
-Evangeline’s announcement of a guest. “My hair refuses to go up,” she
-began, turning straight to the sideboard. “I shall do it like some women
-I saw yesterday. The front was all in tiny plaits and the back—well, it
-wasn’t hairdressing, it was plumbing. You’ve been pretty hearty with the
-kedgeree, haven’t you?”
-
-“Dicky, darling, I don’t think you have seen Captain Hatton,” her mother
-suggested. Teresa turned unconcernedly.
-
-“I am sorry,” she apologised. “How do you do? I remember my sister did
-tell me you were here, but I happened to be thinking at the time and I
-forgot.”
-
-“Please don’t bother,” he said. He was recovering his temper under the
-influence of breakfast and the sense of safety that his host brought.
-“You’ll see so much of me, I’m afraid, that I’d rather you did not
-notice it.”
-
-“Don’t hope for that, Hatton,” put in the General. “They’ll see
-everything you do. It’s a damned noticing family; except Evangeline and
-she’ll fall over you in the dark every time.”
-
-Captain Hatton looked embarrassed and changed the subject. “Are you
-going to like being here, do you think?” he asked Susie.
-
-“Oh, I think so,” she replied. “Of course it is quite different from
-London, but there must be some nice people. Do you know many people here
-yet?”
-
-“I have got some friends who live a few miles out,” he said. “I have
-stayed with them for hunting, but I’ve been out of England for the last
-three years. We were sent to Germany after the armistice and I came back
-to go into hospital.”
-
-“Oh, dear me, those hospitals!” she sighed. “Shall I ever forget them! I
-couldn’t do any actual nursing, of course, though I should have loved
-it; but I don’t think it was right the way women left their children.
-But I used to visit the poor boys and wash up. I get such touching
-letters from them even now. Do you remember young Digby, Cyril?”
-
-“No, I don’t, but I could make a fair guess at him. You forget that I
-was in my little wooden hut at the time and couldn’t leave it even for
-you. I wonder if that beastly woman is out of my room. Dicky—oblige your
-father. Go and see if she is there, will you? I want to get dressed.”
-
-“She is making toast, dear,” Mrs. Fulton explained. “You might ask her
-for it; she won’t hear the bell.”
-
-Teresa went out and met Strickland in the passage. She was dusting the
-hall. “Can we have the toast, please?” Teresa asked.
-
-“It isn’t made,” Strickland replied coldly. “I couldn’t be spoken to
-like that. I shall leave at the end of the month. I’m not accustomed to
-be blasted.” Teresa touched her on the shoulder. “Never mind Father,”
-she said. “We none of us do. He’s most affectionate really. Forget the
-toast; I’ll tell them.” She went back into the dining-room and shut the
-door. Mrs. Fulton was offering dainty morsels of sentiment about
-hospitals to Captain Hatton, who disposed of them one by one with the
-indifference a sea lion shows about the quality of the fish thrown into
-its mouth. Teresa sat down by her father and said in a low voice, “You
-mustn’t swear at the maids, you know. Strickland is very angry and was
-going to go, but I told her you are all right. I don’t know if she will
-recover, but you must remember that you don’t have the trouble of going
-to registry offices.”
-
-“What an eternal curse women’s feelings are,” he grumbled as he pulled
-out a cigarette case. “I believe they grow fat on them.”
-
-“But then, you see, your men have none at all,” she explained, “which is
-as bad the other way, because you can’t make them hear except by
-blasting and all those kinds of words that mean nothing.”
-
-“But they do mean something,” argued her aggrieved father. “They mean,
-‘You’ve damn well got to do it and look sharp.’”
-
-“Yes, but if you say to a woman, ‘Be quick, Pansy dear,’ she does it
-just as well.”
-
-Cyril roared with laughter. “Here, Hatton,” he said, “do you know what
-you’ve got to say to the mess sergeant the next time he keeps you
-waiting? ‘Be quick, Pansy dear!’ Will you try it first or shall I?”
-Captain Hatton laughed.
-
-“What is Dicky saying?” asked Mrs. Fulton indulgently.
-
-“Explaining the art of commanding those of unripe station,” said the
-General. “Come on to my room, Hatton, and I’ll leave you there while I
-get some clothes on—if they’re not all over toast and tears,” he added
-resentfully.
-
-“Good heavens! What a man!” Evangeline exclaimed when the door shut
-behind them. “He’s like an umbrella.”
-
-“Oh, I think he’s charming,” said her mother. “So much tact, and most
-interesting, I should think, when one gets to know him. Ring the bell,
-Dicky dear, and when she comes to clear away tell her I shall be in my
-sitting-room if she wants me.”
-
-“What are we going to do with ourselves every day in this place, Chips?”
-Teresa asked her sister when they were alone.
-
-“Oh, what we have done before, I suppose,” Evangeline answered
-carelessly. She was reading the paper that had come too late to save
-Captain Hatton’s temper. The Labour Party, she read, were determined to
-do something which she did not understand, but which foreboded
-discomfort to everybody including their own supporters. They seemed to
-do it on purpose, like schoolmistresses, for some end which no
-reasonable young person desires, even if it could be achieved. Who
-exactly were the Labour party she wondered? The paper showed their
-photographs; clumsy figures in impossible hats, with impossible wives
-whose barren heads contrasted grotesquely with the hairiness of their
-men’s faces. She looked over the page. An officer, recently demobilised,
-had committed suicide owing to the difficulty of maintaining a blue-eyed
-child, whose portrait was inset below his own. The “night life” of a
-great city was said to be “glittering with unprecedented extravagance!”
-A millionaire had made a unique will at a place she had never heard of,
-providing for the purchase of fifty elephants, which were to be
-presented to the Corporation, and supported by public funds for the
-employment of superannuated keepers.
-
-“But you forget that I haven’t done anything except go to classes,”
-pursued Teresa. “I am supposed to be ‘out’ now.”
-
-“Jolly lucky for you,” remarked her sister. “There was no coming out in
-my time.”
-
-“I don’t see much difference,” said Teresa, “except that you brought
-your own food to parties and didn’t wear such low necks. But anyhow,
-what I meant was that the war is over, and we’re in a new place and
-we’ve got some maids, and what is the next?”
-
-“I don’t know,” Evangeline answered slowly. “There are days when I want
-to burst—you know—with a pop, in the sun on a still day—like that, (she
-waved her hands) and then I should become something quite different. I
-should be full of ideas. I don’t know what they would be but that is the
-exciting part.”
-
-“This is a very dirty town,” Teresa said, as she stood at the window. “I
-haven’t seen any people yet who looked as if they liked what they were
-doing.”
-
-Evangeline’s eager interest had faded. “Haven’t you?” she said.
-
-“No, and I don’t know what Mother will do with herself, either. I
-suppose there must be some ordinary ones. She’s a social success, isn’t
-she?”
-
-“In a way——” Evangeline hesitated. “She’s not like an American mother in
-those ways, but if you notice you’ll find that you never can stop
-anything happening as she wants it to. I believe she conjures. She seems
-to sit down by a hat and take no notice of it, and then there’s an
-omelet in it. If Father doesn’t want the omelet, or we don’t, she says
-she hasn’t made it, and I spend my life trying to find out whether she
-has or not.”
-
-“Well that hasn’t much to do with what I was saying,” her sister
-continued. “We shall drift here if we don’t look out.”
-
-“Drift?”
-
-“Yes, you know—I shall arrange the flowers, and you will play endless
-games and go to things and perhaps ‘take up’ something, and I shall shop
-and be polite to visitors, and I really don’t want to do anything else.
-I am not energetic, and I should love to live in a cottage. But
-everything is so hideous here, and those smells and awful faces make me
-sort of drunk.”
-
-“My dear!” Evangeline sympathised with little understanding.
-
-“Everyone has always made me feel a little drunk,” Teresa went on. “They
-say such stupid things; sit there gibbering and drinking tea, and yet
-all the people in history—anyone—Nebuchadnezzar or Cleopatra or Anne
-Boleyn—were in society, and all sorts of real things happened to them;
-they didn’t ask for it. And I believe just as much could happen to the
-silly people who pay calls. I often understand eating grass and letting
-one’s nails grow.” She paused. “And those people who are poor—they must
-know a lot. I want to know what it is.”
-
-“It is like my wanting to burst, perhaps,” said Evangeline. “Except that
-I don’t want to know all about those horrors. I hated all that in the
-war, though, of course, it was so exciting being useful that one forgot
-the mess. I should like to be in a dangerous country with a lovely
-climate, and live with a man who had read everything there is. We should
-ride all day, and perhaps have some children who wouldn’t want clothes
-or governesses nor have diseases.”
-
-“Like a cinema,” commented Teresa.
-
-“Yes, rather. I always get so angry with the film girl who is left in a
-log cabin with a perfectly beautiful savage who leaves her the room to
-herself out of chivalry and sleeps in the stable and does all he can for
-her, and then the silly ass crawls screaming round the walls, and wants
-to go back to some odious young man in the city.”
-
-“But the city man would be much more likely to have read everything,”
-her sister pointed out. “Your savage wouldn’t know any more than you do,
-which isn’t saying much.”
-
-“No, I know,” she admitted with a sigh. “I don’t know what I want;
-perhaps both of them for different days; wet Sundays to spend with the
-young man who reads, and the other days, when it is sunny, to gallop
-about with the dangerous one.”
-
-“I believe there is more in it than that,” said Teresa, “and meantime I
-am going to study Strickland. I have an idea she can tell me the things
-I want to know. I had better find her, by the way, and give her Mother’s
-message. I don’t think she takes much interest in bells.” She left
-Evangeline to speculate on life as digested for her by the newspaper,
-and went herself in search of the woman who, she felt, held some clue to
-the pursuit of her desire.
-
-At the end of a week she recalled her sister’s inspired description of
-their mother’s behaviour. Susie had, it seemed, by some unobservable
-process, evolved a spiritual omelet out of the most unpromising material
-among the people who called on her. Most of them belonged to what
-Strickland, who had begun to unbend towards Teresa, assured her were
-“some of our leading families.”
-
-“The Manleys are very well known,” she said. “Old Mr. Manley did a great
-deal of good, and was very well thought of all over the town. My
-grandfather used to work for him, and he always said he never wished to
-have a better master. I don’t know so much about the young ones. My
-sister lived with Mrs. James Manley, and I can’t say she enjoyed it.
-Everything was very near, and she left because she got run down with the
-work. But Mrs. Eric Manley, that called to-day, is well enough spoken
-of, though I don’t think much of her myself.”
-
-“Yes,—Mrs. Carpenter,” she said, another day, when she was turning down
-Teresa’s bed. “I’m glad you mentioned her. She’s another of the sort I
-was telling you about. They’re well enough in public I suppose, but
-those who have to do with them when they get back know who are the real
-ladies and gentlemen. Now you’ll hear a great deal, I daresay, about
-Mrs. Carpenter, and how she goes about here and there and all she does,
-but I wouldn’t be the matron of some of those homes she goes to—no, I
-wouldn’t for all the money you could give me; and I wouldn’t be one of
-the inmates, either, with all the advice she gives, and she who doesn’t
-know what it is to have one child left on her hands for a day, let alone
-six or eight. I don’t say she doesn’t go about here and there, and so
-she should, for she’s the time and the money, but I don’t think it’s
-right for servants to be kept up till all hours washing dishes for those
-who study the poor, and up again next morning to light the fires in time
-for ladies to warm themselves while they telephone for the best of
-everything.”
-
-“Yes,” said Teresa, looking into the fire.
-
-“You’ll say I’m a socialist, perhaps, Miss,” Strickland added, as she
-was going to leave the room, “but it isn’t that. I know we can’t all do
-alike, and I don’t mind the General, if you’ll excuse me, now I’ve got
-used to his language. He’s very thoughtful in some ways, and it seems a
-man’s place to mess things about. But when I took in the tea, and heard
-Mrs. Carpenter going on at such a rate, and Mrs. Manley, too, I felt
-like speaking out when you mentioned her.”
-
-“How you do gossip with the servants, dear Dicky,” said Susie, who had
-heard the last word on her way to her bedroom, and called to Teresa to
-help her to fasten her dress. “I never think it is a wise plan.”
-
-Teresa said nothing. Although she always received her mother’s remarks
-with respectful affection, due to the fact that Susie never appeared
-cross and everything she said was incontrovertible, yet very little that
-was not a definitely expressed wish penetrated her thoughts. “If Mother
-wants anything done, of course we do it,” was the understanding between
-her and Evangeline, but they respected her power as a conjuror, rather
-than her wisdom as a prophet. Susie’s power over men had been great in
-her youth, and she had had much influence in the lives of women, but no
-one had ever counted her as friend or enemy. She had been an article of
-faith to some, of admiration, of liking, of amusement or indefinite
-irritation to others, but only her children in their nursery days had
-ever looked to her as a help in time of trouble. Her conjuring ability
-had been invaluable in the nursery and schoolroom. Her presence would
-always turn a crime into a bubble, and the indignant nurse or governess
-was compelled to see her rod break out into the delicate blossom of
-divine forgiveness under her outraged eyes. The impression of this
-gentleness remained with the girls when they grew up; but that was all.
-They might search the corners of the wonder-box where their
-recollections of her were stored, and find nothing that they could put
-together and call a mother.
-
-Teresa had been surprised that day by Susie’s immediate success with the
-women who had called. It is true that they had come prepared to like the
-Fultons, but they were in no way committed; and such all-embracing
-eagerness to love as Evangeline showed to strangers was against their
-traditions. It is one of the customs of Millport before paying a call to
-consider first the reasons for the newcomers’ arrival. A well paid
-appointment gives them a good start, whereas an indefinite purpose would
-be thought suspicious. Second to be considered is their pedigree. If
-they can be traced to some source called “good connections” another
-point is scored in their favour. A good income comes third, and,
-provided the rest is satisfactory, adds greatly to their favourable
-chances, but this item is not so essential as it used to be. People who
-are not at all nice are often rich at the present time, and even furs
-have to be more carefully chosen than in the past, for fear they may be
-the outcome of too recent enterprise. But the thing that tells in the
-long run is “views.” The Provinces have collective “views” in a way that
-would be impossible in London. You must either think with the city or
-carry the city with you. To live in opposition to it you must be either
-a hermit or a fanatic; cease to love your neighbour or lose your reason.
-The apostle of a different creed from that of the city can carry the
-people with him some distance towards any end—the best or the
-worst—provided he uses the old ritual cunningly; but wolves and doves
-alike must be dressed in sheep’s clothing, or out they go.
-
-“None of that, now, with those feathers,” the city says to the intruding
-dove. “I know you’re not a wolf. You don’t need to tell me what I can
-see. But you’ve got a beak, and I wouldn’t put it past you to get
-pecking at my legs.”
-
-But they received Susie at once with open arms. She came from London,
-which is always nice; her parents had been born in Millport of
-absolutely pure wool stock, her husband had inherited money from a good
-old lady before the war, and Susie had only to appear in her own
-spotless fleece of nice feeling upon every subject—especially wine—for
-them to cluster round her with acclamations and summon their kind from
-the most distant parts of the county.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
-
-Miss Archer, reporter for the _Millport News_, stood just inside the
-first reception-room at the Town Hall. There was a suite of rooms,
-leading one into the other, showing a vista of hats and baldish heads
-and faces of all sorts wedged together in packs or moving in a slow
-stream with eddies and cross currents. The stream rose in the great
-entrance hall of the building. It was brought by contributory motors and
-broughams, from all parts of the town, suburbs and county, and it flowed
-upstairs and through the rooms and down again through a temporary
-congestion at the first door where Miss Archer stood with her little
-note book. A middle-aged woman, mastering fatigue with vivacity, stood
-beside her and made rapid remarks in an undertone, pointing out this or
-that noteworthy face or garment. Her hand was conspicuous by being so
-obviously ill at ease in its white glove. It was a worker’s hand, full
-of strength and sensibility, and the sillily cut glove sat on it like a
-bonnet on a horse. The Mayor and Mayoress remained just within the big
-folding doors which were set wide apart, a footman planted on either
-side. The footman on the left had nothing about him to allay the
-suspicion that he was stuffed, except his small twinkling eyes that
-spoke of much experience of humanity, a family life of his own and
-knowledge of the moral difficulties of rich men. His counterpart on the
-right was unable to give way to the same luxurious calm, being compelled
-to undergo the trouble of repeating strange syllables whispered into his
-ear, such as “—siz-an-Miss-S-Arkbury,” “—stron-misses J’n’per,” etc.; if
-it had not been that he knew the names of the greater number of the
-guests he would probably have broken down and been led weeping to the
-nearest public-house. As it was he battled bravely on, and beyond the
-momentary annoyance of the Harburys who became “Barleys,” and the
-Muskovilles who became “Musk-and-veal,” and so on, it didn’t really
-matter. People who knew them knew them, and those who didn’t didn’t
-mind.
-
-“Who were those last, did you hear?” Miss Archer bent to ask her friend.
-“They’re new, surely; I must note their dresses; they’re very good.
-There—the woman in grey with sables, and the two girls.”
-
-“‘Fulton!’ I thought he said,” answered the tired woman. She followed
-them with her eyes to where they stopped, looking at the crowd and
-talking now and then to each other. Susie was benevolently dimpling, as
-if the party were hers, and commenting to her daughters on the beauty of
-the rooms. “Architecture makes so much difference to a building, doesn’t
-it?” she said. “It would be so easy to spoil a big place like this by
-making it clumsy and in bad taste. But I do admire this immensely, don’t
-you?”
-
-“There’s Mrs. Manley gone up to them now,” said Miss Archer’s friend. “I
-tell you—won’t they be the new general’s family that someone said had
-come? There’s some new arrangement or other about the soldiers. I know
-my nephew who’s a territorial said something about a General Fulton
-coming to be over the whole lot of them; not separated as they used to
-be.”
-
-Miss Archer wrote down, “—in a distinguished combination of old gold and
-palest petunia, relieved by valuable antique buckles. Mrs. Slacks looked
-well in mauve, with one of the new violet pyramid hats.” “What did you
-say? Yes, I should think that’s very likely. Let me see. Grey poult de
-soie, isn’t it, with sables? and her two young daughters (she was
-scribbling again) in girlish foam of niaise crepe in the new swallow
-blue that has lately come into its own. Yes, that will do.”
-
-“There’s Mrs. Carpenter speaking to them,” said the friend. “I don’t
-know how you are going to dish up that checked coat of hers again. I
-must catch Mr. Beaver if I can—he has just gone through—and see if he
-will take the chair on the 15th.” She disappeared among the crowd, and
-presently Miss Archer tripped away to take a turn through the rooms to
-make sure she had omitted no one of importance.
-
-“Shall we find a table for you?” Mrs. Manley said to Susie. “It will
-take us through the rooms on the way and there are several people you
-must meet.”
-
-A young woman, dressed with the touching pride of the connoisseur on a
-small income, turned as Mrs. Manley spoke, and smiled at her.
-
-“How are you?” Mrs. Manley said. “I am showing Mrs. Fulton the lions. If
-you want tea we could fill a table. Mrs. Fulton, may I introduce you to
-Mrs. Vachell. You are sure to meet everywhere. General and Mrs. Fulton
-have just moved into the Babley’s house,” she explained to the other.
-
-“Yes, I know,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I was going to call on you this week
-(she turned to Susie). Mrs. Babley left me several messages for you
-about the house, small things that she thought might be useful, but she
-didn’t want to bother you by writing about them. I only came back from
-Egypt yesterday.”
-
-“Mrs. Vachell’s husband,” Mrs. Manley explained, “is the most
-distinguished something-or-other-ist of the century, only I never can
-pronounce it.”
-
-“Never mind,” said Mrs. Vachell. “We’ll leave it at that. What a squash
-there is to-day. Do you suppose we shall ever get any tea?” They moved
-slowly on, and Mrs. Vachell found herself separated with the two girls.
-
-“You must find it rather dreary being turned loose in a strange town,”
-she said almost pityingly. “Has anyone been any use?”
-
-“We’re quite happy,” said Evangeline. “Do tell me why so many people
-come here. Is a Town Hall a sort of public party place? Oh dear, what a
-row that band makes!”
-
-“If we can get to the tea room we shall be out of it,” said Mrs.
-Vachell. “No, this isn’t exactly a public party, but the Lord Mayor has
-to entertain everybody. You will find later that you meet your friends
-here, and it isn’t so bad. But you will probably be roped in to make
-yourselves useful before long.”
-
-Teresa thrilled once more with the breath of the thing she sought.
-“How?” she asked.
-
-“All sorts of ways. Child welfare or domestic training or inebriates—or
-perhaps imbeciles,” Mrs. Vachell added, mischievously putting on an
-extra screw as she noted the alarm in Evangeline’s face and the throb of
-excitement in Teresa’s.
-
-Mrs. Carpenter was to be seen through the doorway, pushing slowly
-towards them, elbowing one, patronising another with a smile, making
-expressive gestures to friends here and there indicating that her task
-was nearly impossible—but—hold on, little sheep! The shepherdess is
-coming. You shall have tea if she has to commandeer some one else’s
-table.
-
-“I wonder if you would mind——” she will probably say reproachfully.
-“This lady ought to sit down and it is impossible to find a table. I
-think we can get six chairs in here if it won’t be pressing you too near
-the wall.” It was by some manœuvre of this sort that she did in the end
-plant the girls, whom she had volunteered to find, and Mrs. Vachell,
-whom she could not very well get rid of, at a table where Mrs. Fulton
-and Mrs. Manley were already seated. The two elderly ladies who were
-there first drained their cups and withdrew, commenting on the bad
-management of the tea rooms and the “manners of some people.”
-
-Mrs. Eric Manley, Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Vachell occupied
-positions in Millport not unlike those of the kings of England
-before Alfred. Their territories were less defined, their wars
-were not so bitter, but, as the history books say, “the country
-languished under their rule and longed for a just and wise leader
-to unite their petty factions under his sway.” Mrs. Manley ruled
-over the Fashionable-who-are-charitable, Mrs. Carpenter over the
-Charitable-who-are-fashionable-and-educated, and Mrs. Vachell over
-the Educated-and-incidentally-fashionable-and-charitable. They
-were ripe for the arrival of a visionary like Susie who should
-unite their people in the peaceful practices of Love—love of
-architecture-and-so-on, love of children, of all weathers, of the
-poor, “even those poor terrible drunken creatures who have been
-taught to be wicked,” of “your own beautiful homes.” We have
-anticipated this last object of her love. It became one of the
-stock phrases of those speeches which made her the idol of public
-meetings in days to come.
-
-But although Destiny was hovering over the tea-table, they knew it not.
-Perhaps Teresa felt something of the fate in store for her. Their chairs
-were near a window, below which the trams stopped to load and discharge
-their passengers. The faces were there by the hundred, the drab
-clothing, the mud were as usual. Did the scene never alter she wondered?
-Did the stream of people pour on like that under lowering skies
-perpetually—all day—Sundays—holidays, even through the night? She had
-come from the crowded streets of London, but that was utterly different.
-There was variety, sunshine, even leisureliness in the squares and quiet
-places off the main traffic; and besides that, the significance of any
-individual was so small that no one could feel responsible for his
-neighbour unless he were invited to interest himself. In Millport every
-weary pedestrian seemed to carry a personal grudge against those who had
-the means to escape from the mud.
-
-Mrs. Manley was comparing notes with Susie on the eternal subject of
-prices. Even cakes made at home were almost too expensive to eat every
-day, she complained. Her husband had had to give up keeping a tin of
-biscuits at his office, and he often came home to tea to save expense,
-unless he had to stay and carry on work that the clerks used to do. It
-was impossible to have the sort of entrées one used to, made with just a
-little sweetbread or cream or something; even the eggs mounted up now——
-
-“Yes, yes, I know, my dear women,” Mrs. Carpenter interrupted, “but do
-you realise what it means to _Charity_? You are only on the visiting
-committee of my beloved Institute, you know,” she smiled at Mrs. Manley,
-“and you can have no idea. The very soap the women wash with costs us
-£20 a year more than it did; there now! What do you think of that? That
-is just soap alone.”
-
-Mrs. Manley looked a little contemptuous. “Everyone uses soap,” she
-said. “I have to deal it out at our orphanage when it is my week for the
-store cupboard. But anyhow I believe there is only one thing that hasn’t
-gone up and that is bi-carbonate of soda. That is why everybody’s cakes
-taste of it. (She glanced at Mrs. Carpenter). How do you find things,
-Mrs. Fulton?”
-
-“I try not to worry about it,” Susie replied. Love seemed to envelope
-the table as she spoke, and even Mrs. Carpenter felt that she had not
-got the nail plumb on the head with her last blow. Mrs. Vachell pricked
-up her ears. “I do so want those two,” Susie continued with a fond look
-at her daughters, “not to have all their young time clouded by perpetual
-half-pennies. Of course we are not extravagant, but we have none of us
-very large appetites and, as I say, I just try not to worry. I have no
-doubt that what we are going through now is somehow for the good of the
-world.”
-
-Mrs. Carpenter drew a long breath and turned back a piece of fur at her
-wrist. “Of course we all believe that,” she said, “or we shouldn’t be
-here; at least I hope not. But what do you propose, Mrs. Fulton, to do
-about the terrible suffering as it is?” Even the best accredited lamb in
-its first year at Millport must not have things all its own way in the
-fold.
-
-Susie’s eyes brimmed. “I think and think,” she said earnestly, “but I
-can’t see how it is to be avoided. It seems somehow as if it was meant,
-and we can only learn the meaning by helping everywhere we can when we
-get the chance. I think some of the saddest cases are often the least
-known, don’t you?” Mrs. Vachell was taking an Olympic pleasure in the
-new forces which Susie was evidently going to bring in on the side of
-good against evil. She looked on from the high ground of quicker wits
-than her two sister rulers. She now wanted to see what Susie did with
-her two daughters. “It is the younger generation that will have to find
-out these things,” she said, looking at the girls.
-
-“Oh, shall we,” said Evangeline, rather bored. Teresa shrugged her
-shoulders and passed the cake. Mrs. Carpenter alone took up the
-challenge. “I think girls have lost all taste for the mere
-pleasure-loving life they used to lead,” she said, “I know mine won’t
-look at it. ‘Oh, Mother,’ they say, ‘We’re _so_ bored with parties.’
-They are all going to have professions and Lena is going to do social
-work.” Mrs. Manley, being childless, said nothing.
-
-“Are they!” Susie exclaimed, full of interest. “How wonderful! I often
-thought as a girl how much I should have liked to _be_ something, but I
-never had a chance and I am afraid I had no talents.” She dimpled at the
-three leaders. “I could only admire and enjoy. We must really be going,
-I think, dears. You belong to the University, don’t you, Mrs. Vachell?”
-she asked as they dispersed. “It must be so delightful.”
-
-“Yes,” Mrs. Vachell replied, “my husband does. Have you met Mrs.
-Gainsborough yet?”
-
-“The Principal’s wife?” said Susie. “No, she called last week, but I was
-out. I was so sorry.” They were walking down the great staircase by this
-time.
-
-“You must be sure to call on her At Home day,” Mrs. Vachell warned her,
-“or you will frighten her. It is every Tuesday.”
-
-“Frighten her?” Susie repeated.
-
-“Yes, because if she hasn’t met you first she will have to ask you to
-dinner without knowing you and she can’t bear that. There she is, by the
-way, still in the hall. Will you come and speak to her?”
-
-Susie allowed herself to be the means of violently startling a massive
-woman—there is no other way to think of her—dressed in old-fashioned
-clothes, who was peering timidly through the glass doors that opened on
-to the street. She turned in a fright when Mrs. Vachell spoke to her.
-“Oh! is that you!” she exclaimed thankfully. “I can’t think why my cab
-hasn’t come. I ordered it at a quarter past five and it is nearly six
-now and it has come on so wet.”
-
-Mrs. Vachell introduced Susie and her daughters and slipped away.
-
-“Oh!” said Mrs. Gainsborough again—(it was her usual beginning)—“so
-delighted to meet you—so sorry you were out when I called. And these are
-your girls?—quite so—yes——” She relapsed into silence and went on
-looking helplessly at the rain.
-
-“Mayn’t we drive you home?” Susie suggested. “Our car is there.” Mrs.
-Gainsborough threw up her hands and followed, murmuring. As they drove
-home through the crowded, dripping streets, Evangeline and Teresa
-crushed suffocatingly under the shadow of Mrs. Gainsborough’s knees,
-Susie’s kind little face peeping from behind a bunch of aged ostrich
-tips in Mrs. Gainsborough’s bonnet, all three of them disconcerted by
-the unusual smell of warm eau-de-Cologne that filled their car, very
-little was said. Mrs. Gainsborough was at her request left on the
-doorstep of a house, cinnamon-coloured like the Fultons’, at the corner
-of a cinnamon-coloured square. Once safely on her own territory her
-nervousness left her, and her smiles and genuine pleasure in the small
-service rendered brought Teresa another fleeting vision of the joy she
-perpetually sought.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
-
-Mrs. Gainsborough soon returned the hospitality of Susie’s motor by
-inviting her and Cyril to dinner. Her note was rambling and agitated
-like her manner, and ended with a postscript, “Please bring one of your
-daughters if she would care for it. Emma will be so pleased.”
-
-Evangeline and Teresa refused to have anything to do with it when the
-letter came, but Cyril said with genuine terror to Teresa when his wife
-had gone out of the room, “Dicky, you must come—promise me quick—but
-don’t say anything about it——”
-
-“All right, of course,” she assured him, “but why?”
-
-“They’re all schoolmasters,” he explained in an undertone as Susie came
-back. Nothing more was said until breakfast was over and then Teresa
-plunged for her father’s sake.
-
-“Can I go to the Gainsboroughs’, after all, Mother?”
-
-“If you like, dear, but I thought you said just now——”
-
-“I know,” she interrupted, “but—I should like to see the University. I
-think the Gainsborough girl would like it.”
-
-Mrs. Fulton looked suspiciously at her husband. He was filling his
-cigarette case from a box on the mantelpiece, using unnecessary care to
-fit them in properly.
-
-“Strickland should have done that for you, dear. Are you off now?”
-
-“Yes, presently,” he answered. “I’m not sure I can come to the
-Gainsboroughs, Sue; we’ve some rather special business next week.”
-
-“I think we ought to get to know everybody as much as possible, Cyril,
-if only for the sake of the girls. And the University are the most
-interesting of all. If you knew what a pleasure it is to me to talk
-about something besides wine and money now and then!”
-
-Cyril instantly threw diplomacy to the winds and began to enjoy himself,
-standing with his back to the fire. “I don’t want to be a kill-joy,” he
-replied, “but I learned more about those two subjects from old Wacks at
-Cambridge than I ever have since from anybody. But he wasn’t married. I
-daresay the female dons understand the use of the globes and all that.
-By George! I remember their queer get-ups. Must have been some very deep
-thinking that led to most of those marriages; which, after all, proves
-your theory of the Higher mind. Let’s go, and take Dicky if she wants to
-come,” he added with the boldness that often came to him suddenly after
-hunting down one of his wife’s insincerities.
-
-By this time she felt nothing but an irritable longing to get him out of
-the room. Through the whole of their married life he had amused himself
-by making a cockshy of the sentiments which she presented to the world
-as the expression of her thoughts. He often exaggerated her insincerity,
-for the sentiments were as much her own as any other jewellery she might
-have bought to adorn herself. She admired them quite as much as any she
-could have originated.
-
-“One of the children will come, of course,” she said impatiently, “if
-Mrs. Gainsborough really wants some young people. It is very kind of
-her, for I don’t suppose you have the least idea how dull it is for
-them, seeing nothing but soldiers and business people who have nothing
-to talk about. The Gainsboroughs are probably teetotallers—in spite of
-the set you mixed with at Cambridge and who had probably nothing to do
-with the life there. Most clever people think very little about their
-food. But you had better have your wine at the club before you start or
-they will think there is something the matter with you. Isn’t the time
-getting on? That clock is a little slow.”
-
-When the time for the party came it turned out to be less of a feast of
-intellect than had been hoped and feared by the Fultons. In the first
-place the Carpenters were there, because Mrs. Carpenter was as difficult
-to keep out of any social gathering as was King Charles’s head from Mr.
-Dick’s “Memorial.” If the festivity were a heavy duty for the cementing
-of business connections, Mrs. Carpenter was invited to lighten the dough
-of wealth with the ferment of culture. If it were a frivolous affair for
-the benefit of the young and thoughtless, she was there with her
-daughters. Hostesses included her as a precaution against any subsequent
-rumour that the scene had been one of unbridled licence. “Really, my
-dear—of course I wasn’t there so I can’t say, but I believe, etc.” If it
-were an ordinary mixed dinner, town and gown, she must be there to make
-things smooth between everybody; to interpose when Mrs. Alderman Snack
-was talking to Professor Cameo about rabbits, and see that the
-conversation was switched off at once on to his last book. She had read
-it of course and was so anxious to contradict him on one point, the
-condition of India before the mutiny. “My grandfather, you know, was
-there as a subaltern and he always said he was _convinced_, etc.” “A
-wonderful woman, Mrs. Carpenter,” everybody said. “She talks so well
-upon anything.”
-
-Mrs. Gainsborough, being so very nervous as she was, of course had not
-settled on a day to ask the new general and his wife until she had made
-sure that the Carpenters would come. Mrs. Carpenter had therefore
-consulted her little note-book and had chosen a day when she had only
-one or two small committees and dear Amy’s dancing lesson to attend, so
-that she would be “nice and fresh for the evening.” Poor Mr. Carpenter,
-who was the overworked underwriter to an insurance company, was not
-likely to be at all nice and fresh, even if he had a good twenty minutes
-to dress after hurrying up from the office. He could be trusted to be
-punctual, though, and would be quite up to a little educated chaff with
-anyone of his own set—Mrs. Vachell or one of the Manleys—so long as he
-hadn’t to tackle a stranger. He was, as it turned out, very happily
-situated, as there were only the Vachells, and Mrs. Eric Manley and her
-unmarried brother-in-law and two young men for Emma Gainsborough and
-Teresa. One was David Varens, whose father, Sir Richard Varens, belonged
-to a family that had owned land round Millport for three or four hundred
-years. Sir Richard had given money and land to Millport University and
-his son David had just left Oxford. It would never have done if Mrs.
-Carpenter had not been there.
-
-The third unmarried man was Mr. Joseph Price, the son of Mr. Manley’s
-partner. Eton and Cambridge had recently handed him back to the home
-nest, which he was prepared, with the backing of the Liberal Party and
-his father’s money, to re-line and generally bring up to date. The old
-birds were to be furbished up and taught new songs; the young lady birds
-from neighbouring nests were to be simply knocked off their perches, and
-Londoners coming to Millport were to understand that Millshire was young
-Mr. Price’s country seat and Millport was his little village where he
-went to post his letters and chat to the Mayor at election time. You
-could even buy things in the town now, he was told—quite fairly decent;
-of course not clothes and all that, but groceries and gloves and that
-sort of thing his mother found she could get there now. But the hotels
-were pretty scandalous sort of places. What? I should say so. Lots of
-churches though; some quite decent ones in the old part of the town if
-you’re interested in glass and all that kind of thing. And good music
-too; you ought to go to the concerts if music doesn’t bore you. There
-was a fellow there the other day—what’s his name—came all the way from
-Russia with a little handbag—he beat everyone else hollow—never heard
-anything like it—thought his arm would come off. Abs’lutely wond’f’l.
-You’ve heard him b’fur ’n town, ’f course? (I have burst into Mr.
-Price’s way of speaking for a moment, but I cannot reproduce it
-perfectly.)
-
-This was to Teresa, whom, owing to her father’s military position and
-their having lived in London, he was treating with unusual effusiveness.
-He knew Emma Gainsborough slightly and had made an honest effort to talk
-to her. He always tried to keep close to the ideal manner at which he
-aimed, the manner of the particular social pen through whose doors he
-had been allowed to squeeze because of his politics and his father’s
-money. He was already getting on very well with the manner, a sort of
-mincingly polite way of speaking, with the vowels squeezed slowly out as
-if through a confectioner’s icing tube, and laid along the sentence, or
-else omitted altogether; the exact opposite to the broad flat tones of
-his native habit. The natural rudeness of vanity was sugared over in
-this way to just the “right” effect he sought; enthusiasm for this or
-that “discovery,” indifference to anything tainted with popularity
-unless some popular thing became discredited enough in time to make it
-discoverable as a new taste.
-
-“Been doing very much lately?” he had asked Emma Gainsborough dutifully
-before turning his attention to Teresa who was really his object of the
-evening. “Seen anything new?”
-
-“No, I don’t think I have,” the poor girl replied, instantly ill at
-ease. Mr. Price observed the effect he had made, and scored several
-marks of superiority to himself; it made him feel good-natured.
-
-“Peewit’s brought out another book, I see,” he said, giving her another
-chance. “’ve you read it?”
-
-“No,” said Emma, adding hurriedly, “I’m doing welfare just now and it
-takes such an awful lot of time. I’m too sleepy to read after I’ve been
-wading through statistics all day.”
-
-“Welfare? Let’s see—what’s that now?” asked Mr. Price. It might possibly
-be something he ought to know about, though from the way Emma did her
-hair he thought it unlikely.
-
-“Welfare? Oh, it is seeing about children—at least, my part is—finding
-out things about them and seeing what happens to them and all that; I
-can’t explain it, but I have been making records of imbeciles all
-afternoon.” Emma was reckoned a humorist in the family circle and many
-were the evenings when her father and mother went to bed exhausted by
-their laughter over things noted by her with a delicacy of perception
-few people would have suspected, Mr. Price less than any. His “Oh, I
-see. Splendid work, I’m sure, but don’t you get tired of it?” was
-followed by a minute’s horrid silence and then he devoted himself with a
-clear conscience to Teresa in the way that has been described.
-
-Teresa’s attention was wandering to her father, who seemed to be doing
-very well with Mrs. Gainsborough. She wondered what they were laughing
-at. She caught up Mr. Price at his short pause after the Russian with
-the handbag.
-
-“No, I didn’t see him,” she answered vaguely. “What was he doing? Was
-there anything in the bag?”
-
-Mr. Price was not very pleased. “I don’t know. Pro’b’ly the last sponge
-in Russia, what? Don’t you take almonds? I shall eat them all if you
-don’t stop me. Oh, prihsless caat, what are you doing? come here and
-talk to me——” He broke off as Mrs. Gainsborough’s blue persian stood up
-beside him and, having pretended to extract three or four long thorns
-from his leg, withdrew.
-
-“I don’t mind them one way or the other,” said Teresa, “but I want to
-know something. Who is the man—the last at the end opposite—by my
-mother?”
-
-“Mr. Vachell do you mean? Don’t you really know him? No, that’s
-delightful. He’s simply won’f’l man—been digging, you know—Egypt—didn’t
-you read about it? You ought to read the paper, you know. He’s our show
-card. When I was up at Cambridge they were fairf’lly jealous that I knew
-him. I told my tutor that I’d seen him once act’lly in pyjamas and he
-became quite respectf’l and let me off a lot of lectures on the strength
-of it. And then you live here and ask who he is——! That’s really great,
-what? isn’t it? You’ve got to say something really brilliant now to make
-up or I shall think you’ve taken to good works like all the dear people
-here.”
-
-“Do you know you make me feel awfully queer,” said Teresa, looking at
-him with puzzled interest. “What are you talking about really? I know
-you answered my question, but what has all the rest to do with it? Why
-should your tutor let you off lectures because you saw somebody who
-lives here in pyjamas? I don’t understand a bit?”
-
-“Miss Fulton, it is quite time you left that silly boy and gave me a
-little attention,” said Mr. Manley, whom Mrs. Vachell had neglected so
-much that he had been keeping a friendly eye on Teresa. He liked the
-young and had understood that she was not enjoying herself. He included
-Mr. Price in what he said with a friendly smile and Teresa turned to him
-gratefully.
-
-“I believe you are much more old-fashioned than you look,” he said to
-her. “You were not getting on at all well. You didn’t mind my rudeness?”
-
-“No, I liked it,” she answered. “I have met Mrs. Manley heaps of times,
-but I’ve never seen you nor your brother to talk to. I have noticed
-since we came here that you may know people for quite a long time before
-you are even sure that they have a husband. One has nothing to go by
-sometimes except the hats in the hall.”
-
-“We come back sometimes to claim them, believe me,” said the old
-gentleman. Teresa’s heart warmed towards him as the dinner went on. His
-kindliness was real, untainted by any wish to shine or obtain credit. He
-had the quick understanding of ideas half expressed, succeeding one
-another like colour in changing light, which alone makes conversation
-anything but a distorted image of what the mind sees. Questions come so
-often from a curiosity that wishes to compare others with itself to its
-own glorification. Each one that Mr. Price or Mrs. Carpenter asked had
-that end in view. Mr. Manley enjoyed his game of give-and-take without
-that ghostly referee to balance the score. Teresa began to understand
-dimly how it was that what Strickland called “our leading families”
-seemed to have been the pious founders of Millport in a way that no
-Londoner’s ancestors can claim to have built their city. Millport was
-the child of dead and gone Manleys; it was handed on by them to new
-generations of themselves and of trusted friends who had watched over
-the early days of its growth. Tutors, governors and servants were
-appointed for the precious thing with that personal care that Teresa
-found so puzzling in the words “duty to the city,” which recurred
-constantly in public and in private. Afterwards in the drawing-room Mr.
-Manley came to her again.
-
-“If you don’t go away and forget all our conversation,” he said,
-“come to me and tell me what you want to do and I’ll show you how to
-set about it. You’ll find my office hat in the hall on Saturday and
-Sunday afternoons—and that’s the one I keep my ideas in. I’d like to
-show you some pictures I’ve got of the old town as it was in my
-great-great-grandfather’s time.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-I had meant to say a great deal about David Varens during this dinner
-party. But Millport has proved too strong for him. It always must have
-been and is now overpowering for the gentle, detached characters whose
-strength is in enjoyment of the immediate thing that circumstances have
-put in their way to be done as well as possible; people who accept
-inherited comfort and adventitious pain equally, as it comes; who love
-and hate by instinct without recognition of any outside interests to
-modify their decision and who never go back on a verdict given by this
-tribunal of taste. He is to be Teresa’s lover and therefore his first
-words to her should have been recorded, also his appearance, his manner
-and what they thought of each other. They should have begun at once with
-definite sensations of like or dislike. But the truth is they hardly
-exchanged a word. He sat on the other side of Emma Gainsborough and
-shared with Mr. Price the miasma of her longing for the whole evening to
-be over. He talked to her as well as he could, patiently and easily, in
-spite of her stumbles into pitfalls of silence that the least presence
-of mind should have taught her to avoid. He retrieved her each time
-without effort and set her on her legs again, wondering what was the
-matter with the poor girl, supposing she might feel the fire at her
-back. He did once suggest drawing a screen further along behind her and
-they talked for some minutes about the cold of Oxford Colleges, but she
-didn’t seem any better for it so he gave it up. It is no use giving Mr.
-Varens any more scope just now. He will turn up in his glory when the
-time comes.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
-
-It did not need many months in Millport to convince Teresa that idleness
-was not one of the snares of the city. She soon found that if any young
-person of the leisured classes were to attempt to “drift” she would have
-her aimless career brought to a standstill by some snag of “duty to the
-city.” No one in London had ever reminded Teresa of her civic
-responsibilities. On thinking it over one day after a particularly
-strong dose of “duty to the city,” administered by Mrs. Carpenter, she
-could not remember that the city of London and its chief magistrate had
-ever laid any personal claim to her services. She tried to imagine any
-such phrase as, “Have you seen the Mayor about it?” or, “What does
-Alderman Teazle think?” occurring in her father’s conversation at his
-club. It was impossible. In those days no one knew anything of her plans
-or her wishes but what she told them; in Millport it seemed that the
-very paving stones knew who was walking along and why, and that carrier
-sparrows flitted from chimney to chimney with little messages of
-information about everybody and an index of probable explanations for
-their conduct—all dead certain to be wrong.
-
-Mrs. Carpenter had not trusted to the fowls of the air to inform the
-Fultons that Millport intended them to do their duty. She gave them a
-few weeks’ law, with full access to her own example. She never failed to
-explain in the street, in the shop, in the ladies’ club, across the
-family pew or on the platform that the fact of her being found where she
-was would mean the loss of so many heart beats to the city’s life. She
-would say, perhaps, “I ought not to be here, my dear, but I promised
-dear Mabel Somebody this little treat just to buck her up after the new
-arrival. Fancy! I was there just two hours before it happened, and my
-waifs and strays waiting for a tin of biscuits I had promised them, and
-Alderman McWhittock’s funeral at half-past two. I don’t know how I ever
-got there—but now what are _you_ doing here? Up to the ears, I suppose,
-getting ready for the dance next week. What it is to be young! though I
-saw you resting like a wise girl at dear Emily’s party. The men are so
-naughty now, aren’t they? They won’t dance—absolutely won’t—except with
-their own old favourites. I always say to them now, ‘No, it’s no use. I
-am here to rest my old bones and you have just got to look in all the
-corners and pick out the plainest and dullest thing you can find and
-send her home happy.’ I condoled with Emily because I know the
-difficulties, and after all a dance must be a success if it is to be
-worth all the trouble, mustn’t it? Now what church do you go to——?” etc.
-
-But Susie almost forestalled her remarks. She was there ready equipped
-by instinct before the call to battle came. Mrs. Carpenter didn’t know
-what to think of it. It is said that birds of prey have their own
-allotted beats and do not poach on their neighbours’ quarry; but they
-arrive, warned by some secret telegraphy wherever there is a vacancy and
-a corpse. Susie had evidently sensed the prevailing occupation of
-Millport and had descended out of the blue to fill a gap among the
-leaders of good works. She could not be said to “take an active part” in
-anything, because that was against her nature, but her name was soon in
-everybody’s mouth as a member of all the chief committees of private
-enterprises. Strangely shaped gentlemen in black used to call on her
-between meals with papers and she listened to them with her gentle smile
-of the mother was has suffered all things; she recognised them instantly
-when she saw them again and remembered with which particular good work
-they were connected; and that is really quite enough, as she herself
-would have said. Ladies with grown-up daughters, who are obliged to
-entertain a great deal and who have no head for organisation and so on,
-ought to leave the running about to those who will do it so much better;
-what the workers need is sympathy.
-
-Evangeline and Teresa, being newcomers from a careless place of comfort,
-were particularly susceptible to the unfamiliar poison of depression for
-which there seemed no cure. The mud, the damp, the ugly streets, and
-indignant, tired faces, the grudging service of the working classes, the
-self consciousness of the well-to-do who walked everywhere in the
-limelight of recognition, the sharp division between those who thought
-everything was all right because they were comfortable and those who
-thought everything was all wrong because they weren’t—all this made the
-girls restless.
-
-A vision of Hyde Park Corner on a sunny day used to haunt Evangeline’s
-mind. She contrasted the space of it, the blue sky, the
-buildings—“polite buildings” was the description that came to her as she
-recalled their appearance, perfectly groomed, keeping their private life
-absolutely to themselves. She felt a sudden hatred for the rows of pert
-little dwellings that she saw all round; “brick trimmings!” she thought
-with disgust as her eye fell on the oblongs and stars and cubes inlaid
-in musty red on a background of livid ginger. There was nothing polite
-about them; they seemed positively loquacious about themselves and their
-trimmings and the nice people that lived in them. Horrid houses, she
-thought.
-
-Teresa, though she did not know it, was distilling for herself a sort of
-love potion from the drabness and hostility. As she once said to her
-sister, the smells and the mysterious purpose behind the faces in the
-fog intoxicated her. All that she knew about what she felt was that an
-insistent passion was dragging her towards some end that she could not
-see. The interest that she found in her conversations with Strickland
-gave her a clue towards the direction from which knowledge of her desire
-was coming to her, and gave her relief from the excitement at the same
-time because Strickland had no grievance against society; she only
-disliked people—ladies especially—talking “through their hats” about
-work. For instance, she did not mind Cyril or Teresa being untidy,
-because “it was their place to leave things about” and she was paid to
-look after them. They never referred to her duties nor seemed to think
-about them. Mrs. Carpenter and Susie implied by their manner that they
-were selected by Providence to lead comfortable lives for the reason
-that every one of their common attributes of humanity, such as their
-legs and their brains, were of such superior quality that their births,
-their lives and their deaths must not be confused with similar
-occurrences in other houses. Work! Of course they knew all about work!
-Did they not exhaust themselves in explaining how early rising and
-attention to detail actually saves labour? If you clean a room
-thoroughly every day there is no need to turn it out once a fortnight;
-if you clear up as you go, wipe the plates with paper and burn it
-directly to avoid clogging the sink, and if you wear gloves for the
-roughest work and put glycerine on the hands after washing, there should
-be at least two clear hours in the afternoon for mending stockings or
-even making clothes. That was the point where Strickland became “horn
-mad,” as she said. “I’d sooner earn me money by being starved and
-scolded as me mother was,” she declared, “than have it explained that
-there’s nothing to complain of. I’d rather have it all wrong and keep my
-liberty to object.”
-
-“But Strickland,” Teresa interrupted, “don’t you remember when you first
-came you said you wouldn’t be blasted by father and you were going to
-leave?”
-
-“Yes,” she replied, “and so I should have if he had made out, as some
-do, that it was all a misunderstanding. But when I saw that it was just
-his way, as you said, and he wasn’t aware of it, you will understand
-that it was no business of mine and I didn’t object. There’s never
-anything personal about the General’s language, I will say that for him.
-It seems it’s his nature, like my brother.”
-
-She took no notice of Evangeline, neither liked nor disliked her. “She’s
-a young lady that will marry,” she observed, “and change her servants
-and not notice who comes and goes nor how the work is done. She won’t
-make much of a house, but no doubt she’ll keep a housekeeper and not
-notice how the money goes. She’ll always be a favourite with the
-gentlemen. My brother’s wife is like that. You never saw such a
-house—and the mess! I often tidy it all up for her and it’s all the same
-next day. And yet he thinks the world of her and keeps out of the public
-house so as he can take her about. And my cousin Gladys is just the
-opposite; everything tidy and as it should be, but she’ll talk, talk,
-talk the whole day, pointing out what she’s done; and her husband has
-taken to drink; he can’t stand it, he says.”
-
-Strickland was right. Evangeline was already proving her capacity for
-being a favourite with the gentlemen by penetrating, one by one, Captain
-Hatton’s well-ordered defences. Being her father’s A.D.C. he was, as he
-had warned them on the first morning, so much about the house that he
-preferred they should not notice him; but then as Cyril counter-warned
-him, “they were a damned noticing family.”
-
-Captain Evan Hatton had always been shy of women because as a
-passionately serious little boy he had been for ever baited by a pair of
-lively young sisters. They meant not an atom of harm, but neither were
-they at all interested in abstract goodness, which together with
-mechanisms of any kind were Evan’s consolation for the trials of family
-life. He wanted with all his soul to know what made wheels (including
-those of the Universe) go round. Nature, which he admired, completely
-outwitted him there and he developed towards the Maker of the Universe
-the passionate respect of pertinacious inquiry incessantly baffled. He
-succeeded in finding out from time to time the elementary rules
-governing earthly wheels, but the vastness of the world (as he had
-glimpses of it through the life of his tame rabbits, the beauties of a
-well-kept garden, geography lessons and the upheaval of his own mind),
-kept him in a ceaseless ferment of questioning. The most industrious
-organ must rest sometimes; so at about fifteen years old he admitted
-himself beaten by the Higher Inquiry. He rested his poor mind in worship
-of that which he had questioned in vain, and concentrated his efforts on
-wheels which could be explained by those who made them. His sisters
-thought all this very funny indeed. They themselves approved of the
-Universe as a first-rate place to live in; it looked so charming, with
-hills and fields and woods all of nice colours. Winter, spring, summer
-and autumn were all nice in their way and could not be improved. The
-idea of tropical storms and polar silence and danger made it seem all
-the more cosy in England. Machinery was a delightful invention and they
-were glad it had been discovered, because it brought all sorts of
-comfort within reach and gave one’s brothers something suitable to do.
-They did laugh sometimes when Evan took a really good thing to pieces
-and couldn’t put it together again or when he got in such a bait about
-Emily giggling at the missionary. When the war broke out they stopped
-laughing at him at first. He was suddenly lifted in their estimation
-from the position of a dear, ridiculous creature to that of “our brother
-in France,” a god among Olympians—“while we have got to stick at home.”
-They worked creditably and humbly at home and when he came back they
-forgot his ribbons in the agitating question whether Emily’s cooking
-would still do or whether they ought not to scrape up £50 somehow and
-get that kitchenmaid who was leaving the club.
-
-When they began to get used to having him at home again they noticed
-that what had been only serious attention to rectitude in the old days
-now burned hot in him as passionate morality. They were good girls,
-secured from evil, if he had known it, by their happy natures. They
-would have thought it very silly to let a man kiss them unless he were
-an accepted lover, properly engaged; because where would be the point in
-being scrubbed by a hairy face; unless it were one of the poor darling
-boys leaving Victoria, and then of course one would hug any stranger.
-That is enough. We know the girls quite well now. There is nothing at
-all the matter with them, quite the contrary. But their brother’s heavy
-sense of responsibility for their souls was as much wasted as if he had
-been Joan of Arc hiding an unexpurgated edition of Shakespeare from the
-cat. All the mistakes he had made about his sisters he repeated with
-every woman he met afterwards. He was wrong every time because the
-attention he gave to their conversation was of the same kind as he would
-have given to a machine that didn’t interest him—if any such machine
-could be imagined—a musical box perhaps. Now everyone knows what happens
-to even the cheapest fiddle, still more to a bird, if its music is
-courted in that way. His sisters saved him from disaster by affectionate
-amusement that asked nothing of him. He offended a great many other
-women, but, to return to the simile of the fiddle, their discords meant
-as little to him as their harmonies, so he learned nothing from his
-failures.
-
-Then suddenly fate confronted him with Evangeline, who also wanted to
-know how wheels went round and—oh, the poor fellow! my heart bleeds for
-him—the wheels she was interested in were those of love and creation and
-human nature; and poor industrious Hatton, who only wished for
-righteousness and good machines, was put into her hands to take to
-pieces. It is, as has often been observed, a cruel world in many ways.
-
-Evangeline’s mother had also been on the track of true love in her
-youth; her story has been written. But a world of difference lay between
-them, for Susie had wanted to possess love and had studied to be all
-things to all men to gain it, giving nothing in return; her daughter
-wanted it in order to give it away, as another lavish nature might ask
-for wealth to spend.
-
-“Captain Hatton is less like an umbrella than he used to be, don’t you
-think?” she said one day to Teresa as they walked home through the Park.
-“When I go riding with him he often stops being polite and tells me
-about the tanks. Yesterday he told me about men out at the war who had
-visions. You’d never think he was that sort of man, would you?”
-
-“I never think much about him,” said Teresa, “I just think of him as a
-table that Father has brought in to work at.”
-
-“I know he doesn’t talk to everyone,” said Evangeline proudly. “He never
-talked to his sisters.”
-
-“Well, what do you do to him?” Teresa asked.
-
-“I don’t know. I just went on bravely and wouldn’t be put down. I was
-sure there must be something somewhere and I wanted to know what it was.
-He has a wonderful face, if you look at it. His eyes look so suffering
-sometimes, like something in a cage. I was sure he couldn’t be all ribs
-and the best waterproof twill really. I said to him once at the Manleys’
-dance, when we were sitting out,” she went on after a pause, “‘You know
-we can’t always go on pretending that you are a pair of trousers and a
-coat and I am a bag with flounces propped up on two chairs. I’m a person
-and so are you. We must have heaps and heaps of things to talk about.
-Do, for goodness’ sake, let one of us go ahead’—I really worked myself
-up. I felt I just would smash into that propriety.”
-
-“And what happened?” her sister asked.
-
-“He got red at first and didn’t answer and I got awfully frightened.
-Then he said in quite a natural voice, ‘If you will behave just as you
-like I will try not to put you off. It is very kind of you to trouble
-about me.’ Rather as if I were a dog that he had been asked to exercise.
-However it was a beginning, and now he starts off by himself. I think
-the great thing is that he doesn’t regard me as a girl.”
-
-“What does he think you are, then?”
-
-“I don’t know. A sort of inferior Tommy I should think; uneducated but
-harmless, and quite useless. I might be his batman, marooned with him in
-a desert full of baboons.”
-
-“It sounds very unlikely,” said Teresa. “You have a very muddled head,
-Chips, and you read such a lot of scraps that I believe it makes you
-worse; but you explain yourself quite clearly. I shall be interested
-to-morrow when I see that stuffed back at the breakfast table. Father
-would be amused.”
-
-“You are not to tell him,” said Evangeline quickly.
-
-“I’m not going to. At least I might have if you hadn’t told me not to.
-Why don’t you want him to know that his man is nicer than we thought?”
-
-“I don’t know, except that I discovered him and I don’t want to show him
-to people; he’s not nearly ready. And besides, he is like having a
-sitting-room of my own. I like a retreat that no one else knows the way
-to.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Is Hatton in the house by any chance?” Cyril asked one day when he came
-in to tea.
-
-“I don’t know at all, dear,” said Susie. “I should think very likely; he
-generally is.”
-
-“He’s helping Chips to wash Tricot in the bathroom,” said Teresa.
-
-Cyril stopped in the act of filling his pipe. “H’m,” he remarked.
-“Hereditary instinct, I suppose. Poor fellow.”
-
-“I know by your face that you mean something unkind, Cyril,” said his
-wife, “but I don’t see how even you can make out that there can be
-anything hereditary about washing a dog.”
-
-“Not if there’s only one person to do it,” he replied. He was holding a
-match to the tobacco and went on explaining between puffs. “But when
-Hatton, who is a nervous fellow—begins washing poodles with your
-daughter—your own little girl—who isn’t generally fond of work—I seem to
-see the young Eve adorning herself with the leaf of experiment just as
-Mother did. Have you ever seen a young chicken begin to scratch the
-moment it leaves the egg? It isn’t imitation, because it does it just
-the same if it is raised in an incubator.”
-
-Teresa looked anxiously amused as a mother does whose favourite child is
-not behaving well in a drawing-room, but Mrs. Fulton was smarting under
-old sores. She said coldly, “Perhaps you would finish washing Tricot,
-dear Dicky. You had better tell Captain Hatton that your father wants
-him.”
-
-“Don’t be silly,” said Cyril. “I don’t want him. I told him there was
-nothing for him to do this afternoon and as I didn’t see him at the Polo
-ground and found his hat in the hall when I came in I remembered the
-story of Adam and thought I’d ask, that’s all.”
-
-Teresa had gone out while he was speaking.
-
-“May I ask if you never want the girls to marry?” Susie asked.
-
-“Lord, no, I don’t care,” he replied, “but what’s that got to do with
-Hatton? I was only joking. I suppose he knows all about washing dogs. I
-expect he likes it. And Chips doesn’t know the business as well as you,
-Sue; she won’t construe a wag of the tail into an offer of marriage.
-Hatton is a very upright man. He’d probably consult you first and lay
-out his plans on paper in the approved style.”
-
-“Well, if he did I’m sure I don’t know what I should say,” she answered
-thoughtfully. Cyril had once explained to a bewildered friend, “The
-great charm of an argument with Sue is that you never know which part of
-a conversation she will choose to take the trick with. You may find that
-the only lie you have told for years is used as an ace.”
-
-“I mean,” she went on, “that I don’t think Evangeline ought to be
-encouraged to act hastily. I like Mr. Varens so much better than Evan
-Hatton. He will probably come into his father’s place very soon.”
-
-“Great Scott!” exclaimed Cyril, really startled at last. “Has Varens
-asked her after dining here once? What in heaven’s name possesses the
-poor devils! But I oughtn’t to talk I suppose.”
-
-“Don’t be so absurd, Cyril. I never said he had proposed to her. I only
-meant that she hadn’t had time to consider him.”
-
-“What do you mean, ‘consider him?’”
-
-“I merely took Mr. Varens as an instance. I don’t want her to be pushed
-into liking Evan Hatton just because she hasn’t had time to think of any
-other. Ill-considered marriages are often so regrettable.”
-
-“If I were a woman,” said Cyril, “I should say that I didn’t know
-whether to laugh or cry at the things you say. Unlace me, Emmeline, and
-give me some more tea—have you got any?” He passed his cup.
-
-“But do you see what I mean, Cyril?” she persisted.
-
-“Oh, I see all right,” he replied. “My eye wants shading if anything;
-it’s positively dazzling, the light that you throw on matters of the
-heart. It’s a pity you never met Darwin. He wrote on natural selection,
-but I’m not sure that he mastered the subject. You might——” He stopped
-as the door opened and Evangeline came in with Captain Hatton.
-
-Evan glanced at his general, who was peacefully sunk in an armchair,
-playing with the cat. Tricot, the poodle, followed into the room and
-walked about shaking himself restlessly as if he missed something.
-
-“That’s all right, old Tricot,” said Cyril. “Come here and talk to
-Pussy; she’s your friend.”
-
-Tricot came in innocent confidence, and the usual recriminations between
-him and the cat began.
-
-“It is funny, if you notice, that dogs are all for love and cats all for
-marriage,” said Cyril thoughtfully, “and the two together are always
-chosen to represent domestic life—at least the ill-considered domestic
-life that you were talking about, Sue. I suppose it’s handed on for
-generations.”
-
-Evan Hatton did not hear. He was at the window with Evangeline, trying
-to make her understand the principle of a magneto. “Here’s Emma coming,”
-she announced presently from the window. “She’s getting off the tram. Do
-you want her, Dicky?”
-
-“I’m going out with her,” Teresa answered. “She said she would come.”
-
-“Where on earth to at this time?”
-
-“She has got a place where children go after school; she said she would
-take me.”
-
-“I do wish she wouldn’t wear that hat,” Evangeline said critically,
-watching Emma as she came up the garden path. “I wonder where good
-milliners go to when they die. They never seem to mix with good people
-in this world.”
-
-Captain Hatton’s face reddened and he turned away from the window.
-
-“What’s the matter?” asked Evangeline. “Are you going?”
-
-“Yes,” he answered shortly and then he said good-bye and left the room.
-He nearly ran into Emma in the hall, so great was his haste and his
-preoccupation. “I beg your pardon,” he apologised. “How could I have
-been so stupid. Did I knock your hat?” for she had put up her hand to
-straighten it.
-
-“Captain Hatton!” Evangeline called over the banisters, “are you coming
-riding before breakfast to-morrow?”
-
-“If you wish me to,” he answered unsteadily and waited for a moment
-while Emma ran upstairs. But Evangeline only replied, “All right, eight
-o’clock then,” and disappeared, and he heard the girls’ laughter in the
-drawing-room. He let himself out and spent the evening and most of the
-night walking along the sea shore.
-
-“That’s an unlucky hat of yours, Emma,” said Evangeline when she went
-back to the drawing-room. “I believe there’s a devil in it. We had one
-row about it before you came up.” She went off singing.
-
-Teresa’s elusive desire had begun to show itself openly to her since she
-met Emma Gainsborough. She had been allowed at last behind the curtain
-where the faces that haunted her in the streets were no longer imaginary
-characters in a scene at which she looked on as a spectator. She began
-to know individual Tommys and Gordons and Gladyses and Victorias, Mrs.
-Potter and Mrs. Jason; to understand why Mr. Potter was out of work and
-what it meant to half-a-dozen lives when Mr. Jason brought home only a
-fraction of his earnings. She saw disease for the first time. She met
-pleasure and wit and obscenity and tragedy jostling familiarly together
-without prejudice or distinction, engendered by all possible unions of
-hunger, love, jealousy, optimism, sensuality, pride, gentleness,
-patience, brutality, callousness, kindness, ambition, hopelessness,
-fidelity, in all possible conditions of filth or heartrending strife
-with squalor; intelligence burning indomitably in fogs of prejudice and
-lies and stupidity. She had torn the veil which the faces in the street
-seemed to draw down between Mrs. Carpenter’s “duty to the city” and some
-vital secret that the city kept to itself. The passionate love of
-fellowship that had tormented her with its insistence and eluded her by
-its formlessness had taken shape in the places that Emma and her leaders
-were patiently trying to remake, and now she thought of little else.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
-
-If Evangeline’s campaign against Evan Hatton’s prejudices had been a
-public war, the supporters of either side would have seen that the end
-was now drawing near. Optimists among the Evangelineites would have
-rubbed their hands and said that she had got the forces of his harsh
-morality fairly on the run; the pessimists would have prophesied (though
-admitting Evangeline’s strength) that the struggle would break out again
-as soon as peace was signed. The Evanites would either have declared
-that Morality was going to the dogs and was being sold by Self-interest
-and Pleasure, or they would have prepared to retreat, still fighting, to
-the height of “A Strong Man’s Influence,” and determined to reorganise
-for a new offensive when the enemy should be weakened by marriage.
-
-An important battle took place during the ride that Evangeline had
-arranged, when Evan retreated after her flippancy on the subject of dead
-milliners. He called for her and brought her horse from the livery
-stable at eight the next morning, and they rode away in that state of
-silent tension which precedes an explanation when two people who care
-for each other have parted in offence. Evangeline tried hard to make him
-“start talking by himself,” as she had boasted to Teresa that he was now
-in the habit of doing. She tempted him with proof that she had absorbed
-his lecture on the magneto and was mistress of its difficulties. She
-threw him touching confidences about her plans in little everyday
-matters. But all in vain. At last her temper rose slightly.
-
-“What is the matter with you?” she asked. “Are you angry with me?”
-
-“I have no right to be angry with you,” he answered with emotion, “but I
-don’t understand you, and yet I know that you are good and could be
-great. Why do you pretend to be like the others and say things that are
-unworthy of you?”
-
-Evangeline was overawed. “What things?” she asked timidly.
-
-“It was a silly trifle, and I know I am a fool—but it made me hot—what
-you said about good milliners not associating with good people in this
-world. Emma Gainsborough is giving her life to God’s work as readily as
-the saints gave theirs—she’s a Crusader if you like—and you make paltry
-fun of her hat. There now! I suppose you won’t speak to me again.”
-
-“Yes, I shall,” said Evangeline. “If you will not shut yourself up into
-that dreadful silence you may say anything—absolutely anything. You make
-me see such a long way when you talk. I read the papers by myself and
-get into such knots because I can’t see any connection between different
-things. But when you hurl me about from Emma’s hat to the Crusaders, who
-I thought were people who fought in nightgowns and red crosses with a
-feather in their helmets and defeated the heathen—why—let me see, where
-am I?—well you see how exhilarating it is! I feel as if my mind had been
-galloping miles in the fresh air in new places.”
-
-“Great heavens, what a child you are!” he said, looking at her in
-wonderment. Then he smiled and held out his hand. “I’m sorry,” he said.
-
-Evangeline shook it heartily. “So am I,” she assured him. “And will you
-show me how to take the car to pieces next time Father lets you off?”
-
-“Nonsense, he won’t want it taken to pieces,” said Evan. “What’s the
-good of that?”
-
-“Just to see the wheels,” she begged. “And then I should be so useful if
-anything went wrong.”
-
-“No, you haven’t got any mechanical sense,” he argued. “I can see that.
-You understand a theory when I tell it you, but when it comes to putting
-it into practice you don’t think a bit. I’ve watched you learning to
-drive; you do it all by the book.”
-
-“Well, what should I do it by?” she asked.
-
-“Common sense and a thorough knowledge of the reason for everything. The
-fact that any part of a machine does so-and-so isn’t enough; you must
-know why, and what will be the result if it doesn’t act, and then you
-must treat it so that it will act.”
-
-“Oh, dear,” she said. “There’s the sun coming out! Let’s gallop while
-there is grass.”
-
-It is superfluous to follow this love episode any further. I have met
-ladies who are always passionately anxious to know “what he said” when a
-girl announces her engagement, and who need no encouragement to tell in
-return “how John did it.” But I am all against emotional indecency, and
-unless any private conversations in this book have to be recorded in the
-interests of research, or are betrayed by the genial indiscretions of
-sympathy, they will be omitted. Evan is the last person who would wish
-anything to be said of him in that moment when Nature, who had always
-laughed at his attempts to make her acknowledge the sovereignty of such
-Divine Rule as he was able to imagine, pushed Evangeline into his arms
-and commanded him to take her or suffer the pains of hell.
-
-He saw no reason to refuse. But the end was not yet, though it had
-become inevitable. Evan had reserves. Evangeline’s gallant forces had a
-tough time of it before they won. Suspicion was the hardest to beat
-down; Evan’s sisters had helped to make that so strong. He reviewed his
-bonny black doubts every day, and led them out against Evangeline’s
-joys. But there was all the difference in the world between his sisters’
-cheerfulness and hers. Their pleasure in life was that of mice in a
-granary, hers was that of a rush of invaders over a rich country; she
-wanted all there was. Her assurance that God loves His world was
-invincible. Evan’s doubts suffered casualties that put them out of
-action; but for a happy marriage they should all have been dead. The
-smallest remnant of a strong army is dangerous.
-
-These battles went on unobserved by Cyril. Susie noticed and said
-nothing, because she knew that unasked advice to a girl precipitates a
-crisis, and she hoped in secret that Evangeline loved her freedom too
-much to do what her mother would call “anything rash,” such as binding
-herself in marriage before she had reviewed all likely candidates. As
-weeks went on she became more anxious. There was a look of settled
-happiness about Evangeline that was not what you would expect of a young
-girl, Susie said to herself. It is a mistake to wear the heart on the
-sleeve. One of the great joys of her own girlhood had been the security
-of living behind a veil of misty sweetness that allowed the public free
-scope for their imagination of what might be behind it and yet committed
-her to nothing. Misunderstandings had arisen in that way but she had not
-suffered and those who had done so had only their own imaginations to
-blame. She still made use of the veil, and the only person who made her
-feel nervous about it was Cyril. He had the knack of twitching it away,
-and never tired of the joke, which seemed to compensate him for the
-nothingness he exposed. In one way only, her disappointment about
-Evangeline’s choice was a good thing to her. She felt it as a revenge on
-her husband for his cynicism about women and the jibes he aimed at her
-about their duplicity towards men. “Perhaps he will see now,” she said
-to herself—her very soul bridling at the Spirit of Man—“that they do
-need protection after all. If he really cared for her I could have
-discussed it with him and he could have got another A.D.C. until this
-had blown over. As it is, it must just go on, and I can’t prevent
-it—with the man here all day while the sons of rich people are sitting
-on office stools, shuffling oats and sugar through their fingers. Why
-can’t some of them come and ride with her and show her their motors? And
-I suppose Dicky will marry a rent collector with a wooden leg, or a
-socialist who stands on a chair and wants to take away our money.” Her
-thoughts wandered into all sorts of bitter possibilities, not at all in
-keeping with the maxim that “if everyone were happy and contented
-everything would come right,” which she brought in so delightfully at
-Mrs. Carpenter’s little informal conferences on social reform. “Mrs.
-Fulton is so original in what she says,” was a remark constantly made.
-But true it was that she thought differently at the moment.
-Circumstances alter cases, as she so often said.
-
-Because of this grievance of hers against him, Cyril was not told of her
-fears, and in due time Evangeline’s battle was won. Evan frowned on the
-tattered remnant of his doubts and bade them go home. He went in, his
-heart stumbling and stopping, to the study where Cyril was asleep after
-a day’s hunting, and shut the door.
-
-Cyril came down early before dinner, and found Evangeline reading the
-evening paper in the drawing-room.
-
-“Hullo,” he said.
-
-“Hullo, dear,” she replied, and went on reading.
-
-“So you and Hatton have fixed it up,” he began. Evangeline put down the
-paper, and looked up at him.
-
-“Is that all right?” she asked. “You’re not cross, are you?”
-
-“No, I’m not cross, my dear,” he said, as if he were thinking of
-something else. “I suppose you wouldn’t tell me any more, would you? Why
-you really want him, for instance.”
-
-“Yes, I would, of course,” she answered readily. “I’d tell you
-anything—though that’s not true, because I told Dicky weeks ago that he
-was getting—oh well, you know—quite tame—and she thought you would be
-pleased, but I wouldn’t let her tell you because—I didn’t want to spoil
-it.”
-
-“H’m,” said Cyril.
-
-“I mean I liked feeling that none of you knew him properly.”
-
-“H’m,” said Cyril again.
-
-“Well, what’s the matter?”
-
-“A powerful apple,” he observed. “Power, my dear child, power.”
-
-“Oh, Father,” she sighed, “you’re not going on again about that dreadful
-old Eden, are you? I do wish no one had ever told you the story. You
-think women are always tempting men to this day.”
-
-“So they are when it comes to marriage,” he asserted. “Don’t you make
-any mistake about that.”
-
-Evangeline felt desperate, as if she were caught and entangled. “Do you
-mean that men never fall in love with them?” Tears gathered in her eyes.
-She had had some weary work at the last stand of Hatton’s doubts, and
-now her father, whom she loved and believed in as a friend, was going to
-take the top off the morning of her happiness.
-
-Cyril understood and repented. “No,” he said, “Hatton loves you—but——”
-he looked at her inquiring face and decided to revise what he was going
-to say. “Have you ever heard of spontaneous combustion? It’s a
-troublesome thing, but I should have more faith in your sex if they
-suffered from it in their emotions. They think too hard for my taste.
-But that’s all. Hatton is the devil of a hard thinker himself, so you
-had better leave him to scratch his head, and say, ‘yes, dear,’ like
-your mother does when I give her the benefit of my wisdom. Then all you
-need is to go out and do just the opposite, and say afterwards that that
-was what you thought he meant. Don’t incense him at the time, is the
-great thing. ‘The Housewife’s Vade Mecum,’ as I read somewhere, or
-‘Little Polly’s first steps in efficiency’.” He kissed her on his way
-across the room to turn on some more light. “Just to wish you luck,
-dear, and to show there’s no ill-feeling.”
-
-He returned to the fire and drew up a chair. “I’m in favour of marriage
-for all, myself,” he went on, “young and old, rich and poor, never mind
-the reason, but get on with the event itself. The advent of little ones
-is, after all, the only thing that matters, as your mother explained to
-me. And that was you, Chips. There was a devil of a row before you
-turned up.”
-
-“Oh, did you and Mother quarrel?” she asked, very much surprised.
-
-“You can’t call a one-sided thing exactly a quarrel,” he said. “No one
-but a man could quarrel with me.”
-
-“Couldn’t they?” she asked.
-
-“No. But your mother is very powerful in the way I was describing;——”
-
-Susie came in just then. Cyril had told her while they were dressing
-that Evan had “put in a claim as consort for Chips; which just bears out
-what I said this style of architecture would lead to when we came;
-except that he isn’t wealthy. In fact, he has very little except his
-pay.”
-
-Susie took the line that this was “all that could be expected in a place
-where people think so much of money that they never leave their offices
-till it is time to go to bed.”
-
-“That ought to make them all the more anxious to marry,” he remarked,
-“or else how can they enjoy any intellectual conversation?”
-
-“Of course you will twist everything I say to a coarse standpoint,
-Cyril,” she said, “because those sort of cheap jokes are so easy to
-make.”
-
-“Where’s the joke?” he asked, putting on his coat. “‘Honi soit qui mal y
-pense,’ as the leaders of taste remind us.”
-
-Susie made no answer, but closed the door between their rooms, and she
-did not go down until dinner was announced.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
-
-Among the people who called on Susie from Mr. Price’s Paradise, the
-county, was Lady Varens, David Varens’s stepmother. Sir Richard and
-Cyril were admirably suited to one another because the old man was a
-sportsman by nature and practice. He had had an adventurous youth and
-“mercifully,” as Cyril said, “forgotten the details.” Then, on his
-father’s death, he came back to Millshire and managed the estate with
-the same thoroughness that had brought him success in less peaceful
-enterprises. He married first a guest of one of his hunting neighbours.
-She was lying unconscious on a bank, with her horse grazing beside her,
-when he saw her for the first time; and when he had brought her round
-and taken her home and called every other day to ask how she was it
-seemed natural to regard her as his own property. She died when David
-was nine, and Sir Richard married, two years afterwards, a lady whom he
-thought to have been unjustly divorced from a drunken old peer who had
-married her from the schoolroom.
-
-She was good to David and kept her own counsel, so Millshire allowed her
-to carry on the tradition of Varens hospitality; in fact there was an
-extra piquancy about her parties owing to the opportunity they gave for
-a little private skeleton hunting among intimate friends. Towards the
-following Christmas, while Evangeline was staying with Evan’s sisters,
-Sir Richard invited Cyril to take a day or two’s hunting with him and
-stay over the week-end. Lady Varens hoped that Mrs. Fulton would come
-too, and bring her daughter, to hunt or not, as she liked. Evangeline
-being away, Teresa was torn from her heart’s delight, the alleys, the
-rotting garrets and the dingy clubs where she groped all day for the
-scattered remnant of what seemed to her the lost birthright of the
-bottom class, their right to the fellowship of common desires and tastes
-with the people who filled her mother’s drawing-room.
-
-“What is the good of this eternal talk about all men being able to reach
-any position they are fitted for, if, when you come across the most
-lovable people in that class, you can hardly bear to sit with them for
-five minutes because of smells and anxieties and habits that shut them
-off like a cage that they didn’t make themselves and can’t get out of?”
-she asked Emma Gainsborough.
-
-“We are trying to get them out,” said Emma.
-
-“I know,” Teresa answered, “but I don’t see how you can unless you kill
-Mrs. Carpenter.” She and Mrs. Carpenter had perhaps the same end in view
-when they worked among the dismal crowds that swarmed in the mud and
-hideousness of the poorer quarters, but to the casual observer it looked
-as though the “charity ladies,” as Strickland called them, were under
-the impression that in their promotion of health and virtue they were
-pressing something new on somebody who had never heard of it, while
-Teresa hoped to restore a treasure that had been lost by past
-generations.
-
-Her own experience was showing her that the cage door gives way before
-devotees who will suffer the violation of everything that makes life
-sweet to them for the sake of what they hold dearer, and she also
-learned the freemasonry of hard work; the point where she stuck was the
-apparent impossibility of ever bridging the gulf between Mrs. Carpenter
-and Mrs. Potter. How to wean Mrs. Carpenter from the idea that the
-social order was all right because she was on the bright side of it, and
-at the same time convince Mrs. Potter that it was not all wrong because
-she was on the dark one? As one of Emma’s friends pointed out, twenty
-centuries had passed since the only serious attempt had been made to
-bring about an understanding between the ancestors of those two
-irreconcilable ladies. The best spiritual engineering had been carried
-on ever since along the lines then laid down; communications had been
-devised and traffic of a sort carried on. But as soon as Mrs. Potter
-advanced a little and caught sight of Mrs. Carpenter and went for her,
-bald-headed, and when Mrs. Carpenter sailed along from her end of the
-bridge and then sat down and sang to Mrs. Potter——. I must stop this
-allegory or the reader will break down in tears of perplexity and
-perhaps send the book straight back to the library; unless he has
-himself lived for a time miserably wedged between the philanthropists
-and the slums of a city.
-
-To get on with the story. Teresa was, as I have said, torn from her
-absorbing occupation and compelled to go with her father and mother to
-be the Varens’ guest at Aldwych Court.
-
-I believe there is no place so comfortable to stay in as an English
-country house belonging to a good hostess. The luxury of dressing in any
-part of her room without the penalty of gooseflesh; the deep, scented
-bath and warm towel three feet square; the rich, dry fluffiness under
-foot, and the cup of tea afterwards, brought by a maid who seemed to
-have nothing else to do, banished all visions of Mrs. Potter to such a
-remote corner of Teresa’s consciousness that when she did remember her
-again the recollection had no more sting than a bad dream. She ate her
-dinner, served by willing men and women who performed their duties like
-priests of Isis, instead of, as dear Strickland did, giving her the
-uneasy feeling that one course would have been quite enough if ladies
-were not so greedy. She had observed sometimes to Evangeline that
-Millport maids treated their mistresses as if they were parrots whose
-dirty cages had to be cleaned out, and whom it “took up people’s time”
-to feed.
-
-David Varens is to play his part on the stage now, but there is to be no
-sudden change in the music to waltz time, nor cries of the villagers,
-“But here comes the Prince! Gay and dancing, bright and prancing, sing
-we now our welcome,” nor will the light fade and moon children glide out
-from under trees and sit upon their mushrooms while he sings, “Queen of
-the dusk and lodestar of my dreams.” He comes on like Cyril’s
-millionaire, “walking quite unaffectedly” among a number of ordinary
-people. It was not until Teresa and her mother went away on Monday that
-she began seriously to prefer him to Mrs. Potter. It may be difficult
-for anyone who is unacquainted with the love of Beauty for the Beast to
-understand what a disappointment it was to her to find that her heart
-had betrayed her and was transferring its allegiance to a normal object.
-It was something between childish terror of the sea and the remorse of a
-pilgrim whose prayers have grown cold that followed on the joy his
-presence gave her. “How happy I am,” she thought, and then, as a ghostly
-voice demanded the truth, she added, “and I don’t care a hang what Mrs.
-Potter is doing.”
-
-There were other people staying in the house, but she did not notice
-them and no more need we. Lady Varens and Susie talked and knitted and
-drove, and Lady Varens liked Susie, because it was impossible not to on
-a slight acquaintance, and Susie liked Lady Varens because there was
-mystery about her and she had great charm, with her soft eyes that saw
-much and told nothing, and her sensitive mouth whose utterances led to
-conversation, but also told nothing. Susie admired in her the ideal
-woman, and “we are so much alike” was what she chiefly thought of her.
-Cyril enjoyed his hunting and sat up late in the smoking-room.
-
-“I hope you will come and see us, Mr. Varens,” said Susie before they
-left. “Your mother, I know, hardly ever leaves this lovely place, and no
-more should I if it were mine. But I know you do come into town
-sometimes. We can always give you lunch and it will be such a change to
-hear about the beautiful country things in the middle of all our
-ugliness; I never get used to it. I shall be so anxious to hear whether
-that dear black cow gets all right again. Cows are such mothers, you
-know; one feels so sorry for them having to be parted from those sweet
-calves. You are going to manage the estate now, Sir Richard told me. How
-delightful that will be, and what a saving of anxiety to him.”
-
-“Yes,” said David, “I come in two or three times a week to the
-University. Perhaps you would let me come one of those days, may I?
-Thanks very much.”
-
-He took Teresa through the woods that morning. She said less than usual,
-and presently he noticed this. “You look worried,” he remarked. “Is
-anything wrong?”
-
-“I don’t know that you can call it wrong,” she answered, “but I feel
-almost sick at the thought of going back to Emma Gainsborough and her
-office. It doesn’t seem any use from here. I was bent on teaching music
-to Albert Potter the day I came, and now I want to turn him into a calf
-or a frog. What is the good of Emma going on sending different kinds of
-splints for him and telling Mrs. Potter how to put them on? The money I
-have eaten since I came here would have saved him from getting like that
-a year ago.”
-
-“Look here,” said David seriously, “I have been along that road while I
-was at Oxford, and it leads nowhere, except into a sort of maze where
-you lose yourself and die for want of a fresh argument. If I had ideas I
-would come down to your place and do what you are doing for as long as
-you wanted me, but I haven’t got any ideas and I have got fields—or
-rather my father has, and can’t look after them as he used to—and I am
-going to see what is to be got out of them.”
-
-“I have neither ideas nor fields,” she said, “but I had an enormous
-family when I left home last week, and now I have been happy and
-forgotten them.”
-
-“Did you forget them?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, quite,” she answered sadly.
-
-“Then you can’t really care for them enough to succeed,” he said. This
-struck Teresa a blow. “Don’t you ever forget your farms and things?” she
-asked, “not for a minute?”
-
-“No, except when I’m asleep or hunting.”
-
-“Hunting! my hunting is done down there,” she said illogically.
-
-“Then where are your farms?”
-
-“Oh, blow!” said Teresa.
-
-“All right. Well, when will you come back here?”
-
-“When I can’t bear any more committees of the charitable. I wish you
-could see Mrs. Carpenter. Do you remember, she was at the Gainsboroughs
-the night you were there?”
-
-“Was she? I forget. What like?”
-
-“Like an hour glass, in pink—with the sand quite solid.”
-
-“I didn’t notice. I couldn’t make your Miss Gainsborough talk, that’s
-all I know. Is there anything the matter with her?”
-
-“Dear me, no,” she answered in surprise. “She’s very amusing when you
-know her. Mr. Price got her into such a state of nerves. He did me, too.
-Do you understand him?”
-
-“No, but I think he is only trying to mix society; just what you want to
-do with Mrs. Potter. If you encourage her you ought to encourage him.”
-
-Teresa looked at him to see whether he was laughing, but they had come
-to a stile and he was waiting politely for her to get over. Instead of
-climbing she sat down on it and faced him. “It is absolutely different,”
-she began to explain. “What I can’t bear is to find people, who would be
-just like you if they had been sent to school and fed, unable to express
-themselves and living in such horrible places that one can hardly attend
-to what they are trying to say because of the awfulness. And it is
-nonsense to say that they can always get out. All self-made men say
-afterwards that they were newsboys, but there are thousands of darling
-newsboys who haven’t got just the bit of extra that made Dick
-Whittington; and, as my mother says, purring among her furs on a
-platform, ‘they are often taught to be bad.’ She does talk such rot, and
-yet often her platitudes wouldn’t be so telling if they were not made up
-over a small piece of truth. There is nothing like that about that
-dreadful man Price; is there now? Come, speak up.”
-
-“He wants to get into a better set and explain himself,” said David.
-
-“Nonsense,” answered Teresa, “not a better set at all; only a more
-fashionable one.”
-
-“Well, but you say that your set isn’t any better than Mrs. Potter’s,
-only more fashionable. If that is so then Mrs. Potter is a snob like
-Price. But if you claim some other advantage that you want Mrs. Potter
-to share, why shouldn’t Price be sensitive about having been born
-outside a set that claims to be better than his own?”
-
-“I wish I could get someone who has as much ‘lip’ as you have to talk to
-you,” said Teresa. “I can’t do it, but I know you are wrong.”
-
-“Your Potter vocabulary is beyond me,” said David politely.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
-
-The curtain now goes up on Evangeline’s marriage. It took place six
-months ago. Cyril has a new A.D.C. with a fluffy wife and blue-eyed
-child; all three as happy as grigs. His name is Jimmy Trotter—(the
-Trotters of Burnside) and she was Miss Fripps of Ely, a daughter of the
-famous Dean Fripps. Cyril doesn’t mind Trotter, who does his work all
-right, and Mrs. Trotter is always good fun at a party, though Susie
-thinks she is rather empty-headed, and can’t understand how she can
-afford a nurse like that for the baby; it would be much more sensible if
-she looked after it herself, and got a really nice girl to take charge
-in the afternoon. Mrs. Trotter thinks not, as she does not believe in
-nice girls and prefers to save money by doing the cooking in which she
-is expert and let the baby have the whole attention of a woman whom she
-can trust. She doesn’t believe in making oneself a premature fright by
-being a Jack-of-all-trades. They have recurrent arguments on this
-question and Susie gets the worst of it, for Mrs. Trotter disposes of
-platitudes as she would of kitchen refuse, without a moment’s thought
-whether there may not be diamonds among them. Therefore, Susie says she
-is empty-headed, and does not care to see more of her than politeness
-demands.
-
-And you should see Mrs. Trotter mimicking “Mrs. General” to the wives of
-Cyril’s staff, all of whom she knows intimately! Of course it got round
-in time to Susie through Mrs. Carpenter, who heard of it from the wife
-of the Staff-Captain, who was rather keen on getting into the University
-set.
-
-Evangeline was happy at this time, living at a place we will call Drage,
-where Cyril had got Evan an appointment. He found there several men who
-had been with him in the trenches. Their recollections pictured him as a
-man who had been of the greatest value as an unfailing joke; a good
-joke, too, for you never knew when it mightn’t blow you sky high. It was
-always worth while raising him when you had a lot to think of, because
-his explosions of temper were entertaining enough to take your mind off
-any unpleasantness. And he was such a thoroughly good fellow; would do
-anything or go anywhere, and his mechanical genius had earned their
-admiration and gratitude for many improvised good things. Hicks
-remembered him taking a Hun’s watch to pieces in his dug-out and—the
-story that followed was always a success. It preceded his arrival at
-Drage, and Evan found everyone pleased to welcome him and his wife.
-
-Evangeline’s enthusiasms and her naïveté were soon the talk of the
-place. Some of the women regarded her as a fool and some as “a very
-dashing young person.” She certainly was, as Strickland had prophesied,
-“a favourite with the gentlemen.” There is a pose of free speech and
-free living that is as closely bound by its self-imposed limits as any
-other doctrine, and it is particularly false because the naturally free
-have never heard of freedom; as Cyril would have pointed out, “it was
-knowledge of the damned thing’s existence that made Eve a slave to
-propriety.” Evangeline’s knowledge of good and evil was, as we have
-seen, gathered almost entirely from the newspapers, and was therefore
-negligible. So she thought freely (which is different from being a free
-thinker) and Evan, who had eaten his apple with attention, was
-scandalised, and the ladies of Drage, who wore their aprons merely as a
-class distinction, cutting them long or short or leaving them off
-altogether, as fashion dictated, were astonished at her behaviour.
-Indeed when her instincts did, as she once hoped they would, “burst with
-a pop in the sun” of experience, she loved creation with a generosity
-that might have led her into all sorts of trouble had she been as
-faithless a woman as her mother. She was fascinated by the idea of
-having a child of her own, “a brand new person, whom no one has ever
-seen before, conjured from the vasty deep,” she said (with some school
-recollection of a quotation connected with impressive magic). She adored
-Evan as the god behind the machine and lost a great deal of the interest
-in his character that had made her take pride in his reluctant
-confidences. Splitting hairs in argument about sin seemed to her an
-absurd waste of time when it was clear that no one would bother to sin
-if he were happy; and who could be other than happy when the war was
-over and a new generation coming into life? Evan’s friends enjoyed her
-hospitality in peace, for she never teased them by the militant
-chastity, provoking but unyielding, which turns many a good bride into a
-firebrand. The average Englishman does not often engage in illicit love
-affairs unless they are offered him; so Evangeline’s lack of decorum was
-regarded as a new and perfectly innocent game. Evan, with his explosive
-seriousness, had been a first-class jest in the old days, and here he
-was back again, married to some one just as funny in an opposite way,
-and the two together were simply splendid. The jokers were never tired
-of setting the one against the other in public, without an idea that
-differences of opinion could hold any danger for two people so obviously
-in love. They relished the stories that went round about Evangeline’s
-latest indiscretions and told how shirty old Evan had been and how the
-two had gone off together afterwards talking all the way and you could
-bet she got it properly in the neck when they reached home. One evening,
-these mischief makers who had egged on Evangeline to persuade poor old
-Hicks to do his Fiji dance, with young Blake lashed to a chair in the
-character of a maiden, went home to bed in the highest spirits, and left
-Evangeline and her husband alone.
-
-“I shall chuck my job at once and leave here if you ever encourage that
-sort of thing again,” he said, standing in front of the embers of the
-fire that had made the little room so cheerful earlier in the evening.
-He had put young Blake’s chair back into its place with a savage push,
-and was now winding up the string that had been broken in the final
-ecstasy that brought the house down. Evangeline stared at him with
-round, startled eyes. “Darling Evan,” she said, “it was a game. What on
-earth is the matter?”
-
-“It was outrageous. If you had ever been among savages——” he stopped,
-speechless.
-
-“But I haven’t,” she argued. “That’s just it. I want to know. It was
-fascinating. I felt as if I were the girl and he were getting nearer and
-nearer—it was gloriously exciting. And anyhow—dear Evan—don’t be an ass;
-it was pure farce, and I don’t believe he knows anything about Fijians
-at all.”
-
-“My mother would have died before she would have allowed such a thing in
-her drawing-room,” said Evan. “You have no womanly dignity. Everyone
-talks about you and the way you behave as if you were married to the
-whole staff.”
-
-“Oh, what is the matter with you?” cried Evangeline. “I was so happy and
-I have done nothing whatever. I don’t know what you are trying to get
-at. How can I be married to the whole staff?”
-
-“I assure you no stranger could point out which was your husband in a
-mixed gathering,” he replied coldly.
-
-“Oh my dear, you’re like an eclipse of the sun,” she said, getting up
-and putting her arms round his neck. “I have been so happy that I had
-forgotten all your Mumbo Jumbo of this or that being right or wrong,
-that you used to make my flesh creep with till I thought you really knew
-about it. I believe you would blow out pleasure like a lamp if you could
-and make us all sit and eat repentance by corpse light. I am going to
-make another fire in my room and have tea and cake there, and if you
-don’t come and cheer up I’ll telephone for one of my other husbands to
-come instead.” So Evan relented until the next time.
-
-They came back to Millport for a visit at Easter.
-
-“And when does Mrs. Hatton expect the great event?” asked Mrs. Carpenter
-of Susie when she and Mrs. Eric Manley and Mrs. Vachell had remained
-behind to tea after a committee meeting. The committee had been dealing,
-among other matters, with the case of Mrs. Potter’s daughter, for whom
-Teresa asked admittance to the maternity home they represented.
-
-“A particularly sad case,” Susie had remarked, “because it seems that
-she hardly knew the man and only encouraged him because her husband
-drank and she had nothing to live on. If she had only come to me, as
-Teresa might have suggested to her, I would have advised her what to
-do.”
-
-“What would you have advised?” asked Mrs. Vachell curiously.
-
-“I should have tried to explain our point of view,” said Susie, “and
-shown her that, apart from the disgrace and all that, the man would
-probably leave her sooner or later, as he has.”
-
-“But surely, Mrs. Fulton, that is not the main point?” said Mrs.
-Carpenter. “Surely we want to awaken something more than self-interest?
-We want to make these girls understand that the marriage vow often
-implies suffering.”
-
-“Oh, of course,” replied Susie with a far-away look. “But I think a
-woman always hopes to the end. They are so confiding and they forget
-that it will probably lead them into trouble.”
-
-In replying to Mrs. Carpenter’s other question, however, she took a
-brighter view of marriage. “Not quite yet,” she said, “but to tell you
-the truth, I never ask many questions of that sort. I always think that
-the glamour of a young marriage ought not to be rubbed off by too many
-practical details.”
-
-Mrs. Vachell used to wonder now and then how it was that Susie
-constantly took the bread out of Mrs. Carpenter’s mouth without her
-victim seeming to experience any sense of loss. Mrs. Carpenter did
-sometimes hesitate as if she thought she had lost something, but Susie
-seemed so innocent of her theft that it generally passed as an accident.
-On the whole, Mrs. Carpenter accepted her as an ally.
-
-“How do they like being at Drage?” Mrs. Manley asked.
-
-“Very much indeed,” Susie replied. “She enjoys military society,
-fortunately, which I never did. Mrs. Trotter envies her, she says, as
-she doesn’t like Millport herself. Of course a place that is building
-itself up a great position with its University and its social schemes
-can’t have much interest for people who are always packing up and
-following a drum from one dusty parade ground to another.” She paused
-and, as her audience was busy with cake, went on, “Those dreadful
-folding beds and bamboo furniture that they all seem to go in for—I
-suppose because it is so light—depress me too much. I do love a
-beautiful home of my own, however small.”
-
-“I don’t think you are altogether fair to the army, my dear lady,” said
-Mrs. Carpenter, a trifle piqued. “I lived, until I married, among my
-dear people who were always on the move, and I don’t think you would
-have said that their ideas were limited. Wherever they went they were
-fêted like princes by all the most interesting people, and I think it
-gave all of us girls much wider interests and sharpened our wits more
-than being shut up in the same set who all think each other perfect.
-Your parents felt it a great change, I expect, when they moved to
-London. One’s individuality has to fight so much harder there not to go
-under with the stream.”
-
-“I daresay,” said Susie gently, “but that was some time before I was
-born. I have always been a Londoner, you know. Of course I missed at
-first being in the centre of everything, but I have got to enjoy the
-earnestness and concentration of it all here. Like those wonderful
-things your friend showed us under the microscope the other day,” she
-added to Mrs. Vachell. “One could hardly believe they were of so much
-importance until one saw them moving about.”
-
-Mrs. Manley laughed and exchanged a look with Mrs. Vachell and then
-Cyril came in and they rose to go. They never felt quite at ease with
-him. Mrs. Carpenter, feeling bound to assert her familiarity with
-military interests, stayed a few minutes to question him about his work,
-hoping incidentally that she might see Evangeline and determine for
-herself the probable date of her initiation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A few days later Evangeline was sitting in her father’s study after
-dinner. Her eyes were red with crying and she sat in a deep armchair
-opposite him, blowing her nose at intervals.
-
-“Have a cigarette,” said Cyril sympathetically, pushing the box towards
-her. There had been something like a row at dinner. The Trotters had
-been invited and David Varens had turned up unexpectedly as he often did
-now after a late lecture at the University. All had gone well until the
-dessert, when Mrs. Trotter, with that want of perception that often goes
-with household efficiency and a bright nature, began telling of a rift
-in the matrimonial lute of the staff-captain and his wife. “It all comes
-of her being so keen on the University,” she concluded. “She was bound
-to get scorched by Mrs. Vachell, sooner or later, when she took up Egypt
-with that giddy old professor. He knows too much about the Sphinx
-altogether.” She helped herself to some grapes and winked at Evan
-Hatton. Evangeline grew nervous as she saw that he was excessively
-angry. Cyril saw, too, but not realising that the matter was serious he
-laid himself out for a little fun.
-
-“Now then, Evan,” he said, “we’ll drink to the spotless reputation of
-the Army versus Thought, coupled with the name of Captain Hatton.” He
-poured himself out a glass of port and passed the decanter. “Now then,
-up you get.”
-
-“I have no joke ready, Sir, about the sort of dirt that women choose to
-throw at each other,” said Evan, and he relapsed into a black silence,
-fingering his glass.
-
-“Here, I say, Hatton——” began Captain Trotter angrily. Evangeline
-blushed scarlet and looked at her husband in despair. Mrs. Trotter
-inspected him with amused disgust and waited for her husband to go on.
-
-“Evan dear, Evan,” Susie remonstrated. “What are you talking about? Mrs.
-Trotter will think you a great bear if you use such strong language
-about poor old Professor Vachell’s little flirtation. You’d really think
-he meant it, wouldn’t you?” she smiled round the table and was going to
-change the conversation when Evan rose.
-
-“I am sorry,” he said, “but I should have to finish what I was going to
-say if I remained, and perhaps I have no right—which of us has when it
-comes to throwing stones?” He went to the door.
-
-“Evan——!” pleaded Evangeline almost angrily, but he was gone.
-
-“Poor fellow!” said Susie, “I expect he feels the heat” (or the cold—I
-forget what the weather was at the time). “You know,” she turned to
-Captain Trotter, “I don’t believe any of you have quite got over that
-dreadful war yet. I met a poor boy only yesterday who was quite sure
-that Moses had appeared to him in a vision and announced the Day of
-Judgment.”
-
-“That’s what Moses is rather in the habit of doing,” said Cyril,
-grateful to her for once, though the occasion had been unintentional.
-“You know, Trotter, seriously, you ought to stop those boys gambling at
-the mess like that. There’s some of them don’t know the difference
-between a Hebrew and a bank account.”
-
-The Trotters went home early after dinner. Evan had gone for a walk and
-not returned, and David Varens and Teresa were arguing in a corner about
-something, so Evangeline slipped off to her father’s room and there wept
-profusely while he smoked. When she was re-established and had accepted
-a cigarette, Cyril began to talk.
-
-“I’ve seen more of that sort of thing than you’d suppose,” he said, “but
-I’m sorry it should come your way, Chips; you, of all people.”
-
-“Oh, I don’t much mind, thanks,” she answered, blowing her nose once
-more with a final blast, the last roll of thunder before sunshine
-reappears. “Only when it is in public.”
-
-“Do you get much of it in private?” asked her father.
-
-“Oh, yes,” she sighed. “Father, what do you think it is? He must be so
-miserable if he thinks everybody wicked when they are having fun. I
-would give up everything or do anything to see him happy, but it seems
-impossible.”
-
-“I always understood he had a reputation for being very good fun,” said
-Cyril.
-
-“Yes, to the others,” she agreed. “They all adore him and he never minds
-anything they do or if he does they only think it funnier still. It is
-women he thinks ought not to be amused at anything broader than—— Oh, I
-don’t know, the way a canary eats or something like that.”
-
-“Very dry humour certainly,” he commented, “but easily gratified. It’s a
-pity more of you don’t care for it.”
-
-“Father, don’t talk to the gallery,” she reproached him. “You know you
-detest a perfect lady.”
-
-“H’m. First catch your hare,” he replied. “We’re not getting on with
-this, Chips, but I wish I could help you. How does he take the prospect
-of fatherhood? If it’s a girl and you keep her in good condition I
-should think his number will be up shortly.”
-
-“But I hate fighting,” she objected. “Why can’t we be happy? And suppose
-it is a boy and he learns to hate Evan? I should give up then and run
-away with him to the desert and live on dates in the sun. I won’t have a
-little boy brought up in that abominable nonsense about Hell. Anger is
-hell. I don’t believe in a God with a black temper.”
-
-“Have another cigarette,” said Cyril.
-
-“Thanks.”
-
-“What are Hatton’s sisters like?” he asked after a pause.
-
-“Giggly little people,” she said, “awfully kind.”
-
-“Do they like you?”
-
-“Oh, yes, so long as they suppose I think Evan perfect.”
-
-“Does he object to them?”
-
-“No, he talks to them about carburettors and their G.F.S. and the dogs.”
-
-“Oh, well, that shows he can be all right if he’s interested,” Cyril
-remarked with some relief. “You evidently haven’t mastered the art of
-distraction that I warned you about, you remember.
-
- ‘J. is for James, Maria’s younger brother,
- Who, walking one way, chose to look the other.’
-
-That is the secret of married happiness, I find; to act like James.”
-
-The front door banged and they heard Evan come upstairs. He stopped for
-a moment outside the door and then came in. “May I come in, Sir?” he
-asked, “I heard Evangeline was here. I’m very sorry I lost my temper at
-dinner. I’ve been round to Trotter and apologised; but I can’t stand
-that woman.”
-
-“Oh, Evan, you are a good bird,” said Evangeline. “Come and sit down
-here and have a cigarette.”
-
-“I had better go down and throw out Varens,” said Cyril, looking at the
-clock, “unless—(an idea struck him)—unless you care to go, Chips, and
-tell your mother I think I am a little feverish and would she like to
-come and rub me with camphorated oil?” Evangeline stared at him.
-
-“What on earth for?” she asked.
-
-“And tell Varens I’ll be down in a minute when the attack has worn off,
-if he wouldn’t mind waiting,” Cyril continued. “I’m rather inclined to
-back up young David against Miss Emma Goliath when it comes to taking up
-Dicky’s time.”
-
-“Where do you get all your Scripture knowledge from?” she asked
-wonderingly.
-
-“I have often read the lessons,” he assured her; then he remembered his
-son-in-law and looked at him guiltily, but all was calm. Evan was
-listening and smoking benevolently. Evangeline resumed, “Mother will
-never swallow that rot.”
-
-“Then I must do it myself,” Cyril decided reluctantly. “Down with Emma
-Goliath and her musty cohorts!” He left the room and a few minutes
-afterwards they heard him rummaging in a book-case in the passage for
-the Army List of 1913, while Susie held the candle.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
-
-Young Mr. Price worked quite hard (“rehrly, you know, kait sairys
-effort!”) to bring his parent’s house up to the requirements of his
-college friends. He was not likely to ask anyone to his home except for
-political or enterprising reasons, because Millport at its richest did
-not provide much entertainment for unsympathetic guests. Its merchant
-princes fell short of imagination when it came to spending. They were as
-unlike the Medici as could well be imagined. They not only failed to
-encourage art, but they disliked it and fought against it. It took as
-much pressure of public opinion from rival cities and continents to get
-anything of value into the town as would have been required to turn
-Lobengula into a St. Anthony. Sometimes when this or that architect,
-painter, poet or musician was known to have built, decorated or filled
-the super-halls of America and returned burdened with contracts and
-delicious food, Millport used to stir uneasily in its contempt and
-occasionally went so far as to despatch a clerk to find out if there
-were any of the stuff left; because America’s habit of apt valuation is
-only too well known in business circles. The fact that her people also
-care passionately for their purchases might otherwise pass unnoticed.
-Neither did Millport indulge itself much in luxuries such as sailing,
-travelling or sport. The Prices kept a big motor which they used
-carefully, often suffering the horrors of the local train or the crowded
-tram rather than be unbusiness-like with petrol. Their clothes were a
-source of pride rather than pleasure. Mrs. Price was timid in her choice
-of garments and inclined to the perfect taste prescribed by the
-lady-in-waiting at Messrs. Venison and Phipps. “Mantles this way,
-Modom,” said the junior assistant in black charmeuse, and then Miss
-Figginbottam, whom Mrs. Price “always reckoned on,” aged forty-five,
-disillusioned and imperative, stepped forward and gave the casting vote
-between the grey moire velours and the rather richer effect of the
-petunia and chinchilla.
-
-But young Mr. Price and his sisters now told the poor old lady that this
-would not do. Her daughters took her to London and brought her back with
-monkeys’ tails and Balkan embroideries hanging slantwise over her
-innocent curves; they trotted her about in high-heeled shoes instead of
-the soft kid boots that Bollingworth’s used to make so well to her
-pattern. They did her hair in the fashion of Goya’s mistress and made
-her drink cocktails and become a vegetarian, but forbade her to smoke,
-which she did not understand. Her son taught her the names of the new
-poets, but could never get six quotable lines of their poetry into her
-head because there was “nothing to catch hold of” about it. Then they
-began on Dad; and he took to it like a bird. There was no trouble with
-him. He put himself entirely in the hands of his son’s tailor and then
-was told he looked too smart. So he stood patiently and allowed his
-trousers to be let down till they corkscrewed ever so rightly down his
-short legs. He shaved off his beard and grew a very intellectual-looking
-moustache; but his daughters told him he looked like a Labour Member and
-made him shave it off. He smoked a pipe, which he did not care for, and
-also learned when to smoke it; as, for instance, when his old friends of
-the city had all got out their cigars. He was made to eat less and give
-up carving; forbidden to press his guests to a second or third helping
-and privately instructed to let the butler manage. He was persuaded to
-buy some pedigree dogs for Mrs. Price, and a man was hired to lecture to
-her once a week on their management and breeding as she wouldn’t learn
-from books. The more they tore up the drawing-room the better the young
-Prices were pleased, though it caused their mother secret agony. Besides
-the names of poets and their works, the parents were made to learn the
-phraseology of farming, lawn tennis, cricket, golf, sex-boredom and the
-religions of the world.
-
-It was during the time when these social gymnastics were being most
-arduously practised by the Price family that they gave an evening party;
-one might almost suppose for the purpose of taking their minds off
-themselves. “Everybody” was there and a few representative nobodies,
-just to show that Mr. Price, senior, was in touch with the political
-movement of the day. “The University,” of course, were there, because
-though it used not to be considered the thing in Millport to encourage
-people who lived in poky houses and “talked superior” and “made fun,” it
-is different now that the aristocracy have taken to asking even
-theatrical people about and marrying professors and so on. You never
-know in these days when your local goose won’t go away somewhere and
-become a swan and get written up in the papers and go to Court or even
-make money. Once bitten, twice shy. Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. James Manley
-and Mrs. Price had one or two secret grievances against certain
-home-clad young wives whom they had avoided as “not quite——” and who had
-gone back on them later by being positively run after by all sorts of
-people; people you wouldn’t expect. How on earth is one to know? Jupiter
-ought to label his protégés in some way from the start so that honest
-people who can afford the best of everything may know where to look for
-it.
-
-“Would you believe it, Mrs. —er?” Mrs. Manley had been known to say, on
-coming to something of the sort in the pages of her _Times_.
-
-“No, and if you ask me, I think it’s absu-u-rd,” replied Mrs. Price in
-her new accent.
-
-“I used to think her decidedly peculiar,” put in Mrs. Carpenter, “but
-there never was any question that he was immensely clever. I used to
-talk to him by the hour.” Emma Gainsborough was reported to have said
-that she hoped that when Millport put up a memorial to Mrs. Carpenter it
-would be in the appropriate form of a weathercock.
-
-The Prices’ house was about three times the size of the Fultons’. It was
-of the same pattern as all the other houses in the neighbourhood; only
-its square mass seemed to have plumped itself down with more aggressive
-self-satisfaction than the others. On a close spring day it could almost
-be heard breathing there on its bit of gravel, puffing and grunting,
-“Now then; what dju looking at? Go away. This is Mr. Price’s house.
-We’ve got four reception rooms, twelve bedrooms, double tennis court,
-treble croquet lawn, copious vinery, garage and the usual offices.”
-
-It must be admitted that the party was a good one to the extent that the
-prodigality of limitless self-satisfaction can go. The Prices meant well
-so far as they could see beyond their own affairs; and their unfortunate
-haziness over the rest of humanity was probably not their fault. Some
-day the school of “Hope-for-all” thought may enlarge its activities and
-devise a sort of Borstal system for the spiritually deficient, and the
-habits of the Prices will be investigated and probably traced to some
-quite simple defect in the marrow; the juice of a dog’s kidney may
-perhaps be injected and suitable exercises prescribed, and so on.
-
-Dancing was going on in the larger of the two drawing-rooms, cards were
-to be played in the other, an “imperial supper,” as someone reported,
-was laid out in the dining-room and Father’s den was banked up all round
-by about a hundred hats, in the middle of which an old retainer with a
-face like the largest and richest muffin ever seen sat as if in a nest.
-No one could have approved more thoroughly of the proceedings than he.
-He had spent nearly all his life in waiting on the ladies and gentlemen
-of Millport in the evenings and in the small hours. By day it is
-supposed that he slept and murmured in his dreams, “Cold chicken or
-galantine, Sir? Lobster salad or trifle, Miss? Champagne, Madam?” He was
-now too rheumatic for this labour of love, so he sat among the hats and
-greeted the familiar faces as they came in. A few of them, such as Mr.
-Manley, spoke to him. “Ah, Higgins, so you’re here, are you?” they said.
-“Wet night, isn’t it?” and then they passed into the bright light and
-deafening chatter. Cyril came in to leave his coat and hat at the same
-moment as Sir Richard was receiving his ticket. “Hullo, what brings you
-here?” he said. “Didn’t know you came to these things.”
-
-“I’ve laid a foundation stone this afternoon and looked in on my
-doctor,” Sir Richard began, and he paused a moment to dust his sleeve
-with a clothes brush.
-
-“Pure coincidence, I hope?” Cyril asked anxiously.
-
-“No, it’s a fact,” the old man assured him. “But I’ll tell Milly you
-asked and what’s more I won’t tell her that Queen Anne sent that joke to
-_Punch_. She has got the car here and I thought I might as well go back
-in it. Young David is here somewhere with her. By-the-bye, Price wants
-me to let Aldwych to him for the hunting next year. I may have to go
-abroad, but I can’t make up my mind.” He spoke in a low voice, but
-Higgins heard.
-
-“I shouldn’t,” Cyril answered. “You never know what those sort of people
-will do with a place.”
-
-“How d’you mean?” asked Sir Richard.
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” Cyril replied, “but it is never the same
-afterwards.” It was characteristic of him not to connect any mental
-process with a globe of flesh encircled by hats, so he spoke in his
-usual tone. “You never get the smell of money out afterwards, and it
-demoralises tenants worse than the plague. And what would you do with
-the stables?”
-
-“He wants to buy the lot,” said Sir Richard.
-
-“My dear fellow!” Cyril exclaimed, and then words failed him. “Here,
-come along and let’s see where the bottle imp has his lair. That
-foundation stone had your wits in it, I think.”
-
-Mr. Joseph Price had been dancing with Evangeline and they were now
-sitting in the winter garden. “You’re living at Drage now, aren’t you?”
-he asked. “Rather a wretch’d sort of place, isn’t it? Not much to do
-there, what?” Evangeline looked at him in surprise. “What sort of things
-can’t you do?” she asked. “I should think you could do anything there is
-to do as well there as anywhere; unless you want to shoot bears or ride
-elephants.”
-
-“I led the strainuous life there for a bit,” he replied. “I never was so
-f’d up in my life.”
-
-“How long were you there?” Evangeline asked.
-
-“Oh, on and off f’ three years in charge ’f a batt’ry.”
-
-“And where did your battery go to?” She was full of interest.
-
-“Well, ’n point ’f fact it stayed where ’t was,” he replied carelessly.
-“They’d had ’nough, you see, ’f sending out f’llers not prop’ly trained,
-and the f’llers they sent to us then weren’t fit t’ handle a catapult.
-H’wever, we pushed them off in th’ end.”
-
-“And then where did you go?” she pursued.
-
-“I’m ’fraid you’ll be raather shocked,” said Mr. Price, smiling, “but I
-never got further than Switch’nham. Kait sairysly though, the Gov’nment
-took over the Dad’s plant there and not a soul knew an’thing about it. I
-had t’ run the whole blooming show by m’self with a handful of r’tired
-M’thuselahs. Awf’l shaame, I thought, digging the pwur old things out at
-their time ’f life. But now you have the whole sordid story ’f m’ life.
-Not much of a f’ller, Price, is he? I know that’s what you’re thinking.”
-
-“Well, I want to be quite fair,” said Evangeline. “Have you got anything
-the matter with you?”
-
-“No, sound ’s a bell,” said young Joseph.
-
-“Well, but had you anything then?” she persisted. “Groggy arms or legs
-or insides?”
-
-“Lac’ration of right forearm ’n’ elbow, received when leaving th’
-theatre in state ’f intoxication during ’n air raid,” he replied,
-grinning at her, “also sustained loss ’f an eye and inj’ry to left
-ankle.”
-
-“Honest?” she asked earnestly. “Let me look at your eye.”
-
-“’T’s glass, but there’s nothing green in it,” said Mr. Price, holding
-down one eyelid, and she saw that what he said was true.
-
-The music of the next dance began and he rose. “You dancing this?” he
-asked, “or c’n I get you a partner? I’m ’fraid I’ve got to trot out Miss
-Gainsborough. I shall keep her meuving for she caan’t talk.”
-
-“I’ve lost my programme,” said Evangeline, “but I’m almost certain I’m
-dancing with some kind of a Manley, with pink eyes—— Oh, I’m sorry, I
-expect he is your cousin; everybody is here.”
-
-“Yes, that’s Claud, I expect, but don’t mind me, please,” Mr. Price
-replied. “His mother’s my aunt. But I don’t see him or my partner——” He
-looked round and they waited a moment. “He’s great on the pwur, too,” he
-said. “P’haps they’re hatching something t’gether. I don’t alt’gether
-b’lieve in it m’self, d’you? Of course it’s awf’lly fine and all that
-and I ’dmire it immensely, but I think it ’ncourages them t’ have
-grievances—makes them dwell on their p’sition and so on, which after all
-can’t be helped. Don’t you rather agree?”
-
-“I don’t know,” said Evangeline. She was not attending much for she had
-caught sight of her husband talking seriously to Mrs. Vachell and
-wondered what it was about. She recalled her mind to what Mr. Price was
-saying. “My sister thinks of nothing else,” she said, “but I am no good
-at it; I am too lazy and selfish.” Emma Gainsborough appeared just then
-and Mr. Price left Evangeline with an apology.
-
-“Awf’lly hot, what?” he observed to Emma when they had been labouring
-round the room a few minutes. Emma was not a good dancer.
-
-“Hot what, what hot?” she mimicked him rather crossly. “You had better
-stop and have an ice.”
-
-“Forthcoming!” he observed as they stopped and he inspected her
-curiously. “Forthcoming indeed! You’re magnif’cent actress, you know,
-Miss Gainsborough. Why couldn’t you do thaat when I came to dinner with
-you, ’nstead of making me think I was boring you all th’ time?”
-
-Emma ignored his last sentence. “I am very sorry,” she said, “but I do
-so hate parties. I get to know such a lot about the food before I see
-it, and I know all the time that my father will criticise every dish
-afterwards and mother will feel she has been a failure and say that she
-must get another cook; and we never do. We have had the same one for
-years and she gets steadily older and worse.”
-
-“Have some coffee or ’n ice?” he suggested. “What c’n I get you? I say,
-th’ band seems to be packing up—that means supper. Will you excuse me as
-I merst look after one of the dowagers. Claud will take you in. Here,
-Claud,” he beckoned to his cousin, “’ll you taek Miss Gainsborough?” and
-he departed in haste. He found that his mother had allotted Susie to him
-from among “the dowagers.” The parent Gainsboroughs, Sir Richard and his
-wife, Cyril and the sister of the ex-Lord Mayor, filled a table with
-their host, and Joseph Price and Susie sat together close by.
-
-“A most charming young man, that Joseph Price,” Susie remarked in her
-room that night. “I wish Evangeline had met him before dear Evan came to
-the house so constantly. He is so fond of sport. I hear there is some
-idea of his father taking Aldwych.”
-
-“Mother Price’s diamonds would flash the glad news from tower to tower,”
-said Cyril with more animosity than he generally showed to anyone. “Her
-searchlights played over me at supper till anyone could have spotted the
-lobster swimming in the champagne.” Susie took refuge in silence and
-they went to bed. Evangeline and Evan were talking in their room at the
-same time. “I hope you had supper,” she said, “I feel I don’t want any
-more to eat for days. Whom did you get hold of?”
-
-“Mrs. Vachell,” he answered. “She is a very charming woman; most
-interesting and cultivated.”
-
-“Evan, I shall never understand you,” she said with amusement. “You
-disapprove of the most harmless people and Mrs. Vachell does more harm
-than almost anyone at Drage.”
-
-“Now that is so like a woman,” said Evan. “Always running down your own
-sex if a man praises one of them.”
-
-Evangeline winced under the injustice and her amusement died. “You will
-give me a sharp tongue some day that I wasn’t born with,” she said
-hotly. “What I meant was that Mrs. Vachell doesn’t believe in any of the
-things you are always fighting about, she isn’t kind to people for she
-doesn’t like them, and Mrs. Carpenter——”
-
-“Don’t mention her,” said Evan. “She’s an awful woman.”
-
-“Yes, I know you can’t stand her any more than you can stand Mrs.
-Trotter who is a perfectly harmless, common little thing, as good as
-gold. But Mrs. Carpenter is the solid prop of the whole edifice of what
-I understand you want people to be and yet you hate her.”
-
-“She’s a humbug,” said Evan, “that’s why.”
-
-“I don’t think Mrs. Vachell believes in anything except brains,” said
-Evangeline. “That’s her own affair,” he replied. “That is a matter
-between her and her Maker. All I say is that she behaves like a lady and
-talks intelligently, without that silly affectation of chaff that spoils
-most women.”
-
-“She doesn’t work nearly as hard as Mrs. Carpenter,” Evangeline laboured
-on. She would always take up any cause at a moment’s notice and
-sacrifice the approval she loved best in her whole-hearted defence.
-
-“Well, keep your opinion and I’ll keep mine,” he said, “I never could
-help being fond of you, Evangeline, but you do exasperate me sometimes
-more than I can tell you. I never know whether you deliberately won’t
-see what I am talking about or whether you can’t.”
-
-“If that is all,” she said contentedly, “I don’t mind. I thought you
-were angry with me.”
-
-The Gainsboroughs were habitually early risers. At half-past nine they
-generally parted for the day; the Principal to his principalling, his
-wife to the kitchen, fortified by renewed hope of Annie being able to
-cook something really nice to-day; Emma to the grimy back street where
-she had her office. It had been late when they reached home after the
-Prices’ party, and Mrs. Gainsborough’s inevitable question, “Would you
-like anything, dear, before you go to bed?” was known to the other two
-to offer no inducement to sitting up; no one can talk over a feast on
-digestive biscuits and water. The three bedroom doors were shut within
-ten minutes after the cab had rattled away down the street and not a
-sound was heard in the big house except faint snoring from the top floor
-and the ticking of the grandfather clock on the landing below. Emma got
-into bed and heard the clock gather itself together with a hoarse rattle
-and strike one; four church clocks answered it a minute later. The trams
-had stopped and the road was so silent that a policeman’s footstep was
-heard all up the street that lay behind the house, round the corner and
-down past Emma’s window almost to the end of the Square. “Certainly not!
-Certainly not!” Emma imagined the footsteps saying, and her heart warmed
-to the image of faithful Robert, patient and decorous, with order as his
-means of subsistence and disorder his only hope of pleasure in the
-monotonous hours. “Certainly not. Certainly not.” The clocks chimed two
-strokes and then one; half-past one. Robert was coming back. Cats began
-to quarrel in the sooty flower beds of the Square; scuffled, spat,
-shrieked and vanished. Emma thought harshly of them and gradually dozed.
-The silence was broken by a sudden uproar in the street at the back,
-near the corner of Robert’s beat, where rows of mean little houses led
-down to one of the railway stations. There were loud sounds of
-quarrelling, a woman’s voice and two or three men; a splintering of
-glass, a scream, grumbling, threats and oaths and then—“Certainly not.
-Certainly not.” Robert was coming back.
-
-“’Ere, what’s this?” she imagined he would say when he reached the
-corner, but all was silent before he had passed the Square, and any hope
-of incident for that night faded away as the clock struck two and the
-rain began to fall gently. Emma was wide awake now and lay for some time
-thinking of her work with the hopelessness of a tired body and mind.
-Robert probably never suffered in this way. If he got in the dumps he
-took something for it, “an’ as for that lot up there,” he would have
-said, pointing a thumb up the poverty-stricken scene of the quarrel,
-“the sooner they was all turned out the better.” Mrs. Robert probably
-understood more than he did about the discouraging habits of matter,
-which collects again as soon as it is displaced. Teresa’s dreams were
-busy with other plans for settling the difficulty. She wanted to build
-up the whole mess into a work of art.
-
-The Gainsboroughs had their deferred talk about the Prices’ party at
-breakfast next morning.
-
-“Joseph Price is a perfect ass,” said Emma. “And yet you can’t be as
-angry with him as he makes you. I want first to slap him and then to
-turn him right side up again and put him back in his chair.”
-
-“No, I think he is really dreadful,” said her mother. “He always was a
-tiresome little boy, but Cambridge seems to have done him more harm than
-good. I can’t think where he gets that silly way of speaking. It is more
-like Oxford if anything, but it isn’t that either. I wouldn’t libel the
-poor things.”
-
-“It is a sort of culture and climbing mixed,” said Emma. “Don’t you
-remember when the Mortons came down here to open the Industries? Some of
-them talked exactly like that, only it wasn’t so obvious because it must
-have been longer since they did it on purpose. It is almost natural to
-lots of people I am sure. But Joseph Price was very busy with it then.
-‘Voilà que j’arrive!’ his whole face said.”
-
-“It was a splendid supper,” said Mrs. Gainsborough, “I only wish I could
-teach Annie to make quenelles like that. I think she must make ours too
-soft. They always have that curious squashy tastelessness about them, or
-else too much pepper.”
-
-“My dear Beatrice, you’ll never do anything with that woman, so long as
-you live,” said the Principal. He tossed a piece of kidney on his plate.
-“Look at that! Leathery, dry—a kidney ought to be a dream of tenderness
-and blood, just poised—poised, mind, so that the juices soak through—on
-a piece of toast, neither hard nor soft, browned to a turn——”
-
-“Oh, Father,” interrupted his daughter, “do please talk of something
-else. You make me dribble with envy; I can’t bear it.”
-
-“Poor darlings!” murmured the mother, compassionate almost to tears. “It
-is hard on you. I really will speak to her and see if she wouldn’t care
-to go to Mrs. Plumtre; I know they don’t care what they eat. I’m not
-sure even that they’re not vegetarians.”
-
-“Did you know Mrs. Price has become a vegetarian?” said Emma. “But not
-the duck-made-of-peas kind; just lettuce and peaches and cheese; except
-when she goes to London by herself, she told me. Oh dear, I must go but
-I am so sleepy,” she yawned and got up.
-
-“Did you sleep well, darling?” asked her mother anxiously.
-
-“There was a row going on in Millard Street and it woke me up.”
-
-“I’d have all those people turned out,” said the Principal. “When
-there’s a revolution the houses round here won’t be fit to live in. And
-there’s that Cranston next door, throwing out literature that is so much
-rank poison by its stupidity. It is bad enough to harm even educated
-idiots, for they take it all in, but at least they are not likely to
-burn down——”
-
-“If you please, Sir, Mr. Fisk wants to know if he can see you for a
-moment. He is in the library,” said Annie at the door.
-
-Emma escaped, and as she passed the open door of the library she saw a
-young man with hair à la Kropotkin and immense spectacles whom she knew
-to be the secretary of the students’ debating society and the son of
-good Mr. Fisk, plumber and decorator in the neighbourhood.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
-
-Mr. Fisk was a good son at home and a pleasant fellow among his friends.
-Emma, who was liked by the students and went to their gatherings, had
-often met him. He kept dormice in his bedroom and tended them with care,
-but if the Communist society he belonged to had called him to do murder
-in the cause of incomes for all he would have summoned his courage to
-smite some bald-headed director of a company with a bloody axe. His
-errand to the Principal that morning was, I am glad to say, of a most
-peaceful nature, connected with the degree he hoped to take. He met Emma
-and Teresa the same afternoon at a tea given by some of the students
-after the meeting of the debating society. Teresa took the cup he
-offered her, and became fascinated by his withered little face, his
-immense spectacles and his Kropotkin hair. Her instinct scented
-suffering and the cage, and she led him on to talk. It must be
-understood that this was her first experience of his kind and she never
-forgot it. He began explaining to her, earnestly at first, then
-excitedly; he struck his knobbly little hands one against the other.
-“Blood!” he concluded, “blood! there’s nothing else for it. We shall
-give our blood when the time comes and we shall take it
-ruthlessly—without remorse.” Teresa looked at him fixedly, questioning.
-“I think that is very wicked,” she said, when she had made up her mind.
-“You have no business at all to decide that one person shall live and
-another shan’t; it is much too serious. Suppose that another lot of
-people decided that you must be killed because you got a degree and they
-didn’t?”
-
-“I shan’t have been born into my degree when I get it,” he said proudly.
-“I shall have earned it by my own endeavours. The rich have been born
-into their property for generations. They come into the world nourished
-on the blood of my fathers. Show me the signs of toil on your hands, if
-you please,” he looked down with a bitter expression at her little hands
-that held the cup.
-
-“I know,” she said humbly, “I often think of it. You needn’t point it
-out. But still you oughtn’t to murder anybody. It is not their fault;
-and anyhow, suppose you burgled my father’s house, he would have no
-right to kill you except in self-defence. I know that is so; a lawyer
-told me.”
-
-“What’s the law!” said Mr. Fisk contemptuously. “We’re going to alter
-all that; we’re going to make new laws by which man will have the right
-to live.”
-
-“Yes, but not to stop others living,” said Teresa. “It’s silly; you know
-you can’t make laws; and who is going to carry them out if you do? You
-can’t make people do what you want just by telling them that you have
-made a law. There’s the army and navy too—but what is the good of
-arguing. You must know it is silly.”
-
-“The army and navy are also learning to think, you’ll find,” said Mr.
-Fisk. “But I don’t wish to offend you, Miss—er. You are yourself of
-military stock, I believe?”
-
-“Yes I am, but I don’t bother about that. It has got nothing to do with
-what I think,” she replied. “Don’t you know——” she went on, with passion
-beginning to rise in her as his words soaked in, “don’t you know, you
-stupid (she shook him delicately by the sleeve), that all the decent
-people in England—and English people are decent, not like the beastly
-people you try to make your hair like—are working their very hardest,
-day and night, to put things straight? And the fact that some of them
-have got white hands is all the better, for it means they have money and
-time to spend on it, and you have only the time to learn by heart what
-someone else has written. It does make me so angry when I know what the
-idle rich, as you call them, are doing.”
-
-“Bah! charity!” said Mr. Fisk, and he spat some shreds of tobacco from
-his cigarette neatly into the grate.
-
-“Oh, you can’t have thought I was talking about charity,” said Teresa
-with real distress. “Of course I wasn’t. It is the very thing I dislike
-most, except your muddle and murder. And besides that, some of the
-richest people boast of having been newsboys, and they are often the
-rudest to their servants and their wives are horrid lazy snobs.” Mr.
-Fisk’s little withered face twitched with his anxiety to collect some
-clear dignified retort.
-
-“Have you ever read much on your subject, may I ask?” he inquired at
-last. “Have you studied economics? Perhaps you have attended Professor
-Cranston’s lectures?”
-
-“No, I haven’t,” she replied.
-
-“Then, pardon me, but I think you are hardly qualified for the argument.
-Capitalism is a highly intricate subject and should involve deep study.
-To judge how far it is advisable to submit the control of wages to the
-State, and also to consider to what extent the right of the individual
-to determine the extent of his earning capacity should be carried,
-requires a long training and arduous study. I should be pleased to
-continue our talk at some other time if convenient to you, and I should
-be happy to lend books if you are interested.”
-
-“Yes,” said Teresa with a sigh of fatigue. “I want to know. And you are
-part of the faces in the fog, I suppose,” she added absently, looking at
-him.
-
-“I beg pardon?”
-
-“I said you were part of the faces in the fog. I used to wonder when we
-came here what was behind the sort of brick-wall expression that people
-in the streets and the trams had. When you go to speak in Hyde Park you
-will see how different your audience is—quite merry in comparison.”
-
-“I don’t propose to do so at present,” said Kropotkin-Fisk, highly
-offended. “We leave that to the executive. Our body here is concerned at
-the moment exclusively with study and propaganda.” Emma came to look for
-Teresa and heard the end of the discussion.
-
-“Aren’t you paving the way for a new set of class distinctions, Mr.
-Fisk?” she asked. “What you said just now sounded like it. I hope you
-will take a lesson from the present evil system and pay yourself
-properly if you are going to keep to the higher activities.”
-
-“I don’t quite follow,” said Mr. Fisk, “but if you’ll favour us at the
-next debate and hear my paper, perhaps you will put your question then,
-and I shall do my best to parry your thrust.”
-
-“I don’t know what Mrs. Potter would do if Fisk were made Chancellor of
-the Exchequer under the new régime,” said Emma, as she and Teresa walked
-back together.
-
-“Yes, she would loathe it,” Teresa agreed. “But I don’t exactly know
-why. Why do they so often hate their own class in office?”
-
-“Well,” said Emma, “I suppose if Eddie Fisk is Chancellor of the
-Exchequer there’s no reason why Albert Potter shouldn’t go one better
-and be King. Mrs. Potter ‘never would ’ave ’eld with them Fisks,’ you’d
-find, ‘—settin’ themselves up!’”
-
-“But Communists don’t have a King; isn’t that the whole point?” Teresa
-objected.
-
-“They don’t until one of them wants to be it,” said Emma. “They would
-call him something else, but some of them would develope an aptitude for
-ruling. Even apes do.”
-
-“But then, I suppose the others could depose him if he wasn’t
-hereditary,” said Teresa.
-
-“No, ‘Gawd save the Prince o’ Wales, bless ’is dear ’eart!’ is Mrs.
-Potter’s motto. ‘That there Fisk is never going to come it over our
-Albert, you’ll find, Miss,’ is what she would say. Ask her the next time
-you see her.”
-
-“Mr. Jorkins doesn’t agree with that,” Teresa pursued. “When he is out
-of work the first thing he blames is Parliament. He’s dead against it.”
-
-“Well, there will always be two opinions about everything in a country,”
-said Emma. “You had much better leave them all alone to mess about and
-let us get on with what we are doing. At present Mr. Fisk is rather like
-the mouse that dipped its tail in the beer and sucked it. He is looking
-for the cat, that’s all.”
-
-“Are you sure?” her friend asked anxiously.
-
-“I am only sure after a party like the Prices’ last night,” Emma
-answered. “It will wear off to-morrow, and I shall get cross with Father
-for talking Conservative intellectualism. I can’t see any use in the
-Prices to-day. They give money when there is a list of donations, and
-Papa Price just hugs himself when someone comes round for a
-subscription. He keeps them waiting in his office, and then when he has
-succeeded in beating them down to less than they asked for and yet finds
-he is still in the top batch of subscriptions he does think he has been
-clever. And Mrs. Price and the family! I would really enjoy seeing the
-girls working in the fur trade instead of wearing coats of it, and I
-wouldn’t wish that to many people. I would like to see them stop
-cackling and find out how witty they would be on two pennyworth of
-refuse. Then the next day, perhaps, I meet Lady Varens, whom I don’t
-grudge anything to, because she keeps a lot of people happily employed
-and really cares for them and buys beautiful things with her money. And
-after that the Starks turn up—you know—the schoolmistress at St.
-Angelus’ school—you met her at the Dispensary. Mrs. Potter’s life is a
-screaming farce compared to hers, and the Jorkinses are wallowing in
-wealth, for at least they enjoy themselves at the pictures and the pub
-when so disposed.”
-
-“Well, let us add it up,” said Teresa. “Under Mr. Fisk’s scheme, Mrs.
-Potter and Mrs. Stark will benefit; Mrs. Price will be altogether
-wrecked and mangled—she and her family; Lady Varens will live as she
-would probably be quite content to live now—she never seems to want
-much—and she would upset the apple carts of a lot of happy dependants.
-But then there are lots of Potters, lots of Starks, comparatively few
-Prices, a good many Varenses and not a great many happy dependants, so
-how does the proportion of benefits work out? I shall have to ask David
-to unravel it.”
-
-“I beg your pardon—David?” asked Emma.
-
-“David Varens,” said Teresa. “What’s the matter?”
-
-“Nothing. I only wondered for a moment. Do you go much by what he says?”
-
-“Yes, more than anybody.”
-
-“Why, may I ask?”
-
-“Oh, because he is so simple,” she answered readily. “I can never tangle
-him up in a problem. He lays it all out and sorts it into heaps, and
-then generally sums up by saying there is nothing in it. It is so
-restful. And then he tells me about phosphates and the habits of the
-teal. But it is only for the rest to my muddled head that I like it so
-much. It would never put me off my work.”
-
-“Sure?” asked Emma, and she was obliged to accept the assurance when it
-was given a second time.
-
-As they passed the Vachells’ house, which was not far from the
-Gainsboroughs’, Mrs. Vachell was just going in. “Come and have tea with
-me?” she suggested. Emma explained that they had had tea and that she
-had work to do at home, but Teresa accepted. She was inclined, like
-Alice in Wonderland, to taste and nibble whatever new thing came her
-way; she had never been inside the Vachells’ house, nor felt that she
-understood what lay behind the self-possession of the small, graceful
-lady whom it was said the Professor had found fanning herself by
-moonlight under an obelisk and brought home. Mrs. Vachell’s face was
-beautiful and full of character but the character was of the reversible
-kind, of which it is impossible to decide whether it is intended to be
-good or bad. Such faces seem not, like most faces, to alter gradually
-with their owner’s mind, but to hold always in themselves two distinct
-characters between which the soul has never chosen a habitation. At
-death, opinion is generally divided as to which character has been the
-true one, as in life it was never decided which it would prove to be.
-“Very like a curious death-mask my father was once given for his study,”
-Susie had described her on first acquaintance. “Dante, or somebody, I
-think it was, who wrote the ‘Inferno.’”
-
-Teresa followed the small gliding figure into the hall and up the
-stairs, where photographs of Byzantine art and reproductions of drawings
-from Egyptian tombs were hung right up to the high window that lighted
-the stairs with a cold north light. The back yards and chimneys of young
-Millport mixed disagreeably in her mind with the impression of endless
-centuries of life that she gathered from the procession of antiquity on
-the walls. There is something alarming to youth in the idea of the early
-days of a very old person.
-
-The drawing-room was more cheerful, but Mr. Vachell’s study, which his
-wife showed her as they passed, made her shiver again. There were
-objects of stone, of clay, of mildewed bronze; tiny domestic
-possessions, gifts of love, weapons, tokens of mourning for the dead,
-provision even for an eternity of wandering beyond the grave. Everywhere
-were glass cases to preserve the imperishable; the penetrating dust of a
-new city defiling them notwithstanding. If Teresa had seen Life and
-Death supping together in the silent room, pledging one another from the
-old vessels that stood upon the Professor’s table, she could not have
-felt more discomfort than she did.
-
-“Do you like these things?” Mrs. Vachell asked her.
-
-“Perhaps I might if I got to know them,” she admitted, “but they scare
-me rather.”
-
-“Come into the drawing-room and have tea then.” Mrs. Vachell led the way
-into the next room and rang the bell. “It is only half-past five; you
-have lots of time to recover. What have you been doing?”
-
-Teresa told her about the Debating Society and Mr. Fisk. “A horrible
-young man,” said Mrs. Vachell. “He isn’t one of my husband’s students,
-luckily, or I should have to ask him to tea. They all get brought here
-at intervals. They sit about in corners and balance cups on their knees
-and spill tea into the saucer. I wish you would come and help me next
-time I have to ask some of them. I believe you would be good to them and
-teach me not to dislike them so much.”
-
-“Very well,” said Teresa, “though I am not benevolent. If people won’t
-talk I can’t make conversation. Why don’t you ask Emma? She knows them
-all.”
-
-“That is just why she is no good,” Mrs. Vachell explained while she made
-tea. “It is like a mother and her children in society. They can’t talk
-their own nonsense before an audience, and they can’t do the polite to
-each other. I want you to extract something from the students. They must
-have interests of the sort that one does not air in the family circle,
-and strangers are the ideal safety valve for that sort of thing.”
-
-“Are many of them like Fisk; wanting blood and new governments and
-things?” Teresa asked.
-
-“That is one of the things I want to know,” Mrs. Vachell answered. “Emma
-could tell us so far as statistics go, but I want to hear for myself.
-You know I sit on Committees with Mrs. Carpenter and her lot because I
-love organisation, and so many of those women who are always talking and
-ordering and doing the Nosey Parker everywhere are just tools for
-anybody in the show who has an axe to grind. Do you understand about
-Boards of Guardians and Select Vestries and all that part?” Teresa
-answered quickly, “Oh, no—nothing whatever. Of course I get inspectors
-and visitors on my track and I have to help Emma with her reports. But a
-Board of Guardians means nothing to me except a firm eye and questions
-that I can’t answer. Mother has them to lunch sometimes.”
-
-“Can she answer their questions?” asked Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“Surely you know that Mother never answers any questions?” said Teresa
-very much surprised. “She always tells you something that she thinks
-instead, and makes it seem as if she had answered. But I never know
-whether it is because she can’t or won’t.”
-
-“I do loathe poverty,” Mrs. Vachell said, as if to herself.
-
-Teresa went home very little the wiser for her visit, but she felt
-greatly discouraged by the extreme age of civilisation as it had been
-shown to her at the Vachells’. It seemed to have accomplished so little
-in the time at its disposal.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
-
-Evangeline’s baby was a boy, very much to Susie’s satisfaction. It would
-be going too far to say that it had been a grief to her that she had no
-son, for grief and she had met only on the most courtly terms since she
-outgrew the realities of childhood which no one escapes. Her philosophy
-had developed early, and since then she had met grief on the terms of
-cavalier and lady. He had bowed to her and fingered his sword; she had
-curtseyed, smiled and turned her back on him, with perhaps a coy glance
-of mockery above her fan. But he paid his first visit to Evangeline,
-equipped for battle, when her son was a few months old. Evan began
-making plans one day for his future, as affectionate fathers will, and
-the discussion, begun amicably, ended in such a storm of passion from
-Evangeline as surprised and horrified him. A doctor would have said that
-she was still weak and unbalanced after young Ivor’s birth; the fact was
-that resentment suppressed or tided over on many occasions had
-accumulated, and was now being paid in one sum. Her natural gaiety had
-made her fairly independent when it was only she who was to suffer from
-Evan’s severity; but when it went beyond her to the child she became
-savage in the defence of her offspring. This situation is as old as the
-hills—older than man—and the true simile of the tigress has become so
-hackneyed by being tacked on to every thwarted feminine instinct that it
-hardly arrests the eye on a printed page; but its accuracy is age-proof.
-The occasion for her outburst was as trifling as it could be; it
-generally is when a storm is long brewing. Evan had chosen for his
-peroration the unfortunate words, “—and we shall teach him discipline
-early.”
-
-He spoke from a full heart and meant, as Queen Elizabeth is said to have
-performed upon the virginals, “excellently well.” Evangeline pictured
-the young creature that was to have been a marvel of joy, crushed by
-fear of its natural friends, pursued by something dark and threatening
-that was called “Right,” so that all sweetness of the day that was
-called “Wrong” must be loved and followed in secret. She pictured the
-child lonely in a garden, with a dog for his friend and his father for
-an enemy, and she herself, perhaps, under suspicion as being in the
-confidence of the enemy. He would be like Romulus and Remus, she
-thought, as her horror gathered volume. She was always a very simple
-thinker. In any crisis her mind’s eye looked over a wide space of
-whatever emotion was in possession of her, and some episode, historical,
-literary or personal, often arose before her as a point of focus for the
-end she was aiming at. Just now she was overwhelmed with pity for the
-awful loneliness of a child’s nature with no human love to comfort it.
-She knew herself what a place animals can take at such times. Romulus
-and Remus had been mothered by a wolf, but must her Ivor be abandoned to
-such a makeshift, while she, adoring him with all her heart and soul,
-was chained by Evan to the Juggernaut’s car that was to pursue the child
-through life? At the moment she pictured her husband’s religion as an
-all-devouring monster.
-
-He sat meanwhile silent, frowning at her grief and wondering how his
-domestic security had come to collapse like this at the breath of a high
-ideal. Was his wife wholly worldly and given over to the worship of
-self-indulgence? Did she mean to bring the boy up to be a pampered young
-ass with no sense of duty to God or man? He said nothing, but thought
-very dark thoughts.
-
-Presently Evangeline’s indomitable optimism came back to the rescue. She
-had exhausted her emotion; Romulus and Remus had played their part in
-her imagination and retired. Pity remained, but there was also hope and
-the fighting strength of the jungle mother. She would remain Ivor’s
-mother and play the part of the wolf as well. Evan should never get at
-her darling while she lived; she would throw herself between them. It
-was not until very much later in the tragedy that she began to think of
-using cunning in her defence. At present she had no idea of decoying an
-enemy away; that instinct had not yet been roused in her so she still
-fought in the open. After the outburst of protest with which she first
-met his innocent remark, and the passionate tears that followed, she
-cheered up again and was prepared to shake hands.
-
-“It will be all right,” she said confidently. “I know you love him as
-much as I do.”
-
-“I love him more, for I care what becomes of him,” was Evan’s grave
-reply.
-
-“You are not going to beat him the first time he disobeys you?” she
-asked in renewed panic.
-
-“Control yourself, for goodness sake,” he replied impatiently. “He is
-only a baby. I have nothing to do with your nursery arrangements. Let
-him tyrannise over you and make his life and yours a misery. There is
-time enough for you to think over whether I am right, and to see the
-result of depriving him of all means of defending himself against
-ill-fortune in this world and damnation in the next.”
-
-“And when he is older, if I still think you are wrong——?” she pursued
-breathlessly.
-
-“Then—I am sorry, Evangeline—I shall not hesitate to remove him from
-your charge.”
-
-“You couldn’t!” she exclaimed. “They would never let you!”
-
-“I don’t know the exact law, but I fancy I could safeguard him and still
-allow you to see him in an ordinary way without your being in authority.
-But all this is absurd. We are making ourselves miserable about nothing.
-Go up to him now and spoil him to your heart’s content. But think over
-what I have said. You have so much good in you, Evangeline, if you would
-only not let yourself be carried away by this terror of all pain and
-discomfort.”
-
-“I didn’t make a sound when Ivor was born,” she said in amazement.
-
-“I know. Don’t think you hadn’t my admiration because I didn’t say so. I
-was thinking of the pains of self-sacrifice and obedience to rules not
-understood.”
-
-“If I can keep Ivor by bearing those, too, I will,” she assured him.
-
-“Of course you can, darling,” he said, misunderstanding. “We shall all
-be happy at last, you will see.”
-
-At Christmas they went again to stay with Evangeline’s parents. Ivor
-found his grandmother all that he could possibly desire. He fell madly
-in love with her and she made very little attempt to conceal her triumph
-from his nurse. Ivor loved the nurse dearly and she loved him, so that
-altogether he never suffered a moment’s anxiety during his visit. War
-was declared over him; a long and bitter war as it turned out; yet his
-life became for the time being all the sweeter in consequence. Susie
-entered the battlefield on the side of Evangeline and motherhood in
-general, of “not worrying about things that can’t be helped,” and of
-opposition to men who “will be disagreeable.” Love, wounded by Ivor’s
-mischievous treachery at times when his grandmother’s blandishments must
-be left for sleep and exercise, brought nurse in on the side of the
-father and discipline. It was she who had to endure the nerve-racking
-screams and struggles that took place on the other side of the
-drawing-room door, and the wakeful nights caused by excitement and “the
-very purest chocolate” from Grannie’s drawer which Ivor had learned to
-open so cleverly. She had to put up with the gentlest and most
-persistent advice, with seeing windows covertly opened or shut when
-otherwise arranged by her with the tenderest care for Ivor’s comfort,
-with clothes added to or removed from what he was wearing. Mothers of
-any civilised country will bear witness that such trifles are more
-dangerous to domestic peace than the franker brawls of the gutter. If
-Susie and the nurse had let themselves go with the same _abandon_ as the
-ladies of honest Robert’s beat, Ivor would have suffered less in the end
-and his father and mother might have called quits after the exchange of
-a black eye and a broken nose. As it was, Evangeline took no part in the
-daily duels so long as her son remained unscathed between the contending
-parties; but she noted Evan’s silent criticism. She saw that every scene
-of wilfulness strengthened his position against her, and her heart
-hardened towards him. Once when Mrs. Vachell asked her to lunch she
-arrived there so discouraged that she could hardly keep up a pretence of
-other conversation.
-
-“I am very sorry to be so stupid,” she said at last, “but I am tired to
-death. Mother and Ivor’s nurse do get on so badly, though I believe it
-is really one-sided because Mother seems not to notice at all; but she
-puts nurse’s back up and Ivor takes advantage of it to get everything he
-wants, and I don’t think she would stay through another visit. Evan
-thinks it is my fault and that I spoil Ivor. I do so hate anger and
-fuss. What would you do?”
-
-“I should tell the nurse that she must be polite to your mother or go,”
-said Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“I wouldn’t do that for a thousand pounds,” said Evangeline. “She
-worships Ivor and would give her life for him I really think.”
-
-“You would easily find another who would do just the same,” Mrs. Vachell
-remarked, “and it might be good for him not to depend so much on one
-person.”
-
-“No, no,” Evangeline repeated. “I won’t do that. But people can make
-one’s life a burden, can’t they! Just by disapproving.”
-
-“I never allow anyone’s vagaries to bother me,” said Mrs. Vachell
-coolly. “I do the best I can and am proof against black looks. Angry
-faces are as soon dead as merry ones and their memory is not kept
-green.”
-
-“Do you think a man’s feeling about children is always different from a
-woman’s?” Evangeline asked presently.
-
-“Yes, very different,” Mrs. Vachell replied. “I think, if you ask me,
-they are the most ram-headed, firebrand, poker-fingered lumps of folly
-that could have been planted on an unhappy world to wreck its comfort.”
-She spoke in a low, deliberate voice. “Damned fools,” she added lightly.
-“Don’t you think so in your heart?”
-
-Evangeline was just going to answer when she remembered her husband’s
-description of Mrs. Vachell after the Prices’ party, “intelligent” and
-“cultivated” and “talks like a lady.” She saw a very old mistake for the
-first time, fresh in all its eternal comedy, and was lifted right out of
-her present difficulties by the amusement of it. “How gloriously funny!”
-she exclaimed.
-
-“What is funny?” Mrs. Vachell asked, a little displeased.
-
-“That you should think that, and—Evan was so delighted with you!”
-Evangeline blurted out.
-
-“Pooh!” said Mrs. Vachell. “I suppose you think I was trying to please
-him?”
-
-“Oh, gracious, no,” said the poor girl. “I told him he knew nothing
-about you.”
-
-“Did you? Why did you say that?”
-
-“Oh, because I knew you don’t believe in any of the things that he
-likes.”
-
-“My dear girl, how can you know that? What don’t I believe in?”
-
-“I mean his kind of religion, and rectitude, and making oneself
-uncomfortable about nothing, and all that misunderstanding of everybody
-and looking out for badness.”
-
-“You don’t need to look far,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“Do you think so?” said Evangeline, surprised. “Now that is just what I
-don’t. I think there would be hardly any badness if people didn’t make
-it by believing in it. But why do you think men are so stupid? You can’t
-have thought so in the war——” She became suddenly indignant.
-
-“If men had not been what they are there would have been no war,” said
-Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“Oh, but—good gracious! Look how women fight!” Evangeline exclaimed in
-amazement, “and all about nothing! Men fight _for_ something, and—I
-can’t bear to hear you say beastly things about them when they did——”
-Her voice broke and she stopped. Her eyes were bright and troubled as
-she looked at Mrs. Vachell in the hope of having mistaken her words.
-
-“Don’t take what I say so much to heart,” Mrs. Vachell said gently. “You
-are a very feminine woman. You ought to turn your sympathies on to your
-own sex, who have to endure seeing their lovers and sons killed because
-countries are governed by brutes and knaves and idiots. When your baby
-goes to war and your husband urges him on with applause and he leaves a
-wife and probably two or three ruined women behind him——”
-
-Evangeline’s tears had vanished in utter astonishment at the novelty of
-this view and her own fundamental disbelief in its reality. There was
-nothing in it to stir her passion as it was remote from anything she
-could ever feel and she did not believe anyone else felt it either.
-
-“Of course Ivor will go without any egging on,” she said. “I should die
-of shame if I had even to open the door for him. And as for ruined
-women—Evan is not like that nor are my people, any of them. I don’t see
-why Ivor should grow up a pig any more than they did. But”—she
-remembered again what had amused her—“I do wish you would come and say
-all that to Evan. I do want to prove to him that I was right, and of
-course I can’t tell him what you said. He wouldn’t believe it and would
-think I was being like a woman.”
-
-This last slip of the tongue was unfortunate and might have led to such
-divergence of opinion as would have deprived Evangeline of those further
-talks with Mrs. Vachell that had so much influence on her future. But
-they heard the front door bell ring and Mrs. Vachell said, “That is
-probably Mr. Fisk. He said he might come this afternoon. I wish you
-would stay a little; he might really interest you.”
-
-“Who is he?” Evangeline asked.
-
-“One of the stupidest of the students, but a reformer——” Mr. Fisk was
-announced. He began of course about the weather and asked Evangeline
-whether she had “been long in these parts,” and so on; he omitted none
-of the steps to acquaintance by which his kindred are accustomed to
-reach the more companionable stage of invitations to “tea and s’rimps.”
-Mrs. Vachell soon became impatient and cut him short. “Don’t let us be
-social any more, Mr. Fisk,” she suggested, “but tell us how your
-campaign is getting on.”
-
-He plunged at once into oratorical phrases and Evangeline listened,
-bewildered. Mrs. Vachell led him on by subtle questions to the law of
-marriage.
-
-“Are you in favour of the coming of women?” he asked Evangeline.
-
-“Where to?” she asked. She was deeply interested.
-
-“What people call feminism,” Mrs. Vachell explained. “Don’t you want to
-take your share in the world?”
-
-“What sort of share?” said Evangeline. “I thought I had got one; but I
-am too stupid to do things, if you mean having a profession.”
-
-“Have you ever tried, may I ask?” Mr. Fisk inquired. “Perhaps you hardly
-know your powers.”
-
-“You like people to be happy, I know,” said Mrs. Vachell. “Why not take
-steps to make them so? Don’t you find, for instance, that men have too
-much power over their families?”
-
-Evangeline’s private anxieties awoke. “Do you mean when they can say how
-children are to be brought up?”
-
-“Yes, that among other things.” Mrs. Vachell observed her closely.
-
-“They oughtn’t to,” said Evangeline. “They don’t understand——”
-
-“Have you read Iris Smith’s pamphlet on the matriarchate?” asked Mr.
-Fisk.
-
-“No, I haven’t read anything deep,” she replied. “What is the thing? You
-don’t mean that sort of solid turquoise?” She supposed him to have
-changed the subject out of modesty. He looked scared and Mrs. Vachell
-laughed.
-
-“Mrs. Hatton is only a potential ally,” she explained to him. “She has
-the real instinct, which is worth all the learning in the world. Books
-are only useful for downing the catchwords of stupid people who won’t
-think. How would you like it,” she continued to Evangeline, “if your
-husband insisted on your boy being brought up at some particular school
-and you knew that he would be bullied and misunderstood there, and that
-all the tenderness you love would be crushed out of him; and suppose you
-found after he went that he came back despising you in his heart for
-being of the inferior sex, though he still caressed you as a dear old
-silly whom he could get material comforts from and put down with one
-hand in any discussion?”
-
-“Boys aren’t like that,” said Evangeline frowning. “I know they are
-not—not English boys, anyhow,” she added with a look at Mr. Fisk’s hair,
-to which she had taken a sudden dislike.
-
-“They have been just like that since a date so far back that I don’t
-believe you have ever heard of it,” Mrs. Vachell assured her. “That is
-why you will find it interesting to read books some day.”
-
-Evangeline stayed to tea and came back more incensed than ever against
-Evan’s theories and more than ever in love with his masculinity.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
-
-Anyone entering the Prices’ house on any Wednesday afternoon between
-3.30 and 6 would hear from the staircase and even from the front door a
-chatter and clatter of cups and conversation and shrill laughter. In a
-short time the drawing-room bell would ring, a door would open upstairs
-and louder sounds of talking would burst out; then one of the Price
-girls would be heard to say, “Well, good-bye, then. Tuesday week,” or
-something like that, and a female form, expensively dressed, the remains
-of a farewell smile still on the face, would pass down the stairs and
-probably meet the maidservant on her way up with another batch from the
-front door. On some Wednesdays as many as thirty women called on Mrs.
-Price. Susie, who “believed in keeping up with people,” as she said, was
-there one day soon after Evangeline had left her. The Prices made much
-of her because of her triple connection with Millport, London and the
-county, and the girls described Cyril as “perfectly killing!” They had a
-great respect for him as soon as they saw that he had none whatever for
-them.
-
-Perhaps it was some survival of the days when slavery was upheld from
-the pulpit by a man of God in their city that gave one or two of the
-older Millport families their exaggerated esteem for an impressive
-manner. They knew by ancestral experience that the top dog is the thing
-to be. They sat as near the top as they could and gazed with admiration
-at those who pressed on them from above. No one who understood Cyril
-could suspect him of being impressive, but he took no interest in the
-Prices, so their natural inference from his behaviour was that he must
-be used to something better than themselves, and that would be something
-very good indeed. The train of thought runs easily to the conclusion
-that Cyril was worth cultivating. Half the things he said would have
-convicted him of “giving himself airs” had he been a poor man and polite
-to the Prices, but, “Have you heard what the General said?” they
-repeated to one another after every occasion when they met him. Even
-such trifles as “what he said when Father offered him a cigar at the
-Club,” were reported, and the answer, “No, thanks; have you seen the
-paper?” produced an avalanche of delight.
-
-“But what did he mean, dear?” asked poor Mrs. Price. “I don’t see
-anything particular in that.”
-
-“Oh, mother! Of course he wanted to get rid of Dad; can’t you see? ‘Have
-you seen the paper!’ I think it is delicious. You can just imagine him
-handing it over and sloping off.”
-
-On this afternoon Mrs. Price sat down beside Susie and began to make
-herself agreeable. “Your daughter has left you now, hasn’t she, Mrs.
-—er?” she began. “I hope Drage suits her. My son was there for a time
-and didn’t care for it.”
-
-“It is not a beautiful place, of course,” Susie replied, “but to see
-those boys back from the war enjoying themselves so much is as good as
-any scenery. Your son told Evangeline of the unfortunate accident that
-prevented him from going out. She was so sorry for him.”
-
-“Well, I wasn’t sorry,” said Mrs. Price. “I think the whole arrangement
-of conscription was scandalous. They took people who were absolutely
-necessary for carrying on what business there was, and sent them out.
-Joseph has a very weak throat and would have been absolutely useless, as
-I told him; though he had made up his mind to go. However, it is all
-over now and I hope to goodness they will get all the labour troubles
-settled soon. The price of everything is dreadful. I don’t know how we
-are to go on living.”
-
-“By-the-bye,” asked Susie, “has anything been settled about your taking
-Aldwych?”
-
-An unpleasant recollection rose in Mrs. Price’s mind. Higgins had
-reported to one of the maids after the party “how disrespectful that
-military gentleman that came had spoke” about wealth in general and the
-Prices in particular. He had retailed Cyril’s remarks about getting the
-smell of money out of the house and the likelihood of the Prices
-demoralising the Aldwych tenants like the plague. Higgins had told the
-infamous tale three times at supper, and Hopkins, Mrs. Price’s maid, had
-repeated it to her mistress. The young Prices had heard of it, but paid
-little attention. It only stung them to further admiration of Cyril, for
-since the Profiteering Act had been passed and half the jokes in _Punch_
-were about people who looked rather like Dad and Mother they had begun
-to feel that the gilt on their gingerbread had better be covered a
-little to prevent rubbing. The parents, however, did not like it.
-
-“I don’t know whether we can afford to take it at all,” Mrs. Price
-continued. “It is only people who have made money in the war that can do
-that sort of thing now. Of course Mr. Price actually lost more than he
-made, and with the income tax and everything his idea was really to give
-up and go into the country. Aldwych would need a great deal of keeping
-up.”
-
-“Would it?” said Susie. “I daresay. But you would find the life so
-delightful, wouldn’t you? I think the unrest in a big town is so trying,
-and the unemployment makes it so much worse.” Mrs. Gainsborough was
-sitting on a sofa at her left hand, talking to a clergyman’s wife, and
-there was a sudden silence as Susie spoke. The young Prices had gone
-into the little room beyond to discuss some theatricals they were
-getting up for a charity.
-
-“Why does the Principal allow Mr. Cranston to go on as he does?” Mrs.
-Price asked, turning to Mrs. Gainsborough.
-
-“He doesn’t,” she replied distractedly. “It drives him nearly wild, but
-he can’t do anything.”
-
-“He is making it much harder for everybody,” said Mrs. Abel, the
-clergyman’s wife. “My husband says he is doing incalculable harm in our
-neighbourhood. They are not the very poorest people there and they all
-have time to read and they are great orators—”
-
-“Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Vachell,” the maid announced.
-
-“Ah, this is delightful!” Mrs. Carpenter exclaimed, advancing first and
-shaking hands with everybody. “You are so wise to go on keeping to one
-day,” she said to Mrs. Price. “It is almost the only way of seeing one’s
-friends. I should love it if I had nothing to do, but if I tried to keep
-an afternoon to myself someone would be sure to call a special meeting
-somewhere and I should have to go off. And how is your dear girl? (To
-Susie.) Wrapped up in hubby and the baby, I suppose. I hope he is not
-getting his teeth too soon; it is such a pity when they do; they only
-decay earlier. And how is Emma? (To Mrs. Gainsborough.) I meet her here,
-there and everywhere. I think she does too much. She has not been
-accustomed to so much drudgery as an old soldier’s daughter like me.
-Papa used to hear us our Greek Testament every morning at half-past six.
-You know those were the good old days at Universities! He never gave it
-up even when he went to India. Then we had our classes and our
-riding-master and the old drill-sergeant, and my mother used to take us
-round among the wives and tell them what to do with their babies. Girls
-haven’t the same strength now. I make Baba lie down for an hour every
-day after lunch while I write letters, and I am sure Emma ought to do
-the same. And how is your parish, Mrs. Abel?” She settled down at last
-to one victim and let the others go.
-
-Presently they heard men’s voices in the hall, some heavy stumbling
-upstairs and a door shut. Mrs. Price listened, hesitated and rang the
-bell. “Has anything happened, Gregory?” she asked the maid.
-
-“Mr. Joseph, ma’am, brought home a young man who got knocked down by the
-car. He wished you not to be troubled as there is nothing serious and he
-is expected to be all right in a few minutes. Mr. Varens is with him in
-Mr. Price’s study.”
-
-“I had better go and see what is the matter,” said Mrs. Price. “Don’t
-disturb yourselves; I shall be back in a minute.” She was gone nearly a
-quarter-of-an-hour, but her guests waited on. Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
-Vachell had begun an animated conversation on strikes and Susie was
-listening. When Mrs. Price came back she looked quite scared.
-
-“It is a young man called Fisk,” she said. “David Varens says he is one
-of the students and you would know him,” she turned to Mrs.
-Gainsborough. “He is quite himself again, but he was stunned for the
-moment and I don’t think he knew where he was. He was talking a great
-deal in a very noisy way about blood, and there wasn’t a scratch on him!
-I have telephoned for the doctor to make quite sure he is all right,
-though he says he can go home. Do you know anything of him?”
-
-“Yes, I do,” said Mrs. Gainsborough, “and if he is talking about blood
-you may be sure he is quite well. He thinks of very little else; it is
-almost a pity in some ways if he hasn’t lost any. We all know about him
-and he is the greatest nuisance and trouble to my husband. How did it
-happen?”
-
-“Joseph was driving Mr. Varens back to tea here and the young man came
-out from behind some cart when they were crossing the road. He was not
-thinking where he was going and walked right into the car; but
-fortunately it was hardly moving.”
-
-“Dear me, what a shock it must have given him!” said Susie.
-
-“Have you got brandy in the house?” asked Mrs. Abel.
-
-“Of course we have, thank you,” Mrs. Price was greatly offended at the
-suggestion of such incompleteness in a perfect establishment. As bad as
-asking King George whether he kept a hair brush. “That is not the point.
-Do you mean to say that he is dangerous, Mrs. Gainsborough?”
-
-“Not more than a flying soda-water bottle,” she answered nervously. The
-little contretemps about the brandy had flurried her and probably
-suggested the comparison.
-
-“I think Teresa mentioned him once,” said Susie, who always came to the
-rescue at any hint of dispute. “A Communist, isn’t he?”
-
-“A very determined one,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“What nonsense!” Mrs. Price exclaimed. “A great many of my relations are
-Communists and I am quite sure this young man doesn’t look like one. He
-must be pretending.” Joseph came in just then.
-
-“The doctor has come,” he remarked, “and says he’d better go t’ bed.
-There’s nothing the matter, but David says he’ll leave a note on the
-chap’s people on th’ way back. They live close by th’ station. Kerious
-sort of f’ller, he is. Called me ‘Moloch’ when he w’s coming round. Who
-was Moloch, d’you remember?” he asked Mrs. Vachell. “I can’t just get it
-for th’ moment.”
-
-“Something to do with blood, wasn’t he?” Mrs. Vachell suggested.
-
-“Ah, thaat’s it,” Joseph replied contentedly. “Script’ral allusion ’f
-some sort I w’s sure. He’s talking about blood all th’ time and not a
-scratch on him anywhere. ’t’s most kerious.”
-
-“Some people have such a prejudice against cars, particularly if they
-are not in them,” said Susie. “And if he is a Communist he is quite sure
-to think he ought to have one. And so ought everybody, I do think, if
-they can. When cheap ones are made in large quantities I am sure people
-will be happier and more contented.”
-
-“Except those who make them,” said Mrs. Vachell. She was standing up by
-the mantelpiece, fingering a matchbox on the corner. “Or shall we
-contrive that Mr. Fisk gets inside one as soon as possible and you and I
-take a turn at the workshops, Mrs. Fulton?”
-
-“No, I think we are all much better where we are,” Susie replied
-smiling. “Every man to his last. But I do certainly think that
-conditions ought to be made better. I believe if all that sort of thing
-were arranged everyone would settle down much more comfortably. Beauty
-is such a happy thing. I find, myself, that I don’t mind how simply I
-live so long as I have music and books and so on and if I can get out
-into the country sometimes. These ugly streets are so depressing.”
-
-“You must meet Mr. Cranston and see what you can do with him,” said Mrs.
-Vachell.
-
-“I don’t think Mrs. Fulton would get on with him at all,” put in Mrs.
-Gainsborough in a great flurry. Her imagination flew to a possible scene
-of inextricable confusion and she turned quite red with embarrassment.
-
-“No, do, Mrs. Fulton,” said Mrs. Abel anxiously. “I wish you would speak
-to him and see if you can’t influence him. What you say is perfectly
-true. My husband would be so grateful to you.”
-
-“Well, I hope you will ask me to come too,” said Mrs. Carpenter. “I can
-support you with all the facts if you want them. Mr. Cranston talks the
-greatest nonsense. He should come down to our place and talk to the
-women I have to deal with and get at the practical side of what they
-want. He would find that if he stopped the men drinking and made them
-bring home their wages there would be plenty—abundance even—to live on;
-and if it were made a criminal offence for a man to run after a young
-girl——”
-
-“Or for a girl to run after a young man,” Mrs. Gainsborough interrupted
-nervously. “They so often do, you know.”
-
-“Not unless they are taught to do it,” Susie objected, her eyes wide
-with reproach.
-
-Joseph Price sat on the back of a sofa looking from one lady to the
-other and jingling the money in his pockets. His mother was waiting to
-ring the bell and have them all shown out. The girls had come from the
-other room and were standing at the back wondering what it was all
-about.
-
-“I am afraid we must be going,” said Mrs. Gainsborough, feeling that she
-had not said the right thing and wishing Emma were there.
-
-“You m’st have a talk to Fisk,” said Joseph to Susie. “You’d like him;
-he’s really a very int’resting f’ller. I wonder if he’s still talking
-about blood; p’raps I’d better go and see.”
-
-“Well, you will come and meet Mr. Cranston, won’t you, Mrs. Fulton?”
-Mrs. Vachell said. She held out her hand to say good-bye to Mrs. Price
-and they all went downstairs.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
-
-Teresa was staying with Evangeline at Drage. Evangeline had received a
-letter from her a week before saying, “I want you to ask me to stay with
-you for a few days. David has asked me to marry him and I can hardly
-make you understand how much I want to and at the same time explain why
-I have refused. You will think it silly, because you don’t take sayings
-literally and there are some that I can’t take generally. If I had a lot
-of money I should see written up on the walls all round me, ‘Sell all
-that thou hast and give to the poor.’ I couldn’t live in the middle of
-it and just dole out what was left from the expenses of a big house.
-David won’t see it. If only his father had not died! Then we should have
-been married and I couldn’t have gone back; whatever we settled David
-and I could not have parted. Though that is just cowardice. It is that I
-hate having the choice when I am so perfectly certain which I ought to
-do. David says the money he would get for the estate would make as much
-difference to the poor as a parcel of dressings in a battle, but I think
-that is the weakest possible argument, that because one person can’t do
-much no one is to do anything; everyone has to go as far as they can see
-and nothing less is enough. He says the money is more useful where it
-is, in teaching people to make the best out of the land. I asked if we
-couldn’t at least sell the big house and live in a cottage or perhaps
-use the house as a convalescent home for mothers and children; but he
-says, No. It is full of lovely things, hundreds of years old, that
-belonged to his family and that he has the right to enjoy as much as if
-he had bought them himself. He says that if Mr. Price bought them, as he
-would like to do, he wouldn’t either give them away or sell them
-directly. He doesn’t care about them, but he would keep them out of
-vanity and hand them on to Joseph, who would probably sell them to the
-Jews and they would be lost all over the world. I said, wasn’t that a
-good thing, as then so many people could each have a little bit and
-enjoy it, but he said there was no sense in that; they looked much
-better all together where they were. Of course you and I have never had
-a family tree, so I don’t suppose we understand any more than Mrs.
-Potter does—though, if you come to think of it, whenever she puts that
-absurd old tea caddy of hers up the spout she always gets it out again
-because it was her grandmother’s. But Mother found out about David and
-she goes on talking very gently and persistently, and tells me I am only
-a little girl and can’t possibly think out things that even the greatest
-men don’t agree about, and she doesn’t see that that is not the point. I
-have to follow what my bones say is the only decent thing to do. She
-does get on my nerves so, and I know you won’t argue if I ask you not. I
-believe I shall get some support out of Evan, as he does so believe in
-anything uncomfortable, doesn’t he? And this is so uncomfortable I am
-nearly mad.”
-
-Evangeline had written at once, offering all the welcome and freedom
-Teresa could want, and Evan received her with affection. He liked her
-thoroughly. She found an atmosphere of tension and sadness in the house
-that she had not expected, neither could she see how it came there, for
-Evangeline seemed on good terms with her husband, and Ivor was well and
-in the highest spirits; except when his father came into the nursery,
-which was not very often. Then the nurse grew troubled and fidgeted the
-child and he became exacting and contentious, speaking rudely to her,
-which was quite unusual with him. One day Teresa and Evangeline were
-there playing with him in perfect peace, when Evan came in. It was about
-half-past three on a foggy November afternoon. “Why isn’t that boy out?”
-he asked his wife.
-
-“He has been out,” she answered, “but Nurse brought him in as it is so
-foggy and he has had a cold.”
-
-“We were always turned out in all weathers up in Yorkshire, and it never
-did us any harm,” said Evan.
-
-“Let’s turn that gun further round this way, Ivor,” said Evangeline,
-going on with the game. “You see it would be firing right into its own
-trenches; try a shot and you will see.” Evan looked on.
-
-“Here, old man, I’ll show you,” he said, and he took hold of the gun.
-
-“No, don’t!” shouted Ivor in great excitement. “Put it down! I’ve put it
-there mythelf.”
-
-“Yes, but you haven’t done it properly,” his father said, beginning to
-move it.
-
-“Leave it, I thay,” Ivor screamed, almost beside himself. “Get out from
-my gunth——” He pushed his father away impatiently. “And you get out
-too,” he commanded Evangeline, pushing her also, suddenly tired of
-visitors. “All go away downthtairth.” Tears of aggravation were in his
-eyes, but he kept them back.
-
-“You are not to speak to your mother like that, sir,” said Evan.
-“Apologise to her at once.” Ivor had no idea what apologising meant, but
-it sounded horrid. “Than’t,” he said.
-
-“Oh, do go away, please, Evan,” said Evangeline. “We’re coming down to
-tea presently. Do go and ring for it.”
-
-“Not till that boy has apologised for his rudeness,” said Evan. Ivor had
-resumed his game alone and was getting interested and remote. Evidently
-this tiresome family of his were going to fight among themselves and
-leave him in peace.
-
-“You are sorry, aren’t you?” his mother said, then in a pleading tone:
-“You didn’t mean to push, did you?”
-
-“Eth,” said Ivor, as he placed the contested gun carefully back in the
-position from which his father had moved it.
-
-“Nonsense,” said Evangeline temptingly. “Come here and kiss me and make
-it up.”
-
-“Take—away—your—’uthband,” Ivor said slowly, as if he were repeating a
-lesson to himself. His mother and his aunt shouted with delight and
-could hardly believe that the child had meant it. Ivor’s face was quite
-unmoved. “Come on,” said Evangeline, seizing Evan by the arm and
-dragging him out of the room. “You can’t stay after that.” But he
-neither smiled nor answered. He followed them downstairs and did not
-speak for some time.
-
-When he had gone out again after tea Evangeline sat for a time looking
-idly into the fire. “Dicky,” she began after a little while, “whatever
-you do don’t marry a man with whom you daren’t be truthful. Before I
-talk to Evan I have to treat what I want to say as if it were to a
-foreigner and had to be translated into his language. First I have to
-cut out the bits that won’t do because of the prejudices he was brought
-up in. Then I have to change whole chunks that he would associate with
-other women whom he dislikes and who have said the same things; we do,
-as a sex, rather talk about the same things as each other, don’t we? But
-when he has heard some gas-bag of a creature say, ‘Oh, Captain Hatton, I
-do love children!’ (which she probably does) he thinks the whole subject
-exhausted, and shamefully exhausted too! So if any woman uses the word
-‘love’ at any time afterwards he looks the subject up in his mind and
-finds a note, ‘memo. gas. Mrs. T.’ and there’s an end of it; so in
-future, when I want to say anything about love I have to use another
-word. It is very hampering.”
-
-“But you can’t go on using new words about everything,” said Teresa.
-
-“No, but you see in the kind of things he talks to men about the words
-can’t very well be misused. If you are describing what has gone wrong
-with an engine you can only use words like ‘plug’ and ‘spring’ and
-‘valve,’ that have only one meaning. Even a lawyer couldn’t say, ‘I
-suggest that when you tell the Court that the valve was defective you
-inferred that John Brown’s baby had a wart on its nose.’ But that is
-what Evan does if I try to tell him what Ivor is thinking—things that I
-know quite well because I remember being a child, and he doesn’t.”
-
-“Yes, I see,” said Teresa.
-
-“Well, let us get on to David,” said her sister. “Does what I have said
-apply to him or not?”
-
-“No, not at all,” (very emphatically).
-
-“Then why doesn’t he do what you want?”
-
-“Not because he doesn’t understand, but because he doesn’t agree. It is
-rather like statistics; two people can add up the same figures and prove
-different results with them, one showing that trade is prospering and
-the other that it is going all wrong.”
-
-“You know, I agree with him,” said Evangeline. “I don’t think you could
-do any good by selling everything. There is nothing you can give to
-people to make them happy if they don’t want to be. I have found that
-out.”
-
-“But the people I am talking about do want to be happy,” Teresa argued
-passionately. “They are starving for what other people are throwing away
-because they can’t use all of it.”
-
-“I saw in the paper the other day that if you divided up everyone’s
-money there would be only thirteen-and-something a day—or a week—or it
-might have been a year—I forget; but only a very little like that for
-each person.”
-
-“It wasn’t finance that I was thinking of,” said Teresa, “I know it is
-no good trying to settle that. There is a horrid boy at the University
-called Fisk. He is always telling me that I haven’t studied the subject,
-and he is going quite mad himself over it. He devours Mr. Cranston’s
-literature and coughs it up again much the worse for wear. Joseph Price
-ran over him once, ages ago, and brought him back to their house in the
-middle of a tea-party. Mother was there, and David told me all about it
-afterwards. Of course Mother told us nothing except that Mrs. Price got
-frightened at Fisk talking so much about blood, as he always does when
-he is excited, and that she had said that he couldn’t possibly be a
-Communist, because some of her own relations were; wasn’t that like her?
-You know they were all very rich, so I have wondered since how they did
-mean to divide up their money. But whichever way it was they don’t seem
-to have done it. Fisk stayed in the Prices’ house for two days, and at
-last Mrs. Price sent for Emma, as he seemed to have settled down there
-very comfortably and said he was too ill to move. I think Joseph
-encouraged him because he thought it was the kind of thing his dear
-Mortons, whom he imitates, would do; keep a revolutionary in bed in
-their own house and egg him on and feed him up and get lots of notoriety
-out of him and then manage to get out of any trouble that they raised
-later on. David says if there were a revolution the Mortons would
-probably pretend to head it and then slip off to another country where
-it is all comfortable under a despot.”
-
-“What does Father say?” Evangeline asked curiously.
-
-“I haven’t told him about David,” Teresa replied.
-
-“Why not? He always understands, and if, as you say, Mother knows, she
-is sure to have told him.”
-
-“No, there are some things he doesn’t see at all, and one of them is
-slums. They don’t worry him an atom unless he has to walk through them,
-and if he does that he complains that everyone wears fish next the skin,
-and wants to go home another way. He never will take the trouble to
-think about anything horrid that he can’t help. I asked him once what he
-would do if he had to live in a place like that—we were in some horrible
-street near the docks—and he said that it was impossible that he should
-have to, because then he would be somebody else; he explained that he
-would have been given gin in his bottle as a baby, and therefore would
-have grown up quite contented with it all. Of course he would side with
-David if I told him. The idea of Mr. Price having anything to do with
-hounds would prevent him from listening to arguments even from an
-archangel.”
-
-If Teresa had but known, her parents were at that very moment discussing
-the same subject. It was after dinner, and Susie had mentioned that she
-met Lady Varens that afternoon opening a bazaar. “They are going to let
-Aldwych to the Prices for three years,” she said. “David refuses to sell
-it, but he has suddenly come round to the idea of letting it. I suppose
-the Prices hope to be able to buy it in the end.”
-
-“Well, I’m damned sorry,” he said with a sigh.
-
-“I am afraid it is partly Dicky’s fault, Cyril,” she suggested gently.
-
-“How’s that?” he asked. “You haven’t sold her to that young Price, have
-you, Sue? I couldn’t stand that.”
-
-“I wonder if you will ever understand that marriage is not a question of
-bargaining and arrangement,” said his wife impatiently. “It is really a
-pity, I think, that I wasn’t able to provide you with cattle instead of
-children. You would have understood me far better if I had been a slave
-or an animal.”
-
-“We might try,” he suggested. “It is not too late to add to your list of
-female impersonations. But you haven’t answered my question.”
-
-“I forget what it was,” she answered gravely.
-
-“Whether you had bestowed (we will say if you prefer it) Teresa on
-Joseph Price.”
-
-“I have no reason to suppose that he has asked her to marry him,” said
-Susie.
-
-“Then we may take it that is all right,” he said with relief. “She would
-never invite herself. I am always glad to see Mammon spread his net in
-vain for your sex, Sue. It makes the world so much brighter and better.
-But what did you mean that Dicky had done?”
-
-“She has refused David; why I don’t know.”
-
-“I am really sorry about that,” he said after a pause.
-
-“I suppose you wouldn’t tell her so, would you?” she asked hopefully.
-
-“Of course not. If marriage means as much to a girl as you say it does,
-she isn’t likely to invest in a husband to amuse dear old Dad.”
-
-“No, but you might tell her. Girls are so silly.”
-
-“Well, you astonish me!” said Cyril.
-
-“Why? Surely you must know they are.”
-
-“I thought the feminine instinct was infallible on every subject.”
-
-“She can’t be expected to have experience,” said Susie.
-
-“Then the divine gift is just a happy little flame that you can blow out
-when you don’t want to see it, is that it? You can just ask Mother what
-she saw when she was a girl? And that was a devil of a lot,” he added
-reflectively.
-
-“Then it is no good asking you to take the matter seriously?” she
-inquired.
-
-“She is not going to stay away long, is she?” Cyril asked.
-
-“I shouldn’t think so. I believe Evan’s sisters are going to stay there
-next week.”
-
-“Well, absence makes the heart grow fonder,” he observed. “I am very
-sorry about Dicky. I don’t think you made a great success there, Sue.”
-
-“I had nothing to do with it,” she protested. “I implored her to wait.
-If anything it was your fault for having Evan always about here.”
-
-“Now how could I help that?” Cyril inquired. “I couldn’t have a maiden
-lady as my A.D.C., and if I had, you would have said that I taught her
-to be wicked. As it was, I just tried not to worry.”
-
-“Is there anything else I can say for you to twist round, Cyril dear?”
-asked his wife. “I am delighted to give you opportunities for your wit,
-but sometimes it is hardly possible to open one’s mouth.”
-
-“I am sorry,” he said penitently. “I don’t want to tease you, really. I
-love everything you say. But when you blamed me for not keeping Hatton
-in a cupboard like a bottle of whisky labelled ‘not to be taken,’ I
-thought you were coming it a little strong.”
-
-“They don’t seem to me to be very happy,” said Susie, prepared to start
-again amicably. “I wish he wouldn’t carry religion quite so far.”
-
-“How far does he carry it?” asked Cyril, “You see, he never had occasion
-to bring it to me at all, so I don’t know.”
-
-“Oh quite ridiculous lengths,” Susie replied. “He thinks quite a number
-of things wrong.”
-
-“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Cyril uproariously. “Well done, Sue. That’s a
-topper! Ha! ha!”
-
-“My dear Cyril, what on earth is the matter?” she asked, quite
-bewildered.
-
-“Nothing,” he replied gravely, as he poured himself out his usual
-evening drink. “My mind wanders sometimes. Go on, my dear. Evan is
-suffering from moral unrest, you say?”
-
-“Yes, he used even to think it wrong sometimes when I had dear Baby in
-my room and played with him. I think it is dreadful not to want to see a
-little child happy.”
-
-“I don’t know that I would trust you to bring up a boy, Sue,” he said
-candidly. “You see, your idea of a male is to let it have all it wants
-so long as it is only a matter of a little song and dance. But when it
-begins to want things a bit nearer the bone, you pull it up short and it
-gets confused. Very few women know how to go on as they meant to begin.”
-
-“I suppose you mean ‘begin as they mean to go on,’” said Susie, “but you
-are quite wrong. Men understand what women mean quite well from the
-beginning.”
-
-“I meant what I said,” Cyril persisted. “Go on as they meant to begin.
-They meant to begin with a carnival and to end in Lent.”
-
-Susie flushed. “I was saying that I think Evan is far too strict with
-little Ivor,” she said.
-
-“Someone has got to be sometime,” said Cyril carelessly. “It will save
-the schoolmaster’s arm later.”
-
-“But a baby! It is so cruel,” she protested. “I must say, Cyril, to do
-you justice, you never interfered with the children.”
-
-“No, because they were girls,” he replied. “And anyhow, I don’t know
-anything about kids. I don’t mind them but I keep out of the way.”
-
-“They were much fonder of you than Ivor is of his father.”
-
-“Don’t let’s be boastful. And you had much better leave those two to
-manage their own affairs.”
-
-Teresa came back at the end of the week and saw David once before he
-went away. The Prices were to move into Aldwych next month and Lady
-Varens was going abroad when David went to the Argentine to learn
-farming.
-
-He met Teresa when he was leaving the University one evening and walked
-back with her. When they reached the house she invited him in. “I know
-Mother is out,” she said, “and Father probably is, too, but I want you
-to come in. I have one more thing to say.”
-
-“What is it?” he asked when they were in the drawing-room.
-
-“Do you think you will certainly come back when the Prices’ three years
-are up?”
-
-“I shall see what sort of a show they run there. If it is all right I
-might let them have it and I would buy some land somewhere else.”
-
-“Where for instance?”
-
-“Anywhere where they talk English.”
-
-“Even in the Colonies? And what about all the things in your house?”
-
-“I should move them.”
-
-“And what about the old people on the place?”
-
-“Easily move them too, if they liked. If not, leave them.”
-
-“Would many of them want to go, do you think?”
-
-“Not unless your friend Fisk gets too much of the blood he is after.
-Then they might.”
-
-“David, I do loathe that Fisk.”
-
-“Yes, so do I.——Teresa?”
-
-“It is the Lady Bountiful I can’t do,” she said very sadly. “There is
-something in me that sticks and boggles at it as if I were trying to
-swallow a fish bone. If you loved someone as much as you could and were
-told you must only flirt with them—wouldn’t you feel you couldn’t? It
-would be like selling one’s soul to the devil.”
-
-“No, I do think that is awfully silly,” said David. “You can’t flirt
-with a girl you love. You get run away with and then—well, you go where
-it is going. You don’t think about whether you ought to stop and pick
-mushrooms.”
-
-So it seemed. For when Susie came back David had gone, and Teresa’s pale
-little face bore evidence of having paid dearly for her inability to (as
-she thought) flirt with her love for Mrs. Potter. It is impossible to
-say whether David carried his idea of the runaway horse any further, or
-comforted himself with the possibility of deflecting the course of
-Teresa’s passion for regeneration.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
-
-“I am going to Aldwych to call on the Prices. Will you come with me,
-dear Dicky? I wish you would,” said Susie.
-
-Teresa said she would. Sometime the idea of Aldwych without David must
-be recognised and dealt with. She also wished her mother to forget that
-“a girl may regret some day” having refused a beautiful old place in the
-country and a really good husband “just for an idea.” Poor little Teresa
-supposed that any show of reluctance to go back to the house might be
-taken as evidence of a weak spot in her armour. Neither she nor
-Evangeline had ever known how much of the world their mother detected
-from behind her veil of misty sweetness. Anything more candid than her
-words and actions could hardly be imagined, and yet somehow, as
-Evangeline had said, omelets were mysteriously made in hats, and whether
-Susie or the Powers of Darkness made them none of her audience could
-discern. Cyril had his ideas on the subject and we have seen how deeply
-they wounded her.
-
-Mrs. Price was found in the garden, talking in her best manner to one of
-“the county” who had called; a crushing sort of woman who made it quite
-clear to Mrs. Price that she had called in obedience to the tradition
-that “noblesse oblige.” She was known as Mrs. Archie Lake, and newcomers
-were supposed to be “all right” if she called on them. She had conferred
-the stamp of recognition on Mrs. Price for several reasons. First, “out
-of decency to Milly Varens”; secondly, because the Hunt was not in a
-very flourishing condition, and Mr. Price was reported to be rich and
-ambitious; thirdly, “just to see what they were like.” Someone had met
-Joseph Price and reported that he was quite possible and that the girls
-would probably have money too in the end——. Here Mrs. Lake let her train
-of thought lose itself because one does not think these things out in so
-many words. Her son was rather a worry to her, but it is impossible to
-make plans of that sort. The French do, but we don’t. Anyhow she called,
-and Susie and Teresa found her there. Mrs. Price was getting on well
-with her new manner. “How charming of you to come, Mrs. Fulton. Of
-course you know this part of the world well. And how is the General?”
-She did not wish Mrs. Lake to suppose that Millport was going to be
-allowed to track her down here, but Susie, of course, was different. She
-welcomed her.
-
-“Yes, I think we have met somewhere, haven’t we?” said Mrs. Lake,
-raising her eyes sleepily to Susie. Mrs. Price made a mental note and
-tried to look a little sleepy too.
-
-“I am sure you are enjoying the country,” Susie said to her. “Everything
-is looking so exquisite just now. We want to go away ourselves as soon
-as we can, but my husband finds it very difficult to get away. He
-doesn’t care for the sea and so many of his Staff have children that he
-likes to let them off when the schools break up and take his own holiday
-when the hunting begins.”
-
-“But isn’t Millport on the sea somewhere?” asked Mrs. Lake. Mrs. Price
-flushed. “We hardly think of a great port like that as the seaside,” she
-said. “Of course when my husband’s ancestor went there first and
-practically built what there was it was on the sea, but that is so long
-ago and everything is so altered he would hardly recognise it if he were
-alive. There are very few people nowadays who have the courage of those
-pioneers who went down to the sea in ships and opened up communications
-with the East. My husband cares so much more for sport and racing and
-all that, that I tell him he is not half proud enough of the old family
-he comes from. Something so rugged and adventurous about the sea, isn’t
-there?”
-
-“They used to import slaves, didn’t they?” Mrs. Lake inquired, looking
-quite vacant. “I wish they would begin again now. I am fed up with the
-search for servants, aren’t you?”
-
-“Oh, but don’t you think that was terribly wrong?” said Susie. “I can’t
-bear to think of it. I am sure that most of the labour troubles now are
-largely owing to people having been so inconsiderate for others in the
-past. Teresa and I both work a great deal in that way, and we see so
-much of it.”
-
-“Oh, really? What sort of work do you do?” asked Mrs. Lake of Teresa.
-
-“I just sort papers in an office,” said Teresa, who would have beaten
-her mother at that moment.
-
-“Really? Don’t you find you need exercise?” said Mrs. Lake. “You had
-better come and do some hunting in the winter. I have come to the
-conclusion that the working classes don’t need helping any more; they
-help themselves to everything they want. Do your girls hunt?” she turned
-to Mrs. Price.
-
-“Oh, they are quite mad about it,” their mother replied. “Sir David sold
-his horses before we came. He said he didn’t understand that Mr. Price
-would have bought any that were good enough for the girls, but some
-others have been ordered, I believe, and in the meantime we have the
-three motors to get about in, so we are not really cut off.”
-
-Mrs. Lake was startled almost out of her good behaviour. She regretted
-for a moment having called so soon, in case it should really be
-impossible to go on with these people, however rich they were.
-
-“I suppose Sir David is coming back in a year or two?” she said,
-anxiously.
-
-“Well, that of course, one can’t say,” Mrs. Price replied, “but my
-husband would have bought the place if he could and he still hopes to—if
-we find we can afford it, that is,” she added, recollecting certain
-warnings from her daughters. “We had to draw in our horns very much
-since the war, like everybody else.”
-
-“Not quite everybody, do you think?” said Mrs. Lake, as she made room
-for the butler and footman who had come in with tea. “There are some
-people who have taken a place called Fable near here—perhaps you know
-them? I think they come from Millport or Poolchester, I forget which. He
-contracted for something during the war, boots or cholera belts or
-cigarettes or something, and not only that, but the price of whatever it
-was is still up. It is rather sad to see the old places go, one by one.”
-
-“I expect they come from Poolchester,” said Mrs. Price. “There is a
-great deal of that sort of thing there. It is a manufacturing town of
-course.”
-
-“But such an interesting place,” Susie intervened. “So much life. I went
-there once to hear some wonderful music, and the faces all looked to me
-so strong. No, no sugar, thanks,—Teresa, dear, will you take that cup
-from Mrs. Price?”
-
-Joseph came in just then and Mrs. Lake dropped all unpleasant subjects
-immediately. She encouraged him and he responded gladly. He infused a
-quality of ease into the conversation.
-
-“And how’s the—what d’you call it?—the welfare of the city, Miss
-Fulton?” he asked presently. “Still going strong, what? Fisk been
-shedding much blood lately?”
-
-“What’s that?” asked Mrs. Lake curiously.
-
-“Oh, great sport, isn’t he, Miss Fulton? Communist, what? Miss Fulton
-b’nevolently hands round soup and Fisk gets into it, isn’t that it? No,
-kait sairysly though. I hope you’re getting on. I do immensely admire
-what you’re doing. I couldn’t do it for m’life. The smell of the f’llers
-on parade used to quite upset me.”
-
-Mrs. Lake didn’t like that. “He must learn not to say those kind of
-things,” she thought. “It is dreadfully bad form; but he is a nice boy
-in many ways; we had better make use of him.”
-
-To Teresa the whole thing was little less than torture. Love of humanity
-was so alive in her that to have it wounded in sport gave her something
-of the hopeless misery of a child roughly handled by bigger boys. The
-fact that they were of her own species made her sense of isolation
-worse. Affectionate women fear alien sympathies more than force. They
-also feel it their duty to betray the whereabouts of the thing they love
-by fighting over it, instead of merely putting it out of range of attack
-and guarding all approaches as men do.
-
-“You would have smelt just as bad yourself if you had been a private,”
-she said, blushing and stammering, “it is only just chance that gives
-you hot baths.”
-
-“Ha! ha!” he laughed heartily. “Of course I should. You’re abs’lutely
-right; but then I shouldn’t have minded, don’t you see? That’s th’ whole
-point.”
-
-“How do you know you wouldn’t?” she flamed out. “How do you know they
-don’t care? They do care. You know nothing about it. You have never
-talked to them.”
-
-“Teresa, dear,” Susie remonstrated.
-
-“No, no, please,” said Joseph. “Come on, Miss Fulton, we must finish
-this. I’m enjoying it ’mmensely. I love people that speak out. I——”
-
-“Oh, do leave it alone,” said Teresa. “You don’t understand a bit.”
-
-“Yes, I do,” he persisted. “I’m ’normously int’rested in th’ whole
-subject. I shall b’ sure to have to canvass for my father at the next
-election and what you were saying is just th’ sort of thing th’ Labour
-people will put up, and I shall have t’ find an answer. And there isn’t
-any answer, you know, except that somebody’s got t’ have money—there
-isn’t ’nough in th’ country for everybody—and mining and all that takes
-generations of training. Somebody’s got to do it, and somebody’s got t’
-stay outside and watch them when they come up. Th’ question is, Who?
-Fisk thinks he ought t’ have a turn because he never has. I think I’m
-going to because I’ve got int’ the habit of it. There’s nothing in it as
-an argument, you see. The only way is t’ sit tight. The thing’s bound t’
-settle itself in time.”
-
-“And what is your father’s view as a Member of Parliament?” asked Mrs.
-Lake, who was a good deal bewildered, a little shocked and a very little
-amused.
-
-“Oh, I don’t know,” said Joseph, “he doesn’t say, but I don’t think he
-stands much nonsense from the f’llers down at the works. But he keeps
-friends with the Labour Party, I b’lieve on principle. The government
-offered him a baronetcy last year, but that sort of thing isn’t done
-now, thank goodness. He said he’d be a fool t’ take it, I remember, but
-I forget why.”
-
-“How can you pretend to be so silly, Joseph,” his mother interrupted.
-“You know your father doesn’t believe in rewards for public service of
-that sort. No one can ever say he has pushed himself forward.”
-
-“No, my dear mother, that’s just what I said,” he remarked. “It’s such
-frightf’lly bad form t’ have titles and all that sort of thing, now. The
-Tories stick to it on principle, of course, but they’re frightf’lly
-crude in their ideas——” He was wandering on gaily as a matter of habit,
-relating as much as he could remember of what he heard at the houses he
-loved, when Mrs. Archie Lake rose.
-
-“Don’t talk too much about crude Conservatives while you are at Aldwych,
-Mr. Price,” she said. “We don’t study politics down here; we just have
-them, and we are not likely to change. You had better come and play
-tennis with us next week, and leave abstruse problems alone.”
-
-Evangeline had taken a small house by the sea for July and August. She
-intended to be there alone with Ivor and his nurse, except for such time
-as she could persuade Teresa to spend with her. Evan would come down for
-week ends, and perhaps a whole ten days at the end of the time. She was
-beginning to lose those sociable tastes that had made her so popular
-when she came to Drage. Her joy in living that had made her easily throw
-off the weight of other people’s theories of conduct was giving way
-under continuous fatigue. Her war against Evan’s prejudices had broken
-out again.
-
-This reassembling of his forces and hers might have been prophesied
-without much risk from the beginning, but the prophet would have been
-called cynical and pessimistic by all those genial souls who believe
-that the best way to prevent war is to invite the hostile parties to a
-picnic. They fondly suppose that because the guns are left at home there
-will be no fighting. Even when they look round and discover that half
-the party are drawn up on one side of the tablecloth with all the
-teapots and the other half are massed with all the buns on the
-other,—even then they would consider it morbid to suspect them of
-harbouring old grudges. It may be remembered that before Evan asked
-Evangeline to marry him he had reviewed and finally dismissed the
-remnant of his doubts about the soundness of her character. His inner
-voices warned him, “She is not your ideal woman; she is lax and flippant
-and light-headed,” but Nature laughed at and tormented him. No one knows
-how Nature does this work of uniting opposite temperaments, but she did
-it, and Evan’s misgivings retired muttering.
-
-By the time we are now speaking of they had gathered again in a strong
-force. Evangeline’s gaiety and confidence and innocence with which she
-had routed them were now weakened by constant unexpected attacks. The
-anxiety of never knowing from what quarter disapproval would burst out
-and turn pleasure into pain made her nervous and depressed. As Ivor grew
-older the strain was more than doubled, for in every attack of Evan’s
-that she could have dodged or parried for herself she was hampered by
-Ivor’s little body, that would suffer equally from her blows at her
-husband and her husband’s at her. She dared not hide away with him,
-because that would at once bring about the crisis she dreaded, and Evan
-would claim his right to take the boy away. There was nowhere she could
-hide him where he would not be found by the police and given back to his
-father. She sat sometimes on a gate among fields that overlooked the
-railway line, and watched with frightened eyes the trains rush by and
-wondered whether any of them went far enough without a stop to take her
-and the child out of Evan’s reach. She thought longingly of other
-countries, stretches of hill and forest, new faces, new people;
-English-speaking they must be for Evangeline, but there are plenty of
-these everywhere, on the other side of the globe. She thought once what
-fun it would be to walk about in bright sunshine, knowing that Evan was
-asleep in darkness and fog just below the curve of the round world. Only
-there, on the other side, would she feel safe; he would never come
-slowly up like a fly over an orange (as she was taught at school when
-the hemispheres were explained) and look for her. No, she knew he would
-not. He would search over England, and possibly Europe, but if the
-police still failed in their clues he would go home at last and explain
-to Cyril, and retire into a blacker severity than ever with his giggly
-little sisters. Then she used to shake herself free from these dreams
-and return home tired and sad. She had looked forward eagerly to being
-by the sea with Teresa and Ivor, and when they were all there at last,
-some of her old confidence came back.
-
-She said nothing to Teresa about the trouble in her mind, because it had
-increased beyond the stage of being an interesting puzzle and become
-grief that lies quieter untouched, except by the one who brought it and
-only could remove it. One great difference between Evangeline and her
-mother was that Susie counted differences of opinion with herself as a
-compliment to her higher understanding; they were treasures to be turned
-over and enjoyed in secret. To her daughter they were so many
-obstructions to love, and must be destroyed if possible; if persistently
-obstructive, she climbed over and fled from them.
-
-Ivor had certainly managed to collect in himself all the elements of
-discord in his father’s and mother’s families. If he had inherited his
-mother’s joyousness and been content with that, the two of them together
-might have weakened Evan’s fears through lack of exercise, for his
-disapproval was not the natural bitterness that uses a creed as the
-organ of its appetite; it was his means of following the same desire as
-Evangeline followed, the desire to know how God works the universe. She
-felt that she knew how it was done and he thought he knew. But feeling
-is generally stronger than thought in personal affairs, so if the
-wretched young Ivor had left well alone and not excited his father’s
-reasoning powers, they might have grown soft like the Roman Legions. But
-unfortunately he had inherited a great deal of Susie’s mischievous
-tendency to stir up strife without taking part in it. He had her elusive
-charm and was, like her, uncommunicative; he loved natural pleasure and
-was indifferent to public opinion, like his mother, and was as
-unswerving along his own chosen path as his father. This combination of
-qualities made him perfectly adapted as a bone of contention, a
-desirable young person, belonging to both, and yet to neither of the
-contending parties. There, down by the sea with his devoted mother and
-aunt and nurse, he played and bathed and went his own way in peace,
-asking nothing that was unreasonable, kind-hearted, courageous and
-merry; the kind of child that terrifies its weaker relatives by the
-thought of what it has to meet in the future; of candid eyes coming upon
-hatred for the first time, small hands roughened by work and stained
-with blood from the noses of hostile neighbours with predatory instincts
-and a perverted sense of humour; visions perhaps, of little trousers
-that were designed for warmth and comfort removed with trembling fingers
-at the command of an ogre with a cane in a place far from home—a callous
-creature with lips dripping the literature of a civilisation that
-worshipped suffering. There is a radical difference between mothers who
-revere the name of Cæsar and mothers who don’t. It is not all children
-who work upon maternal terrors in this way, but Ivor had the gift to
-perfection and his unconsciousness of his own power made it the
-stronger.
-
-The little party were playing on the sands one day, when two figures,
-one in a linen dress with a red parasol, the other in baggy tweeds, came
-to the edge of the cliff above them and sat down. Evangeline heard a
-small laugh with a familiar tone in it, and looked up. “Hullo, Dicky,”
-she said, “there are the Vachells; look!” Mrs. Vachell waved her hand
-and then said something, and presently both figures rose and came slowly
-down the sandhills, Mrs. Vachell with leisurely ease, her husband with
-the reluctance of a shy man obeying the stronger will of a wife used to
-society.
-
-“I had no idea you were here,” she said. “Did I tell you of the place by
-any chance? There are so few people here generally. You know my husband,
-don’t you?” Mr. Vachell bowed. “But you two don’t count as people,” she
-added. “I don’t grudge you your simple pleasures. If you spend your days
-like this making sand pies you must have very peaceful minds. What I
-hate are people who put up tents and are always making tea and screaming
-in two inches of water.”
-
-“Your boy seems to be having a good time,” said Mr. Vachell. Ivor was
-busy with a net among the small rocks that appeared at low tide.
-
-“Yes, he loves it,” Evangeline replied. “We are so happy here.” She
-spread her rug hospitably, and they all sat down. Mr. Vachell and Teresa
-were side by side in a silence that each felt the other ought to break
-first, but neither was equal to the attempt.
-
-“Is Captain Hatton with you?” asked Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“No, not often,” Evangeline replied. “He comes for week ends sometimes.
-
-“Your boy looks very well,” Mr. Vachell remarked.
-
-“Yes, he is, and he is really no trouble,” said his mother. “There are
-some other children about, but he doesn’t seem to want them. He is the
-most independent creature I ever met.”
-
-“That is a useful thing in a boy, isn’t it?”
-
-“It is useful in anybody,” said Evangeline, sighing. “I think if
-everyone minded their own business like animals, and were just happy
-eating together and enjoying each other’s society and hopping off in
-between, it would be much nicer.”
-
-Mr. Vachell’s face wrinkled into a smile, but he said nothing.
-
-Teresa happened to look up. “What are you laughing at?” she asked.
-
-“Your sister’s idea of living agrees with mine,” he said. They missed
-Mrs. Vachell’s reply, but Evangeline went on thinking aloud, incited by
-the sunshine and the splash of the waves. She had once said to Susie, as
-a child, that the sea was always telling her to speak out, but that it
-never said anything but “h’m” when she did, and Susie had answered,
-“Yes, dear, that is quite true.” She had found the sea restful herself,
-when pursued by the eager questioning of lovers. Evangeline went on now,
-“There is too much busy-bodying about morals. I think that people who
-like committing murder should be put on an island together and settle it
-among themselves; people who steal should have all their things taken
-away and sold for hospitals; people who say nasty things should be given
-vinegar tea made with bilge water, and be photographed every day and
-obliged to look at the proofs——”
-
-“What about people who are stupid?” asked Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“Oh, poor darlings, nothing about them,” said Evangeline quickly, “don’t
-be horrid.”
-
-“Don’t you think most vice is stupidity?”
-
-“No, certainly not. For instance, I am so stupid that I don’t know what
-two and two make, but I don’t mean an atom of harm.”
-
-“But you may do a lot of harm by adding them up to make six. Why not try
-to learn?”
-
-“I don’t believe God adds up,” said Evangeline, tracing patterns in the
-sand with her finger. “But then I expect He knows the answer without
-thinking, so that doesn’t come to anything.”
-
-“I don’t know your husband, Mrs. Hatton,” said Mr. Vachell, “but I hope
-he is not passionately fond of arithmetic.”
-
-“He has a passion for everything uncomfortable,” said Evangeline.
-
-“Poor fellow!” observed Mr. Vachell.
-
-“Mr. Vachell, really I don’t think you need look like that,” said
-Teresa. “Your study, which I saw once, is the most hauntingly
-uncomfortable place I was ever led into. I couldn’t go to sleep the
-night after I had seen it.”
-
-“Why, what is the matter with it?” he asked, surprised.
-
-“Everything is so dug up,” she explained. “Have you ever seen it,
-Chips?” she turned to her sister. “I do think when people have finished
-with their lives they might be allowed to get rid of them decently. To
-have their bones and their tears and the things they have been happy
-with all brought back and looked at——. Suppose someone dug up Millport
-thousands of years after us, and put a whole street full of people
-together again! Personal possessions are bad enough when the people who
-own them are alive; they are so full of—I don’t know what—associations.
-But when the owners are dead their things become perfectly horrid. I
-don’t think anyone ought to own anything at all. I would like them to
-live out of doors in tents that don’t cost anything, and to eat with
-their fingers——”
-
-“I am very sorry my things worried you so much,” said Mr. Vachell. “I
-have always looked at them quite prosaically as history; interesting in
-their way. In fact, I think I could show you that they are interesting
-if you came and looked at them again. Some of them are very beautiful,
-and if people make beautiful things to please themselves they are worth
-keeping. The world would be very squalid by now if it had gone on as you
-suggest. Think of the grass all trampled down with being sat upon and
-nobody’s hair ever having been combed, and how dreadfully they would all
-quarrel and gossip with nothing to do.”
-
-“I expect I was thinking of a world with fewer people in it,” said
-Teresa. “It makes me giddy when I think of arranging a government that
-will be fair to millions and millions of people, each one of them just a
-little different from any one of the others.”
-
-“That is where historians do their humble best for you,” said he. “It
-does sort the masses into a few main heaps that tend to move about in
-definite directions, and even clear the ground by destroying one
-another.”
-
-“Yes, that is a man’s only idea of deciding an argument,” said his wife.
-“He has never been able to understand anything more intelligent than
-blood. And as long as women are silly enough to go on providing children
-and handing them over to him the supply will be kept up and arguments
-will be decided in that way.”
-
-“I am afraid I must go in and do a little work,” said he, rising with a
-sigh.
-
-“Good-bye,” said his wife, “I’ll come along later.”
-
-They sat talking until it was time to go in to tea. Evangeline began to
-feel her contentment in the outdoor life she loved give way gradually
-before the force of purpose that Mrs. Vachell brought with her. The
-Sphinx who looked so calm among hungry crowds had the opposite effect on
-Evangeline’s simple enjoyment of things as they are. The smothered
-rebellion that is hidden by pride so long as the enemy is overpowering
-may suddenly break out and inflame a peaceful party of shepherds and set
-them running and shouting for an end that they never contemplated or
-desired. Evangeline had been suffering under a sense of heavy depression
-when she came away to the sea. She felt herself up against an obstacle
-that was not to be moved because it moved with her and encircled her
-from all sides, closing her in and shutting out all the new joys of the
-future that she had seen ahead of her when Ivor was born. Every step she
-took was hampered by fear that she might be sending him farther away
-from her, some incident might arise that would strengthen Evan’s
-conviction that she was not fit to have the charge of him. Then when she
-hid her sympathy from Ivor and forced herself to suffer for the sake of
-keeping him with her, she could see a look of childish judgment in his
-eyes that placed her unjustly in the category she dreaded, that of
-people who have grown up and are beyond the pale of confidence from the
-young. If she went on pretending for his sake, she said to herself, he
-would become like Romulus and Remus, living in his own thoughts without
-a mother. The idea made her almost mad at times.
-
-Alone with Teresa and Ivor by the sea, she had got back her confidence,
-her nature being of the kind that expects a trouble left behind to
-remain where it is without attempting pursuit. She kept no record of the
-occasions when this hope had been disappointed. The things Mrs. Vachell
-talked of that afternoon showed her something entirely new to her. She
-understood, to her great surprise, that all over the world were
-thousands of other Evangelines, suffering as she did, from the
-inexplicable harshness of men towards those precious, irrational
-gambollings of the mind, that move women to actions that are condemned
-as “unreasonable,” “inconsistent,” “illogical,” “false,” “silly,” and
-generally lacking in orderly sequence. She learned that she was not
-alone, fighting something sinister that had no shape and perhaps was
-only a disorder of her own imagination. Mrs. Vachell explained that the
-enemy was terribly real and powerful; the enemy of all true women whose
-duty it was to unite in fighting to the last drop of their blood.
-
-“Women are not stupid,” she said in her slow, deep voice, “they are not
-irrational. What you see in Ivor and dread to lose—what your husband
-does not see—is what comes into the world by women, and your husband
-thinks it foolish because it is not in him. He wants to preserve his own
-qualities; you want to preserve yours; they are wholly contradictory,
-and one side or the other must impose its will.”
-
-“But I thought men were supposed to adore women for having just what
-they haven’t got, just as we adore them for their physical strength and
-their brains.”
-
-“So they say, and so we say, because otherwise there would be no
-marriages,” said Mrs. Vachell. “But it is a lie. We only love their
-strength for the sake of getting the better of it. They cultivate our
-foolishness because it gives them rest from competition, and they can
-sit down and plume themselves. Each wants the power, and the centuries
-of suffering that we have gone through have taught us to see love as the
-only thing worth having, while they still look on it as a pleasant fad
-to be indulged in when they have finished arranging who is to get the
-most of what belongs, by right, equally to all. It is all very pretty,
-you will find, if you look into it.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Dicky,” said Evangeline, a few days later, when she and Teresa had
-settled themselves under the cliff after breakfast, “I have done the
-most evil bit of mischief. I feel like Guy Fawkes. I have advised Mrs.
-Trotter to come here, and she is coming.”
-
-“But why not?” Teresa asked in surprise.
-
-“Don’t you know how Evan hates her? No, I suppose you wouldn’t. But he
-does. She is his _bête noir_.”
-
-“But, then, why have you asked her?”
-
-“I didn’t ask her. Mother wrote and said the rooms the Trotters
-generally go to at Broadstairs have got something the matter with them;
-a lodger developed some disease or other, I think. They couldn’t get in
-anywhere, and she wanted to know if I could get rooms here. There are
-rooms in those cottages down on the left by the church, nurse told me.
-So I think she is sure to come.”
-
-“But that isn’t your fault,” said Teresa. “You couldn’t do anything
-else. Evan hasn’t bought up the whole place.”
-
-“No, not if I had done it innocently like that,” said Evangeline, “but I
-didn’t. I urged her to come and made everything easy, and I have been
-enjoying the idea ever since. It is deliberate vice. There is Evan
-coming along now with Mrs. Vachell, of course. He still thinks her a
-very ladylike woman. Oh, Dicky! when Mrs. Trotter comes won’t she mow
-them both down with repartee? It will be lovely.”
-
-“Chips,” said Teresa hesitatingly, “you—you’re not so—so kind to Evan as
-you are to the rest of us. You used to be so interested in making him
-talk, and now you so often won’t listen when he does.”
-
-“He talks such rot,” said her sister. “I can’t be bothered with it.”
-There was silence for some minutes.
-
-“I’m a pig, Dicky,” said Evangeline presently. “But if you knew how
-deadly it is being with someone who doesn’t understand the way women
-look at things——”
-
-“Don’t talk about women as if they were all alike,” said Teresa
-impatiently. “It is as bad as Mrs. Carpenter. She is always saying, ‘we
-women are so something or other,’ and Mother says, ‘but then, don’t you
-think women are so something else.’ But they both give you an idea of
-somebody very noble and forlorn in the position of Daniel in the den of
-lions. I am sure that there are certain qualities in people, courage and
-truthfulness and meanness and greed and all the rest, and everybody has
-some of them in different mixtures; it doesn’t make any difference
-whether they are male or female or rich or poor. It is so silly trying
-to label people into classes and species according to their incomes or
-their sex. Nationality divides them up a little, I admit, but otherwise
-you are just asking for trouble by presupposing any vice or virtues.”
-
-“Well, then, men should stop presupposing that women have no brains and
-no morals,” said Evangeline.
-
-“I don’t believe that any woman with either has ever bothered what was
-presupposed about her, or had any difficulty in convincing anyone to
-whom it mattered,” Teresa replied.
-
-“But that is nonsense, Dicky. You know it was only when women had to be
-employed in the war that they had a chance to show what they could do.
-Look at women doctors before they began to run their own hospitals.”
-
-“Well, that is exactly what I have been trying to explain. It all came
-of that abominable system of classifying. Women were this and women were
-that, and it was very largely their own fault. Which sex was it that
-used to say, ‘My dear, that is unladylike. Don’t imitate that nasty bold
-girl who handles mice as if she were a navvy’? Now they are allowed to
-be competent or incompetent, as nature made them, and you are doing your
-best to rebuild the whole obstacle by saying, ‘All women are not what
-you think them. They are all something else. They have all got lovely,
-pure, high-browed minds and all men have horrid brutish ones.’ You are
-only changing a guerilla war into a series of pitched battles. I detest
-Mrs. Vachell. She looks like a martyr, and she is only a hunger
-striker.”
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“I mean she is a rebel with no sense of adventure. She will plot against
-any sort of power that galls her personally, and I don’t think she uses
-fair means; there’s no gallantry about her. It is all spitting and
-kicking and causing harmless people inconvenience.”
-
-“I think you are most unfair,” said Evangeline hotly. “She is out
-against all sorts of tyranny, the sort of tyranny that Evan would
-exercise over Ivor if he could; the tyranny of horrid vulgar people who
-never do a stroke of work and have no brains and simply live on enormous
-incomes, while women are sweated and slave-driven or forced on to the
-street. It has nothing to do with her personally; Mr. Vachell is the
-least interfering man in the world, and they are not particularly hard
-up.”
-
-“Whom does she think she is going to do good to by making you fed up
-with Evan?”
-
-“She doesn’t; but she has made me see why it is that he doesn’t
-understand children and why I have to stand up to him if I want to save
-Ivor. And you know, Dicky, it is such a joke, because Evan thinks her
-perfect and is always holding her up as a model of dignity and common
-sense. That is why I want Mrs. Trotter to come. It does make me so
-irritated to see him stalking along thinking Mrs. Vachell is listening
-with the deepest interest to what he says, and all the time she is
-boiling like a volcano, and when she looks quietest I know she is quite
-white hot with contempt for something he has said.”
-
-“Then she is an abominable hypocrite,” said Teresa indignantly.
-
-“I know,” her sister answered rather sadly, “and if I tell Evan the
-least little bit of truth about her he flies at me and won’t listen;
-just thunders me down, and yet I am really fond of him. But she hates
-him, and the only way she can get in the truths she wants to say is to
-keep so quiet that he doesn’t understand, and then little by little she
-undermines his ideas. It is quite wonderful to watch.”
-
-When Mrs. Trotter came she surpassed even Evangeline’s expectations. It
-may be necessary to recall to the reader’s mind that on the occasion
-when Evan had burst out at Cyril’s dinner-table on the subject of women
-throwing dirt at each other the exciting cause of his anger had been
-Mrs. Trotter’s sarcasm on the wife of the Staff Captain, who wanted to
-“get into the University set,” and was alleged to have incensed her
-husband by too frequent references to Mr. Vachell’s brain power. Mrs.
-Trotter was devoted with real sisterly affection to the Staff Captain,
-who was an honest blue-eyed Briton, and she therefore harboured secret
-dislike, both of the University set and of Evan with his misplaced
-belief in Mrs. Vachell. The Hattons could not do other than ask her to
-dinner on the evening when she arrived at her lodgings, alone with the
-child and its nurse, as Captain Trotter was yachting with a friend.
-Evangeline had mischievously urged the Vachells to come in after the
-meal as they often did. When they arrived Evan was in one of his most
-taciturn moods, having been worried by his wife’s daring laughter over
-some misdemeanour of Ivor’s. She was comparing notes with Mrs. Trotter,
-whose young daughter treated her parents with fearless impertinence, the
-common result of insensitiveness in favourable surroundings.
-
-“The little scamp!” Mrs. Trotter exclaimed. “He and Maisie will be great
-pals I expect. She doesn’t care a rap for anybody. Her father can’t say
-boo to a goose when she is knocking round. I tell him he had better give
-it up and save time.”
-
-Evan glanced at Mrs. Vachell and saw her raise her eyebrows slightly. It
-soothed him to be assured that she shared his disgust and he sat down by
-her. “I am very sorry,” he said in a low voice. “We ought to have warned
-you.”
-
-“Oh no, please,” she answered. “It is very interesting; and I am sure
-Evangeline enjoys it. And it is something you have got to learn some
-time. You may have daughters of your own in days to come, and then you
-will know how to save yourself needless worry by giving in at once.”
-
-“Yes, it is appalling, isn’t it?” he agreed, supposing her to be
-commenting on Mrs. Trotter’s remark. “But perhaps it is good in some
-ways to let the thing go on as grossly and blatantly as possible. It
-will achieve its own destruction all the quicker.”
-
-“How?” she asked.
-
-“A revulsion is bound to come, and it will be all the stronger when
-women see what a monstrous race they have raised. They have rebelled
-against chastisement with whips and their children will chastise them
-with scorpions.”
-
-“They will, indeed,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I am glad I have no children,
-though the want of them put out the sun for me so far as marriage is
-concerned. But it is not a world to have children in just now.”
-
-“If you had brought them up to be like yourself they would have helped
-to keep the balance,” said Evan.
-
-“Well, you shall send your daughters to me to bring up,” she said,
-turning her small sphinx face directly to him. “Evangeline will be
-engrossed in her boys. She thinks women of no importance.”
-
-“It is not that,” said Evan, “but she thinks nothing of importance
-except liveliness and getting the pleasure out of everything that
-happens, and throwing away the rest. As soon as anything has to be
-bought at the price of discomfort it is worthless to her.”
-
-“Do you think so?” said she, raising her eyebrows again. “Is your
-beautiful Ivor worth so little to her? You surprise me. I thought she
-was devoted to him.”
-
-“So she is, but she won’t give herself the momentary pain of correcting
-him. It is the most fatal cowardice. I don’t know what to do to avert
-the end that I foresee.”
-
-“You must have been a great deal with children,” she remarked, while she
-looked at him with grave inquiry. “Did you always care for them, or is
-it just that you understand them so well?”
-
-“Every man knows the kind of way a boy ought to be brought up,” he
-replied innocently.
-
-“And a woman, of course, understands a girl better?”
-
-“Yes, I suppose so.”
-
-“It is so much simpler that they should start on wholly different lines
-from the beginning.”
-
-“Well, I suppose they do naturally. I know that my sisters never had the
-least idea what I was driving at. They were always giggling among
-themselves.”
-
-“And your mother?” asked Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“My mother was a wonderful woman,” Evan replied. His tone made it clear
-that discussion was barricaded along that road.
-
-“I don’t want to persuade you to discuss her, but please answer one
-question truthfully. Suppose you had done something that you knew she
-would dislike, not because it was wrong in itself, but because she had
-no experience of a wish to do it herself; let us take for an instance
-that delightful story I heard about your taking a German’s watch to
-pieces and what you did with it.”
-
-“Who told you that story?” he asked, frowning.
-
-“The Staff Captain’s wife told my husband. It amused him and it amused
-her, because she has had parents who educated her between them; they
-didn’t believe in female sheep and male goats.”
-
-“I find all that sort of telling of stories very offensive,” said Evan.
-“But if they choose to hear it it is nothing to me. There is no harm in
-it.”
-
-“But your mother would have held a different opinion if she had known?”
-
-“Why are you asking these questions, Mrs. Vachell?” She saw
-disappointment in his face, and knew she must pick her way delicately.
-
-“Because you were good enough to give me some of your confidence in a
-difficulty and I was trying to make you understand what I think is a
-point of great importance to you and Evangeline and Ivor. What I say is
-that you were not perfectly brought up as you think, because you grew up
-with the idea that what was all right for you as a man would offend your
-mother as a woman, even to hear about. That means that all through your
-life you could only enjoy her society within limits, and you were either
-obliged to worry out every difficulty alone in your head, or else to
-chance it among outsiders who had not a quarter of the interest in you
-that she had. You must have felt very lonely, or you wouldn’t have shown
-me so much confidence as you have. Have you ever tried Evangeline as a
-confidante? She has not been brought up with many prejudices—not enough
-you think. And one thing more. Don’t you think that Ivor is better off
-than you were at his age? I am sure he is less harassed with problems
-and he will have a better brain than his father, because it won’t have
-been prematurely worn out.”
-
-“It is no use telling me he won’t go to bits if he has no principles to
-fall back on,” said Evan doggedly.
-
-“But what about Evangeline’s principles?” Mrs. Vachell persisted.
-
-“She has none. That is the whole point. It is where we started from——”
-
-“You two are carrying on a very long flirtation,” interrupted Mrs.
-Trotter from the other side of the room. “Can’t we hear what it is all
-about? I heard something about principles just now. Do you believe in
-principles, Captain Hatton?”
-
-“Yes,” said Evan. “I hope you are pleased with the lodgings my wife
-found for you.”
-
-“Yes, thank you, they are delightful. But talking of principles, do you
-know, Mrs. Vachell, that your friend Fisk has been making the most
-dreadful havoc with his principles? You see we never get rid of these
-students like the ordinary undergraduates are disposed of, because they
-don’t go down for the vacs. They are at home all the time. And he has
-been spending his spare time in stirring up the Welsh and the Irish and
-every sort of rabble in the place, and holding meetings and passing
-resolutions. He gets hold of the wives and tells them they ought to be
-dressed in velvet and silk, and have time to read and play the piano.
-But Mrs. Price says all that is quite inconsistent with Communism. The
-real Communists want everyone to live as simply as possible and earn a
-small amount each day and then improve their minds. But since Mr. Fisk
-spent those few days with the Prices he has lost all his noble ideas
-about garden cities and honest toil and sandals or whatever he believed
-in, and in place of the blood that was to be spilled in the cause of
-education and leisure and concerts and so on he now wants rapine, and
-oh! the most frightful outrages! so that everyone may change places. He
-and his friends are to have education and champagne and talk big, while
-their female relations play the gramophone and order Mrs. Price about.
-It is all screamingly funny. Dear me, Captain Hatton, pray don’t look at
-me like that. Do you think one ought not to laugh at poor silly
-creatures? I do find human nature so very amusing sometimes. What do you
-think, Professor Vachell? Do you think the universities are doing good
-or harm?”
-
-“They have hardly reached an age of full-grown responsibility yet,” he
-replied. “When ladies and Labour have joined our deliberations for a few
-years we shall be able to give a better opinion.”
-
-“Now, don’t be sarcastic,” Mrs. Trotter warned him with a finger. “That
-is very naughty of you. I hope it will be a long time before your
-beautiful cloistered calm is invaded in any such way. I can’t imagine
-women and tradesmen holding forth in Oxford, can you, Mrs. Vachell?”
-
-“So long as the present generation of poor weak fools, who will risk
-nothing, survive it is rather difficult,” she answered quietly. Evan
-started slightly as she spoke. “But even though every year the
-percentage is less of boys who are brought up to be bullies and of girls
-whose intelligence is crushed, it will take a long time to destroy the
-tradition. Don’t worry, Mrs. Trotter. Your system will probably last
-your time, and if your little girl does scandalise you by learning some
-other trade than husband hunting, she may make up by marrying a
-tradesman Prime Minister.”
-
-“I don’t think that is at all likely,” Teresa broke in. “The tradesman
-Prime Minister would want a perfect lady for his wife; they always do.
-They boast of the work that their women do when they want to compare
-them with what they call the idle rich; but the very first thing they
-want to buy for their wives and daughters is exemption from any kind of
-work.”
-
-“Nonsense, my dear Teresa,” said Mrs. Vachell. “They are the keenest of
-all that their daughters should have ‘the schooling.’”
-
-“Yes, but that is only so that they may not have to do housework or be
-ordered about in shops. They think that education for a girl means her
-marrying into another class and keeping a servant. They are just like
-us. They hate squalor and want to live like we do. They don’t care for
-learning in itself any more than we do——”
-
-“I beg your pardon, Miss Fulton,” Mr. Vachell interrupted. “Do I
-understand that you put down my laborious work of research to a sordid
-hope of fitting myself to dine at Buckingham Palace, or even living
-there some day? You are wounding me very much.”
-
-“No, of course not,” said Teresa. “You are quite different; you are a
-man. I am sure lots of men wanted to learn because they are interested.
-I was thinking of what they wanted for their daughters.”
-
-“Well, what do you think the Principal wants for our excellent Emma?” he
-went on. “That she should marry the Prince of Wales? I don’t believe she
-has got the ghost of a chance, so you had better stop her while you
-can.”
-
-“Don’t muddle up what I say like that,” said Teresa. “Emma only wants to
-stop mothers giving their babies rhubarb pie, and to persuade fathers to
-buy bread instead of beer; and she wants them to be clean and have time
-and money enough to find out what they can do.”
-
-“But where does Maisie Trotter’s husband come in?” asked Evan, who was
-also grateful for the diversion that Teresa had made.
-
-“I haven’t the least idea. I have lost sight of him. Oh, no, I remember;
-he was to be Prime Minister. It will be no good for Maisie to live up to
-him in the way of education, because his sisters will do that. He will
-want a pink and white princess who can detect a crumpled rose leaf under
-the mattress. I assure you that is what working people ask for. It is
-the really valuable thing that they have lost, and they are often so
-silly, poor darlings, and think it comes with money. You know how fussy
-people like the Prices are about breeding, and they spend and spend,
-trying to buy it somehow and knowing that they fail. It is so sad.”
-
-“Oh, everything is sad if you notice it,” said Mrs. Trotter impatiently.
-“I don’t believe in pitying people for not being different from what
-they are. I once met a woman who said she disliked travelling in public
-conveyances because women’s hats were pathetic; something about the
-trimming; if you ever heard such nonsense! Now I’m off and thank you all
-very much for a pleasant evening. Anyone coming my way?”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
-
-“Well, I am sure, Roderick,” said Mrs. Carpenter as she turned the last
-page of a letter she was reading, “Evangeline Hatton seems to be laying
-up a nice future for herself. Emmie Trotter is staying down there with
-Maisie and she says that Mrs. Vachell is in and out of the Hattons’
-house the whole time, influencing Evangeline to run down her husband.
-And that poor Evan Hatton is as blind as a bat and running after Mrs.
-Vachell all the time. Of course, Amy Vachell is one of those hard women
-who never see when men are attracted by them. All she thinks of is her
-social work and I have often told her it is dangerous and that in her
-anxiety to put women on a higher footing she forgets that men persist in
-remaining on the lower one and they misunderstand her motives. I knew
-she would get into trouble some day.” There was a note of triumph in her
-voice.
-
-“Yers,” her husband answered deprecatingly over the top of his
-pince-nez. “Yers—yers—very foolish of her.”
-
-“They will come to grief in the end, you will see,” said Mrs. Carpenter,
-as one who observes the first swallow of the season.
-
-She met Mrs. Eric Manley that afternoon at a sale of work on behalf of
-an inebriates’ home in Mrs. Abel’s parish. They wandered together from
-stall to stall, inspecting photograph frames ornamented with landscapes
-in poker work, table centres and tea-cosies of hand-painted satin,
-pinafores edged with cheap lace, preposterous woollen garments for all
-ages, dreary confections in flannelette that would make a Hottentot
-pessimistic, dusters, packets of Lux and grate polish; everything that
-could most vividly recall the horrors of the Will to Live and the Desire
-to Decorate at Random. The two friends sat down presently to tea in a
-small room festooned with coloured muslin, served by ladies who were
-beginning to feel the running about rather a strain though great fun.
-
-“Well, my dear, how is it that you are still here?” asked Mrs.
-Carpenter. “I told Mrs. Abel that it was a bad time to have the sale as
-everybody would be away, but she said that some of the best helpers
-would have more time now. Of course, we shall get off to Scotland later.
-I heard to-day that Evangeline Hatton and her husband are not enjoying
-their holiday very much, poor things. They are at Roscombe with the boy
-and Teresa Fulton, and the Vachells are there too. I am afraid Amy
-Vachell is stirring up mischief. It is a great pity for such young
-married things.”
-
-“Oh, who told you?” asked Mrs. Manley.
-
-“Emmie Trotter for one. She is quite worried about it. Captain Hatton is
-so dogged, you know, with that kind of foolish religious fervour. It
-does blind people so when it takes hold of them; they don’t seem to see
-anything else. Of course he is a splendid man; so upright and devoted to
-her. But I do think it is a great mistake to get carried away by that
-kind of thing.”
-
-“And what is Mrs. Vachell after, do you suppose?” inquired her friend.
-
-“Oh, dear Amy! I am sure I don’t know. Of course one knows that she is
-absolutely straight; no one could doubt that. But it is a pity, I think,
-the things she does sometimes—with that far-away look of hers, don’t you
-know? She may have encouraged Evangeline without meaning anything, and
-made her rebel against his very dogmatic manner. And the Professor is so
-silly; he really is. All that about Mrs. Harting was so absurd. She is a
-very intellectual woman; I get on with her splendidly, we have so much
-in common; and she threw herself into all his excavations and so on, and
-of course dear Amy was just a little—well, she didn’t like it; naturally
-she wouldn’t; but there was absolutely no more in it than that. However,
-it may have made Amy bitter and perhaps she has lashed out against men
-and put Evangeline up to some nonsense. I wonder if I could do any good
-by having a chat with her mother.”
-
-“I should leave it alone, I think,” Mrs. Manley advised. “You won’t get
-anything out of Mrs. Fulton. She is so extraordinarily broad-minded and
-indulgent and thinks everybody means well.”
-
-“Do you think so?” said Mrs. Carpenter, with her head on one side. “I
-don’t know altogether that I should have said that. Dear Susie Fulton is
-very shrewd and likes to keep the peace in the family, but she would
-very much dislike the General getting to hear anything from outside
-sources, and it might be best to warn her privately. What do you think?”
-
-“Well, you might drop in,” said Mrs. Manley. “I could drive you round
-there if you have bought all you want now. Perhaps I had better not come
-in. You would prefer to talk about it alone.”
-
-“Perhaps that would be wise,” Mrs. Carpenter agreed. “I really think it
-is the kind thing to do. It would be such a pity if anything got round.”
-
-She found Susie at home and tea being cleared away. “I have had some, my
-dear, thank you,” said Mrs. Carpenter. “Quite an excellent tea at dear
-Jenny Abel’s little sale, where I was buying for all I was worth. Such a
-poor lot of things. I am afraid they won’t have done very well; but then
-they don’t manage that place at all as it should be done. They ought to
-call a meeting and have the whole thing laid out and make a proper
-appeal. It is no good patching up with little affairs like that. No one
-wants to buy at all nowadays; we are all overdone with sales of work.
-Still, the things won’t be wasted. I just pass them on to the next. Your
-little Teresa is not back again with you yet, I suppose?”
-
-“No, she is still with Evangeline,” said Susie. “They are staying on as
-long as the weather lasts. The Vachells and the Trotters are there, too,
-so they are quite a pleasant little party.”
-
-They talked nicely in this way for some time and then Mrs. Carpenter
-said, lowering her voice mysteriously, “You didn’t gather, did you, that
-there was any little difficulty with Evangeline seeing so much of dear
-Amy Vachell? I am not quite sure that she is just the person whom I
-should choose to be very much with a young mother, who, of course, wants
-to see everything _couleur de rose_.”
-
-“Dear me, no,” Susie replied in gentle astonishment. “Is there any
-difficulty about anything? I didn’t know. What makes you think so?”
-
-“My dear, it was just an impression that was whispered to me by a little
-bird who knows them very well. I won’t tell you whom because it wouldn’t
-be fair, and of course there was nothing wrong anywhere, but just the
-idea that Evangeline and her hubby were inclined to drift a little in
-opposite directions and that Amy Vachell—who is so open-hearted and
-sincere and has such a high opinion of women and the place they should
-take in the home—may perhaps have unconsciously made a little mischief.
-Captain Hatton believes so very strongly in the dogmatic side of
-religion, doesn’t he? and he may suppose that Amy goes further with him
-in her opinions than she does. But that is all; just to put you on your
-guard. It was the merest trifle that I heard, but it would be such a
-pity if it went any further when you as a mother could put it all right,
-probably, in a moment with just a word.”
-
-“Oh, I am sure there is nothing in it,” said Susie contentedly. “People
-make too much of Evan’s manner, and he means nothing; it is all on the
-surface. He is a most delightful fellow and Evangeline is wrapped up in
-him. But it was so kind of you to come and tell me. I often think people
-are not outspoken enough.”
-
-She said nothing about Mrs. Carpenter’s visit until Teresa came home,
-and then she chose the next evening when Cyril was peacefully reading in
-an armchair. Teresa had put away a bundle of papers from Emma’s office,
-over which she had been toiling with evident fatigue and depression.
-
-“I hope dear little Ivor is not vexing his father as much as he did
-while he was a baby,” Susie began quietly over her knitting.
-
-“He doesn’t get into many rows,” said Teresa. “It would be almost better
-if he did.”
-
-“How do you mean, dear?”
-
-“I mean that Evan says so little, it is rather frightening sometimes. He
-just looks and you don’t know what he is thinking.”
-
-“Evangeline doesn’t worry, I suppose?”
-
-“Yes, I think she does. She is much thinner than she used to be.”
-
-“I daresay that is the damp of Drage,” Susie remarked. “It is a very
-relaxing place, I have heard.” Teresa laughed, not very merrily.
-
-“Mother, darling,” she asked, looking at Susie with kindly curiosity,
-“if Father bit you do you think you would say it was owing to the frost?
-I believe you would.”
-
-“What an absurd thing to say, dear. I don’t talk so much about the
-weather, do I? It is a subject I have always detested; it is so
-commonplace. But if you are laughing because I said that Drage is damp
-that is ridiculous. Everyone knows it is and there is nothing so
-depressing as a place that is all on clay.” She left the room presently
-and Cyril put down his book.
-
-“How old are you, Dicky?” he asked.
-
-“Twenty-five next month. Why?”
-
-“You seem to have grown a little and I couldn’t remember how long we had
-been here. It is a devil of a long time. Sit down there for a minute and
-tell me something I want to know. Aren’t you wasting your time a bit,
-young woman? frousting down there with Emma Gainsborough. Or is it what
-you want?”
-
-“I am rather in a fog,” said Teresa. He said nothing and she went on, “I
-used to look at people paddling along in the mud, streaming past all the
-time; you remember the first time we went down to the docks together and
-came back on a tram? It fascinated me. I had always felt that there was
-something that my mind was chasing after, as if I were half asleep and
-shouldn’t wake up until I had found out what I wanted to know. Have you
-ever felt like that?”
-
-“No, I am not much troubled with what is called the Higher Mind,” said
-Cyril. “But I don’t disbelieve in it on that account. In fact I think it
-is a good thing if properly used. But go on. How does it work out?”
-
-“Well, they all look so angry and miserable and discontented,” she
-explained. “There was some mystery or other that cut me off from them
-like a misunderstanding; some enormous grievance or injustice that
-divided us and our lot from them and their lot, and I felt as if I
-wanted to break through it somehow—anyhow—and say, ‘Here! Let me in! I
-won’t be left outside. Tell me what you want and I will get it for you
-somehow.’ I wanted to give them everything I had; not only money, but
-the kind of pleasure that makes it of no importance whether one has
-money or not. And then they let me in. Strickland let me in first. She
-told me such a lot when she found that I wasn’t inquisitive or
-preaching. She explains things so clearly and I began to see what the
-grievance is and then it got more hopeless than ever, because I saw that
-before you can get into the frame of mind that is independent of poverty
-you must be decently fed and warm or else you can’t think at all for
-sheer animal discomfort. I suppose mystics come back down the same road
-by smashing the body after they have used it to get a mind with. They
-couldn’t begin as slum babies and say, ‘I must fast and subdue the
-flesh.’ You see, if you start hungry, unless you have a perfectly sweet
-nature you probably think of nothing but clawing for food and knocking
-down someone else who has got some. Then you find people down there with
-all sorts of wonderful qualities so strong that they manage to keep
-their end of the stick up in spite of everything. So that topples down
-all your hopes when you see that all the virtues that you were going to
-bring in by making more comfortable surroundings are there already in
-the most wonderful perfection. It just thickens the mystery and makes
-the barrier and the fog more unaccountable than it was from outside. If
-you could see the horrors that some people contend against and still
-remain as good as gold and gay as larks, I think you would stop being so
-perfectly disgusting as you are sometimes about my Potters and people.”
-
-“No, I shouldn’t, my dear,” he said, “but not because I don’t believe
-you. But why should I make myself sick with smells that I can’t prevent?
-I should be of no earthly use sitting by the bedside of an aged
-fish-wife with my nose in my handkerchief, and I don’t understand
-accounts or babies. I am much more use at my own job, which neither Emma
-nor your friend Jason nor even the lion-hearted Fisk could do.”
-
-“No, no, you are much better where you are,” she agreed. “And now you
-see I have got beyond the first fog into a worse one. I feel cut off
-from the side I left and I can do nothing for the others because they
-have got all the means of happiness that I wanted to give them. You see,
-if anything good survives there it gets awfully good because it takes so
-much exercise.”
-
-“Yes?” said Cyril.
-
-“I don’t know how much you were ever in love with anyone, but you
-wouldn’t, would you, have married Mother if she had not been rather
-extra pretty and very, very well washed?”
-
-“No, Dicky, you are not going to win on that. I should never have got
-within speaking distance of her, so the Higher Mind would not have
-contended with the lower. No war, no victory. You see, your Misters and
-Misseses of the unwashed brigade start on an equal footing. Mr. Potter
-has nothing to forgive before he inquires into the perfections of Mrs.
-Potter’s character.”
-
-“Very well, we’ll try again,” she said patiently. “I must make you
-understand somehow. We’ll take Mother. She was devoted to us and she
-loves babies as she only sees clean ones. Suppose she lived in a slum
-and had half-a-dozen of them squalling and screaming and covered with
-every sort of hideous filth and was kept awake all night and saw them
-being hungry and ill and cold. Just think what a tremendous sort of love
-she would need to have to make her go on with it; and how honest she
-would have to be not to steal for them; and how unselfish to go hungry
-so that they might have what food there was, and how patient not to
-grumble and scold. You need a super quality of every good point in a
-character in order to keep up at all. You can’t say that being used to
-horrors takes away all the merit of enduring them with real style like
-you see sometimes down there.
-
-“No, not all,” said Cyril, “but then, Dicky, you must be fair. Lots of
-things that I find very hard to bear, such as—no, I won’t go into them;
-you are too tender-hearted and I don’t want to add to your worries. But
-I assure you I am a very noble fellow in my way though nothing I have to
-put up with would rouse any sympathy in your fog-bound heroes.”
-
-Teresa looked at him anxiously, critical and questioning.
-
-“I am only trying to cheer you up, dear,” he assured her. “I have a very
-tidy mind—untidiness at the office is one of the things that I was going
-to mention just now—and I dislike arguing in a circle. That is where
-Emma is more suited to her job than you are. She never stands about and
-says, ‘Yes, but on the other hand——’ or, ‘what can we do, because every
-way you look at it it doesn’t make sense?’ She plugs along as busy as a
-bee, fitting splints on to one and a flannel petticoat and a book of
-poetry on to another and doesn’t wear herself out in guessing whether
-the creatures are angels or devils. Dicky, my dear, you are twenty-five
-and you are missing everything that you have been looking for and that
-you haven’t found. You have said that you only got past one fog into
-another and that you want to give what you have to starving people who
-need it. What about David?”
-
-“I do want so dreadfully to marry him,” said Teresa after some
-hesitation. “But I am sure it is selfish. He won’t do what I want and
-what would make it all right.”
-
-“What won’t he do?”
-
-“Sell the place and give the money to the work Emma is doing. It
-wouldn’t make much difference, I know, but it would take a few hundred
-children out of the mud and I should feel I had done my best.”
-
-“You would do much more good by keeping those damned Prices out of
-Aldwych. You never saw such a mess as they are making of it. It is
-perfectly beastly. Enough to make the old man turn in his grave.”
-
-“But it is the wrong way to live,” she persisted. “I have no right to
-glide into beautiful things and comfort that I haven’t earned.”
-
-“Well, look here. You’re pretty comfortable to start with, aren’t you?
-Your mother and I saw to that. She especially. She married me because
-she wanted a child and like a good careful bird she chose the downiest
-nesting-place she could find for the benefit of her young.”
-
-“Oh, Father,” said Teresa, awestruck. “Wasn’t she in love with you?”
-
-“Not a bit of it,” he replied.
-
-“I wish she had married a poor man, then,” said the girl. “It would have
-saved me a lot of trouble. But to go back to what you said. I couldn’t
-help being born where I am, but I can give back everything I have got.
-It makes it worse to marry into a lot more luxury.”
-
-“How much do you think your friends in the fog would give back to you if
-they dropped into a soft job?” he asked.
-
-“That has nothing to do with it.”
-
-“Yes, it has. It means that they go with the stream and don’t drown
-themselves trying to dam it up with a bunch of flowers. Keep those
-damned hucksters out of Aldwych and keep it the decent civilised place
-it was; and breed young Davids to counteract the pernicious spawning of
-Millport. You’ll be far better employed. You can invite all the young
-Potters to tea and show them what they may attain by thrift instead of
-greed. They’ll only think you a damned fool and not listen to a word of
-good advice.”
-
-Teresa was silent.
-
-“They would take the place off you to-morrow if they could and say you
-weren’t fit to appreciate it. And they would undo the work of centuries
-that have been spent on it and turn it into a hell of their own.”
-
-“They wouldn’t. They would want to become gentle people and build it up
-again in their own way.”
-
-“Rot,” said Cyril. “Much better keep it as a model instead of wasting it
-all first. You must keep something in the show room. It is no good for
-everybody who wants an airship to destroy all there are and begin again
-by himself with a glider.”
-
-“Why are you two silly things sitting together in the dark?” said
-Susie’s voice at the door.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
-
-“There is a good deal to be said for subscription lists all the same,”
-said Mr. Manley. “How could you have the hospitals and other places kept
-going?” Teresa often went to the old man for help in her schemes, as he
-had invited her to do on their first acquaintance. They were good
-friends, though his tolerance of institutions, governors, spiritual
-pastors and masters puzzled her when she tried to piece it together with
-the other side of his character; the side which made him impatient with
-all sorts of pomposity and humbug. He delighted in the removal of
-lifeless traditions and he welcomed to his house the whole of the small
-army of people who fought for the life of the city against vanity,
-self-interest and stupidity.
-
-“But the way people go home to a fat dinner, with servants running round
-the table with more dishes, after they have sat listening to speeches
-about all sorts of deadly necessities makes me sick,” she said. “They
-sign a cheque for a sum that is just large enough to look impressive on
-a list, but that won’t make the least difference to the way they live;
-and then they think they have done everything that can possibly be
-required of them.”
-
-“If would be a dull world if there were no kindness, only obligation and
-compulsion,” he remarked. “I like people who are charitable to the
-poverty of my intelligence, so why not to the poverty of my comforts.”
-
-“But if some starving genius were to head a list of people who were kind
-to Mr. Price’s intelligence he wouldn’t be grateful.”
-
-“Well, if we are going to pounce upon ingratitude and snobbery in one
-place let us be down on it all round,” he said. “I tell you that
-kindness is a good thing anywhere, and though giving and taking is
-always a ticklish business because people think too much of themselves,
-that doesn’t make it any less good. By the way, did you know that Fisk
-has got himself locked up?”
-
-“I am delighted to hear it,” said Teresa, “but what for especially?”
-
-“Inciting to breach of the peace. Of course that has finished him so far
-as his career goes. He never got his degree and now he is too old and
-too mad. He was quite a decent boy. I used to employ his father and knew
-him quite well. He was as keen as possible on educating the lad.
-Cranston has a great deal to answer for, wasting these boys’ time so
-that they don’t work at anything. Fisk will have to be a paid agitator
-when he comes out in order to make a living. He’ll never go back to
-learn a trade now.”
-
-“How do you manage to stand the Prices?” Teresa resumed presently, going
-back to her train of thought. “I have often wondered. And Mrs.
-Carpenter—— Oh, dear me, I have got to hate rich people since we came
-here. At first I was worried about the poor. I wanted money not to
-matter either way, so that one could make friends anywhere and there
-shouldn’t be a barrier of habits and manners that some of them were born
-into and that cut them off from their natural friends in other classes.”
-
-“But that is nothing new,” he said, “I saw when I first met you that
-that was what you were after and you thought none of us here had ever
-had the same idea at all except good old Emma. That is why I wanted to
-make friends with you. I didn’t want the barrier of a rich dinner table
-to separate you from your natural friend here.”
-
-Teresa laughed. “Well, it didn’t, you see. But still, I don’t seem able
-to leap across the pineapples to Mr. and Mrs. Price. What does she mean
-by saying that her people are communists? It does seem the silliest
-rot.”
-
-“They are intellectual socialists. People who see that the world is
-untidy, which it certainly is, but they haven’t the taste for the
-characters that can only come out of an untidy world. I am a bit of a
-reader of the classics, as I haven’t a wife to talk to, and I can’t see
-any of the people I love best in books coming out of a world where
-everything is as neat as a bedded-out garden. I have a great dislike of
-culture, as it is called. Education is one thing and so is enterprise,
-and Price is enterprising; but I must say I don’t like Botticelli
-pictures and cocoa in a public-house, and that is what Mrs. Price means
-by saying her people are communists. They are wealthy themselves with
-all sorts of art tastes and live comfortably, and they like to preach.
-They don’t understand commerce and are ashamed of having any connection
-with it. You may always suspect a man who is prepared to run a business
-he hasn’t served in. I’ve the same suspicion of parsons. They see so
-many notices up everywhere, ‘Beware of the Devil!’ that they get
-tripping about here, there and everywhere in such a state of nerves that
-they forget they are not there to run God’s business, but to find out
-what He wants done. It is all this assuming of moral responsibility
-instead of working that I think is the mistake. Now you see what I meant
-when you were running down charitable institutions. You do your bit, my
-dear, and help to keep the machinery going. You can’t run it alone and
-improvements are being made all the time.” Teresa got up to go.
-
-“Do you know Mother is making a speech to-day?” she said doubtfully.
-“The first she has ever made outside a drawing-room, and I have to
-go—shall you be there? It is in the small room at the Town Hall.”
-
-“What is the meeting for?” he asked.
-
-“The Mary Popley Home for women.”
-
-“No,” he said, “I have given a subscription, but I am not coming to-day.
-I am sure she will do it well; she is so gentle and tactful. We want
-more women like that on our committees. Some of them are so very fierce.
-That is why I like Mrs. Vachell, though I am never sure what she has got
-up her sleeve; she’s rather an enigma.”
-
-“She hates men, that is all I know,” said Teresa.
-
-“Does she really? How very remarkable. I never knew that. And living
-among such excellent men and great scholars as she does! Good-bye, my
-dear, good-bye.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I suppose you are not coming, Cyril?” said Susie, later, putting on her
-gloves. “We are dining with the Gainsboroughs after the meeting; without
-dressing.”
-
-“No, your subjects are too deep for me, Sue,” he replied. “I’ll have
-something ready to wet your whistle when you come back, and keep up the
-fire and let the cat out and that sort of thing.”
-
-“Strickland will see to all that, dear,” she said. “I think you had
-better go to bed if you feel tired. I expect one of the maids will be up
-to make tea if we want it.”
-
-When they arrived at the Town Hall they were shown into a small room
-where the general committees of charitable institutions were often held.
-Reports were read, giving an outline of the year’s work and a statement
-of the financial position and requirements; an attempt was made to rouse
-public interest, accounts were then passed and votes of thanks to the
-principal helpers and the chairman were proposed, seconded and carried.
-Susie had been asked to second the vote of thanks to the committee.
-
-The audience consisted of a large number of her personal friends, a few
-dowdily dressed women with serious, lined faces, whom she knew by sight,
-and dreaded a little for their habit of turning up at tea-parties and
-saying tactless things about the behaviour of young girls in the Park
-after sunset, the cruelty of parents and the tendency of wives to drink
-to excess, in spite of industrious husbands. Very often they introduced
-these subjects just when she herself had been expounding the perfection
-of the mother instinct or the disastrous result of confidence in a young
-and innocent mind. They had a way of referring to crime as if it were a
-flaw in a work of art, rather than a snare set by wicked poachers for
-the Almighty’s pet rabbits. A few of the outside public were also
-present, with the usual vacant faces, perfunctory clothes, thin hair,
-and those curious eyes of the English stranger, which, if they are
-indeed windows of the soul, certainly do not belong to a country where
-romances are carried on at the lattice. Those eyes suggest Nottingham
-lace curtains and an aspidistra behind the dim panes which the owner
-never approaches, unless there is a street accident or a ring at the
-bell. They enclose many human preoccupations, but nothing that is likely
-to be shared with the passersby.
-
-Susie faced the eyes, the friendly eyes, the business-like eyes and the
-aspidistra eyes. The chairman had called on her to second the vote of
-thanks, after a short-sighted glance round to make sure she was there.
-Her dimple, the little crease in the satin cushion of her cheek,
-appeared, and she smiled, catching the attention of the first few rows.
-
-“Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,” she began, “I think it extremely
-kind of you to ask me to second this vote of thanks, because you are all
-so busy and I am not used to speaking, nor experienced enough in your
-work to be of very much help. But in thanking our splendid committee for
-all they have done, I want to try and tell everybody if I can, how
-deeply I feel that we all ought to do a great deal more to help these
-poor women. Vice is so pitifully easy to women in a great city like this
-(murmured approval was heard at the back). I am not going to say
-anything against men. We are the wives and mothers and sisters of men,
-and the responsibility lies with us (slight signs of cynicism from an
-aspidistra eye in the fifth row). But what I say is this. All our
-influence is necessarily—must necessarily be—of no use so long as our
-girls are wilfully misled by the idea that their love and innocent
-confidence will be understood and valued at its true worth by the
-naturally coarser and rougher nature. (“How thankful I am father didn’t
-come!” thought Teresa.) Men go into the world and become accustomed to
-hardness and cruelty, especially in foreign countries, with which a
-great port like this is constantly in touch. They drink and quarrel, and
-their poor homes have so little beauty to encourage them. Is it to be
-wondered at that a young girl who dreams of romance and her own little
-home and the sound of baby feet should refuse to believe that these
-things are of less value to the rough sailor or soldier or merchant,
-drunk with wine and full of strong passions that have no place in her
-finer nature? (The chairman, the treasurer and a doctor, who happened to
-be there, were gazing meditatively at the electric light fixtures, the
-desk, the floor, anywhere that would afford a sufficiently obscure
-resting-place for any involuntary expression of opinion on their faces.
-They felt a friendly approval of Susie as a nice, tender-hearted little
-woman, but all the same they hoped she would wind up soon.) What I feel
-so much is this, that although great sympathy and great patience with
-these poor girls must be shown, and although they must, of course, be
-taught to see the dreadful evil that they do, yet until wives and
-mothers and sisters impress their men with a better understanding of a
-woman’s feeling about these things, and make them see that the finer and
-higher view is not necessarily foolish and sentimental—that they hurt us
-by coarse jokes and rough actions, by mistaking love of motherhood for
-vulgar flirtation—that until they see all this in its true light it is
-useless to expect that trust will not be betrayed and happy girls flung
-back into these Homes, ruined and disgraced. Marriage may mean so much
-to a girl. It is surely worth an effort from us, who have had our trials
-and difficulties and misunderstandings, to bring home to the boys who
-are growing up a sense of those qualities which they lack by nature. I
-have much pleasure in seconding this vote of thanks to our committee.”
-
-She sat down amidst whole-hearted applause from her friends and several
-of the aspidistra-eyed. The ladies whom she feared gave a few
-business-like taps with one hand upon the other and fidgeted
-impatiently. Everything that interested them in the meeting was over and
-most of them had other engagements or voluminous documents at home to
-attend to.
-
-The vote of thanks to the chairman and his reply only occupied another
-ten minutes, and then there was tea in the Lady Mayoress’s parlour.
-
-“What a splendid speech you made,” said Mrs. Eric Manley, coming up to
-Susie. “I don’t know that I go quite as far as you do about the
-innocence of girls, but still——”
-
-“Oh, don’t you?” said Susie. “Of course a great many are not innocent,
-because they have been taught so young by seeing all kinds of dreadful
-things. But I think a woman’s natural character is much less suspicious
-than a man’s.” Mrs. Vachell came up and under the pretext of finding a
-chair drew Susie away from the crowd.
-
-“I have been waiting to see you,” she said. “I have just seen Evangeline
-off to Drage again and I am very much worried about her. Has she written
-to you much about herself?”
-
-“No, her letters are generally full of darling Ivor,” said Susie.
-
-Mrs. Vachell looked her up and down for an instant as if considering
-whether she could make a cut in Susie’s plump little figure without
-letting out too much sawdust and spoiling it.
-
-“She didn’t tell you that her husband thinks of sending Ivor away from
-her?”
-
-Susie’s eyes grew startled, but she said quietly, “Don’t you think you
-have mistaken a joke of his? Why should he do such a thing?”
-
-“I think he is a little mad,” said Mrs. Vachell. “The war shook a good
-many of them. He was always very strict with Ivor, wasn’t he?”
-
-“Oh yes, but then men are so silly about children,” said Susie, a little
-reassured. “They never do understand them.”
-
-“You were saying this afternoon that the responsibility for making them
-understand lies with women,” said Mrs. Vachell. “If you really believe
-that, it is time for you to help Evangeline. Her situation seems to me
-to be desperate.”
-
-“What did he say he was going to do?” Susie asked.
-
-“He told me in confidence that he means to send him away quite soon, in
-a year perhaps—not to a boy’s school, of course, but a sort of place
-kept by religious ladies. But Evangeline was not to know that. He is
-afraid she might do something violent, come to you and her father or
-make some public scandal. He hates having his affairs discussed and
-preferred to wait until the time comes.”
-
-“Men are really very tiresome and difficult sometimes, aren’t they,”
-said Susie with a sigh. “I do wish they would keep to their own affairs.
-Suppose I interfered with my husband’s soldiers and you put all Mr.
-Vachell’s diggings upside down on the shelves when he had arranged them.
-I can’t think how they can be so stupid. I am dreadfully worried about
-what you tell me, because, of course, it is all nonsense. If dear Evan
-suffers from his head that is no reason why he should vent it on a
-little boy. Perhaps a doctor might advise some tonic that would do him
-good.”
-
-“There is no tonic for a bullying disposition,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“Oh, don’t you think so?” said Susie. “I am sure the blood has so much
-effect on those kind of ideas. If people are well, you know, they see
-things quite differently, though, of course, there are some things that
-they will never understand, unless they are poets or artists. That makes
-a great deal of difference, I think, being in touch with beautiful
-things. Those religious ideas of his are a great mistake, I think; all
-about Jehovah, and being so full of judgment and wrath and so on. It
-gives them quite a wrong idea of the Bible. But I think his mother must
-have been a masculine sort of woman from what he says. Quite a little
-joke sometimes upsets him. Teresa and I are going on to the
-Gainsboroughs. Can we drop you?”
-
-All through the evening Susie was a little preoccupied. She was thinking
-out a plan of campaign by which she might save Evangeline from the harsh
-authority of her husband, as she had saved her from the prosy ethics of
-the schoolroom when she was a child. But, as in those days so now, she
-had no wish to reveal herself as a fighter. Once recognised as a
-partisan she would lay herself open to attack and perhaps be driven from
-her high ground of superiority to earthly passions. She represented in
-her own mind idealism, tender remoteness from all ugly thoughts,
-innocence of all desires save love for everybody. Could power be more
-strongly hedged about from attack?
-
-She had a short time alone with Mrs. Gainsborough, as the Principal
-retired to work in his study and Emma took Teresa away to her room.
-
-“I heard from a sister of mine at Drage to-day,” Mrs. Gainsborough
-began, “that they think they will probably be sent to Egypt quite soon.
-Will that affect Captain Hatton or will the special work he is doing
-keep him behind?”
-
-“I don’t know at all,” said Susie. “I hadn’t heard there was any idea of
-their going, but I think my husband did say that Evan would probably
-have to move soon in any case. Those special jobs they get are only
-temporary.”
-
-“Would Evangeline go with him?” asked Mrs. Gainsborough; “would it be
-all right for Ivor?” A possible solution to all difficulties at once
-presented itself to Susie. “I hardly think he could afford to take them
-both,” she said. “Without the extra pay he has been getting they will
-have to be very careful for a time, and I hear everything in Egypt is an
-awful price. He may be glad to leave Evangeline and the boy with us; I
-hope so.”
-
-“Oh, poor girl!” exclaimed Mrs. Gainsborough, “she wouldn’t like that.”
-
-“No, of course it would be a dreadful separation,” Susie agreed, “but it
-might be necessary until he got something else. He probably would very
-soon. He is so popular with everyone and so high principled. Anything to
-do with engineering delights him, and I should think there must be a
-great deal of that sort of thing going on everywhere just now. The whole
-world is making an effort to better everybody’s lives—except ours, of
-course, who have to pay for it. But one doesn’t grudge that. Personally
-I don’t mind how simply I live so long as I can have the things I want.”
-
-“I am very sorry I couldn’t come and hear you speak this afternoon,”
-said Mrs. Gainsborough. “But the fact is, my old cook, Annie, is being
-married and we gave her a little send-off from here. She has married
-such a nice respectable man—a widower—a plumber and decorator; we have
-known him for years—a man of the name of Fisk. But you know all about
-young Fisk, the son? How stupid of me! A horrid nuisance he is and a
-great worry to his father. He won’t have anything to do with poor old
-Annie. Turns up his nose at her altogether.”
-
-“How horrid of him!” said Susie.
-
-“Yes, I believe he thinks we arranged it all as a studied insult to him;
-vulgar little wretch!”
-
-“You will miss Annie, won’t you?” said Susie. “She has been with you
-such a long time.”
-
-“Oh, she is not exactly leaving us,” said Mrs. Gainsborough. “She will
-still come for the day about eleven o’clock to do all the cooking, and
-she will go home in the afternoon to give her husband his tea and then
-come back and dish up the dinner. You see, her home is only just round
-the corner and he is out all day so she is glad of the company and to
-earn the extra money. I fancy young Fisk takes a good bit of what his
-father makes.”
-
-They had hardly finished dinner when the maid handed a note to Susie.
-The girl, she said, was waiting for an answer. It was from Mrs. Vachell.
-
- “DEAR MRS. FULTON,” it said.
-
- “You told me you are dining with the Gainsboroughs. I wonder if you
- would have time to come in here for a few minutes on your way home. If
- Teresa is tired she could drop you and send the car back? I have heard
- from Evangeline by the last post with some reference to what I
- suggested to you this afternoon. She is sure to have written to you at
- the same time, but I cannot answer her letter without consulting you,
- and as you are always so busy it might save time if I can catch you
- between your good deeds.”
-
-“Would you ask the girl to tell Mrs. Vachell I shall be very glad to
-come round later,” she said to the maid; then she turned with an apology
-to Mrs. Gainsborough. “If one once takes up these public things there
-are so many little details to think out. Mrs. Vachell wants to talk over
-one or two points that she suggested this afternoon. I will send Teresa
-home when the car comes in case my husband wonders what has become of
-us, and it can come back for me to Mrs. Vachell’s.”
-
-Mrs. Vachell was alone when Susie was shown up. “My husband is out at
-one of those dreary men’s dinners where they play Bridge till all
-hours,” she explained. “I wanted to tell you, though you are sure to
-find a letter from Evangeline when you get back, that there seems to be
-an idea that his regiment is going to Egypt and he will probably have to
-go with them. In that case he is sure to make it the excuse for the
-separation I told you of.”
-
-“But surely all such things must be decided between themselves,” said
-Susie. “Evangeline and he are sure to talk it over and decide what is
-best to be done.”
-
-“Mrs. Fulton, have you seen your son-in-law lately?” Mrs. Vachell asked,
-looking at her searchingly. “Do you know how strongly he has got to feel
-on this point? I have been down there for a month with them and I
-realised that Evangeline has no idea what an obsession it has become
-with him. He seemed to want to pour it out to somebody and you know
-yourself how a man always chooses a woman to listen to him because of
-the very qualities he despises in her—shall we call it flexibility of
-judgment? He knows she is not likely to say, ‘My dear chap, that’s all
-rot. Have a whiskey and soda?’”
-
-“That is so true,” said Susie with a sigh. “How well I know it!”
-
-“You understand then how I come to know more of his intentions than you
-do. He wouldn’t feel that you were an impartial judge and also——” her
-mouth twitched slightly—“I am afraid he thinks you a little—frivolous.
-He mistakes your delicacy of thought for want of earnestness.”
-
-“Yes, I daresay,” said Susie, slightly stung, “I am quite used to being
-thought absurd just because there is so much in spiritual things that
-one cannot explain in black and white. Those very dogmatic people always
-seem to me to miss the whole point of everything.”
-
-“Well, now, the question is this. I know—I tell you this in all
-seriousness—I know what he means to do with the child at the last
-moment, and the last moment will come sooner than we expected if he is
-ordered to Egypt. So please do dispossess yourself of any fancy ideas of
-its all blowing over or all coming right. What can you do? You will
-probably offer to take Ivor and Evangeline too. He will refuse because
-he thinks you are even worse for the boy than she is.” Susie betrayed no
-sign of anger, but her eyes narrowed a little and there was no dimple in
-her cheek as she listened attentively. “What will you do then?” Mrs.
-Vachell went on. “There are some terrible women he knows of who keep a
-school away down in Cornwall. I don’t mean that they are intentionally
-cruel, but Ivor has your sensitive nature. He is a little boy whom you
-might as well whip with a cat-o’-nine-tails as send to women like that.”
-
-Tears sprang to Susie’s eyes and her lips trembled. “I will do anything
-you suggest,” she promised. “I don’t care what it is. I think I could
-almost kill him. Thank heaven he trusts you!”
-
-Mrs. Vachell laughed. “It is against all my principles and theories,”
-she said, “but they force us to do these things. Some day when we are in
-power we can be our true selves and enjoy the luxury of the straight
-path. At present we lie for the children and the women like Evangeline
-who suffer in their foolish reverence for the male. I don’t know what
-you advise, but I don’t see any better way out of it than that
-Evangeline should be supposed to be going overland to join him and just
-not turn up. The boy will be left with me on the understanding that I
-take him to Cornwall as soon as Evangeline has left or perhaps a month
-or two after.”
-
-“It doesn’t sound at all the sort of thing Evan would do,” said Susie
-doubtfully. “He is always so very downright.”
-
-“No, you are quite right,” said Mrs. Vachell. “He hasn’t thought of it
-yet. He has only got as far as the old ladies. But I can make him see
-the difficulty of a scene with Evangeline. She is very much liked at
-Drage. Evan’s Colonel and his wife are devoted to her. There would be
-awful talk and gossip and indignation if she let herself go and got the
-rest of them down on to it. He is secretive and hates outside
-interference.”
-
-“But then why not let public opinion have the chance to make him give
-in?” asked Susie.
-
-“He wouldn’t do that. He would make some plan for a temporary
-arrangement with me or someone else and it is safer that it should be
-with me.”
-
-“But when you have got him off, what next? The school will be expecting
-him, they will be furious and write to Evan and he will order you to
-give up Ivor. He may send a solicitor’s letter. He may get special leave
-and come back.”
-
-“That he couldn’t possibly afford,” said Mrs. Vachell. “It is a very
-expensive journey just now. And as for the solicitor’s letter—do you
-know I am not at all sure that I shouldn’t leave that to your husband. I
-can’t tell you why, but I think he could manage Captain Hatton even now;
-the only thing is that he wouldn’t. You have to get things into a mess
-first before a man like that will move. They never will do anything to
-prevent a row if it means making a plan, but they will shovel away the
-mess afterwards quite willingly.”
-
-“I think I might sound him,” said Susie reflectively.
-
-“Very well, but remember if you give him the least hint of a plan he
-will forbid you to do it and then it becomes rather a nuisance; it would
-be fifty per cent more complicated. If you do the thing first you can
-pretend to be sorry and say how stupid you were not to have thought of
-the consequences. A man will always swallow that.”
-
-Susie changed the subject. “And what about Evangeline?” she asked.
-“Shall I write to her?”
-
-“No, indeed, you won’t. Don’t write a line except the usual
-grandmotherly stuff. I will ring her up and get her to take a day’s
-shopping in London; I am going there next week. Then after that I will
-go on to Drage to see a young cousin of mine. Evan will know by that
-time whether he is going or not. If he does I can persuade him to lend
-me Ivor for a month or two or even more. Even he understands that he is
-rather a baby to go to strangers alone and he is sorry for me for having
-no children——” She gave a little laugh. “You might, perhaps, make it
-easier by saying that you want to have Ivor yourself, but that there is
-difficulty about the nurse. He trusts her, and she doesn’t, in fact,
-like being with you.”
-
-“Doesn’t she?” asked Susie, very much surprised.
-
-“No, not at all. She went so far as to threaten to give notice if she
-stayed with you again. She complains that you spoil Ivor.”
-
-“What a horrid woman!” said Susie.
-
-“Yes, you will probably have to get another in the end. But all that
-will be much simpler when we once get him out there. It is difficult for
-anyone to make arrangements with such a long post in between.”
-
-“Dear me,” Susie said with a sigh, “it is all very sad. I think I will
-go home now. There may be a letter from Evangeline and I can see what my
-husband says.”
-
-“Well,” said Cyril when she came back, “Dicky says you are a great
-orator, Sue. Got the nail plumb on the head and brought tears to every
-eye. I sent her to bed as she looked tired. Strickland said she was
-going to bring you some tea as soon as you came in.”
-
-“Are there any letters for me?” she asked.
-
-“Yes, I believe there are. I put them down somewhere. Evan has written
-to me to say that the regiment is going to Egypt and he will have to go
-unless he gets anything else.”
-
-“Is he likely to do that?”
-
-“I don’t know. He will have to run his own show now. I should think he
-is most likely to go.” Susie found her letters and looked through them.
-There was nothing from Evangeline. “I wonder why she writes to Mrs.
-Vachell and not to me,” she thought, but she felt no jealousy; nothing
-more than a little surprise, such as she might have felt if one of her
-children had chosen to have tea with the housemaid instead of coming
-down to the drawing-room.
-
-“What sort of a country is Egypt for children?” she asked presently when
-Strickland had brought the tea.
-
-“I’ve never been there, but I shouldn’t think it was very good for
-them,” said Cyril.
-
-“Wouldn’t it be the best plan for Ivor to stay with us and have a
-governess?” she suggested.
-
-“Well, I suppose that is for Chips to settle.”
-
-“When you talk of her settling do you realise that Evan has very odd
-views about children and that he is a little obstinate sometimes?”
-
-“What are you getting at, Sue?” he asked. “I haven’t studied the insect
-world enough to be always sure what particular idea you are after. If
-you will tell me the shape of twig you want to resemble——”
-
-“I haven’t an idea what you are talking about, Cyril, but I was asking
-for Evangeline’s sake. You always seem to understand men so much better
-than I do.”
-
-“That is because they say what they mean,” he replied. “There is no
-difficulty about that.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Mrs. Vachell scarcely recognised Evangeline when she rose out of a
-corner of the shop lounge where they had arranged to meet. She was not
-only thin and heavy-eyed, but she looked hunted. Behind the sphinx face
-that looked into hers bitter pity was hard at work. “My dear child,”
-Mrs. Vachell said, holding out both her hands, “don’t worry. It is
-perfectly all right.”
-
-“But you don’t know,” said Evangeline in a low, frightened voice. “I
-haven’t told you. He is going to Egypt and insists on my going too. Ivor
-is to be sent away——” Her voice broke.
-
-“No, no, nonsense,” said Mrs. Vachell. “Here, come and sit down. Ivor
-isn’t going away. He will be sent to me first and you won’t go on the
-boat at all. You can either be supposed to join him at Marseilles, or if
-that makes too much fuss you can go on board and slip off among the
-crowd when people are being sent ashore at the last minute. There are
-lots of ways and we will think out the best. Once he is safely off, you
-will go back to your parents and he will find the devil of a difficulty
-in dislodging you. It is a temporary remedy, I know, but we shall have
-time to think of something else when the next obstacle turns up. He is
-one man against three women, remember. You know your mother by this
-time. I am not sure but what she is stronger than either of us. And you
-will have all the regiment with you if they get to know of it.”
-
-“But Mother doesn’t know,” said Evangeline. “I didn’t think it was any
-use telling her.”
-
-“Then you are a fool, dear. Never mind; I have told her; and if Evan
-thinks he is any match for her he is mistaken. He might as well try to
-fight a climate.”
-
-“But how did you know anything about it?” she asked, more and more
-puzzled. “He only told me yesterday, and I don’t know now where he wants
-to send Ivor. It may be to his sisters, which is bad enough.”
-
-“I knew a month ago what he intended to do some day, and I made plans
-for you as soon as I heard that he might be going to Egypt. Don’t waste
-time being jealous of me, Evangeline. I would wring the man’s neck like
-a turkey’s if I could.”
-
-“Oh, you are wicked!” gasped Evangeline.
-
-“No, I am not. Don’t be stupid. You will lose your faith in men too some
-day, and then you won’t stick at anything to help a woman. What other
-weapons have we to defend our lives as yet? Do you want Ivor or do you
-not?”
-
-“Do I?” said Evangeline, nervously hunting for her handkerchief. “I
-didn’t sleep last night and I’ve had no breakfast.”
-
-“Very well, have lunch now, then,” said Mrs. Vachell, rising. During
-lunch they matured their plan. Evan had not yet explained definitely
-where he intended to send Ivor, though he had once mentioned two friends
-of his mother’s, “the best women in the world,” he called them. Mrs.
-Vachell related all she knew of the place where they lived and their
-methods of training the young mind. Perhaps she exaggerated and perhaps
-Evan had laid unfair stress on the items he was most anxious about.
-“They believe in making a child independent of physical comforts,” she
-said, “and not allowing a light in the room at night and that sort of
-thing.”
-
-“Oh, God! Ivor will go mad,” said Evangeline. “He is so good about the
-dark and getting used to it, but he hates it—and without me!”
-
-Mrs. Vachell shrugged her shoulders. “I came across men in hospital,”
-she said, “to whom their childish terrors used to come back. Of course
-it made them able to stand anything as they grew up, for nothing they
-were likely to meet afterwards in an ordinary life could be such
-torture. But it seems a little like burning down the house to get roast
-pig. And, after all, the war has shown that it wasn’t worth while,
-because boys from happy homes were just as undefeatable as the children
-of brutes. In fact some of them who took it most simply had had the
-happiest childhood. Good schools do just as well now when the boys come
-by train as when they were frozen on the tops of coaches on the way and
-tortured when they got there.”
-
-“Yes,” said Evangeline.
-
-“I shall have to fool your husband a good deal before I get Ivor handed
-over to me,” Mrs. Vachell said, looking at her attentively.
-
-“Oh, I don’t mind,” Evangeline answered carelessly. “He doesn’t love the
-real you. That is the only thing that would annoy me.” Mrs. Vachell gave
-a little laugh.
-
-“Who says women can’t stick together or tell the truth?” she said.
-
-“Do they?” said Evangeline with indifference. “I wonder why.”
-
-“Well, let’s get on,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I must do my shopping in a few
-minutes. I shall come to Drage next week, and, in the meantime, just
-behave as you would if you believed it was all going to happen as he
-says. Try to forget that it isn’t; and when I come you will find that
-the old ladies will be postponed for a few months at least. And another
-thing. You had better beg for Ivor to be sent to your mother. I want
-your husband to have knocked off that idea before I come or I should
-have to suggest it and fail. He shall tell you himself that it won’t do,
-and he will be getting uneasy about the old duchesses by that time if
-you are tragic enough.”
-
-“Oh, it is beastly!” said Evangeline. “Hateful! disgusting! How can a
-man be so mean as to force his wife to filthy, low tricks to keep their
-only son with her while he is a baby and she has done nothing wrong. How
-dare he do it! I shall be a wicked woman before he has done with me.”
-
-Mrs. Vachell again shrugged her shoulders. “Wait,” she said, “it is
-coming. There can be no stopping it in the end. We are in Parliament; we
-are almost in the Law; we have one foot in the Church. Wait, Evangeline,
-my dear. And in the meantime we won’t throw away the old weapons till
-the new are ready. They haven’t done bad service in the past.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
-
-“God bless you,” said Evan, as he let Mrs. Vachell out of his house
-about a week later. “I’ll tell Evangeline as soon as she comes in. It is
-an enormous weight off my mind, really. I can’t tell you what torture it
-has been to see the poor girl in that state, and yet it was my duty. I
-couldn’t do otherwise, so it had to be gone through. Now she will be
-comparatively happy as she will trust Ivor with you and Mrs. Fulton can
-see him when she wants to—within limits. Evangeline will like that. I
-have the utmost confidence in the nurse too. I should never have sent
-her away from him if it had been possible to keep him at home. I have
-written to Miss Moseley and told her that his coming is only postponed
-and that I will arrange with her later when you see how he gets on.”
-
-“Yes,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I will write to you every week or so at
-first. Good-bye. You sail on the 30th, don’t you? I suppose I can make
-all the final arrangements about trains with Evangeline. She will like
-to see him settled in before she goes, perhaps, and it will give her
-time to pack and settle the house in peace.”
-
-Evan had refused to listen to the suggestion that Evangeline should pick
-up the ship anywhere on the way out, so that had been given up. Mrs.
-Vachell had undertaken to bring off the final coup. Ivor was to be
-established in her house a week before the ship sailed. Evangeline was
-to pack her trunks as much as possible with old clothes and oddments
-that she did not need. Evan was out all day, so there was no difficulty
-about that. Mrs. Vachell would get permission to see them off on board,
-and would undertake that Evangeline should disappear when the shore bell
-rang. An errand of mercy in some lady’s cabin would prevent Evan from
-looking for her until some time after the ship had left. Mrs. Vachell
-would keep him in discussion till the last moment and tear herself away
-only at the last imperative shouts from the gangway. After that the
-deluge, and Cyril in the character of Noah.
-
-“I don’t like the plan at all,” Susie said anxiously, when Mrs. Vachell
-returned. “I simply don’t know how I shall ever make my husband
-understand. He is quite extraordinarily dense in those ways. And I want
-to tell the servants to get Evangeline’s room ready, and of course I
-can’t. There are all sorts of things to be seen to, and Strickland will
-be so cross. And I am afraid they will gossip, too. Can’t you possibly
-think of anything else? Couldn’t Evangeline be taken ill on the way out
-and landed, and then she could just come home?”
-
-“I am afraid that soldiers are more easily deceived than doctors,” said
-Mrs. Vachell, “and Evangeline is such a bad actress! How I have pulled
-her through this week I don’t know. But I can keep Ivor as long as you
-like while you make your preparations. When Evangeline comes off the
-boat and gets to you, she must just have had a fit of temporary insanity
-to account for it to your husband; a sort of mad motherhood. I
-understand that she has an excuse for a certain amount of eccentricity.
-For that reason alone any doctor can be got to say that she is better at
-home.”
-
-“Well, we must try not to worry,” said Susie. “I daresay, when you come
-to think of it, that by the time Evan has several children he will give
-up a great deal of that absurd nonsense about training. The children
-themselves will make him forget about it. Marriage does away with so
-many silly fancies, doesn’t it?”
-
-All the same, as the time drew near, she became a trifle restless. One
-day, unknown to her, Cyril went to have a tooth out. It was a bad tooth,
-and he felt decidedly uncomfortable afterwards, so he telephoned from
-the dentist’s house to put off an engagement he had made, and went
-straight home. It happened to be the afternoon Susie had chosen for a
-box containing Evangeline’s belongings to be brought to the house, as
-she knew Cyril had a train journey of a couple of hours, which would
-keep him out of the way. He was just fitting his latchkey in the door
-when a van stopped and a man got out and touched his hat. “A box for
-you, sir,” he said, “would you sign, please.” Another man was dragging
-out the box and Cyril took the paper and read it. “It is addressed to
-Mrs. Hatton,” he said. “Just wait a minute and I’ll send a servant.”
-Susie, hearing his voice, was peeping rather agitatedly out of the
-drawing-room door. He rang the front door bell for Strickland, and went
-upstairs.
-
-“There’s a man with a box addressed to Chips,” he remarked. “Is it all
-right?”
-
-“Y-yes, I think so, dear,” said Susie. “It is just a few things we are
-to take care of, that she thought might spoil in Egypt. Perhaps I had
-better see about it. Why are you back so early?”
-
-“I had a tooth out,” he explained.
-
-“Well, really, Cyril dear,” she said impatiently, “how you men do fuss
-about every little ache and pain. What would you say if we gave up our
-work for as little reason as that?”
-
-“I should say you had the wisdom of the serpent and the harmlessness of
-the dove,” he replied. “It wouldn’t matter a row of beans.” He went off
-to his room.
-
-“When are we going to see those two to say good-bye?” he asked that
-evening after dinner.
-
-“They will be coming for a night next week when they take Ivor to the
-Vachells’,” said Susie.
-
-“I still don’t understand why he is being sent there instead of coming
-to us,” he observed.
-
-Susie made a little face. “It is just Evan,” she said. “He thinks we are
-not to be trusted with children. Of course I couldn’t insist.”
-
-“It is very unlike you, Sue, to hand over one of your brood without a
-murmur. Does Evangeline want him to go there?”
-
-“Certainly not,” said Susie unguardedly.
-
-“Well then, I bet he won’t be there long,” said Cyril. Susie began to
-wonder whether this might not be a golden opportunity put into her
-hands.
-
-“If you think it best too, dear, I am not sure it mightn’t be the wisest
-thing to move him here after a little while,” she said. Cyril looked at
-her speculatively, but said nothing at the time. When Evangeline arrived
-he noticed a great alteration in her. She had lost her easy-going
-acceptance of everything that was said and done. She seemed anxious and
-analytical, on the look out for traps, chary of expressing an opinion.
-She had said good-bye to Ivor, she told them, and Evan had stayed behind
-to settle a few last details with Mrs. Vachell. She said all this with
-so much nervousness and lack of interest, as if repeating a lesson, that
-Cyril wondered more and more. He thought again of the box that had
-arrived, of Susie’s embarrassment, and her anger at his unexpected
-return. When she went in the afternoon to pay her fortnightly visit to a
-women’s hospital Cyril asked:
-
-“You’re not acting altogether on the straight about this voyage, are
-you, Chips? What’s the plot?”
-
-Evangeline pushed back her chair and a look of terror came into her
-face. She hesitated, but said nothing. He looked at her with concern.
-“My dear child, I am not going to eat you,” he said. “What’s the
-matter?”
-
-“I thought perhaps you knew,” she stammered, without realising what she
-had said.
-
-“What, that your mother had given you away?”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“Well, she did, though she didn’t mean to. She was a marvel of
-discretion, but unfortunately I had a tooth out and came here when I
-ought to have been stowed in the train, and I met your luggage on the
-doorstep. She told me it was antiques or something, and I didn’t, in
-fact, think much about it until you turned up. So now you had better
-tell me what you have both been up to. It is quite evident that you
-haven’t parted from Ivor. How do you manage that? Are you going to take
-him as a cargo of apples or what?”
-
-“No, I am not going,” said Evangeline. “I won’t go, and if you give me
-away, I’ll—no, I am sorry. I would have told you at first, but Mother
-and Mrs. Vachell said that men will only help to clear up a mess. They
-won’t ever make a plan to prevent it.”
-
-“Oh,” said Cyril, “so the plot is pretty deep, is it? How big is the
-membership?”
-
-“Just us three,” said Evangeline.
-
-“Not Dicky?”
-
-“No, no, Dicky is impossible. She wouldn’t give it away, but she would
-want me to fight it out with Evan. But I can’t, Father,—I can’t, I
-can’t. He has broken my nerve. I would fight for myself, but I can’t
-risk it when it is for Ivor. I can’t afford to lose. It is Evan’s own
-fault. I never thought of being deceitful until I met him.”
-
-“And Mrs. Vachell?” added Cyril.
-
-“I daresay,” she admitted, “but she doesn’t want to any more than I do.
-She says she does so look forward to the day when women won’t have to
-lie. It will be such a luxury.”
-
-“H’m, yes, perhaps,” he replied, “but we won’t go into these gilded
-prospects now. She’s evidently still in a very poor way. But if you
-don’t mind me telling you, I think what you are doing is very risky,
-though I don’t exactly know what it is. How are you going to get off?”
-
-“Just slip off the boat while Mrs. Vachell is saying good-bye to him. He
-is to suppose that I am in the ladies’ cabin looking after someone who
-is ill.”
-
-“And do you suppose any man is going to find out that his wife has
-played him a trick like that and yet go on with his voyage and stay over
-there?”
-
-“Mrs. Vachell said he wouldn’t be able to afford to come back,” said
-Evangeline.
-
-“Good God! What a fool the woman is,” he exclaimed. “And she and her
-pack of jelly-brained idiots think that—well, well, Chips my dear, she
-is not too big a fool anyhow to have properly done poor old Evan. She
-must have endured the devil of a lot of self-denial in the way of truth
-lately. A regular Lent of corkers. Chips, I really don’t advise you to
-go on with this. It is all nonsense; Evan is a very decent sort of
-fellow and I don’t suppose he understands in the least that he is
-worrying you seriously. I’ll tell him that I am going to keep you here
-for a bit, and Ivor too, to keep you company, and that we’ll think out a
-scheme later for you to go out there when he has got ready for you. He
-can’t object, for I don’t think you are well.”
-
-“No, I am not,” said Evangeline, and she burst into tears. “I am going
-to have another, and I know he will take it away, too, and I shall go
-mad——”
-
-“Oh, rot!” said Cyril kindly. “Here, buck up. You’re not going if you
-don’t want to. Why on earth didn’t you talk over this mess before?
-There——” (the front door bell rang) “that’s probably the heavy father
-coming on the stage now.”
-
-“Father,” said Evangeline, turning white, “don’t tell him——” She fell
-forward in her chair and fainted, and at the same moment Evan came in.
-
-“Here,” said Cyril holding her, “go down, there’s a good fellow, and get
-some brandy; there’s some in the dining-room.” Evan raced down and
-brought back the decanter and a glass, and between them they did their
-best, lifting her on to the sofa, and Evan tried to make her swallow
-some of the brandy. She opened her eyes and looked at him with terror,
-and then sat up. “What is it?” she asked. “Oh please, please, Evan,
-don’t take him away. I will do anything you like.”
-
-“Don’t take who away, my darling, I don’t know what you mean?” he said.
-
-“Here, never mind,” said Cyril. “It’s all right, Chips. We’ll get you
-put to bed I think, and, there’s nothing to worry about; do you
-understand?” He rang the bell for Strickland, and she came in and stood
-gazing at them in surprise and disapproval.
-
-“Mrs. Hatton isn’t well,” said Cyril. “A little influenza or something.
-Will you get her room ready and put her to bed? Can you walk so far,
-Chips, if we give you a hand?” They left her in the bedroom with
-Strickland, and then Cyril faced his son-in-law in the drawing-room.
-
-“I think I’ll telephone for a doctor,” he said, “just to make sure she’s
-all right. Mix yourself a drink while I look the fellow up.” He found
-the number and took up the receiver. “That Doctor Clark?” he said. “Oh,
-isn’t he? Well would you ask him to come round to Mrs. Fulton’s house as
-soon as he comes in. Now then, Evan,” he went on, while he lit a pipe,
-“let’s have this out. You mustn’t take the girl away to Egypt just yet.
-She’s all to bits and she’s got a holy terror of you for some reason.
-What have you been doing?”
-
-“I am afraid it has been parting from the boy that has upset her,” said
-Evan. “But I considered very carefully before I did it, and I am quite
-sure it is the only way.”
-
-“Only way to what?” asked Cyril.
-
-“The only way to safeguard him from being ruined by weakness and
-self-indulgence.”
-
-“It won’t do him any harm to speak of for a year or two,” said Cyril,
-“and then he’ll go to school and get it put straight. You’ll do him far
-more harm where you’ve left him at present with that unscrupulous
-she-devil of the Nile. Take her back with you on the spare ticket and
-drop her whence she came.”
-
-“Excuse me, sir,” Evan said, getting up. “I can’t listen to any abuse of
-Mrs. Vachell. I am sorry Evangeline has sunk to that last resort of
-slandering her best friend to achieve her end.”
-
-“Evangeline didn’t slander her, my dear boy,” said Cyril. “She was full
-of her praises because of the magnificent plan she had devised for
-deceiving you. I arrived home unexpectedly a few days ago and met
-Evangeline’s box on the doorstep. The plan was that Cleopatra was to
-beguile you at one end of the deck while Evangeline nipped off down the
-gangway and home. They had a plan all thought out about her ministering
-to a sick friend in a distant cabin so that you wouldn’t look for her
-until you were well out at sea. Ivor was to join her here then, and
-after that I don’t think they had any clear idea, but they were
-reckoning on your finding it cheaper to stay where you were and storm at
-them on paper.”
-
-Evan’s face looked hard and worn, but he showed no other sign of
-disappointment. “I think I had better go now and ask Mrs. Vachell if it
-is true,” he said. “You know I have only just come from her, and we made
-an arrangement that Ivor should stay with her for two or three months
-and then go to some ladies whom my mother knew in Cornwall; they keep a
-small school for very young children whose parents are abroad.”
-
-“Did Chips know of that further arrangement?” asked Cyril.
-
-“Not unless Mrs. Vachell told her.”
-
-“Why not? What sort of a fellow do you think you are, making plans with
-another woman behind your wife’s back as to what you will do with your
-son while she is away?”
-
-“It was the only way,” said Evan again.
-
-“The only way to land yourself in the devil of a mess. Upon my word,
-Evan, it’s a pretty beastly sort of thing to do. If it got round to the
-mess you’d find yourself up against a devilish hard proposition.”
-
-“Yes, I know,” said Evan. “It was cowardice. I hate hurting a woman if
-it can be avoided.”
-
-“Funny how people deny themselves in little ways,” Cyril said
-reflectively. “There you say you hate hurting a woman, and you go a long
-way round to find a plan that must hurt her more than anything you could
-have chosen. Evangeline told me that Mrs. Vachell hates lying more than
-anything, and she——”
-
-“Excuse my interrupting you, sir,” said Evan rising. “That is not quite
-proved yet. I’ll be back in half an hour.”
-
-Cyril, from the window, saw him rush after a passing tram and board it
-with the expression of the Chief of Police in a cinema drama. “Poor
-devil!” he said to himself with amusement. “She’s going to catch it.”
-
-Mrs. Vachell’s little maid was greatly surprised when the gentleman whom
-she had let out of the house not long before brushed past her with some
-muttered remark when she opened the door, and ran straight up to the
-drawing-room, where her mistress was having tea. Mr. Vachell had
-returned from the University and was enjoying himself with a muffin.
-Evan greeted him hurriedly, and said to Mrs. Vachell, “Can I speak to
-you a moment alone?”
-
-“No, my dear Evan, I don’t think you can with that face,” she said,
-looking at him coldly, “you almost frighten me. Sit down there and have
-some tea, and tell us what is the matter. Ivor is quite happy having his
-upstairs.”
-
-“He must pack up now and come with me, unless you can contradict what I
-have just been told,” said Evan. “But I know you will——” his voice was
-almost beseeching. “Evangeline is ill. She fainted and went to bed, and
-I think she is a little light-headed. She assured her father that you
-had made a plan to let her slip off the boat as it was starting and to
-join Ivor here and take him to her father’s house——” he paused
-anxiously.
-
-“Yes, it is quite true,” she said without concern. “It evidently isn’t
-coming off now as Evangeline has gone back on it. Still I think she
-might have warned me. It is all the same to me what she does, but it is
-generally considered not to be playing the game to do that sort of
-thing.”
-
-“Why did you do it?” asked Evan.
-
-“Because it was the only way to stop your monstrous behaviour to a woman
-and her child. I would have done it for anybody.” Mr. Vachell had taken
-no part in what was going on, but was quietly proceeding with his tea.
-
-“Did you know of this?” Evan asked, turning to him.
-
-“Of course not,” he replied. “Is it likely?”
-
-“Of course he didn’t,” said Mrs. Vachell. “It had nothing to do with
-him. But he wouldn’t have interfered in any case. We are a normal
-husband and wife; not a potentate and his slave.”
-
-“Then would you ring for Ivor and his nurse to get ready, please,” said
-Evan.
-
-“Where are you going to take him?” she inquired.
-
-“I beg your pardon, but that is no business of yours.”
-
-“Very well, then, wait a moment please.” She took up the telephone from
-a table beside her and asked for the Fultons’ number. Cyril answered it.
-“Is that you, General Fulton?” she said. “Captain Hatton wishes to take
-Ivor away at once and will not tell me where he is taking him to. The
-little boy has hardly had his tea and is tired after the journey. Would
-you mind telling me what to do.” Emphatic sounds were audible from the
-mouth-piece, and she turned to Evan. “He says I am to tell you not to be
-a damned fool but to go round there at once. Your wife is very ill. You
-are to leave the child here for the present. What did you say, General
-Fulton? Do you want to speak to him?” She got up and gave her place to
-Evan. “Yes—hullo,” he said. “Is that you, sir? What’s the matter,
-please,—very well—I will come.” He said good-bye to neither of the
-Vachells, but stopped at the door. “I should like Ivor and the nurse
-sent to General Fulton’s as early as you conveniently can to-morrow,” he
-said, and went downstairs.
-
-“Good heavens! what idiots!” said Mrs. Vachell, pouring herself out
-another cup of tea, when he was gone. “It is very difficult to do good
-in this world.”
-
-“I know you don’t want my advice,” said Mr. Vachell, “so I won’t give
-it. But I am sorry there has been such a mess and she is ill. I like the
-poor girl and she seems to have had a bad time one way and another.
-Little Teresa will be hitting out right and left I expect.”
-
-“Oh, Teresa!” his wife said contemptuously, “is full of old-fashioned
-prejudices, and her idea of equality between human beings doesn’t go
-beyond incomes.”
-
-“If people would study the way things have worked out in the past they
-would get a better idea of what is likely to happen in the future,” he
-observed. “I think I must go down and do a little work.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
-
-“There is certainly no question of her going to Egypt just yet,” said
-the doctor when he came downstairs. “She seems to have got a sort of
-nervous breakdown. Can you account for it in any way?”
-
-Susie had come home just before he arrived, and was apparently greatly
-fluttered by the scene of confusion that she found, but, in fact, she
-was secretly rejoiced. “It clears the whole thing up in the most
-wonderful way,” she thought. “Really it almost seems as if Providence
-did interfere sometimes.” She came into the drawing-room with the doctor
-and found Cyril and Evan talking with perfect friendliness. She put them
-both down in her thoughts as “extraordinarily lacking in all feeling,”
-but she expressed nothing but cheerful propriety.
-
-“Really I don’t know,” she said, in answer to the doctor’s question.
-“Evan, Dr. Clark wants to know whether you can account for Evangeline
-having broken down like this. You were here with her, Cyril, when it
-happened. Do either of you know of anything?” Both were silent, waiting
-for the other to speak. “Well?” said Susie impatiently. “You see, I have
-been out, and she seemed to be all right when she arrived.”
-
-“I think it had to do with her leaving Ivor behind,” said Cyril at last.
-“Really, my dear, you are a mother; you ought to understand these
-feelings. She was about to sail on a long voyage, remember.”
-
-Susie blushed. “There has been the move too, of course,” she said to the
-doctor. “Everything was arranged in a great hurry and there was a great
-deal of packing up; and as she told you, she is not strong just now.”
-
-“No,” he said, “there’s that. But I should have thought there was more
-in it. However, it is not my affair, and if it is a family matter you
-must do as you like. But whatever it is must be put right somehow, or
-you may have very serious consequences to deal with. I will come back
-to-morrow morning, unless you want me before then. But please try to set
-her mind at rest on whatever it is that is worrying her. It would be
-much better if you had a trained nurse.”
-
-“Little Ivor’s nurse is a splendid woman,” said Susie. “She has had a
-hospital training, and Evangeline is used to her. Do you think she could
-manage?”
-
-“No, I think not,” he said. “She seems to be worrying about the child as
-it is. Have him in the house with her and let her know he is within
-reach with his own nurse, and I’ll send you round another woman, if you
-don’t mind.”
-
-Evangeline slept that evening under the influence of some medicine the
-doctor ordered, and Cyril and Evan were left alone after dinner, while
-the household were carrying out the numerous requirements of the nurse
-and preparing another couple of rooms for Ivor.
-
-It had been decided that Evan must sail with his regiment, but so far
-nothing had been said about Ivor’s future. Presently Cyril remarked, “We
-had better settle now about the boy, Evan. It looks pretty clear to me
-that you have got to wait for him to find his level in the ordinary way
-at a preparatory school. There aren’t many years to wait, and I can
-promise you that there will be nothing morbid about him so long as he is
-under my roof. You see, if I had had a son I should have had to check
-his tendencies and all that, and he will quite likely mind what I say
-more than he would the old women of Cornwall.”
-
-“I shall make no inquiries,” said Evan. “Since his mother and I cannot
-act together, and it seems that I shall be responsible for her illness
-if we act separately, I shall withdraw altogether. I will send her all
-the money I have beyond what I need for bare necessities, and she has
-your very generous allowance. I don’t imagine she will miss me at all
-out of her life. Everything has been as wretched as it could be for the
-last year or two.”
-
-“I think you will probably find you want them both back again by and
-bye,” said Cyril. “My wife would tell you, I am sure, that absence makes
-the heart grow fonder—which reminds me that I very much hope that is
-true. However, don’t let’s take it for granted that all is over and Moab
-is our wash-pot, and so on. It is wonderful how things peter out if you
-leave them alone.”
-
-“Perhaps,” said Evan gloomily, “but I am afraid not. What is wrong in
-the beginning is wrong in the end. I shall go away to-morrow before the
-boy arrives. He is not likely to ask after me much, as he was set
-against me from the beginning.”
-
-“Have a drink before you go up,” said Cyril, as Evan rose from his
-chair. “I am sure you had better.” Ten minutes later they were absorbed
-in a discussion about Egyptian administration, but Evan remained gloomy.
-
-When Strickland brought his breakfast next morning she asked whether he
-had seen Mrs. Hatton, and how was she?
-
-“I didn’t disturb her,” he answered, “but the nurse came to the door and
-told me she was better.”
-
-“I think Mrs. Fulton will be down in a few minutes, sir,” said
-Strickland, hesitating at the door. She liked Evan, who was always
-gravely considerate to the maids and, as she once said to the cook,
-“never passes us with his hat on.” “I may be gone before then,” said
-Evan, “but if so, please tell her I was sorry to go without saying
-good-bye. I have several things to do on the way to the station.” Teresa
-ran down just as he was putting on his coat.
-
-“Oh Evan, were you going without saying good-bye? Wouldn’t you like to
-see Chips?”
-
-“No, Dicky, I must be off,” he said. “Will you write and tell me how she
-is?”
-
-“Yes, I will, and Ivor too,” she promised. “I wish you were not going so
-early and so far off. You look so bleak. But it won’t be long before
-Chips can go out to you.”
-
-“Dicky,” he said, stopping with his hand on the door, “don’t say
-anything about Ivor when you write. I would rather not hear. But do what
-you can for him—and if you marry, have him with you sometimes, will
-you?” He gave her a kiss and went out, and she watched him call a cab
-from the rank across the road and drive off. She was standing there
-still when Strickland came to shut the door.
-
-“I don’t like the Captain going off like that,” Strickland said, when
-they were back in the dining-room and she was clearing away the plates
-and cup. “It doesn’t seem right somehow.”
-
-“I wonder what there is about marriage that is so difficult,” said
-Teresa sadly. “People nearly always behave queerly after a bit. Even if
-they don’t actually quarrel they call each other ‘dear’—rather short—and
-say ‘it doesn’t matter, thank you,’ and dreary things like that.”
-
-“I think, myself, better have a quarrel and have done with it,” said
-Strickland. “It is a mistake to think over things too much. If a woman
-is busy all day working she’s no time to bother about the man till it
-comes to getting his wages off him, and then it’s best to be civil.”
-
-“But, my dear, it is worse in working men’s houses,” said Teresa. “If
-you counted up the quarrels between husbands and wives in some of those
-small streets!”
-
-“Quarrels, yes, Miss, that’s what I said,” Strickland replied. “But I
-thought you were speaking of Captain Hatton going off so cold this
-morning, and no one able to say exactly what has happened.”
-
-Susie came in at that moment and dismissed Strickland with a rather
-reproving request for breakfast at once. When the door was shut she said
-to Teresa, “I do hope the maids haven’t begun gossiping about Evangeline
-already. What was Strickland saying?”
-
-“We were talking about marriage and wondering why it is so difficult,”
-said Teresa. “She was sorry Evan had gone off so drearily.”
-
-“Oh, has he gone!” Susie exclaimed. “Really he ought not to have done
-that. They will think all sorts of absurd things, and now there is that
-nurse to gossip with. You really encourage them sometimes, dear Dicky,
-by talking about a thing instead of pretending there is nothing to
-notice.”
-
-“But I didn’t know there was anything the matter, except that Chips was
-ill,” said Teresa in astonishment. “I was talking to Strickland about
-married people’s manner to each other. What has happened?”
-
-“Evan made a very foolish and cruel plan to send poor little Ivor to a
-strict school in the furthest part of Cornwall. There was no persuading
-him, so Evangeline very wisely took the whole thing out of his hands.”
-
-“How?” asked Teresa. “What could she do if he wouldn’t do what she
-wanted?”
-
-“Well you will find, dear, some day,” said Susie, “that when a man is
-bent on doing what is wrong the only way is to seem as if it was all to
-go on as he says and then trust to Providence to find some way of
-stopping it when the time comes. Opposition only makes him more
-determined, and he is more likely to take precautions.”
-
-“I thought it was arranged by Evan and everybody that Ivor was to go to
-Mrs. Vachell’s.”
-
-“That was Evan’s own silly arrangement, certainly, and Mrs. Vachell
-agreed just for the sake of putting off the dreadful school time. And
-now you see, mercifully the doctor says that Evangeline must, on no
-account, be worried, so darling Ivor is to come here after all, as he
-ought to have in the first place, and everything is all right. It is
-wonderful how things work out if only one has trust.”
-
-“But then, I don’t see what you are afraid of the maids knowing, and why
-Evan is so cold,” said Teresa, very puzzled.
-
-“Well, of course Evan wasn’t pleased with the alteration of plan. You
-couldn’t expect him to be. And Evangeline has got so ill with the
-anxiety. If she had only trusted to its coming out right——. But she got
-run down and worried, and what with one thing and another, she didn’t
-want to see Evan or to hear any more discussion, and I thought the maids
-would think it so odd. You know how in that class everything is
-sacrificed to the man because he has the money, and they don’t
-understand anything between a difference of opinion and actual
-quarrelling.”
-
-“I see,” said Teresa thoughtfully.
-
-“I wouldn’t talk to Evangeline about it, I think, dear,” said Susie
-after a pause. “The doctor says she must be kept very quiet.”
-
-Later in the morning Evangeline asked for Teresa to come up to her room.
-She was in bed, looking white and tired and the nurse was quietly
-dusting.
-
-“Wouldn’t you like some tea, Nurse?” Evangeline suggested. “Strickland
-is sure to be making some if it is eleven o’clock.”
-
-“I don’t mind leaving you for half an hour if that is what you want,”
-said the nurse with a smile. “But don’t talk about any worries, there’s
-a dear, or you will get your temperature up again. You’ll not let her
-tire herself, will you?” she said to Teresa. “And I’ll leave this little
-bell here in case you want anything.”
-
-“Everything is quite all right, you know,” she said soothingly, as she
-arranged the bedclothes before departing. “Your husband sent you his
-best love when he went off this morning, only you were asleep and he
-wouldn’t disturb you. And everything is ready for the little boy when he
-comes. He will be pleased to see his Mummy again, won’t he?”
-
-“Oh yes, yes,” said Evangeline, “it is all right. Do go and get your
-tea, Nurse; we won’t do anything.”
-
-“Well, did you see him?” she asked eagerly, when the nurse had gone.
-
-“Yes, I did. He was very nice about you. He asked me to write and tell
-him how you are, and I said I would.”
-
-“Forgive me, Dicky, for not telling you what I meant to do,” said
-Evangeline. “But I knew it would make you miserable, and I couldn’t
-stand discussion.”
-
-“I don’t mind that a bit,” she answered, “but if you get into a mess
-again, Chips, do tell Father. I think Mother’s way of deceiving men on
-principle is a mistake, apart from whether it is right or wrong. I think
-you could have got Evan to do anything you liked if you had told Father,
-because, after all, it was quite reasonable, only I expect he didn’t in
-the least understand. You told me once that if you want to make him see
-your side of the argument you have to translate it into different terms,
-because he uses other ways of expressing the same things. You see,
-Father would probably have used very bad language and said that the
-school Evan wanted was kept by a lot of damned tea-drinking,
-blanketty-blank-I-don’t-know-what’s, and then Evan would have understood
-that it wasn’t really a good plan.”
-
-“Well, it is done now and he is gone,” said Evangeline. “I shall never
-see him again. I’ve deceived him and that is the end. But if he hadn’t
-told Mrs. Vachell what he meant to do I should never have found out. I
-knew nothing about the school until she told me.”
-
-“Didn’t you! Oh, Chips, how horrid! But then, he must have deceived you,
-too, so it is rather like what Mother says about being ‘taught to be
-wicked.’ It is so odd if you come to think of it that what she says
-should really come true, perhaps for the first time; though it is too
-near the bone to be so funny as it might be.”
-
-“Do you know, I never thought of that,” Evangeline remarked, “but, of
-course he did. That makes it a lot better.”
-
-“No it doesn’t. It doesn’t make any difference either way. But, at
-least, you can both say you are sorry and start again.”
-
-“But Dicky, I didn’t tell you—there is going to be a new one, and then
-everything will begin all over again. I could perhaps have held out
-until Ivor goes to school in the ordinary way, which of course I want
-him to, and after that he will be able to look after himself; but I
-can’t go through it all with another.” Her eyes looked large and
-startled.
-
-“But he hasn’t done Ivor any harm,” Teresa protested, “and he will see
-by and by that he is not a tiresome little boy, and then he won’t want
-to interfere.”
-
-“But the strain of perpetually smoothing things over and avoiding
-rows——. You don’t know what hell it is. We never laugh now except when
-he’s out of the house, and when I hear his latchkey it is like hearing
-the prison door shut again after one had escaped.”
-
-“For the Lord’s sake don’t cry,” said Teresa, “or the nurse will never
-let me up here again. It is all over now, Chips. There’s months and
-months for things to settle, and they always do settle. Nothing ever
-goes on as it is. I wish it did sometimes, but life is a very restless
-thing, like the kind of person who is always saying, ‘Well, what shall
-we do next?’ You will see something will turn up.”
-
-But months went by, and nothing did turn up. The carrier sparrows of
-Millport somehow disseminated the news that the Hattons had had a split.
-One report said that Evangeline was looking ill and went nowhere. This
-was contradicted by someone who had met her at the theatre, “In quite
-her old spirits.” Mrs. Carpenter determined to sift the matter to the
-bottom, and invited Evangeline to tea. She refused, so Mrs. Carpenter
-called on Susie and found Mrs. Gainsborough there. Evangeline had gone
-to stay for the week-end with her sisters-in-law, Susie announced with
-secret pleasure. No one but herself knew what a relief it was to have
-such a respectable piece of news to impart. For since Mrs. Carpenter’s
-visit of inquiry during the summer holiday she had been in daily dread
-of what the mysterious “little bird” then alluded to might not choose
-for its subject next time it sang songs of Araby to its kind patroness.
-“The Hattons are charming girls and devoted to Evangeline,” Susie added.
-
-“I suppose she will be going out to her husband soon,” said Mrs.
-Carpenter. “She will get the climate at its very best about now I should
-think.”
-
-“Oh dear no, she is not going to Egypt,” said Susie, with great surprise
-at such an idea. “She gave that up from the very first. It was really
-foolish of her to think of it at all, but she was so anxious to be with
-him. But Doctor Clark says it would never do to take the risk. It would
-be difficult to get a proper nurse out there, and either to keep a baby
-out in the heat or to bring it home such a long way would be risky. No,
-there is no idea of that.”
-
-Susie had always had a lurking taste for critical situations requiring
-skill in manipulating censorious persons, and whenever she managed to
-get out of a difficult place with credit, she always felt an increased
-sense of safety from the snares of the stupid and downright who persist
-in making life difficult by wanting everything set down in black and
-white.
-
-“Oh certainly, you are very wise,” Mrs. Carpenter agreed, “though it
-always seems hard on a husband when he is away a long time. Dear Mamma
-always insisted on going out to India whatever happened. One of us was
-even born at sea when the doctor had said that he wouldn’t be
-responsible for her unless she spent one hot weather at home. However,
-she was back again that autumn and we were all left with dear Grannie
-until Papa came home for good.”
-
-“I never think that mothers were so wise in those days as they are now,”
-said Susie. “One reads of so many little lives sacrificed to theories of
-that sort. Mothers away, careless nurses and governesses, cold bathing
-and all sorts of tyrannical rules. They did nobody any good that one can
-see.”
-
-“Don’t you think that generation were very much stronger, though, than
-the present one?” asked Mrs. Carpenter. “I do, and I think they were
-more high principled.”
-
-“Oh no, I don’t think so,” Susie answered in gentle rebuke. “Look at the
-drinking that went on, for instance. Even gentlemen used to spend their
-evenings under the table, unable to sit up, and they did just as they
-liked, and no one dared to say anything. The divorce laws are improving
-all the time now, though, of course, it is still dreadfully wrong
-whichever way you look at it. Still, I think people have higher ideals
-than they did.”
-
-Mrs. Carpenter was completely crushed for the moment. Susie had left no
-opening for her to score, for modern ideals were her own favourite
-topic, which she was sometimes unwisely tempted to confuse with the
-superiority of her own infancy. Susie, though she was by nature always
-anxious to smooth over all friction between other people, and to
-establish her own spiritual triumph over sordid dispute, had lately
-passed through a dangerous crisis, owing to the fact that her own
-intrigues against her son-in-law might be exposed at any moment by
-Evangeline’s impatient candour or Mrs. Vachell’s boastful contempt for
-male authority. It was necessary that she should build for herself a
-strong pedestal of Courage-to-do-what-is-right-at-all-costs, and she
-chose to cement it with a plastering of the Best Modern Thought. Once
-her position was on a solid foundation, she would withdraw again behind
-her inviolable mist of vagueness. It is easy to imagine how foolish a
-veiled figure of Mystery would look, toppled over and broken, with
-nothing left but some meaningless drapery and wire, compared to that of,
-let us say, Nelson, whose every separate feature and limb would retain
-its individuality, whether erect above the ground or scattered upon it.
-
-“These strikes are very terrible,” Mrs. Gainsborough remarked, seizing
-upon the nearest current topic in order to save herself from the perils
-of controversy into which she might be drawn at any moment. Poor woman!
-She chose badly.
-
-“It is all very largely the fault of so-called education,” said Mrs.
-Carpenter, pulling herself together for a new line of self-assertion.
-“They insist on everybody being taught to read, and send working-men to
-the Universities, and then are surprised that they read the wrong
-things. Of course they read whatever is sensational, just as our maids
-prefer trashy novels about peers marrying housemaids, and they won’t
-look at the classics. All that the strikers want is gramophones and
-pianos that they can’t play and motors to go to work in instead of
-trams. They are far better paid than our wretched clergy, for instance.
-I looked in on little Jenny Abel the other day, and found her and the
-children having tea with nothing but bread and a scraping of margarine,
-and all of them with colds, and Jenny simply worn out with doing all the
-housework and the cooking. The small girl they had had gone off to a
-place where she was getting £35 a year; more than Jenny has to dress
-herself and all the children. The girl’s mother took her away because
-she said she wasn’t properly fed and had too much to do. Said she
-shouldn’t touch margarine. ‘Nasty poor stuff, I call it!’ she said; and
-the girl must have butter and jam and something hot for supper and every
-afternoon off from three to six and two evenings a week out until ten.”
-
-“But I really don’t think you would find those sort of girls very much
-educated,” said Mrs. Gainsborough nervously. “They are not the kind who
-take scholarships. They are, in a way, more like some of the girls one
-meets about in society just now; selfish, you know, thinking of nothing
-but amusing themselves.”
-
-“I don’t know at all where you meet such girls, dear lady,” Mrs.
-Carpenter answered rather acidly. “All my friends’ daughters whom I can
-think of are taking up professions.”
-
-“Yes, but rather for the fun of it, don’t you think?” poor Mrs.
-Gainsborough suggested, plunging more and more wildly. “They don’t like
-to be worried by home life and they prefer working with men and so on.
-It is very natural, poor young things. Just what I should have done
-myself if I had been born later.”
-
-“My dear Mrs. Gainsborough, how shockingly indiscreet!” said Mrs.
-Carpenter with a silly little laugh. “I hope you won’t go round the
-University saying that women take degrees in order to be with men. You
-will raise a nice hornets’ nest if you do.”
-
-“Oh dear me, no, that is not in the least what I meant,” stammered Mrs.
-Gainsborough. “Most of the girls are splendid and don’t run after the
-boys at all. But I meant that I don’t think that they care about
-domestic things so much and that it is partly to escape from them that
-they take up professions. I can’t believe that some of them who are
-really pretty and charming can care very much for mathematics and the
-other subjects of that sort that they take.”
-
-“Evangeline was telling me that she read in some paper that socialism is
-taking a great hold in the Universities,” said Susie. “I think it is a
-pity, because though it is a nice idea in many ways it doesn’t seem
-practicable. What you were saying just now about Mrs. Abel just shows
-that everybody is not fitted for the same kind of work; and either very
-strong people would get into mischief from not having enough to do or
-else the weaker ones would die through having too much to do.”
-
-“I think the chief difficulty would be with the ordinary British working
-man,” said Mrs. Gainsborough, innocently. “They do so dislike
-regulations of any sort, and if they chose to stop work for any reason I
-believe they would always do it. They would take no notice of orders or
-shots or anything. They are so unused to not doing what they want and
-you can’t argue with them. They would just say it was all nonsense. They
-are very strong and not at all hysterical like foreigners. They never
-paid the least attention to rationing, you remember, during the war; no
-tradesman dared to enforce it in the industrial districts. They don’t
-mind losing their lives but they seem to think it so silly to be ordered
-about at home and so it is, I quite agree.”
-
-“Of course,” said Susie, placidly, “if anyone could be found who had
-really enjoyed a revolution it would be different and one would have
-more sympathy. It is worth any sacrifice to make people happy. But
-beyond a few brutal kind of men, who I am sure are either naturally
-disagreeable or not English, it seems to make everyone discontented.
-Even the people who make themselves comfortable in ruined palaces must
-be afraid of someone wanting to turn them out. It all seems so gloomy
-from what one reads. Must you really go? I hope you will come back, Mrs.
-Carpenter, and see Evangeline when she comes home. Now she is here for
-good she will want something to interest her. She might help you perhaps
-at Christmas with your parcels distribution. Dear Evan was so anxious
-she should be too busy and happy to miss him just now.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
-
-Just before Christmas, Teresa met Lady Varens in a shop. “My dear, I am
-so glad to see you,” said the soft voice that reminded her of Aldwych
-and her first happiness there. “Come and have tea with me somewhere. I
-have a great deal to tell you.” Teresa’s heart bounded and bumped. It
-seemed a year before the girl behind the counter located her particular
-little wooden ball from among the dozens that were bowling along the
-wire above her head, carrying little scraps of paper and small change to
-a stupid public who did not know David. She followed Lady Varens through
-the crowd to a shop on the other side of the street, where they sat down
-at a table shut away in a recess off the main room. “What would you
-like?” Lady Varens asked; “tea and crumpets?”
-
-“Oh yes, anything, awfully,” said Teresa, hardly able to hide her
-impatience.
-
-“David is coming back next week, did you know?” said Lady Varens. “Has
-he written to you?”
-
-“No,” said Teresa; “I haven’t heard from him for a year.” Tears came
-into her eyes, but she flattered herself that they were unobserved.
-
-“We are both going to stay with Mr. Manley,” Lady Varens went on. “I had
-just let my villa and was going to friends in Rome when David’s letter
-came; but I didn’t want to lose any time by bringing him round all that
-way so I came here and Mr. Manley wants us both to go to him. We must
-settle finally with the Prices whether we take Aldwych back next year or
-whether I go out with David to the Argentine. He has a charming house
-there.”
-
-“Oh,” said Teresa, “and which do you think you will do?” Her heart
-seemed to have stood still for a year, waiting for the answer, before it
-came.
-
-“I don’t know at all, but old Bessie, David’s nurse, who writes to me
-sometimes from the village, says they are all longing for him to come
-back. The Prices seem to have put everybody’s back up. None of the
-outside people will stay if he buys the place and he makes all sorts of
-mischief with the bailiff and the farmers, imagining he is being robbed
-of sixpence somewhere or other. He says that if he buys it he is going
-to get an American expert over to run it all on some new system by which
-everything is organised and checked automatically, and the output, as
-they call it, of every grain and cow and rabbit and man and boy on the
-place is ascertained, and if it doesn’t work out at the maximum the
-animal is destroyed and the man is sacked.”
-
-“Oh, David must come back,” said Teresa. “It sounds too horrible.”
-
-“Very well then, dear, tell him so,” said Lady Varens, drinking her tea
-peacefully without a hint of intention in her voice.
-
-“I can’t think why the man in the Bible was told to give all his money
-to the poor if it wasn’t the right thing to do,” said Teresa. She put
-her chin on her hands and puckered her brow over some inner problem.
-
-“I think it was probably suggested more for his benefit than for that of
-the poor,” said Lady Varens. “It is the giving that matters much more
-than who gets the stuff.”
-
-“Do you really think so?” said Teresa.
-
-“Yes, personally I do. People can only be governed by the qualities that
-are in them, and a state can’t make them equal, because it is made up
-itself of inequalities. It can never be made into an automatic machine;
-it is alive—made of live things. I can’t understand how even decent
-socialists can expect it to act as if it were a machine. Of course one
-knows what bad communists are after. They are just criminal tyrants who
-want to be beasts in control instead of controlled beasts. But the good
-ones make me desperate. It is so impossible to imagine anything but
-disaster coming from their innocent idiocy. They seem to go on blindly
-hoping that human intelligence can devise a scheme that is proof against
-human intelligence. They are dear things but I do wish they would take
-their hobby horses to some place where the bad boys couldn’t harness
-them to the cart that will land us all in the ditch. They think they can
-out-theorise history and all forms of religion.”
-
-Two little tears rolled at last down Teresa’s cheeks and were lost in
-the cup with which she tried in vain to hide them. Their salt taste
-symbolised to her the bitterness of her failure.
-
-“Oh, bother it!” she said; “I give up here and now trying to do any
-good. It is no earthly use.”
-
-“David said that when he left Oxford,” said Lady Varens, lighting a
-cigarette to avoid Teresa’s eye. “But in a way he works harder than ever
-at it now.”
-
-“Does he?” Teresa answered with elaborate indifference.
-
-“Yes; won’t you come to dinner with us while we are with Mr. Manley? He
-said I was to ask anyone I liked and he loves you.”
-
-“Yes, I would like to.”
-
-“Very well; come next Thursday if you are not too busy,” said Lady
-Varens. “By the way, how is your sister? Are they still at Drage?”
-
-“Oh, no—dear me, it is a long story to tell you all the things that have
-happened since you left. But Evan is in Egypt and Evangeline and Ivor
-are with us.”
-
-“I am sorry; that sounds dreary,” she said. “I never knew your sister
-well, but I liked him though he seemed so different from her. I often
-wished he had thought of going out to the colonies or something of that
-sort. I believe it would have suited her. I can’t see her in a garrison
-town.”
-
-“She used to say she would like to lead two lives at once,” said Teresa.
-“One a sort of Wild West business and the other with someone very
-literary, but Evan isn’t either, so I suppose people compromise or do
-something different from what they intended.”
-
-“Tell me, Teresa,” said Lady Varens, “I am not asking from curiosity; is
-it a success?”
-
-“Chips could make a success of almost anybody who didn’t interfere with
-her,” Teresa replied. “She is not at all exacting and she is so
-affectionate. But Evan is a little like John Knox or that sort of
-person; then she does things without telling him and he gets all sorts
-of ideas into his head. I do hate Mrs. Vachell. I think she does more
-harm than a thousand mothers-in-law.” Lady Varens laughed.
-
-“Do be careful what you say about mothers-in-law. When David marries I
-shall remind you of that remark and ask you not to suggest to my
-daughter-in-law that I interfere, because I don’t.”
-
-Teresa blushed and looked vexed. “I had forgotten about you, really,”
-she said. “But Mrs. Vachell came to stay by the sea when Chips and I
-were there with Ivor, and it all went wrong after that. I don’t think
-they were ever happy again. And I believe she only did it out of sheer
-spite because she hates men.”
-
-“Does she? I should never have guessed that,” said Lady Varens.
-
-“No, nobody would. She never says a word, but she used to get at that
-wretched boy Fisk, at the University, and put him up to all sorts of
-revolutions; not because she cares twopence about the poor, I think,
-unless they are women, but she wants women to govern everything, and I
-think she got him to believe that they would all help a revolution for
-the sake of making laws to get what they want for themselves. Don’t you
-think that Miss Smackfield would probably drop her Bolshevism if there
-were any women capitalists?”
-
-“I don’t know that I or anyone else knows exactly what a capitalist is.
-But do you seriously suppose Miss Smackfield cares a hang what any row
-is about so long as she can be in the front with an axe, shouting, ‘Off
-with his head!’ like the Queen of the pack of cards. She would be
-forgotten to-morrow if someone put a flower pot over her.”
-
-They talked for some little time and at last Lady Varens said, “It is so
-difficult to remedy anything, from a disease to a grievance. There is
-always a ‘vicious circle,’ not one thing alone that is the matter.
-People are ill because they fuss and fuss because they are ill. There
-are some, I think, who want a revolution because they are miserable, and
-others who are miserable because they want a revolution, another lot who
-make other people’s misfortunes an excuse for making a row and some more
-who put all their misfortunes down to other people’s love of making a
-row. If you take a human body in that sort of contradictory mess into a
-doctor’s consulting room, he pays no attention to the details, but tells
-the patient to wash in the Ganges or eat a lightly-boiled onion an hour
-before sunset with his back to the north; or else he tries
-psycho-analysis or hypnotism.”
-
-“Oh, does he?” said Teresa, who was quite bewildered by this time.
-
-“Yes, he does, and once upon a time it was done with incantations and
-charms, or the fat of a dormouse was rubbed under the ear. There was
-Christianity too, with all sorts of by-products in the way of
-Reformations and Crusades—but you see my point. A really engrossing
-superstition or a creed with a ritual would be more useful than
-discussing symptoms of national neurasthenia. Any idea that is unselfish
-and clean would do, and Bolshevism isn’t either; it is both selfish and
-dirty.”
-
-“But you can’t preach unselfishness to the unemployed,” Teresa objected,
-“not, anyhow, so long as there are ‘boudoir gowns for my lady when she
-snatches a moment’s rest in her strenuous afternoon,’ advertised in the
-papers. If I were an unemployed, I should want to tear my lady in
-pieces, and roll her beastly maid with the sofa and the pot of chocolate
-over and over in the mud on the Embankment.”
-
-“That’s illogical,” said Lady Varens. “I have to shut my eyes tight when
-I see advertisements of anything to do with my lady, because I know that
-that sort of indignation is off the line. Communism is dreary and
-crushing and impossible, I think; and if you are going to let people
-keep the money they or their fathers make, then you must let them alone
-to spend it as they like. There are idiots in every class who chuck
-money about. But, as I say, if you are going to admit freedom to inherit
-and make, you must have freedom to spend as well, or else Rule Britannia
-becomes Rule Bolshevina, and my dear friend, the British working man,
-who hates to be hustled, will have to set up his apple cart again in
-some other place.”
-
-“No, it is quite true, it won’t suit him a bit,” said Teresa, thinking
-of Mr. Jason.
-
-“I have tried to imagine the very beeriest British loafer being made
-compulsorily drunk at stated intervals by a public authority, and I
-can’t see him getting a bit of pleasure out of it. And as for being
-compulsorily busy, and obliged to see nothing but good plays, and sent
-to hear good music—has any real Englishman ever devised such a plan, or
-are they all those very unhumorous Huns in disguise? Only a nation that
-wears spectacles could picture England as a community with rules, except
-the ordinary policeman rules. But the people have got so used to freedom
-that they may let the thing go on and stand watching it like a dog fight
-until it is done and has to be cleaned up.”
-
-“That is what Mrs. Vachell said about Evangeline, that father wouldn’t
-interfere about Evan until he had actually done something. She said that
-men won’t bother to prevent a thing happening.”
-
-“What are you talking about?” said Lady Varens.
-
-“Oh, I forgot, I was thinking about what you said. Evan did rather try
-to work out theories about Ivor and there was a bother that there
-needn’t have been if he and Chips had understood each other instead of
-working separately. However that is nothing. I expect they will worry
-through all right.”
-
-“Well, come and see David,” said Lady Varens, “and help us to decide
-what we will do. He is all for stopping a muddle before it is too late.”
-
-Teresa went home in a tram, among the faces in the fog, but she did not
-notice them. She was tired to death by problems and counter problems; by
-desires that seemed to lead straight to a just and happy end, and were
-blocked always, sooner or later, by some defect of the quality that
-engendered them. Equality had a way of elbowing the grace of respect off
-the path, social recognition bred snobbery and civic responsibility led
-to jobbery, philanthropy grew so easily into impertinence, reform into
-self-righteousness and contentment into smugness; there seemed no end to
-the fine and stupid ideas that had started along the same road.
-Innocence and discipline fought for perfection in every imaginative
-task. She saw a world full of Evans and Evangelines quarrelling
-irreconcilably for ever, like Tweedledum and Tweedledee.
-
-The car trundled and swayed, grinding along its rails. The distorted,
-grotesquely-dressed forms that had been made beautiful all these years
-in her imagination by the belief that they were princes and princesses
-in disguise, waiting for the magic touch of recognition to restore them
-to their kingdom, failed for the first time to excite her interest. The
-desire which used to entice her with the promise of a new world had
-vanished, and left in its place a message rather like the traditional
-note on the pincushion left by the escaping heroine of romance. The
-message said that the only truth on which heaven and earth were agreed
-was that a marriage would shortly take place.
-
-She cheered up a little as she looked at the fog-bound faces on either
-side of her, and thought how greatly any of them might be improved by
-loving any one as much as she loved David. Another still more cheerful
-idea occurred to her, that perhaps they did! Perhaps it was only the mud
-filtering down upon the city that made them look so depressed. Inside
-their minds there might be an inextinguishable flame that only needed to
-be kindled to destroy all anger and discontent. “I suppose there will
-always be Evans and Evangelines,” she thought, “all the Tweedledums and
-Tweedledees, and they will fight about nothing whenever they meet; but
-if they were really in love Evan wouldn’t look for trouble and
-Evangeline wouldn’t try to walk round it; they would go through it
-together as it came. I am glad David doesn’t either worry or shirk—but
-then, of course, he wouldn’t.”
-
-When she reached home she went up to the nursery where Evangeline was
-putting Ivor to bed, it being nurse’s afternoon out. When he was tucked
-up and Evangeline was tidying the nursery, Teresa sat down by the fire
-and said, “I met Lady Varens and had tea with her. David is coming home
-in a few days, and they are going to stay with Mr. Manley. They are
-going to make up their minds what they will do with Aldwych.”
-
-“Oh, are they?” said Evangeline. “Do you suppose they will go back?”
-
-“I should think quite likely.”
-
-“You look very pleased, Dicky,” said Evangeline, looking at her sister’s
-face in the firelight. “I am so glad if it is all right. But Dicky——”
-she hesitated in a frightened way—“you know I have no nerves in these
-days, and I get unnecessary panics—, don’t build on his being the same
-as when he went away, will you? You know what men are.”
-
-“Oh, Chips, do drop that men and women business,” said Teresa wearily.
-“There are men and men and David is David.”
-
-“I know,” she admitted, “but you see Evan is also Evan, so I warn you
-from my experience—quite kindly meant, and you are angry, quite fairly.”
-
-“I think you would like him best to be Evan if you loved him,” said
-Teresa. “He wouldn’t be ‘men’ any more, and you wouldn’t compare him
-with yourself.”
-
-“I do love him,” Evangeline answered; “but he thinks I don’t because I
-deceived him.”
-
-“Do you suppose he doesn’t love you because he deceived you?”
-
-“I am sure he doesn’t, because men—I am sorry, I won’t say it. But he is
-always talking about ‘women’ too. In fact, he began.”
-
-“Do you know, as I was coming up in the tram it occurred to me how like
-Tweedledum and Tweedledee you two are, and now what you say makes you
-more absurdly like. They never knew which began the quarrels. You need a
-‘monstrous crow’ to send you both flying into one another’s arms. Of
-course if you were in a book Ivor would have a dangerous illness or
-something silly like that.”
-
-“That would only make us hate each other more because he would say that
-God did it for our good, and I should say that God was sorry the devil
-did it.”
-
-“And suppose Ivor died, whose doing would you say it was?”
-
-“No one’s doing at all. But I should say the devil made the germs and
-that God did nothing, except that He was glad to have Ivor back.”
-
-“I am sure that is very bad theology,” said Teresa, “You can’t have
-Badness with a definite intention and Goodness without any.”
-
-“Why not? Intentions mean brains and theories and I do loathe them more
-than I can tell you. I’m content with things that are alive and perfect;
-I mean without diseases and sins. One doesn’t need any intention for
-loving the sun and everything that I call ‘God.’ But Evan sets his brain
-humming and buzzing like a factory to make up the awful Moloch of a
-creature that he worships.”
-
-“It is very odd,” said Teresa, “how people have always been more annoyed
-by each other’s religions than by anything else. I am myself. I could
-put up with Mrs. Carpenter’s face, if it were not for the things she
-says about the Church. But there we go again! I suppose if a monstrous
-crow could frighten quarrellers apart a monstrous dove might prevent
-them from fighting; but I don’t know, and there would probably be some
-drawback to that too; there always is. I am going to meet David next
-week.”
-
-“You know, I can’t go on living at home for ever,” said Evangeline. “I
-shall have to arrange something when all this business is over, and what
-am I going to tell people? I can’t keep an unexplained husband in the
-background all my life. Just think of it! Very little money, no man, no
-father for the children and no explanation to give. I shall have to
-become a paid agitator in self-defence.”
-
-“To agitate about what?”
-
-“Oh, anything. Mrs. Vachell belongs to all sorts of societies. I might
-help to run a paper. I’ve always liked papers.”
-
-“Yes, I know you have,” said Teresa. “I think, Chips, if you hadn’t sat
-so comfortably in the sun, and been content with sensations you might
-have found out more for yourself. Isn’t that why we called you ‘Chips,’
-just because you were always picking up bits of information? I always
-think of toast and newspapers when I remember you as my elder sister in
-the nursery. Either with toast and newspapers by the fire or else out in
-the garden when you ought to have been somewhere else. Do you remember
-when you brought in a worm when we were away in the country, and you put
-it on a doll’s chair on the tea-table, and tried to make it sit up, and
-Miss Jacks came in? But to go back to your newspaper; you can’t do that.
-Do wait until you are well again, and then go away from Mrs. Vachell,
-and write to Evan. I am not sure you hadn’t better leave your family
-with nurse and me somewhere, and go to Egypt yourself; but, anyhow, it
-will be all right. I have told you things are always happening.”
-
-“Evan’s sisters are another problem,” Evangeline said presently. “They
-don’t know anything yet, but they keep on wanting Ivor to go there, and
-when they do find out they will do everything they can to get him taken
-away from me. They will think I am an active danger if I differ from
-Evan in any way. And they are so silly with Ivor. They do spoil him so.”
-
-“I think that is awfully funny,” said Teresa. “Doesn’t it amuse you if
-you think of it?”
-
-“You mean because Evan complains of me spoiling him? But then, you see,
-I don’t and they do. You never saw such drivel as they carry on. Ivor
-gets quite imbecile when he is there; he hardly seems the same. It isn’t
-gaiety, it is a sort of orgie of pranks; like those wearisome film
-comedies where a lot of people slip up on a piece of soap, and get
-covered with whitewash and food. Really when I am staying there I often
-feel like asking the cook to shoot me into the dining-room by the hatch
-and fling a basin of custard after me just so as not to damp the party.”
-
-“Doesn’t Evan mind that?”
-
-“No, he doesn’t, because it is something that can be explained. It
-doesn’t amuse him, but he can pigeon-hole it as ‘all good girls’’ way of
-amusing themselves. It has nothing to do with him, but it is a necessary
-cog in the machinery of a nice family so he can get on with something
-else while they do it. It is almost like a domestic rite. But when I
-enjoy myself he thinks it is moral indulgence because it isn’t planned
-out and it isn’t tiring.”
-
-“I don’t know how father gets on so well with all sorts of different
-people,” said Teresa. “It never seems to bother him if they don’t
-understand what he is talking about. He never tries to explain himself
-or cares whether they agree with him or not.”
-
-“No, I daresay, but then he has only got himself to bother about,” said
-Evangeline. “If he had to protect us from a wife with high principles it
-might make him think a bit.”
-
-Teresa dreaded telling her mother about the Varens’ return. Experience
-has taught me that there are many painstaking minds who will come to a
-knot at this point, and want to be told why any young girl with a clear
-conscience should dread to tell so amiable and good a mother that an
-eligible young man, dear to them both, has returned to the
-neighbourhood. But it cannot be made quite clear to all readers. The
-nearest thing that can be said is that perhaps if Susie had been known
-to approve less of the possibility with which Teresa was secretly aglow,
-the girl would have been less anxious to keep it to herself. “Alice in
-Wonderland” is full of the everyday experience of simple people, and in
-one of those irrational gambollings of the female mind which have been
-referred to on another page I seem to see Susie represented by the
-kindly Dodo who said to Alice after she had won the race, “I beg your
-acceptance of this elegant thimble,” and presented her with her own
-property. Teresa was as straight-forward as Alice, and liked things to
-work out logically, so she resented being led up to her lover, as much
-as she disliked hearing Mrs. Carpenter instruct Mrs. Potter in the art
-of patience.
-
-She decided now that the dangerous moment could be most successfully
-faced under Cyril’s protection, so she announced at dinner, “I met Lady
-Varens to-day, and they are both coming back, probably for good.” She
-made the news sound as gossipy and impersonal as she could, and shot a
-rapid glance at her father.
-
-“I am glad to hear that,” he replied. “The Perkin Warbecks can now
-resume their normal occupations.”
-
-“Who are they?” she said.
-
-“I don’t know who they were, but I remember being sent to bed because I
-didn’t know that they aspired to the throne. I’ve remembered their
-beastly names ever since.”
-
-“They are staying with Mr. Manley,” Teresa went on, “at least she is,
-and David is going there next week. I promised to go to dinner one
-evening, so I can tell them about the Perkin Warbecks. It is nice to
-think how pleased the farmers will be, isn’t it?” She felt some pride in
-the way she was conducting this affair.
-
-“Very nice, dear,” said Susie quietly. “Do you know at all how he got on
-in the Argentine?”
-
-“No, she didn’t say,” Teresa answered.
-
-“I thought perhaps you might have heard sometimes,” said Susie. “So
-often out in those lonely places people are so glad of posts, and they
-write and tell one all sorts of things about themselves, just with the
-idea of getting an answer. I remember I had a cousin who used to write
-dreadfully dull letters all about the country and then strings and
-strings of questions.”
-
-Teresa need not have been afraid. Her mother did, as Evangeline had
-pointed out, achieve what seemed like conjuring tricks in the lives of
-other people, but she only prepared spiritual omelets in places where no
-omelet was likely to be made in the ordinary way. Having satisfied
-herself now that Teresa had been completely cut off from David while he
-was away and was full of suppressed excitement at his return, she was
-too great an artist in mystery to use apparatus when the laws of nature
-were already operating in the direction she wished.
-
-Three days after this was Christmas Day, and both Susie and Teresa had a
-busy day before them. Susie was to attend a tea and distribution of
-useful Christmas presents to the inmates of the Mary Popley Home, and
-Teresa was to help serve dinner to some hundreds of street urchins,
-members of one of the many organisations with which Emma’s devoted band
-worked ceaselessly and hopefully, undeterred by rumours of class war or
-theories about the reconstruction of the State. Emma’s workers got on
-with the business of cleaning the city as best they could, while Fisk,
-the people’s friend, raved of blood and destruction, and then went home
-to tend his dormice. Teresa’s post was at the end of a trestle table
-with nearly fifty boys on each side. She was buttoned up to the neck in
-an overall; her face was hot from the stove beside her and from the
-crowded atmosphere; her head felt bursting from the smell of poor homes
-and the clapper of voices; her feet were icy from the draught along the
-wooden floor which was only separated from the street by an open door
-and a long stone passage. In front of her was a gigantic hot-pot,
-replaced by another as soon as empty. She held in her hand a long iron
-spoon, greasy from top to bottom and heavy to wield. At her elbow were a
-pile of plates, which were snatched up and borne away by other helpers
-as fast as she filled them. There were three tables altogether, and the
-same thing was happening at both ends of each. Other people, visitors
-and members of the committee, stood about the room and looked on, giving
-a hand with any extra job that was needed. When the last plate was
-filled Teresa had a moment in which to look at the faces down the table.
-They were all faces from behind the fog, but they were young, and the
-Great Depression (as she called the public expression of countenance
-when she first came to Millport) had not yet reached them. Many of them
-were pale and pinched, many were apple-faced, some fat and white, but
-they were all young and as free as squirrels. They bore marks of cold
-and hunger, some of them of cruelty and disease, every single one of
-them had a cold in the head and took no notice of it. “The plum pudding,
-Miss——. May I pass?” said a voice beside her, and, as she moved, a
-monstrous pudding was put before her and the helpers pawed the ground in
-their impatience to be off with the plates. Teresa doled out great
-helpings of the stuff as fast as she could, grasping her heavy spoon
-with both hands. Once more she had time to look at the boys. They were
-not talking now; they were stuffing, and they had said all they had to
-say to their neighbours. She saw one of them deposit a large
-tablespoonful of the pudding in a pocket of his little age-worn
-waistcoat, and in the horror of the moment she exclaimed, “Child! what
-on earth are you doing?”
-
-“It’s for me granny,” he said, “she’s sick.” Teresa experienced the
-upheaval of mind and body that used to shake her with a general sense of
-topsy-turvydom when she first took up Emma’s work, and which she had
-nearly lost during the last years. She remembered Ivor as she had left
-him that morning, happily engaged in discussion on seasonable topics of
-revelry, she thought of dirty little faces assembled outside toyshops
-lighted up early on account of the penetrating fog; she had a vision of
-the Price family in paper caps seated among a débris of hothouse dessert
-and wine and coffee and expensive trifles in leather and gold, recently
-unwrapped from parcels, each “novelty” designed to save small
-discomforts, such as the lighting of a match or the turn of a head to
-see the time; she thought of Evan’s sisters, giggling happily beneath
-banners that advertised Peace and Goodwill, and of Fisk at the other end
-of the Christmas dinner-table, gloomily contemplating his father’s
-mésalliance, the Gainsboroughs’ old cook who never could cook anything
-decently, and who had now become the last straw on all that an unjust
-government had heaped upon him at his birth. Teresa’s mind, which had by
-now established David in its background as a referee in all debated
-questions, recalled at this moment her first visit to Aldwych and her
-self-reproach for having eaten the price of Albert Potter’s splints. “I
-have been along that road,” David had said, “and it leads nowhere except
-to a maze where you lose yourself and die for want of a new argument.”
-“David!” she cried now, in her heart, “David! get me out of this and
-take me with you, if you know where you are going.”
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX
-
-
-Susie, meanwhile, was performing prodigies of peace and goodwill at the
-Mary Popley Home. She radiated the most suitable atmosphere that a lady
-visitor to a rescue home could possibly have evolved after years of
-thought, and she did it without any thought at all! The “inmates,” as
-they were called, and as we will call them for want of a less lively
-word, literally basked in her smile. Grave kindness they were accustomed
-to; breeziness they knew to satiety; Mrs. Abel’s generous pity almost
-inconvenienced them; but Susie’s veil of aloofness from everything real
-wrapped them in gossamer of the angels who have no bodies. “Isn’t she a
-nice lady?” they said among themselves, feeling that, where she was,
-neither shame nor hope of doing well eventually, nor gratitude for
-tolerance would be expected of them. “It must be nice to be a lady and
-able to do what yer like without any ’arm coming of it,” was what they
-mostly thought, in place of the bitter reflections that stung them in
-the presence of Mrs. Carpenter. “What does she know about it?” they were
-used to mutter, when that excellent visitor explained to them the duties
-of self-respect, the necessity for self-control, the joys of home that
-they had forfeited, and the useful-even-though-damaged lives they might
-yet lead. “That there Jack, I used to tell you about, would ’ave taught
-’er what for,” was a favourite comment of one of them after these
-occasions. “Telling us as men is what we makes them, and ’adn’t ought to
-be encouraged! ’E don’t want much encouragin’, she’d find, if she got
-’im ’ome, in spite of ’er face.” It seems almost a pity that this inmate
-could not have heard Susie second the vote of thanks to the committee at
-the Town Hall; for one feels that justice was hardly done to Mrs.
-Carpenter, while Susie, who had said the same thing in other words, was
-so much admired. But that, of course, was never known, and probably if
-it had been, her manner and her expression would have caused a different
-interpretation to be put upon her words. The inmates would have pictured
-themselves as partakers in a scene of innocent pleasure, ended in sorrow
-by the devil, while Mrs. Carpenter only succeeded in offending them by
-the suggestion of mischief done to an honest fellow.
-
-“’Ain’t she a nice lady!” they repeated in admiration. “I do like ’er
-’at, and the way it is done at the back. Just pass my cup up along
-there, Veronica, would you?”
-
-“Give old pasty-face something to do for ’er living,” said Veronica, as
-she passed the cup up the line, to where the under-matron was presiding
-over the urns.
-
-“You know, some of them are such nice girls,” Mrs. Abel was saying
-enthusiastically to Susie at the same moment. “I can’t tell you what
-splendid natures they have. That one down there—Veronica Baker—it’s the
-saddest history, but I won’t tell you now. She is simply devoted to the
-baby—such a darling it is—and I am hoping to get her a really good job
-where she can keep it with her. It is with her mother at present.”
-
-“I do hope the old woman is good to it,” said Susie. “It would be
-terrible if anything happened to it while the mother is here. That is
-the worst of Homes I always think, although they are so necessary and
-splendid in every way. But so few of them are able to arrange to keep
-the mothers and children together, and it does separate them so in cases
-where it isn’t possible. Don’t you think there is that about them?”
-
-“Yes, but then what can one do?” said Mrs. Abel a little sadly. “One
-can’t leave them to go on with the life, and in many cases it is better
-that the child should be sent to some place that is known to be all
-right, so that the mother may not be hampered in finding work. It goes
-against them very much with some people if the child is seen.”
-
-“I do think,” said Susie, “that if the girls could be got to see before
-they go so far what will happen if they do, it might prevent them. It
-seems to me sadder than any amount of difficulty in making ends meet.”
-
-“Yes, indeed, it does,” said Mrs. Abel, greatly touched, poor little
-thing. “When I think of my own home and how difficult things are just
-now, and yet how we have been kept from all unhappiness, I think I
-hardly know how to be thankful enough.”
-
-“It must be so delightful to have your husband with you in everything,”
-Susie said with a little sigh. “It must make up for any anxiety. If one
-is thoroughly understood nothing else matters. I was so glad you did so
-well with the sale of work in the summer. Drink is really another of the
-worst problems, I think. Do you find many in your Home are any better?”
-
-“Well, it is impossible to say whether any of them are really cured,”
-said Mrs. Abel. “But a great many have gone out and kept steady for
-several years, and now and then we hear from them that they are doing
-well. But of course some of them relapse and then they sometimes come
-back for a time. But if we get them quite early on I believe there is
-every chance of their keeping straight. Only it is so difficult to
-persuade them to come in then.”
-
-“What a pity it is that wine was ever invented,” said Susie. “I can’t
-think what people want with it. It only makes them noisy and stupid; not
-really cheerful.”
-
-“I don’t think it is wine that matters,” said Mrs. Abel. “In fact a
-little of it would do them good if they could get it. It is the beer and
-spirits that are so bad, because they take such quantities of beer and
-so little spirits affects them, especially the stuff they can afford. My
-husband doesn’t at all believe in actual teetotalism, except as a help
-to those who can’t keep away from it. The doctor says a glass of port
-would do him all the good in the world in the evening, but I can’t get
-him to take it, just for the sake of the example.”
-
-“How splendid of him!” Susie exclaimed. “I wish I could persuade my
-husband to set the example to his men.”
-
-“You see, it is the evenings that are such a temptation,” Mrs. Abel went
-on. “Their homes are so dreadfully uncomfortable, with the children all
-about and everything in a mess and nothing to do. Of course they prefer
-the public-houses and the clubs.”
-
-“But if the children went to bed in proper time and the wives kept their
-sewing until the evening it would be quite simple,” Susie declared.
-“They seem to have no idea of time.”
-
-“Still, I know myself that it is not easy to have everything straight by
-the evening,” Mrs. Abel sighed. “Now my little maid has gone and I have
-everything to do for the children, besides the house and the parish, I
-find it very difficult to be all neat and good tempered, and ready to
-listen to my husband, though I am longing to hear all about his day. And
-then, you see, very often with those people the children have nowhere to
-sleep except the living-room, and there is hardly room for them all to
-sit round—and perhaps no fire—and if there is illness—and they have no
-occupations to keep them quiet. And besides, some of the houses you
-really can’t make clean or cheerful, and if the man does get good wages
-for a time it all goes as soon as there is unemployment or if he meets
-with an accident; the insurance doesn’t cover it all. At least I know my
-husband will get his stipend whatever happens, and people are very kind
-and good. We were so touched by the amount of the Easter Offering this
-year, although it is such a poor parish.”
-
-“Mrs. Fulton, would you like to come and see the distribution of
-presents?” said the matron, advancing to Susie with a smile that she did
-her best to make genial. Long years of bringing the passions of other
-people into line had made it difficult for her to relax at different
-milestones of the Almanack into the requirements of a moral armistice.
-
-Susie followed her into the next room, where a small Christmas tree was
-glimmering and dropping wax on to a table; round it, piled high, were
-parcels with the forbiddingly soft contours that betray to the
-experienced eye the presence of wool in unattractive shapes. Two smiling
-men with eyeglasses and gay waistcoats, and Mr. Abel, well-bred, shabby,
-harassed, devoted and obviously in need of port wine, stood by with
-sponges, ready to quench any untoward splutterings between the dim
-flames and the branches on which they drooped. Festoons of tinselled
-cotton hung between the pine needles which still smelled of the forest,
-and on the top spike, precariously inclined, was a cardboard Father
-Christmas with frosted boots and a face like Mr. Price after dinner. The
-inmates crowded round, murmuring among themselves in drawling
-exclamations peculiar to the class who spend so much of their lives as
-onlookers at all kinds of pageantry.
-
-“Eh, luk!” they said. “H’m—yes, it is, i’nt it! eh, to be sure! See,
-Lily, the li’l moonkey wi’ th’ baal in its mouth! See Father Christmas?
-Where? Eh, yes, a see ’im. Seems a pity there a’nt no children here to
-see it. What’s the good of it?” A terrific sniff raised the speaker’s
-nose in wrinkles almost into her low-growing hair. “Eh, luk! the parcel!
-’tis for the paarson!” Roars of laughter broke out while Mr. Abel
-unwrapped a neat silver cigar-cutter and sought in vain for words that
-should combine truth with the idea that it was the thing he was most in
-need of. Mrs. Abel received a pocket manicure case, the matron was
-delighted with Miss Gilworth’s _Outlook of the Saints_, the under-matron
-had a sponge, “specially designed for continental use,” and the rest of
-the staff were given various articles ranging from penwipers to plaster
-dogs with one eye bandaged. The proceedings ended with a carol, in which
-Susie joined with her very kindest expression and a most delicate voice,
-reinforced by the powerful bass of one of the gentlemen with eyeglasses
-who was a member of Mr. Abel’s choir. Mr. Abel moved a vote of thanks in
-his high-pitched Oxford plaint, and soon after a piercing wind from the
-front door and a hum of voices and flutter of aprons in the passage
-betokened that the Mary Popley inmates would be left to their own
-reflections on a year that was about to slink away like a defaulter with
-the happiness they had invested.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Evangeline’s daughter was born between Christmas and the New Year.
-Teresa arrived home late from her dinner at Mr. Manley’s and was met by
-Strickland looking as if she were about to perform some religious rite.
-Her cap lay across her head at an angle that gave her a slightly mystic
-appearance, her eyes were full of indefinite purpose and her mouth was
-set tight.
-
-“Have you got toothache again, you poor thing?” Teresa exclaimed the
-moment she saw her.
-
-“No, Miss Teresa; it’s _that_,” Strickland replied in a hushed voice.
-“We’ve got the nurse, and the doctor is coming along now. Mrs. Fulton is
-upstairs, but I was to tell you there’s nothing to worry about and you
-was to go into the General’s study. I’ll bring you a cup of tea and then
-you’ll go to bed. It’ll be all over in the morning, you’ll see. You’ll
-not hinder me by worrying, now, will you? For I’ve the kettles to see to
-and all.”
-
-“N—no,” said Teresa rather doubtfully. “I won’t hinder you anyhow, old
-lady. Go on with your fussing and don’t mind me. But I wish you would
-come and tell me when it is there. I don’t suppose I shall be asleep.”
-
-“Yes, you will, then, Miss Teresa, or I shall be angry. No, I mean it.
-You’ll be doing very wrong if you’re not asleep. The General is in the
-study, if you’ll go up now, so I needn’t keep up the drawing-room fire.”
-
-“Strickland—here a moment,” said Teresa, pulling her into the darkened
-drawing-room. “Just tell me before you go. Is it very, very awful?”
-
-“No, Miss Teresa, of course it isn’t,” she replied quite angrily,
-shaking herself away. “My brother’s wife thinks nothing of it. It’s what
-we’ve all got to go through—unless it’s a poor thing like me that has no
-one. And there’s the nurse and doctor and everything she can want.
-There’s a great many that hasn’t——”
-
-“Oh, yes, yes, I know,” Teresa interrupted. “I shall stop my ears if you
-say any more of that. I’ve finished with it. I’m not going to hear any
-more until I can begin again. Strickland, I’m engaged; but please don’t
-tell them downstairs. I want to do it myself when it is all over. Only I
-am so happy I had to tell you; and now I have come home to be so
-frightened. Never mind; you see, I am not in the least worried. I’m
-going up. And about twelve o’clock I shall go to my room—and take off
-all my clothes—and go to bed—and put my head on the pillow—Oh,
-Strickland, you are an ass, aren’t you? How do you suppose I am going to
-sleep? Well, good-night.” She ran upstairs very quietly and went into
-the study.
-
-Cyril was sitting by the fire, smoking and reading. He looked round as
-she came in and said, “Well, did you have a good time? I suppose they’ve
-told you about Chips?”
-
-“Yes,” she said. “I shan’t go to bed yet if you are not going. We’ll
-wait together if you like. And, Father—I saw David.” She brought a chair
-up to the fire.
-
-“And did he see you?” Cyril inquired. “You please my eye very much when
-you are happy and you’ve been a withered little object lately.”
-
-“Well, that is really about all about it,” she said. “I’ve stopped
-withering. You do like David, don’t you, Father?”
-
-“I’m devoted to him,” Cyril answered. “Do I understand that you have
-fixed it up?”
-
-“Yes,” she answered. “Oh, Father, listen, what was that?”
-
-“I didn’t hear anything,” he said, rather hastily, “but there’s a devil
-of a draught up those back stairs. I think I’ll shut the passage door.”
-
-“I’ll do it,” she said.
-
-“No, stay where you are.” He went out, shutting the door after him, shut
-the passage door that led to the top storey and met Strickland coming
-up. “Keep that door shut, would you?” he said. “Miss Teresa’s in there;
-and don’t worry her to go to bed. I’ll send her when I think it is a
-good plan.” He went back to the study.
-
-“Was that Strickland you were talking to?” she asked. “There’s nothing
-wrong, is there?”
-
-“No, but I can’t do with her damned singing. I told her to wait until
-the Philharmonic was open. Now then, tell us all about it, Dicky; that
-is, as much of it as you like.”
-
-“Well, you see, I refused him before,” she began slowly. “He wouldn’t
-combine with what I was doing and I wouldn’t give it up——” She stopped,
-and Cyril poured himself out a glass of whiskey. “Have some?” he asked.
-
-“Now you know, dear, that is silly,” said Teresa. “I don’t want to take
-to drink because I am going to be married—— Oh, father, what is that?
-Something is bothering me—is there a wind or something? It was quite
-still when I came back.”
-
-Cyril hesitated a moment and then said, “You’re not the woman your
-mother is. She thought me very foolish—I am not sure she didn’t say very
-wrong—for spending the night in the Turkish bath when you were born. I
-should be there now if you weren’t at home, but if you are going to sit
-there behaving like some damned fox-terrier whenever a door opens I
-shall have to get out the car and drive you round till we both freeze.”
-
-“All right,” she said. “I am sorry, but I didn’t know what it was. I
-just felt creepy.”
-
-They heard the front door slam.
-
-“That’s the doctor,” said Cyril. “Now you can go ahead. The pilot is on
-board and a tot of rum will be served to all those in favour. I wish you
-would have some.”
-
-“No, I am going to have tea presently,” she said. “I do wish you
-wouldn’t interrupt. I was going to tell you why I changed my mind.”
-
-“Yes?” he said, encouragingly.
-
-“Let’s see. You see, the thing is like this. I think David started with
-the same idea that I did and I don’t know exactly what happened but he
-found that he hadn’t enough brains for argument, so he studied
-fox-hunting which he had always had a passion for, only he got slightly
-mixed like I did about people who live in towns. He is really very
-sensitive about cruelty, and his father gave him such a lot of money at
-college that when he found anyone who wanted it he gave like anything;
-and when you have once begun doing that in person, not just by
-subscription, it is very difficult not to feel that you ought to be
-earning some instead. But anyhow that is what he did. And then he had to
-go to Aldwych to help his father who wasn’t well, and then he got
-interested in the land and he met some people who wanted experiments
-done—I forget what in—and who couldn’t afford to do them; and, it is
-very odd, but he seems to find out more by common sense than I ever
-should by working and working at an idea, trying to make it fit whatever
-happens, because it never does. As soon as one stops worrying and works
-at whatever one can do best, the idea one had tried to fit on to all
-sorts of contradictions seems suddenly to grow up out of the middle of
-one’s work, with a root fastened to all the different things it wouldn’t
-fit before. It is impossible to explain but I assure you you would have
-found that happen if you had ever had an idea of any sort or done any
-work.”
-
-“I should like to direct your next piece of purposeless labour to
-respecting the forces of the Crown a little if you can,” said Cyril.
-“I’m damned! No ideas and no work! Do you know who I am? I suppose your
-mother is right. Marriage does mean something to a girl.”
-
-“Why? What?” she asked in bewilderment. “What have I said?”
-
-“Go on, my love; don’t let me interrupt you,” he said. Strickland came
-in with some tea and a plate of sandwiches. “I suppose it is no good
-offering you tea, sir?” she inquired.
-
-“No, thank you, I have got everything I want,” he answered.
-
-“I am coming to bed in a few minutes,” Teresa said, nodding to her.
-
-Strickland looked appealingly at Cyril and hesitated. “You’d better stay
-here a bit I think,” he said. “You won’t sleep after that stuff.”
-
-“Oh yes, I shall. I’m awfully sleepy,” she said.
-
-Strickland pulled herself together and cleared her throat. “I’m sorry,
-Miss Teresa,” she said boldly, “but there’s been a slight accident in
-your room. Your hot water bottle leaked, and the bed was wet through so
-I’ve taken the things down to the fire. I’ll tell you as soon as they
-are dry.”
-
-“Very well; but goodness, how late it is!” Teresa said as she glanced at
-the clock. “Nearly one. Has mother gone to bed?”
-
-“Not yet,” said Strickland. “She’ll be down by-and-by. You’ll see her if
-you wait a little.” She shut the door and Teresa settled herself again
-in the armchair with her tea. “The Prices have got Aldwych for another
-six months,” she said, “but David thought perhaps if we were married in
-the spring I might go out with him to see his place over there and help
-him to settle up, and then come back when they leave. I shouldn’t so
-much mind leaving all of it if I didn’t go straight from Emma’s office
-to a house with hot towel rails and pheasant for breakfast and a peach
-house.”
-
-“Well, we all have our troubles, but I feel if I were given my choice
-that that is the one I could face with most courage,” said Cyril. “I
-could tear myself away from Emma’s office more resolutely than from
-almost any luxury I know. But then I can’t live up to your friend Mrs.
-Vachell, who hunts with George Washington and runs with Ananias from a
-sense of duty. I admit I wasn’t happy in the office when you took me
-there.”
-
-“What are we going to do with Chips when she gets well?” said Teresa. “I
-can’t bear to go away and leave her here. Mrs. Vachell would get her
-altogether in time and mother wouldn’t be any good. Mother thinks that
-when she says what fine creatures women are and all that, and when Mrs.
-Vachell begins on the same subject, they both mean the same thing. But
-they don’t. Did you know that? Mrs. Vachell is quite serious.”
-
-“Yes, I knew that,” he answered. “She told me herself that nothing was
-too bad to do in the cause of the noblest of God’s creatures, and a
-woman in that frame of mind is always beyond a joke. You can’t get it
-into their heads that there are certain things that are not done, such
-as vitriol and so on. Not that I have heard of any of them doing that,
-but she seemed to be speaking inclusively.”
-
-“No, that sort of thing isn’t a bit like her. Really father, it isn’t. I
-only meant that the more depressed Chips gets about being away from Evan
-the more Mrs. Vachell uses it to make it impossible for her ever to go
-back. Chips is quite right in saying that she can’t live here. It would
-be so dreary for her and she hates having no explanation for it. People
-will think that either she or Evan have done something bad. And it is
-cruel to think of her without a man for the rest of her life; it is far
-worse than being a widow. I don’t think either you or mother have
-realised that.”
-
-“It hadn’t, as you say, occurred to me that they wouldn’t finish it up
-sometime. I hope marriage doesn’t mean too much to her after all. I have
-always supposed that so long as people mind their own business there is
-very little to complain of.”
-
-As he stopped speaking, a long, high-pitched sound, seeming to come from
-nowhere in particular and too faint to be more than just audible, rose,
-grew and died away again. Teresa turned white and looked at her father
-with frightened, questioning eyes.
-
-“Was it a lie that Strickland told me about my hot bottle?” she asked.
-“Didn’t she want me to go up?”
-
-“I expect not,” said Cyril. “You can’t do anything. Would you like me to
-get the car out? We can wrap up quite warm.”
-
-“No, what is the good of running away,” she answered. “I have got to
-know. But Strickland said it was nothing. She was quite indignant and
-was going to tell me that there are people who aren’t as well looked
-after as Chips, but I wouldn’t listen. Let’s go on talking. I do so want
-to get out of this mess of pity on to a road that leads somewhere. It is
-like being for ever shot at and hurt by something you can’t see.
-Strickland is wrong. Evidently in the main things one person suffers as
-much as another.”
-
-“I’ve often told you you were worrying unnecessarily,” said Cyril. “I am
-sorry we didn’t send you away just now, but I never thought of it and
-your mother doesn’t descend to details much, as you know. She takes the
-most alarming things as a matter of course. I believe she was born a
-favourite of the gods. I found out the other day that she has never had
-a tooth out. I was away when Chips was born and, as I told you, I spent
-the night of your arrival in the Turkish bath, so I don’t know what
-happened; but it wouldn’t surprise me in the least to hear she slept
-through it.”
-
-The door opened and Susie came in. As she stood there for a moment a
-smell unknown to Teresa came in with the air from the passage.
-
-“What! are you two still here?” she said in the gently reproving tone
-she used when any of them did anything not wholly normal. “Why didn’t
-you go to bed, Teresa dear? I told Strickland to tell you not to worry.
-I hope you weren’t.”
-
-“Oh no,” she replied, “it wasn’t that. I got your message, but I’m not
-sleepy. What is that odd smell?”
-
-“Just a little something the doctor used to give her some sleep,” said
-Susie. “I think I shall wait here until he comes down.” She had left the
-door open and Teresa sat tense and agonised, dreading the sound that
-might come again at any moment. But everything was quiet. Strickland
-shuffled down the back stairs and shut the kitchen door. Cyril got up
-and shut the door of the study and drew up another chair.
-
-“Well, and how did your dinner go off?” Susie asked. “Did you see
-David?”
-
-“Yes,” said Teresa. “He—he enjoyed himself very much in the Argentine.”
-
-“How nice. And is he going back or is he going to take up Aldwych again?
-I do hope he will.”
-
-“Yes,” she said still more nervously. “Yes—we are going to take it up
-together—we arranged—I hope you don’t mind. I got a little worried with
-Chips and everything, or I should have told you. I really came home to
-tell you—I——”
-
-“My darling, I quite understand,” said Susie. “Don’t trouble to explain.
-I am so glad that you have come to see what a dear fellow he is. I
-always told you he was a great deal nicer than you thought; but you
-wouldn’t believe me.”
-
-Teresa’s just feeling of indignation gave way to a second thought that
-she had much rather her mother supposed her not to have cared for David
-before, than that she should suspect her of having listened to wisdom on
-the subject of a prudent marriage.
-
-“And so that is all settled!” Susie continued, warming her toes
-peacefully. “And when dear Evangeline is strong again we must make
-another effort to put that right. And then we shall have nothing left to
-wish for, shall we? Evan is a silly fellow, really. I wish he were here
-now; it might bring it home to him.”
-
-“How, Mother?”
-
-“I mean that he might see that women have quite enough to go through
-without being teased about their children when they have got them. All
-those stupid rules and that kind of thing! Really, you know, I think
-that anyone who has had a child—I mean any woman, of course,—deserves to
-be let alone. Now those poor women I saw last week——. I don’t know that
-it is a very nice subject for you, Teresa, but as you have taken to work
-among the poor you are bound to hear of it, and you are going to be
-married yourself—what I was going to say is that those poor women I saw
-at Christmas have been most foolish, there is no doubt, and the law
-ought to oblige the men to marry them. But if it won’t do that, at least
-it might be made more easy for the mother to keep the child with her
-instead of her living alone with that matron, who I am sure, is
-extremely kind, but with such a cross face. The poor little child has to
-be brought up elsewhere because the mother has lost her character! Men
-lose their characters quickly enough in the public-house, and no one
-says anything. They are allowed to take the bottle home with them, too,
-and it is not thought a disgrace, although they do it deliberately.
-Whereas a child——” She paused, becoming suddenly aware that Cyril’s eye
-was fixed on her with delighted interest. “Cyril, dear,” she said, “are
-you sure you want to wait up? There is really no need.”
-
-“I wouldn’t miss a word, Sue, I assure you,” he said politely. “Dicky,
-pass me the syphon, would you?” Teresa passed it, and said nothing. No
-one spoke for a short time, and then a bell rang upstairs and another
-sound, a sort of rapid, angry mewing, was heard as Susie opened the door
-of the study and Strickland vanished up the stairs. Susie disappeared
-into the passage and presently Strickland ran down again. “It’s a dear
-little girl, sir, the doctor says,” she remarked, thrusting her head
-round the study door, “and now you get to bed, Miss Teresa, please,
-while I get a cup of something for the nurse. The doctor will be pleased
-to join you, sir, presently, but he won’t stop to have nothing but a
-glass of wine and a biscuit. He’s got another case waiting for him he
-says.” She disappeared before Teresa had grasped the wonderful details
-of her déshabille. This was indeed a new Strickland, or at least one
-unknown to the family. “My brother’s wife” and Evangeline were one and
-indivisible in Strickland’s heart that night.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI
-
-
-Lady Varens and David stayed for some weeks with Mr. Manley, and then
-took a furnished cottage by the sea, at a place not far from Millport.
-It was a place of everlasting winds, sandy as the desert, flat as a
-tablecloth, ugly as every other nest of the speculative builder. It is
-true that the owners of the land had imposed restrictions on the
-invaders, but the only result of this was to make a certain style of
-architecture a duty, instead of an unfortunate occurrence, so the town
-had as little chance of achieving beauty as a society for the
-suppression of marriage would have of evolving true love. The little
-caskets of the home, that were dumped down in groups along the shore,
-roofed to excess in the prevailing fashion, neatly gardened with rock
-plants that could not blow away and might be disinterred from an
-avalanche of sand without obvious damage, were designed to catch the
-greatest possible quantity of ozone. Painstaking mothers, whose husbands
-were occupied in Millport, immured themselves heroically there all the
-year round for the good of their offspring, who rewarded them by
-thriving exceedingly on the hurricanes of health that swept along the
-mud flats. The tide rose from time to time—generally in the night—, took
-a rapid survey of the villas, and fled back into the distant sea.
-Squadrons of perambulators were marched daily along the most exposed
-part of the shore, which the speculative builder had kindly laid with
-asphalt for the purpose. There, prevented by stout iron railings from
-being blown into the sea, the mothers and sisters and aunts and nurses
-of young Millport wrestled up and down twice a day, their skirts lashed
-impedingly against their knees or their calves, according to whether
-they were going to or coming from, the butcher. Their faces were set
-with a permanent expression of having been blown crooked, nose slightly
-aslant and a little richer in tone on one side than the other, eyes half
-closed to keep out the volleying sand, ears all but inside out, and the
-mouth set at the gasp, owing to the nostrils having been banged to as
-soon as the owner struggled out of her front door; heads were mostly a
-little on one side, cocked to meet the shouts of a succession of
-acquaintances all endeavouring to hear whether Reggie would come to tea
-with Edna on Thursday or Friday, or whether the bridge party began at
-three or four. But then, as the inhabitants say when strangers are
-critical about the place, “we do have such beautiful sunsets. They say
-it is something phosphorescent about the mud.” So there’s always
-something either way to keep the balance between good and evil.
-
-Lady Varens took one of the villas for a few months. The place more
-nearly resembled country than any other in the neighbourhood where she
-could get a house; it was at least in the open air, or rather, as she
-said, in an open draught, and the mud stayed where it was, instead of
-going up into the sky and down again all the time. The sun shone a
-little when it was anywhere handy, and one could smell the sea, and even
-see it for a few minutes if one looked sharp about it. There was a golf
-course, and a train to bring Teresa and anyone else who had sufficient
-patience and a solid enough frame to hold together during the requisite
-period. Maids were found who, being attached by love to the butcher’s
-assistants, were willing to oblige a titled lady to whom money was no
-object. The villa was designed for a large family and attendants, so
-when Evangeline was well again, Lady Varens asked her to stay for a time
-with the children; she persuaded her that it would be good for them to
-be blown into the state of solidity that comes to the young of that
-scourging place from constant tossing between the consuming ozone and
-the replenishing butcher. Evangeline accepted, and at the end of a week
-or two the shadow of Millport and all the human vexatiousness which had
-darkened the last months for her began to stir and rise, taking with it
-her newspaper problems, Mrs. Vachell’s sphinxery and the episodes of her
-life at Drage that were stored in her recollection like toys broken in a
-long-forgotten quarrel. The dear inanities of that time were like poor
-Tweedledum and Tweedledee’s nice new rattle which had brought them both
-out armed with deceptions against each other, till the monstrous crow
-they had brought down frightened them apart. She laughed aloud one day
-as she thought of Teresa’s comparison, and presently she went to the
-nursery and brought Ivor’s copy of “Through the Looking Glass” into the
-drawing-room and sat down with it in the window seat, where she used to
-watch the sunsets. She turned up the part where the quarrel begins about
-nothing, when Tweedledum and Tweedledee have been sitting together under
-an umbrella. “That is exactly like us,” she thought and she laughed as
-she read. “But Evan will never see that. I shall have to explain the
-situation in some other way.” Her thoughts wandered back down a train of
-other things that she had tried to explain to him. Before their
-engagement she had expounded a good deal and listened very little. To
-tell the truth, Evan had been attending more to the distraction of her
-presence than to the matter of her speech, but she did not know that. He
-had been unaccustomed to the society of women who lulled, and she did
-lull his natural embarrassment in conversation by the largeness of her
-interest in everything that went on in the world. Such luxuriant living
-and lack of analysis was new to him. He had formed an idea of women from
-his sisters’ giggling little comments on every subject; they inspected
-life at too close quarters to make their view interesting to anyone with
-Evan’s passion for Universal study. The world was contained for them in
-their village interests; England was a garden where God lived and their
-village was one of His boundary lodges; foreign countries were something
-akin to a nobleman’s other residences, managed by agents and let to
-strangers; the mission field a wild region that must be brought into
-cultivation. Evan had loved his sisters while the war was on, for they
-thought neither to the right hand nor to the left. They had trotted out
-of their village in the wake of England, Harry and St. George, never
-doubting that God was with them as they bandaged and stitched and prayed
-that Ypres might hold out, and that Evan and the men from the village
-might come home safe. They never spoke of the enemy as sheep or devils.
-War was a medicine which England had to take now and then for the good
-of her health, and whether it was against Zulus, Boers, or Germans had
-nothing whatever to do with the village. _The Graphic_ of the past or
-_The Graphic_ of the present, depicted “the dead,” with troops advancing
-over them through smoke, and dropping as they came; or a hillock and a
-gun and a few figures lying bandaged—perhaps with the very bandages that
-Emily had made—and that was Victory, and would end someday in “The
-Soldier’s Return,” and a dinner in the village. Such a dinner! The
-sisters were at their best at such times; no one could be cross with
-them; but in private life, during peace, Evan found them trying beyond
-words. He was suffering from reaction against their village interests
-when he met Evangeline, and listened to her impersonal prattle of
-sunshine and wide spaces of the earth where parties are unknown and no
-man is obliged to ask the nymph of his choice how many theatres she has
-been to. Then, as we know, Evangeline encouraged him. She wouldn’t let
-him keep himself to himself as he had always done. She forced him, in
-the name of politeness to his General’s daughter, to say something, and
-it had to be something true. She refused all substitutes for his
-treasures; so he brought them out one at a time, and she handled them so
-respectfully, owing to a “gentleman’s” instinct, which was part of her
-inheritance from Cyril, that in the end he married her; married her,
-poor dear, supposing her to be what he called a lady. Then after a time
-they began to quarrel. He said his nice new rattle was spoiled, his lady
-was not ladylike. She always behaved “like a gentleman” towards him, but
-that wasn’t right; she must behave like a lady. Then Evangeline said
-that she had done nothing to the rattle. It was just as it was when he
-first got it. So he pointed to Mrs. Vachell and said that was what he
-wanted his rattle to look like, a ladylike woman who could understand a
-man’s idea of the way he wanted his sons brought up. They fought battles
-and separated in fear of the darkness that came down over everything
-after that and now——. “Really, really,” she thought, “it is too silly
-for anything. He knows by now that Mrs. Vachell was having him on and
-never cared twopence for what he said. If he could know that I love him
-he might see that his rattle isn’t broken at all. After all, we were
-happy—. Ivor doesn’t seem to mind very much whether he is approved of or
-not. Evan wouldn’t find his ‘moulding’ made much difference in a year or
-two’s time, and Father says Ivor is all right; he is not afraid of
-things and tells the truth; and perhaps Evan might let him alone if he
-came back now. What a good thing Susan is a girl. I don’t think he would
-be so keen about bringing her up to be ladylike after coming such a
-cropper. Oh, dear! I do wish we could begin all over again.” She
-remembered the daily event of Evan’s homecoming when they were at Drage;
-the pleasure of his being in to lunch unexpectedly; his atrocious
-singing while he had a hot bath; the general disturbance in every room;
-the comfortable, foolish conversations; the friendly disputes and dear
-kisses; one or two tiresome occurrences, as when there was a drunken
-cook to be dealt with and people coming to dinner and Evan was so decent
-and helpful. Then a happy, out-of-door summer, and later on their
-eagerness about Ivor. After that, Evan began to shun the nursery
-foolishness and she had got bored by his details of tinkering with the
-little car he bought. They had gone to Millport one Christmas and Ivor
-had screamed a good deal, and the nurse complained. There were no
-complaints now. Everything went like clockwork, and life was dull as
-ditchwater with no man to promote irrationality by treating all episodes
-with common sense. No household can be really merry without someone to
-supply the spectacle of common sense, meeting with little accidents from
-the mischievous contradictions of the human heart. Presently David came
-in.
-
-“You can’t see to read there, can you?” he said.
-
-“I wasn’t reading,” she answered. “I was wondering. I must do something
-about Evan, do you know? It isn’t really a quarrel if you come to think
-of it.”
-
-David looked at her inquiringly, and sat down on the window seat. “I
-wonder what I had better do. Go out to him, or what?”
-
-“The children would be all right with us here, but I suppose you would
-want them,” he said. “Your husband has never thought of leaving the
-army, has he? He could get something to do in England that would
-probably pay him better.”
-
-“What sort of thing?” she asked.
-
-“I don’t know, but I could find out. I know some engineering people.”
-
-Evangeline was silent. “I haven’t the least idea when it began,” she
-said, after a few minutes’ thought.
-
-“Have you tried writing to him?” he suggested.
-
-“No, not yet.”
-
-“Does he know about Susan?”
-
-“Dicky wrote,” said Evangeline.
-
-“There is no difficulty in getting out of the army,” he remarked.
-
-“But how am I to put that? What shall I say?”
-
-“Just tell him,” said David; “there’s no difficulty in that.”
-
-“Oh, David!” said Evangeline in despair, “don’t go on saying there’s no
-difficulty in anything. I daresay there isn’t if you can do the things,
-but just think of it! He went away in the blackest huff you ever saw,
-and all about nothing, so there is, in a way, nothing to begin on. I
-can’t say, ‘Are you still angry?’ because he must be, or he would have
-written. I can’t say, ‘I am not angry any more,’ because I wasn’t. I was
-depressed and frightened to death.”
-
-David sat with his hands in his pockets, slowly swinging his legs and
-gazing at the floor, wrapped in thought. “I don’t think I should think
-at all,” he advised. “I should just take a pen and write.”
-
-“Would you take a J pen or a quill pen?” Evangeline inquired, while she
-tossed the volume of “Alice” backwards and forwards.
-
-“Either,” he replied. “There’s no difficulty in that.” She all but threw
-the book at his head, but refrained. “No difficulty at all,” he
-repeated, with his eye on the book.
-
-“Can I say you thought he could get a job in England?” she said.
-
-“Yes, if you like.”
-
-“But do you think I had better?”
-
-“I shouldn’t begin with it,” said David.
-
-“But you think I might put it in at the end?”
-
-“I should see how the letter looks when it is done. If it seems to fit,
-put that in.”
-
-“I suppose you are doing your best to be helpful.”
-
-“I’d do anything I could for you.”
-
-“But you don’t know how frightening he is when he just turns his back.
-Suppose he says, ‘No’.”
-
-“Then you might have to go out there.”
-
-“What! and just walk up to him?”
-
-“Yes, or else wait till he came in.”
-
-“And what should I say?”
-
-“You’d have to tell him you had come.”
-
-“I see.”
-
-“I am going to see where Dicky is,” he said, getting off the window
-seat. “I really came in to look for her. You had better have a light.”
-He brought a small lamp over from the writing-table and fastened it to a
-switch beside her. Then he got a blotting book and some paper and
-envelopes and took a fountain pen from his pocket. “That will write,
-you’ll find,” he said, as he laid the things by her and then he went
-out.
-
-She took up the paper and turned it over; paused, and took up the pen.
-It was rather like the preliminaries to a letter written by planchette,
-when the fingers are loose upon the board and the eye fixed on vacancy.
-Presently she began and wrote a few words rapidly, stopped, wrote again,
-and this time she was off. She filled the four sides of the paper with
-what she wrote, and then folded it, screwing up her eyes resolutely. “I
-daren’t read it,” she said to herself, and pushed it, with shaking
-fingers, into the envelope, stuck it down and addressed it. Then she
-went into the hall and opened a cupboard, groped in the dark for a coat,
-and took the first she touched, which happened to be David’s. She
-slipped her arms into it, and without stopping for fastenings, wrapped
-it round her and opened the outer door. The pillar box was about twenty
-yards away and the letter was posted before anything but the speed of
-her actions had time to guide her thoughts. When it was done she felt as
-if she had given the world a kick and sent a villa or two toppling about
-her ears. “Oh!——” she thought, and “Oh——! suppose it doesn’t work!” She
-ran back into the house and flung David’s coat upon a seat without
-thinking. Then she went to the drawing-room and drew the curtains and
-sat down by the fire. “Suppose I should have to go out,” she thought.
-“Suppose he wouldn’t look at me. Suppose he doesn’t care for old times
-after all.” She was still sitting there when Lady Varens came in. “I
-thought there was no wind this afternoon,” she remarked, “but there is
-something; I think it must be suction, because there is not a twig
-stirring, but my hat was drawn off my head and my eyes are full of sand.
-Have you been out?”
-
-“Only to the letter box,” said Evangeline. “I wrote to Evan and raced
-out to post it before I had time to think.”
-
-“What made you do that?” Lady Varens asked.
-
-“David,” she answered. “He kept repeating that there was no difficulty.
-If anyone goes on saying a thing often enough I begin to believe it, and
-he went on and on.”
-
-“But I don’t understand yet,” Lady Varens said. “What sort of a letter
-was it?”
-
-“Just a nice letter. There are a great many things that he may have
-forgotten. I haven’t. It was all right, you know, once.”
-
-“David thinks Evan might leave the army,” she went on presently. “I
-shouldn’t have to go out then—unless he won’t answer.”
-
-“What would he do if he left?” asked Lady Varens.
-
-“I don’t know, but David seemed to have some idea in his mind.”
-
-“Then I expect if he seemed to, he had. If he goes after a fox there
-generally is one.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The post to Egypt is not a very long one, but measured by the emotions
-Evangeline went through between the earliest day when Evan’s answer
-could be expected, and the day when it came, the interval was about a
-year and a half. The extra length of time was put in three strips. One
-between the moment when the postman knocked at the front door and the
-time it took the maid to examine and bring up the letters. The second
-was when Evangeline was out in the afternoon and remembered that another
-post would be there when she got back; it took the length of several
-days to look at the letters on the hall table as she crossed the
-threshold and judge from their appearance whether they were all
-circulars. The third age was when she and Teresa were talking in their
-bedrooms before going to bed and went through their nightly review of
-all the things he would be likely to say, and compared them with the
-likelihood of his saying nothing at all. The nights were all right, for
-Evangeline, when in health, would sleep though the earth cracked
-asunder. One day people came to lunch and stayed talking, so she did not
-go out, and the maid brought the letters to Lady Varens before anyone
-had remembered the postman.
-
-“Here’s yours, Evangeline,” Lady Varens said, passing it to her. “Do you
-know whether the children have gone out yet? I wanted them to call at
-the butcher’s for me. He didn’t send the mutton I ordered this morning.”
-
-“I’ll go and see,” said Evangeline, and she carried off her letter. Ten
-minutes or a quarter-of-an-hour went by, and then Ivor came in dressed
-for going out.
-
-“Mother’s being a dog on the stairth,” he said. “It’s dangerous; you’d
-better not go past, but we’re going to do your message now if Nurth can
-get past.”
-
-“Can’t you say your s’s yet, darling?” said the visitor. “Well, I’m
-quite shocked! Come and tell me where you are going.”
-
-“Can’t thtop,” said Ivor. “You oughtn’t to path remarkth. Good-bye.”
-
-He went out, leaving the door open, and Teresa got up and shut it. She
-heard cacklings from the baby and Ivor and respectful protests from the
-nurse near the top landing. “Now go off,” she heard Evangeline say in a
-tone she had nearly forgotten. “I don’t know where the dog has gone;
-probably to the butcher’s. You may find him there.” Teresa shut the door
-behind her. “Chips!” she called gently, “shall I come up or are you
-coming down?”
-
-“I don’t know what I am going to do,” said a dishevelled head through
-the banisters. “What about those people? ‘Massacre them all!’ as the
-Peace Delegate said.” Nurse, carrying the baby, brushed past with an
-apology, and went down, herding Ivor before her.
-
-“It is quite all right,” said Evangeline. “Very much all right.
-Excessively all right.” Teresa sat down on a lower step.
-
-“David is clever, isn’t he?” she remarked with pleasure.
-
-“I thought of it first,” said Evangeline. “He only suggested writing.”
-
-“Well what is going to happen? Are you going out or what?”
-
-“No, he says Joseph Price offered him a job in their works when the
-regiment was sent out, but he refused. If he can still get it he will
-clear out.”
-
-“Why did he refuse it before?” asked Teresa.
-
-“Because of Ivor I think—but we won’t go into that.”
-
-“Where is the Price place? Would you have to be in Millport?”
-
-“No, it is a new one they have started somewhere near London. I forget
-what the name is; it is somewhere I never heard of except that I know
-some famous person was born there.”
-
-“Hush!” said Teresa. “They’re coming out. Let me up, quick!” They both
-disappeared into Evangeline’s room as the drawing-room door opened.
-
-“Yes, he’s a thoroughly decent f’ller,” said Joseph Price to his father,
-that evening. “Marv’llous engineer, I’m told. But ’f course, it’s just
-’s you like.”
-
-“What does he want to leave the army for?” inquired Mr. Price
-suspiciously. “Nothing fishy about it, I suppose? The army’s a very good
-profession for a man that has got up in it.”
-
-“’T’s not lucrative, very,” observed Joseph, “nor int’resting exactly, I
-should think. And Egypt’s a tedious sort of place; nothing t’ do except
-learn about it and so on; th’ sort of thing Vachell’s good at. You know,
-so far as Hatton’s concerned I c’n understand a man pr’ferring to use
-his intell’gence in the panoply of war, rather than th’ executive;
-specially if there’s nothing t’ execute, if you see what I mean. And,
-aft’r all, the sort of thing he’d be doing f’r us might be useful in all
-sorts of ways in ’nother war. There’s no earthly reason, if you come t’
-think of it, why he shouldn’t join up again ’n that case and take th’
-thing up where he left it.”
-
-“Yes, yes,” said Mr. Price, “but that’s not the point. What I want to
-find out is, has he any business capacity apart from this talent?”
-
-“’Mense capacity, I b’lieve,” said Joseph. “It’s his strong point.”
-
-“How do you know? What experience have you of him?”
-
-“When I was at Drage the f’llers talked of nothing else. He was the very
-man that ought to have taken over your plant then.”
-
-“But surely he was in France at that time,” said the perplexed parent.
-
-“Yes, I know, but everyone was going backwards and forwards all th’
-time, and they all knew what th’ others were doing. There was a story
-about him, I r’member——”
-
-“Well?” said Mr. Price, as his son stopped.
-
-“No, you must get him t’ tell it you himself; I might spoil it. But kait
-sairysly, Dad, he’s the very f’ller you’re looking for.”
-
-“Why are you so keen about this?” asked Mr. Price, frowning to himself.
-“You’re not after the wife, are you, eh?”
-
-“No, my dear dirty old man, I’m not, and you mustn’t say that kind ’f
-thing now; ’t’s not done.”
-
-“I don’t see why not,” his father remarked. “There’s nothing to be
-ashamed of. I remember a time when a lot of jobs were handled that way,
-but people are mealy-mouthed now. Well, write and say we’ll try him, if
-you like.”
-
-“I’ve his letter ’f acceptance here, as a matt’r of fact,” said Joseph.
-“Subject, of course, t’ your approval. I sounded him more ’r less befur
-he went away, but it didn’t appeal t’ him then. However, Egypt’s kait
-’mpossible they tell me, f’r a young family; flies get int’ the milk,
-’n’ so on. I’ll fix it up with him for you, ’f you like. By th’ bye,
-when exactly d’ we clear out ’f here?”
-
-“In June,” replied his father. “It’s a great disappointment to me, the
-whole thing. I had thought of settling down here and leaving you with a
-decent place to call your own. However, there are plenty more in the
-market. I shouldn’t be surprised if Brackenbury didn’t come up for sale
-some time, and of course this doesn’t hold a candle to it.”
-
-“If you’re thinking of me, I’d leave it,” said Joseph. “You know, the
-thing’s hardly done ’t all now. You won’t find any decent f’llers left
-in houses like this in a year or two, I b’lieve. Nobody’s got ’ny money,
-except a few people like you, and you might b’ left stranded here with
-practic’lly no one to talk to. Personally, I should say th’ thing to do
-is to live ’s quietly and comf’rtably as possible, and say we’ve lost
-th’ money. You’d find yourself in a far better set t’-morrow.”
-
-“Tut! nonsense!” said his father.
-
-“’T’s true, I ’ssure you. I’ve been sairysly c’nsidering putting in a
-couple ’f hours a day at the ’lectric light plant at Brackenbury. Th’
-Duke’s fairf’lly keen on getting his daughters off, and they won’t look
-’t anybody ’nless he’s a mechanic ’r dustman or that kind ’f thing. Two
-’f them are starting ’n old-fashioned inn and calling it ‘Th’ Star ’nd
-Garter.’ They want t’ have th’ old f’ller’s trophies framed t’ stick up
-outside. ’T’s an awf’lly jolly little idea ’f you come t’ think of it.”
-
-We will here leave Mr. Price to his reflections.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII
-
-
-“Well now, tell me,” said Mrs. Carpenter, drawing her chair near to Mrs.
-Vachell’s tea-table. “What is all this about the Hattons, do you know?”
-
-“I haven’t heard anything,” said Mrs. Vachell. “What have they, or
-rather, what has she, been doing?”
-
-“Haven’t you heard that he is coming home?”
-
-“Let me see, where was it he went to? Egypt, wasn’t it? I haven’t seen
-Evangeline for some time.”
-
-“Amy,” Mrs. Carpenter said earnestly, wedging her large face close up to
-Mrs. Vachell, “tell me now—you know I never repeat things—what did
-happen then? You know people say all sorts of things, and some of them
-have really said so much about you that I want to be able to contradict
-them.”
-
-“You can contradict them all, certainly,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-
-“I may do that from you, may I?”
-
-“No, not from me, from yourself. I don’t know what they have said, but
-whatever it is, I am sure you can safely say it is untrue.”
-
-“You really had nothing to do with his going to Egypt? I was told
-to-day, on the very best authority, that you had sent him off because
-Evangeline—you know those young wives—they can’t bear anyone even to
-look at their husbands, can they? Do you know, I thought she was quite
-strange in her manner one evening at our house when he would talk to me
-all the time about India. We said something about the heat, and I
-remember I thought to myself, ‘Yes, my dear boy, you would find it very
-hot indeed out there with a wife who looks after you with those eyes!’
-Why, half the women at any station would run after him on purpose, if
-they saw she was jealous.”
-
-“Yes,—women!” said Mrs. Vachell. “How these Christians love one another,
-don’t they? We are a very united sex when we are running with the hounds
-to show what the hare can do to please them.”
-
-“Then it really wasn’t you who made him go to Egypt?” Mrs. Carpenter
-persisted.
-
-“No. I am very much flattered at being mistaken for the War Office, but
-it wasn’t me. I should like to take the credit for ridding the country
-of the dullest regiment in England, but I am afraid I can’t truthfully.”
-
-“That is very sarcastic of you, dear Amy, but I know you don’t like
-soldiers,” said Mrs. Carpenter affectionately. “You have never mixed
-with them enough to know how honest and simple they are. What do you
-think of General Fulton, though, really and truly? He is an odd sort of
-man, isn’t he? I get on with him very well because I love his humour and
-we have great arguments together, but I know he is not popular as a
-rule. He is very naughty in the things he says to her sometimes, and she
-never seems to see. Emmie Trotter doesn’t like her at all; she thinks
-she is not genuine, but I don’t think that. I think she is perfectly
-sincere in the work she does but I don’t think she is business-like.
-Someone told me that Evan Hatton is coming back and going into business.
-Had you heard of it?”
-
-“Yes, I had heard that,” said Mrs. Vachell. “And Teresa has given up her
-work with Emma and is going to study unemployment from the most
-favourable standpoint, by having nothing to do. She is very lucky, I
-think, though I couldn’t do it myself.”
-
-“You mean you don’t care for the Varens’?”
-
-“I know nothing about them one way or the other. He used to be in and
-out of the University, I don’t know what for; learning to make chemical
-manures perhaps; but I never saw much of him. He belongs to what Mrs.
-Harding calls the ‘polo set’ and they don’t interest me.”
-
-“Oh, now, some of them are very charming and delightful. All the
-Brackenbury set are dears. Bobo, as they call him, is a splendid player
-and a real dear boy. However, the Duke says he can’t afford to let him
-play next year and he must do something. You have heard about the girls
-setting up an inn, haven’t you? It is a pity, I think, but as Bobo says,
-what are you to do? He pretends he is going to run a circus, but
-seriously, I’m sure I don’t know. They can’t keep themselves in the army
-now, not even in the Guards. But David Varens—how did we get off the
-track——? He is all right, apparently. His father seems to have left him
-plenty of money, and of course he is not extravagant like Bobo and that
-terrible elder brother. Wasn’t it dreadful about him! Did you say Teresa
-is going to give up all her work as soon as she marries? Now I do think
-that is a great mistake, don’t you? All the more reason she should go on
-with it now that she will have money. Of course I can see that she
-couldn’t come in every day in the same way, but there is no reason why
-she shouldn’t visit and take an interest in it all. A few meetings would
-be good for her and prevent her from getting self-centred.”
-
-The door opened and Mr. Vachell was heard to say, “Come in. I think my
-wife is in here,” and Teresa walked into the room, followed by the
-little man with a pile of books. “I was bringing these back,” she said
-to Mrs. Vachell. “They are some that you lent to Evangeline and she had
-forgotten about them. I am so sorry. I met Mr. Vachell on the step and
-he brought me up, but I am afraid I mustn’t stay.”
-
-“Yes, you must,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I haven’t seen any of you for so
-long and Mrs. Carpenter was saying just now that I am given credit for
-all sorts of things in your family—for Captain Hatton’s regiment being
-sent to Egypt and—what else was it, Mrs. Carpenter? I have just told her
-that I never see you, but she is still suspicious.”
-
-Teresa frowned and blushed and had nothing to say for a minute. Then she
-turned on Mrs. Carpenter in sudden wrath. “I do wish women wouldn’t be
-sweet when they want to make mischief,” she said. “I never knew anything
-like this place. It is like a lot of flies walking in muck and then
-settling on the jam.” The expression on Mrs. Carpenter’s face moved her
-to compunction, and she stopped. After all, the woman had had children
-and battled with pain and death and denied herself for her
-fellow-creatures in more ways than Teresa, for she had no love of them
-to carry her over the discomforts of bearing other people’s burdens. If
-she did gossip and preach and plume herself by the way, she was entitled
-to that relaxation, knowing no other. So long as Britons never shall be
-slaves let us allow the Potters their public-house, the Carpenters their
-tea-table, the Fisks their blood and the passionate philanthropists
-their feast of reason and flow of soul. The Emma Gainsboroughs will go
-on patiently and methodically clearing up, taking no notice of
-themselves, and by-and-bye, as Susie so often justly remarked, “Anything
-that is really good is sure to make the rest seem so small in
-comparison.”
-
-“What was it you wanted to know?” she asked Mrs. Carpenter gently. “I
-would so much rather tell you, if you are interested, than have you
-going about asking all sorts of people whether they have heard
-anything.”
-
-“Dear little Teresa!” Mrs. Carpenter said, recovering her usual smile.
-“What a set-down for poor me! You fierce little thing! Well then, since
-you ask, tell me what Evangeline has been doing to set all the tongues
-wagging? I shouldn’t have liked to ask you, dear, until you offered me
-your confidence so sweetly. I appreciate it, I assure you. But you know
-it is distressing to hear a thing hinted at everywhere and not to be
-able to put it right authoritatively. Now we will have it all fair and
-square, shall we? Sit down there and tell me——have they separated?”
-
-“No, they haven’t,” said Teresa. “Mrs. Vachell lent Evangeline those
-books that I have brought back, and they are all written to dish up rows
-that needn’t happen if people’s minds weren’t as stuffy as mouldy
-cupboards. Evangeline’s is like a wide open door, you know; she is not
-at all stuffy; but she wants so much to have everyone enjoy everything
-they can that she took on the idea of women being oppressed, and of
-course, wanted to help to let them out, as she thought. That is true,
-isn’t it?” she turned to Mrs. Vachell.
-
-Mrs. Vachell shrugged her shoulders. “It is true as far as it goes,” she
-said. “Yes.”
-
-“Well then, you know Evan Hatton, don’t you,” Teresa continued. She had
-forgotten her anger against Mrs. Carpenter, and was trying to tell the
-story as if she were in a Court of Justice, presenting Evangeline’s case
-and Evan’s as one against the world. “He is not so naturally anxious for
-everyone to be happy. In fact he doesn’t mind whether they are enjoying
-themselves or not, so long as he thinks they are doing what has got to
-be done. He got really worried about her trying to undo all the doors
-and locks everywhere. I think he got a sort of panic about it; as if she
-would or could possibly have done any harm! Anyhow, he thought it was
-the thing to do, so they had it out; that is all. And now he is coming
-back. They hated being away from each other, and he is going into Mr.
-Price’s engineering place, a new one he has started near London. Now
-aren’t you sorry you helped to make people think there was some nasty,
-frowsy mystery?”
-
-“That is nonsense, dear Teresa,” Mrs. Carpenter protested. “You ought
-not to let yourself run away with such ideas. But I am more than
-delighted it is so simple as you say. You know Mrs. Trotter had quite a
-different impression, and I must say Evangeline talked to her a good
-deal when you were all together that summer.”
-
-“Yes, that is what she does,” Teresa admitted regretfully. “She talks to
-everybody as if they were all straight and decent, and she doesn’t
-realise what worms some of them are. Of course they just mix whatever
-she says with slime.”
-
-Mrs. Carpenter gave the little laugh which she used to express offence.
-“Hardly flattering to her audience, is it?” she said.
-
-“No, I didn’t mean to flatter them,” said Teresa. “They can do that for
-themselves when they have finished. I was telling you how it looks to me
-when I know how Evangeline loves all sunny and kind things.”
-
-“I hear you are going to be married and give up all your work,” said
-Mrs. Carpenter. “I must congratulate you and I hope you will be very
-happy. Aldwych is a lovely place and David Varens is quite delightful I
-think. You find you can’t keep on with your poor people, don’t you? With
-so many new interests, I daresay it is not easy for young people to
-think of others.”
-
-“Yes,” said Teresa, her cheeks glowing. “But you know you will never
-make anything different out of Mrs. Potter, any more than I have.”
-
-“Who is Mrs. Potter? I don’t remember her,” asked Mrs. Carpenter.
-
-“There are some people called Potter in that long street—Boaling
-Street—just by Emma’s office; but I don’t mean them alone. I was
-thinking of them as a class, and I forgot you didn’t know them. I don’t
-think either you or I are any good to them. They laugh at you for
-thinking you are wiser than they are, and they think I am mad because I
-keep on supposing they are feeling the same things as I do. Emma
-understands everything they say and is never surprised, nor ever tells
-them anything about herself, so they think she is perfectly normal and
-never suspect her of being a lady. She is just ‘The lady at the depôt,’
-like the girl behind the counter is ‘the young lady in the shop.’ They
-go to her when they want sensible things, and I don’t suppose they have
-any more theory as to why she is there than they have about any
-official. They probably think she is paid by the Government.”
-
-“And you are really sure you are not going to keep it up, even twice a
-week?” said Mrs. Carpenter. Then, without waiting for further answer,
-she changed the subject. “By-the-bye, Mr. Vachell, can you tell me what
-the Sphinx really is? Someone was asking the other day, and I said you
-could tell us if anyone could.”
-
-Teresa excused herself and went away, depressed by what had happened.
-She felt crushed by the weight of the heaviest burden that society
-brings, the failure to impress a living thought on a dead comprehension.
-She had offered sincerity, and been met with the corpse-like hand of
-offence.
-
-“Both those Fulton girls have been very much spoiled,” said Mrs.
-Carpenter, when she had shut the door.
-
-When Teresa got home she found David sitting stiffly in a chair beside
-Susie, who was knitting a small coat for her grandchild. There had been
-a conversation between them which it may be worth recording, and Teresa
-arrived at a critical moment. Susie’s knitting was a curious
-performance, and David, sadly at a loss for an occupation while he
-waited for Teresa, had watched it and wondered in what way it differed
-from his mother’s. Lady Varens at work with needles suggested Penelope
-filling in time to avert the intrusion of emotions. Susie evidently
-undertook the thing as part of the equipment of a rôle. It was like all
-household affairs performed by stage characters, the dusting of a room
-by a saucy maid who flicks the mantelpiece twice and then gets on with
-her lines, the dinner-party where everything is swept away after the
-first morsel of fish has been tasted. Susie’s knitting was the
-“business” connected with the rôle of “Mrs. Fulton; beautiful, refined,
-well-dressed, awaiting the eventide of life with the calm philosophy of
-one who has known much suffering.” She was now “discovered seated,
-centre R.f., expecting the return of her husband, a typical twentieth
-century rake.”
-
-“You do a great deal of knitting, don’t you?” David remarked at last.
-
-“Not as much as I should like,” said Susie. “I hope that when you and
-Dicky are married you will encourage her to do something of that kind in
-the evening. If she is giving up all her other work she will need
-something to take its place. You don’t sing or play at all, do you?”
-
-“No,” he said, feeling some apology was needed, “I don’t.”
-
-“I almost think I should take up some interest if I were you,” she said
-gently. “Of course there is no doubt that there is no happiness like
-being married if people understand each other, but at the same time it
-is impossible not to feel the need for change of thought sometimes. You
-are not fond of wine, are you, David?”
-
-“No, not at odd times, thanks very much,” David replied. He was mildly
-startled by the question and wondered what she was driving at.
-
-“And no more is Dicky. She never cared for it at all, and yet Evangeline
-would always take a glass when it was offered her. It gives people quite
-a different outlook. I don’t know how far you have studied Dicky’s
-character but I understand her, in a way, better than Evangeline. Dicky
-takes a much wider view of spiritual things.”
-
-“Yes, I expect so,” said David, polite and noncommittal.
-
-“And just for that reason I am a little sad at her giving up all her
-work among the poor. I am afraid she will feel the want of it.” David
-was struck dumb, so she went on, supposing his silence to be due to a
-wish to hear more. “She has no artistic interests, you see. When I was
-her age I had a great many. I was devoted to music, for instance, and if
-I had not fallen in love with my husband the course of my life might
-have been quite different. I hope you will forgive these little bits of
-personal history, dear David, but I should be so glad if they helped you
-in any way to clear up difficulties that may come when the ‘first fine
-careless rapture,’ as I heard it described the other day at a wonderful
-lecture of Professor Gaskie’s—I thought of you two at once—when that is
-over. I felt it so much when I had to give up all that side of things
-when I married. You see my husband has his wine, for instance, and his
-men; he had a great number of old friends when we first married, whom I
-must say, I thought extremely uninteresting. They talked by the hour
-about foxes; not in connection with all the beautiful country life that
-you have, for he never hunted except when he was asked to stay with
-people, but they were always talking about that kind of thing. Some of
-them were purely politicians and some very much worse. Not the old
-intellectual type like Disraeli, who really cared for beautiful things,
-but the sort who run away from a drawing-room and hide themselves
-somewhere with decanters and laugh and roar and sing half the night. I
-can’t tell you how much I used to feel the want of something else. Then
-the children came, and of course it was all right, and I had friends who
-were very kind, so that I could go now and then and hear music and talk
-about the things I cared for. That is why I have taken up the work I do
-here. It is not an intellectual place, as you see; and those concerts!
-Have you ever been to them?”
-
-“Yes, sometimes,” said David. “I thought they were supposed to be rather
-good.”
-
-“The performers are often very good,” she agreed, “but there is an
-atmosphere about the place that I don’t like; a want of appreciation.
-Have you noticed that there is often quite a fog in the hall? I have
-wondered sometimes whether it was anything like what Professor Bole was
-describing the other day. I forget how he put it, but I thought of those
-concerts and wondered whether people’s tastes—their love of rich dinners
-and wine and all that, had been chased out of them by the music and was
-wanting to get back and preventing them from hearing it fully. Dear
-little Dicky used to find the fog in the town so depressing when we
-first came, and I expect she felt the same as I do. Now Evangeline is
-different altogether, more like her father. She will throw off anything
-of that sort in a minute and be all ready for a gallop or a dance or
-party. Haven’t you noticed that? And yet I always think any art is such
-a happy thing. One has no real need of other people——” Her knitting had
-gone down on to her lap long ago.
-
-“No, perhaps not,” said David.
-
-“I am so glad you think so,” she continued in her purry voice. “For of
-course, you will be a great deal cut off in the country. What is that
-Mrs. Lake like whom I used to meet now and then? She seemed to have
-quite taken up the Prices. She is very typical of the society round
-there, isn’t she?”
-
-“I don’t know much about her,” said David. “But I believe she is all
-right.”
-
-“Dicky will find friends, of course,” said Susie. “One can always find
-some good in everybody if one is prepared to look for it.”
-
-“Yes, I don’t think there will be any difficulty,” said David.
-
-“What do you think about Evan going into this business of Mr. Price’s?”
-she asked.
-
-“It ought to be quite easy I think,” he answered. “It is what he likes.”
-
-“Yes, but Evan does like such curious things,” said Susie. “His is a
-most interesting nature; so upright; but I often wonder how Evangeline,
-with her very sunny disposition, chose anyone with such very strong
-religious views. Religion always seems to me to be a thing that should
-be so helpful in making it easier to stand up against things that go
-wrong. One sees so much suffering in a place like this that unless one
-can be sure that it is all intended and for the best, one would be
-inclined to dwell too much on it. Now Evan, it seems to me, instead of
-seeing it like that, often makes it sadder by supposing things to be
-worse than they are. He used to take the gloomiest view of poor little
-Ivor in his childish naughtiness, though he is really a good little boy
-and very obedient if one just smooths over difficulties with a little
-tact. Nurse is not always very wise with him. She goes on persisting at
-the time, instead of waiting until he has forgotten and letting him do
-whatever it is of his own accord, when he is interested in something
-else. That is Evan’s mistake I am sure. He is always on the look out for
-sad things and it makes him so difficult to interest. Now my husband is
-all the other way. He won’t believe that anything matters, and I think
-that Evangeline is rather like him. They have no sympathy for any aims
-beyond the present. Do you know Mrs. Vachell well?”
-
-“Not very,” David replied.
-
-“Do you like her?”
-
-“I don’t think she wants people to either like or dislike her, so I
-haven’t got so far,” he said. He would have been candid with Teresa or
-Evangeline or many other people, but he had a deep-rooted distrust of
-Susie as a receptacle for words. They meant so little to her that she
-was liable to pass them on as coinage in conversation and give no goods
-of her own in exchange, so there was no bargain that she was likely to
-respect between her and whoever she talked to. He felt this
-instinctively and had no dealings with her, not being willing, like
-Cyril, to declare himself bankrupt for the joy of riotous living.
-
-“She believes very much in women,” Susie went on. “Her idea is that some
-day all those things that I was talking about, the love of finer tastes
-and of children, and all the confidence and dislike of harshness and
-ugliness that woman feels so much will come more to the front and have
-more influence. There may be something in it, for although I dislike the
-idea of women going into the world, still, if they can do any good I am
-sure it is right for them not to hold back; for the sake of the
-unmarried ones who have to earn a living. It does seem terrible, don’t
-you think, that there should be no way for those who are not
-intellectual to live except by pleasing men in the wrong way; because
-that is what it comes to, whether they are married or not. And if they
-are not good looking it is even worse. They ought to be as well paid for
-cultivating the higher side of life as for pandering to the lower. A
-loving nature is of as much value to the world as a brain that invents
-war material; and, as it is, men only use it as a toy for every sort of
-coarser instinct.”
-
-“But does Mrs. Vachell suggest a sort of spiritual—market?” David asked,
-hesitatingly, roused at last out of his burrow by the logical
-enticements that Susie had been aiming at him. “Aren’t there enough
-people who sell themselves in that way already?”
-
-“I don’t think you have quite understood my point, dear David,” she
-replied, and at that moment Teresa came in and found them.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII
-
-
-Teresa and Joseph Price were going back to Millport together in the
-rickety little train that joggled up and down the coast every few hours.
-Teresa had spent the day with the Varens’ and Joseph had called about
-tea time with some information from his father for Evangeline about her
-husband’s new work. Evan was expected in about ten days, and was to take
-up his work at first under Mr. Price’s own eye before being entrusted
-with the final appointment at a distance. Joseph and Teresa were each
-occupied in trying to hold an evening paper still enough in the dim
-light to read the last news of a riot that had broken out in the
-Midlands over a labour dispute. They had hardly deciphered more than a
-few lines when the train wriggled itself to a standstill, and Mr. Fisk
-junior jumped into the carriage. He threw himself down in a corner and
-took some papers from his pocket and then recognised his companions.
-“How do you do?” said Teresa. “I don’t think you can see anything by
-this lamp. We were trying to read a paper, but it is no good.”
-
-“How d’ you do, Fisk?” said Joseph. “Been playing golf down here?”
-
-“No,” said Mr. Fisk, frowning. “What I have been doing is a game to some
-but deadly earnest to others. If it ends in bloodshed the responsibility
-will lie with those who treated it as a game.” He settled himself into
-his corner and glared at Teresa.
-
-“Kait sairysly, though, Fisk, what d’ you think of this?” Joseph asked,
-tapping his paper. “D’ you think it’ll come t’ anything, what?”
-
-“It has come to something already,” said Fisk, “as you will find if you
-study your newspaper. And it will come to something that you have not
-yet experienced, the search for a crust of bread by those who have
-treated the misery of their fellow-creatures as a game.”
-
-“Yes, but you know, that won’t do any good,” said Joseph. “Somebody’s
-got t’ hold the purse, or the money’s bound to get lost. That’s been
-gone into pretty thoroughly. You and I can’t decide the thing ’n a
-railway carriage, like this. Now I’ll tell you a thing ’s an instance.
-My father, the other day, was thinking of buying a big place—since
-you’ve turned us out—” he added politely to Teresa, “and I said t’ him,
-‘Don’t. I don’t want the thing. In a year or two’s time we shan’t have a
-soul left t’ talk to. All the f’llers we know will be in trade or
-driving their own engines and so on, and the people at the top will be
-the sort that nobody c’n ask out and all that. ’T’s abs’lutely not
-done,’ I said, ‘’t’s played out.’ Th’ only thing t’ do now, ’f you want
-to be in it, is t’ cover yourself with grease and get up at th’ most
-ungodly hours. Th’ old aristocracy won’t look at you if you offer them a
-really decent dinner. At my club th’ other day, I met a f’ller ordering
-tripe and onions; ’t’s a fact.”
-
-“Oh, don’t be so stupid,” said Teresa angrily. “You can’t always go on
-shifting from one branch to another as soon as anyone else sits down on
-yours. All people want is to be let alone to do anything they are able
-to do, and it is snobbery like yours that makes it impossible.”
-
-“No, no, really, I assure you,” Joseph protested. “That’s not Fisk’s
-idea, I’m sure, is it?” He appealed to the indignant spectacled form
-opposite. “What? I heard about you th’ other day, you know. I was down
-canv’ssing your way for my father and turned up ’t your house. Your
-father gave us his vote—’t’s a fact, abs’lutely—because he said he was
-f’d up with socialism. ‘My son’s one of them,’ he said, ‘and he won’t
-work, and he objects t’ me and my wife working.’ Now there’s snobb’ry
-for you ’f you like, I think, what? I’m willing t’ associate with people
-who won’t associate with themselves. What are you t’ do?”
-
-“My father knows nothing about economic questions,” said Fisk, with
-dignity. “He has been ground down to the level he is at now, but he has
-never been below into the pit from which a class must either become
-submerged or rise above the one that is holding it down. They may rise
-through blood——”
-
-“Oh, do stop, Mr. Fisk,” Teresa implored him, “I believe England got on
-a lot better when people only argued at elections and went on with
-things in between. But look here. Will you tell me what you get paid for
-stopping people working and I will find you something to do where you
-shall get the same for being of some use. I have promised to find
-someone who will give their whole time to doing properly what I did so
-badly in scraps for Miss Gainsborough. You have had an education which I
-haven’t, and you have much longer legs——”
-
-“No, pardon me, I don’t approve of palliative methods,” said Mr. Fisk.
-
-“Well, you won’t argue any more till we get out, will you?” asked
-Teresa. “How are the dormice?”
-
-He launched into the subject with enthusiasm. He forsaw a great future
-for dormice in the field of knowledge when their habits had been studied
-more. After he got out at the next station Joseph remarked:
-
-“Kerious sort of f’ller, isn’t he? Typical of a kind that’s dying out, I
-b’lieve. In a year or two you’ll find that sort of thing’ll hardly be
-done at all. Abs’lutely the latest thing already is t’ work at something
-and it’ll come in, you’ll find, and then everybody’ll want to do it for
-a bit. Fisk’ll be as jealous as poss’ble when he finds someone else has
-collared his little shovel and his paint pot and all that, and that
-there isn’t any loose money about to pay him for talking. It’s a very
-kerious thing how ’n idea gets out ’f date. I don’t know if you’re
-interested in morals and all that?”
-
-“Go on,” said Teresa, “I shall be grateful if you will make me really
-cross with you.”
-
-“How’s that?” inquired Joseph.
-
-“It is like a sneeze that won’t come off—but never mind; you have worked
-me up into an explosion sometimes. What were you going to say?”
-
-“I said I didn’t know if you are int’rested in morals; because I b’lieve
-very strongly that illicit love affairs and all that sort ’f thing’s
-going t’ be frightfully stale, what? Don’t you think so? Of course it’ll
-go on happ’ning; you can’t prevent it; but people will have t’ run the
-risk of being thought middle class. I’m fairf’lly bored with th’ idea of
-sex, myself, aren’t you?”
-
-“No, I must say I am glad there are two,” said Teresa. “But then I am
-‘fairf’lly bored,’ as you call it, with the idea of anything being
-‘middle class.’ Perhaps that is newer still. I hope not for your sake.
-However, in the meantime I am ever so grateful for what you have done
-for Evan. My sister is so happy about having him back and that he is
-going to do something he will like so awfully. I hope it won’t bore your
-father, having him there.”
-
-“Oh no, my father’s never bored,” said Joseph. “That’s really th’ thing
-about him that bores me sometimes, ’f you know what I mean.”
-
-The train stopped for the last time and Teresa got out into the
-brightly-lit station. Outside it there was semi-darkness, and the
-mud dripping imperceptibly. Along the slimy pavements three or four
-of the little boys to whom she had ladled out hot-pot and plum
-pudding ran to and fro, shouting the latest news. “—’clock
-‘Echo’—special edi—shun! six-o’clock—‘Echo’—’clock—edi—shun!
-‘Echo’—riots—in—Blankshire—forty-seven—persons—injured!
-‘Echo’—edi—shun—serious-rioting—in Midland—town—forty-seven—’ere you
-are, sir.—’clock—‘Echo’——” and away he sped. “I wonder if he has got
-any awfulness buttoned into his waistcoat for Grannie to-night,”
-thought Teresa, “or whether she died——. Shall I ever be able to
-stand knowing that ‘Grannie’ and the waistcoat are there and I am
-with David, and not doing anything?”
-
-“I met Joseph Price to-day,” she said to her father when she got home.
-“He has really been very good about Evan. I believe he invented the
-whole idea himself. Mr. Price seems suspicious about it and wants to
-have Evan at the works here first, to make sure that he is all right.
-David says he is quite sure that he is in fact what is wanted, and there
-won’t be any difficulty, as he keeps on saying, but how Joseph knew, or
-why he took the trouble, I can’t imagine. He is such an absolute ass and
-yet he seems to pick up ideas and he makes the old man do just what he
-likes. He is also the greatest snob and time-server, and yet he will do
-anything or go anywhere for anybody for no reason. Fisk was in the
-train, raving about blood as usual, and Joseph said he was going to ask
-him to stay for a week-end and meet some of the people who are coming
-down about the election. Joseph will sit there quite undisturbed by his
-family and get any amount of amusement out of the fluttering in the
-dovecot there will be, and Lady Varens says that Mrs. Lake—the select
-Mrs. Lake—thinks he would make a nice son-in-law. She thought that he
-liked Lady Angela Brackenbury who started the inn, the Star and Garter.
-They wanted to have the Duke’s Star and Garter framed as a sign outside.
-I am getting so muddled with them all. I couldn’t go and live there if
-it weren’t for David. Joseph told me he was bored with sex, so I
-suppose, as he can’t find anything newer than a woman to marry, it won’t
-be either of them and the Price money will have to go to anyone who
-marries the girls after Joseph has lolled about on it enough. It is
-distracting to ravel out.”
-
-“You’ve got an abnormal love of the social order,” said Cyril. “You’d
-much better leave it alone and concentrate on your man. He’ll repay it
-with far more gratitude.”
-
-“I don’t want gratitude,” she said. “It is just the Lady Bountiful idea
-that has annoyed me from the beginning. I want to feel one of a colossal
-family, that’s all; not to be the housekeeper in the store cupboard or a
-cow being milked.”
-
-“Then you must put up with poor relations, and they’re always a damned
-nuisance,” said Cyril. “Your mother had a great love of humanity, she
-said, but her idea was more to be the head of a family of her own than
-to be mixed up in a general one. Gad! she used to rope them in, too! I
-never saw anything like it. And nothing about it of a grosser nature,
-like your friend Joseph. All pure, unadulterated love. It’s a wonderful
-gift.” He was lost in retrospect.
-
-“Where have you wandered off to?” she asked in perplexity. “Mother had
-only two of us and you said once that she wasn’t in love with you. I
-have thought over that sometimes, and I think you must be wrong. I don’t
-mean to say you oughtn’t to have said it, because I don’t want nasty
-things covered up; I want them not to happen. But you were probably
-talking to the gallery that time, weren’t you? People forget. Evan
-forgot a lot of things that Chips remembered afterwards.”
-
-“I wasn’t thinking about anything at all nasty,” Cyril replied. “There’s
-nothing wrong with the instinct of the nesting season, and the number of
-eggs laid has nothing to do with it. The selection of a mate has also
-been sung by poets, so I have every right to use the comparison without
-being blamed by you. Chips is another of you loving ladies,” he went on.
-“That makes three of you. What a trio for one man to keep under the same
-roof! No wonder that I give way sometimes.”
-
-“Chips loves the sun, with people thrown in as something that hatches
-out under it, I think,” said Teresa. “There’s not much actual family
-about it—though Ivor—goodness! You talk of birds! That is nothing to
-her. Do you know, I think she imagined she had hatched out the whole of
-creation at once when Ivor was born. And now she lives in him in a way,
-and doesn’t mind how independent he is. She never wants to hold on to
-him or push him this way or that, like some mothers do. She forgets so
-easily what other people think, so long as they don’t make obstacles and
-set them up in front of her.”
-
-“I daresay,” said Cyril. “Your sex amuse me very much, and I am very
-fond of a great many of you. But I wish you didn’t all think so much. It
-keeps one for ever tripping about for fear of disturbing a valued plan.
-That’s a thing I detested during the war, having to make arrangements.
-You see a thing to do and you do it or don’t. That’s the only reasonable
-way.”
-
-About a fortnight later Evangeline went to London to meet Evan. They
-were to stay there for a few days while he went to see Mr. Price’s
-engineering works. They were then to take rooms in Millport until after
-Teresa’s wedding, and make arrangements for the future. There was not
-much money to spare for the moment, and Susie had urged Evangeline to
-economise by staying with them until Evan began to receive his new
-income. But the sisters decided between themselves that the suggestion
-held too many risks. “He does so hate being looked at,” Evangeline had
-said, at the conclusion of her remarks on the subject in Teresa’s
-bedroom one night.
-
-“There is too much of what Father calls ‘damned noticing’ in this
-family, isn’t there?” said Teresa. “And yet Mother never tells you she
-has seen anything; she only points out what someone else has seen. And
-Father never seems to see anything unless you ask him, and I don’t spy
-round, but still I understand. I should hate not to be away with David.
-I am so glad we are going away into another continent before we end up
-among neighbours.”
-
-“But this isn’t a honeymoon, so it ought not to matter,” said
-Evangeline. “But I know you will all look so nervous if we disagree, and
-since the Vachell episode I feel that Evan will suspect the devil in
-every female eye he sees for a long time.”
-
-“Mrs. Vachell is the only person I know from whom I feel absolutely cut
-off,” said Teresa. “I don’t mean since the episode, but always. You and
-I have thought she wasn’t human, but that is not true. She is fond—I
-mean fond really—of that little Vachell. He fainted one day at his
-lecture and was brought home in a cab; I don’t know if I ever told you;
-and I happened to be there. She didn’t say anything hardly, but you
-can’t mistake. That is all I know about her. I think from something she
-said once that her father ill-treated her mother, but I am not sure. If
-you had left Evan I have an idea she would have carried the
-luggage—taken the blame and all that—and you would have kept Ivor even
-if she had to seduce Evan and all the jury, so if you come to
-principles——! She would have been burnt in the Middle Ages and Evan
-would have burnt her and been burnt himself. Isn’t it a mercy there is
-nothing worse than Fisk to make opinions unpleasant in this country.”
-The hour was very late and honest Robert’s footsteps could be heard
-coming down the street. “Certainly not; certainly not,” they said. But
-neither Teresa nor Evangeline was aware of him. “But I don’t know her in
-the very least,” Teresa added.
-
-“I was a fool,” said Evangeline, reflecting. “As if it mattered!”
-
-“As if what mattered?”
-
-“Whether Evan understood either her or me. Things come out in the wash.
-But it would be nice to live with someone whom one could say just
-anything to, instead of only being in love with them, wouldn’t it? But I
-suppose that hardly ever happens.”
-
-Teresa didn’t answer.
-
-A day arrived when Evangeline stood waiting for the train that was to
-bring Evan. She was shivering and impatient, like a swimmer about to
-dive on a rough day; anticipating the joy of achievement and the thrill
-after stale security, but aware also of what would happen if she failed.
-The noise of the station was deafening; other trains came in,
-discharging crowds that pushed past her in their search for relatives
-and luggage. An engine let off steam close behind her and then thudded
-and puffed interminably, it seemed, until the noise added to her
-nervousness and the smell of smoke and the pushing of unlovely strangers
-gave her an utter revulsion against the thought of contending with
-Evan’s sunlessness. She forgot everything except the weariness of
-contention. All of a sudden the platform was magically clear except for
-a line of porters drawn up at intervals along it. The engine was still
-screeching somewhere near and now a second one appeared before her in a
-rush of smoke and noise. The powerful movement of the axle, bringing the
-inexorable moment, was the only thing she noticed, and then she was
-fairly in the crowd, trying to remember what Evan looked like. She
-caught sight of him at last, standing a little apart, with a drawn,
-chilly expression of disappointment. She ran up to him, pushing porters
-and passengers out of her way and caught his arm. “Here——” she said
-breathlessly, “I’m here—I couldn’t find you for ages.” He smiled, and
-she began to feel less at the mercy of events. He said something not
-very distinctly, that was drowned in a blast from the engine. She made a
-sign to him to look for his luggage, and after a time they drove away to
-the hotel. Poor Evan felt as though he had been washed ashore right into
-his own home after a shipwreck. He wanted to hear everything, to pick up
-lost threads of small events; to hear about this new job, and Teresa’s
-marriage. Evangeline found plenty to talk about over their meal, but she
-was conscious all the time of the strength of the sea and that she would
-have to swim again presently. She longed for a sunny beach and warm blue
-ripples with no danger lurking in them. She was tired with excitement,
-and all her natural distaste for effort oppressed her with a wish that
-the man she loved were in charge of the situation, and not she. She
-wanted to bask in the certainty that nothing she could say would matter,
-and yet she knew that his face might cloud at any moment and become
-chilled by a chance slip of her speech.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The story ends at the Fultons’ house a few weeks after this. Luncheon
-was over and Cyril had poured himself out a glass of port and pushed the
-decanter towards Evan. The Hattons were to leave Millport in ten days
-after Teresa’s wedding and move into their new home. Even Mr. Price was
-satisfied that there was no hanky-panky about the appointment his son
-had made, and Evan’s prospects were bright. He and Evangeline had been
-to lunch and the children were to go afterwards for a drive with Susie.
-David was also there.
-
-“Well, here’s luck,” said Cyril. “Luck to marriage and all it may mean
-to a girl. Isn’t that it, Sue?”
-
-“I will drink the health in my cup of coffee, I think, dear,” said
-Susie. “Hadn’t you better send the wine down to this end of the table?
-David may like to reply with some idea that is a little brighter.”
-
-“I am not sure that I won’t drink Mrs. Potter’s health,” said David.
-“May I, Dicky?”
-
-“Yes, do,” she said eagerly. “And you do really mean it, don’t you?”
-
-“Yes, of course I do,” he answered. “Where’s the difficulty?”
-
-“No, there isn’t any, I know,” said Teresa. The door was pushed gently
-open and Ivor came in. Nurse stood in the doorway holding young Susan.
-
-“I shall be ready in about twenty minutes,” said Susie. “I must be at
-the bank before it shuts. Would you like to walk up and down a little,
-in the garden, Nurse, and get what sun there is till the car comes?”
-
-The little party went out and Evan got up to watch them from the window.
-“How they do wrap that child up,” he observed to Evangeline. “Just look
-at the forest of shawls in that thing. I am sure it is not good for
-her.”
-
-“Oh, Evan,” she said, wincing, “please, please don’t begin over again.
-You may find the wheel of the perambulator is loose or something,” she
-added hastily, to make her request sound like a kindly joke. She opened
-the window to say something to the nurse, and Strickland, who had come
-out into the garden, intoxicated with the atmosphere of nuptial gaiety,
-was heard carolling to the baby, as she pushed the perambulator up and
-down:
-
- “It’s a—long, long trail a—winding
- Unto the—land of—my dreams——”
-
-“I always think that is so true,” said Susie with a little sigh.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Three Loving Ladies, by Mrs. Dowdall</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Three Loving Ladies</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Mrs. Dowdall</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: March 12, 2022 [eBook #67610]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE LOVING LADIES ***</div>
-
-<div class='tnotes covernote'>
-
-<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='titlepage'>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'>THREE LOVING LADIES</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>By</span></div>
- <div><span class='xlarge'>THE HON. MRS. DOWDALL</span></div>
- <div class='c002'>BOSTON AND NEW YORK</div>
- <div><span class='large'>HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY</span></div>
- <div class='c003'>1921</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='small'><em>Printed in Great Britain</em></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>TO</div>
- <div class='c003'>KATIE BURRILL</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter ph1'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>THREE LOVING LADIES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Messrs. Burridge and Co’s pantechnicons bumped
-majestically along the streets of Millport early in the
-morning. Mud seemed to be unaccountably falling
-from the sky through a close filter of smoke draped
-high above the town; for although there was no fog,
-the great stucco offices on either side of the street
-were slimy with coffee-coloured moisture, and the
-people who hurried along looked cold and slippery,
-like panic-stricken snails compelled to leave their
-shelters. The same mysterious mud oozed also
-from below the paving stones, and would continue to
-ooze long after the sun had penetrated the smoke
-filter and made the houses and the pedestrians
-comparatively dry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Millport is one of the largest cities of the empire,
-and one of the richest. I have never heard of anyone
-living there for choice, or for any reason but an
-alleged opportunity for making money. Those who
-settle there are in the habit of transplanting themselves
-at regular intervals; removing to a house
-further away from the premises to which the breadwinner
-carries a neat bag or attaché case every
-weekday morning, between eight and ten. The
-removals mark a rise in the social scale, and are
-celebrated by new responsibilities, in the addition
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>of servants, greenhouses, garages and acres of
-ground requiring “upkeep.” The heights of Elysium
-are, in the end, reached by train. Between the
-main railway station and the outskirts of wealth,
-lie nearly two miles of shops, and a professional
-quarter where the inner darkness of blocks and
-terraces shades into the dim glory of semi-detached
-houses. The next stage of grandeur is seen in the
-increase of laurel bushes and gravel paths round
-each semi-detached pair. When the flower beds
-in front, and the tennis lawns at the back, reach a
-certain standard of importance they flow into each
-other by connecting paths between the buildings,
-and each house then stands alone, detached, in the
-full radiance of encircling “grounds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was nearly ten o’clock before Messrs. Burridge’s
-stately pantechnicons reached their destination, a
-large, square, cinnamon-coloured house, standing in
-about two acres of ground on the borders of Millport’s
-largest and most satisfactory park. General
-Fulton, who had taken a five years’ lease of it,
-wondered many times what had induced him to
-leave his comfortable little house in Westminster.
-He had meant to retire from the army at the end of
-the war, and had been turning over in his mind
-many agreeable plans for the future, when he was
-offered the command of a military district of which
-Millport was the centre. In a rash moment he
-confided the offer to his wife, hoping for some entertainment
-from her habit of commenting seriously
-on matters which he regarded as trifling. To his
-surprise and disgust, she surpassed his expectation,
-and pointed out unanswerable reasons why the
-command must be accepted. She confronted him
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>with facts about his income, which had hitherto been
-sufficient. But he neither read the papers nor
-practised arithmetic, and, as she observed at the
-end of the argument, “seemed to suppose that
-girls’ clothes grew on their backs.” His reply to
-this last shot produced a silence which he knew to be
-ominous of a settled programme; he knew that he
-had thrown away his last chance by “saying something
-coarse,” and that any further excuses would
-be flung unregarded into the flame of her spiritual
-nature (a possession which is supposed by women
-who boast of it, to guarantee also a sound business
-judgment). He appealed in vain to his daughters
-Evangeline and Teresa. Evangeline said carelessly,
-“Oh, do let’s, father,” and left the room to post a
-letter. She informed the maid whom she passed on
-the stairs that, “we are all going to Millport, and
-isn’t it fun?” Teresa ran her fingers through her
-untidy hair, done up for the first time, and said,
-“If it is by the sea couldn’t we have a cottage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>General Fulton, avoiding his wife’s eye, mixed
-himself a whisky and soda. It was the only way to
-drown his bitter regret at having ever mentioned the
-appointment. “You’ll never get another house as
-nice as this,” he suggested feebly. “I’ve been to
-Millport once, and it’s a filthy place. There was
-a great black church opposite the hotel, and drunken
-old women poking stale fish about.” Teresa
-shivered, but said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t suppose those poor old women ever
-thought of drinking until they were taught by their
-husbands,” said Mrs. Fulton, glancing at the tumbler
-he held, but she added hurriedly, before he had time
-to protest, “and I believe it is perfectly necessary
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>to poke fish before you can tell whether it is fresh
-or not. You would see that kind of thing in any
-town you went to, Cyril. And, anyhow, one
-doesn’t live down there. Father and mother lived
-in Millport for years, and I know father said everyone
-lived right out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I don’t think I want the thing,” he said
-bravely. “I am not going to take it.” He gathered
-up his morning’s correspondence. “I’m out to
-lunch, Sue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mind paying some money into the bank
-for me as you go past?” she said gently. “The
-last quarter hasn’t been nearly enough. I suppose
-it is the income tax and the price of everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>General Fulton looked at her in exasperated
-admiration as she sat there, quietly warming her
-toes in front of the fire, meditative and candid;
-the typical gentle wife who patiently adds up the
-problems of life for her husband, and leaves his
-wisdom to unravel the answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why didn’t you say at the beginning that we
-were in debt?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know that we are, dear,” she said,
-looking at him in perfect innocence. “I only said
-that I couldn’t manage on what you gave me. I
-don’t know what your shares come to; it is all
-Greek to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, have it your own way, damn it,” returned
-her husband. “Perhaps you’ve inherited business
-instincts, and they always go with turpitude.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish you would think a little of the children
-sometimes,” she said, glancing at Teresa who sat
-lost in thought by the window, hearing what they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>said, and trying in vain to understand what the
-argument really meant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you want to go to Millport, Dicky?” her
-father asked kindly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” she said. “It is on the sea,
-isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s on shrimps,” he replied, “and docks—things
-that open and shut at you—and it is as black as
-night, and people walk about with bread under
-their arms. Well, good-bye, dear; your mother
-says we’re going, and she knows—she cares—God
-bless her.” He kissed Teresa affectionately, and
-left the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And so, the course of time showed Messrs.
-Burridge’s pantechnicons casting the contents of
-Cyril’s happy little home into the ornate cinnamon
-jaws of a house that he said made him think somehow
-of the late Prince Albert. “The sort of thing
-he’d have built for the head gamekeeper, Sue,” he
-remarked after lunch on their first day there. “And
-the park is the very thing for ‘interments’; you
-could see them winding all the way from end to end.
-I hope it will come up to your expectations in the
-matter of wealthy consorts for the girls; or is that
-not part of the scheme?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t like joking about marriage, Cyril, you
-know that,” she replied, “it may mean so much to a
-girl.” She sighed. She had been very beautiful
-twenty years before, and would have been so still,
-but for the fact that years of quiet enjoyment of her
-own skill in getting what she wanted, and a conscious
-superiority over people who “worried about what
-couldn’t be helped” had obliterated the delicate
-lines of her face, and given to the fleeting dimple,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>which used to be the despair and delight of her
-lovers, the coarser appearance of a crease in a satin
-cushion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It may mean something to her partner, too,
-if you come to that,” returned Cyril. “It will to
-Evangeline’s, I should think. I wouldn’t be in his
-shoes for something. She’s like you, Sue, in some
-ways; with all the naughty little point of the story
-left out. I never knew such a rough rider in the
-field of conversation. She’d never have been able to
-stuff me with the stories you did about the injury
-to your pure young mind when I kissed you. Lord!
-think of it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Fulton kept a dignified silence for a minute or
-two, and then sighed again, as if to waft away the
-possibility of looking at Nature’s beauties with a
-man who had been blind from birth. “How did
-you like the people you met to-day?” she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, some of them weren’t bad. Hatton will be
-here to breakfast. He’ll always be about the place,
-so I hope you’ll like him; he’s my A.D.C. And
-all their wives will be round soon, I suppose, to pay
-their respects. Hatton hasn’t got one I’m glad to
-say; though I daresay he’ll be as preoccupied with
-the subject as if he had. I wish I had gone into the
-Navy instead of the Army.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why?” she asked, though she knew that the
-drift of what he was going to say would be somehow
-unflattering to herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because one’s subordinates have always got a
-neat woman in lodgings somewhere, and they just
-clear off in their spare time and keep themselves
-employed until one meets them again. Their wives
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>don’t litter about the place and fight with each
-other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know how any woman can care to be a
-mere tool like that,” she replied. “It must make
-them so one-sided.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” he said, “but think of the feelings of the
-happy man who can say, ‘This little side is all for
-me,’ and knows that she has no other to give to
-one who might like to have it. Why, it would make
-life a different thing. Where are the girls, by the
-way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think they are arranging their rooms and showing
-the servants where to put things. They seem
-to be the most curious creatures that we have got;
-but it was so difficult to find well trained ones. They
-call me ‘Mrs. Fulton,’ and tell me what they have
-been accustomed to. I think I shall engage a housekeeper,
-Cyril. I do hate explaining, and these
-creatures want to argue about everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can’t the girls do it?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no; they have other things to do. Besides,
-Evangeline turns everything upside down. I had
-the greatest difficulty in getting the dining-room
-table put where I wanted it. Of course I want the
-dears to have everything as they like, but I do wish
-sometimes they would be a little more help.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well, we managed all right in the old place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but then these servants won’t do nearly so
-much,” she complained, “and they have more to do
-as it is. I must say I think it is only right that we
-should consider them more than we used to do. It
-must be so dreadful to work all day. I am sure that
-new girl Strickland would be more satisfied and likely
-to stop if you kept your room tidier, Cyril.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>Evangeline poked her head round the door.
-“Father,” she asked, “can I leave your books and
-have a lesson on the car from that magnificent Fitz-Augustus
-person of yours? He says he is going
-some messages for you, and he wouldn’t mind——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Anything you like,” said her father, “so long
-as I don’t know anything about it; you can’t drive
-without a licence. Also, if you’ll make Dicky go
-for a walk with me. I must go into the town, and
-I must have some exercise, and I won’t walk alone.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think we’ll do that business after all,” he
-said as he left the house with Teresa half an hour
-later. “It only means a small additional coolness
-to the heels of an unknown gentleman in an office.
-They’ll warm up again to-morrow, like a lodging
-house chop. You’ve never lived in lodgings have
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, never.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, never do. When I lived in lodgings and
-used to be a bit off colour in the morning I used to
-see ornaments about everywhere. I remember
-I once saw a china dog, with a basket of forget-me-nots
-in its mouth, on the Colonel’s table in the
-middle of his papers, and I’m hanged if I know to
-this day whether it was a real one or not. I could
-never make up my mind about it, though it gave
-me such a turn that I went round to the chemist
-and got something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What else,” asked Teresa. “That’s lovely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I don’t remember anything special; but
-they never clean the mustard pot in those places—that
-was another thing. They’ve no sense. And
-I never could find the matches. They’d be at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>bottom of a vase with dried grass in it, or that kind
-of thing. I think this ought to take us down to the
-docks. Would you like to see them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, awfully,” she agreed, and they walked
-some way in silence. “They are nicer houses
-down here if they weren’t so dirty, aren’t they?” she
-said presently, looking up at the windows as they
-passed along a street to which some bygone architect
-had bequeathed an indestructible dignity. Their
-restful proportions and large windows gave her a
-sudden sense of relief after the turrets and variegated
-excrescences, coloured bricks disposed in geometrical
-patterns, and twisted ironwork that adhered to
-the semi-detached quarter they had passed
-through.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said her father. “I expect all the old
-turpitudes—pious founders and all that—lived down
-here. Our place was probably a marsh or a coal
-mine or something, till the influence of the Late
-Lamented overtook it. A man I met yesterday was
-talking about slaves. They were up to all sorts of
-games down at their warehouses. The negro still
-flourishes apparently,” he added, as a group of
-black men passed them and turned down a narrow
-street, where tousled women stood at their doors,
-and children screamed in the gutter. They crossed
-over a thoroughfare at which main streets intersected
-one another, and accommodation for sailors was
-advertised by mission rooms, clubs, public-houses,
-slop shops, and reiterated offers of beds. Blocks
-of shops, shipping bureaus and warehouses split
-up further on into single gigantic buildings, the
-offices of the state and of great trading companies,
-full as beehives, and glittering with prosperity; all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>the organism of a seaport in touch with continents.
-The sea air was fresh in their faces.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s good,” said Cyril. “We’ll go and hang
-about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They went precariously down a sloping bridge,
-slippery with mud from the feet of a stream of hurrying
-workers intent on their home affairs which lay
-on the other side of the river, and stood by a line
-of iron chains that stretched indefinitely along the
-gently heaving planks of the stage to which the
-ferry boats were moored. A red sun hung above the
-chimneys on the opposite side in a slight fog that
-was creeping up the river, and, from mysterious
-shapes behind this veil, hooters, syrens and clanging
-bells answered one another in warnings to the
-capering atoms of whom the drowning of even one
-would affect, in some degree, the life of the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you know,” said Teresa presently, “that
-I haven’t seen a single person—what we used to
-call ‘person’—since we came out; nothing but
-the kind of people who make crowds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s because you don’t know them,” said
-Cyril. “I saw a millionaire get off the boat a
-minute ago, ‘walking quite unaffectedly,’ as the
-newspapers say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but the dressed people,” said Teresa, “you
-know what I mean. Where are they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear, how should I know?” he replied
-carelessly. “That’s what I tried to explain to your
-mother before we came; I thought it would put
-her off. But I shouldn’t be in the least surprised
-if she took up philanthropy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you mean that she’d go on committees?”
-Teresa asked awestruck.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>“She might quite well, and if I were the committee
-I should just tell her what I wanted done,
-and leave her to do it her own way. You’d find
-it would work out in the end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But those kind of people are generally so interfering,”
-said Teresa. “Mother is not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but she is a master of strategy,” said Cyril.
-“I used to read about Napoleon when we were
-taught strategy. Did you ever hear of his battles?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean Waterloo?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but that didn’t come off. His great success
-was before then. She may meet her Wellington on
-the playing fields of Millport for all you know. We
-shall see. Let’s go back to tea. Have a taxi?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, let’s go on the top of a tram,” said Teresa.
-“I want to have that rod thing arranged over my
-head. Did you see the conductor running round
-with a string and hooking the little wheel on at the
-back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I don’t mind,” he conceded, “but the
-smell will knock you down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What smell?” asked Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Demos, a crowd,” he replied, as they made
-their slow progress between the jostling workers
-who still poured uninterruptedly across the bridge,
-“see also ‘Demosthenes’ and ‘demon’— and
-‘demi-monde’,” he added reflectively, as a whiff
-of strong scent struck him from a girl with a sharp
-elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a fuss you make about smells and things,”
-she said. “They’re all life. They mean all sorts
-of things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, they don’t mean anything I want,” he
-grumbled. “I believe everybody in this damned
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>place wears fish next the skin.” This was said with
-profound disgust as they took their places on a
-little seat at the top of the tram staircase, and
-other swarms of people with pale, serious faces and
-drab clothing pushed past his knees to the glass
-shelter beyond. The windows became fogged with
-human breath and clouds of cheap tobacco, and as
-the sun disappeared in the drifting fog from the
-river, the mud began to filter down once more on
-to the roofs, and to ooze up from under the stones
-of the pavement. The car swayed under its heavy
-load, with occasional grinding squeals, stopping
-every few hundred yards to take up new burdens
-in place of those who had reached their destination.
-Teresa watched the squalid forms and weary faces
-with a new-born ecstasy. Some veiled desire, a
-love for something unknown, which had led her in
-pursuit for as long as she could remember, had
-stopped and shown itself to her for a moment. Then
-it fled again from her reach.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>One great source of mental nourishment that
-Evangeline relied on at this time was the Press.
-Two thirds of the things she thought about each day
-came from the newspapers, plain or illustrated, but
-not political; that is to say, not political beyond
-striking headlines and a short—very short—leading
-article. Her mind made curious pictures of these
-scraps of state information. Perhaps the best way
-of describing what she thought Parliament is, and
-does, is to imagine oneself very agile, very kind, very
-interested, perched inside the roof of an immense
-building, looking down on hundreds of elderly
-gentlemen all of one type, but some with familiar
-faces. We, from our perch, know that each of them
-has gone through a period of anxiety and expense,
-connected with loss of voice and terrible boredom
-of his supporters, who have to sit behind him on
-uncomfortable chairs and wish he would pull his
-coat down at the back before speaking. This period
-of trial has ended in an election—ribbon and scratch
-meals—and then he got a “seat” here on something or other
-benches (Evangeline had been at school,
-but she wasn’t in the serious lot, at least, not the
-brainy serious. Her set used only to discuss things
-like immortality when they felt really friendly.)
-Once on these “benches” men become political,
-and lose considerably in spiritual value, except when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>they call out the army and navy. Otherwise they
-spend their time henceforth in committing blunders
-(the meat blunder, the wool blunder, the tax blunder,
-the housing blunder, etc.), to the perpetual inconvenience
-of the public, until something happens
-to the Cabinet and a lot of well-known people who
-were IN become OUT, and it makes no difference
-at all, except as a frail raft for the drowning in
-conversation. But the rest of the paper is worth
-reading; there are things to interest everybody.
-The eccentric behaviour of criminals, landladies
-and leaders of society; adventures, and reports of
-shipwrecks and calves with two tails. On the last
-page there is often expert advice on physical fitness
-and the complexion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On the morning following Teresa’s walk to the
-docks with her father Evangeline began to try the
-effects of the juice of an orange accompanied by
-half an hour’s deep breathing before breakfast. She
-had walked and deep breathed in the park, and
-returned full of exhilaration from the sight of the
-dewy grass, young tulips pushing through the
-heavy dun soil and the song of birds in smoke-laden
-trees and bushes that were budding as irrepressibly
-as herself. She stood on the edge of a pond and
-watched the ducks performing an ecstatic toilet.
-Their guttural sounds of pleasure and the grinding
-of distant tram wheels were the only sounds besides
-the chorus of chirping. The only people she met
-were a policeman on one side of the pond, and a
-dressmaker’s assistant on the other, and she felt
-that God was the friend of both as of the ducks and
-the Spring; they were not at all in the way. When
-she arrived at home a man in military uniform was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>standing on the doorstep. He was young and had
-the face of a reformer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good morning,” she said. “Are you coming
-in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Please,” he answered gravely, and said no more,
-while she fitted her latchkey. She led the way into
-the dining-room, where breakfast was laid, and
-looked vaguely round.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shall I tell my father you’re here?” she asked
-hesitatingly, and then, with sudden uncontrollable
-interest, “Are you the man that hasn’t got a
-wife?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He started and frowned. He was embarrassed,
-and felt that the question was not one that should
-have been asked by a stranger. “No, I am not
-married,” he snapped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is your name Hatton?” she asked next.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, then Father told us about you. Do you
-want to see him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very much,” said Captain Hatton with
-emphasis.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll fetch him,” she said, “but do sit down
-and be comfortable.” She went out and called,
-“Father! Father!” at the bottom of the stairs.
-“Father! Oh, drat him! I believe he is still in
-the bath.” Captain Hatton, erect on the hearthrug
-in front of the door she had left open, heard,
-and winced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dick—y! Dick—y!” she called next.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, do come up, Chips, if you want anything,”
-he heard a small weary voice say upstairs. “Father
-is in the bath; he’ll be out directly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well tell him to hurry up; it’s Captain Hatton,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>said Evangeline, and she plunged back into the
-dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid my watch must be all wrong,”
-he said, as he glanced round the room in hope
-of moral support from an accusing clock. “I
-thought General Fulton said breakfast at half-past
-eight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So it is,” said Evangeline. “It is only twenty
-minutes to nine now. Father won’t get up if he
-has an interesting post. What time do you get
-up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh—er—a quarter to seven usually,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A quarter to——? Gracious! Do you mean
-in the very middle of a minute like that? It seems
-just as if you said ‘up goes the hand of my watch,
-down goes my leg on the floor.’ I couldn’t do that.
-I have to yawn a long time first and then get out
-by degrees till it gets too cold not to do something
-about it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There was silence. Evangeline felt depressed.
-All her gladness in the awakening spring had gone.
-“Would you like to look at the paper?” she asked
-with a sigh. He said, “Thank you,” but as he
-stretched out his hand to take it from her he saw
-that it was not <cite>Country Life</cite>, but a lady’s paper.
-Doll-like faces with no noses, shameless trousseaux,
-ridiculous young men in black, scent bottles and
-wigs met his eye on the open page.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Er—thanks very much,” he said, “I think I’ll
-wait for the morning paper. What time do you
-get it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I expect it has come,” said Evangeline. “The
-boy generally flings it in at the kitchen window.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>She rang the bell. “Breakfast, please, Strickland,
-and the paper if it has come,” she ordered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was waiting till Mrs. Fulton came down,”
-said the maid severely. Evangeline sighed again.
-“How obstructive everyone is this morning,” she
-thought, but said aloud, “No, we’ll begin please,
-and anyhow I want the paper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But neither came and the silence grew heavier.
-She wanted to rush out of the room; she knew that
-her hair was untidy and two of her finger nails were
-grubby owing to having restored a strayed worm
-to what she thought a safe place on the bank of
-the pond, where a duck had eaten him at once to
-her disgust. But she could not move from the
-sofa where she had taken refuge with her rejected
-paper. The barrier of Captain Hatton’s eye
-stretched between her and the door and she felt
-that it might touch her as she ran past; if it did
-she would have to scream. Suddenly—“A—tish—u!”—a
-fearful explosion. Captain Hatton had
-sneezed. There was a dead silence while Evangeline
-held her breath and dared not look. Then again
-the awful sound; and again; eight times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg your pardon,” he said when all was quiet
-again. “Extraordinary how these attacks come
-on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The great friendly creature cheered up at once
-on this crumb of encouragement. “I like sneezing,”
-she said. “It almost takes the place of
-swearing. You feel better and no harm done to
-anybody.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah—h’m,” he agreed without enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There’s Mother coming,” she said thankfully
-as a gentle rustle was heard in the passage. Susie
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>came in in a soft breakfast gown that avoided
-conclusions with her figure. Her hair was beautifully
-done and her face delicately cared for. Captain
-Hatton, though he approved of her evidently
-careful toilet, took a vague dislike to her because
-it had not been carried through at the specified
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am so sorry my husband is late,” she murmured,
-“I am afraid we got into bad habits in
-London. Everything is so late there and the
-morning is really the loveliest time, isn’t it? I
-remember once being out at six to catch a train
-and the birds were simply delightful. Do you sing
-at all?” she inquired, her eyes brimming with
-sympathetic interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do occasionally,” he admitted, heartily
-wishing that his chief would come and relieve him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hope we shall often hear you,” said Mrs.
-Fulton. “I always think music is such a happy
-thing. Evangeline dear, ring the bell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have rung twice,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Servants are very unpunctual as a race,” Mrs.
-Fulton observed. “I wish they would get up
-earlier, but I daresay they are often tired like we
-are.” Strickland came in with the hot dishes.
-“We shall want some more toast, I think, Strickland.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The fire’s not hot enough,” answered the maid.
-“The cook was late this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then just run up and make a little at the gas
-fire in the General’s dressing-room,” Susie ordered.
-“Will you help yourself, Captain Hatton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A few minutes later Cyril entered hurriedly in
-his dressing-gown. “I say, Sue, what the devil—hullo,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>Hatton, that you?—what the devil did you
-send that woman to make toast in my room for?
-I’d nothing but——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Cyril dear, never mind,” his wife interrupted.
-“The kitchen fire wasn’t quite ready; she won’t
-be a minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I can’t go back to dress now,” he complained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It will teach us to be more punctual to-morrow,”
-said Mrs. Fulton. “We must set them a good
-example. Dicky ought to be down too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa came in quietly and shut the door without
-looking at anyone. She was flushed and seemed
-preoccupied and had evidently forgotten Evangeline’s
-announcement of a guest. “My hair
-refuses to go up,” she began, turning straight to
-the sideboard. “I shall do it like some women I
-saw yesterday. The front was all in tiny plaits
-and the back—well, it wasn’t hairdressing, it was
-plumbing. You’ve been pretty hearty with the
-kedgeree, haven’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dicky, darling, I don’t think you have seen
-Captain Hatton,” her mother suggested. Teresa
-turned unconcernedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sorry,” she apologised. “How do you
-do? I remember my sister did tell me you were
-here, but I happened to be thinking at the time
-and I forgot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Please don’t bother,” he said. He was recovering
-his temper under the influence of breakfast
-and the sense of safety that his host brought.
-“You’ll see so much of me, I’m afraid, that I’d
-rather you did not notice it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t hope for that, Hatton,” put in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>General. “They’ll see everything you do. It’s
-a damned noticing family; except Evangeline and
-she’ll fall over you in the dark every time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Captain Hatton looked embarrassed and changed
-the subject. “Are you going to like being here,
-do you think?” he asked Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I think so,” she replied. “Of course it is
-quite different from London, but there must be
-some nice people. Do you know many people
-here yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have got some friends who live a few miles
-out,” he said. “I have stayed with them for
-hunting, but I’ve been out of England for the
-last three years. We were sent to Germany after
-the armistice and I came back to go into
-hospital.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear me, those hospitals!” she sighed.
-“Shall I ever forget them! I couldn’t do any
-actual nursing, of course, though I should have
-loved it; but I don’t think it was right the way
-women left their children. But I used to visit
-the poor boys and wash up. I get such touching
-letters from them even now. Do you remember
-young Digby, Cyril?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I don’t, but I could make a fair guess at
-him. You forget that I was in my little wooden
-hut at the time and couldn’t leave it even for you.
-I wonder if that beastly woman is out of my room.
-Dicky—oblige your father. Go and see if she is
-there, will you? I want to get dressed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She is making toast, dear,” Mrs. Fulton explained.
-“You might ask her for it; she won’t
-hear the bell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa went out and met Strickland in the passage.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>She was dusting the hall. “Can we have the toast,
-please?” Teresa asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It isn’t made,” Strickland replied coldly. “I
-couldn’t be spoken to like that. I shall leave at
-the end of the month. I’m not accustomed to be
-blasted.” Teresa touched her on the shoulder.
-“Never mind Father,” she said. “We none of
-us do. He’s most affectionate really. Forget the
-toast; I’ll tell them.” She went back into the
-dining-room and shut the door. Mrs. Fulton was
-offering dainty morsels of sentiment about hospitals
-to Captain Hatton, who disposed of them one by
-one with the indifference a sea lion shows about the
-quality of the fish thrown into its mouth. Teresa
-sat down by her father and said in a low voice,
-“You mustn’t swear at the maids, you know.
-Strickland is very angry and was going to go, but
-I told her you are all right. I don’t know if she
-will recover, but you must remember that you
-don’t have the trouble of going to registry offices.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What an eternal curse women’s feelings are,”
-he grumbled as he pulled out a cigarette case. “I
-believe they grow fat on them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But then, you see, your men have none at all,”
-she explained, “which is as bad the other way,
-because you can’t make them hear except by
-blasting and all those kinds of words that mean
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But they do mean something,” argued her
-aggrieved father. “They mean, ‘You’ve damn
-well got to do it and look sharp.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but if you say to a woman, ‘Be quick,
-Pansy dear,’ she does it just as well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril roared with laughter. “Here, Hatton,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>he said, “do you know what you’ve got to say
-to the mess sergeant the next time he keeps you
-waiting? ‘Be quick, Pansy dear!’ Will you try
-it first or shall I?” Captain Hatton laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is Dicky saying?” asked Mrs. Fulton
-indulgently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Explaining the art of commanding those of
-unripe station,” said the General. “Come on to
-my room, Hatton, and I’ll leave you there while
-I get some clothes on—if they’re not all over toast
-and tears,” he added resentfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good heavens! What a man!” Evangeline
-exclaimed when the door shut behind them. “He’s
-like an umbrella.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I think he’s charming,” said her mother.
-“So much tact, and most interesting, I should
-think, when one gets to know him. Ring the bell,
-Dicky dear, and when she comes to clear away
-tell her I shall be in my sitting-room if she wants
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are we going to do with ourselves every
-day in this place, Chips?” Teresa asked her sister
-when they were alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, what we have done before, I suppose,”
-Evangeline answered carelessly. She was reading
-the paper that had come too late to save Captain
-Hatton’s temper. The Labour Party, she read,
-were determined to do something which she did not
-understand, but which foreboded discomfort to
-everybody including their own supporters. They
-seemed to do it on purpose, like schoolmistresses, for
-some end which no reasonable young person desires,
-even if it could be achieved. Who exactly were the
-Labour party she wondered? The paper showed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>their photographs; clumsy figures in impossible
-hats, with impossible wives whose barren heads
-contrasted grotesquely with the hairiness of their
-men’s faces. She looked over the page. An officer,
-recently demobilised, had committed suicide owing
-to the difficulty of maintaining a blue-eyed child,
-whose portrait was inset below his own. The
-“night life” of a great city was said to be “glittering
-with unprecedented extravagance!” A
-millionaire had made a unique will at a place she
-had never heard of, providing for the purchase of
-fifty elephants, which were to be presented to the
-Corporation, and supported by public funds for the
-employment of superannuated keepers.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you forget that I haven’t done anything
-except go to classes,” pursued Teresa. “I am
-supposed to be ‘out’ now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Jolly lucky for you,” remarked her sister.
-“There was no coming out in my time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t see much difference,” said Teresa,
-“except that you brought your own food to parties
-and didn’t wear such low necks. But anyhow,
-what I meant was that the war is over, and we’re
-in a new place and we’ve got some maids, and what
-is the next?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” Evangeline answered slowly.
-“There are days when I want to burst—you know—with
-a pop, in the sun on a still day—like that,
-(she waved her hands) and then I should become
-something quite different. I should be full of ideas.
-I don’t know what they would be but that is the
-exciting part.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“This is a very dirty town,” Teresa said, as she
-stood at the window. “I haven’t seen any people
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>yet who looked as if they liked what they were
-doing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline’s eager interest had faded. “Haven’t
-you?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, and I don’t know what Mother will do with
-herself, either. I suppose there must be some
-ordinary ones. She’s a social success, isn’t she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In a way——” Evangeline hesitated. “She’s
-not like an American mother in those ways, but if
-you notice you’ll find that you never can stop anything
-happening as she wants it to. I believe she
-conjures. She seems to sit down by a hat and take
-no notice of it, and then there’s an omelet in it.
-If Father doesn’t want the omelet, or we don’t, she
-says she hasn’t made it, and I spend my life trying
-to find out whether she has or not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well that hasn’t much to do with what I was
-saying,” her sister continued. “We shall drift
-here if we don’t look out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Drift?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you know—I shall arrange the flowers, and
-you will play endless games and go to things and
-perhaps ‘take up’ something, and I shall shop and
-be polite to visitors, and I really don’t want to do
-anything else. I am not energetic, and I should
-love to live in a cottage. But everything is so
-hideous here, and those smells and awful faces
-make me sort of drunk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear!” Evangeline sympathised with little
-understanding.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Everyone has always made me feel a little
-drunk,” Teresa went on. “They say such stupid
-things; sit there gibbering and drinking tea, and
-yet all the people in history—anyone—Nebuchadnezzar
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>or Cleopatra or Anne Boleyn—were in society,
-and all sorts of real things happened to them; they
-didn’t ask for it. And I believe just as much could
-happen to the silly people who pay calls. I often
-understand eating grass and letting one’s nails
-grow.” She paused. “And those people who are
-poor—they must know a lot. I want to know what
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is like my wanting to burst, perhaps,” said
-Evangeline. “Except that I don’t want to know
-all about those horrors. I hated all that in the war,
-though, of course, it was so exciting being useful
-that one forgot the mess. I should like to be in a
-dangerous country with a lovely climate, and live
-with a man who had read everything there is.
-We should ride all day, and perhaps have some
-children who wouldn’t want clothes or governesses
-nor have diseases.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Like a cinema,” commented Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, rather. I always get so angry with the
-film girl who is left in a log cabin with a perfectly
-beautiful savage who leaves her the room to herself
-out of chivalry and sleeps in the stable and does all
-he can for her, and then the silly ass crawls screaming
-round the walls, and wants to go back to some odious
-young man in the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the city man would be much more likely
-to have read everything,” her sister pointed out.
-“Your savage wouldn’t know any more than you
-do, which isn’t saying much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I know,” she admitted with a sigh. “I
-don’t know what I want; perhaps both of them for
-different days; wet Sundays to spend with the
-young man who reads, and the other days, when
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>it is sunny, to gallop about with the dangerous
-one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I believe there is more in it than that,” said
-Teresa, “and meantime I am going to study Strickland.
-I have an idea she can tell me the things
-I want to know. I had better find her, by the way,
-and give her Mother’s message. I don’t think she
-takes much interest in bells.” She left Evangeline
-to speculate on life as digested for her by the newspaper,
-and went herself in search of the woman who,
-she felt, held some clue to the pursuit of her desire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At the end of a week she recalled her sister’s
-inspired description of their mother’s behaviour.
-Susie had, it seemed, by some unobservable process,
-evolved a spiritual omelet out of the most unpromising
-material among the people who called on
-her. Most of them belonged to what Strickland,
-who had begun to unbend towards Teresa, assured
-her were “some of our leading families.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Manleys are very well known,” she said.
-“Old Mr. Manley did a great deal of good, and was
-very well thought of all over the town. My grandfather
-used to work for him, and he always said he
-never wished to have a better master. I don’t
-know so much about the young ones. My sister lived
-with Mrs. James Manley, and I can’t say she enjoyed
-it. Everything was very near, and she left because
-she got run down with the work. But Mrs. Eric
-Manley, that called to-day, is well enough spoken
-of, though I don’t think much of her myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,—Mrs. Carpenter,” she said, another day,
-when she was turning down Teresa’s bed. “I’m
-glad you mentioned her. She’s another of the sort
-I was telling you about. They’re well enough in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>public I suppose, but those who have to do with
-them when they get back know who are the real
-ladies and gentlemen. Now you’ll hear a great deal,
-I daresay, about Mrs. Carpenter, and how she goes
-about here and there and all she does, but I wouldn’t
-be the matron of some of those homes she goes to—no,
-I wouldn’t for all the money you could give me;
-and I wouldn’t be one of the inmates, either, with
-all the advice she gives, and she who doesn’t know
-what it is to have one child left on her hands for a
-day, let alone six or eight. I don’t say she doesn’t
-go about here and there, and so she should, for she’s
-the time and the money, but I don’t think it’s right
-for servants to be kept up till all hours washing
-dishes for those who study the poor, and up again
-next morning to light the fires in time for ladies to
-warm themselves while they telephone for the best
-of everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Teresa, looking into the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ll say I’m a socialist, perhaps, Miss,”
-Strickland added, as she was going to leave the
-room, “but it isn’t that. I know we can’t all do
-alike, and I don’t mind the General, if you’ll excuse
-me, now I’ve got used to his language. He’s very
-thoughtful in some ways, and it seems a man’s place
-to mess things about. But when I took in the tea,
-and heard Mrs. Carpenter going on at such a rate,
-and Mrs. Manley, too, I felt like speaking out when
-you mentioned her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How you do gossip with the servants, dear
-Dicky,” said Susie, who had heard the last word
-on her way to her bedroom, and called to Teresa to
-help her to fasten her dress. “I never think it is
-a wise plan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>Teresa said nothing. Although she always
-received her mother’s remarks with respectful
-affection, due to the fact that Susie never appeared
-cross and everything she said was incontrovertible,
-yet very little that was not a definitely expressed
-wish penetrated her thoughts. “If Mother wants
-anything done, of course we do it,” was the understanding
-between her and Evangeline, but they
-respected her power as a conjuror, rather than her
-wisdom as a prophet. Susie’s power over men had
-been great in her youth, and she had had much
-influence in the lives of women, but no one had ever
-counted her as friend or enemy. She had been an
-article of faith to some, of admiration, of liking, of
-amusement or indefinite irritation to others, but
-only her children in their nursery days had ever
-looked to her as a help in time of trouble. Her
-conjuring ability had been invaluable in the nursery
-and schoolroom. Her presence would always turn
-a crime into a bubble, and the indignant nurse or
-governess was compelled to see her rod break out
-into the delicate blossom of divine forgiveness under
-her outraged eyes. The impression of this gentleness
-remained with the girls when they grew up;
-but that was all. They might search the corners of
-the wonder-box where their recollections of her were
-stored, and find nothing that they could put together
-and call a mother.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa had been surprised that day by Susie’s
-immediate success with the women who had called.
-It is true that they had come prepared to like the
-Fultons, but they were in no way committed;
-and such all-embracing eagerness to love as Evangeline
-showed to strangers was against their traditions.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>It is one of the customs of Millport before paying a
-call to consider first the reasons for the newcomers’
-arrival. A well paid appointment gives them a
-good start, whereas an indefinite purpose would be
-thought suspicious. Second to be considered is
-their pedigree. If they can be traced to some
-source called “good connections” another point is
-scored in their favour. A good income comes
-third, and, provided the rest is satisfactory, adds
-greatly to their favourable chances, but this item
-is not so essential as it used to be. People who are
-not at all nice are often rich at the present time,
-and even furs have to be more carefully chosen
-than in the past, for fear they may be the outcome
-of too recent enterprise. But the thing that tells
-in the long run is “views.” The Provinces have
-collective “views” in a way that would be impossible
-in London. You must either think with
-the city or carry the city with you. To live in
-opposition to it you must be either a hermit or a
-fanatic; cease to love your neighbour or lose your
-reason. The apostle of a different creed from that of
-the city can carry the people with him some distance
-towards any end—the best or the worst—provided
-he uses the old ritual cunningly; but wolves and
-doves alike must be dressed in sheep’s clothing, or
-out they go.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“None of that, now, with those feathers,” the
-city says to the intruding dove. “I know you’re
-not a wolf. You don’t need to tell me what I can see.
-But you’ve got a beak, and I wouldn’t put it past
-you to get pecking at my legs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But they received Susie at once with open arms.
-She came from London, which is always nice; her
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>parents had been born in Millport of absolutely
-pure wool stock, her husband had inherited money
-from a good old lady before the war, and Susie had
-only to appear in her own spotless fleece of nice
-feeling upon every subject—especially wine—for
-them to cluster round her with acclamations and
-summon their kind from the most distant parts of the
-county.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Miss Archer, reporter for the <cite>Millport News</cite>, stood
-just inside the first reception-room at the Town
-Hall. There was a suite of rooms, leading one into
-the other, showing a vista of hats and baldish heads
-and faces of all sorts wedged together in packs or
-moving in a slow stream with eddies and cross
-currents. The stream rose in the great entrance
-hall of the building. It was brought by contributory
-motors and broughams, from all parts of the town,
-suburbs and county, and it flowed upstairs and
-through the rooms and down again through a
-temporary congestion at the first door where Miss
-Archer stood with her little note book. A middle-aged
-woman, mastering fatigue with vivacity, stood
-beside her and made rapid remarks in an undertone,
-pointing out this or that noteworthy face or garment.
-Her hand was conspicuous by being so obviously ill
-at ease in its white glove. It was a worker’s hand,
-full of strength and sensibility, and the sillily cut
-glove sat on it like a bonnet on a horse. The
-Mayor and Mayoress remained just within the big
-folding doors which were set wide apart, a footman
-planted on either side. The footman on the left
-had nothing about him to allay the suspicion that
-he was stuffed, except his small twinkling eyes
-that spoke of much experience of humanity, a
-family life of his own and knowledge of the moral
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>difficulties of rich men. His counterpart on the
-right was unable to give way to the same luxurious
-calm, being compelled to undergo the trouble of
-repeating strange syllables whispered into his ear,
-such as “—siz-an-Miss-S-Arkbury,” “—stron-misses
-J’n’per,” etc.; if it had not been that he
-knew the names of the greater number of the guests
-he would probably have broken down and been led
-weeping to the nearest public-house. As it was
-he battled bravely on, and beyond the momentary
-annoyance of the Harburys who became “Barleys,”
-and the Muskovilles who became “Musk-and-veal,”
-and so on, it didn’t really matter. People who knew
-them knew them, and those who didn’t didn’t mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who were those last, did you hear?” Miss
-Archer bent to ask her friend. “They’re new,
-surely; I must note their dresses; they’re very
-good. There—the woman in grey with sables,
-and the two girls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“‘Fulton!’ I thought he said,” answered the
-tired woman. She followed them with her eyes to
-where they stopped, looking at the crowd and
-talking now and then to each other. Susie was
-benevolently dimpling, as if the party were hers,
-and commenting to her daughters on the beauty of
-the rooms. “Architecture makes so much difference
-to a building, doesn’t it?” she said. “It
-would be so easy to spoil a big place like this by
-making it clumsy and in bad taste. But I do admire
-this immensely, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There’s Mrs. Manley gone up to them now,”
-said Miss Archer’s friend. “I tell you—won’t they
-be the new general’s family that someone said had
-come? There’s some new arrangement or other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>about the soldiers. I know my nephew who’s a
-territorial said something about a General Fulton
-coming to be over the whole lot of them; not
-separated as they used to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Miss Archer wrote down, “—in a distinguished
-combination of old gold and palest petunia, relieved
-by valuable antique buckles. Mrs. Slacks looked
-well in mauve, with one of the new violet pyramid
-hats.” “What did you say? Yes, I should think
-that’s very likely. Let me see. Grey poult de
-soie, isn’t it, with sables? and her two young
-daughters (she was scribbling again) in girlish foam
-of niaise crepe in the new swallow blue that has
-lately come into its own. Yes, that will do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There’s Mrs. Carpenter speaking to them,”
-said the friend. “I don’t know how you are going
-to dish up that checked coat of hers again. I
-must catch Mr. Beaver if I can—he has just gone
-through—and see if he will take the chair on the
-15th.” She disappeared among the crowd, and
-presently Miss Archer tripped away to take a turn
-through the rooms to make sure she had omitted no
-one of importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Shall we find a table for you?” Mrs. Manley
-said to Susie. “It will take us through the rooms
-on the way and there are several people you must
-meet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A young woman, dressed with the touching pride
-of the connoisseur on a small income, turned as Mrs.
-Manley spoke, and smiled at her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How are you?” Mrs. Manley said. “I am
-showing Mrs. Fulton the lions. If you want tea
-we could fill a table. Mrs. Fulton, may I introduce
-you to Mrs. Vachell. You are sure to meet everywhere.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>General and Mrs. Fulton have just moved
-into the Babley’s house,” she explained to the other.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I was going
-to call on you this week (she turned to Susie). Mrs.
-Babley left me several messages for you about the
-house, small things that she thought might be useful,
-but she didn’t want to bother you by writing about
-them. I only came back from Egypt yesterday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Vachell’s husband,” Mrs. Manley explained,
-“is the most distinguished something-or-other-ist
-of the century, only I never can pronounce it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Never mind,” said Mrs. Vachell. “We’ll leave
-it at that. What a squash there is to-day. Do you
-suppose we shall ever get any tea?” They moved
-slowly on, and Mrs. Vachell found herself separated
-with the two girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must find it rather dreary being turned
-loose in a strange town,” she said almost pityingly.
-“Has anyone been any use?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We’re quite happy,” said Evangeline. “Do
-tell me why so many people come here. Is a Town
-Hall a sort of public party place? Oh dear, what a
-row that band makes!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If we can get to the tea room we shall be out of
-it,” said Mrs. Vachell. “No, this isn’t exactly a
-public party, but the Lord Mayor has to entertain
-everybody. You will find later that you meet your
-friends here, and it isn’t so bad. But you will
-probably be roped in to make yourselves useful
-before long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa thrilled once more with the breath of the
-thing she sought. “How?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All sorts of ways. Child welfare or domestic
-training or inebriates—or perhaps imbeciles,” Mrs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>Vachell added, mischievously putting on an extra
-screw as she noted the alarm in Evangeline’s face
-and the throb of excitement in Teresa’s.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Carpenter was to be seen through the doorway,
-pushing slowly towards them, elbowing one,
-patronising another with a smile, making expressive
-gestures to friends here and there indicating that her
-task was nearly impossible—but—hold on, little
-sheep! The shepherdess is coming. You shall have
-tea if she has to commandeer some one else’s table.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wonder if you would mind——” she will
-probably say reproachfully. “This lady ought to
-sit down and it is impossible to find a table. I think
-we can get six chairs in here if it won’t be pressing
-you too near the wall.” It was by some manœuvre
-of this sort that she did in the end plant the girls,
-whom she had volunteered to find, and Mrs. Vachell,
-whom she could not very well get rid of, at a table
-where Mrs. Fulton and Mrs. Manley were already
-seated. The two elderly ladies who were there first
-drained their cups and withdrew, commenting on
-the bad management of the tea rooms and the
-“manners of some people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Eric Manley, Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs.
-Vachell occupied positions in Millport not unlike
-those of the kings of England before Alfred. Their
-territories were less defined, their wars were not so
-bitter, but, as the history books say, “the country
-languished under their rule and longed for a just
-and wise leader to unite their petty factions under
-his sway.” Mrs. Manley ruled over the Fashionable-who-are-charitable,
-Mrs. Carpenter over the Charitable-who-are-fashionable-and-educated,
-and Mrs. Vachell over the Educated-and-incidentally-fashionable-and-charitable.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>They were ripe for the arrival
-of a visionary like Susie who should unite their
-people in the peaceful practices of Love—love of
-architecture-and-so-on, love of children, of all
-weathers, of the poor, “even those poor terrible
-drunken creatures who have been taught to be
-wicked,” of “your own beautiful homes.” We have
-anticipated this last object of her love. It became
-one of the stock phrases of those speeches which
-made her the idol of public meetings in days to
-come.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But although Destiny was hovering over the tea-table,
-they knew it not. Perhaps Teresa felt something
-of the fate in store for her. Their chairs were
-near a window, below which the trams stopped to
-load and discharge their passengers. The faces
-were there by the hundred, the drab clothing, the
-mud were as usual. Did the scene never alter she
-wondered? Did the stream of people pour on like
-that under lowering skies perpetually—all day—Sundays—holidays,
-even through the night? She
-had come from the crowded streets of London, but
-that was utterly different. There was variety, sunshine,
-even leisureliness in the squares and quiet
-places off the main traffic; and besides that, the
-significance of any individual was so small that no
-one could feel responsible for his neighbour unless
-he were invited to interest himself. In Millport
-every weary pedestrian seemed to carry a personal
-grudge against those who had the means to escape
-from the mud.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Manley was comparing notes with Susie
-on the eternal subject of prices. Even cakes made
-at home were almost too expensive to eat every day,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>she complained. Her husband had had to give up
-keeping a tin of biscuits at his office, and he often
-came home to tea to save expense, unless he had
-to stay and carry on work that the clerks used to
-do. It was impossible to have the sort of entrées
-one used to, made with just a little sweetbread or
-cream or something; even the eggs mounted up
-now——</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, yes, I know, my dear women,” Mrs.
-Carpenter interrupted, “but do you realise what
-it means to <em>Charity</em>? You are only on the visiting
-committee of my beloved Institute, you know,”
-she smiled at Mrs. Manley, “and you can have no
-idea. The very soap the women wash with costs
-us £20 a year more than it did; there now! What
-do you think of that? That is just soap alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Manley looked a little contemptuous.
-“Everyone uses soap,” she said. “I have to deal
-it out at our orphanage when it is my week for the
-store cupboard. But anyhow I believe there is
-only one thing that hasn’t gone up and that is
-bi-carbonate of soda. That is why everybody’s
-cakes taste of it. (She glanced at Mrs. Carpenter).
-How do you find things, Mrs. Fulton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I try not to worry about it,” Susie replied.
-Love seemed to envelope the table as she spoke,
-and even Mrs. Carpenter felt that she had not got
-the nail plumb on the head with her last blow.
-Mrs. Vachell pricked up her ears. “I do so want
-those two,” Susie continued with a fond look at her
-daughters, “not to have all their young time
-clouded by perpetual half-pennies. Of course we
-are not extravagant, but we have none of us very
-large appetites and, as I say, I just try not to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>worry. I have no doubt that what we are going
-through now is somehow for the good of the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Carpenter drew a long breath and turned
-back a piece of fur at her wrist. “Of course we
-all believe that,” she said, “or we shouldn’t be
-here; at least I hope not. But what do you propose,
-Mrs. Fulton, to do about the terrible suffering
-as it is?” Even the best accredited lamb in its
-first year at Millport must not have things all its
-own way in the fold.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie’s eyes brimmed. “I think and think,”
-she said earnestly, “but I can’t see how it is to be
-avoided. It seems somehow as if it was meant,
-and we can only learn the meaning by helping
-everywhere we can when we get the chance. I
-think some of the saddest cases are often the least
-known, don’t you?” Mrs. Vachell was taking
-an Olympic pleasure in the new forces which Susie
-was evidently going to bring in on the side of good
-against evil. She looked on from the high ground
-of quicker wits than her two sister rulers. She
-now wanted to see what Susie did with her two
-daughters. “It is the younger generation that
-will have to find out these things,” she said, looking
-at the girls.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, shall we,” said Evangeline, rather bored.
-Teresa shrugged her shoulders and passed the cake.
-Mrs. Carpenter alone took up the challenge. “I
-think girls have lost all taste for the mere pleasure-loving
-life they used to lead,” she said, “I know
-mine won’t look at it. ‘Oh, Mother,’ they say,
-‘We’re <em>so</em> bored with parties.’ They are all going
-to have professions and Lena is going to do social
-work.” Mrs. Manley, being childless, said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>“Are they!” Susie exclaimed, full of interest.
-“How wonderful! I often thought as a girl how
-much I should have liked to <em>be</em> something, but I
-never had a chance and I am afraid I had no talents.”
-She dimpled at the three leaders. “I could only
-admire and enjoy. We must really be going, I
-think, dears. You belong to the University, don’t
-you, Mrs. Vachell?” she asked as they dispersed.
-“It must be so delightful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” Mrs. Vachell replied, “my husband does.
-Have you met Mrs. Gainsborough yet?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Principal’s wife?” said Susie. “No, she
-called last week, but I was out. I was so sorry.”
-They were walking down the great staircase by this
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must be sure to call on her At Home day,”
-Mrs. Vachell warned her, “or you will frighten
-her. It is every Tuesday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Frighten her?” Susie repeated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, because if she hasn’t met you first she will
-have to ask you to dinner without knowing you and
-she can’t bear that. There she is, by the way,
-still in the hall. Will you come and speak to
-her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie allowed herself to be the means of violently
-startling a massive woman—there is no other way to
-think of her—dressed in old-fashioned clothes, who
-was peering timidly through the glass doors that
-opened on to the street. She turned in a fright
-when Mrs. Vachell spoke to her. “Oh! is that
-you!” she exclaimed thankfully. “I can’t think
-why my cab hasn’t come. I ordered it at a quarter
-past five and it is nearly six now and it has come on
-so wet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>Mrs. Vachell introduced Susie and her daughters
-and slipped away.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh!” said Mrs. Gainsborough again—(it was
-her usual beginning)—“so delighted to meet you—so
-sorry you were out when I called. And these
-are your girls?—quite so—yes——” She relapsed
-into silence and went on looking helplessly at the
-rain.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mayn’t we drive you home?” Susie suggested.
-“Our car is there.” Mrs. Gainsborough threw up
-her hands and followed, murmuring. As they
-drove home through the crowded, dripping streets,
-Evangeline and Teresa crushed suffocatingly under
-the shadow of Mrs. Gainsborough’s knees, Susie’s
-kind little face peeping from behind a bunch of
-aged ostrich tips in Mrs. Gainsborough’s bonnet,
-all three of them disconcerted by the unusual smell
-of warm eau-de-Cologne that filled their car, very
-little was said. Mrs. Gainsborough was at her
-request left on the doorstep of a house, cinnamon-coloured
-like the Fultons’, at the corner of a cinnamon-coloured
-square. Once safely on her own
-territory her nervousness left her, and her smiles
-and genuine pleasure in the small service rendered
-brought Teresa another fleeting vision of the joy
-she perpetually sought.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Mrs. Gainsborough soon returned the hospitality
-of Susie’s motor by inviting her and Cyril to dinner.
-Her note was rambling and agitated like her manner,
-and ended with a postscript, “Please bring one of
-your daughters if she would care for it. Emma
-will be so pleased.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline and Teresa refused to have anything
-to do with it when the letter came, but Cyril said
-with genuine terror to Teresa when his wife had
-gone out of the room, “Dicky, you must come—promise
-me quick—but don’t say anything about
-it——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right, of course,” she assured him, “but
-why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They’re all schoolmasters,” he explained in
-an undertone as Susie came back. Nothing more
-was said until breakfast was over and then Teresa
-plunged for her father’s sake.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can I go to the Gainsboroughs’, after all,
-Mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you like, dear, but I thought you said just
-now——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” she interrupted, “but—I should like
-to see the University. I think the Gainsborough
-girl would like it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Fulton looked suspiciously at her husband.
-He was filling his cigarette case from a box on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>mantelpiece, using unnecessary care to fit them in
-properly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Strickland should have done that for you, dear.
-Are you off now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, presently,” he answered. “I’m not sure
-I can come to the Gainsboroughs, Sue; we’ve some
-rather special business next week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think we ought to get to know everybody as
-much as possible, Cyril, if only for the sake of the
-girls. And the University are the most interesting
-of all. If you knew what a pleasure it is to me to
-talk about something besides wine and money now
-and then!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril instantly threw diplomacy to the winds and
-began to enjoy himself, standing with his back to
-the fire. “I don’t want to be a kill-joy,” he
-replied, “but I learned more about those two
-subjects from old Wacks at Cambridge than I ever
-have since from anybody. But he wasn’t married.
-I daresay the female dons understand the use of
-the globes and all that. By George! I remember
-their queer get-ups. Must have been some very
-deep thinking that led to most of those marriages;
-which, after all, proves your theory of the Higher
-mind. Let’s go, and take Dicky if she wants to
-come,” he added with the boldness that often came
-to him suddenly after hunting down one of his
-wife’s insincerities.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By this time she felt nothing but an irritable
-longing to get him out of the room. Through the
-whole of their married life he had amused himself
-by making a cockshy of the sentiments which she
-presented to the world as the expression of her
-thoughts. He often exaggerated her insincerity,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>for the sentiments were as much her own as any
-other jewellery she might have bought to adorn
-herself. She admired them quite as much as any
-she could have originated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“One of the children will come, of course,” she
-said impatiently, “if Mrs. Gainsborough really
-wants some young people. It is very kind of her,
-for I don’t suppose you have the least idea how dull
-it is for them, seeing nothing but soldiers and
-business people who have nothing to talk about.
-The Gainsboroughs are probably teetotallers—in
-spite of the set you mixed with at Cambridge and
-who had probably nothing to do with the life there.
-Most clever people think very little about their
-food. But you had better have your wine at the
-club before you start or they will think there is
-something the matter with you. Isn’t the time
-getting on? That clock is a little slow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When the time for the party came it turned out
-to be less of a feast of intellect than had been hoped
-and feared by the Fultons. In the first place the
-Carpenters were there, because Mrs. Carpenter
-was as difficult to keep out of any social gathering
-as was King Charles’s head from Mr. Dick’s
-“Memorial.” If the festivity were a heavy duty
-for the cementing of business connections, Mrs.
-Carpenter was invited to lighten the dough of
-wealth with the ferment of culture. If it were a
-frivolous affair for the benefit of the young and
-thoughtless, she was there with her daughters.
-Hostesses included her as a precaution against
-any subsequent rumour that the scene had been
-one of unbridled licence. “Really, my dear—of
-course I wasn’t there so I can’t say, but I believe,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>etc.” If it were an ordinary mixed dinner, town
-and gown, she must be there to make things smooth
-between everybody; to interpose when Mrs. Alderman
-Snack was talking to Professor Cameo about
-rabbits, and see that the conversation was switched
-off at once on to his last book. She had read it
-of course and was so anxious to contradict him on
-one point, the condition of India before the mutiny.
-“My grandfather, you know, was there as a subaltern
-and he always said he was <em>convinced</em>, etc.” “A
-wonderful woman, Mrs. Carpenter,” everybody said.
-“She talks so well upon anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Gainsborough, being so very nervous as
-she was, of course had not settled on a day to ask
-the new general and his wife until she had made sure
-that the Carpenters would come. Mrs. Carpenter
-had therefore consulted her little note-book and
-had chosen a day when she had only one or two
-small committees and dear Amy’s dancing lesson
-to attend, so that she would be “nice and fresh for
-the evening.” Poor Mr. Carpenter, who was the
-overworked underwriter to an insurance company,
-was not likely to be at all nice and fresh, even if he
-had a good twenty minutes to dress after hurrying
-up from the office. He could be trusted to be
-punctual, though, and would be quite up to a little
-educated chaff with anyone of his own set—Mrs.
-Vachell or one of the Manleys—so long as he hadn’t
-to tackle a stranger. He was, as it turned out, very
-happily situated, as there were only the Vachells,
-and Mrs. Eric Manley and her unmarried brother-in-law
-and two young men for Emma Gainsborough
-and Teresa. One was David Varens, whose father,
-Sir Richard Varens, belonged to a family that had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>owned land round Millport for three or four hundred
-years. Sir Richard had given money and land to
-Millport University and his son David had just left
-Oxford. It would never have done if Mrs. Carpenter
-had not been there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The third unmarried man was Mr. Joseph Price,
-the son of Mr. Manley’s partner. Eton and Cambridge
-had recently handed him back to the home
-nest, which he was prepared, with the backing of
-the Liberal Party and his father’s money, to re-line
-and generally bring up to date. The old birds
-were to be furbished up and taught new songs; the
-young lady birds from neighbouring nests were to
-be simply knocked off their perches, and Londoners
-coming to Millport were to understand that Millshire
-was young Mr. Price’s country seat and Millport
-was his little village where he went to post his
-letters and chat to the Mayor at election time.
-You could even buy things in the town now, he
-was told—quite fairly decent; of course not clothes
-and all that, but groceries and gloves and that sort
-of thing his mother found she could get there now.
-But the hotels were pretty scandalous sort of
-places. What? I should say so. Lots of churches
-though; some quite decent ones in the old part
-of the town if you’re interested in glass and all
-that kind of thing. And good music too; you
-ought to go to the concerts if music doesn’t bore
-you. There was a fellow there the other day—what’s
-his name—came all the way from Russia
-with a little handbag—he beat everyone else
-hollow—never heard anything like it—thought his
-arm would come off. Abs’lutely wond’f’l. You’ve
-heard him b’fur ’n town, ’f course? (I have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>burst into Mr. Price’s way of speaking for a moment,
-but I cannot reproduce it perfectly.)</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This was to Teresa, whom, owing to her father’s
-military position and their having lived in London,
-he was treating with unusual effusiveness. He
-knew Emma Gainsborough slightly and had made
-an honest effort to talk to her. He always tried
-to keep close to the ideal manner at which he aimed,
-the manner of the particular social pen through
-whose doors he had been allowed to squeeze because
-of his politics and his father’s money. He was
-already getting on very well with the manner, a
-sort of mincingly polite way of speaking, with the
-vowels squeezed slowly out as if through a confectioner’s
-icing tube, and laid along the sentence,
-or else omitted altogether; the exact opposite to
-the broad flat tones of his native habit. The
-natural rudeness of vanity was sugared over in this
-way to just the “right” effect he sought; enthusiasm
-for this or that “discovery,” indifference
-to anything tainted with popularity unless some
-popular thing became discredited enough in time
-to make it discoverable as a new taste.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Been doing very much lately?” he had asked
-Emma Gainsborough dutifully before turning his
-attention to Teresa who was really his object of
-the evening. “Seen anything new?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I don’t think I have,” the poor girl replied,
-instantly ill at ease. Mr. Price observed the effect
-he had made, and scored several marks of superiority
-to himself; it made him feel good-natured.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Peewit’s brought out another book, I see,” he
-said, giving her another chance. “’ve you read
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>“No,” said Emma, adding hurriedly, “I’m
-doing welfare just now and it takes such an awful
-lot of time. I’m too sleepy to read after I’ve been
-wading through statistics all day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Welfare? Let’s see—what’s that now?” asked
-Mr. Price. It might possibly be something he
-ought to know about, though from the way Emma
-did her hair he thought it unlikely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Welfare? Oh, it is seeing about children—at
-least, my part is—finding out things about them
-and seeing what happens to them and all that;
-I can’t explain it, but I have been making records
-of imbeciles all afternoon.” Emma was reckoned
-a humorist in the family circle and many were the
-evenings when her father and mother went to bed
-exhausted by their laughter over things noted by
-her with a delicacy of perception few people would
-have suspected, Mr. Price less than any. His
-“Oh, I see. Splendid work, I’m sure, but don’t
-you get tired of it?” was followed by a minute’s
-horrid silence and then he devoted himself with a
-clear conscience to Teresa in the way that has been
-described.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa’s attention was wandering to her father,
-who seemed to be doing very well with Mrs. Gainsborough.
-She wondered what they were laughing
-at. She caught up Mr. Price at his short pause
-after the Russian with the handbag.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I didn’t see him,” she answered vaguely.
-“What was he doing? Was there anything in the
-bag?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr. Price was not very pleased. “I don’t know.
-Pro’b’ly the last sponge in Russia, what? Don’t
-you take almonds? I shall eat them all if you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>don’t stop me. Oh, prihsless caat, what are you
-doing? come here and talk to me——” He broke
-off as Mrs. Gainsborough’s blue persian stood up
-beside him and, having pretended to extract three
-or four long thorns from his leg, withdrew.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t mind them one way or the other,” said
-Teresa, “but I want to know something. Who is
-the man—the last at the end opposite—by my
-mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Vachell do you mean? Don’t you really
-know him? No, that’s delightful. He’s simply
-won’f’l man—been digging, you know—Egypt—didn’t
-you read about it? You ought to read the
-paper, you know. He’s our show card. When
-I was up at Cambridge they were fairf’lly jealous
-that I knew him. I told my tutor that I’d seen
-him once act’lly in pyjamas and he became quite
-respectf’l and let me off a lot of lectures on the
-strength of it. And then you live here and ask
-who he is——! That’s really great, what? isn’t
-it? You’ve got to say something really brilliant
-now to make up or I shall think you’ve taken to
-good works like all the dear people here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you know you make me feel awfully queer,”
-said Teresa, looking at him with puzzled interest.
-“What are you talking about really? I know
-you answered my question, but what has all the
-rest to do with it? Why should your tutor let
-you off lectures because you saw somebody who
-lives here in pyjamas? I don’t understand a
-bit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Miss Fulton, it is quite time you left that silly
-boy and gave me a little attention,” said Mr. Manley,
-whom Mrs. Vachell had neglected so much that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>had been keeping a friendly eye on Teresa. He
-liked the young and had understood that she
-was not enjoying herself. He included Mr. Price
-in what he said with a friendly smile and Teresa
-turned to him gratefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I believe you are much more old-fashioned than
-you look,” he said to her. “You were not getting
-on at all well. You didn’t mind my rudeness?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I liked it,” she answered. “I have met
-Mrs. Manley heaps of times, but I’ve never seen
-you nor your brother to talk to. I have noticed
-since we came here that you may know people
-for quite a long time before you are even sure
-that they have a husband. One has nothing to
-go by sometimes except the hats in the hall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We come back sometimes to claim them,
-believe me,” said the old gentleman. Teresa’s
-heart warmed towards him as the dinner went on.
-His kindliness was real, untainted by any wish to
-shine or obtain credit. He had the quick understanding
-of ideas half expressed, succeeding one
-another like colour in changing light, which alone
-makes conversation anything but a distorted image
-of what the mind sees. Questions come so often
-from a curiosity that wishes to compare others
-with itself to its own glorification. Each one that
-Mr. Price or Mrs. Carpenter asked had that end
-in view. Mr. Manley enjoyed his game of give-and-take
-without that ghostly referee to balance
-the score. Teresa began to understand dimly
-how it was that what Strickland called “our
-leading families” seemed to have been the pious
-founders of Millport in a way that no Londoner’s
-ancestors can claim to have built their city. Millport
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>was the child of dead and gone Manleys; it
-was handed on by them to new generations of
-themselves and of trusted friends who had watched
-over the early days of its growth. Tutors, governors
-and servants were appointed for the precious thing
-with that personal care that Teresa found so
-puzzling in the words “duty to the city,” which
-recurred constantly in public and in private.
-Afterwards in the drawing-room Mr. Manley came
-to her again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you don’t go away and forget all our conversation,”
-he said, “come to me and tell me what
-you want to do and I’ll show you how to set about
-it. You’ll find my office hat in the hall on Saturday
-and Sunday afternoons—and that’s the one
-I keep my ideas in. I’d like to show you some
-pictures I’ve got of the old town as it was in my
-great-great-grandfather’s time.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>I had meant to say a great deal about David
-Varens during this dinner party. But Millport has
-proved too strong for him. It always must have
-been and is now overpowering for the gentle,
-detached characters whose strength is in enjoyment
-of the immediate thing that circumstances
-have put in their way to be done as well as possible;
-people who accept inherited comfort and adventitious
-pain equally, as it comes; who love and hate by
-instinct without recognition of any outside interests
-to modify their decision and who never go back on
-a verdict given by this tribunal of taste. He is to
-be Teresa’s lover and therefore his first words to
-her should have been recorded, also his appearance,
-his manner and what they thought of each other.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>They should have begun at once with definite
-sensations of like or dislike. But the truth is they
-hardly exchanged a word. He sat on the other
-side of Emma Gainsborough and shared with Mr.
-Price the miasma of her longing for the whole
-evening to be over. He talked to her as well as
-he could, patiently and easily, in spite of her
-stumbles into pitfalls of silence that the least presence
-of mind should have taught her to avoid. He retrieved
-her each time without effort and set her on
-her legs again, wondering what was the matter
-with the poor girl, supposing she might feel the
-fire at her back. He did once suggest drawing a
-screen further along behind her and they talked for
-some minutes about the cold of Oxford Colleges,
-but she didn’t seem any better for it so he gave it
-up. It is no use giving Mr. Varens any more scope
-just now. He will turn up in his glory when the
-time comes.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>It did not need many months in Millport to convince
-Teresa that idleness was not one of the snares
-of the city. She soon found that if any young
-person of the leisured classes were to attempt to
-“drift” she would have her aimless career brought
-to a standstill by some snag of “duty to the city.”
-No one in London had ever reminded Teresa of
-her civic responsibilities. On thinking it over one
-day after a particularly strong dose of “duty to
-the city,” administered by Mrs. Carpenter, she
-could not remember that the city of London and its
-chief magistrate had ever laid any personal claim
-to her services. She tried to imagine any such
-phrase as, “Have you seen the Mayor about it?”
-or, “What does Alderman Teazle think?” occurring
-in her father’s conversation at his club. It was
-impossible. In those days no one knew anything
-of her plans or her wishes but what she told them;
-in Millport it seemed that the very paving stones
-knew who was walking along and why, and that
-carrier sparrows flitted from chimney to chimney
-with little messages of information about everybody
-and an index of probable explanations for their
-conduct—all dead certain to be wrong.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Carpenter had not trusted to the fowls of
-the air to inform the Fultons that Millport intended
-them to do their duty. She gave them a few
-weeks’ law, with full access to her own example.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>She never failed to explain in the street, in the
-shop, in the ladies’ club, across the family pew or
-on the platform that the fact of her being found
-where she was would mean the loss of so many
-heart beats to the city’s life. She would say,
-perhaps, “I ought not to be here, my dear, but I
-promised dear Mabel Somebody this little treat
-just to buck her up after the new arrival. Fancy!
-I was there just two hours before it happened, and
-my waifs and strays waiting for a tin of biscuits
-I had promised them, and Alderman McWhittock’s
-funeral at half-past two. I don’t know how I
-ever got there—but now what are <em>you</em> doing here?
-Up to the ears, I suppose, getting ready for the
-dance next week. What it is to be young! though
-I saw you resting like a wise girl at dear Emily’s
-party. The men are so naughty now, aren’t they?
-They won’t dance—absolutely won’t—except with
-their own old favourites. I always say to them
-now, ‘No, it’s no use. I am here to rest my old
-bones and you have just got to look in all the
-corners and pick out the plainest and dullest thing
-you can find and send her home happy.’ I condoled
-with Emily because I know the difficulties,
-and after all a dance must be a success if it is to
-be worth all the trouble, mustn’t it? Now what
-church do you go to——?” etc.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But Susie almost forestalled her remarks. She
-was there ready equipped by instinct before the
-call to battle came. Mrs. Carpenter didn’t know
-what to think of it. It is said that birds of prey
-have their own allotted beats and do not poach
-on their neighbours’ quarry; but they arrive,
-warned by some secret telegraphy wherever there
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>is a vacancy and a corpse. Susie had evidently
-sensed the prevailing occupation of Millport and
-had descended out of the blue to fill a gap among
-the leaders of good works. She could not be said
-to “take an active part” in anything, because that
-was against her nature, but her name was soon
-in everybody’s mouth as a member of all the chief
-committees of private enterprises. Strangely shaped
-gentlemen in black used to call on her between
-meals with papers and she listened to them with
-her gentle smile of the mother was has suffered all
-things; she recognised them instantly when she
-saw them again and remembered with which particular
-good work they were connected; and that
-is really quite enough, as she herself would have
-said. Ladies with grown-up daughters, who are
-obliged to entertain a great deal and who have no
-head for organisation and so on, ought to leave the
-running about to those who will do it so much
-better; what the workers need is sympathy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline and Teresa, being newcomers from a
-careless place of comfort, were particularly susceptible
-to the unfamiliar poison of depression for
-which there seemed no cure. The mud, the damp,
-the ugly streets, and indignant, tired faces, the
-grudging service of the working classes, the self
-consciousness of the well-to-do who walked everywhere
-in the limelight of recognition, the sharp
-division between those who thought everything
-was all right because they were comfortable and
-those who thought everything was all wrong
-because they weren’t—all this made the girls
-restless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A vision of Hyde Park Corner on a sunny day
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>used to haunt Evangeline’s mind. She contrasted
-the space of it, the blue sky, the buildings—“polite
-buildings” was the description that came to her
-as she recalled their appearance, perfectly groomed,
-keeping their private life absolutely to themselves.
-She felt a sudden hatred for the rows of pert little
-dwellings that she saw all round; “brick trimmings!”
-she thought with disgust as her eye fell
-on the oblongs and stars and cubes inlaid in musty
-red on a background of livid ginger. There was
-nothing polite about them; they seemed positively
-loquacious about themselves and their trimmings
-and the nice people that lived in them. Horrid
-houses, she thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa, though she did not know it, was distilling
-for herself a sort of love potion from the
-drabness and hostility. As she once said to her
-sister, the smells and the mysterious purpose
-behind the faces in the fog intoxicated her. All
-that she knew about what she felt was that an
-insistent passion was dragging her towards some
-end that she could not see. The interest that she
-found in her conversations with Strickland gave
-her a clue towards the direction from which knowledge
-of her desire was coming to her, and gave her
-relief from the excitement at the same time because
-Strickland had no grievance against society; she
-only disliked people—ladies especially—talking
-“through their hats” about work. For instance,
-she did not mind Cyril or Teresa being untidy,
-because “it was their place to leave things about”
-and she was paid to look after them. They never
-referred to her duties nor seemed to think about
-them. Mrs. Carpenter and Susie implied by their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>manner that they were selected by Providence to
-lead comfortable lives for the reason that every
-one of their common attributes of humanity, such
-as their legs and their brains, were of such superior
-quality that their births, their lives and their
-deaths must not be confused with similar occurrences
-in other houses. Work! Of course they knew all
-about work! Did they not exhaust themselves
-in explaining how early rising and attention to
-detail actually saves labour? If you clean a room
-thoroughly every day there is no need to turn it
-out once a fortnight; if you clear up as you go,
-wipe the plates with paper and burn it directly to
-avoid clogging the sink, and if you wear gloves for
-the roughest work and put glycerine on the hands
-after washing, there should be at least two clear
-hours in the afternoon for mending stockings or
-even making clothes. That was the point where
-Strickland became “horn mad,” as she said. “I’d
-sooner earn me money by being starved and scolded
-as me mother was,” she declared, “than have it
-explained that there’s nothing to complain of.
-I’d rather have it all wrong and keep my liberty
-to object.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Strickland,” Teresa interrupted, “don’t
-you remember when you first came you said you
-wouldn’t be blasted by father and you were going
-to leave?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she replied, “and so I should have if
-he had made out, as some do, that it was all a
-misunderstanding. But when I saw that it was
-just his way, as you said, and he wasn’t aware of
-it, you will understand that it was no business of
-mine and I didn’t object. There’s never anything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>personal about the General’s language, I will say
-that for him. It seems it’s his nature, like my
-brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She took no notice of Evangeline, neither liked
-nor disliked her. “She’s a young lady that will
-marry,” she observed, “and change her servants
-and not notice who comes and goes nor how the
-work is done. She won’t make much of a house,
-but no doubt she’ll keep a housekeeper and not
-notice how the money goes. She’ll always be a
-favourite with the gentlemen. My brother’s wife
-is like that. You never saw such a house—and the
-mess! I often tidy it all up for her and it’s all the
-same next day. And yet he thinks the world of
-her and keeps out of the public house so as he can
-take her about. And my cousin Gladys is just
-the opposite; everything tidy and as it should be,
-but she’ll talk, talk, talk the whole day, pointing
-out what she’s done; and her husband has taken
-to drink; he can’t stand it, he says.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Strickland was right. Evangeline was already
-proving her capacity for being a favourite with the
-gentlemen by penetrating, one by one, Captain
-Hatton’s well-ordered defences. Being her father’s
-A.D.C. he was, as he had warned them on the first
-morning, so much about the house that he preferred
-they should not notice him; but then as Cyril
-counter-warned him, “they were a damned noticing
-family.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Captain Evan Hatton had always been shy of
-women because as a passionately serious little boy
-he had been for ever baited by a pair of lively young
-sisters. They meant not an atom of harm, but
-neither were they at all interested in abstract goodness,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>which together with mechanisms of any kind
-were Evan’s consolation for the trials of family
-life. He wanted with all his soul to know what
-made wheels (including those of the Universe) go
-round. Nature, which he admired, completely
-outwitted him there and he developed towards the
-Maker of the Universe the passionate respect of
-pertinacious inquiry incessantly baffled. He succeeded
-in finding out from time to time the elementary
-rules governing earthly wheels, but the
-vastness of the world (as he had glimpses of it
-through the life of his tame rabbits, the beauties
-of a well-kept garden, geography lessons and the
-upheaval of his own mind), kept him in a ceaseless
-ferment of questioning. The most industrious
-organ must rest sometimes; so at about fifteen years
-old he admitted himself beaten by the Higher
-Inquiry. He rested his poor mind in worship of
-that which he had questioned in vain, and concentrated
-his efforts on wheels which could be explained
-by those who made them. His sisters thought all
-this very funny indeed. They themselves approved
-of the Universe as a first-rate place to live in; it
-looked so charming, with hills and fields and woods
-all of nice colours. Winter, spring, summer and
-autumn were all nice in their way and could not be
-improved. The idea of tropical storms and polar
-silence and danger made it seem all the more cosy
-in England. Machinery was a delightful invention
-and they were glad it had been discovered, because
-it brought all sorts of comfort within reach and
-gave one’s brothers something suitable to do.
-They did laugh sometimes when Evan took a really
-good thing to pieces and couldn’t put it together
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>again or when he got in such a bait about Emily
-giggling at the missionary. When the war broke
-out they stopped laughing at him at first. He
-was suddenly lifted in their estimation from the
-position of a dear, ridiculous creature to that of
-“our brother in France,” a god among Olympians—“while
-we have got to stick at home.” They
-worked creditably and humbly at home and when
-he came back they forgot his ribbons in the agitating
-question whether Emily’s cooking would still do or
-whether they ought not to scrape up £50 somehow
-and get that kitchenmaid who was leaving the
-club.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When they began to get used to having him at
-home again they noticed that what had been only
-serious attention to rectitude in the old days now
-burned hot in him as passionate morality. They
-were good girls, secured from evil, if he had known
-it, by their happy natures. They would have
-thought it very silly to let a man kiss them unless
-he were an accepted lover, properly engaged;
-because where would be the point in being scrubbed
-by a hairy face; unless it were one of the poor
-darling boys leaving Victoria, and then of course
-one would hug any stranger. That is enough. We
-know the girls quite well now. There is nothing
-at all the matter with them, quite the contrary.
-But their brother’s heavy sense of responsibility
-for their souls was as much wasted as if he had
-been Joan of Arc hiding an unexpurgated edition
-of Shakespeare from the cat. All the mistakes
-he had made about his sisters he repeated with
-every woman he met afterwards. He was wrong
-every time because the attention he gave to their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>conversation was of the same kind as he would
-have given to a machine that didn’t interest him—if
-any such machine could be imagined—a musical
-box perhaps. Now everyone knows what happens
-to even the cheapest fiddle, still more to a bird, if
-its music is courted in that way. His sisters saved
-him from disaster by affectionate amusement that
-asked nothing of him. He offended a great many
-other women, but, to return to the simile of the
-fiddle, their discords meant as little to him as
-their harmonies, so he learned nothing from his
-failures.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Then suddenly fate confronted him with Evangeline,
-who also wanted to know how wheels went
-round and—oh, the poor fellow! my heart bleeds
-for him—the wheels she was interested in were
-those of love and creation and human nature;
-and poor industrious Hatton, who only wished
-for righteousness and good machines, was put
-into her hands to take to pieces. It is, as has often
-been observed, a cruel world in many ways.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline’s mother had also been on the track
-of true love in her youth; her story has been
-written. But a world of difference lay between
-them, for Susie had wanted to possess love and
-had studied to be all things to all men to gain it,
-giving nothing in return; her daughter wanted it
-in order to give it away, as another lavish nature
-might ask for wealth to spend.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Captain Hatton is less like an umbrella than
-he used to be, don’t you think?” she said one day
-to Teresa as they walked home through the Park.
-“When I go riding with him he often stops being
-polite and tells me about the tanks. Yesterday he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>told me about men out at the war who had visions.
-You’d never think he was that sort of man, would
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never think much about him,” said Teresa,
-“I just think of him as a table that Father has
-brought in to work at.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know he doesn’t talk to everyone,” said
-Evangeline proudly. “He never talked to his
-sisters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, what do you do to him?” Teresa asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know. I just went on bravely and
-wouldn’t be put down. I was sure there must be
-something somewhere and I wanted to know what
-it was. He has a wonderful face, if you look at it.
-His eyes look so suffering sometimes, like something
-in a cage. I was sure he couldn’t be all ribs and
-the best waterproof twill really. I said to him once
-at the Manleys’ dance, when we were sitting out,”
-she went on after a pause, “‘You know we can’t
-always go on pretending that you are a pair of
-trousers and a coat and I am a bag with flounces
-propped up on two chairs. I’m a person and so
-are you. We must have heaps and heaps of things
-to talk about. Do, for goodness’ sake, let one of
-us go ahead’—I really worked myself up. I felt
-I just would smash into that propriety.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what happened?” her sister asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He got red at first and didn’t answer and I
-got awfully frightened. Then he said in quite
-a natural voice, ‘If you will behave just as you
-like I will try not to put you off. It is very kind
-of you to trouble about me.’ Rather as if I were
-a dog that he had been asked to exercise. However
-it was a beginning, and now he starts off by himself.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>I think the great thing is that he doesn’t
-regard me as a girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What does he think you are, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know. A sort of inferior Tommy I
-should think; uneducated but harmless, and quite
-useless. I might be his batman, marooned with
-him in a desert full of baboons.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It sounds very unlikely,” said Teresa. “You
-have a very muddled head, Chips, and you read
-such a lot of scraps that I believe it makes you
-worse; but you explain yourself quite clearly. I
-shall be interested to-morrow when I see that
-stuffed back at the breakfast table. Father would
-be amused.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are not to tell him,” said Evangeline
-quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m not going to. At least I might have if you
-hadn’t told me not to. Why don’t you want him
-to know that his man is nicer than we thought?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know, except that I discovered him
-and I don’t want to show him to people; he’s not
-nearly ready. And besides, he is like having a
-sitting-room of my own. I like a retreat that no
-one else knows the way to.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is Hatton in the house by any chance?” Cyril
-asked one day when he came in to tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know at all, dear,” said Susie. “I
-should think very likely; he generally is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He’s helping Chips to wash Tricot in the bathroom,”
-said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril stopped in the act of filling his pipe. “H’m,”
-he remarked. “Hereditary instinct, I suppose.
-Poor fellow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>“I know by your face that you mean something
-unkind, Cyril,” said his wife, “but I don’t see how
-even you can make out that there can be anything
-hereditary about washing a dog.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not if there’s only one person to do it,” he
-replied. He was holding a match to the tobacco
-and went on explaining between puffs. “But
-when Hatton, who is a nervous fellow—begins
-washing poodles with your daughter—your own
-little girl—who isn’t generally fond of work—I
-seem to see the young Eve adorning herself with
-the leaf of experiment just as Mother did. Have
-you ever seen a young chicken begin to scratch
-the moment it leaves the egg? It isn’t imitation,
-because it does it just the same if it is raised in an
-incubator.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa looked anxiously amused as a mother
-does whose favourite child is not behaving well in
-a drawing-room, but Mrs. Fulton was smarting
-under old sores. She said coldly, “Perhaps you
-would finish washing Tricot, dear Dicky. You had
-better tell Captain Hatton that your father wants
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t be silly,” said Cyril. “I don’t want
-him. I told him there was nothing for him to do
-this afternoon and as I didn’t see him at the Polo
-ground and found his hat in the hall when I came
-in I remembered the story of Adam and thought
-I’d ask, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa had gone out while he was speaking.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“May I ask if you never want the girls to marry?”
-Susie asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lord, no, I don’t care,” he replied, “but what’s
-that got to do with Hatton? I was only joking.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>I suppose he knows all about washing dogs. I
-expect he likes it. And Chips doesn’t know the
-business as well as you, Sue; she won’t construe
-a wag of the tail into an offer of marriage. Hatton
-is a very upright man. He’d probably consult
-you first and lay out his plans on paper in the
-approved style.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, if he did I’m sure I don’t know what I
-should say,” she answered thoughtfully. Cyril
-had once explained to a bewildered friend, “The
-great charm of an argument with Sue is that you
-never know which part of a conversation she will
-choose to take the trick with. You may find that
-the only lie you have told for years is used as an
-ace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean,” she went on, “that I don’t think
-Evangeline ought to be encouraged to act hastily.
-I like Mr. Varens so much better than Evan Hatton.
-He will probably come into his father’s place very
-soon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Great Scott!” exclaimed Cyril, really startled
-at last. “Has Varens asked her after dining here
-once? What in heaven’s name possesses the poor
-devils! But I oughtn’t to talk I suppose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t be so absurd, Cyril. I never said he had
-proposed to her. I only meant that she hadn’t
-had time to consider him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you mean, ‘consider him?’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I merely took Mr. Varens as an instance. I
-don’t want her to be pushed into liking Evan Hatton
-just because she hasn’t had time to think of any
-other. Ill-considered marriages are often so regrettable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I were a woman,” said Cyril, “I should say
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>that I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry at the
-things you say. Unlace me, Emmeline, and give
-me some more tea—have you got any?” He
-passed his cup.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But do you see what I mean, Cyril?” she
-persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I see all right,” he replied. “My eye
-wants shading if anything; it’s positively dazzling,
-the light that you throw on matters of the heart.
-It’s a pity you never met Darwin. He wrote on
-natural selection, but I’m not sure that he mastered
-the subject. You might——” He stopped as the
-door opened and Evangeline came in with Captain
-Hatton.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evan glanced at his general, who was peacefully
-sunk in an armchair, playing with the cat. Tricot,
-the poodle, followed into the room and walked about
-shaking himself restlessly as if he missed something.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s all right, old Tricot,” said Cyril. “Come
-here and talk to Pussy; she’s your friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Tricot came in innocent confidence, and the
-usual recriminations between him and the cat began.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is funny, if you notice, that dogs are all for
-love and cats all for marriage,” said Cyril thoughtfully,
-“and the two together are always chosen to
-represent domestic life—at least the ill-considered
-domestic life that you were talking about, Sue. I
-suppose it’s handed on for generations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evan Hatton did not hear. He was at the
-window with Evangeline, trying to make her
-understand the principle of a magneto. “Here’s
-Emma coming,” she announced presently from the
-window. “She’s getting off the tram. Do you want
-her, Dicky?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>“I’m going out with her,” Teresa answered.
-“She said she would come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where on earth to at this time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has got a place where children go after
-school; she said she would take me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do wish she wouldn’t wear that hat,” Evangeline
-said critically, watching Emma as she came
-up the garden path. “I wonder where good
-milliners go to when they die. They never seem
-to mix with good people in this world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Captain Hatton’s face reddened and he turned
-away from the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s the matter?” asked Evangeline. “Are
-you going?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” he answered shortly and then he said
-good-bye and left the room. He nearly ran into
-Emma in the hall, so great was his haste and his
-preoccupation. “I beg your pardon,” he apologised.
-“How could I have been so stupid. Did
-I knock your hat?” for she had put up her hand
-to straighten it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Captain Hatton!” Evangeline called over the
-banisters, “are you coming riding before breakfast
-to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you wish me to,” he answered unsteadily
-and waited for a moment while Emma ran upstairs.
-But Evangeline only replied, “All right, eight
-o’clock then,” and disappeared, and he heard the
-girls’ laughter in the drawing-room. He let himself
-out and spent the evening and most of the
-night walking along the sea shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s an unlucky hat of yours, Emma,” said
-Evangeline when she went back to the drawing-room.
-“I believe there’s a devil in it. We had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>one row about it before you came up.” She went
-off singing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa’s elusive desire had begun to show itself
-openly to her since she met Emma Gainsborough.
-She had been allowed at last behind the curtain
-where the faces that haunted her in the streets
-were no longer imaginary characters in a scene
-at which she looked on as a spectator. She began
-to know individual Tommys and Gordons and
-Gladyses and Victorias, Mrs. Potter and Mrs.
-Jason; to understand why Mr. Potter was out of
-work and what it meant to half-a-dozen lives when
-Mr. Jason brought home only a fraction of his
-earnings. She saw disease for the first time. She
-met pleasure and wit and obscenity and tragedy
-jostling familiarly together without prejudice or
-distinction, engendered by all possible unions of
-hunger, love, jealousy, optimism, sensuality, pride,
-gentleness, patience, brutality, callousness, kindness,
-ambition, hopelessness, fidelity, in all possible
-conditions of filth or heartrending strife with
-squalor; intelligence burning indomitably in fogs
-of prejudice and lies and stupidity. She had torn
-the veil which the faces in the street seemed to
-draw down between Mrs. Carpenter’s “duty to
-the city” and some vital secret that the city kept
-to itself. The passionate love of fellowship that
-had tormented her with its insistence and eluded
-her by its formlessness had taken shape in the
-places that Emma and her leaders were patiently
-trying to remake, and now she thought of little
-else.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>If Evangeline’s campaign against Evan Hatton’s
-prejudices had been a public war, the supporters of
-either side would have seen that the end was now
-drawing near. Optimists among the Evangelineites
-would have rubbed their hands and said that she
-had got the forces of his harsh morality fairly on the
-run; the pessimists would have prophesied (though
-admitting Evangeline’s strength) that the struggle
-would break out again as soon as peace was signed.
-The Evanites would either have declared that
-Morality was going to the dogs and was being sold by
-Self-interest and Pleasure, or they would have
-prepared to retreat, still fighting, to the height of
-“A Strong Man’s Influence,” and determined to
-reorganise for a new offensive when the enemy
-should be weakened by marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An important battle took place during the ride
-that Evangeline had arranged, when Evan retreated
-after her flippancy on the subject of dead milliners.
-He called for her and brought her horse from the
-livery stable at eight the next morning, and they
-rode away in that state of silent tension which
-precedes an explanation when two people who care
-for each other have parted in offence. Evangeline
-tried hard to make him “start talking by himself,”
-as she had boasted to Teresa that he was now in the
-habit of doing. She tempted him with proof that
-she had absorbed his lecture on the magneto and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>was mistress of its difficulties. She threw him
-touching confidences about her plans in little everyday
-matters. But all in vain. At last her temper
-rose slightly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is the matter with you?” she asked.
-“Are you angry with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have no right to be angry with you,” he
-answered with emotion, “but I don’t understand
-you, and yet I know that you are good and could be
-great. Why do you pretend to be like the others
-and say things that are unworthy of you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline was overawed. “What things?”
-she asked timidly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was a silly trifle, and I know I am a fool—but
-it made me hot—what you said about good
-milliners not associating with good people in this
-world. Emma Gainsborough is giving her life to
-God’s work as readily as the saints gave theirs—she’s
-a Crusader if you like—and you make paltry
-fun of her hat. There now! I suppose you won’t
-speak to me again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I shall,” said Evangeline. “If you will not
-shut yourself up into that dreadful silence you may
-say anything—absolutely anything. You make me
-see such a long way when you talk. I read the
-papers by myself and get into such knots because I
-can’t see any connection between different things.
-But when you hurl me about from Emma’s hat to
-the Crusaders, who I thought were people who
-fought in nightgowns and red crosses with a feather
-in their helmets and defeated the heathen—why—let
-me see, where am I?—well you see how exhilarating
-it is! I feel as if my mind had been galloping
-miles in the fresh air in new places.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>“Great heavens, what a child you are!” he said,
-looking at her in wonderment. Then he smiled
-and held out his hand. “I’m sorry,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline shook it heartily. “So am I,” she
-assured him. “And will you show me how to take
-the car to pieces next time Father lets you off?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nonsense, he won’t want it taken to pieces,”
-said Evan. “What’s the good of that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just to see the wheels,” she begged. “And
-then I should be so useful if anything went wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, you haven’t got any mechanical sense,”
-he argued. “I can see that. You understand a
-theory when I tell it you, but when it comes to
-putting it into practice you don’t think a bit. I’ve
-watched you learning to drive; you do it all by the
-book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, what should I do it by?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Common sense and a thorough knowledge of
-the reason for everything. The fact that any part
-of a machine does so-and-so isn’t enough; you must
-know why, and what will be the result if it doesn’t
-act, and then you must treat it so that it will act.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear,” she said. “There’s the sun coming
-out! Let’s gallop while there is grass.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It is superfluous to follow this love episode any
-further. I have met ladies who are always passionately
-anxious to know “what he said” when a
-girl announces her engagement, and who need no
-encouragement to tell in return “how John did it.”
-But I am all against emotional indecency, and unless
-any private conversations in this book have to be
-recorded in the interests of research, or are betrayed
-by the genial indiscretions of sympathy, they will
-be omitted. Evan is the last person who would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>wish anything to be said of him in that moment
-when Nature, who had always laughed at his
-attempts to make her acknowledge the sovereignty
-of such Divine Rule as he was able to imagine,
-pushed Evangeline into his arms and commanded
-him to take her or suffer the pains of hell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He saw no reason to refuse. But the end was
-not yet, though it had become inevitable. Evan
-had reserves. Evangeline’s gallant forces had a
-tough time of it before they won. Suspicion was
-the hardest to beat down; Evan’s sisters had helped
-to make that so strong. He reviewed his bonny
-black doubts every day, and led them out against
-Evangeline’s joys. But there was all the difference
-in the world between his sisters’ cheerfulness and
-hers. Their pleasure in life was that of mice in a
-granary, hers was that of a rush of invaders over
-a rich country; she wanted all there was. Her
-assurance that God loves His world was invincible.
-Evan’s doubts suffered casualties that put them out
-of action; but for a happy marriage they should all
-have been dead. The smallest remnant of a strong
-army is dangerous.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>These battles went on unobserved by Cyril.
-Susie noticed and said nothing, because she knew
-that unasked advice to a girl precipitates a crisis,
-and she hoped in secret that Evangeline loved her
-freedom too much to do what her mother would call
-“anything rash,” such as binding herself in marriage
-before she had reviewed all likely candidates. As
-weeks went on she became more anxious. There
-was a look of settled happiness about Evangeline
-that was not what you would expect of a young
-girl, Susie said to herself. It is a mistake to wear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>the heart on the sleeve. One of the great joys of her
-own girlhood had been the security of living behind
-a veil of misty sweetness that allowed the public
-free scope for their imagination of what might be
-behind it and yet committed her to nothing. Misunderstandings
-had arisen in that way but she had
-not suffered and those who had done so had only
-their own imaginations to blame. She still made
-use of the veil, and the only person who made her
-feel nervous about it was Cyril. He had the knack
-of twitching it away, and never tired of the joke,
-which seemed to compensate him for the nothingness
-he exposed. In one way only, her disappointment
-about Evangeline’s choice was a good thing to her.
-She felt it as a revenge on her husband for his
-cynicism about women and the jibes he aimed at
-her about their duplicity towards men. “Perhaps
-he will see now,” she said to herself—her very soul
-bridling at the Spirit of Man—“that they do need
-protection after all. If he really cared for her I
-could have discussed it with him and he could have
-got another A.D.C. until this had blown over. As
-it is, it must just go on, and I can’t prevent it—with
-the man here all day while the sons of rich people
-are sitting on office stools, shuffling oats and sugar
-through their fingers. Why can’t some of them
-come and ride with her and show her their motors?
-And I suppose Dicky will marry a rent collector
-with a wooden leg, or a socialist who stands on a
-chair and wants to take away our money.” Her
-thoughts wandered into all sorts of bitter possibilities,
-not at all in keeping with the maxim that
-“if everyone were happy and contented everything
-would come right,” which she brought in so delightfully
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>at Mrs. Carpenter’s little informal conferences
-on social reform. “Mrs. Fulton is so original in
-what she says,” was a remark constantly made.
-But true it was that she thought differently at the
-moment. Circumstances alter cases, as she so
-often said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Because of this grievance of hers against him,
-Cyril was not told of her fears, and in due time
-Evangeline’s battle was won. Evan frowned on the
-tattered remnant of his doubts and bade them go
-home. He went in, his heart stumbling and stopping,
-to the study where Cyril was asleep after a day’s
-hunting, and shut the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril came down early before dinner, and found
-Evangeline reading the evening paper in the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hullo,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hullo, dear,” she replied, and went on reading.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So you and Hatton have fixed it up,” he began.
-Evangeline put down the paper, and looked up at
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is that all right?” she asked. “You’re not
-cross, are you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I’m not cross, my dear,” he said, as if he
-were thinking of something else. “I suppose you
-wouldn’t tell me any more, would you? Why you
-really want him, for instance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I would, of course,” she answered readily.
-“I’d tell you anything—though that’s not true,
-because I told Dicky weeks ago that he was getting—oh
-well, you know—quite tame—and she thought
-you would be pleased, but I wouldn’t let her tell
-you because—I didn’t want to spoil it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“H’m,” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>“I mean I liked feeling that none of you knew
-him properly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“H’m,” said Cyril again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, what’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A powerful apple,” he observed. “Power, my
-dear child, power.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Father,” she sighed, “you’re not going on
-again about that dreadful old Eden, are you? I
-do wish no one had ever told you the story. You
-think women are always tempting men to this
-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So they are when it comes to marriage,” he
-asserted. “Don’t you make any mistake about
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline felt desperate, as if she were caught
-and entangled. “Do you mean that men never
-fall in love with them?” Tears gathered in her
-eyes. She had had some weary work at the last
-stand of Hatton’s doubts, and now her father, whom
-she loved and believed in as a friend, was going to
-take the top off the morning of her happiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril understood and repented. “No,” he said,
-“Hatton loves you—but——” he looked at her
-inquiring face and decided to revise what he was
-going to say. “Have you ever heard of spontaneous
-combustion? It’s a troublesome thing, but I should
-have more faith in your sex if they suffered from it
-in their emotions. They think too hard for my
-taste. But that’s all. Hatton is the devil of a
-hard thinker himself, so you had better leave him
-to scratch his head, and say, ‘yes, dear,’ like your
-mother does when I give her the benefit of my
-wisdom. Then all you need is to go out and do
-just the opposite, and say afterwards that that was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>what you thought he meant. Don’t incense him
-at the time, is the great thing. ‘The Housewife’s
-Vade Mecum,’ as I read somewhere, or ‘Little Polly’s
-first steps in efficiency’.” He kissed her on
-his way across the room to turn on some more light.
-“Just to wish you luck, dear, and to show there’s
-no ill-feeling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He returned to the fire and drew up a chair. “I’m
-in favour of marriage for all, myself,” he went on,
-“young and old, rich and poor, never mind the
-reason, but get on with the event itself. The advent
-of little ones is, after all, the only thing that matters,
-as your mother explained to me. And that was you,
-Chips. There was a devil of a row before you
-turned up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, did you and Mother quarrel?” she asked,
-very much surprised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You can’t call a one-sided thing exactly a
-quarrel,” he said. “No one but a man could
-quarrel with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Couldn’t they?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No. But your mother is very powerful in the
-way I was describing;——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie came in just then. Cyril had told her while
-they were dressing that Evan had “put in a claim
-as consort for Chips; which just bears out what I
-said this style of architecture would lead to when we
-came; except that he isn’t wealthy. In fact, he
-has very little except his pay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie took the line that this was “all that could
-be expected in a place where people think so much
-of money that they never leave their offices till it is
-time to go to bed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That ought to make them all the more anxious
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>to marry,” he remarked, “or else how can they
-enjoy any intellectual conversation?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course you will twist everything I say to a
-coarse standpoint, Cyril,” she said, “because those
-sort of cheap jokes are so easy to make.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where’s the joke?” he asked, putting on his
-coat. “‘<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Honi soit qui mal y pense</span>,’ as the leaders
-of taste remind us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie made no answer, but closed the door between
-their rooms, and she did not go down until dinner
-was announced.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Among the people who called on Susie from Mr.
-Price’s Paradise, the county, was Lady Varens,
-David Varens’s stepmother. Sir Richard and Cyril
-were admirably suited to one another because the
-old man was a sportsman by nature and practice.
-He had had an adventurous youth and “mercifully,”
-as Cyril said, “forgotten the details.” Then, on
-his father’s death, he came back to Millshire and
-managed the estate with the same thoroughness
-that had brought him success in less peaceful
-enterprises. He married first a guest of one of his
-hunting neighbours. She was lying unconscious
-on a bank, with her horse grazing beside her, when he
-saw her for the first time; and when he had brought
-her round and taken her home and called every
-other day to ask how she was it seemed natural to
-regard her as his own property. She died when
-David was nine, and Sir Richard married, two years
-afterwards, a lady whom he thought to have been
-unjustly divorced from a drunken old peer who had
-married her from the schoolroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She was good to David and kept her own counsel,
-so Millshire allowed her to carry on the tradition
-of Varens hospitality; in fact there was an extra
-piquancy about her parties owing to the opportunity
-they gave for a little private skeleton hunting among
-intimate friends. Towards the following Christmas,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>while Evangeline was staying with Evan’s sisters,
-Sir Richard invited Cyril to take a day or two’s
-hunting with him and stay over the week-end.
-Lady Varens hoped that Mrs. Fulton would come
-too, and bring her daughter, to hunt or not, as she
-liked. Evangeline being away, Teresa was torn
-from her heart’s delight, the alleys, the rotting
-garrets and the dingy clubs where she groped all
-day for the scattered remnant of what seemed to
-her the lost birthright of the bottom class, their
-right to the fellowship of common desires and tastes
-with the people who filled her mother’s drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is the good of this eternal talk about all
-men being able to reach any position they are fitted
-for, if, when you come across the most lovable
-people in that class, you can hardly bear to sit with
-them for five minutes because of smells and anxieties
-and habits that shut them off like a cage that they
-didn’t make themselves and can’t get out of?” she
-asked Emma Gainsborough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We are trying to get them out,” said Emma.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” Teresa answered, “but I don’t see
-how you can unless you kill Mrs. Carpenter.” She
-and Mrs. Carpenter had perhaps the same end in
-view when they worked among the dismal crowds
-that swarmed in the mud and hideousness of the
-poorer quarters, but to the casual observer it looked
-as though the “charity ladies,” as Strickland called
-them, were under the impression that in their promotion
-of health and virtue they were pressing something
-new on somebody who had never heard of it,
-while Teresa hoped to restore a treasure that had
-been lost by past generations.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>Her own experience was showing her that the
-cage door gives way before devotees who will suffer
-the violation of everything that makes life sweet
-to them for the sake of what they hold dearer, and
-she also learned the freemasonry of hard work;
-the point where she stuck was the apparent impossibility
-of ever bridging the gulf between Mrs.
-Carpenter and Mrs. Potter. How to wean Mrs.
-Carpenter from the idea that the social order was
-all right because she was on the bright side of it,
-and at the same time convince Mrs. Potter that it
-was not all wrong because she was on the dark one?
-As one of Emma’s friends pointed out, twenty
-centuries had passed since the only serious attempt
-had been made to bring about an understanding
-between the ancestors of those two irreconcilable
-ladies. The best spiritual engineering had been
-carried on ever since along the lines then laid down;
-communications had been devised and traffic of a
-sort carried on. But as soon as Mrs. Potter advanced
-a little and caught sight of Mrs. Carpenter and went
-for her, bald-headed, and when Mrs. Carpenter
-sailed along from her end of the bridge and then sat
-down and sang to Mrs. Potter——. I must stop
-this allegory or the reader will break down in tears
-of perplexity and perhaps send the book straight
-back to the library; unless he has himself lived
-for a time miserably wedged between the philanthropists
-and the slums of a city.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To get on with the story. Teresa was, as I have
-said, torn from her absorbing occupation and compelled
-to go with her father and mother to be the
-Varens’ guest at Aldwych Court.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>I believe there is no place so comfortable to stay
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>in as an English country house belonging to a good
-hostess. The luxury of dressing in any part of her
-room without the penalty of gooseflesh; the deep,
-scented bath and warm towel three feet square;
-the rich, dry fluffiness under foot, and the cup of tea
-afterwards, brought by a maid who seemed to have
-nothing else to do, banished all visions of Mrs.
-Potter to such a remote corner of Teresa’s consciousness
-that when she did remember her again the
-recollection had no more sting than a bad dream.
-She ate her dinner, served by willing men and
-women who performed their duties like priests of
-Isis, instead of, as dear Strickland did, giving her
-the uneasy feeling that one course would have been
-quite enough if ladies were not so greedy. She had
-observed sometimes to Evangeline that Millport
-maids treated their mistresses as if they were parrots
-whose dirty cages had to be cleaned out, and whom
-it “took up people’s time” to feed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David Varens is to play his part on the stage now,
-but there is to be no sudden change in the music
-to waltz time, nor cries of the villagers, “But here
-comes the Prince! Gay and dancing, bright and
-prancing, sing we now our welcome,” nor will the
-light fade and moon children glide out from under
-trees and sit upon their mushrooms while he sings,
-“Queen of the dusk and lodestar of my dreams.”
-He comes on like Cyril’s millionaire, “walking quite
-unaffectedly” among a number of ordinary people.
-It was not until Teresa and her mother went away
-on Monday that she began seriously to prefer him
-to Mrs. Potter. It may be difficult for anyone who
-is unacquainted with the love of Beauty for the
-Beast to understand what a disappointment it was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>to her to find that her heart had betrayed her and
-was transferring its allegiance to a normal object.
-It was something between childish terror of the sea
-and the remorse of a pilgrim whose prayers have
-grown cold that followed on the joy his presence
-gave her. “How happy I am,” she thought, and
-then, as a ghostly voice demanded the truth, she
-added, “and I don’t care a hang what Mrs. Potter
-is doing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>There were other people staying in the house, but
-she did not notice them and no more need we. Lady
-Varens and Susie talked and knitted and drove, and
-Lady Varens liked Susie, because it was impossible
-not to on a slight acquaintance, and Susie liked
-Lady Varens because there was mystery about her
-and she had great charm, with her soft eyes that
-saw much and told nothing, and her sensitive mouth
-whose utterances led to conversation, but also told
-nothing. Susie admired in her the ideal woman,
-and “we are so much alike” was what she chiefly
-thought of her. Cyril enjoyed his hunting and sat
-up late in the smoking-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hope you will come and see us, Mr. Varens,”
-said Susie before they left. “Your mother, I know,
-hardly ever leaves this lovely place, and no more
-should I if it were mine. But I know you do come
-into town sometimes. We can always give you
-lunch and it will be such a change to hear about
-the beautiful country things in the middle of all
-our ugliness; I never get used to it. I shall be so
-anxious to hear whether that dear black cow gets
-all right again. Cows are such mothers, you know;
-one feels so sorry for them having to be parted from
-those sweet calves. You are going to manage the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>estate now, Sir Richard told me. How delightful
-that will be, and what a saving of anxiety to
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said David, “I come in two or three times
-a week to the University. Perhaps you would let
-me come one of those days, may I? Thanks very
-much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He took Teresa through the woods that morning.
-She said less than usual, and presently he noticed
-this. “You look worried,” he remarked. “Is
-anything wrong?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know that you can call it wrong,” she
-answered, “but I feel almost sick at the thought of
-going back to Emma Gainsborough and her office.
-It doesn’t seem any use from here. I was bent on
-teaching music to Albert Potter the day I came, and
-now I want to turn him into a calf or a frog. What
-is the good of Emma going on sending different
-kinds of splints for him and telling Mrs. Potter how
-to put them on? The money I have eaten since I
-came here would have saved him from getting like
-that a year ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Look here,” said David seriously, “I have been
-along that road while I was at Oxford, and it leads
-nowhere, except into a sort of maze where you lose
-yourself and die for want of a fresh argument. If
-I had ideas I would come down to your place and do
-what you are doing for as long as you wanted me,
-but I haven’t got any ideas and I have got fields—or
-rather my father has, and can’t look after them
-as he used to—and I am going to see what is to be
-got out of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have neither ideas nor fields,” she said, “but
-I had an enormous family when I left home last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>week, and now I have been happy and forgotten
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you forget them?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, quite,” she answered sadly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you can’t really care for them enough to
-succeed,” he said. This struck Teresa a blow.
-“Don’t you ever forget your farms and things?”
-she asked, “not for a minute?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, except when I’m asleep or hunting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hunting! my hunting is done down there,” she
-said illogically.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then where are your farms?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, blow!” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right. Well, when will you come back here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When I can’t bear any more committees of
-the charitable. I wish you could see Mrs. Carpenter.
-Do you remember, she was at the Gainsboroughs
-the night you were there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Was she? I forget. What like?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Like an hour glass, in pink—with the sand quite
-solid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t notice. I couldn’t make your Miss
-Gainsborough talk, that’s all I know. Is there
-anything the matter with her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear me, no,” she answered in surprise. “She’s
-very amusing when you know her. Mr. Price got
-her into such a state of nerves. He did me, too.
-Do you understand him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but I think he is only trying to mix society;
-just what you want to do with Mrs. Potter. If
-you encourage her you ought to encourage him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa looked at him to see whether he was
-laughing, but they had come to a stile and he was
-waiting politely for her to get over. Instead of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>climbing she sat down on it and faced him. “It
-is absolutely different,” she began to explain.
-“What I can’t bear is to find people, who would be
-just like you if they had been sent to school and
-fed, unable to express themselves and living in such
-horrible places that one can hardly attend to what
-they are trying to say because of the awfulness.
-And it is nonsense to say that they can always get
-out. All self-made men say afterwards that they
-were newsboys, but there are thousands of darling
-newsboys who haven’t got just the bit of extra
-that made Dick Whittington; and, as my mother
-says, purring among her furs on a platform, ‘they
-are often taught to be bad.’ She does talk such
-rot, and yet often her platitudes wouldn’t be so
-telling if they were not made up over a small piece
-of truth. There is nothing like that about that
-dreadful man Price; is there now? Come, speak up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He wants to get into a better set and explain
-himself,” said David.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nonsense,” answered Teresa, “not a better set
-at all; only a more fashionable one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, but you say that your set isn’t any better
-than Mrs. Potter’s, only more fashionable. If that
-is so then Mrs. Potter is a snob like Price. But
-if you claim some other advantage that you
-want Mrs. Potter to share, why shouldn’t Price be
-sensitive about having been born outside a set that
-claims to be better than his own?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish I could get someone who has as much
-‘lip’ as you have to talk to you,” said Teresa. “I
-can’t do it, but I know you are wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your Potter vocabulary is beyond me,” said
-David politely.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The curtain now goes up on Evangeline’s marriage.
-It took place six months ago. Cyril has a new
-A.D.C. with a fluffy wife and blue-eyed child; all
-three as happy as grigs. His name is Jimmy
-Trotter—(the Trotters of Burnside) and she was
-Miss Fripps of Ely, a daughter of the famous Dean
-Fripps. Cyril doesn’t mind Trotter, who does his
-work all right, and Mrs. Trotter is always good fun
-at a party, though Susie thinks she is rather empty-headed,
-and can’t understand how she can afford
-a nurse like that for the baby; it would be much
-more sensible if she looked after it herself, and got
-a really nice girl to take charge in the afternoon.
-Mrs. Trotter thinks not, as she does not believe in
-nice girls and prefers to save money by doing the
-cooking in which she is expert and let the baby have
-the whole attention of a woman whom she can
-trust. She doesn’t believe in making oneself a
-premature fright by being a Jack-of-all-trades.
-They have recurrent arguments on this question and
-Susie gets the worst of it, for Mrs. Trotter disposes
-of platitudes as she would of kitchen refuse, without
-a moment’s thought whether there may not be
-diamonds among them. Therefore, Susie says she
-is empty-headed, and does not care to see more of
-her than politeness demands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>And you should see Mrs. Trotter mimicking
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>“Mrs. General” to the wives of Cyril’s staff, all
-of whom she knows intimately! Of course it got
-round in time to Susie through Mrs. Carpenter, who
-heard of it from the wife of the Staff-Captain, who
-was rather keen on getting into the University set.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline was happy at this time, living at a
-place we will call Drage, where Cyril had got Evan
-an appointment. He found there several men who
-had been with him in the trenches. Their recollections
-pictured him as a man who had been of the
-greatest value as an unfailing joke; a good joke,
-too, for you never knew when it mightn’t blow you
-sky high. It was always worth while raising him
-when you had a lot to think of, because his explosions
-of temper were entertaining enough to take
-your mind off any unpleasantness. And he was
-such a thoroughly good fellow; would do anything
-or go anywhere, and his mechanical genius had
-earned their admiration and gratitude for many
-improvised good things. Hicks remembered him
-taking a Hun’s watch to pieces in his dug-out and—the
-story that followed was always a success. It
-preceded his arrival at Drage, and Evan found everyone
-pleased to welcome him and his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline’s enthusiasms and her naïveté were
-soon the talk of the place. Some of the women
-regarded her as a fool and some as “a very dashing
-young person.” She certainly was, as Strickland
-had prophesied, “a favourite with the gentlemen.”
-There is a pose of free speech and free living that is
-as closely bound by its self-imposed limits as any
-other doctrine, and it is particularly false because
-the naturally free have never heard of freedom;
-as Cyril would have pointed out, “it was knowledge
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>of the damned thing’s existence that made Eve a
-slave to propriety.” Evangeline’s knowledge of
-good and evil was, as we have seen, gathered almost
-entirely from the newspapers, and was therefore
-negligible. So she thought freely (which is different
-from being a free thinker) and Evan, who had eaten
-his apple with attention, was scandalised, and the
-ladies of Drage, who wore their aprons merely
-as a class distinction, cutting them long or short
-or leaving them off altogether, as fashion
-dictated, were astonished at her behaviour.
-Indeed when her instincts did, as she once hoped
-they would, “burst with a pop in the sun” of
-experience, she loved creation with a generosity
-that might have led her into all sorts of trouble
-had she been as faithless a woman as her mother.
-She was fascinated by the idea of having a child of
-her own, “a brand new person, whom no one has
-ever seen before, conjured from the vasty deep,”
-she said (with some school recollection of a quotation
-connected with impressive magic). She adored
-Evan as the god behind the machine and lost a
-great deal of the interest in his character that had
-made her take pride in his reluctant confidences.
-Splitting hairs in argument about sin seemed to her
-an absurd waste of time when it was clear that no
-one would bother to sin if he were happy; and who
-could be other than happy when the war was over
-and a new generation coming into life? Evan’s
-friends enjoyed her hospitality in peace, for she
-never teased them by the militant chastity, provoking
-but unyielding, which turns many a good bride
-into a firebrand. The average Englishman does not
-often engage in illicit love affairs unless they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>offered him; so Evangeline’s lack of decorum was
-regarded as a new and perfectly innocent game.
-Evan, with his explosive seriousness, had been a
-first-class jest in the old days, and here he was back
-again, married to some one just as funny in an
-opposite way, and the two together were simply
-splendid. The jokers were never tired of setting
-the one against the other in public, without an idea
-that differences of opinion could hold any danger for
-two people so obviously in love. They relished the
-stories that went round about Evangeline’s latest
-indiscretions and told how shirty old Evan had been
-and how the two had gone off together afterwards
-talking all the way and you could bet she got it
-properly in the neck when they reached home. One
-evening, these mischief makers who had egged on
-Evangeline to persuade poor old Hicks to do his
-Fiji dance, with young Blake lashed to a chair in the
-character of a maiden, went home to bed in the
-highest spirits, and left Evangeline and her husband
-alone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall chuck my job at once and leave here if
-you ever encourage that sort of thing again,” he
-said, standing in front of the embers of the fire
-that had made the little room so cheerful earlier
-in the evening. He had put young Blake’s chair
-back into its place with a savage push, and was now
-winding up the string that had been broken in the
-final ecstasy that brought the house down.
-Evangeline stared at him with round, startled
-eyes. “Darling Evan,” she said, “it was a game.
-What on earth is the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was outrageous. If you had ever been among
-savages——” he stopped, speechless.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>“But I haven’t,” she argued. “That’s just it.
-I want to know. It was fascinating. I felt as if
-I were the girl and he were getting nearer and
-nearer—it was gloriously exciting. And anyhow—dear
-Evan—don’t be an ass; it was pure farce,
-and I don’t believe he knows anything about
-Fijians at all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My mother would have died before she would
-have allowed such a thing in her drawing-room,”
-said Evan. “You have no womanly dignity.
-Everyone talks about you and the way you behave
-as if you were married to the whole staff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, what is the matter with you?” cried
-Evangeline. “I was so happy and I have done
-nothing whatever. I don’t know what you are
-trying to get at. How can I be married to the whole
-staff?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I assure you no stranger could point out which
-was your husband in a mixed gathering,” he replied
-coldly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh my dear, you’re like an eclipse of the sun,”
-she said, getting up and putting her arms round
-his neck. “I have been so happy that I had forgotten
-all your Mumbo Jumbo of this or that being
-right or wrong, that you used to make my flesh
-creep with till I thought you really knew about it.
-I believe you would blow out pleasure like a lamp
-if you could and make us all sit and eat repentance
-by corpse light. I am going to make another fire
-in my room and have tea and cake there, and if you
-don’t come and cheer up I’ll telephone for one of
-my other husbands to come instead.” So Evan
-relented until the next time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They came back to Millport for a visit at Easter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>“And when does Mrs. Hatton expect the great
-event?” asked Mrs. Carpenter of Susie when she
-and Mrs. Eric Manley and Mrs. Vachell had remained
-behind to tea after a committee meeting. The
-committee had been dealing, among other matters,
-with the case of Mrs. Potter’s daughter, for whom
-Teresa asked admittance to the maternity home
-they represented.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A particularly sad case,” Susie had remarked,
-“because it seems that she hardly knew the man
-and only encouraged him because her husband drank
-and she had nothing to live on. If she had only
-come to me, as Teresa might have suggested to her,
-I would have advised her what to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What would you have advised?” asked Mrs.
-Vachell curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should have tried to explain our point of
-view,” said Susie, “and shown her that, apart from
-the disgrace and all that, the man would probably
-leave her sooner or later, as he has.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But surely, Mrs. Fulton, that is not the main
-point?” said Mrs. Carpenter. “Surely we want
-to awaken something more than self-interest? We
-want to make these girls understand that the
-marriage vow often implies suffering.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, of course,” replied Susie with a far-away
-look. “But I think a woman always hopes to the
-end. They are so confiding and they forget that it
-will probably lead them into trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>In replying to Mrs. Carpenter’s other question,
-however, she took a brighter view of marriage.
-“Not quite yet,” she said, “but to tell you the truth,
-I never ask many questions of that sort. I always
-think that the glamour of a young marriage ought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>not to be rubbed off by too many practical
-details.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell used to wonder now and then how
-it was that Susie constantly took the bread out of
-Mrs. Carpenter’s mouth without her victim seeming
-to experience any sense of loss. Mrs. Carpenter
-did sometimes hesitate as if she thought she had
-lost something, but Susie seemed so innocent of her
-theft that it generally passed as an accident. On
-the whole, Mrs. Carpenter accepted her as an ally.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do they like being at Drage?” Mrs.
-Manley asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very much indeed,” Susie replied. “She enjoys
-military society, fortunately, which I never did.
-Mrs. Trotter envies her, she says, as she doesn’t like
-Millport herself. Of course a place that is building
-itself up a great position with its University and
-its social schemes can’t have much interest for
-people who are always packing up and following a
-drum from one dusty parade ground to another.”
-She paused and, as her audience was busy with cake,
-went on, “Those dreadful folding beds and bamboo
-furniture that they all seem to go in for—I suppose
-because it is so light—depress me too much. I do
-love a beautiful home of my own, however small.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think you are altogether fair to the army,
-my dear lady,” said Mrs. Carpenter, a trifle piqued.
-“I lived, until I married, among my dear people
-who were always on the move, and I don’t think you
-would have said that their ideas were limited.
-Wherever they went they were fêted like princes
-by all the most interesting people, and I think
-it gave all of us girls much wider interests and
-sharpened our wits more than being shut up in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>same set who all think each other perfect. Your
-parents felt it a great change, I expect, when they
-moved to London. One’s individuality has to
-fight so much harder there not to go under with the
-stream.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I daresay,” said Susie gently, “but that was
-some time before I was born. I have always been
-a Londoner, you know. Of course I missed at
-first being in the centre of everything, but I have
-got to enjoy the earnestness and concentration of
-it all here. Like those wonderful things your
-friend showed us under the microscope the other
-day,” she added to Mrs. Vachell. “One could
-hardly believe they were of so much importance
-until one saw them moving about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Manley laughed and exchanged a look with
-Mrs. Vachell and then Cyril came in and they rose
-to go. They never felt quite at ease with him.
-Mrs. Carpenter, feeling bound to assert her familiarity
-with military interests, stayed a few minutes
-to question him about his work, hoping incidentally
-that she might see Evangeline and determine for
-herself the probable date of her initiation.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>A few days later Evangeline was sitting in her
-father’s study after dinner. Her eyes were red
-with crying and she sat in a deep armchair opposite
-him, blowing her nose at intervals.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have a cigarette,” said Cyril sympathetically,
-pushing the box towards her. There had been
-something like a row at dinner. The Trotters had
-been invited and David Varens had turned up
-unexpectedly as he often did now after a late
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>lecture at the University. All had gone well until
-the dessert, when Mrs. Trotter, with that want of
-perception that often goes with household efficiency
-and a bright nature, began telling of a rift in the
-matrimonial lute of the staff-captain and his wife.
-“It all comes of her being so keen on the University,”
-she concluded. “She was bound to get
-scorched by Mrs. Vachell, sooner or later, when
-she took up Egypt with that giddy old professor.
-He knows too much about the Sphinx altogether.”
-She helped herself to some grapes and winked at
-Evan Hatton. Evangeline grew nervous as she
-saw that he was excessively angry. Cyril saw, too,
-but not realising that the matter was serious he
-laid himself out for a little fun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now then, Evan,” he said, “we’ll drink to the
-spotless reputation of the Army versus Thought,
-coupled with the name of Captain Hatton.” He
-poured himself out a glass of port and passed the
-decanter. “Now then, up you get.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have no joke ready, Sir, about the sort of
-dirt that women choose to throw at each other,”
-said Evan, and he relapsed into a black silence,
-fingering his glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, I say, Hatton——” began Captain Trotter
-angrily. Evangeline blushed scarlet and looked
-at her husband in despair. Mrs. Trotter inspected
-him with amused disgust and waited for her husband
-to go on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evan dear, Evan,” Susie remonstrated. “What
-are you talking about? Mrs. Trotter will think
-you a great bear if you use such strong language
-about poor old Professor Vachell’s little flirtation.
-You’d really think he meant it, wouldn’t you?”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>she smiled round the table and was going to change
-the conversation when Evan rose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sorry,” he said, “but I should have to
-finish what I was going to say if I remained, and
-perhaps I have no right—which of us has when it
-comes to throwing stones?” He went to the
-door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evan——!” pleaded Evangeline almost angrily,
-but he was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor fellow!” said Susie, “I expect he feels
-the heat” (or the cold—I forget what the weather
-was at the time). “You know,” she turned to
-Captain Trotter, “I don’t believe any of you have
-quite got over that dreadful war yet. I met a
-poor boy only yesterday who was quite sure that
-Moses had appeared to him in a vision and announced
-the Day of Judgment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s what Moses is rather in the habit of
-doing,” said Cyril, grateful to her for once, though
-the occasion had been unintentional. “You know,
-Trotter, seriously, you ought to stop those boys
-gambling at the mess like that. There’s some of
-them don’t know the difference between a Hebrew
-and a bank account.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Trotters went home early after dinner.
-Evan had gone for a walk and not returned, and
-David Varens and Teresa were arguing in a corner
-about something, so Evangeline slipped off to her
-father’s room and there wept profusely while he
-smoked. When she was re-established and had
-accepted a cigarette, Cyril began to talk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve seen more of that sort of thing than you’d
-suppose,” he said, “but I’m sorry it should come
-your way, Chips; you, of all people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>“Oh, I don’t much mind, thanks,” she answered,
-blowing her nose once more with a final blast, the
-last roll of thunder before sunshine reappears.
-“Only when it is in public.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you get much of it in private?” asked her
-father.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes,” she sighed. “Father, what do you
-think it is? He must be so miserable if he thinks
-everybody wicked when they are having fun. I
-would give up everything or do anything to see
-him happy, but it seems impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I always understood he had a reputation for
-being very good fun,” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, to the others,” she agreed. “They all
-adore him and he never minds anything they do
-or if he does they only think it funnier still. It is
-women he thinks ought not to be amused at anything
-broader than—— Oh, I don’t know, the way
-a canary eats or something like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very dry humour certainly,” he commented,
-“but easily gratified. It’s a pity more of you
-don’t care for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Father, don’t talk to the gallery,” she reproached
-him. “You know you detest a perfect
-lady.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“H’m. First catch your hare,” he replied.
-“We’re not getting on with this, Chips, but I wish
-I could help you. How does he take the prospect
-of fatherhood? If it’s a girl and you keep her in
-good condition I should think his number will be
-up shortly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I hate fighting,” she objected. “Why
-can’t we be happy? And suppose it is a boy and
-he learns to hate Evan? I should give up then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>and run away with him to the desert and live on
-dates in the sun. I won’t have a little boy brought
-up in that abominable nonsense about Hell. Anger
-is hell. I don’t believe in a God with a black
-temper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have another cigarette,” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are Hatton’s sisters like?” he asked
-after a pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Giggly little people,” she said, “awfully kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do they like you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes, so long as they suppose I think Evan
-perfect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does he object to them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, he talks to them about carburettors and
-their G.F.S. and the dogs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, well, that shows he can be all right if he’s
-interested,” Cyril remarked with some relief. “You
-evidently haven’t mastered the art of distraction
-that I warned you about, you remember.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c009'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>‘J. is for James, Maria’s younger brother,</div>
- <div class='line'>Who, walking one way, chose to look the other.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c010'>That is the secret of married happiness, I find; to
-act like James.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The front door banged and they heard Evan
-come upstairs. He stopped for a moment outside
-the door and then came in. “May I come in, Sir?”
-he asked, “I heard Evangeline was here. I’m
-very sorry I lost my temper at dinner. I’ve been
-round to Trotter and apologised; but I can’t stand
-that woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Evan, you are a good bird,” said Evangeline.
-“Come and sit down here and have a cigarette.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>“I had better go down and throw out Varens,”
-said Cyril, looking at the clock, “unless—(an idea
-struck him)—unless you care to go, Chips, and tell
-your mother I think I am a little feverish and would
-she like to come and rub me with camphorated
-oil?” Evangeline stared at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What on earth for?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And tell Varens I’ll be down in a minute when
-the attack has worn off, if he wouldn’t mind waiting,”
-Cyril continued. “I’m rather inclined to back up
-young David against Miss Emma Goliath when it
-comes to taking up Dicky’s time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where do you get all your Scripture knowledge
-from?” she asked wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have often read the lessons,” he assured her;
-then he remembered his son-in-law and looked at
-him guiltily, but all was calm. Evan was listening
-and smoking benevolently. Evangeline resumed,
-“Mother will never swallow that rot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I must do it myself,” Cyril decided reluctantly.
-“Down with Emma Goliath and her
-musty cohorts!” He left the room and a few
-minutes afterwards they heard him rummaging
-in a book-case in the passage for the Army List
-of 1913, while Susie held the candle.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Young Mr. Price worked quite hard (“rehrly, you
-know, kait sairys effort!”) to bring his parent’s
-house up to the requirements of his college friends.
-He was not likely to ask anyone to his home except
-for political or enterprising reasons, because Millport
-at its richest did not provide much entertainment
-for unsympathetic guests. Its merchant princes
-fell short of imagination when it came to spending.
-They were as unlike the Medici as could well be
-imagined. They not only failed to encourage art,
-but they disliked it and fought against it. It took
-as much pressure of public opinion from rival cities
-and continents to get anything of value into the
-town as would have been required to turn Lobengula
-into a St. Anthony. Sometimes when this or that
-architect, painter, poet or musician was known to
-have built, decorated or filled the super-halls of
-America and returned burdened with contracts
-and delicious food, Millport used to stir uneasily
-in its contempt and occasionally went so far as to
-despatch a clerk to find out if there were any of
-the stuff left; because America’s habit of apt
-valuation is only too well known in business circles.
-The fact that her people also care passionately for
-their purchases might otherwise pass unnoticed.
-Neither did Millport indulge itself much in luxuries
-such as sailing, travelling or sport. The Prices
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>kept a big motor which they used carefully, often
-suffering the horrors of the local train or the crowded
-tram rather than be unbusiness-like with petrol.
-Their clothes were a source of pride rather than
-pleasure. Mrs. Price was timid in her choice of
-garments and inclined to the perfect taste prescribed
-by the lady-in-waiting at Messrs. Venison
-and Phipps. “Mantles this way, Modom,” said
-the junior assistant in black charmeuse, and then
-Miss Figginbottam, whom Mrs. Price “always
-reckoned on,” aged forty-five, disillusioned and
-imperative, stepped forward and gave the casting
-vote between the grey moire velours and the rather
-richer effect of the petunia and chinchilla.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But young Mr. Price and his sisters now told the
-poor old lady that this would not do. Her daughters
-took her to London and brought her back with
-monkeys’ tails and Balkan embroideries hanging
-slantwise over her innocent curves; they trotted
-her about in high-heeled shoes instead of the soft
-kid boots that Bollingworth’s used to make so well
-to her pattern. They did her hair in the fashion
-of Goya’s mistress and made her drink cocktails
-and become a vegetarian, but forbade her to smoke,
-which she did not understand. Her son taught
-her the names of the new poets, but could never
-get six quotable lines of their poetry into her head
-because there was “nothing to catch hold of”
-about it. Then they began on Dad; and he took
-to it like a bird. There was no trouble with him.
-He put himself entirely in the hands of his son’s
-tailor and then was told he looked too smart. So
-he stood patiently and allowed his trousers to be
-let down till they corkscrewed ever so rightly down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>his short legs. He shaved off his beard and grew
-a very intellectual-looking moustache; but his
-daughters told him he looked like a Labour Member
-and made him shave it off. He smoked a pipe,
-which he did not care for, and also learned when to
-smoke it; as, for instance, when his old friends
-of the city had all got out their cigars. He was
-made to eat less and give up carving; forbidden to
-press his guests to a second or third helping and
-privately instructed to let the butler manage. He
-was persuaded to buy some pedigree dogs for Mrs.
-Price, and a man was hired to lecture to her once
-a week on their management and breeding as she
-wouldn’t learn from books. The more they tore
-up the drawing-room the better the young Prices
-were pleased, though it caused their mother secret
-agony. Besides the names of poets and their
-works, the parents were made to learn the phraseology
-of farming, lawn tennis, cricket, golf, sex-boredom
-and the religions of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It was during the time when these social gymnastics
-were being most arduously practised by the
-Price family that they gave an evening party; one
-might almost suppose for the purpose of taking
-their minds off themselves. “Everybody” was
-there and a few representative nobodies, just to
-show that Mr. Price, senior, was in touch with the
-political movement of the day. “The University,”
-of course, were there, because though it used not
-to be considered the thing in Millport to encourage
-people who lived in poky houses and “talked
-superior” and “made fun,” it is different now that
-the aristocracy have taken to asking even theatrical
-people about and marrying professors and so on.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>You never know in these days when your local
-goose won’t go away somewhere and become a
-swan and get written up in the papers and go to
-Court or even make money. Once bitten, twice
-shy. Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. James Manley and
-Mrs. Price had one or two secret grievances against
-certain home-clad young wives whom they had
-avoided as “not quite——” and who had gone
-back on them later by being positively run after
-by all sorts of people; people you wouldn’t expect.
-How on earth is one to know? Jupiter ought to
-label his protégés in some way from the start so
-that honest people who can afford the best of
-everything may know where to look for it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you believe it, Mrs. —er?” Mrs. Manley
-had been known to say, on coming to something
-of the sort in the pages of her <cite>Times</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, and if you ask me, I think it’s absu-u-rd,”
-replied Mrs. Price in her new accent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I used to think her decidedly peculiar,” put
-in Mrs. Carpenter, “but there never was any
-question that he was immensely clever. I used
-to talk to him by the hour.” Emma Gainsborough
-was reported to have said that she hoped that when
-Millport put up a memorial to Mrs. Carpenter it
-would be in the appropriate form of a weathercock.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Prices’ house was about three times the size
-of the Fultons’. It was of the same pattern as all
-the other houses in the neighbourhood; only its
-square mass seemed to have plumped itself down
-with more aggressive self-satisfaction than the
-others. On a close spring day it could almost be
-heard breathing there on its bit of gravel, puffing
-and grunting, “Now then; what dju looking at?
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>Go away. This is Mr. Price’s house. We’ve got
-four reception rooms, twelve bedrooms, double
-tennis court, treble croquet lawn, copious vinery,
-garage and the usual offices.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>It must be admitted that the party was a good
-one to the extent that the prodigality of limitless
-self-satisfaction can go. The Prices meant well so
-far as they could see beyond their own affairs; and
-their unfortunate haziness over the rest of humanity
-was probably not their fault. Some day the school
-of “Hope-for-all” thought may enlarge its activities
-and devise a sort of Borstal system for the spiritually
-deficient, and the habits of the Prices will be investigated
-and probably traced to some quite
-simple defect in the marrow; the juice of a dog’s
-kidney may perhaps be injected and suitable
-exercises prescribed, and so on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Dancing was going on in the larger of the two
-drawing-rooms, cards were to be played in the
-other, an “imperial supper,” as someone reported,
-was laid out in the dining-room and Father’s den
-was banked up all round by about a hundred hats,
-in the middle of which an old retainer with a face
-like the largest and richest muffin ever seen sat as
-if in a nest. No one could have approved more
-thoroughly of the proceedings than he. He had
-spent nearly all his life in waiting on the ladies and
-gentlemen of Millport in the evenings and in the
-small hours. By day it is supposed that he slept
-and murmured in his dreams, “Cold chicken or
-galantine, Sir? Lobster salad or trifle, Miss?
-Champagne, Madam?” He was now too rheumatic
-for this labour of love, so he sat among the hats
-and greeted the familiar faces as they came in.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>A few of them, such as Mr. Manley, spoke to him.
-“Ah, Higgins, so you’re here, are you?” they said.
-“Wet night, isn’t it?” and then they passed into
-the bright light and deafening chatter. Cyril came
-in to leave his coat and hat at the same moment as
-Sir Richard was receiving his ticket. “Hullo,
-what brings you here?” he said. “Didn’t know
-you came to these things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve laid a foundation stone this afternoon and
-looked in on my doctor,” Sir Richard began, and
-he paused a moment to dust his sleeve with a
-clothes brush.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pure coincidence, I hope?” Cyril asked
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, it’s a fact,” the old man assured him.
-“But I’ll tell Milly you asked and what’s more I
-won’t tell her that Queen Anne sent that joke to
-<cite>Punch</cite>. She has got the car here and I thought
-I might as well go back in it. Young David is
-here somewhere with her. By-the-bye, Price wants
-me to let Aldwych to him for the hunting next
-year. I may have to go abroad, but I can’t make
-up my mind.” He spoke in a low voice, but
-Higgins heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shouldn’t,” Cyril answered. “You never
-know what those sort of people will do with a
-place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How d’you mean?” asked Sir Richard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I don’t know,” Cyril replied, “but it is
-never the same afterwards.” It was characteristic
-of him not to connect any mental process with a
-globe of flesh encircled by hats, so he spoke in his
-usual tone. “You never get the smell of money
-out afterwards, and it demoralises tenants worse
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>than the plague. And what would you do with the
-stables?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He wants to buy the lot,” said Sir Richard.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear fellow!” Cyril exclaimed, and then
-words failed him. “Here, come along and let’s
-see where the bottle imp has his lair. That foundation
-stone had your wits in it, I think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr. Joseph Price had been dancing with Evangeline
-and they were now sitting in the winter
-garden. “You’re living at Drage now, aren’t
-you?” he asked. “Rather a wretch’d sort of
-place, isn’t it? Not much to do there, what?”
-Evangeline looked at him in surprise. “What
-sort of things can’t you do?” she asked. “I
-should think you could do anything there is to do
-as well there as anywhere; unless you want to
-shoot bears or ride elephants.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I led the strainuous life there for a bit,” he
-replied. “I never was so f’d up in my life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How long were you there?” Evangeline asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, on and off f’ three years in charge ’f a
-batt’ry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And where did your battery go to?” She
-was full of interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, ’n point ’f fact it stayed where ’t was,”
-he replied carelessly. “They’d had ’nough, you
-see, ’f sending out f’llers not prop’ly trained, and
-the f’llers they sent to us then weren’t fit t’ handle
-a catapult. H’wever, we pushed them off in th’
-end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And then where did you go?” she pursued.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m ’fraid you’ll be raather shocked,” said
-Mr. Price, smiling, “but I never got further than
-Switch’nham. Kait sairysly though, the Gov’nment
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>took over the Dad’s plant there and not a soul knew
-an’thing about it. I had t’ run the whole blooming
-show by m’self with a handful of r’tired M’thuselahs.
-Awf’l shaame, I thought, digging the pwur old
-things out at their time ’f life. But now you have
-the whole sordid story ’f m’ life. Not much of a
-f’ller, Price, is he? I know that’s what you’re
-thinking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I want to be quite fair,” said Evangeline.
-“Have you got anything the matter with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, sound ’s a bell,” said young Joseph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, but had you anything then?” she persisted.
-“Groggy arms or legs or insides?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Lac’ration of right forearm ’n’ elbow, received
-when leaving th’ theatre in state ’f intoxication
-during ’n air raid,” he replied, grinning at her,
-“also sustained loss ’f an eye and inj’ry to left
-ankle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Honest?” she asked earnestly. “Let me
-look at your eye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’T’s glass, but there’s nothing green in it,”
-said Mr. Price, holding down one eyelid, and she
-saw that what he said was true.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The music of the next dance began and he rose.
-“You dancing this?” he asked, “or c’n I get you
-a partner? I’m ’fraid I’ve got to trot out Miss
-Gainsborough. I shall keep her meuving for she
-caan’t talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve lost my programme,” said Evangeline,
-“but I’m almost certain I’m dancing with some
-kind of a Manley, with pink eyes—— Oh, I’m
-sorry, I expect he is your cousin; everybody is
-here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, that’s Claud, I expect, but don’t mind
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>me, please,” Mr. Price replied. “His mother’s
-my aunt. But I don’t see him or my partner——”
-He looked round and they waited a moment. “He’s
-great on the pwur, too,” he said. “P’haps they’re
-hatching something t’gether. I don’t alt’gether
-b’lieve in it m’self, d’you? Of course it’s awf’lly
-fine and all that and I ’dmire it immensely, but I
-think it ’ncourages them t’ have grievances—makes
-them dwell on their p’sition and so on, which
-after all can’t be helped. Don’t you rather agree?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know,” said Evangeline. She was not
-attending much for she had caught sight of her
-husband talking seriously to Mrs. Vachell and
-wondered what it was about. She recalled her
-mind to what Mr. Price was saying. “My sister
-thinks of nothing else,” she said, “but I am no
-good at it; I am too lazy and selfish.” Emma
-Gainsborough appeared just then and Mr. Price
-left Evangeline with an apology.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Awf’lly hot, what?” he observed to Emma
-when they had been labouring round the room a
-few minutes. Emma was not a good dancer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hot what, what hot?” she mimicked him rather
-crossly. “You had better stop and have an ice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Forthcoming!” he observed as they stopped
-and he inspected her curiously. “Forthcoming
-indeed! You’re magnif’cent actress, you know,
-Miss Gainsborough. Why couldn’t you do thaat
-when I came to dinner with you, ’nstead of making
-me think I was boring you all th’ time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Emma ignored his last sentence. “I am very
-sorry,” she said, “but I do so hate parties. I get
-to know such a lot about the food before I see it,
-and I know all the time that my father will criticise
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>every dish afterwards and mother will feel she has
-been a failure and say that she must get another
-cook; and we never do. We have had the same
-one for years and she gets steadily older and worse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have some coffee or ’n ice?” he suggested.
-“What c’n I get you? I say, th’ band seems to be
-packing up—that means supper. Will you excuse
-me as I merst look after one of the dowagers.
-Claud will take you in. Here, Claud,” he beckoned
-to his cousin, “’ll you taek Miss Gainsborough?”
-and he departed in haste. He found that his
-mother had allotted Susie to him from among
-“the dowagers.” The parent Gainsboroughs, Sir
-Richard and his wife, Cyril and the sister of the
-ex-Lord Mayor, filled a table with their host, and
-Joseph Price and Susie sat together close by.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A most charming young man, that Joseph
-Price,” Susie remarked in her room that night.
-“I wish Evangeline had met him before dear Evan
-came to the house so constantly. He is so fond of
-sport. I hear there is some idea of his father taking
-Aldwych.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mother Price’s diamonds would flash the glad
-news from tower to tower,” said Cyril with more
-animosity than he generally showed to anyone.
-“Her searchlights played over me at supper till
-anyone could have spotted the lobster swimming
-in the champagne.” Susie took refuge in silence
-and they went to bed. Evangeline and Evan were
-talking in their room at the same time. “I hope
-you had supper,” she said, “I feel I don’t want any
-more to eat for days. Whom did you get hold of?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Vachell,” he answered. “She is a very
-charming woman; most interesting and cultivated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>“Evan, I shall never understand you,” she said
-with amusement. “You disapprove of the most
-harmless people and Mrs. Vachell does more harm
-than almost anyone at Drage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now that is so like a woman,” said Evan.
-“Always running down your own sex if a man
-praises one of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline winced under the injustice and her
-amusement died. “You will give me a sharp
-tongue some day that I wasn’t born with,” she
-said hotly. “What I meant was that Mrs. Vachell
-doesn’t believe in any of the things you are always
-fighting about, she isn’t kind to people for she
-doesn’t like them, and Mrs. Carpenter——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t mention her,” said Evan. “She’s an
-awful woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know you can’t stand her any more than
-you can stand Mrs. Trotter who is a perfectly harmless,
-common little thing, as good as gold. But
-Mrs. Carpenter is the solid prop of the whole edifice
-of what I understand you want people to be and
-yet you hate her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She’s a humbug,” said Evan, “that’s why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think Mrs. Vachell believes in anything
-except brains,” said Evangeline. “That’s her own
-affair,” he replied. “That is a matter between
-her and her Maker. All I say is that she behaves
-like a lady and talks intelligently, without that
-silly affectation of chaff that spoils most women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She doesn’t work nearly as hard as Mrs. Carpenter,”
-Evangeline laboured on. She would
-always take up any cause at a moment’s notice
-and sacrifice the approval she loved best in her
-whole-hearted defence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>“Well, keep your opinion and I’ll keep mine,”
-he said, “I never could help being fond of you,
-Evangeline, but you do exasperate me sometimes
-more than I can tell you. I never know whether
-you deliberately won’t see what I am talking about
-or whether you can’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If that is all,” she said contentedly, “I don’t
-mind. I thought you were angry with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Gainsboroughs were habitually early risers.
-At half-past nine they generally parted for the
-day; the Principal to his principalling, his wife
-to the kitchen, fortified by renewed hope of Annie
-being able to cook something really nice to-day;
-Emma to the grimy back street where she had
-her office. It had been late when they reached
-home after the Prices’ party, and Mrs. Gainsborough’s
-inevitable question, “Would you like
-anything, dear, before you go to bed?” was known
-to the other two to offer no inducement to sitting
-up; no one can talk over a feast on digestive
-biscuits and water. The three bedroom doors
-were shut within ten minutes after the cab had
-rattled away down the street and not a sound was
-heard in the big house except faint snoring from
-the top floor and the ticking of the grandfather
-clock on the landing below. Emma got into bed
-and heard the clock gather itself together with a
-hoarse rattle and strike one; four church clocks
-answered it a minute later. The trams had stopped
-and the road was so silent that a policeman’s footstep
-was heard all up the street that lay behind the
-house, round the corner and down past Emma’s
-window almost to the end of the Square. “Certainly
-not! Certainly not!” Emma imagined the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>footsteps saying, and her heart warmed to the
-image of faithful Robert, patient and decorous,
-with order as his means of subsistence and disorder
-his only hope of pleasure in the monotonous hours.
-“Certainly not. Certainly not.” The clocks chimed
-two strokes and then one; half-past one. Robert
-was coming back. Cats began to quarrel in the
-sooty flower beds of the Square; scuffled, spat,
-shrieked and vanished. Emma thought harshly
-of them and gradually dozed. The silence was
-broken by a sudden uproar in the street at the
-back, near the corner of Robert’s beat, where rows
-of mean little houses led down to one of the railway
-stations. There were loud sounds of quarrelling,
-a woman’s voice and two or three men; a splintering
-of glass, a scream, grumbling, threats and oaths
-and then—“Certainly not. Certainly not.” Robert
-was coming back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’Ere, what’s this?” she imagined he would
-say when he reached the corner, but all was silent
-before he had passed the Square, and any hope of
-incident for that night faded away as the clock
-struck two and the rain began to fall gently. Emma
-was wide awake now and lay for some time thinking
-of her work with the hopelessness of a tired body
-and mind. Robert probably never suffered in this
-way. If he got in the dumps he took something
-for it, “an’ as for that lot up there,” he would
-have said, pointing a thumb up the poverty-stricken
-scene of the quarrel, “the sooner they was all
-turned out the better.” Mrs. Robert probably
-understood more than he did about the discouraging
-habits of matter, which collects again as soon as it
-is displaced. Teresa’s dreams were busy with other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>plans for settling the difficulty. She wanted to
-build up the whole mess into a work of art.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The Gainsboroughs had their deferred talk about
-the Prices’ party at breakfast next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Joseph Price is a perfect ass,” said Emma.
-“And yet you can’t be as angry with him as he
-makes you. I want first to slap him and then to
-turn him right side up again and put him back in
-his chair.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I think he is really dreadful,” said her
-mother. “He always was a tiresome little boy,
-but Cambridge seems to have done him more harm
-than good. I can’t think where he gets that silly
-way of speaking. It is more like Oxford if anything,
-but it isn’t that either. I wouldn’t libel the
-poor things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is a sort of culture and climbing mixed,”
-said Emma. “Don’t you remember when the
-Mortons came down here to open the Industries?
-Some of them talked exactly like that, only it
-wasn’t so obvious because it must have been longer
-since they did it on purpose. It is almost natural
-to lots of people I am sure. But Joseph Price was
-very busy with it then. ‘Voilà que j’arrive!’
-his whole face said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was a splendid supper,” said Mrs. Gainsborough,
-“I only wish I could teach Annie to make
-quenelles like that. I think she must make ours
-too soft. They always have that curious squashy
-tastelessness about them, or else too much pepper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear Beatrice, you’ll never do anything
-with that woman, so long as you live,” said the
-Principal. He tossed a piece of kidney on his
-plate. “Look at that! Leathery, dry—a kidney
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>ought to be a dream of tenderness and blood, just
-poised—poised, mind, so that the juices soak
-through—on a piece of toast, neither hard nor soft,
-browned to a turn——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Father,” interrupted his daughter, “do
-please talk of something else. You make me
-dribble with envy; I can’t bear it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor darlings!” murmured the mother, compassionate
-almost to tears. “It is hard on you.
-I really will speak to her and see if she wouldn’t
-care to go to Mrs. Plumtre; I know they don’t care
-what they eat. I’m not sure even that they’re
-not vegetarians.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you know Mrs. Price has become a vegetarian?”
-said Emma. “But not the duck-made-of-peas
-kind; just lettuce and peaches and cheese;
-except when she goes to London by herself, she
-told me. Oh dear, I must go but I am so sleepy,”
-she yawned and got up.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you sleep well, darling?” asked her mother
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There was a row going on in Millard Street
-and it woke me up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’d have all those people turned out,” said
-the Principal. “When there’s a revolution the
-houses round here won’t be fit to live in. And
-there’s that Cranston next door, throwing out
-literature that is so much rank poison by its stupidity.
-It is bad enough to harm even educated idiots, for
-they take it all in, but at least they are not likely
-to burn down——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you please, Sir, Mr. Fisk wants to know if
-he can see you for a moment. He is in the library,”
-said Annie at the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>Emma escaped, and as she passed the open door
-of the library she saw a young man with hair <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la</span>
-Kropotkin and immense spectacles whom she knew
-to be the secretary of the students’ debating society
-and the son of good Mr. Fisk, plumber and decorator
-in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Mr. Fisk was a good son at home and a pleasant
-fellow among his friends. Emma, who was liked
-by the students and went to their gatherings, had
-often met him. He kept dormice in his bedroom
-and tended them with care, but if the Communist
-society he belonged to had called him to do murder
-in the cause of incomes for all he would have
-summoned his courage to smite some bald-headed
-director of a company with a bloody axe. His
-errand to the Principal that morning was, I am
-glad to say, of a most peaceful nature, connected
-with the degree he hoped to take. He met Emma
-and Teresa the same afternoon at a tea given by
-some of the students after the meeting of the debating
-society. Teresa took the cup he offered her,
-and became fascinated by his withered little face,
-his immense spectacles and his Kropotkin hair.
-Her instinct scented suffering and the cage, and she
-led him on to talk. It must be understood that this
-was her first experience of his kind and she never
-forgot it. He began explaining to her, earnestly
-at first, then excitedly; he struck his knobbly little
-hands one against the other. “Blood!” he concluded,
-“blood! there’s nothing else for it. We
-shall give our blood when the time comes and we
-shall take it ruthlessly—without remorse.” Teresa
-looked at him fixedly, questioning. “I think that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>is very wicked,” she said, when she had made up her
-mind. “You have no business at all to decide that
-one person shall live and another shan’t; it is
-much too serious. Suppose that another lot of
-people decided that you must be killed because you
-got a degree and they didn’t?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shan’t have been born into my degree when I
-get it,” he said proudly. “I shall have earned it
-by my own endeavours. The rich have been born
-into their property for generations. They come
-into the world nourished on the blood of my fathers.
-Show me the signs of toil on your hands, if you
-please,” he looked down with a bitter expression at
-her little hands that held the cup.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” she said humbly, “I often think of it.
-You needn’t point it out. But still you oughtn’t
-to murder anybody. It is not their fault; and
-anyhow, suppose you burgled my father’s house,
-he would have no right to kill you except in
-self-defence. I know that is so; a lawyer told
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s the law!” said Mr. Fisk contemptuously.
-“We’re going to alter all that; we’re going
-to make new laws by which man will have the right
-to live.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but not to stop others living,” said Teresa.
-“It’s silly; you know you can’t make laws; and
-who is going to carry them out if you do? You
-can’t make people do what you want just by telling
-them that you have made a law. There’s the army
-and navy too—but what is the good of arguing.
-You must know it is silly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The army and navy are also learning to think,
-you’ll find,” said Mr. Fisk. “But I don’t wish to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>offend you, Miss—er. You are yourself of military
-stock, I believe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes I am, but I don’t bother about that. It
-has got nothing to do with what I think,” she replied.
-“Don’t you know——” she went on, with passion
-beginning to rise in her as his words soaked in,
-“don’t you know, you stupid (she shook him
-delicately by the sleeve), that all the decent people
-in England—and English people are decent, not
-like the beastly people you try to make your hair
-like—are working their very hardest, day and night,
-to put things straight? And the fact that some of
-them have got white hands is all the better, for it
-means they have money and time to spend on it,
-and you have only the time to learn by heart what
-someone else has written. It does make me so
-angry when I know what the idle rich, as you call
-them, are doing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Bah! charity!” said Mr. Fisk, and he spat
-some shreds of tobacco from his cigarette neatly
-into the grate.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, you can’t have thought I was talking about
-charity,” said Teresa with real distress. “Of course
-I wasn’t. It is the very thing I dislike most, except
-your muddle and murder. And besides that, some
-of the richest people boast of having been newsboys,
-and they are often the rudest to their servants and
-their wives are horrid lazy snobs.” Mr. Fisk’s
-little withered face twitched with his anxiety to
-collect some clear dignified retort.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you ever read much on your subject, may
-I ask?” he inquired at last. “Have you studied
-economics? Perhaps you have attended Professor
-Cranston’s lectures?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>“No, I haven’t,” she replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then, pardon me, but I think you are hardly
-qualified for the argument. Capitalism is a highly
-intricate subject and should involve deep study.
-To judge how far it is advisable to submit the control
-of wages to the State, and also to consider to what
-extent the right of the individual to determine the
-extent of his earning capacity should be carried,
-requires a long training and arduous study. I should
-be pleased to continue our talk at some other time
-if convenient to you, and I should be happy to
-lend books if you are interested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Teresa with a sigh of fatigue. “I
-want to know. And you are part of the faces in the
-fog, I suppose,” she added absently, looking at him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg pardon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I said you were part of the faces in the fog. I
-used to wonder when we came here what was behind
-the sort of brick-wall expression that people in the
-streets and the trams had. When you go to speak
-in Hyde Park you will see how different your
-audience is—quite merry in comparison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t propose to do so at present,” said
-Kropotkin-Fisk, highly offended. “We leave that
-to the executive. Our body here is concerned at
-the moment exclusively with study and propaganda.”
-Emma came to look for Teresa and heard the end of
-the discussion.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Aren’t you paving the way for a new set of class
-distinctions, Mr. Fisk?” she asked. “What you
-said just now sounded like it. I hope you will take
-a lesson from the present evil system and pay yourself
-properly if you are going to keep to the higher
-activities.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>“I don’t quite follow,” said Mr. Fisk, “but if
-you’ll favour us at the next debate and hear my
-paper, perhaps you will put your question then, and
-I shall do my best to parry your thrust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what Mrs. Potter would do if Fisk
-were made Chancellor of the Exchequer under the
-new régime,” said Emma, as she and Teresa walked
-back together.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, she would loathe it,” Teresa agreed. “But
-I don’t exactly know why. Why do they so often
-hate their own class in office?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Emma, “I suppose if Eddie Fisk
-is Chancellor of the Exchequer there’s no reason
-why Albert Potter shouldn’t go one better and be
-King. Mrs. Potter ‘never would ’ave ’eld with
-them Fisks,’ you’d find, ‘—settin’ themselves
-up!’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Communists don’t have a King; isn’t that
-the whole point?” Teresa objected.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They don’t until one of them wants to be it,”
-said Emma. “They would call him something else,
-but some of them would develope an aptitude for
-ruling. Even apes do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But then, I suppose the others could depose
-him if he wasn’t hereditary,” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, ‘Gawd save the Prince o’ Wales, bless ’is
-dear ’eart!’ is Mrs. Potter’s motto. ‘That there
-Fisk is never going to come it over our Albert, you’ll
-find, Miss,’ is what she would say. Ask her the
-next time you see her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Jorkins doesn’t agree with that,” Teresa
-pursued. “When he is out of work the first thing
-he blames is Parliament. He’s dead against it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, there will always be two opinions about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>everything in a country,” said Emma. “You
-had much better leave them all alone to mess
-about and let us get on with what we are doing.
-At present Mr. Fisk is rather like the mouse that
-dipped its tail in the beer and sucked it. He is
-looking for the cat, that’s all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are you sure?” her friend asked anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am only sure after a party like the Prices’ last
-night,” Emma answered. “It will wear off to-morrow,
-and I shall get cross with Father for talking
-Conservative intellectualism. I can’t see any use
-in the Prices to-day. They give money when there
-is a list of donations, and Papa Price just hugs
-himself when someone comes round for a subscription.
-He keeps them waiting in his office, and then
-when he has succeeded in beating them down to
-less than they asked for and yet finds he is still in
-the top batch of subscriptions he does think he has
-been clever. And Mrs. Price and the family! I
-would really enjoy seeing the girls working in the
-fur trade instead of wearing coats of it, and I
-wouldn’t wish that to many people. I would like
-to see them stop cackling and find out how witty
-they would be on two pennyworth of refuse. Then
-the next day, perhaps, I meet Lady Varens, whom
-I don’t grudge anything to, because she keeps a lot
-of people happily employed and really cares for
-them and buys beautiful things with her money.
-And after that the Starks turn up—you know—the
-schoolmistress at St. Angelus’ school—you met her
-at the Dispensary. Mrs. Potter’s life is a screaming
-farce compared to hers, and the Jorkinses are
-wallowing in wealth, for at least they enjoy themselves
-at the pictures and the pub when so disposed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>“Well, let us add it up,” said Teresa. “Under
-Mr. Fisk’s scheme, Mrs. Potter and Mrs. Stark will
-benefit; Mrs. Price will be altogether wrecked and
-mangled—she and her family; Lady Varens will
-live as she would probably be quite content to live
-now—she never seems to want much—and she would
-upset the apple carts of a lot of happy dependants.
-But then there are lots of Potters, lots of Starks,
-comparatively few Prices, a good many Varenses
-and not a great many happy dependants, so how
-does the proportion of benefits work out? I shall
-have to ask David to unravel it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg your pardon—David?” asked Emma.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David Varens,” said Teresa. “What’s the
-matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nothing. I only wondered for a moment. Do
-you go much by what he says?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, more than anybody.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, may I ask?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, because he is so simple,” she answered
-readily. “I can never tangle him up in a problem.
-He lays it all out and sorts it into heaps, and then
-generally sums up by saying there is nothing in it.
-It is so restful. And then he tells me about phosphates
-and the habits of the teal. But it is only
-for the rest to my muddled head that I like it so
-much. It would never put me off my work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sure?” asked Emma, and she was obliged to
-accept the assurance when it was given a second
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As they passed the Vachells’ house, which was
-not far from the Gainsboroughs’, Mrs. Vachell was
-just going in. “Come and have tea with me?”
-she suggested. Emma explained that they had had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>tea and that she had work to do at home, but Teresa
-accepted. She was inclined, like Alice in Wonderland,
-to taste and nibble whatever new thing came
-her way; she had never been inside the Vachells’
-house, nor felt that she understood what lay behind
-the self-possession of the small, graceful lady whom
-it was said the Professor had found fanning herself
-by moonlight under an obelisk and brought home.
-Mrs. Vachell’s face was beautiful and full of character
-but the character was of the reversible kind, of
-which it is impossible to decide whether it is intended
-to be good or bad. Such faces seem not, like most
-faces, to alter gradually with their owner’s mind,
-but to hold always in themselves two distinct
-characters between which the soul has never chosen
-a habitation. At death, opinion is generally divided
-as to which character has been the true one, as in
-life it was never decided which it would prove to be.
-“Very like a curious death-mask my father was
-once given for his study,” Susie had described her
-on first acquaintance. “Dante, or somebody, I
-think it was, who wrote the ‘Inferno.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa followed the small gliding figure into the
-hall and up the stairs, where photographs of Byzantine
-art and reproductions of drawings from
-Egyptian tombs were hung right up to the high
-window that lighted the stairs with a cold north
-light. The back yards and chimneys of young
-Millport mixed disagreeably in her mind with the
-impression of endless centuries of life that she
-gathered from the procession of antiquity on the
-walls. There is something alarming to youth in
-the idea of the early days of a very old person.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The drawing-room was more cheerful, but Mr.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>Vachell’s study, which his wife showed her as they
-passed, made her shiver again. There were objects
-of stone, of clay, of mildewed bronze; tiny domestic
-possessions, gifts of love, weapons, tokens of mourning
-for the dead, provision even for an eternity of
-wandering beyond the grave. Everywhere were
-glass cases to preserve the imperishable; the
-penetrating dust of a new city defiling them notwithstanding.
-If Teresa had seen Life and Death
-supping together in the silent room, pledging one
-another from the old vessels that stood upon the
-Professor’s table, she could not have felt more discomfort
-than she did.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you like these things?” Mrs. Vachell asked
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps I might if I got to know them,” she
-admitted, “but they scare me rather.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Come into the drawing-room and have tea then.”
-Mrs. Vachell led the way into the next room and
-rang the bell. “It is only half-past five; you have
-lots of time to recover. What have you been
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa told her about the Debating Society and
-Mr. Fisk. “A horrible young man,” said Mrs.
-Vachell. “He isn’t one of my husband’s students,
-luckily, or I should have to ask him to tea. They
-all get brought here at intervals. They sit about in
-corners and balance cups on their knees and spill
-tea into the saucer. I wish you would come and
-help me next time I have to ask some of them. I
-believe you would be good to them and teach me
-not to dislike them so much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well,” said Teresa, “though I am not
-benevolent. If people won’t talk I can’t make
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>conversation. Why don’t you ask Emma? She
-knows them all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is just why she is no good,” Mrs. Vachell
-explained while she made tea. “It is like a mother
-and her children in society. They can’t talk their
-own nonsense before an audience, and they can’t do
-the polite to each other. I want you to extract
-something from the students. They must have
-interests of the sort that one does not air in the
-family circle, and strangers are the ideal safety
-valve for that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are many of them like Fisk; wanting blood and
-new governments and things?” Teresa asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is one of the things I want to know,” Mrs.
-Vachell answered. “Emma could tell us so far as
-statistics go, but I want to hear for myself. You
-know I sit on Committees with Mrs. Carpenter and
-her lot because I love organisation, and so many of
-those women who are always talking and ordering
-and doing the Nosey Parker everywhere are just
-tools for anybody in the show who has an axe to
-grind. Do you understand about Boards of
-Guardians and Select Vestries and all that part?”
-Teresa answered quickly, “Oh, no—nothing whatever.
-Of course I get inspectors and visitors on
-my track and I have to help Emma with her reports.
-But a Board of Guardians means nothing to me
-except a firm eye and questions that I can’t answer.
-Mother has them to lunch sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can she answer their questions?” asked Mrs.
-Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Surely you know that Mother never answers
-any questions?” said Teresa very much surprised.
-“She always tells you something that she thinks
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>instead, and makes it seem as if she had answered.
-But I never know whether it is because she can’t or
-won’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do loathe poverty,” Mrs. Vachell said, as if to
-herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa went home very little the wiser for her
-visit, but she felt greatly discouraged by the extreme
-age of civilisation as it had been shown to her at
-the Vachells’. It seemed to have accomplished so
-little in the time at its disposal.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Evangeline’s baby was a boy, very much to
-Susie’s satisfaction. It would be going too far to
-say that it had been a grief to her that she had no
-son, for grief and she had met only on the most
-courtly terms since she outgrew the realities of
-childhood which no one escapes. Her philosophy
-had developed early, and since then she had met
-grief on the terms of cavalier and lady. He had
-bowed to her and fingered his sword; she had
-curtseyed, smiled and turned her back on him, with
-perhaps a coy glance of mockery above her fan.
-But he paid his first visit to Evangeline, equipped
-for battle, when her son was a few months old.
-Evan began making plans one day for his future, as
-affectionate fathers will, and the discussion, begun
-amicably, ended in such a storm of passion from
-Evangeline as surprised and horrified him. A
-doctor would have said that she was still weak and
-unbalanced after young Ivor’s birth; the fact was
-that resentment suppressed or tided over on many
-occasions had accumulated, and was now being paid
-in one sum. Her natural gaiety had made her fairly
-independent when it was only she who was to suffer
-from Evan’s severity; but when it went beyond her
-to the child she became savage in the defence of her
-offspring. This situation is as old as the hills—older
-than man—and the true simile of the tigress
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>has become so hackneyed by being tacked on to
-every thwarted feminine instinct that it hardly
-arrests the eye on a printed page; but its accuracy
-is age-proof. The occasion for her outburst was as
-trifling as it could be; it generally is when a storm
-is long brewing. Evan had chosen for his peroration
-the unfortunate words, “—and we shall teach him
-discipline early.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He spoke from a full heart and meant, as Queen
-Elizabeth is said to have performed upon the
-virginals, “excellently well.” Evangeline pictured
-the young creature that was to have been a marvel
-of joy, crushed by fear of its natural friends, pursued
-by something dark and threatening that was called
-“Right,” so that all sweetness of the day that was
-called “Wrong” must be loved and followed in
-secret. She pictured the child lonely in a garden,
-with a dog for his friend and his father for an enemy,
-and she herself, perhaps, under suspicion as being
-in the confidence of the enemy. He would be like
-Romulus and Remus, she thought, as her horror
-gathered volume. She was always a very simple
-thinker. In any crisis her mind’s eye looked over
-a wide space of whatever emotion was in possession
-of her, and some episode, historical, literary or
-personal, often arose before her as a point of focus
-for the end she was aiming at. Just now she was
-overwhelmed with pity for the awful loneliness of
-a child’s nature with no human love to comfort it.
-She knew herself what a place animals can take at
-such times. Romulus and Remus had been mothered
-by a wolf, but must her Ivor be abandoned to such a
-makeshift, while she, adoring him with all her heart
-and soul, was chained by Evan to the Juggernaut’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>car that was to pursue the child through life? At
-the moment she pictured her husband’s religion as an
-all-devouring monster.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He sat meanwhile silent, frowning at her grief and
-wondering how his domestic security had come to
-collapse like this at the breath of a high ideal. Was
-his wife wholly worldly and given over to the worship
-of self-indulgence? Did she mean to bring the boy
-up to be a pampered young ass with no sense of
-duty to God or man? He said nothing, but thought
-very dark thoughts.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Presently Evangeline’s indomitable optimism
-came back to the rescue. She had exhausted her
-emotion; Romulus and Remus had played their
-part in her imagination and retired. Pity remained,
-but there was also hope and the fighting strength
-of the jungle mother. She would remain Ivor’s
-mother and play the part of the wolf as well. Evan
-should never get at her darling while she lived;
-she would throw herself between them. It was
-not until very much later in the tragedy that she
-began to think of using cunning in her defence.
-At present she had no idea of decoying an enemy
-away; that instinct had not yet been roused in
-her so she still fought in the open. After the
-outburst of protest with which she first met his
-innocent remark, and the passionate tears that
-followed, she cheered up again and was prepared
-to shake hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It will be all right,” she said confidently. “I
-know you love him as much as I do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I love him more, for I care what becomes of
-him,” was Evan’s grave reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are not going to beat him the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>time he disobeys you?” she asked in renewed
-panic.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Control yourself, for goodness sake,” he replied
-impatiently. “He is only a baby. I have nothing
-to do with your nursery arrangements. Let him
-tyrannise over you and make his life and yours a
-misery. There is time enough for you to think
-over whether I am right, and to see the result of depriving
-him of all means of defending himself against
-ill-fortune in this world and damnation in the next.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And when he is older, if I still think you are
-wrong——?” she pursued breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then—I am sorry, Evangeline—I shall not
-hesitate to remove him from your charge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You couldn’t!” she exclaimed. “They would
-never let you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know the exact law, but I fancy I could
-safeguard him and still allow you to see him in an
-ordinary way without your being in authority.
-But all this is absurd. We are making ourselves
-miserable about nothing. Go up to him now and
-spoil him to your heart’s content. But think over
-what I have said. You have so much good in you,
-Evangeline, if you would only not let yourself be
-carried away by this terror of all pain and discomfort.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t make a sound when Ivor was born,”
-she said in amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know. Don’t think you hadn’t my admiration
-because I didn’t say so. I was thinking of
-the pains of self-sacrifice and obedience to rules
-not understood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If I can keep Ivor by bearing those, too, I
-will,” she assured him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>“Of course you can, darling,” he said, misunderstanding.
-“We shall all be happy at last,
-you will see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>At Christmas they went again to stay with
-Evangeline’s parents. Ivor found his grandmother
-all that he could possibly desire. He fell madly
-in love with her and she made very little attempt
-to conceal her triumph from his nurse. Ivor loved
-the nurse dearly and she loved him, so that altogether
-he never suffered a moment’s anxiety during
-his visit. War was declared over him; a long and
-bitter war as it turned out; yet his life became for
-the time being all the sweeter in consequence.
-Susie entered the battlefield on the side of Evangeline
-and motherhood in general, of “not worrying about
-things that can’t be helped,” and of opposition
-to men who “will be disagreeable.” Love, wounded
-by Ivor’s mischievous treachery at times when his
-grandmother’s blandishments must be left for sleep
-and exercise, brought nurse in on the side of the
-father and discipline. It was she who had to
-endure the nerve-racking screams and struggles
-that took place on the other side of the drawing-room
-door, and the wakeful nights caused by excitement
-and “the very purest chocolate” from
-Grannie’s drawer which Ivor had learned to open
-so cleverly. She had to put up with the gentlest
-and most persistent advice, with seeing windows
-covertly opened or shut when otherwise arranged
-by her with the tenderest care for Ivor’s comfort,
-with clothes added to or removed from what he
-was wearing. Mothers of any civilised country
-will bear witness that such trifles are more dangerous
-to domestic peace than the franker brawls of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>gutter. If Susie and the nurse had let themselves
-go with the same <em>abandon</em> as the ladies of honest
-Robert’s beat, Ivor would have suffered less in the
-end and his father and mother might have called
-quits after the exchange of a black eye and a broken
-nose. As it was, Evangeline took no part in the
-daily duels so long as her son remained unscathed
-between the contending parties; but she noted
-Evan’s silent criticism. She saw that every scene
-of wilfulness strengthened his position against
-her, and her heart hardened towards him. Once
-when Mrs. Vachell asked her to lunch she arrived
-there so discouraged that she could hardly keep up
-a pretence of other conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am very sorry to be so stupid,” she said at
-last, “but I am tired to death. Mother and Ivor’s
-nurse do get on so badly, though I believe it is
-really one-sided because Mother seems not to notice
-at all; but she puts nurse’s back up and Ivor
-takes advantage of it to get everything he wants,
-and I don’t think she would stay through another
-visit. Evan thinks it is my fault and that I spoil
-Ivor. I do so hate anger and fuss. What would
-you do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should tell the nurse that she must be polite
-to your mother or go,” said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t do that for a thousand pounds,”
-said Evangeline. “She worships Ivor and would
-give her life for him I really think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would easily find another who would do
-just the same,” Mrs. Vachell remarked, “and it
-might be good for him not to depend so much on
-one person.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no,” Evangeline repeated. “I won’t do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>that. But people can make one’s life a burden,
-can’t they! Just by disapproving.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never allow anyone’s vagaries to bother me,”
-said Mrs. Vachell coolly. “I do the best I can
-and am proof against black looks. Angry faces
-are as soon dead as merry ones and their memory
-is not kept green.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you think a man’s feeling about children
-is always different from a woman’s?” Evangeline
-asked presently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, very different,” Mrs. Vachell replied. “I
-think, if you ask me, they are the most ram-headed,
-firebrand, poker-fingered lumps of folly that could
-have been planted on an unhappy world to wreck
-its comfort.” She spoke in a low, deliberate voice.
-“Damned fools,” she added lightly. “Don’t you
-think so in your heart?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline was just going to answer when she
-remembered her husband’s description of Mrs.
-Vachell after the Prices’ party, “intelligent” and
-“cultivated” and “talks like a lady.” She saw
-a very old mistake for the first time, fresh in all
-its eternal comedy, and was lifted right out of her
-present difficulties by the amusement of it. “How
-gloriously funny!” she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is funny?” Mrs. Vachell asked, a little
-displeased.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That you should think that, and—Evan was
-so delighted with you!” Evangeline blurted out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Pooh!” said Mrs. Vachell. “I suppose you
-think I was trying to please him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, gracious, no,” said the poor girl. “I told
-him he knew nothing about you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you? Why did you say that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>“Oh, because I knew you don’t believe in any of
-the things that he likes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear girl, how can you know that? What
-don’t I believe in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean his kind of religion, and rectitude, and
-making oneself uncomfortable about nothing, and
-all that misunderstanding of everybody and looking
-out for badness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You don’t need to look far,” said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you think so?” said Evangeline, surprised.
-“Now that is just what I don’t. I think there
-would be hardly any badness if people didn’t make
-it by believing in it. But why do you think men
-are so stupid? You can’t have thought so in the
-war——” She became suddenly indignant.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If men had not been what they are there would
-have been no war,” said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but—good gracious! Look how women
-fight!” Evangeline exclaimed in amazement, “and
-all about nothing! Men fight <em>for</em> something, and—I
-can’t bear to hear you say beastly things about
-them when they did——” Her voice broke and
-she stopped. Her eyes were bright and troubled
-as she looked at Mrs. Vachell in the hope of having
-mistaken her words.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t take what I say so much to heart,” Mrs.
-Vachell said gently. “You are a very feminine
-woman. You ought to turn your sympathies on
-to your own sex, who have to endure seeing their
-lovers and sons killed because countries are governed
-by brutes and knaves and idiots. When your baby
-goes to war and your husband urges him on with
-applause and he leaves a wife and probably two or
-three ruined women behind him——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>Evangeline’s tears had vanished in utter astonishment
-at the novelty of this view and her own
-fundamental disbelief in its reality. There was
-nothing in it to stir her passion as it was remote
-from anything she could ever feel and she did not
-believe anyone else felt it either.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course Ivor will go without any egging on,”
-she said. “I should die of shame if I had even to
-open the door for him. And as for ruined women—Evan
-is not like that nor are my people, any of them.
-I don’t see why Ivor should grow up a pig any
-more than they did. But”—she remembered
-again what had amused her—“I do wish you would
-come and say all that to Evan. I do want to prove
-to him that I was right, and of course I can’t tell
-him what you said. He wouldn’t believe it and
-would think I was being like a woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This last slip of the tongue was unfortunate and
-might have led to such divergence of opinion as
-would have deprived Evangeline of those further
-talks with Mrs. Vachell that had so much influence
-on her future. But they heard the front door bell
-ring and Mrs. Vachell said, “That is probably Mr.
-Fisk. He said he might come this afternoon. I
-wish you would stay a little; he might really
-interest you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who is he?” Evangeline asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“One of the stupidest of the students, but a
-reformer——” Mr. Fisk was announced. He
-began of course about the weather and asked
-Evangeline whether she had “been long in these
-parts,” and so on; he omitted none of the steps
-to acquaintance by which his kindred are accustomed
-to reach the more companionable stage of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>invitations to “tea and s’rimps.” Mrs. Vachell
-soon became impatient and cut him short. “Don’t
-let us be social any more, Mr. Fisk,” she suggested,
-“but tell us how your campaign is getting on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He plunged at once into oratorical phrases and
-Evangeline listened, bewildered. Mrs. Vachell led
-him on by subtle questions to the law of marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are you in favour of the coming of women?”
-he asked Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where to?” she asked. She was deeply
-interested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What people call feminism,” Mrs. Vachell
-explained. “Don’t you want to take your share
-in the world?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What sort of share?” said Evangeline. “I
-thought I had got one; but I am too stupid to do
-things, if you mean having a profession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you ever tried, may I ask?” Mr. Fisk
-inquired. “Perhaps you hardly know your powers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You like people to be happy, I know,” said
-Mrs. Vachell. “Why not take steps to make them
-so? Don’t you find, for instance, that men have
-too much power over their families?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline’s private anxieties awoke. “Do you
-mean when they can say how children are to be
-brought up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, that among other things.” Mrs. Vachell
-observed her closely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They oughtn’t to,” said Evangeline. “They
-don’t understand——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you read Iris Smith’s pamphlet on the
-matriarchate?” asked Mr. Fisk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I haven’t read anything deep,” she replied.
-“What is the thing? You don’t mean
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>that sort of solid turquoise?” She supposed him
-to have changed the subject out of modesty. He
-looked scared and Mrs. Vachell laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Hatton is only a potential ally,” she
-explained to him. “She has the real instinct,
-which is worth all the learning in the world. Books
-are only useful for downing the catchwords of
-stupid people who won’t think. How would you
-like it,” she continued to Evangeline, “if your
-husband insisted on your boy being brought up at
-some particular school and you knew that he would
-be bullied and misunderstood there, and that all
-the tenderness you love would be crushed out of
-him; and suppose you found after he went that
-he came back despising you in his heart for being
-of the inferior sex, though he still caressed you as
-a dear old silly whom he could get material comforts
-from and put down with one hand in any
-discussion?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Boys aren’t like that,” said Evangeline frowning.
-“I know they are not—not English boys,
-anyhow,” she added with a look at Mr. Fisk’s hair,
-to which she had taken a sudden dislike.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They have been just like that since a date so
-far back that I don’t believe you have ever heard
-of it,” Mrs. Vachell assured her. “That is why
-you will find it interesting to read books some day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline stayed to tea and came back more
-incensed than ever against Evan’s theories and more
-than ever in love with his masculinity.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Anyone entering the Prices’ house on any Wednesday
-afternoon between 3.30 and 6 would hear from
-the staircase and even from the front door a chatter
-and clatter of cups and conversation and shrill
-laughter. In a short time the drawing-room bell
-would ring, a door would open upstairs and louder
-sounds of talking would burst out; then one of
-the Price girls would be heard to say, “Well, good-bye,
-then. Tuesday week,” or something like
-that, and a female form, expensively dressed, the
-remains of a farewell smile still on the face, would
-pass down the stairs and probably meet the maidservant
-on her way up with another batch from
-the front door. On some Wednesdays as many as
-thirty women called on Mrs. Price. Susie, who
-“believed in keeping up with people,” as she said,
-was there one day soon after Evangeline had left
-her. The Prices made much of her because of
-her triple connection with Millport, London and
-the county, and the girls described Cyril as “perfectly
-killing!” They had a great respect for him
-as soon as they saw that he had none whatever for
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Perhaps it was some survival of the days when
-slavery was upheld from the pulpit by a man of
-God in their city that gave one or two of the older
-Millport families their exaggerated esteem for an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>impressive manner. They knew by ancestral experience
-that the top dog is the thing to be. They
-sat as near the top as they could and gazed with
-admiration at those who pressed on them from
-above. No one who understood Cyril could suspect
-him of being impressive, but he took no interest in
-the Prices, so their natural inference from his behaviour
-was that he must be used to something
-better than themselves, and that would be something
-very good indeed. The train of thought runs
-easily to the conclusion that Cyril was worth cultivating.
-Half the things he said would have convicted
-him of “giving himself airs” had he been
-a poor man and polite to the Prices, but, “Have
-you heard what the General said?” they repeated
-to one another after every occasion when they met
-him. Even such trifles as “what he said when
-Father offered him a cigar at the Club,” were reported,
-and the answer, “No, thanks; have you
-seen the paper?” produced an avalanche of delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But what did he mean, dear?” asked poor
-Mrs. Price. “I don’t see anything particular in
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, mother! Of course he wanted to get rid
-of Dad; can’t you see? ‘Have you seen the
-paper!’ I think it is delicious. You can just
-imagine him handing it over and sloping off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>On this afternoon Mrs. Price sat down beside
-Susie and began to make herself agreeable. “Your
-daughter has left you now, hasn’t she, Mrs. —er?”
-she began. “I hope Drage suits her. My son was
-there for a time and didn’t care for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is not a beautiful place, of course,” Susie
-replied, “but to see those boys back from the war
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>enjoying themselves so much is as good as any
-scenery. Your son told Evangeline of the unfortunate
-accident that prevented him from going
-out. She was so sorry for him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I wasn’t sorry,” said Mrs. Price. “I
-think the whole arrangement of conscription was
-scandalous. They took people who were absolutely
-necessary for carrying on what business there was,
-and sent them out. Joseph has a very weak
-throat and would have been absolutely useless, as
-I told him; though he had made up his mind to
-go. However, it is all over now and I hope to
-goodness they will get all the labour troubles
-settled soon. The price of everything is dreadful.
-I don’t know how we are to go on living.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“By-the-bye,” asked Susie, “has anything
-been settled about your taking Aldwych?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>An unpleasant recollection rose in Mrs. Price’s
-mind. Higgins had reported to one of the maids
-after the party “how disrespectful that military
-gentleman that came had spoke” about wealth
-in general and the Prices in particular. He had
-retailed Cyril’s remarks about getting the smell
-of money out of the house and the likelihood of
-the Prices demoralising the Aldwych tenants
-like the plague. Higgins had told the infamous tale
-three times at supper, and Hopkins, Mrs. Price’s
-maid, had repeated it to her mistress. The young
-Prices had heard of it, but paid little attention.
-It only stung them to further admiration of Cyril,
-for since the Profiteering Act had been passed and
-half the jokes in <cite>Punch</cite> were about people who
-looked rather like Dad and Mother they had begun
-to feel that the gilt on their gingerbread had better
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>be covered a little to prevent rubbing. The parents,
-however, did not like it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know whether we can afford to take it
-at all,” Mrs. Price continued. “It is only people
-who have made money in the war that can do that
-sort of thing now. Of course Mr. Price actually
-lost more than he made, and with the income tax
-and everything his idea was really to give up and
-go into the country. Aldwych would need a great
-deal of keeping up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would it?” said Susie. “I daresay. But
-you would find the life so delightful, wouldn’t you?
-I think the unrest in a big town is so trying, and
-the unemployment makes it so much worse.” Mrs.
-Gainsborough was sitting on a sofa at her left
-hand, talking to a clergyman’s wife, and there was
-a sudden silence as Susie spoke. The young Prices
-had gone into the little room beyond to discuss
-some theatricals they were getting up for a
-charity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why does the Principal allow Mr. Cranston to
-go on as he does?” Mrs. Price asked, turning to
-Mrs. Gainsborough.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He doesn’t,” she replied distractedly. “It
-drives him nearly wild, but he can’t do anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He is making it much harder for everybody,”
-said Mrs. Abel, the clergyman’s wife. “My husband
-says he is doing incalculable harm in our neighbourhood.
-They are not the very poorest people there
-and they all have time to read and they are great
-orators—”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Vachell,” the maid
-announced.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>“Ah, this is delightful!” Mrs. Carpenter exclaimed,
-advancing first and shaking hands with
-everybody. “You are so wise to go on keeping to
-one day,” she said to Mrs. Price. “It is almost
-the only way of seeing one’s friends. I should
-love it if I had nothing to do, but if I tried to keep
-an afternoon to myself someone would be sure to
-call a special meeting somewhere and I should have
-to go off. And how is your dear girl? (To Susie.)
-Wrapped up in hubby and the baby, I suppose.
-I hope he is not getting his teeth too soon; it is
-such a pity when they do; they only decay earlier.
-And how is Emma? (To Mrs. Gainsborough.) I
-meet her here, there and everywhere. I think she
-does too much. She has not been accustomed to
-so much drudgery as an old soldier’s daughter
-like me. Papa used to hear us our Greek Testament
-every morning at half-past six. You know
-those were the good old days at Universities! He
-never gave it up even when he went to India.
-Then we had our classes and our riding-master and
-the old drill-sergeant, and my mother used to take
-us round among the wives and tell them what to
-do with their babies. Girls haven’t the same
-strength now. I make Baba lie down for an hour
-every day after lunch while I write letters, and I
-am sure Emma ought to do the same. And how
-is your parish, Mrs. Abel?” She settled down at
-last to one victim and let the others go.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Presently they heard men’s voices in the hall,
-some heavy stumbling upstairs and a door shut.
-Mrs. Price listened, hesitated and rang the bell.
-“Has anything happened, Gregory?” she asked
-the maid.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>“Mr. Joseph, ma’am, brought home a young man
-who got knocked down by the car. He wished you
-not to be troubled as there is nothing serious and
-he is expected to be all right in a few minutes.
-Mr. Varens is with him in Mr. Price’s study.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had better go and see what is the matter,”
-said Mrs. Price. “Don’t disturb yourselves; I
-shall be back in a minute.” She was gone nearly
-a quarter-of-an-hour, but her guests waited on.
-Mrs. Carpenter and Mrs. Vachell had begun an
-animated conversation on strikes and Susie was
-listening. When Mrs. Price came back she looked
-quite scared.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is a young man called Fisk,” she said.
-“David Varens says he is one of the students and
-you would know him,” she turned to Mrs. Gainsborough.
-“He is quite himself again, but he was
-stunned for the moment and I don’t think he knew
-where he was. He was talking a great deal in a
-very noisy way about blood, and there wasn’t a
-scratch on him! I have telephoned for the doctor
-to make quite sure he is all right, though he says
-he can go home. Do you know anything of
-him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I do,” said Mrs. Gainsborough, “and if
-he is talking about blood you may be sure he is
-quite well. He thinks of very little else; it is
-almost a pity in some ways if he hasn’t lost any.
-We all know about him and he is the greatest
-nuisance and trouble to my husband. How did it
-happen?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Joseph was driving Mr. Varens back to tea
-here and the young man came out from behind
-some cart when they were crossing the road. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>was not thinking where he was going and walked
-right into the car; but fortunately it was hardly
-moving.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear me, what a shock it must have given
-him!” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you got brandy in the house?” asked
-Mrs. Abel.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course we have, thank you,” Mrs. Price was
-greatly offended at the suggestion of such incompleteness
-in a perfect establishment. As bad as
-asking King George whether he kept a hair brush.
-“That is not the point. Do you mean to say that
-he is dangerous, Mrs. Gainsborough?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not more than a flying soda-water bottle,”
-she answered nervously. The little contretemps
-about the brandy had flurried her and probably
-suggested the comparison.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think Teresa mentioned him once,” said Susie,
-who always came to the rescue at any hint of dispute.
-“A Communist, isn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A very determined one,” said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What nonsense!” Mrs. Price exclaimed. “A
-great many of my relations are Communists and
-I am quite sure this young man doesn’t look like
-one. He must be pretending.” Joseph came in
-just then.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The doctor has come,” he remarked, “and
-says he’d better go t’ bed. There’s nothing the
-matter, but David says he’ll leave a note on the
-chap’s people on th’ way back. They live close
-by th’ station. Kerious sort of f’ller, he is. Called
-me ‘Moloch’ when he w’s coming round. Who
-was Moloch, d’you remember?” he asked Mrs.
-Vachell. “I can’t just get it for th’ moment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>“Something to do with blood, wasn’t he?”
-Mrs. Vachell suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ah, thaat’s it,” Joseph replied contentedly.
-“Script’ral allusion ’f some sort I w’s sure. He’s
-talking about blood all th’ time and not a scratch
-on him anywhere. ’t’s most kerious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Some people have such a prejudice against
-cars, particularly if they are not in them,” said
-Susie. “And if he is a Communist he is quite
-sure to think he ought to have one. And so ought
-everybody, I do think, if they can. When cheap
-ones are made in large quantities I am sure people
-will be happier and more contented.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Except those who make them,” said Mrs.
-Vachell. She was standing up by the mantelpiece,
-fingering a matchbox on the corner. “Or
-shall we contrive that Mr. Fisk gets inside one as
-soon as possible and you and I take a turn at the
-workshops, Mrs. Fulton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I think we are all much better where we
-are,” Susie replied smiling. “Every man to his
-last. But I do certainly think that conditions
-ought to be made better. I believe if all that sort
-of thing were arranged everyone would settle down
-much more comfortably. Beauty is such a happy
-thing. I find, myself, that I don’t mind how simply
-I live so long as I have music and books and so on
-and if I can get out into the country sometimes.
-These ugly streets are so depressing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must meet Mr. Cranston and see what you
-can do with him,” said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think Mrs. Fulton would get on with
-him at all,” put in Mrs. Gainsborough in a great
-flurry. Her imagination flew to a possible scene
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>of inextricable confusion and she turned quite red
-with embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, do, Mrs. Fulton,” said Mrs. Abel anxiously.
-“I wish you would speak to him and see if you
-can’t influence him. What you say is perfectly
-true. My husband would be so grateful to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I hope you will ask me to come too,”
-said Mrs. Carpenter. “I can support you with all
-the facts if you want them. Mr. Cranston talks
-the greatest nonsense. He should come down to
-our place and talk to the women I have to deal
-with and get at the practical side of what they
-want. He would find that if he stopped the men
-drinking and made them bring home their wages
-there would be plenty—abundance even—to live
-on; and if it were made a criminal offence for a
-man to run after a young girl——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Or for a girl to run after a young man,” Mrs.
-Gainsborough interrupted nervously. “They so
-often do, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not unless they are taught to do it,” Susie
-objected, her eyes wide with reproach.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Joseph Price sat on the back of a sofa looking
-from one lady to the other and jingling the money
-in his pockets. His mother was waiting to ring the
-bell and have them all shown out. The girls had
-come from the other room and were standing at
-the back wondering what it was all about.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid we must be going,” said Mrs.
-Gainsborough, feeling that she had not said the
-right thing and wishing Emma were there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You m’st have a talk to Fisk,” said Joseph to
-Susie. “You’d like him; he’s really a very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>int’resting f’ller. I wonder if he’s still talking
-about blood; p’raps I’d better go and see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you will come and meet Mr. Cranston,
-won’t you, Mrs. Fulton?” Mrs. Vachell said. She
-held out her hand to say good-bye to Mrs. Price
-and they all went downstairs.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Teresa was staying with Evangeline at Drage.
-Evangeline had received a letter from her a week
-before saying, “I want you to ask me to stay with
-you for a few days. David has asked me to marry
-him and I can hardly make you understand how
-much I want to and at the same time explain why
-I have refused. You will think it silly, because
-you don’t take sayings literally and there are some
-that I can’t take generally. If I had a lot of money
-I should see written up on the walls all round me,
-‘Sell all that thou hast and give to the poor.’ I
-couldn’t live in the middle of it and just dole out
-what was left from the expenses of a big house.
-David won’t see it. If only his father had not
-died! Then we should have been married and I
-couldn’t have gone back; whatever we settled
-David and I could not have parted. Though that
-is just cowardice. It is that I hate having the
-choice when I am so perfectly certain which I
-ought to do. David says the money he would get
-for the estate would make as much difference to the
-poor as a parcel of dressings in a battle, but I think
-that is the weakest possible argument, that because
-one person can’t do much no one is to do anything;
-everyone has to go as far as they can see and nothing
-less is enough. He says the money is more useful
-where it is, in teaching people to make the best out
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>of the land. I asked if we couldn’t at least sell the
-big house and live in a cottage or perhaps use the
-house as a convalescent home for mothers and
-children; but he says, No. It is full of lovely
-things, hundreds of years old, that belonged to
-his family and that he has the right to enjoy as
-much as if he had bought them himself. He says
-that if Mr. Price bought them, as he would like to
-do, he wouldn’t either give them away or sell
-them directly. He doesn’t care about them, but
-he would keep them out of vanity and hand them on
-to Joseph, who would probably sell them to the
-Jews and they would be lost all over the world.
-I said, wasn’t that a good thing, as then so many
-people could each have a little bit and enjoy it,
-but he said there was no sense in that; they looked
-much better all together where they were. Of
-course you and I have never had a family tree, so
-I don’t suppose we understand any more than
-Mrs. Potter does—though, if you come to think of
-it, whenever she puts that absurd old tea caddy
-of hers up the spout she always gets it out again
-because it was her grandmother’s. But Mother
-found out about David and she goes on talking
-very gently and persistently, and tells me I am only
-a little girl and can’t possibly think out things
-that even the greatest men don’t agree about, and
-she doesn’t see that that is not the point. I have
-to follow what my bones say is the only decent
-thing to do. She does get on my nerves so, and
-I know you won’t argue if I ask you not. I believe
-I shall get some support out of Evan, as he does
-so believe in anything uncomfortable, doesn’t he?
-And this is so uncomfortable I am nearly mad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>Evangeline had written at once, offering all the
-welcome and freedom Teresa could want, and Evan
-received her with affection. He liked her thoroughly.
-She found an atmosphere of tension and
-sadness in the house that she had not expected,
-neither could she see how it came there, for Evangeline
-seemed on good terms with her husband,
-and Ivor was well and in the highest spirits; except
-when his father came into the nursery, which was
-not very often. Then the nurse grew troubled and
-fidgeted the child and he became exacting and
-contentious, speaking rudely to her, which was
-quite unusual with him. One day Teresa and
-Evangeline were there playing with him in perfect
-peace, when Evan came in. It was about half-past
-three on a foggy November afternoon. “Why
-isn’t that boy out?” he asked his wife.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He has been out,” she answered, “but Nurse
-brought him in as it is so foggy and he has had a
-cold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We were always turned out in all weathers up
-in Yorkshire, and it never did us any harm,” said
-Evan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let’s turn that gun further round this way,
-Ivor,” said Evangeline, going on with the game.
-“You see it would be firing right into its own
-trenches; try a shot and you will see.” Evan
-looked on.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, old man, I’ll show you,” he said, and he
-took hold of the gun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, don’t!” shouted Ivor in great excitement.
-“Put it down! I’ve put it there mythelf.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but you haven’t done it properly,” his
-father said, beginning to move it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>“Leave it, I thay,” Ivor screamed, almost beside
-himself. “Get out from my gunth——” He
-pushed his father away impatiently. “And you
-get out too,” he commanded Evangeline, pushing
-her also, suddenly tired of visitors. “All go away
-downthtairth.” Tears of aggravation were in his
-eyes, but he kept them back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are not to speak to your mother like that,
-sir,” said Evan. “Apologise to her at once.” Ivor
-had no idea what apologising meant, but it sounded
-horrid. “Than’t,” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, do go away, please, Evan,” said Evangeline.
-“We’re coming down to tea presently. Do go and
-ring for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not till that boy has apologised for his rudeness,”
-said Evan. Ivor had resumed his game
-alone and was getting interested and remote.
-Evidently this tiresome family of his were going to
-fight among themselves and leave him in peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You are sorry, aren’t you?” his mother said,
-then in a pleading tone: “You didn’t mean to
-push, did you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Eth,” said Ivor, as he placed the contested gun
-carefully back in the position from which his father
-had moved it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nonsense,” said Evangeline temptingly. “Come
-here and kiss me and make it up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Take—away—your—’uthband,” Ivor said
-slowly, as if he were repeating a lesson to himself.
-His mother and his aunt shouted with delight and
-could hardly believe that the child had meant it.
-Ivor’s face was quite unmoved. “Come on,” said
-Evangeline, seizing Evan by the arm and dragging
-him out of the room. “You can’t stay after that.”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>But he neither smiled nor answered. He followed
-them downstairs and did not speak for some time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When he had gone out again after tea Evangeline
-sat for a time looking idly into the fire. “Dicky,”
-she began after a little while, “whatever you do
-don’t marry a man with whom you daren’t be truthful.
-Before I talk to Evan I have to treat what I
-want to say as if it were to a foreigner and had to
-be translated into his language. First I have to
-cut out the bits that won’t do because of the prejudices
-he was brought up in. Then I have to
-change whole chunks that he would associate with
-other women whom he dislikes and who have said
-the same things; we do, as a sex, rather talk about
-the same things as each other, don’t we? But
-when he has heard some gas-bag of a creature say,
-‘Oh, Captain Hatton, I do love children!’ (which she
-probably does) he thinks the whole subject exhausted,
-and shamefully exhausted too! So if any
-woman uses the word ‘love’ at any time afterwards
-he looks the subject up in his mind and finds a note,
-‘memo. gas. Mrs. T.’ and there’s an end of it; so
-in future, when I want to say anything about love
-I have to use another word. It is very hampering.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you can’t go on using new words about
-everything,” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but you see in the kind of things he talks to
-men about the words can’t very well be misused.
-If you are describing what has gone wrong with
-an engine you can only use words like ‘plug’ and
-‘spring’ and ‘valve,’ that have only one meaning.
-Even a lawyer couldn’t say, ‘I suggest that when
-you tell the Court that the valve was defective you
-inferred that John Brown’s baby had a wart on its
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>nose.’ But that is what Evan does if I try to tell
-him what Ivor is thinking—things that I know
-quite well because I remember being a child, and
-he doesn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I see,” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, let us get on to David,” said her sister.
-“Does what I have said apply to him or not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not at all,” (very emphatically).</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then why doesn’t he do what you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not because he doesn’t understand, but because
-he doesn’t agree. It is rather like statistics; two
-people can add up the same figures and prove
-different results with them, one showing that trade
-is prospering and the other that it is going all wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You know, I agree with him,” said Evangeline.
-“I don’t think you could do any good by selling
-everything. There is nothing you can give to people
-to make them happy if they don’t want to be. I
-have found that out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the people I am talking about do want to
-be happy,” Teresa argued passionately. “They
-are starving for what other people are throwing
-away because they can’t use all of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I saw in the paper the other day that if you
-divided up everyone’s money there would be only
-thirteen-and-something a day—or a week—or it
-might have been a year—I forget; but only a very
-little like that for each person.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It wasn’t finance that I was thinking of,” said
-Teresa, “I know it is no good trying to settle that.
-There is a horrid boy at the University called Fisk.
-He is always telling me that I haven’t studied the
-subject, and he is going quite mad himself over it.
-He devours Mr. Cranston’s literature and coughs
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>it up again much the worse for wear. Joseph Price
-ran over him once, ages ago, and brought him back
-to their house in the middle of a tea-party. Mother
-was there, and David told me all about it afterwards.
-Of course Mother told us nothing except that Mrs.
-Price got frightened at Fisk talking so much about
-blood, as he always does when he is excited, and
-that she had said that he couldn’t possibly be a
-Communist, because some of her own relations were;
-wasn’t that like her? You know they were all
-very rich, so I have wondered since how they did
-mean to divide up their money. But whichever way
-it was they don’t seem to have done it. Fisk stayed
-in the Prices’ house for two days, and at last Mrs.
-Price sent for Emma, as he seemed to have settled
-down there very comfortably and said he was too
-ill to move. I think Joseph encouraged him
-because he thought it was the kind of thing his dear
-Mortons, whom he imitates, would do; keep a
-revolutionary in bed in their own house and egg
-him on and feed him up and get lots of notoriety
-out of him and then manage to get out of any trouble
-that they raised later on. David says if there were
-a revolution the Mortons would probably pretend
-to head it and then slip off to another country where
-it is all comfortable under a despot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What does Father say?” Evangeline asked
-curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I haven’t told him about David,” Teresa replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why not? He always understands, and if, as
-you say, Mother knows, she is sure to have told him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, there are some things he doesn’t see at all,
-and one of them is slums. They don’t worry him
-an atom unless he has to walk through them, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>if he does that he complains that everyone wears
-fish next the skin, and wants to go home another
-way. He never will take the trouble to think about
-anything horrid that he can’t help. I asked him
-once what he would do if he had to live in a place
-like that—we were in some horrible street near the
-docks—and he said that it was impossible that he
-should have to, because then he would be somebody
-else; he explained that he would have been given
-gin in his bottle as a baby, and therefore would have
-grown up quite contented with it all. Of course
-he would side with David if I told him. The idea
-of Mr. Price having anything to do with hounds
-would prevent him from listening to arguments
-even from an archangel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>If Teresa had but known, her parents were at that
-very moment discussing the same subject. It was
-after dinner, and Susie had mentioned that she met
-Lady Varens that afternoon opening a bazaar.
-“They are going to let Aldwych to the Prices for
-three years,” she said. “David refuses to sell it,
-but he has suddenly come round to the idea of
-letting it. I suppose the Prices hope to be able to
-buy it in the end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I’m damned sorry,” he said with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid it is partly Dicky’s fault, Cyril,”
-she suggested gently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How’s that?” he asked. “You haven’t sold
-her to that young Price, have you, Sue? I couldn’t
-stand that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wonder if you will ever understand that
-marriage is not a question of bargaining and arrangement,”
-said his wife impatiently. “It is really
-a pity, I think, that I wasn’t able to provide you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>with cattle instead of children. You would have
-understood me far better if I had been a slave or an
-animal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We might try,” he suggested. “It is not too
-late to add to your list of female impersonations.
-But you haven’t answered my question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I forget what it was,” she answered gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Whether you had bestowed (we will say if you
-prefer it) Teresa on Joseph Price.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have no reason to suppose that he has asked
-her to marry him,” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then we may take it that is all right,” he said
-with relief. “She would never invite herself. I
-am always glad to see Mammon spread his net in
-vain for your sex, Sue. It makes the world so
-much brighter and better. But what did you mean
-that Dicky had done?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has refused David; why I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am really sorry about that,” he said after a
-pause.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose you wouldn’t tell her so, would you?”
-she asked hopefully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course not. If marriage means as much to a
-girl as you say it does, she isn’t likely to invest in a
-husband to amuse dear old Dad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but you might tell her. Girls are so silly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you astonish me!” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why? Surely you must know they are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought the feminine instinct was infallible
-on every subject.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She can’t be expected to have experience,”
-said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then the divine gift is just a happy little flame
-that you can blow out when you don’t want to see
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>it, is that it? You can just ask Mother what she
-saw when she was a girl? And that was a devil of
-a lot,” he added reflectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then it is no good asking you to take the matter
-seriously?” she inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She is not going to stay away long, is she?”
-Cyril asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shouldn’t think so. I believe Evan’s sisters
-are going to stay there next week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, absence makes the heart grow fonder,” he
-observed. “I am very sorry about Dicky. I don’t
-think you made a great success there, Sue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had nothing to do with it,” she protested. “I
-implored her to wait. If anything it was your fault
-for having Evan always about here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now how could I help that?” Cyril inquired.
-“I couldn’t have a maiden lady as my A.D.C., and
-if I had, you would have said that I taught her to
-be wicked. As it was, I just tried not to worry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is there anything else I can say for you to twist
-round, Cyril dear?” asked his wife. “I am
-delighted to give you opportunities for your wit,
-but sometimes it is hardly possible to open one’s
-mouth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sorry,” he said penitently. “I don’t
-want to tease you, really. I love everything you
-say. But when you blamed me for not keeping
-Hatton in a cupboard like a bottle of whisky labelled
-‘not to be taken,’ I thought you were coming it a
-little strong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They don’t seem to me to be very happy,” said
-Susie, prepared to start again amicably. “I wish
-he wouldn’t carry religion quite so far.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How far does he carry it?” asked Cyril, “You
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>see, he never had occasion to bring it to me at all,
-so I don’t know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh quite ridiculous lengths,” Susie replied.
-“He thinks quite a number of things wrong.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ha! ha! ha!” laughed Cyril uproariously.
-“Well done, Sue. That’s a topper! Ha! ha!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear Cyril, what on earth is the matter?”
-she asked, quite bewildered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nothing,” he replied gravely, as he poured
-himself out his usual evening drink. “My mind
-wanders sometimes. Go on, my dear. Evan is
-suffering from moral unrest, you say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, he used even to think it wrong sometimes
-when I had dear Baby in my room and played with
-him. I think it is dreadful not to want to see a
-little child happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know that I would trust you to bring up a
-boy, Sue,” he said candidly. “You see, your idea
-of a male is to let it have all it wants so long as it is
-only a matter of a little song and dance. But when
-it begins to want things a bit nearer the bone, you
-pull it up short and it gets confused. Very few
-women know how to go on as they meant to
-begin.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose you mean ‘begin as they mean to go
-on,’” said Susie, “but you are quite wrong. Men
-understand what women mean quite well from the
-beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I meant what I said,” Cyril persisted. “Go
-on as they meant to begin. They meant to begin
-with a carnival and to end in Lent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie flushed. “I was saying that I think Evan
-is far too strict with little Ivor,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Someone has got to be sometime,” said Cyril
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>carelessly. “It will save the schoolmaster’s arm
-later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But a baby! It is so cruel,” she protested.
-“I must say, Cyril, to do you justice, you never
-interfered with the children.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, because they were girls,” he replied. “And
-anyhow, I don’t know anything about kids. I don’t
-mind them but I keep out of the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They were much fonder of you than Ivor is of
-his father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t let’s be boastful. And you had much
-better leave those two to manage their own affairs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa came back at the end of the week and saw
-David once before he went away. The Prices were
-to move into Aldwych next month and Lady Varens
-was going abroad when David went to the Argentine
-to learn farming.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He met Teresa when he was leaving the University
-one evening and walked back with her. When they
-reached the house she invited him in. “I know
-Mother is out,” she said, “and Father probably is,
-too, but I want you to come in. I have one more
-thing to say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is it?” he asked when they were in the
-drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you think you will certainly come back
-when the Prices’ three years are up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall see what sort of a show they run there.
-If it is all right I might let them have it and I would
-buy some land somewhere else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where for instance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Anywhere where they talk English.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Even in the Colonies? And what about all the
-things in your house?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>“I should move them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what about the old people on the place?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Easily move them too, if they liked. If not,
-leave them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would many of them want to go, do you
-think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not unless your friend Fisk gets too much of the
-blood he is after. Then they might.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David, I do loathe that Fisk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, so do I.——Teresa?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is the Lady Bountiful I can’t do,” she said
-very sadly. “There is something in me that sticks
-and boggles at it as if I were trying to swallow a
-fish bone. If you loved someone as much as you
-could and were told you must only flirt with them—wouldn’t
-you feel you couldn’t? It would be like
-selling one’s soul to the devil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I do think that is awfully silly,” said David.
-“You can’t flirt with a girl you love. You get run
-away with and then—well, you go where it is going.
-You don’t think about whether you ought to stop
-and pick mushrooms.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>So it seemed. For when Susie came back David
-had gone, and Teresa’s pale little face bore evidence
-of having paid dearly for her inability to (as she
-thought) flirt with her love for Mrs. Potter. It is
-impossible to say whether David carried his idea
-of the runaway horse any further, or comforted himself
-with the possibility of deflecting the course of
-Teresa’s passion for regeneration.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“I am going to Aldwych to call on the Prices. Will
-you come with me, dear Dicky? I wish you
-would,” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa said she would. Sometime the idea of
-Aldwych without David must be recognised and
-dealt with. She also wished her mother to forget
-that “a girl may regret some day” having refused
-a beautiful old place in the country and a really
-good husband “just for an idea.” Poor little
-Teresa supposed that any show of reluctance to go
-back to the house might be taken as evidence of a
-weak spot in her armour. Neither she nor Evangeline
-had ever known how much of the world their
-mother detected from behind her veil of misty
-sweetness. Anything more candid than her words
-and actions could hardly be imagined, and yet
-somehow, as Evangeline had said, omelets were
-mysteriously made in hats, and whether Susie or
-the Powers of Darkness made them none of her
-audience could discern. Cyril had his ideas on the
-subject and we have seen how deeply they wounded
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Price was found in the garden, talking in
-her best manner to one of “the county” who had
-called; a crushing sort of woman who made it
-quite clear to Mrs. Price that she had called in
-obedience to the tradition that “noblesse oblige.”
-She was known as Mrs. Archie Lake, and newcomers
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>were supposed to be “all right” if she called on
-them. She had conferred the stamp of recognition
-on Mrs. Price for several reasons. First, “out of
-decency to Milly Varens”; secondly, because the
-Hunt was not in a very flourishing condition, and
-Mr. Price was reported to be rich and ambitious;
-thirdly, “just to see what they were like.” Someone
-had met Joseph Price and reported that he was
-quite possible and that the girls would probably
-have money too in the end——. Here Mrs. Lake
-let her train of thought lose itself because one does
-not think these things out in so many words. Her
-son was rather a worry to her, but it is impossible to
-make plans of that sort. The French do, but we
-don’t. Anyhow she called, and Susie and Teresa
-found her there. Mrs. Price was getting on well
-with her new manner. “How charming of you to
-come, Mrs. Fulton. Of course you know this part
-of the world well. And how is the General?” She
-did not wish Mrs. Lake to suppose that Millport was
-going to be allowed to track her down here, but Susie,
-of course, was different. She welcomed her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I think we have met somewhere, haven’t
-we?” said Mrs. Lake, raising her eyes sleepily to
-Susie. Mrs. Price made a mental note and tried to
-look a little sleepy too.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sure you are enjoying the country,” Susie
-said to her. “Everything is looking so exquisite
-just now. We want to go away ourselves as soon
-as we can, but my husband finds it very difficult
-to get away. He doesn’t care for the sea and so
-many of his Staff have children that he likes to
-let them off when the schools break up and take his
-own holiday when the hunting begins.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>“But isn’t Millport on the sea somewhere?”
-asked Mrs. Lake. Mrs. Price flushed. “We hardly
-think of a great port like that as the seaside,” she
-said. “Of course when my husband’s ancestor
-went there first and practically built what there was
-it was on the sea, but that is so long ago and everything
-is so altered he would hardly recognise it if
-he were alive. There are very few people nowadays
-who have the courage of those pioneers who went
-down to the sea in ships and opened up communications
-with the East. My husband cares so much
-more for sport and racing and all that, that I tell him
-he is not half proud enough of the old family he
-comes from. Something so rugged and adventurous
-about the sea, isn’t there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They used to import slaves, didn’t they?”
-Mrs. Lake inquired, looking quite vacant. “I wish
-they would begin again now. I am fed up with the
-search for servants, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, but don’t you think that was terribly
-wrong?” said Susie. “I can’t bear to think of it.
-I am sure that most of the labour troubles now are
-largely owing to people having been so inconsiderate
-for others in the past. Teresa and I both work a
-great deal in that way, and we see so much of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, really? What sort of work do you do?”
-asked Mrs. Lake of Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I just sort papers in an office,” said Teresa, who
-would have beaten her mother at that moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Really? Don’t you find you need exercise?”
-said Mrs. Lake. “You had better come and do
-some hunting in the winter. I have come to the
-conclusion that the working classes don’t need
-helping any more; they help themselves to everything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>they want. Do your girls hunt?” she turned
-to Mrs. Price.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, they are quite mad about it,” their mother
-replied. “Sir David sold his horses before we
-came. He said he didn’t understand that Mr. Price
-would have bought any that were good enough for
-the girls, but some others have been ordered, I
-believe, and in the meantime we have the three
-motors to get about in, so we are not really cut off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Lake was startled almost out of her good
-behaviour. She regretted for a moment having
-called so soon, in case it should really be impossible
-to go on with these people, however rich they were.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose Sir David is coming back in a year or
-two?” she said, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, that of course, one can’t say,” Mrs. Price
-replied, “but my husband would have bought the
-place if he could and he still hopes to—if we find
-we can afford it, that is,” she added, recollecting
-certain warnings from her daughters. “We had to
-draw in our horns very much since the war, like
-everybody else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not quite everybody, do you think?” said Mrs.
-Lake, as she made room for the butler and footman
-who had come in with tea. “There are some people
-who have taken a place called Fable near here—perhaps
-you know them? I think they come from
-Millport or Poolchester, I forget which. He contracted
-for something during the war, boots or
-cholera belts or cigarettes or something, and not
-only that, but the price of whatever it was is still
-up. It is rather sad to see the old places go, one
-by one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I expect they come from Poolchester,” said Mrs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>Price. “There is a great deal of that sort of thing
-there. It is a manufacturing town of course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But such an interesting place,” Susie intervened.
-“So much life. I went there once to hear some
-wonderful music, and the faces all looked to me so
-strong. No, no sugar, thanks,—Teresa, dear, will
-you take that cup from Mrs. Price?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Joseph came in just then and Mrs. Lake dropped
-all unpleasant subjects immediately. She encouraged
-him and he responded gladly. He infused
-a quality of ease into the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And how’s the—what d’you call it?—the
-welfare of the city, Miss Fulton?” he asked
-presently. “Still going strong, what? Fisk been
-shedding much blood lately?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What’s that?” asked Mrs. Lake curiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, great sport, isn’t he, Miss Fulton? Communist,
-what? Miss Fulton b’nevolently hands
-round soup and Fisk gets into it, isn’t that it? No,
-kait sairysly though. I hope you’re getting on. I
-do immensely admire what you’re doing. I couldn’t
-do it for m’life. The smell of the f’llers on parade
-used to quite upset me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Lake didn’t like that. “He must learn not
-to say those kind of things,” she thought. “It is
-dreadfully bad form; but he is a nice boy in many
-ways; we had better make use of him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>To Teresa the whole thing was little less than
-torture. Love of humanity was so alive in her that
-to have it wounded in sport gave her something
-of the hopeless misery of a child roughly handled by
-bigger boys. The fact that they were of her own
-species made her sense of isolation worse. Affectionate
-women fear alien sympathies more than
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>force. They also feel it their duty to betray the
-whereabouts of the thing they love by fighting over
-it, instead of merely putting it out of range of
-attack and guarding all approaches as men do.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would have smelt just as bad yourself if
-you had been a private,” she said, blushing and
-stammering, “it is only just chance that gives you
-hot baths.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Ha! ha!” he laughed heartily. “Of course I
-should. You’re abs’lutely right; but then I
-shouldn’t have minded, don’t you see? That’s
-th’ whole point.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do you know you wouldn’t?” she flamed
-out. “How do you know they don’t care? They
-do care. You know nothing about it. You have
-never talked to them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Teresa, dear,” Susie remonstrated.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, please,” said Joseph. “Come on, Miss
-Fulton, we must finish this. I’m enjoying it
-’mmensely. I love people that speak out. I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, do leave it alone,” said Teresa. “You don’t
-understand a bit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I do,” he persisted. “I’m ’normously
-int’rested in th’ whole subject. I shall b’ sure to
-have to canvass for my father at the next election
-and what you were saying is just th’ sort of thing
-th’ Labour people will put up, and I shall have t’ find
-an answer. And there isn’t any answer, you know,
-except that somebody’s got t’ have money—there
-isn’t ’nough in th’ country for everybody—and
-mining and all that takes generations of training.
-Somebody’s got to do it, and somebody’s got t’ stay
-outside and watch them when they come up. Th’
-question is, Who? Fisk thinks he ought t’ have a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>turn because he never has. I think I’m going to
-because I’ve got int’ the habit of it. There’s nothing
-in it as an argument, you see. The only way is t’
-sit tight. The thing’s bound t’ settle itself in
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what is your father’s view as a Member of
-Parliament?” asked Mrs. Lake, who was a good
-deal bewildered, a little shocked and a very little
-amused.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I don’t know,” said Joseph, “he doesn’t say,
-but I don’t think he stands much nonsense from the
-f’llers down at the works. But he keeps friends with
-the Labour Party, I b’lieve on principle. The
-government offered him a baronetcy last year, but
-that sort of thing isn’t done now, thank goodness.
-He said he’d be a fool t’ take it, I remember, but I
-forget why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How can you pretend to be so silly, Joseph,”
-his mother interrupted. “You know your father
-doesn’t believe in rewards for public service of that
-sort. No one can ever say he has pushed himself
-forward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, my dear mother, that’s just what I said,”
-he remarked. “It’s such frightf’lly bad form t’
-have titles and all that sort of thing, now. The
-Tories stick to it on principle, of course, but they’re
-frightf’lly crude in their ideas——” He was
-wandering on gaily as a matter of habit, relating
-as much as he could remember of what he heard at
-the houses he loved, when Mrs. Archie Lake rose.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t talk too much about crude Conservatives
-while you are at Aldwych, Mr. Price,” she said.
-“We don’t study politics down here; we just have
-them, and we are not likely to change. You had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>better come and play tennis with us next week,
-and leave abstruse problems alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline had taken a small house by the sea
-for July and August. She intended to be there alone
-with Ivor and his nurse, except for such time as
-she could persuade Teresa to spend with her. Evan
-would come down for week ends, and perhaps a
-whole ten days at the end of the time. She was
-beginning to lose those sociable tastes that had
-made her so popular when she came to Drage.
-Her joy in living that had made her easily throw
-off the weight of other people’s theories of
-conduct was giving way under continuous fatigue.
-Her war against Evan’s prejudices had broken out
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>This reassembling of his forces and hers might
-have been prophesied without much risk from the
-beginning, but the prophet would have been called
-cynical and pessimistic by all those genial souls who
-believe that the best way to prevent war is to invite
-the hostile parties to a picnic. They fondly suppose
-that because the guns are left at home there will be
-no fighting. Even when they look round and discover
-that half the party are drawn up on one side
-of the tablecloth with all the teapots and the other
-half are massed with all the buns on the other,—even
-then they would consider it morbid to suspect
-them of harbouring old grudges. It may be remembered
-that before Evan asked Evangeline to
-marry him he had reviewed and finally dismissed
-the remnant of his doubts about the soundness of
-her character. His inner voices warned him, “She
-is not your ideal woman; she is lax and flippant and
-light-headed,” but Nature laughed at and tormented
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>him. No one knows how Nature does this work of
-uniting opposite temperaments, but she did it, and
-Evan’s misgivings retired muttering.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>By the time we are now speaking of they had
-gathered again in a strong force. Evangeline’s
-gaiety and confidence and innocence with which she
-had routed them were now weakened by constant unexpected
-attacks. The anxiety of never knowing from
-what quarter disapproval would burst out and turn
-pleasure into pain made her nervous and depressed.
-As Ivor grew older the strain was more than
-doubled, for in every attack of Evan’s that she could
-have dodged or parried for herself she was hampered
-by Ivor’s little body, that would suffer equally from
-her blows at her husband and her husband’s at her.
-She dared not hide away with him, because that
-would at once bring about the crisis she dreaded,
-and Evan would claim his right to take the boy away.
-There was nowhere she could hide him where he
-would not be found by the police and given back
-to his father. She sat sometimes on a gate among
-fields that overlooked the railway line, and watched
-with frightened eyes the trains rush by and wondered
-whether any of them went far enough without a
-stop to take her and the child out of Evan’s reach.
-She thought longingly of other countries, stretches
-of hill and forest, new faces, new people; English-speaking
-they must be for Evangeline, but there
-are plenty of these everywhere, on the other side of
-the globe. She thought once what fun it would be
-to walk about in bright sunshine, knowing that
-Evan was asleep in darkness and fog just below the
-curve of the round world. Only there, on the other
-side, would she feel safe; he would never come
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>slowly up like a fly over an orange (as she was
-taught at school when the hemispheres were explained)
-and look for her. No, she knew he would
-not. He would search over England, and possibly
-Europe, but if the police still failed in their clues he
-would go home at last and explain to Cyril, and
-retire into a blacker severity than ever with his
-giggly little sisters. Then she used to shake herself
-free from these dreams and return home tired and
-sad. She had looked forward eagerly to being by
-the sea with Teresa and Ivor, and when they were
-all there at last, some of her old confidence came
-back.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She said nothing to Teresa about the trouble in
-her mind, because it had increased beyond the stage
-of being an interesting puzzle and become grief
-that lies quieter untouched, except by the one who
-brought it and only could remove it. One great
-difference between Evangeline and her mother was
-that Susie counted differences of opinion with herself
-as a compliment to her higher understanding;
-they were treasures to be turned over and enjoyed
-in secret. To her daughter they were so many
-obstructions to love, and must be destroyed if
-possible; if persistently obstructive, she climbed
-over and fled from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Ivor had certainly managed to collect in himself
-all the elements of discord in his father’s and mother’s
-families. If he had inherited his mother’s joyousness
-and been content with that, the two of them together
-might have weakened Evan’s fears through lack of
-exercise, for his disapproval was not the natural
-bitterness that uses a creed as the organ of its
-appetite; it was his means of following the same
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>desire as Evangeline followed, the desire to know
-how God works the universe. She felt that she
-knew how it was done and he thought he knew.
-But feeling is generally stronger than thought in
-personal affairs, so if the wretched young Ivor had
-left well alone and not excited his father’s reasoning
-powers, they might have grown soft like the Roman
-Legions. But unfortunately he had inherited a
-great deal of Susie’s mischievous tendency to stir
-up strife without taking part in it. He had her
-elusive charm and was, like her, uncommunicative;
-he loved natural pleasure and was indifferent to
-public opinion, like his mother, and was as unswerving
-along his own chosen path as his father. This
-combination of qualities made him perfectly adapted
-as a bone of contention, a desirable young person,
-belonging to both, and yet to neither of the contending
-parties. There, down by the sea with his devoted
-mother and aunt and nurse, he played and bathed
-and went his own way in peace, asking nothing
-that was unreasonable, kind-hearted, courageous
-and merry; the kind of child that terrifies its weaker
-relatives by the thought of what it has to meet in
-the future; of candid eyes coming upon hatred
-for the first time, small hands roughened by work
-and stained with blood from the noses of hostile
-neighbours with predatory instincts and a perverted
-sense of humour; visions perhaps, of little trousers
-that were designed for warmth and comfort removed
-with trembling fingers at the command of an ogre
-with a cane in a place far from home—a callous
-creature with lips dripping the literature of a civilisation
-that worshipped suffering. There is a radical
-difference between mothers who revere the name of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>Cæsar and mothers who don’t. It is not all
-children who work upon maternal terrors in this
-way, but Ivor had the gift to perfection and his
-unconsciousness of his own power made it the
-stronger.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The little party were playing on the sands one
-day, when two figures, one in a linen dress with a
-red parasol, the other in baggy tweeds, came to the
-edge of the cliff above them and sat down. Evangeline
-heard a small laugh with a familiar tone in it,
-and looked up. “Hullo, Dicky,” she said, “there
-are the Vachells; look!” Mrs. Vachell waved
-her hand and then said something, and presently
-both figures rose and came slowly down the sandhills,
-Mrs. Vachell with leisurely ease, her husband
-with the reluctance of a shy man obeying the
-stronger will of a wife used to society.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had no idea you were here,” she said. “Did
-I tell you of the place by any chance? There are so
-few people here generally. You know my husband,
-don’t you?” Mr. Vachell bowed. “But you
-two don’t count as people,” she added. “I don’t
-grudge you your simple pleasures. If you spend
-your days like this making sand pies you must have
-very peaceful minds. What I hate are people who
-put up tents and are always making tea and screaming
-in two inches of water.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your boy seems to be having a good time,” said
-Mr. Vachell. Ivor was busy with a net among the
-small rocks that appeared at low tide.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, he loves it,” Evangeline replied. “We
-are so happy here.” She spread her rug hospitably,
-and they all sat down. Mr. Vachell and Teresa
-were side by side in a silence that each felt the other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>ought to break first, but neither was equal to the
-attempt.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is Captain Hatton with you?” asked Mrs.
-Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not often,” Evangeline replied. “He
-comes for week ends sometimes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your boy looks very well,” Mr. Vachell
-remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, he is, and he is really no trouble,” said his
-mother. “There are some other children about,
-but he doesn’t seem to want them. He is the most
-independent creature I ever met.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is a useful thing in a boy, isn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is useful in anybody,” said Evangeline,
-sighing. “I think if everyone minded their own
-business like animals, and were just happy eating
-together and enjoying each other’s society and
-hopping off in between, it would be much nicer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mr. Vachell’s face wrinkled into a smile, but he
-said nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa happened to look up. “What are you
-laughing at?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Your sister’s idea of living agrees with mine,”
-he said. They missed Mrs. Vachell’s reply, but
-Evangeline went on thinking aloud, incited by the
-sunshine and the splash of the waves. She had
-once said to Susie, as a child, that the sea was always
-telling her to speak out, but that it never said anything
-but “h’m” when she did, and Susie had
-answered, “Yes, dear, that is quite true.” She had
-found the sea restful herself, when pursued by the
-eager questioning of lovers. Evangeline went on
-now, “There is too much busy-bodying about
-morals. I think that people who like committing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>murder should be put on an island together and
-settle it among themselves; people who steal
-should have all their things taken away and sold
-for hospitals; people who say nasty things should
-be given vinegar tea made with bilge water, and be
-photographed every day and obliged to look at the
-proofs——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What about people who are stupid?” asked
-Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, poor darlings, nothing about them,” said
-Evangeline quickly, “don’t be horrid.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t you think most vice is stupidity?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, certainly not. For instance, I am so
-stupid that I don’t know what two and two make,
-but I don’t mean an atom of harm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you may do a lot of harm by adding them
-up to make six. Why not try to learn?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t believe God adds up,” said Evangeline,
-tracing patterns in the sand with her finger. “But
-then I expect He knows the answer without thinking,
-so that doesn’t come to anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know your husband, Mrs. Hatton,” said
-Mr. Vachell, “but I hope he is not passionately fond
-of arithmetic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He has a passion for everything uncomfortable,”
-said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Poor fellow!” observed Mr. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Vachell, really I don’t think you need look
-like that,” said Teresa. “Your study, which I
-saw once, is the most hauntingly uncomfortable
-place I was ever led into. I couldn’t go to sleep
-the night after I had seen it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why, what is the matter with it?” he asked,
-surprised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>“Everything is so dug up,” she explained.
-“Have you ever seen it, Chips?” she turned to her
-sister. “I do think when people have finished
-with their lives they might be allowed to get rid
-of them decently. To have their bones and their
-tears and the things they have been happy with
-all brought back and looked at——. Suppose
-someone dug up Millport thousands of years after
-us, and put a whole street full of people together
-again! Personal possessions are bad enough when
-the people who own them are alive; they are so
-full of—I don’t know what—associations. But
-when the owners are dead their things become
-perfectly horrid. I don’t think anyone ought to
-own anything at all. I would like them to live out
-of doors in tents that don’t cost anything, and to
-eat with their fingers——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am very sorry my things worried you so
-much,” said Mr. Vachell. “I have always looked
-at them quite prosaically as history; interesting
-in their way. In fact, I think I could show you
-that they are interesting if you came and looked
-at them again. Some of them are very beautiful,
-and if people make beautiful things to please themselves
-they are worth keeping. The world would be
-very squalid by now if it had gone on as you suggest.
-Think of the grass all trampled down with being
-sat upon and nobody’s hair ever having been combed,
-and how dreadfully they would all quarrel and gossip
-with nothing to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I expect I was thinking of a world with fewer
-people in it,” said Teresa. “It makes me giddy
-when I think of arranging a government that will
-be fair to millions and millions of people, each one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>of them just a little different from any one of the
-others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is where historians do their humble best
-for you,” said he. “It does sort the masses into a
-few main heaps that tend to move about in definite
-directions, and even clear the ground by destroying
-one another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, that is a man’s only idea of deciding an
-argument,” said his wife. “He has never been able
-to understand anything more intelligent than blood.
-And as long as women are silly enough to go on
-providing children and handing them over to him
-the supply will be kept up and arguments will be
-decided in that way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid I must go in and do a little work,”
-said he, rising with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good-bye,” said his wife, “I’ll come along
-later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They sat talking until it was time to go in to tea.
-Evangeline began to feel her contentment in the
-outdoor life she loved give way gradually before
-the force of purpose that Mrs. Vachell brought
-with her. The Sphinx who looked so calm among
-hungry crowds had the opposite effect on Evangeline’s
-simple enjoyment of things as they are. The
-smothered rebellion that is hidden by pride so
-long as the enemy is overpowering may suddenly
-break out and inflame a peaceful party of shepherds
-and set them running and shouting for an end that
-they never contemplated or desired. Evangeline
-had been suffering under a sense of heavy depression
-when she came away to the sea. She felt herself
-up against an obstacle that was not to be moved
-because it moved with her and encircled her from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>all sides, closing her in and shutting out all the new
-joys of the future that she had seen ahead of her
-when Ivor was born. Every step she took was
-hampered by fear that she might be sending him
-farther away from her, some incident might arise
-that would strengthen Evan’s conviction that she
-was not fit to have the charge of him. Then when
-she hid her sympathy from Ivor and forced herself
-to suffer for the sake of keeping him with her, she
-could see a look of childish judgment in his eyes that
-placed her unjustly in the category she dreaded,
-that of people who have grown up and are beyond
-the pale of confidence from the young. If she went
-on pretending for his sake, she said to herself, he
-would become like Romulus and Remus, living in
-his own thoughts without a mother. The idea
-made her almost mad at times.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Alone with Teresa and Ivor by the sea, she had
-got back her confidence, her nature being of the
-kind that expects a trouble left behind to remain
-where it is without attempting pursuit. She kept
-no record of the occasions when this hope had been
-disappointed. The things Mrs. Vachell talked of
-that afternoon showed her something entirely new
-to her. She understood, to her great surprise, that
-all over the world were thousands of other Evangelines,
-suffering as she did, from the inexplicable
-harshness of men towards those precious, irrational
-gambollings of the mind, that move women to
-actions that are condemned as “unreasonable,”
-“inconsistent,” “illogical,” “false,” “silly,” and
-generally lacking in orderly sequence. She learned
-that she was not alone, fighting something sinister
-that had no shape and perhaps was only a disorder
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>of her own imagination. Mrs. Vachell explained
-that the enemy was terribly real and powerful; the
-enemy of all true women whose duty it was to unite
-in fighting to the last drop of their blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Women are not stupid,” she said in her slow,
-deep voice, “they are not irrational. What you
-see in Ivor and dread to lose—what your husband
-does not see—is what comes into the world by
-women, and your husband thinks it foolish because
-it is not in him. He wants to preserve his own
-qualities; you want to preserve yours; they are
-wholly contradictory, and one side or the other
-must impose its will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I thought men were supposed to adore
-women for having just what they haven’t got, just
-as we adore them for their physical strength and
-their brains.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So they say, and so we say, because otherwise
-there would be no marriages,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“But it is a lie. We only love their strength for
-the sake of getting the better of it. They cultivate
-our foolishness because it gives them rest from
-competition, and they can sit down and plume themselves.
-Each wants the power, and the centuries of
-suffering that we have gone through have taught us
-to see love as the only thing worth having, while
-they still look on it as a pleasant fad to be indulged
-in when they have finished arranging who is to get
-the most of what belongs, by right, equally to
-all. It is all very pretty, you will find, if you look
-into it.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dicky,” said Evangeline, a few days later, when
-she and Teresa had settled themselves under the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>cliff after breakfast, “I have done the most evil bit
-of mischief. I feel like Guy Fawkes. I have
-advised Mrs. Trotter to come here, and she is
-coming.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But why not?” Teresa asked in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t you know how Evan hates her? No, I
-suppose you wouldn’t. But he does. She is his
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bête noir</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, then, why have you asked her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t ask her. Mother wrote and said the
-rooms the Trotters generally go to at Broadstairs
-have got something the matter with them; a
-lodger developed some disease or other, I think.
-They couldn’t get in anywhere, and she wanted to
-know if I could get rooms here. There are rooms
-in those cottages down on the left by the church,
-nurse told me. So I think she is sure to come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But that isn’t your fault,” said Teresa. “You
-couldn’t do anything else. Evan hasn’t bought up
-the whole place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not if I had done it innocently like that,”
-said Evangeline, “but I didn’t. I urged her to
-come and made everything easy, and I have been
-enjoying the idea ever since. It is deliberate vice.
-There is Evan coming along now with Mrs. Vachell,
-of course. He still thinks her a very ladylike
-woman. Oh, Dicky! when Mrs. Trotter comes
-won’t she mow them both down with repartee? It
-will be lovely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Chips,” said Teresa hesitatingly, “you—you’re
-not so—so kind to Evan as you are to the rest of us.
-You used to be so interested in making him talk,
-and now you so often won’t listen when he does.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He talks such rot,” said her sister. “I can’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>be bothered with it.” There was silence for some
-minutes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m a pig, Dicky,” said Evangeline presently.
-“But if you knew how deadly it is being with someone
-who doesn’t understand the way women look
-at things——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t talk about women as if they were all
-alike,” said Teresa impatiently. “It is as bad as
-Mrs. Carpenter. She is always saying, ‘we women
-are so something or other,’ and Mother says,
-‘but then, don’t you think women are so something
-else.’ But they both give you an idea of
-somebody very noble and forlorn in the position of
-Daniel in the den of lions. I am sure that there
-are certain qualities in people, courage and truthfulness
-and meanness and greed and all the rest,
-and everybody has some of them in different
-mixtures; it doesn’t make any difference whether
-they are male or female or rich or poor. It is so
-silly trying to label people into classes and species
-according to their incomes or their sex. Nationality
-divides them up a little, I admit, but otherwise you
-are just asking for trouble by presupposing any vice
-or virtues.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, then, men should stop presupposing that
-women have no brains and no morals,” said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t believe that any woman with either has
-ever bothered what was presupposed about her, or
-had any difficulty in convincing anyone to whom
-it mattered,” Teresa replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But that is nonsense, Dicky. You know it
-was only when women had to be employed in the
-war that they had a chance to show what they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>could do. Look at women doctors before they
-began to run their own hospitals.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, that is exactly what I have been trying to
-explain. It all came of that abominable system of
-classifying. Women were this and women were that,
-and it was very largely their own fault. Which sex
-was it that used to say, ‘My dear, that is unladylike.
-Don’t imitate that nasty bold girl who handles mice
-as if she were a navvy’? Now they are allowed to
-be competent or incompetent, as nature made them,
-and you are doing your best to rebuild the whole
-obstacle by saying, ‘All women are not what you
-think them. They are all something else. They
-have all got lovely, pure, high-browed minds and
-all men have horrid brutish ones.’ You are only
-changing a guerilla war into a series of pitched
-battles. I detest Mrs. Vachell. She looks like a
-martyr, and she is only a hunger striker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean she is a rebel with no sense of adventure.
-She will plot against any sort of power that galls
-her personally, and I don’t think she uses fair
-means; there’s no gallantry about her. It is all
-spitting and kicking and causing harmless people
-inconvenience.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think you are most unfair,” said Evangeline
-hotly. “She is out against all sorts of tyranny,
-the sort of tyranny that Evan would exercise over
-Ivor if he could; the tyranny of horrid vulgar
-people who never do a stroke of work and have no
-brains and simply live on enormous incomes, while
-women are sweated and slave-driven or forced on
-to the street. It has nothing to do with her
-personally; Mr. Vachell is the least interfering
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>man in the world, and they are not particularly
-hard up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Whom does she think she is going to do good to
-by making you fed up with Evan?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She doesn’t; but she has made me see why it
-is that he doesn’t understand children and why I
-have to stand up to him if I want to save Ivor.
-And you know, Dicky, it is such a joke, because Evan
-thinks her perfect and is always holding her up as a
-model of dignity and common sense. That is why
-I want Mrs. Trotter to come. It does make me
-so irritated to see him stalking along thinking Mrs.
-Vachell is listening with the deepest interest to
-what he says, and all the time she is boiling like a
-volcano, and when she looks quietest I know she is
-quite white hot with contempt for something he
-has said.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then she is an abominable hypocrite,” said
-Teresa indignantly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” her sister answered rather sadly,
-“and if I tell Evan the least little bit of truth about
-her he flies at me and won’t listen; just thunders
-me down, and yet I am really fond of him. But she
-hates him, and the only way she can get in the
-truths she wants to say is to keep so quiet that he
-doesn’t understand, and then little by little she
-undermines his ideas. It is quite wonderful to
-watch.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Mrs. Trotter came she surpassed even
-Evangeline’s expectations. It may be necessary
-to recall to the reader’s mind that on the occasion
-when Evan had burst out at Cyril’s dinner-table
-on the subject of women throwing dirt at each other
-the exciting cause of his anger had been Mrs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>Trotter’s sarcasm on the wife of the Staff Captain,
-who wanted to “get into the University set,” and
-was alleged to have incensed her husband by too
-frequent references to Mr. Vachell’s brain power.
-Mrs. Trotter was devoted with real sisterly affection
-to the Staff Captain, who was an honest blue-eyed
-Briton, and she therefore harboured secret dislike,
-both of the University set and of Evan with his
-misplaced belief in Mrs. Vachell. The Hattons
-could not do other than ask her to dinner on the
-evening when she arrived at her lodgings, alone
-with the child and its nurse, as Captain Trotter
-was yachting with a friend. Evangeline had
-mischievously urged the Vachells to come in after
-the meal as they often did. When they arrived
-Evan was in one of his most taciturn moods, having
-been worried by his wife’s daring laughter over some
-misdemeanour of Ivor’s. She was comparing notes
-with Mrs. Trotter, whose young daughter treated
-her parents with fearless impertinence, the common
-result of insensitiveness in favourable surroundings.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The little scamp!” Mrs. Trotter exclaimed.
-“He and Maisie will be great pals I expect. She
-doesn’t care a rap for anybody. Her father can’t
-say boo to a goose when she is knocking round. I
-tell him he had better give it up and save
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evan glanced at Mrs. Vachell and saw her raise
-her eyebrows slightly. It soothed him to be assured
-that she shared his disgust and he sat down by her.
-“I am very sorry,” he said in a low voice. “We
-ought to have warned you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, please,” she answered. “It is very
-interesting; and I am sure Evangeline enjoys it.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>And it is something you have got to learn some time.
-You may have daughters of your own in days to
-come, and then you will know how to save yourself
-needless worry by giving in at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, it is appalling, isn’t it?” he agreed,
-supposing her to be commenting on Mrs. Trotter’s
-remark. “But perhaps it is good in some ways to
-let the thing go on as grossly and blatantly as
-possible. It will achieve its own destruction all the
-quicker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“A revulsion is bound to come, and it will be all
-the stronger when women see what a monstrous
-race they have raised. They have rebelled against
-chastisement with whips and their children will
-chastise them with scorpions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They will, indeed,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I am
-glad I have no children, though the want of them
-put out the sun for me so far as marriage is concerned.
-But it is not a world to have children in
-just now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you had brought them up to be like yourself
-they would have helped to keep the balance,” said
-Evan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you shall send your daughters to me to
-bring up,” she said, turning her small sphinx face
-directly to him. “Evangeline will be engrossed
-in her boys. She thinks women of no importance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is not that,” said Evan, “but she thinks
-nothing of importance except liveliness and getting
-the pleasure out of everything that happens, and
-throwing away the rest. As soon as anything has
-to be bought at the price of discomfort it is worthless
-to her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>“Do you think so?” said she, raising her eyebrows
-again. “Is your beautiful Ivor worth so
-little to her? You surprise me. I thought she
-was devoted to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So she is, but she won’t give herself the
-momentary pain of correcting him. It is the most
-fatal cowardice. I don’t know what to do to avert
-the end that I foresee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You must have been a great deal with children,”
-she remarked, while she looked at him with
-grave inquiry. “Did you always care for them,
-or is it just that you understand them so
-well?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Every man knows the kind of way a boy ought
-to be brought up,” he replied innocently.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And a woman, of course, understands a girl
-better?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I suppose so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is so much simpler that they should start on
-wholly different lines from the beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I suppose they do naturally. I know
-that my sisters never had the least idea what I was
-driving at. They were always giggling among
-themselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And your mother?” asked Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My mother was a wonderful woman,” Evan
-replied. His tone made it clear that discussion was
-barricaded along that road.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t want to persuade you to discuss her,
-but please answer one question truthfully. Suppose
-you had done something that you knew she would
-dislike, not because it was wrong in itself, but
-because she had no experience of a wish to do it
-herself; let us take for an instance that delightful
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>story I heard about your taking a German’s watch
-to pieces and what you did with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who told you that story?” he asked,
-frowning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Staff Captain’s wife told my husband. It
-amused him and it amused her, because she has had
-parents who educated her between them; they
-didn’t believe in female sheep and male goats.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I find all that sort of telling of stories very
-offensive,” said Evan. “But if they choose to
-hear it it is nothing to me. There is no harm
-in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But your mother would have held a different
-opinion if she had known?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why are you asking these questions, Mrs.
-Vachell?” She saw disappointment in his face,
-and knew she must pick her way delicately.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because you were good enough to give me some
-of your confidence in a difficulty and I was trying
-to make you understand what I think is a point of
-great importance to you and Evangeline and Ivor.
-What I say is that you were not perfectly brought
-up as you think, because you grew up with the
-idea that what was all right for you as a man would
-offend your mother as a woman, even to hear about.
-That means that all through your life you could
-only enjoy her society within limits, and you were
-either obliged to worry out every difficulty alone
-in your head, or else to chance it among outsiders
-who had not a quarter of the interest in you that
-she had. You must have felt very lonely, or you
-wouldn’t have shown me so much confidence as you
-have. Have you ever tried Evangeline as a confidante?
-She has not been brought up with many
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>prejudices—not enough you think. And one thing
-more. Don’t you think that Ivor is better off than
-you were at his age? I am sure he is less harassed
-with problems and he will have a better brain than
-his father, because it won’t have been prematurely
-worn out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is no use telling me he won’t go to bits if
-he has no principles to fall back on,” said Evan
-doggedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But what about Evangeline’s principles?”
-Mrs. Vachell persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She has none. That is the whole point. It is
-where we started from——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You two are carrying on a very long flirtation,”
-interrupted Mrs. Trotter from the other side of the
-room. “Can’t we hear what it is all about? I
-heard something about principles just now. Do you
-believe in principles, Captain Hatton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Evan. “I hope you are pleased
-with the lodgings my wife found for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, thank you, they are delightful. But
-talking of principles, do you know, Mrs. Vachell,
-that your friend Fisk has been making the most
-dreadful havoc with his principles? You see we
-never get rid of these students like the ordinary
-undergraduates are disposed of, because they don’t
-go down for the vacs. They are at home all the
-time. And he has been spending his spare time
-in stirring up the Welsh and the Irish and every
-sort of rabble in the place, and holding meetings and
-passing resolutions. He gets hold of the wives
-and tells them they ought to be dressed in velvet
-and silk, and have time to read and play the piano.
-But Mrs. Price says all that is quite inconsistent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>with Communism. The real Communists want
-everyone to live as simply as possible and earn a
-small amount each day and then improve their
-minds. But since Mr. Fisk spent those few days
-with the Prices he has lost all his noble ideas about
-garden cities and honest toil and sandals or whatever
-he believed in, and in place of the blood that
-was to be spilled in the cause of education and
-leisure and concerts and so on he now wants rapine,
-and oh! the most frightful outrages! so that
-everyone may change places. He and his friends
-are to have education and champagne and talk
-big, while their female relations play the gramophone
-and order Mrs. Price about. It is all screamingly
-funny. Dear me, Captain Hatton, pray don’t
-look at me like that. Do you think one ought not
-to laugh at poor silly creatures? I do find human
-nature so very amusing sometimes. What do you
-think, Professor Vachell? Do you think the
-universities are doing good or harm?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They have hardly reached an age of full-grown
-responsibility yet,” he replied. “When ladies
-and Labour have joined our deliberations for a few
-years we shall be able to give a better opinion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now, don’t be sarcastic,” Mrs. Trotter warned
-him with a finger. “That is very naughty of you.
-I hope it will be a long time before your beautiful
-cloistered calm is invaded in any such way. I can’t
-imagine women and tradesmen holding forth in
-Oxford, can you, Mrs. Vachell?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“So long as the present generation of poor weak
-fools, who will risk nothing, survive it is rather
-difficult,” she answered quietly. Evan started
-slightly as she spoke. “But even though every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>year the percentage is less of boys who are brought
-up to be bullies and of girls whose intelligence
-is crushed, it will take a long time to destroy the
-tradition. Don’t worry, Mrs. Trotter. Your system
-will probably last your time, and if your little
-girl does scandalise you by learning some other
-trade than husband hunting, she may make up by
-marrying a tradesman Prime Minister.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think that is at all likely,” Teresa
-broke in. “The tradesman Prime Minister would
-want a perfect lady for his wife; they always do.
-They boast of the work that their women do when
-they want to compare them with what they call
-the idle rich; but the very first thing they want
-to buy for their wives and daughters is exemption
-from any kind of work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Nonsense, my dear Teresa,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“They are the keenest of all that their daughters
-should have ‘the schooling.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but that is only so that they may not
-have to do housework or be ordered about in shops.
-They think that education for a girl means her
-marrying into another class and keeping a servant.
-They are just like us. They hate squalor and want
-to live like we do. They don’t care for learning in
-itself any more than we do——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg your pardon, Miss Fulton,” Mr. Vachell
-interrupted. “Do I understand that you put
-down my laborious work of research to a sordid
-hope of fitting myself to dine at Buckingham
-Palace, or even living there some day? You are
-wounding me very much.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, of course not,” said Teresa. “You are
-quite different; you are a man. I am sure lots of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>men wanted to learn because they are interested.
-I was thinking of what they wanted for their
-daughters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, what do you think the Principal wants
-for our excellent Emma?” he went on. “That
-she should marry the Prince of Wales? I don’t
-believe she has got the ghost of a chance, so you had
-better stop her while you can.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t muddle up what I say like that,” said
-Teresa. “Emma only wants to stop mothers
-giving their babies rhubarb pie, and to persuade
-fathers to buy bread instead of beer; and she
-wants them to be clean and have time and money
-enough to find out what they can do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But where does Maisie Trotter’s husband come
-in?” asked Evan, who was also grateful for the
-diversion that Teresa had made.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I haven’t the least idea. I have lost sight of
-him. Oh, no, I remember; he was to be Prime
-Minister. It will be no good for Maisie to live up
-to him in the way of education, because his sisters
-will do that. He will want a pink and white princess
-who can detect a crumpled rose leaf under the
-mattress. I assure you that is what working people
-ask for. It is the really valuable thing that they
-have lost, and they are often so silly, poor darlings,
-and think it comes with money. You know how
-fussy people like the Prices are about breeding,
-and they spend and spend, trying to buy it somehow
-and knowing that they fail. It is so sad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, everything is sad if you notice it,” said
-Mrs. Trotter impatiently. “I don’t believe in
-pitying people for not being different from what
-they are. I once met a woman who said she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>disliked travelling in public conveyances because
-women’s hats were pathetic; something about the
-trimming; if you ever heard such nonsense!
-Now I’m off and thank you all very much for a
-pleasant evening. Anyone coming my way?”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Well, I am sure, Roderick,” said Mrs. Carpenter
-as she turned the last page of a letter she was
-reading, “Evangeline Hatton seems to be laying
-up a nice future for herself. Emmie Trotter is
-staying down there with Maisie and she says that
-Mrs. Vachell is in and out of the Hattons’ house
-the whole time, influencing Evangeline to run
-down her husband. And that poor Evan Hatton
-is as blind as a bat and running after Mrs. Vachell
-all the time. Of course, Amy Vachell is one of
-those hard women who never see when men are
-attracted by them. All she thinks of is her social
-work and I have often told her it is dangerous and
-that in her anxiety to put women on a higher footing
-she forgets that men persist in remaining on the
-lower one and they misunderstand her motives.
-I knew she would get into trouble some day.”
-There was a note of triumph in her voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yers,” her husband answered deprecatingly
-over the top of his pince-nez. “Yers—yers—very
-foolish of her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They will come to grief in the end, you will
-see,” said Mrs. Carpenter, as one who observes the
-first swallow of the season.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She met Mrs. Eric Manley that afternoon at a
-sale of work on behalf of an inebriates’ home in
-Mrs. Abel’s parish. They wandered together from
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>stall to stall, inspecting photograph frames ornamented
-with landscapes in poker work, table centres
-and tea-cosies of hand-painted satin, pinafores
-edged with cheap lace, preposterous woollen garments
-for all ages, dreary confections in flannelette
-that would make a Hottentot pessimistic, dusters,
-packets of Lux and grate polish; everything that
-could most vividly recall the horrors of the Will to
-Live and the Desire to Decorate at Random. The
-two friends sat down presently to tea in a small
-room festooned with coloured muslin, served by
-ladies who were beginning to feel the running about
-rather a strain though great fun.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, my dear, how is it that you are still
-here?” asked Mrs. Carpenter. “I told Mrs. Abel
-that it was a bad time to have the sale as everybody
-would be away, but she said that some of the best
-helpers would have more time now. Of course,
-we shall get off to Scotland later. I heard to-day
-that Evangeline Hatton and her husband are not
-enjoying their holiday very much, poor things.
-They are at Roscombe with the boy and Teresa
-Fulton, and the Vachells are there too. I am
-afraid Amy Vachell is stirring up mischief. It is
-a great pity for such young married things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, who told you?” asked Mrs. Manley.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Emmie Trotter for one. She is quite worried
-about it. Captain Hatton is so dogged, you know,
-with that kind of foolish religious fervour. It
-does blind people so when it takes hold of them;
-they don’t seem to see anything else. Of course
-he is a splendid man; so upright and devoted to
-her. But I do think it is a great mistake to get
-carried away by that kind of thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>“And what is Mrs. Vachell after, do you suppose?”
-inquired her friend.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, dear Amy! I am sure I don’t know. Of
-course one knows that she is absolutely straight;
-no one could doubt that. But it is a pity, I think,
-the things she does sometimes—with that far-away
-look of hers, don’t you know? She may have
-encouraged Evangeline without meaning anything,
-and made her rebel against his very dogmatic
-manner. And the Professor is so silly; he really
-is. All that about Mrs. Harting was so absurd.
-She is a very intellectual woman; I get on with her
-splendidly, we have so much in common; and she
-threw herself into all his excavations and so on,
-and of course dear Amy was just a little—well,
-she didn’t like it; naturally she wouldn’t; but
-there was absolutely no more in it than that.
-However, it may have made Amy bitter and perhaps
-she has lashed out against men and put Evangeline
-up to some nonsense. I wonder if I could do any
-good by having a chat with her mother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should leave it alone, I think,” Mrs. Manley
-advised. “You won’t get anything out of Mrs.
-Fulton. She is so extraordinarily broad-minded
-and indulgent and thinks everybody means well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you think so?” said Mrs. Carpenter, with
-her head on one side. “I don’t know altogether
-that I should have said that. Dear Susie Fulton
-is very shrewd and likes to keep the peace in the
-family, but she would very much dislike the General
-getting to hear anything from outside sources, and
-it might be best to warn her privately. What do
-you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you might drop in,” said Mrs. Manley.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>“I could drive you round there if you have bought
-all you want now. Perhaps I had better not come
-in. You would prefer to talk about it alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps that would be wise,” Mrs. Carpenter
-agreed. “I really think it is the kind thing to
-do. It would be such a pity if anything got round.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She found Susie at home and tea being cleared
-away. “I have had some, my dear, thank you,”
-said Mrs. Carpenter. “Quite an excellent tea at
-dear Jenny Abel’s little sale, where I was buying
-for all I was worth. Such a poor lot of things. I
-am afraid they won’t have done very well; but
-then they don’t manage that place at all as it should
-be done. They ought to call a meeting and have
-the whole thing laid out and make a proper appeal.
-It is no good patching up with little affairs like that.
-No one wants to buy at all nowadays; we are all
-overdone with sales of work. Still, the things
-won’t be wasted. I just pass them on to the next.
-Your little Teresa is not back again with you yet,
-I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, she is still with Evangeline,” said Susie.
-“They are staying on as long as the weather lasts.
-The Vachells and the Trotters are there, too, so
-they are quite a pleasant little party.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They talked nicely in this way for some time
-and then Mrs. Carpenter said, lowering her voice
-mysteriously, “You didn’t gather, did you, that
-there was any little difficulty with Evangeline
-seeing so much of dear Amy Vachell? I am not
-quite sure that she is just the person whom I should
-choose to be very much with a young mother,
-who, of course, wants to see everything <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">couleur de
-rose</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>“Dear me, no,” Susie replied in gentle astonishment.
-“Is there any difficulty about anything?
-I didn’t know. What makes you think
-so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear, it was just an impression that was
-whispered to me by a little bird who knows them
-very well. I won’t tell you whom because it
-wouldn’t be fair, and of course there was nothing
-wrong anywhere, but just the idea that Evangeline
-and her hubby were inclined to drift a little in
-opposite directions and that Amy Vachell—who is
-so open-hearted and sincere and has such a high
-opinion of women and the place they should take
-in the home—may perhaps have unconsciously
-made a little mischief. Captain Hatton believes so
-very strongly in the dogmatic side of religion,
-doesn’t he? and he may suppose that Amy goes
-further with him in her opinions than she does.
-But that is all; just to put you on your guard.
-It was the merest trifle that I heard, but it would
-be such a pity if it went any further when you as
-a mother could put it all right, probably, in a
-moment with just a word.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I am sure there is nothing in it,” said
-Susie contentedly. “People make too much of
-Evan’s manner, and he means nothing; it is all
-on the surface. He is a most delightful fellow and
-Evangeline is wrapped up in him. But it was so
-kind of you to come and tell me. I often think
-people are not outspoken enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She said nothing about Mrs. Carpenter’s visit
-until Teresa came home, and then she chose the
-next evening when Cyril was peacefully reading
-in an armchair. Teresa had put away a bundle of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>papers from Emma’s office, over which she had been
-toiling with evident fatigue and depression.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hope dear little Ivor is not vexing his father
-as much as he did while he was a baby,” Susie began
-quietly over her knitting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He doesn’t get into many rows,” said Teresa.
-“It would be almost better if he did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do you mean, dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean that Evan says so little, it is rather
-frightening sometimes. He just looks and you
-don’t know what he is thinking.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evangeline doesn’t worry, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I think she does. She is much thinner
-than she used to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I daresay that is the damp of Drage,” Susie
-remarked. “It is a very relaxing place, I have
-heard.” Teresa laughed, not very merrily.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mother, darling,” she asked, looking at Susie
-with kindly curiosity, “if Father bit you do you
-think you would say it was owing to the frost? I
-believe you would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What an absurd thing to say, dear. I don’t
-talk so much about the weather, do I? It is a
-subject I have always detested; it is so commonplace.
-But if you are laughing because I said that
-Drage is damp that is ridiculous. Everyone knows
-it is and there is nothing so depressing as a place
-that is all on clay.” She left the room presently
-and Cyril put down his book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How old are you, Dicky?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Twenty-five next month. Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You seem to have grown a little and I couldn’t
-remember how long we had been here. It is a
-devil of a long time. Sit down there for a minute
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>and tell me something I want to know. Aren’t
-you wasting your time a bit, young woman?
-frousting down there with Emma Gainsborough.
-Or is it what you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am rather in a fog,” said Teresa. He said
-nothing and she went on, “I used to look at people
-paddling along in the mud, streaming past all the
-time; you remember the first time we went down
-to the docks together and came back on a tram?
-It fascinated me. I had always felt that there was
-something that my mind was chasing after, as if
-I were half asleep and shouldn’t wake up until I
-had found out what I wanted to know. Have you
-ever felt like that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I am not much troubled with what is called
-the Higher Mind,” said Cyril. “But I don’t disbelieve
-in it on that account. In fact I think it is
-a good thing if properly used. But go on. How
-does it work out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, they all look so angry and miserable
-and discontented,” she explained. “There was
-some mystery or other that cut me off from them
-like a misunderstanding; some enormous grievance
-or injustice that divided us and our lot from them
-and their lot, and I felt as if I wanted to break
-through it somehow—anyhow—and say, ‘Here!
-Let me in! I won’t be left outside. Tell me what
-you want and I will get it for you somehow.’ I
-wanted to give them everything I had; not only
-money, but the kind of pleasure that makes it of no
-importance whether one has money or not. And
-then they let me in. Strickland let me in first. She
-told me such a lot when she found that I wasn’t
-inquisitive or preaching. She explains things so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>clearly and I began to see what the grievance is
-and then it got more hopeless than ever, because
-I saw that before you can get into the frame of
-mind that is independent of poverty you must be
-decently fed and warm or else you can’t think at
-all for sheer animal discomfort. I suppose mystics
-come back down the same road by smashing the
-body after they have used it to get a mind with.
-They couldn’t begin as slum babies and say, ‘I
-must fast and subdue the flesh.’ You see, if you
-start hungry, unless you have a perfectly sweet
-nature you probably think of nothing but clawing
-for food and knocking down someone else who has
-got some. Then you find people down there with
-all sorts of wonderful qualities so strong that they
-manage to keep their end of the stick up in spite
-of everything. So that topples down all your hopes
-when you see that all the virtues that you were
-going to bring in by making more comfortable
-surroundings are there already in the most wonderful
-perfection. It just thickens the mystery and
-makes the barrier and the fog more unaccountable
-than it was from outside. If you could see the
-horrors that some people contend against and still
-remain as good as gold and gay as larks, I think
-you would stop being so perfectly disgusting as
-you are sometimes about my Potters and people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I shouldn’t, my dear,” he said, “but not
-because I don’t believe you. But why should I
-make myself sick with smells that I can’t prevent?
-I should be of no earthly use sitting by the bedside
-of an aged fish-wife with my nose in my handkerchief,
-and I don’t understand accounts or babies.
-I am much more use at my own job, which neither
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>Emma nor your friend Jason nor even the lion-hearted
-Fisk could do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, you are much better where you are,”
-she agreed. “And now you see I have got beyond
-the first fog into a worse one. I feel cut off from
-the side I left and I can do nothing for the others
-because they have got all the means of happiness
-that I wanted to give them. You see, if anything
-good survives there it gets awfully good because
-it takes so much exercise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes?” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know how much you were ever in love
-with anyone, but you wouldn’t, would you, have
-married Mother if she had not been rather extra
-pretty and very, very well washed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, Dicky, you are not going to win on that.
-I should never have got within speaking distance
-of her, so the Higher Mind would not have contended
-with the lower. No war, no victory. You
-see, your Misters and Misseses of the unwashed
-brigade start on an equal footing. Mr. Potter has
-nothing to forgive before he inquires into the
-perfections of Mrs. Potter’s character.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well, we’ll try again,” she said patiently.
-“I must make you understand somehow. We’ll
-take Mother. She was devoted to us and she
-loves babies as she only sees clean ones. Suppose
-she lived in a slum and had half-a-dozen of them
-squalling and screaming and covered with every
-sort of hideous filth and was kept awake all night
-and saw them being hungry and ill and cold. Just
-think what a tremendous sort of love she would
-need to have to make her go on with it; and how
-honest she would have to be not to steal for them;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>and how unselfish to go hungry so that they might
-have what food there was, and how patient not
-to grumble and scold. You need a super quality
-of every good point in a character in order to
-keep up at all. You can’t say that being used
-to horrors takes away all the merit of enduring
-them with real style like you see sometimes down
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not all,” said Cyril, “but then, Dicky, you
-must be fair. Lots of things that I find very hard
-to bear, such as—no, I won’t go into them; you
-are too tender-hearted and I don’t want to add to
-your worries. But I assure you I am a very noble
-fellow in my way though nothing I have to put up
-with would rouse any sympathy in your fog-bound
-heroes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa looked at him anxiously, critical and
-questioning.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am only trying to cheer you up, dear,” he
-assured her. “I have a very tidy mind—untidiness
-at the office is one of the things that I was
-going to mention just now—and I dislike arguing in
-a circle. That is where Emma is more suited to
-her job than you are. She never stands about and
-says, ‘Yes, but on the other hand——’ or, ‘what
-can we do, because every way you look at it it
-doesn’t make sense?’ She plugs along as busy as
-a bee, fitting splints on to one and a flannel petticoat
-and a book of poetry on to another and doesn’t
-wear herself out in guessing whether the creatures
-are angels or devils. Dicky, my dear, you are
-twenty-five and you are missing everything that
-you have been looking for and that you haven’t
-found. You have said that you only got past one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>fog into another and that you want to give what
-you have to starving people who need it. What
-about David?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do want so dreadfully to marry him,” said
-Teresa after some hesitation. “But I am sure it
-is selfish. He won’t do what I want and what
-would make it all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What won’t he do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Sell the place and give the money to the work
-Emma is doing. It wouldn’t make much difference,
-I know, but it would take a few hundred
-children out of the mud and I should feel I had done
-my best.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You would do much more good by keeping
-those damned Prices out of Aldwych. You never
-saw such a mess as they are making of it. It is
-perfectly beastly. Enough to make the old man
-turn in his grave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But it is the wrong way to live,” she persisted.
-“I have no right to glide into beautiful things
-and comfort that I haven’t earned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, look here. You’re pretty comfortable
-to start with, aren’t you? Your mother and I
-saw to that. She especially. She married me
-because she wanted a child and like a good careful
-bird she chose the downiest nesting-place she could
-find for the benefit of her young.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Father,” said Teresa, awestruck. “Wasn’t
-she in love with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not a bit of it,” he replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wish she had married a poor man, then,”
-said the girl. “It would have saved me a lot of
-trouble. But to go back to what you said. I
-couldn’t help being born where I am, but I can give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>back everything I have got. It makes it worse to
-marry into a lot more luxury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How much do you think your friends in the fog
-would give back to you if they dropped into a
-soft job?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That has nothing to do with it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, it has. It means that they go with the
-stream and don’t drown themselves trying to dam
-it up with a bunch of flowers. Keep those damned
-hucksters out of Aldwych and keep it the decent
-civilised place it was; and breed young Davids
-to counteract the pernicious spawning of Millport.
-You’ll be far better employed. You can invite
-all the young Potters to tea and show them what
-they may attain by thrift instead of greed. They’ll
-only think you a damned fool and not listen to a
-word of good advice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa was silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They would take the place off you to-morrow
-if they could and say you weren’t fit to appreciate
-it. And they would undo the work of centuries
-that have been spent on it and turn it into a hell
-of their own.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They wouldn’t. They would want to become
-gentle people and build it up again in their own way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Rot,” said Cyril. “Much better keep it as a
-model instead of wasting it all first. You must
-keep something in the show room. It is no good
-for everybody who wants an airship to destroy all
-there are and begin again by himself with a glider.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why are you two silly things sitting together
-in the dark?” said Susie’s voice at the door.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“There is a good deal to be said for subscription
-lists all the same,” said Mr. Manley. “How could
-you have the hospitals and other places kept
-going?” Teresa often went to the old man for
-help in her schemes, as he had invited her to do
-on their first acquaintance. They were good friends,
-though his tolerance of institutions, governors,
-spiritual pastors and masters puzzled her when she
-tried to piece it together with the other side of his
-character; the side which made him impatient
-with all sorts of pomposity and humbug. He delighted
-in the removal of lifeless traditions and he
-welcomed to his house the whole of the small army
-of people who fought for the life of the city against
-vanity, self-interest and stupidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But the way people go home to a fat dinner,
-with servants running round the table with more
-dishes, after they have sat listening to speeches
-about all sorts of deadly necessities makes me
-sick,” she said. “They sign a cheque for a sum
-that is just large enough to look impressive on a
-list, but that won’t make the least difference to the
-way they live; and then they think they have done
-everything that can possibly be required of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If would be a dull world if there were no kindness,
-only obligation and compulsion,” he remarked.
-“I like people who are charitable to the poverty of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>my intelligence, so why not to the poverty of my
-comforts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if some starving genius were to head a
-list of people who were kind to Mr. Price’s intelligence
-he wouldn’t be grateful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, if we are going to pounce upon ingratitude
-and snobbery in one place let us be down on it all
-round,” he said. “I tell you that kindness is a
-good thing anywhere, and though giving and taking
-is always a ticklish business because people think
-too much of themselves, that doesn’t make it any
-less good. By the way, did you know that Fisk
-has got himself locked up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am delighted to hear it,” said Teresa, “but
-what for especially?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Inciting to breach of the peace. Of course
-that has finished him so far as his career goes. He
-never got his degree and now he is too old and too
-mad. He was quite a decent boy. I used to employ
-his father and knew him quite well. He was as
-keen as possible on educating the lad. Cranston
-has a great deal to answer for, wasting these boys’
-time so that they don’t work at anything. Fisk
-will have to be a paid agitator when he comes out
-in order to make a living. He’ll never go back
-to learn a trade now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do you manage to stand the Prices?”
-Teresa resumed presently, going back to her train
-of thought. “I have often wondered. And Mrs.
-Carpenter—— Oh, dear me, I have got to hate
-rich people since we came here. At first I was
-worried about the poor. I wanted money not to
-matter either way, so that one could make friends
-anywhere and there shouldn’t be a barrier of habits
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span>and manners that some of them were born into
-and that cut them off from their natural friends
-in other classes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But that is nothing new,” he said, “I saw when
-I first met you that that was what you were after
-and you thought none of us here had ever had the
-same idea at all except good old Emma. That is
-why I wanted to make friends with you. I didn’t
-want the barrier of a rich dinner table to separate
-you from your natural friend here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa laughed. “Well, it didn’t, you see. But
-still, I don’t seem able to leap across the pineapples
-to Mr. and Mrs. Price. What does she mean
-by saying that her people are communists? It
-does seem the silliest rot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They are intellectual socialists. People who
-see that the world is untidy, which it certainly is,
-but they haven’t the taste for the characters that
-can only come out of an untidy world. I am a bit
-of a reader of the classics, as I haven’t a wife to
-talk to, and I can’t see any of the people I love best
-in books coming out of a world where everything
-is as neat as a bedded-out garden. I have a great
-dislike of culture, as it is called. Education is one
-thing and so is enterprise, and Price is enterprising;
-but I must say I don’t like Botticelli pictures and
-cocoa in a public-house, and that is what Mrs. Price
-means by saying her people are communists. They
-are wealthy themselves with all sorts of art tastes
-and live comfortably, and they like to preach.
-They don’t understand commerce and are ashamed
-of having any connection with it. You may always
-suspect a man who is prepared to run a business he
-hasn’t served in. I’ve the same suspicion of parsons.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>They see so many notices up everywhere,
-‘Beware of the Devil!’ that they get tripping
-about here, there and everywhere in such a state of
-nerves that they forget they are not there to run
-God’s business, but to find out what He wants done.
-It is all this assuming of moral responsibility
-instead of working that I think is the mistake. Now
-you see what I meant when you were running down
-charitable institutions. You do your bit, my
-dear, and help to keep the machinery going. You
-can’t run it alone and improvements are being made
-all the time.” Teresa got up to go.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you know Mother is making a speech to-day?”
-she said doubtfully. “The first she has
-ever made outside a drawing-room, and I have to
-go—shall you be there? It is in the small room at
-the Town Hall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What is the meeting for?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The Mary Popley Home for women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” he said, “I have given a subscription, but
-I am not coming to-day. I am sure she will do it
-well; she is so gentle and tactful. We want more
-women like that on our committees. Some of them
-are so very fierce. That is why I like Mrs. Vachell,
-though I am never sure what she has got up her
-sleeve; she’s rather an enigma.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She hates men, that is all I know,” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does she really? How very remarkable. I
-never knew that. And living among such excellent
-men and great scholars as she does! Good-bye,
-my dear, good-bye.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose you are not coming, Cyril?” said
-Susie, later, putting on her gloves. “We are dining
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>with the Gainsboroughs after the meeting; without
-dressing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, your subjects are too deep for me, Sue,” he
-replied. “I’ll have something ready to wet your
-whistle when you come back, and keep up the fire
-and let the cat out and that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Strickland will see to all that, dear,” she said.
-“I think you had better go to bed if you feel tired.
-I expect one of the maids will be up to make tea
-if we want it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When they arrived at the Town Hall they were
-shown into a small room where the general committees
-of charitable institutions were often held.
-Reports were read, giving an outline of the year’s
-work and a statement of the financial position and
-requirements; an attempt was made to rouse public
-interest, accounts were then passed and votes of
-thanks to the principal helpers and the chairman
-were proposed, seconded and carried. Susie had
-been asked to second the vote of thanks to the
-committee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The audience consisted of a large number of her
-personal friends, a few dowdily dressed women with
-serious, lined faces, whom she knew by sight, and
-dreaded a little for their habit of turning up at tea-parties
-and saying tactless things about the behaviour
-of young girls in the Park after sunset, the
-cruelty of parents and the tendency of wives to
-drink to excess, in spite of industrious husbands.
-Very often they introduced these subjects just when
-she herself had been expounding the perfection of
-the mother instinct or the disastrous result of
-confidence in a young and innocent mind. They
-had a way of referring to crime as if it were a flaw
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>in a work of art, rather than a snare set by wicked
-poachers for the Almighty’s pet rabbits. A few
-of the outside public were also present, with the
-usual vacant faces, perfunctory clothes, thin hair,
-and those curious eyes of the English stranger,
-which, if they are indeed windows of the soul,
-certainly do not belong to a country where romances
-are carried on at the lattice. Those eyes suggest
-Nottingham lace curtains and an aspidistra behind
-the dim panes which the owner never approaches,
-unless there is a street accident or a ring at the bell.
-They enclose many human preoccupations, but
-nothing that is likely to be shared with the passersby.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie faced the eyes, the friendly eyes, the business-like
-eyes and the aspidistra eyes. The chairman
-had called on her to second the vote of thanks,
-after a short-sighted glance round to make sure she
-was there. Her dimple, the little crease in the satin
-cushion of her cheek, appeared, and she smiled,
-catching the attention of the first few rows.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mr. Chairman, ladies and gentlemen,” she
-began, “I think it extremely kind of you to ask me
-to second this vote of thanks, because you are all
-so busy and I am not used to speaking, nor experienced
-enough in your work to be of very much
-help. But in thanking our splendid committee for
-all they have done, I want to try and tell everybody
-if I can, how deeply I feel that we all ought to do a
-great deal more to help these poor women. Vice
-is so pitifully easy to women in a great city like
-this (murmured approval was heard at the back).
-I am not going to say anything against men. We
-are the wives and mothers and sisters of men, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>the responsibility lies with us (slight signs of cynicism
-from an aspidistra eye in the fifth row). But what
-I say is this. All our influence is necessarily—must
-necessarily be—of no use so long as our girls are
-wilfully misled by the idea that their love and
-innocent confidence will be understood and valued
-at its true worth by the naturally coarser and
-rougher nature. (“How thankful I am father didn’t
-come!” thought Teresa.) Men go into the world
-and become accustomed to hardness and cruelty,
-especially in foreign countries, with which a great
-port like this is constantly in touch. They drink
-and quarrel, and their poor homes have so little
-beauty to encourage them. Is it to be wondered at
-that a young girl who dreams of romance and her
-own little home and the sound of baby feet should
-refuse to believe that these things are of less value
-to the rough sailor or soldier or merchant, drunk
-with wine and full of strong passions that have no
-place in her finer nature? (The chairman, the
-treasurer and a doctor, who happened to be there,
-were gazing meditatively at the electric light
-fixtures, the desk, the floor, anywhere that would
-afford a sufficiently obscure resting-place for any
-involuntary expression of opinion on their faces.
-They felt a friendly approval of Susie as a nice,
-tender-hearted little woman, but all the same they
-hoped she would wind up soon.) What I feel so
-much is this, that although great sympathy and
-great patience with these poor girls must be shown,
-and although they must, of course, be taught to see
-the dreadful evil that they do, yet until wives and
-mothers and sisters impress their men with a better
-understanding of a woman’s feeling about these
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>things, and make them see that the finer and higher
-view is not necessarily foolish and sentimental—that
-they hurt us by coarse jokes and rough actions,
-by mistaking love of motherhood for vulgar flirtation—that
-until they see all this in its true light it
-is useless to expect that trust will not be betrayed
-and happy girls flung back into these Homes, ruined
-and disgraced. Marriage may mean so much to a
-girl. It is surely worth an effort from us, who have
-had our trials and difficulties and misunderstandings,
-to bring home to the boys who are growing up a
-sense of those qualities which they lack by nature.
-I have much pleasure in seconding this vote of
-thanks to our committee.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She sat down amidst whole-hearted applause
-from her friends and several of the aspidistra-eyed.
-The ladies whom she feared gave a few business-like
-taps with one hand upon the other and fidgeted
-impatiently. Everything that interested them in
-the meeting was over and most of them had other
-engagements or voluminous documents at home to
-attend to.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The vote of thanks to the chairman and his reply
-only occupied another ten minutes, and then there
-was tea in the Lady Mayoress’s parlour.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a splendid speech you made,” said Mrs.
-Eric Manley, coming up to Susie. “I don’t know
-that I go quite as far as you do about the innocence
-of girls, but still——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, don’t you?” said Susie. “Of course a
-great many are not innocent, because they have
-been taught so young by seeing all kinds of dreadful
-things. But I think a woman’s natural character
-is much less suspicious than a man’s.” Mrs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>Vachell came up and under the pretext of finding
-a chair drew Susie away from the crowd.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have been waiting to see you,” she said. “I
-have just seen Evangeline off to Drage again and I
-am very much worried about her. Has she written
-to you much about herself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, her letters are generally full of darling Ivor,”
-said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell looked her up and down for an instant
-as if considering whether she could make a cut in
-Susie’s plump little figure without letting out too
-much sawdust and spoiling it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She didn’t tell you that her husband thinks of
-sending Ivor away from her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie’s eyes grew startled, but she said quietly,
-“Don’t you think you have mistaken a joke of his?
-Why should he do such a thing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think he is a little mad,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“The war shook a good many of them. He was
-always very strict with Ivor, wasn’t he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, but then men are so silly about children,”
-said Susie, a little reassured. “They never do
-understand them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You were saying this afternoon that the responsibility
-for making them understand lies with
-women,” said Mrs. Vachell. “If you really believe
-that, it is time for you to help Evangeline. Her
-situation seems to me to be desperate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What did he say he was going to do?” Susie
-asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He told me in confidence that he means to
-send him away quite soon, in a year perhaps—not
-to a boy’s school, of course, but a sort of place kept
-by religious ladies. But Evangeline was not to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>know that. He is afraid she might do something
-violent, come to you and her father or make some
-public scandal. He hates having his affairs discussed
-and preferred to wait until the time comes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Men are really very tiresome and difficult
-sometimes, aren’t they,” said Susie with a sigh.
-“I do wish they would keep to their own affairs.
-Suppose I interfered with my husband’s soldiers
-and you put all Mr. Vachell’s diggings upside down
-on the shelves when he had arranged them. I
-can’t think how they can be so stupid. I am
-dreadfully worried about what you tell me, because,
-of course, it is all nonsense. If dear Evan suffers
-from his head that is no reason why he should
-vent it on a little boy. Perhaps a doctor might
-advise some tonic that would do him good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is no tonic for a bullying disposition,”
-said Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, don’t you think so?” said Susie. “I
-am sure the blood has so much effect on those kind
-of ideas. If people are well, you know, they see
-things quite differently, though, of course, there are
-some things that they will never understand, unless
-they are poets or artists. That makes a great deal
-of difference, I think, being in touch with beautiful
-things. Those religious ideas of his are a great
-mistake, I think; all about Jehovah, and being so
-full of judgment and wrath and so on. It gives
-them quite a wrong idea of the Bible. But I think
-his mother must have been a masculine sort of
-woman from what he says. Quite a little joke
-sometimes upsets him. Teresa and I are going on
-to the Gainsboroughs. Can we drop you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All through the evening Susie was a little preoccupied.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>She was thinking out a plan of campaign
-by which she might save Evangeline from the
-harsh authority of her husband, as she had saved
-her from the prosy ethics of the schoolroom when she
-was a child. But, as in those days so now, she
-had no wish to reveal herself as a fighter. Once
-recognised as a partisan she would lay herself open
-to attack and perhaps be driven from her high
-ground of superiority to earthly passions. She
-represented in her own mind idealism, tender
-remoteness from all ugly thoughts, innocence of
-all desires save love for everybody. Could power
-be more strongly hedged about from attack?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She had a short time alone with Mrs. Gainsborough,
-as the Principal retired to work in his
-study and Emma took Teresa away to her
-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I heard from a sister of mine at Drage to-day,”
-Mrs. Gainsborough began, “that they think they
-will probably be sent to Egypt quite soon. Will
-that affect Captain Hatton or will the special work
-he is doing keep him behind?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know at all,” said Susie. “I hadn’t
-heard there was any idea of their going, but I think
-my husband did say that Evan would probably
-have to move soon in any case. Those special
-jobs they get are only temporary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would Evangeline go with him?” asked Mrs.
-Gainsborough; “would it be all right for Ivor?”
-A possible solution to all difficulties at once presented
-itself to Susie. “I hardly think he could
-afford to take them both,” she said. “Without
-the extra pay he has been getting they will have
-to be very careful for a time, and I hear everything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>in Egypt is an awful price. He may be glad to
-leave Evangeline and the boy with us; I hope so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, poor girl!” exclaimed Mrs. Gainsborough,
-“she wouldn’t like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, of course it would be a dreadful separation,”
-Susie agreed, “but it might be necessary until he
-got something else. He probably would very
-soon. He is so popular with everyone and so high
-principled. Anything to do with engineering delights
-him, and I should think there must be a great
-deal of that sort of thing going on everywhere just
-now. The whole world is making an effort to
-better everybody’s lives—except ours, of course,
-who have to pay for it. But one doesn’t grudge
-that. Personally I don’t mind how simply I live
-so long as I can have the things I want.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am very sorry I couldn’t come and hear you
-speak this afternoon,” said Mrs. Gainsborough.
-“But the fact is, my old cook, Annie, is being
-married and we gave her a little send-off from here.
-She has married such a nice respectable man—a
-widower—a plumber and decorator; we have
-known him for years—a man of the name of Fisk.
-But you know all about young Fisk, the son?
-How stupid of me! A horrid nuisance he is and
-a great worry to his father. He won’t have anything
-to do with poor old Annie. Turns up his
-nose at her altogether.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How horrid of him!” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I believe he thinks we arranged it all as
-a studied insult to him; vulgar little wretch!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You will miss Annie, won’t you?” said Susie.
-“She has been with you such a long time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, she is not exactly leaving us,” said Mrs.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>Gainsborough. “She will still come for the day
-about eleven o’clock to do all the cooking, and she
-will go home in the afternoon to give her husband
-his tea and then come back and dish up the dinner.
-You see, her home is only just round the corner
-and he is out all day so she is glad of the company
-and to earn the extra money. I fancy young Fisk
-takes a good bit of what his father makes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They had hardly finished dinner when the maid
-handed a note to Susie. The girl, she said, was
-waiting for an answer. It was from Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“<span class='sc'>Dear Mrs. Fulton</span>,” it said.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You told me you are dining with the
-Gainsboroughs. I wonder if you would have time
-to come in here for a few minutes on your way
-home. If Teresa is tired she could drop you and
-send the car back? I have heard from Evangeline
-by the last post with some reference to what I
-suggested to you this afternoon. She is sure to
-have written to you at the same time, but I cannot
-answer her letter without consulting you, and as
-you are always so busy it might save time if I can
-catch you between your good deeds.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you ask the girl to tell Mrs. Vachell I
-shall be very glad to come round later,” she said
-to the maid; then she turned with an apology to
-Mrs. Gainsborough. “If one once takes up these
-public things there are so many little details to
-think out. Mrs. Vachell wants to talk over one
-or two points that she suggested this afternoon.
-I will send Teresa home when the car comes in case
-my husband wonders what has become of us, and
-it can come back for me to Mrs. Vachell’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>Mrs. Vachell was alone when Susie was shown
-up. “My husband is out at one of those dreary
-men’s dinners where they play Bridge till all hours,”
-she explained. “I wanted to tell you, though you
-are sure to find a letter from Evangeline when
-you get back, that there seems to be an idea that
-his regiment is going to Egypt and he will probably
-have to go with them. In that case he is sure to
-make it the excuse for the separation I told you of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But surely all such things must be decided
-between themselves,” said Susie. “Evangeline
-and he are sure to talk it over and decide what is
-best to be done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Fulton, have you seen your son-in-law
-lately?” Mrs. Vachell asked, looking at her searchingly.
-“Do you know how strongly he has got
-to feel on this point? I have been down there for
-a month with them and I realised that Evangeline
-has no idea what an obsession it has become with
-him. He seemed to want to pour it out to somebody
-and you know yourself how a man always
-chooses a woman to listen to him because of the
-very qualities he despises in her—shall we call it
-flexibility of judgment? He knows she is not
-likely to say, ‘My dear chap, that’s all rot. Have
-a whiskey and soda?’”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is so true,” said Susie with a sigh. “How
-well I know it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You understand then how I come to know
-more of his intentions than you do. He wouldn’t
-feel that you were an impartial judge and also——”
-her mouth twitched slightly—“I am afraid he
-thinks you a little—frivolous. He mistakes your
-delicacy of thought for want of earnestness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>“Yes, I daresay,” said Susie, slightly stung, “I
-am quite used to being thought absurd just because
-there is so much in spiritual things that one cannot
-explain in black and white. Those very dogmatic
-people always seem to me to miss the whole point
-of everything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, now, the question is this. I know—I
-tell you this in all seriousness—I know what he
-means to do with the child at the last moment,
-and the last moment will come sooner than we
-expected if he is ordered to Egypt. So please do
-dispossess yourself of any fancy ideas of its all
-blowing over or all coming right. What can you
-do? You will probably offer to take Ivor and
-Evangeline too. He will refuse because he thinks
-you are even worse for the boy than she is.” Susie
-betrayed no sign of anger, but her eyes narrowed
-a little and there was no dimple in her cheek as she
-listened attentively. “What will you do then?”
-Mrs. Vachell went on. “There are some terrible
-women he knows of who keep a school away down
-in Cornwall. I don’t mean that they are intentionally
-cruel, but Ivor has your sensitive nature.
-He is a little boy whom you might as well whip
-with a cat-o’-nine-tails as send to women like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Tears sprang to Susie’s eyes and her lips trembled.
-“I will do anything you suggest,” she promised.
-“I don’t care what it is. I think I could almost
-kill him. Thank heaven he trusts you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell laughed. “It is against all my
-principles and theories,” she said, “but they force
-us to do these things. Some day when we are in
-power we can be our true selves and enjoy the
-luxury of the straight path. At present we lie
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>for the children and the women like Evangeline
-who suffer in their foolish reverence for the male.
-I don’t know what you advise, but I don’t see any
-better way out of it than that Evangeline should
-be supposed to be going overland to join him and
-just not turn up. The boy will be left with me
-on the understanding that I take him to Cornwall
-as soon as Evangeline has left or perhaps a month
-or two after.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It doesn’t sound at all the sort of thing Evan
-would do,” said Susie doubtfully. “He is always
-so very downright.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, you are quite right,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“He hasn’t thought of it yet. He has only got
-as far as the old ladies. But I can make him see
-the difficulty of a scene with Evangeline. She is
-very much liked at Drage. Evan’s Colonel and
-his wife are devoted to her. There would be awful
-talk and gossip and indignation if she let herself
-go and got the rest of them down on to it. He is
-secretive and hates outside interference.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But then why not let public opinion have the
-chance to make him give in?” asked Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He wouldn’t do that. He would make some
-plan for a temporary arrangement with me or
-someone else and it is safer that it should be with
-me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But when you have got him off, what next?
-The school will be expecting him, they will be
-furious and write to Evan and he will order you to
-give up Ivor. He may send a solicitor’s letter.
-He may get special leave and come back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That he couldn’t possibly afford,” said Mrs.
-Vachell. “It is a very expensive journey just now.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>And as for the solicitor’s letter—do you know I
-am not at all sure that I shouldn’t leave that to
-your husband. I can’t tell you why, but I think
-he could manage Captain Hatton even now; the
-only thing is that he wouldn’t. You have to get
-things into a mess first before a man like that will
-move. They never will do anything to prevent
-a row if it means making a plan, but they will
-shovel away the mess afterwards quite willingly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think I might sound him,” said Susie reflectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well, but remember if you give him the
-least hint of a plan he will forbid you to do it and
-then it becomes rather a nuisance; it would be
-fifty per cent more complicated. If you do the
-thing first you can pretend to be sorry and say
-how stupid you were not to have thought of the
-consequences. A man will always swallow that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie changed the subject. “And what about
-Evangeline?” she asked. “Shall I write to her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, indeed, you won’t. Don’t write a line
-except the usual grandmotherly stuff. I will ring
-her up and get her to take a day’s shopping in
-London; I am going there next week. Then
-after that I will go on to Drage to see a young
-cousin of mine. Evan will know by that time
-whether he is going or not. If he does I can persuade
-him to lend me Ivor for a month or two or
-even more. Even he understands that he is rather
-a baby to go to strangers alone and he is sorry
-for me for having no children——” She gave a
-little laugh. “You might, perhaps, make it easier
-by saying that you want to have Ivor yourself, but
-that there is difficulty about the nurse. He trusts
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>her, and she doesn’t, in fact, like being with
-you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Doesn’t she?” asked Susie, very much surprised.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not at all. She went so far as to threaten
-to give notice if she stayed with you again. She
-complains that you spoil Ivor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a horrid woman!” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you will probably have to get another in
-the end. But all that will be much simpler when
-we once get him out there. It is difficult for
-anyone to make arrangements with such a long
-post in between.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear me,” Susie said with a sigh, “it is all
-very sad. I think I will go home now. There may
-be a letter from Evangeline and I can see what my
-husband says.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well,” said Cyril when she came back, “Dicky
-says you are a great orator, Sue. Got the nail
-plumb on the head and brought tears to every
-eye. I sent her to bed as she looked tired. Strickland
-said she was going to bring you some tea as
-soon as you came in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Are there any letters for me?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I believe there are. I put them down
-somewhere. Evan has written to me to say that
-the regiment is going to Egypt and he will have to
-go unless he gets anything else.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Is he likely to do that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know. He will have to run his own
-show now. I should think he is most likely to go.”
-Susie found her letters and looked through them.
-There was nothing from Evangeline. “I wonder
-why she writes to Mrs. Vachell and not to me,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>she thought, but she felt no jealousy; nothing
-more than a little surprise, such as she might have
-felt if one of her children had chosen to have tea
-with the housemaid instead of coming down to the
-drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What sort of a country is Egypt for children?”
-she asked presently when Strickland had brought
-the tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve never been there, but I shouldn’t think
-it was very good for them,” said Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wouldn’t it be the best plan for Ivor to stay
-with us and have a governess?” she suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, I suppose that is for Chips to settle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When you talk of her settling do you realise
-that Evan has very odd views about children and
-that he is a little obstinate sometimes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are you getting at, Sue?” he asked.
-“I haven’t studied the insect world enough to be
-always sure what particular idea you are after.
-If you will tell me the shape of twig you want to
-resemble——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I haven’t an idea what you are talking about,
-Cyril, but I was asking for Evangeline’s sake. You
-always seem to understand men so much better
-than I do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is because they say what they mean,”
-he replied. “There is no difficulty about that.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell scarcely recognised Evangeline when
-she rose out of a corner of the shop lounge where
-they had arranged to meet. She was not only
-thin and heavy-eyed, but she looked hunted.
-Behind the sphinx face that looked into hers bitter
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>pity was hard at work. “My dear child,” Mrs.
-Vachell said, holding out both her hands, “don’t
-worry. It is perfectly all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you don’t know,” said Evangeline in a
-low, frightened voice. “I haven’t told you. He
-is going to Egypt and insists on my going too.
-Ivor is to be sent away——” Her voice broke.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, nonsense,” said Mrs. Vachell. “Here,
-come and sit down. Ivor isn’t going away. He
-will be sent to me first and you won’t go on the
-boat at all. You can either be supposed to join
-him at Marseilles, or if that makes too much fuss
-you can go on board and slip off among the crowd
-when people are being sent ashore at the last
-minute. There are lots of ways and we will think
-out the best. Once he is safely off, you will go
-back to your parents and he will find the devil of
-a difficulty in dislodging you. It is a temporary
-remedy, I know, but we shall have time to think
-of something else when the next obstacle turns
-up. He is one man against three women, remember.
-You know your mother by this time. I am
-not sure but what she is stronger than either of
-us. And you will have all the regiment with you
-if they get to know of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Mother doesn’t know,” said Evangeline.
-“I didn’t think it was any use telling her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you are a fool, dear. Never mind; I
-have told her; and if Evan thinks he is any match
-for her he is mistaken. He might as well try to
-fight a climate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But how did you know anything about it?”
-she asked, more and more puzzled. “He only told
-me yesterday, and I don’t know now where he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>wants to send Ivor. It may be to his sisters, which
-is bad enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I knew a month ago what he intended to do
-some day, and I made plans for you as soon as I
-heard that he might be going to Egypt. Don’t
-waste time being jealous of me, Evangeline. I
-would wring the man’s neck like a turkey’s if I
-could.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, you are wicked!” gasped Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I am not. Don’t be stupid. You will
-lose your faith in men too some day, and then
-you won’t stick at anything to help a woman.
-What other weapons have we to defend our lives
-as yet? Do you want Ivor or do you not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do I?” said Evangeline, nervously hunting
-for her handkerchief. “I didn’t sleep last night
-and I’ve had no breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well, have lunch now, then,” said Mrs.
-Vachell, rising. During lunch they matured their
-plan. Evan had not yet explained definitely where
-he intended to send Ivor, though he had once
-mentioned two friends of his mother’s, “the best
-women in the world,” he called them. Mrs. Vachell
-related all she knew of the place where they lived
-and their methods of training the young mind.
-Perhaps she exaggerated and perhaps Evan had
-laid unfair stress on the items he was most anxious
-about. “They believe in making a child independent
-of physical comforts,” she said, “and not
-allowing a light in the room at night and that sort
-of thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, God! Ivor will go mad,” said Evangeline.
-“He is so good about the dark and getting used to
-it, but he hates it—and without me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>Mrs. Vachell shrugged her shoulders. “I came
-across men in hospital,” she said, “to whom their
-childish terrors used to come back. Of course it
-made them able to stand anything as they grew
-up, for nothing they were likely to meet afterwards
-in an ordinary life could be such torture. But it
-seems a little like burning down the house to get
-roast pig. And, after all, the war has shown that
-it wasn’t worth while, because boys from happy
-homes were just as undefeatable as the children
-of brutes. In fact some of them who took it most
-simply had had the happiest childhood. Good
-schools do just as well now when the boys come by
-train as when they were frozen on the tops of
-coaches on the way and tortured when they got
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall have to fool your husband a good deal
-before I get Ivor handed over to me,” Mrs. Vachell
-said, looking at her attentively.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I don’t mind,” Evangeline answered carelessly.
-“He doesn’t love the real you. That is
-the only thing that would annoy me.” Mrs.
-Vachell gave a little laugh.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who says women can’t stick together or tell
-the truth?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do they?” said Evangeline with indifference.
-“I wonder why.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, let’s get on,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I
-must do my shopping in a few minutes. I shall
-come to Drage next week, and, in the meantime,
-just behave as you would if you believed it was all
-going to happen as he says. Try to forget that it
-isn’t; and when I come you will find that the old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>ladies will be postponed for a few months at least.
-And another thing. You had better beg for Ivor
-to be sent to your mother. I want your husband
-to have knocked off that idea before I come or I
-should have to suggest it and fail. He shall tell
-you himself that it won’t do, and he will be getting
-uneasy about the old duchesses by that time if
-you are tragic enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, it is beastly!” said Evangeline. “Hateful!
-disgusting! How can a man be so mean as
-to force his wife to filthy, low tricks to keep their
-only son with her while he is a baby and she has
-done nothing wrong. How dare he do it! I shall
-be a wicked woman before he has done with me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell again shrugged her shoulders.
-“Wait,” she said, “it is coming. There can be
-no stopping it in the end. We are in Parliament;
-we are almost in the Law; we have one foot in
-the Church. Wait, Evangeline, my dear. And
-in the meantime we won’t throw away the old
-weapons till the new are ready. They haven’t
-done bad service in the past.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“God bless you,” said Evan, as he let Mrs. Vachell
-out of his house about a week later. “I’ll tell
-Evangeline as soon as she comes in. It is an
-enormous weight off my mind, really. I can’t
-tell you what torture it has been to see the poor
-girl in that state, and yet it was my duty. I
-couldn’t do otherwise, so it had to be gone through.
-Now she will be comparatively happy as she will
-trust Ivor with you and Mrs. Fulton can see him
-when she wants to—within limits. Evangeline
-will like that. I have the utmost confidence in the
-nurse too. I should never have sent her away from
-him if it had been possible to keep him at home.
-I have written to Miss Moseley and told her that
-his coming is only postponed and that I will arrange
-with her later when you see how he gets on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I will write to
-you every week or so at first. Good-bye. You
-sail on the 30th, don’t you? I suppose I can make
-all the final arrangements about trains with Evangeline.
-She will like to see him settled in before
-she goes, perhaps, and it will give her time to pack
-and settle the house in peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evan had refused to listen to the suggestion that
-Evangeline should pick up the ship anywhere on the
-way out, so that had been given up. Mrs. Vachell
-had undertaken to bring off the final coup. Ivor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>was to be established in her house a week before the
-ship sailed. Evangeline was to pack her trunks
-as much as possible with old clothes and oddments
-that she did not need. Evan was out all day, so
-there was no difficulty about that. Mrs. Vachell
-would get permission to see them off on board, and
-would undertake that Evangeline should disappear
-when the shore bell rang. An errand of mercy
-in some lady’s cabin would prevent Evan from
-looking for her until some time after the ship had
-left. Mrs. Vachell would keep him in discussion
-till the last moment and tear herself away only
-at the last imperative shouts from the gangway.
-After that the deluge, and Cyril in the character
-of Noah.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t like the plan at all,” Susie said anxiously,
-when Mrs. Vachell returned. “I simply don’t know
-how I shall ever make my husband understand.
-He is quite extraordinarily dense in those ways.
-And I want to tell the servants to get Evangeline’s
-room ready, and of course I can’t. There are all
-sorts of things to be seen to, and Strickland will be
-so cross. And I am afraid they will gossip, too.
-Can’t you possibly think of anything else? Couldn’t
-Evangeline be taken ill on the way out and landed,
-and then she could just come home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid that soldiers are more easily deceived
-than doctors,” said Mrs. Vachell, “and Evangeline
-is such a bad actress! How I have pulled her
-through this week I don’t know. But I can keep
-Ivor as long as you like while you make your preparations.
-When Evangeline comes off the boat and
-gets to you, she must just have had a fit of temporary
-insanity to account for it to your husband; a sort of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>mad motherhood. I understand that she has an
-excuse for a certain amount of eccentricity. For
-that reason alone any doctor can be got to say that
-she is better at home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, we must try not to worry,” said Susie.
-“I daresay, when you come to think of it, that by
-the time Evan has several children he will give
-up a great deal of that absurd nonsense about
-training. The children themselves will make him
-forget about it. Marriage does away with so many
-silly fancies, doesn’t it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>All the same, as the time drew near, she became a
-trifle restless. One day, unknown to her, Cyril
-went to have a tooth out. It was a bad tooth,
-and he felt decidedly uncomfortable afterwards, so
-he telephoned from the dentist’s house to put off
-an engagement he had made, and went straight
-home. It happened to be the afternoon Susie had
-chosen for a box containing Evangeline’s belongings
-to be brought to the house, as she knew Cyril had a
-train journey of a couple of hours, which would keep
-him out of the way. He was just fitting his latchkey
-in the door when a van stopped and a man
-got out and touched his hat. “A box for you, sir,”
-he said, “would you sign, please.” Another man
-was dragging out the box and Cyril took the paper
-and read it. “It is addressed to Mrs. Hatton,” he
-said. “Just wait a minute and I’ll send a servant.”
-Susie, hearing his voice, was peeping rather
-agitatedly out of the drawing-room door. He rang
-the front door bell for Strickland, and went upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There’s a man with a box addressed to Chips,”
-he remarked. “Is it all right?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>“Y-yes, I think so, dear,” said Susie. “It is
-just a few things we are to take care of, that she
-thought might spoil in Egypt. Perhaps I had better
-see about it. Why are you back so early?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I had a tooth out,” he explained.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, really, Cyril dear,” she said impatiently,
-“how you men do fuss about every little ache and
-pain. What would you say if we gave up our work
-for as little reason as that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should say you had the wisdom of the serpent
-and the harmlessness of the dove,” he replied. “It
-wouldn’t matter a row of beans.” He went off
-to his room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When are we going to see those two to say
-good-bye?” he asked that evening after dinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They will be coming for a night next week when
-they take Ivor to the Vachells’,” said Susie.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I still don’t understand why he is being sent
-there instead of coming to us,” he observed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie made a little face. “It is just Evan,” she
-said. “He thinks we are not to be trusted with
-children. Of course I couldn’t insist.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is very unlike you, Sue, to hand over one of
-your brood without a murmur. Does Evangeline
-want him to go there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Certainly not,” said Susie unguardedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well then, I bet he won’t be there long,”
-said Cyril. Susie began to wonder whether this
-might not be a golden opportunity put into her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you think it best too, dear, I am not sure it
-mightn’t be the wisest thing to move him here
-after a little while,” she said. Cyril looked at her
-speculatively, but said nothing at the time. When
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>Evangeline arrived he noticed a great alteration in
-her. She had lost her easy-going acceptance of
-everything that was said and done. She seemed
-anxious and analytical, on the look out for traps,
-chary of expressing an opinion. She had said good-bye
-to Ivor, she told them, and Evan had stayed
-behind to settle a few last details with Mrs. Vachell.
-She said all this with so much nervousness and
-lack of interest, as if repeating a lesson, that Cyril
-wondered more and more. He thought again of the
-box that had arrived, of Susie’s embarrassment, and
-her anger at his unexpected return. When she
-went in the afternoon to pay her fortnightly visit
-to a women’s hospital Cyril asked:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’re not acting altogether on the straight about
-this voyage, are you, Chips? What’s the plot?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline pushed back her chair and a look of
-terror came into her face. She hesitated, but said
-nothing. He looked at her with concern. “My
-dear child, I am not going to eat you,” he said.
-“What’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought perhaps you knew,” she stammered,
-without realising what she had said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What, that your mother had given you away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, she did, though she didn’t mean to. She
-was a marvel of discretion, but unfortunately I had
-a tooth out and came here when I ought to have been
-stowed in the train, and I met your luggage on the
-doorstep. She told me it was antiques or something,
-and I didn’t, in fact, think much about it until you
-turned up. So now you had better tell me what
-you have both been up to. It is quite evident
-that you haven’t parted from Ivor. How do you
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>manage that? Are you going to take him as a
-cargo of apples or what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I am not going,” said Evangeline. “I
-won’t go, and if you give me away, I’ll—no, I am
-sorry. I would have told you at first, but Mother
-and Mrs. Vachell said that men will only help to
-clear up a mess. They won’t ever make a plan to
-prevent it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” said Cyril, “so the plot is pretty deep, is
-it? How big is the membership?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just us three,” said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not Dicky?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, Dicky is impossible. She wouldn’t
-give it away, but she would want me to fight it out
-with Evan. But I can’t, Father,—I can’t, I can’t.
-He has broken my nerve. I would fight for myself,
-but I can’t risk it when it is for Ivor. I can’t afford
-to lose. It is Evan’s own fault. I never thought
-of being deceitful until I met him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And Mrs. Vachell?” added Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I daresay,” she admitted, “but she doesn’t
-want to any more than I do. She says she does so
-look forward to the day when women won’t have
-to lie. It will be such a luxury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“H’m, yes, perhaps,” he replied, “but we won’t
-go into these gilded prospects now. She’s evidently
-still in a very poor way. But if you don’t mind me
-telling you, I think what you are doing is very risky,
-though I don’t exactly know what it is. How are
-you going to get off?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just slip off the boat while Mrs. Vachell is
-saying good-bye to him. He is to suppose that I
-am in the ladies’ cabin looking after someone who
-is ill.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>“And do you suppose any man is going to find
-out that his wife has played him a trick like that
-and yet go on with his voyage and stay over there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Vachell said he wouldn’t be able to afford
-to come back,” said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good God! What a fool the woman is,” he
-exclaimed. “And she and her pack of jelly-brained
-idiots think that—well, well, Chips my dear, she
-is not too big a fool anyhow to have properly done
-poor old Evan. She must have endured the devil
-of a lot of self-denial in the way of truth lately. A
-regular Lent of corkers. Chips, I really don’t
-advise you to go on with this. It is all nonsense;
-Evan is a very decent sort of fellow and I don’t
-suppose he understands in the least that he is
-worrying you seriously. I’ll tell him that I am
-going to keep you here for a bit, and Ivor too, to
-keep you company, and that we’ll think out a
-scheme later for you to go out there when he has
-got ready for you. He can’t object, for I don’t think
-you are well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I am not,” said Evangeline, and she burst
-into tears. “I am going to have another, and
-I know he will take it away, too, and I shall go
-mad——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, rot!” said Cyril kindly. “Here, buck up.
-You’re not going if you don’t want to. Why on
-earth didn’t you talk over this mess before?
-There——” (the front door bell rang) “that’s
-probably the heavy father coming on the stage
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Father,” said Evangeline, turning white, “don’t
-tell him——” She fell forward in her chair and
-fainted, and at the same moment Evan came in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>“Here,” said Cyril holding her, “go down,
-there’s a good fellow, and get some brandy; there’s
-some in the dining-room.” Evan raced down and
-brought back the decanter and a glass, and between
-them they did their best, lifting her on to the sofa,
-and Evan tried to make her swallow some of the
-brandy. She opened her eyes and looked at him
-with terror, and then sat up. “What is it?” she
-asked. “Oh please, please, Evan, don’t take him
-away. I will do anything you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t take who away, my darling, I don’t know
-what you mean?” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here, never mind,” said Cyril. “It’s all right,
-Chips. We’ll get you put to bed I think, and,
-there’s nothing to worry about; do you understand?”
-He rang the bell for Strickland, and she
-came in and stood gazing at them in surprise and
-disapproval.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Hatton isn’t well,” said Cyril. “A little
-influenza or something. Will you get her room
-ready and put her to bed? Can you walk so far,
-Chips, if we give you a hand?” They left her in
-the bedroom with Strickland, and then Cyril faced
-his son-in-law in the drawing-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think I’ll telephone for a doctor,” he said,
-“just to make sure she’s all right. Mix yourself
-a drink while I look the fellow up.” He found
-the number and took up the receiver. “That
-Doctor Clark?” he said. “Oh, isn’t he? Well
-would you ask him to come round to Mrs. Fulton’s
-house as soon as he comes in. Now then, Evan,”
-he went on, while he lit a pipe, “let’s have this
-out. You mustn’t take the girl away to Egypt
-just yet. She’s all to bits and she’s got a holy terror
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>of you for some reason. What have you been
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am afraid it has been parting from the boy
-that has upset her,” said Evan. “But I considered
-very carefully before I did it, and I am quite sure it
-is the only way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Only way to what?” asked Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The only way to safeguard him from being
-ruined by weakness and self-indulgence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It won’t do him any harm to speak of for a year
-or two,” said Cyril, “and then he’ll go to school and
-get it put straight. You’ll do him far more harm
-where you’ve left him at present with that unscrupulous
-she-devil of the Nile. Take her back
-with you on the spare ticket and drop her whence
-she came.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Excuse me, sir,” Evan said, getting up. “I
-can’t listen to any abuse of Mrs. Vachell. I am
-sorry Evangeline has sunk to that last resort
-of slandering her best friend to achieve her
-end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evangeline didn’t slander her, my dear boy,”
-said Cyril. “She was full of her praises because of
-the magnificent plan she had devised for deceiving
-you. I arrived home unexpectedly a few days ago
-and met Evangeline’s box on the doorstep. The
-plan was that Cleopatra was to beguile you at one
-end of the deck while Evangeline nipped off down
-the gangway and home. They had a plan all
-thought out about her ministering to a sick friend
-in a distant cabin so that you wouldn’t look for
-her until you were well out at sea. Ivor was to
-join her here then, and after that I don’t think they
-had any clear idea, but they were reckoning on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>your finding it cheaper to stay where you were
-and storm at them on paper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evan’s face looked hard and worn, but he showed
-no other sign of disappointment. “I think I had
-better go now and ask Mrs. Vachell if it is true,” he
-said. “You know I have only just come from her,
-and we made an arrangement that Ivor should
-stay with her for two or three months and then go to
-some ladies whom my mother knew in Cornwall;
-they keep a small school for very young children
-whose parents are abroad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did Chips know of that further arrangement?”
-asked Cyril.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not unless Mrs. Vachell told her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why not? What sort of a fellow do you think
-you are, making plans with another woman behind
-your wife’s back as to what you will do with your
-son while she is away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It was the only way,” said Evan again.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The only way to land yourself in the devil of a
-mess. Upon my word, Evan, it’s a pretty beastly
-sort of thing to do. If it got round to the mess
-you’d find yourself up against a devilish hard
-proposition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know,” said Evan. “It was cowardice.
-I hate hurting a woman if it can be avoided.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Funny how people deny themselves in little
-ways,” Cyril said reflectively. “There you say
-you hate hurting a woman, and you go a long way
-round to find a plan that must hurt her more than
-anything you could have chosen. Evangeline told
-me that Mrs. Vachell hates lying more than anything,
-and she——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Excuse my interrupting you, sir,” said Evan
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>rising. “That is not quite proved yet. I’ll be
-back in half an hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril, from the window, saw him rush after a
-passing tram and board it with the expression of
-the Chief of Police in a cinema drama. “Poor
-devil!” he said to himself with amusement. “She’s
-going to catch it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell’s little maid was greatly surprised
-when the gentleman whom she had let out of the
-house not long before brushed past her with some
-muttered remark when she opened the door, and
-ran straight up to the drawing-room, where her
-mistress was having tea. Mr. Vachell had returned
-from the University and was enjoying himself
-with a muffin. Evan greeted him hurriedly, and
-said to Mrs. Vachell, “Can I speak to you a moment
-alone?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, my dear Evan, I don’t think you can with
-that face,” she said, looking at him coldly, “you
-almost frighten me. Sit down there and have some
-tea, and tell us what is the matter. Ivor is quite
-happy having his upstairs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“He must pack up now and come with me, unless
-you can contradict what I have just been told,” said
-Evan. “But I know you will——” his voice was
-almost beseeching. “Evangeline is ill. She fainted
-and went to bed, and I think she is a little light-headed.
-She assured her father that you had made
-a plan to let her slip off the boat as it was starting
-and to join Ivor here and take him to her father’s
-house——” he paused anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, it is quite true,” she said without concern.
-“It evidently isn’t coming off now as Evangeline
-has gone back on it. Still I think she might have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>warned me. It is all the same to me what she does,
-but it is generally considered not to be playing the
-game to do that sort of thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why did you do it?” asked Evan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because it was the only way to stop your
-monstrous behaviour to a woman and her child.
-I would have done it for anybody.” Mr. Vachell
-had taken no part in what was going on, but was
-quietly proceeding with his tea.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Did you know of this?” Evan asked, turning
-to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course not,” he replied. “Is it likely?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course he didn’t,” said Mrs. Vachell. “It
-had nothing to do with him. But he wouldn’t
-have interfered in any case. We are a normal
-husband and wife; not a potentate and his slave.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then would you ring for Ivor and his nurse to
-get ready, please,” said Evan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where are you going to take him?” she inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I beg your pardon, but that is no business of
-yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well, then, wait a moment please.” She
-took up the telephone from a table beside her and
-asked for the Fultons’ number. Cyril answered it.
-“Is that you, General Fulton?” she said. “Captain
-Hatton wishes to take Ivor away at once and
-will not tell me where he is taking him to. The
-little boy has hardly had his tea and is tired after
-the journey. Would you mind telling me what
-to do.” Emphatic sounds were audible from the
-mouth-piece, and she turned to Evan. “He says
-I am to tell you not to be a damned fool but to go
-round there at once. Your wife is very ill. You
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>are to leave the child here for the present. What
-did you say, General Fulton? Do you want to
-speak to him?” She got up and gave her place to
-Evan. “Yes—hullo,” he said. “Is that you, sir?
-What’s the matter, please,—very well—I will
-come.” He said good-bye to neither of the Vachells,
-but stopped at the door. “I should like Ivor and
-the nurse sent to General Fulton’s as early as you
-conveniently can to-morrow,” he said, and went
-downstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Good heavens! what idiots!” said Mrs.
-Vachell, pouring herself out another cup of tea,
-when he was gone. “It is very difficult to do good
-in this world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know you don’t want my advice,” said Mr.
-Vachell, “so I won’t give it. But I am sorry there
-has been such a mess and she is ill. I like the poor
-girl and she seems to have had a bad time one way
-and another. Little Teresa will be hitting out
-right and left I expect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Teresa!” his wife said contemptuously,
-“is full of old-fashioned prejudices, and her idea of
-equality between human beings doesn’t go beyond
-incomes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If people would study the way things have
-worked out in the past they would get a better idea of
-what is likely to happen in the future,” he observed.
-“I think I must go down and do a little work.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“There is certainly no question of her going to
-Egypt just yet,” said the doctor when he came
-downstairs. “She seems to have got a sort of
-nervous breakdown. Can you account for it in any
-way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie had come home just before he arrived, and
-was apparently greatly fluttered by the scene of
-confusion that she found, but, in fact, she was
-secretly rejoiced. “It clears the whole thing up in
-the most wonderful way,” she thought. “Really
-it almost seems as if Providence did interfere sometimes.”
-She came into the drawing-room with the
-doctor and found Cyril and Evan talking with
-perfect friendliness. She put them both down in
-her thoughts as “extraordinarily lacking in all
-feeling,” but she expressed nothing but cheerful
-propriety.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Really I don’t know,” she said, in answer to the
-doctor’s question. “Evan, Dr. Clark wants to
-know whether you can account for Evangeline
-having broken down like this. You were here with
-her, Cyril, when it happened. Do either of you
-know of anything?” Both were silent, waiting
-for the other to speak. “Well?” said Susie impatiently.
-“You see, I have been out, and she
-seemed to be all right when she arrived.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think it had to do with her leaving Ivor
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>behind,” said Cyril at last. “Really, my dear, you
-are a mother; you ought to understand these
-feelings. She was about to sail on a long voyage,
-remember.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie blushed. “There has been the move too, of
-course,” she said to the doctor. “Everything was
-arranged in a great hurry and there was a great deal
-of packing up; and as she told you, she is not
-strong just now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” he said, “there’s that. But I should have
-thought there was more in it. However, it is not
-my affair, and if it is a family matter you must do
-as you like. But whatever it is must be put right
-somehow, or you may have very serious consequences
-to deal with. I will come back to-morrow
-morning, unless you want me before then.
-But please try to set her mind at rest on whatever
-it is that is worrying her. It would be much better
-if you had a trained nurse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Little Ivor’s nurse is a splendid woman,” said
-Susie. “She has had a hospital training, and
-Evangeline is used to her. Do you think she could
-manage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I think not,” he said. “She seems to be
-worrying about the child as it is. Have him in the
-house with her and let her know he is within reach
-with his own nurse, and I’ll send you round another
-woman, if you don’t mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline slept that evening under the influence
-of some medicine the doctor ordered, and Cyril
-and Evan were left alone after dinner, while the
-household were carrying out the numerous requirements
-of the nurse and preparing another couple of
-rooms for Ivor.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>It had been decided that Evan must sail with his
-regiment, but so far nothing had been said about
-Ivor’s future. Presently Cyril remarked, “We had
-better settle now about the boy, Evan. It looks
-pretty clear to me that you have got to wait for
-him to find his level in the ordinary way at a preparatory
-school. There aren’t many years to wait,
-and I can promise you that there will be nothing
-morbid about him so long as he is under my roof.
-You see, if I had had a son I should have had to
-check his tendencies and all that, and he will quite
-likely mind what I say more than he would the old
-women of Cornwall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall make no inquiries,” said Evan. “Since
-his mother and I cannot act together, and it seems
-that I shall be responsible for her illness if we act
-separately, I shall withdraw altogether. I will send
-her all the money I have beyond what I need for
-bare necessities, and she has your very generous
-allowance. I don’t imagine she will miss me at all
-out of her life. Everything has been as wretched as
-it could be for the last year or two.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think you will probably find you want them
-both back again by and bye,” said Cyril. “My
-wife would tell you, I am sure, that absence makes
-the heart grow fonder—which reminds me that I
-very much hope that is true. However, don’t let’s
-take it for granted that all is over and Moab is our
-wash-pot, and so on. It is wonderful how things
-peter out if you leave them alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Perhaps,” said Evan gloomily, “but I am
-afraid not. What is wrong in the beginning is
-wrong in the end. I shall go away to-morrow
-before the boy arrives. He is not likely to ask
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>after me much, as he was set against me from the
-beginning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have a drink before you go up,” said Cyril,
-as Evan rose from his chair. “I am sure you had
-better.” Ten minutes later they were absorbed in
-a discussion about Egyptian administration, but
-Evan remained gloomy.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Strickland brought his breakfast next
-morning she asked whether he had seen Mrs. Hatton,
-and how was she?</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t disturb her,” he answered, “but the
-nurse came to the door and told me she was better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think Mrs. Fulton will be down in a few
-minutes, sir,” said Strickland, hesitating at the door.
-She liked Evan, who was always gravely considerate
-to the maids and, as she once said to the cook,
-“never passes us with his hat on.” “I may be
-gone before then,” said Evan, “but if so, please
-tell her I was sorry to go without saying good-bye.
-I have several things to do on the way to the station.”
-Teresa ran down just as he was putting on his coat.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh Evan, were you going without saying good-bye?
-Wouldn’t you like to see Chips?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, Dicky, I must be off,” he said. “Will you
-write and tell me how she is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I will, and Ivor too,” she promised. “I
-wish you were not going so early and so far off.
-You look so bleak. But it won’t be long before
-Chips can go out to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dicky,” he said, stopping with his hand on the
-door, “don’t say anything about Ivor when you
-write. I would rather not hear. But do what
-you can for him—and if you marry, have him with
-you sometimes, will you?” He gave her a kiss
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>and went out, and she watched him call a cab
-from the rank across the road and drive off. She
-was standing there still when Strickland came to
-shut the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t like the Captain going off like that,”
-Strickland said, when they were back in the dining-room
-and she was clearing away the plates and cup.
-“It doesn’t seem right somehow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wonder what there is about marriage that is
-so difficult,” said Teresa sadly. “People nearly
-always behave queerly after a bit. Even if they
-don’t actually quarrel they call each other ‘dear’—rather
-short—and say ‘it doesn’t matter, thank
-you,’ and dreary things like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think, myself, better have a quarrel and have
-done with it,” said Strickland. “It is a mistake
-to think over things too much. If a woman is busy
-all day working she’s no time to bother about the
-man till it comes to getting his wages off him, and
-then it’s best to be civil.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But, my dear, it is worse in working men’s
-houses,” said Teresa. “If you counted up the
-quarrels between husbands and wives in some of
-those small streets!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Quarrels, yes, Miss, that’s what I said,” Strickland
-replied. “But I thought you were speaking
-of Captain Hatton going off so cold this morning,
-and no one able to say exactly what has happened.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie came in at that moment and dismissed
-Strickland with a rather reproving request for
-breakfast at once. When the door was shut she
-said to Teresa, “I do hope the maids haven’t begun
-gossiping about Evangeline already. What was
-Strickland saying?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>“We were talking about marriage and wondering
-why it is so difficult,” said Teresa. “She was sorry
-Evan had gone off so drearily.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, has he gone!” Susie exclaimed. “Really
-he ought not to have done that. They will think all
-sorts of absurd things, and now there is that nurse
-to gossip with. You really encourage them sometimes,
-dear Dicky, by talking about a thing instead
-of pretending there is nothing to notice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I didn’t know there was anything the
-matter, except that Chips was ill,” said Teresa in
-astonishment. “I was talking to Strickland about
-married people’s manner to each other. What has
-happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evan made a very foolish and cruel plan to
-send poor little Ivor to a strict school in the furthest
-part of Cornwall. There was no persuading him,
-so Evangeline very wisely took the whole thing out
-of his hands.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How?” asked Teresa. “What could she do if
-he wouldn’t do what she wanted?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well you will find, dear, some day,” said Susie,
-“that when a man is bent on doing what is wrong
-the only way is to seem as if it was all to go on as
-he says and then trust to Providence to find some
-way of stopping it when the time comes. Opposition
-only makes him more determined, and he is more
-likely to take precautions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought it was arranged by Evan and everybody
-that Ivor was to go to Mrs. Vachell’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That was Evan’s own silly arrangement, certainly,
-and Mrs. Vachell agreed just for the sake of
-putting off the dreadful school time. And now
-you see, mercifully the doctor says that Evangeline
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>must, on no account, be worried, so darling Ivor
-is to come here after all, as he ought to have in the
-first place, and everything is all right. It is wonderful
-how things work out if only one has trust.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But then, I don’t see what you are afraid of the
-maids knowing, and why Evan is so cold,” said
-Teresa, very puzzled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, of course Evan wasn’t pleased with the
-alteration of plan. You couldn’t expect him to be.
-And Evangeline has got so ill with the anxiety.
-If she had only trusted to its coming out right——.
-But she got run down and worried, and what with
-one thing and another, she didn’t want to see Evan
-or to hear any more discussion, and I thought the
-maids would think it so odd. You know how in
-that class everything is sacrificed to the man because
-he has the money, and they don’t understand anything
-between a difference of opinion and actual
-quarrelling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I see,” said Teresa thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t talk to Evangeline about it, I think,
-dear,” said Susie after a pause. “The doctor says
-she must be kept very quiet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Later in the morning Evangeline asked for Teresa
-to come up to her room. She was in bed, looking
-white and tired and the nurse was quietly dusting.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Wouldn’t you like some tea, Nurse?” Evangeline
-suggested. “Strickland is sure to be making
-some if it is eleven o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t mind leaving you for half an hour if that
-is what you want,” said the nurse with a smile.
-“But don’t talk about any worries, there’s a dear,
-or you will get your temperature up again. You’ll
-not let her tire herself, will you?” she said to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>Teresa. “And I’ll leave this little bell here in case
-you want anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Everything is quite all right, you know,” she
-said soothingly, as she arranged the bedclothes
-before departing. “Your husband sent you his
-best love when he went off this morning, only you
-were asleep and he wouldn’t disturb you. And
-everything is ready for the little boy when he comes.
-He will be pleased to see his Mummy again, won’t
-he?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, yes,” said Evangeline, “it is all right.
-Do go and get your tea, Nurse; we won’t do anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, did you see him?” she asked eagerly,
-when the nurse had gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I did. He was very nice about you. He
-asked me to write and tell him how you are, and I
-said I would.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Forgive me, Dicky, for not telling you what
-I meant to do,” said Evangeline. “But I knew it
-would make you miserable, and I couldn’t stand
-discussion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t mind that a bit,” she answered, “but
-if you get into a mess again, Chips, do tell Father.
-I think Mother’s way of deceiving men on principle is
-a mistake, apart from whether it is right or wrong.
-I think you could have got Evan to do anything
-you liked if you had told Father, because, after all,
-it was quite reasonable, only I expect he didn’t in
-the least understand. You told me once that if
-you want to make him see your side of the argument
-you have to translate it into different terms, because
-he uses other ways of expressing the same things.
-You see, Father would probably have used very
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>bad language and said that the school Evan wanted
-was kept by a lot of damned tea-drinking, blanketty-blank-I-don’t-know-what’s,
-and then Evan would
-have understood that it wasn’t really a good plan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, it is done now and he is gone,” said Evangeline.
-“I shall never see him again. I’ve deceived
-him and that is the end. But if he hadn’t told Mrs.
-Vachell what he meant to do I should never have
-found out. I knew nothing about the school until
-she told me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Didn’t you! Oh, Chips, how horrid! But
-then, he must have deceived you, too, so it is rather
-like what Mother says about being ‘taught to be
-wicked.’ It is so odd if you come to think of it that
-what she says should really come true, perhaps for
-the first time; though it is too near the bone to be
-so funny as it might be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you know, I never thought of that,” Evangeline
-remarked, “but, of course he did. That makes
-it a lot better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No it doesn’t. It doesn’t make any difference
-either way. But, at least, you can both say you
-are sorry and start again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But Dicky, I didn’t tell you—there is going to
-be a new one, and then everything will begin all
-over again. I could perhaps have held out until
-Ivor goes to school in the ordinary way, which of
-course I want him to, and after that he will be able
-to look after himself; but I can’t go through it all
-with another.” Her eyes looked large and startled.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But he hasn’t done Ivor any harm,” Teresa
-protested, “and he will see by and by that he is not
-a tiresome little boy, and then he won’t want to
-interfere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>“But the strain of perpetually smoothing things
-over and avoiding rows——. You don’t know what
-hell it is. We never laugh now except when he’s
-out of the house, and when I hear his latchkey it is
-like hearing the prison door shut again after one had
-escaped.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“For the Lord’s sake don’t cry,” said Teresa,
-“or the nurse will never let me up here again. It is
-all over now, Chips. There’s months and months
-for things to settle, and they always do settle.
-Nothing ever goes on as it is. I wish it did sometimes,
-but life is a very restless thing, like the kind
-of person who is always saying, ‘Well, what shall
-we do next?’ You will see something will turn
-up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>But months went by, and nothing did turn up.
-The carrier sparrows of Millport somehow disseminated
-the news that the Hattons had had a
-split. One report said that Evangeline was looking
-ill and went nowhere. This was contradicted by
-someone who had met her at the theatre, “In quite
-her old spirits.” Mrs. Carpenter determined to
-sift the matter to the bottom, and invited Evangeline
-to tea. She refused, so Mrs. Carpenter called
-on Susie and found Mrs. Gainsborough there.
-Evangeline had gone to stay for the week-end with
-her sisters-in-law, Susie announced with secret
-pleasure. No one but herself knew what a relief
-it was to have such a respectable piece of news to
-impart. For since Mrs. Carpenter’s visit of inquiry
-during the summer holiday she had been in daily
-dread of what the mysterious “little bird” then
-alluded to might not choose for its subject next
-time it sang songs of Araby to its kind patroness.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>“The Hattons are charming girls and devoted to
-Evangeline,” Susie added.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose she will be going out to her husband
-soon,” said Mrs. Carpenter. “She will get the
-climate at its very best about now I should think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear no, she is not going to Egypt,” said
-Susie, with great surprise at such an idea. “She
-gave that up from the very first. It was really
-foolish of her to think of it at all, but she was so
-anxious to be with him. But Doctor Clark says it
-would never do to take the risk. It would be
-difficult to get a proper nurse out there, and either
-to keep a baby out in the heat or to bring it home
-such a long way would be risky. No, there is no
-idea of that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie had always had a lurking taste for critical
-situations requiring skill in manipulating censorious
-persons, and whenever she managed to get out of a
-difficult place with credit, she always felt an increased
-sense of safety from the snares of the stupid
-and downright who persist in making life difficult by
-wanting everything set down in black and white.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh certainly, you are very wise,” Mrs. Carpenter
-agreed, “though it always seems hard on a husband
-when he is away a long time. Dear Mamma
-always insisted on going out to India whatever
-happened. One of us was even born at sea when the
-doctor had said that he wouldn’t be responsible for
-her unless she spent one hot weather at home.
-However, she was back again that autumn and we
-were all left with dear Grannie until Papa came home
-for good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I never think that mothers were so wise in those
-days as they are now,” said Susie. “One reads of so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>many little lives sacrificed to theories of that sort.
-Mothers away, careless nurses and governesses, cold
-bathing and all sorts of tyrannical rules. They did
-nobody any good that one can see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Don’t you think that generation were very
-much stronger, though, than the present one?”
-asked Mrs. Carpenter. “I do, and I think they were
-more high principled.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, I don’t think so,” Susie answered in
-gentle rebuke. “Look at the drinking that went on,
-for instance. Even gentlemen used to spend their
-evenings under the table, unable to sit up, and they
-did just as they liked, and no one dared to say anything.
-The divorce laws are improving all the time
-now, though, of course, it is still dreadfully wrong
-whichever way you look at it. Still, I think people
-have higher ideals than they did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Carpenter was completely crushed for the
-moment. Susie had left no opening for her to
-score, for modern ideals were her own favourite
-topic, which she was sometimes unwisely tempted
-to confuse with the superiority of her own infancy.
-Susie, though she was by nature always anxious to
-smooth over all friction between other people, and
-to establish her own spiritual triumph over sordid
-dispute, had lately passed through a dangerous
-crisis, owing to the fact that her own intrigues against
-her son-in-law might be exposed at any moment by
-Evangeline’s impatient candour or Mrs. Vachell’s
-boastful contempt for male authority. It was
-necessary that she should build for herself a strong
-pedestal of Courage-to-do-what-is-right-at-all-costs,
-and she chose to cement it with a plastering of the
-Best Modern Thought. Once her position was on a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>solid foundation, she would withdraw again behind
-her inviolable mist of vagueness. It is easy to
-imagine how foolish a veiled figure of Mystery
-would look, toppled over and broken, with nothing
-left but some meaningless drapery and wire, compared
-to that of, let us say, Nelson, whose every
-separate feature and limb would retain its individuality,
-whether erect above the ground or
-scattered upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“These strikes are very terrible,” Mrs. Gainsborough
-remarked, seizing upon the nearest current
-topic in order to save herself from the perils of
-controversy into which she might be drawn at any
-moment. Poor woman! She chose badly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is all very largely the fault of so-called
-education,” said Mrs. Carpenter, pulling herself
-together for a new line of self-assertion. “They
-insist on everybody being taught to read, and send
-working-men to the Universities, and then are
-surprised that they read the wrong things. Of
-course they read whatever is sensational, just as
-our maids prefer trashy novels about peers marrying
-housemaids, and they won’t look at the classics.
-All that the strikers want is gramophones and
-pianos that they can’t play and motors to go to
-work in instead of trams. They are far better
-paid than our wretched clergy, for instance. I
-looked in on little Jenny Abel the other day, and
-found her and the children having tea with nothing
-but bread and a scraping of margarine, and all of
-them with colds, and Jenny simply worn out with
-doing all the housework and the cooking. The
-small girl they had had gone off to a place where
-she was getting £35 a year; more than Jenny has
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>to dress herself and all the children. The girl’s
-mother took her away because she said she wasn’t
-properly fed and had too much to do. Said she
-shouldn’t touch margarine. ‘Nasty poor stuff, I
-call it!’ she said; and the girl must have butter
-and jam and something hot for supper and every
-afternoon off from three to six and two evenings a
-week out until ten.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I really don’t think you would find those
-sort of girls very much educated,” said Mrs. Gainsborough
-nervously. “They are not the kind who
-take scholarships. They are, in a way, more like
-some of the girls one meets about in society just
-now; selfish, you know, thinking of nothing but
-amusing themselves.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know at all where you meet such girls,
-dear lady,” Mrs. Carpenter answered rather acidly.
-“All my friends’ daughters whom I can think of
-are taking up professions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but rather for the fun of it, don’t you
-think?” poor Mrs. Gainsborough suggested, plunging
-more and more wildly. “They don’t like to be
-worried by home life and they prefer working with
-men and so on. It is very natural, poor young
-things. Just what I should have done myself if I
-had been born later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My dear Mrs. Gainsborough, how shockingly
-indiscreet!” said Mrs. Carpenter with a silly little
-laugh. “I hope you won’t go round the University
-saying that women take degrees in order to be with
-men. You will raise a nice hornets’ nest if you do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh dear me, no, that is not in the least what I
-meant,” stammered Mrs. Gainsborough. “Most of
-the girls are splendid and don’t run after the boys
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>at all. But I meant that I don’t think that they
-care about domestic things so much and that it is
-partly to escape from them that they take up professions.
-I can’t believe that some of them who
-are really pretty and charming can care very much
-for mathematics and the other subjects of that sort
-that they take.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evangeline was telling me that she read in
-some paper that socialism is taking a great hold in
-the Universities,” said Susie. “I think it is a pity,
-because though it is a nice idea in many ways it
-doesn’t seem practicable. What you were saying
-just now about Mrs. Abel just shows that everybody
-is not fitted for the same kind of work; and either
-very strong people would get into mischief from
-not having enough to do or else the weaker ones
-would die through having too much to do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think the chief difficulty would be with the
-ordinary British working man,” said Mrs. Gainsborough,
-innocently. “They do so dislike regulations
-of any sort, and if they chose to stop work
-for any reason I believe they would always do it.
-They would take no notice of orders or shots or
-anything. They are so unused to not doing what
-they want and you can’t argue with them. They
-would just say it was all nonsense. They are very
-strong and not at all hysterical like foreigners.
-They never paid the least attention to rationing,
-you remember, during the war; no tradesman dared
-to enforce it in the industrial districts. They don’t
-mind losing their lives but they seem to think it so
-silly to be ordered about at home and so it is, I
-quite agree.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Of course,” said Susie, placidly, “if anyone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>could be found who had really enjoyed a revolution
-it would be different and one would have more
-sympathy. It is worth any sacrifice to make
-people happy. But beyond a few brutal kind of
-men, who I am sure are either naturally disagreeable
-or not English, it seems to make everyone discontented.
-Even the people who make themselves
-comfortable in ruined palaces must be afraid of
-someone wanting to turn them out. It all seems so
-gloomy from what one reads. Must you really go?
-I hope you will come back, Mrs. Carpenter, and see
-Evangeline when she comes home. Now she is here
-for good she will want something to interest her.
-She might help you perhaps at Christmas with your
-parcels distribution. Dear Evan was so anxious
-she should be too busy and happy to miss him
-just now.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Just before Christmas, Teresa met Lady Varens in
-a shop. “My dear, I am so glad to see you,” said
-the soft voice that reminded her of Aldwych and
-her first happiness there. “Come and have tea
-with me somewhere. I have a great deal to tell
-you.” Teresa’s heart bounded and bumped. It
-seemed a year before the girl behind the counter
-located her particular little wooden ball from
-among the dozens that were bowling along the wire
-above her head, carrying little scraps of paper and
-small change to a stupid public who did not know
-David. She followed Lady Varens through the
-crowd to a shop on the other side of the street,
-where they sat down at a table shut away in a
-recess off the main room. “What would you
-like?” Lady Varens asked; “tea and crumpets?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, anything, awfully,” said Teresa, hardly
-able to hide her impatience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David is coming back next week, did you
-know?” said Lady Varens. “Has he written to
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” said Teresa; “I haven’t heard from him
-for a year.” Tears came into her eyes, but she
-flattered herself that they were unobserved.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“We are both going to stay with Mr. Manley,”
-Lady Varens went on. “I had just let my villa
-and was going to friends in Rome when David’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>letter came; but I didn’t want to lose any time by
-bringing him round all that way so I came here and
-Mr. Manley wants us both to go to him. We must
-settle finally with the Prices whether we take
-Aldwych back next year or whether I go out with
-David to the Argentine. He has a charming house
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh,” said Teresa, “and which do you think
-you will do?” Her heart seemed to have stood
-still for a year, waiting for the answer, before it
-came.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know at all, but old Bessie, David’s
-nurse, who writes to me sometimes from the village,
-says they are all longing for him to come back.
-The Prices seem to have put everybody’s back up.
-None of the outside people will stay if he buys the
-place and he makes all sorts of mischief with the
-bailiff and the farmers, imagining he is being robbed
-of sixpence somewhere or other. He says that if
-he buys it he is going to get an American expert
-over to run it all on some new system by which
-everything is organised and checked automatically,
-and the output, as they call it, of every grain and
-cow and rabbit and man and boy on the place is
-ascertained, and if it doesn’t work out at the maximum
-the animal is destroyed and the man is sacked.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, David must come back,” said Teresa. “It
-sounds too horrible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well then, dear, tell him so,” said Lady
-Varens, drinking her tea peacefully without a hint
-of intention in her voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I can’t think why the man in the Bible was told
-to give all his money to the poor if it wasn’t the
-right thing to do,” said Teresa. She put her chin
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>on her hands and puckered her brow over some
-inner problem.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think it was probably suggested more for his
-benefit than for that of the poor,” said Lady Varens.
-“It is the giving that matters much more than who
-gets the stuff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you really think so?” said Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, personally I do. People can only be
-governed by the qualities that are in them, and a
-state can’t make them equal, because it is made up
-itself of inequalities. It can never be made into an
-automatic machine; it is alive—made of live things.
-I can’t understand how even decent socialists can
-expect it to act as if it were a machine. Of course
-one knows what bad communists are after. They
-are just criminal tyrants who want to be beasts in
-control instead of controlled beasts. But the good
-ones make me desperate. It is so impossible to
-imagine anything but disaster coming from their
-innocent idiocy. They seem to go on blindly
-hoping that human intelligence can devise a scheme
-that is proof against human intelligence. They are
-dear things but I do wish they would take their
-hobby horses to some place where the bad boys
-couldn’t harness them to the cart that will land us
-all in the ditch. They think they can out-theorise
-history and all forms of religion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Two little tears rolled at last down Teresa’s cheeks
-and were lost in the cup with which she tried in vain
-to hide them. Their salt taste symbolised to her
-the bitterness of her failure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, bother it!” she said; “I give up here and
-now trying to do any good. It is no earthly use.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David said that when he left Oxford,” said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>Lady Varens, lighting a cigarette to avoid Teresa’s
-eye. “But in a way he works harder than ever at
-it now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does he?” Teresa answered with elaborate
-indifference.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes; won’t you come to dinner with us while
-we are with Mr. Manley? He said I was to ask
-anyone I liked and he loves you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I would like to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well; come next Thursday if you are not
-too busy,” said Lady Varens. “By the way, how
-is your sister? Are they still at Drage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, no—dear me, it is a long story to tell you
-all the things that have happened since you left.
-But Evan is in Egypt and Evangeline and Ivor are
-with us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sorry; that sounds dreary,” she said.
-“I never knew your sister well, but I liked him
-though he seemed so different from her. I often
-wished he had thought of going out to the colonies
-or something of that sort. I believe it would have
-suited her. I can’t see her in a garrison town.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She used to say she would like to lead two lives
-at once,” said Teresa. “One a sort of Wild West
-business and the other with someone very literary,
-but Evan isn’t either, so I suppose people compromise
-or do something different from what they
-intended.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tell me, Teresa,” said Lady Varens, “I am not
-asking from curiosity; is it a success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Chips could make a success of almost anybody
-who didn’t interfere with her,” Teresa replied.
-“She is not at all exacting and she is so affectionate.
-But Evan is a little like John Knox or that sort of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>person; then she does things without telling him
-and he gets all sorts of ideas into his head. I do
-hate Mrs. Vachell. I think she does more harm
-than a thousand mothers-in-law.” Lady Varens
-laughed.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do be careful what you say about mothers-in-law.
-When David marries I shall remind you of
-that remark and ask you not to suggest to my
-daughter-in-law that I interfere, because I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa blushed and looked vexed. “I had forgotten
-about you, really,” she said. “But Mrs.
-Vachell came to stay by the sea when Chips and I
-were there with Ivor, and it all went wrong after
-that. I don’t think they were ever happy again.
-And I believe she only did it out of sheer spite
-because she hates men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does she? I should never have guessed that,”
-said Lady Varens.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, nobody would. She never says a word,
-but she used to get at that wretched boy Fisk,
-at the University, and put him up to all sorts of
-revolutions; not because she cares twopence
-about the poor, I think, unless they are women,
-but she wants women to govern everything, and I
-think she got him to believe that they would all
-help a revolution for the sake of making laws to
-get what they want for themselves. Don’t you
-think that Miss Smackfield would probably drop
-her Bolshevism if there were any women capitalists?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know that I or anyone else knows exactly
-what a capitalist is. But do you seriously suppose
-Miss Smackfield cares a hang what any row is
-about so long as she can be in the front with an
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>axe, shouting, ‘Off with his head!’ like the Queen
-of the pack of cards. She would be forgotten
-to-morrow if someone put a flower pot over her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They talked for some little time and at last Lady
-Varens said, “It is so difficult to remedy anything,
-from a disease to a grievance. There is always a
-‘vicious circle,’ not one thing alone that is the
-matter. People are ill because they fuss and fuss
-because they are ill. There are some, I think,
-who want a revolution because they are miserable,
-and others who are miserable because they want
-a revolution, another lot who make other people’s
-misfortunes an excuse for making a row and some
-more who put all their misfortunes down to other
-people’s love of making a row. If you take a
-human body in that sort of contradictory mess into
-a doctor’s consulting room, he pays no attention
-to the details, but tells the patient to wash in the
-Ganges or eat a lightly-boiled onion an hour before
-sunset with his back to the north; or else he tries
-psycho-analysis or hypnotism.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, does he?” said Teresa, who was quite
-bewildered by this time.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, he does, and once upon a time it was done
-with incantations and charms, or the fat of a
-dormouse was rubbed under the ear. There was
-Christianity too, with all sorts of by-products in
-the way of Reformations and Crusades—but you
-see my point. A really engrossing superstition
-or a creed with a ritual would be more useful than
-discussing symptoms of national neurasthenia.
-Any idea that is unselfish and clean would do, and
-Bolshevism isn’t either; it is both selfish and
-dirty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>“But you can’t preach unselfishness to the
-unemployed,” Teresa objected, “not, anyhow, so
-long as there are ‘boudoir gowns for my lady when
-she snatches a moment’s rest in her strenuous
-afternoon,’ advertised in the papers. If I were
-an unemployed, I should want to tear my lady in
-pieces, and roll her beastly maid with the sofa
-and the pot of chocolate over and over in the mud
-on the Embankment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s illogical,” said Lady Varens. “I have
-to shut my eyes tight when I see advertisements of
-anything to do with my lady, because I know that
-that sort of indignation is off the line. Communism
-is dreary and crushing and impossible,
-I think; and if you are going to let people keep
-the money they or their fathers make, then you
-must let them alone to spend it as they like. There
-are idiots in every class who chuck money about.
-But, as I say, if you are going to admit freedom to
-inherit and make, you must have freedom to spend
-as well, or else Rule Britannia becomes Rule Bolshevina,
-and my dear friend, the British working
-man, who hates to be hustled, will have to set up
-his apple cart again in some other place.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, it is quite true, it won’t suit him a bit,”
-said Teresa, thinking of Mr. Jason.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I have tried to imagine the very beeriest British
-loafer being made compulsorily drunk at stated
-intervals by a public authority, and I can’t see
-him getting a bit of pleasure out of it. And as for
-being compulsorily busy, and obliged to see nothing
-but good plays, and sent to hear good music—has
-any real Englishman ever devised such a plan,
-or are they all those very unhumorous Huns in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>disguise? Only a nation that wears spectacles
-could picture England as a community with rules,
-except the ordinary policeman rules. But the
-people have got so used to freedom that they may
-let the thing go on and stand watching it like a
-dog fight until it is done and has to be cleaned up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is what Mrs. Vachell said about Evangeline,
-that father wouldn’t interfere about Evan
-until he had actually done something. She said that
-men won’t bother to prevent a thing happening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are you talking about?” said Lady
-Varens.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, I forgot, I was thinking about what you
-said. Evan did rather try to work out theories
-about Ivor and there was a bother that there
-needn’t have been if he and Chips had understood
-each other instead of working separately. However
-that is nothing. I expect they will worry
-through all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, come and see David,” said Lady Varens,
-“and help us to decide what we will do. He is all
-for stopping a muddle before it is too late.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa went home in a tram, among the faces in
-the fog, but she did not notice them. She was
-tired to death by problems and counter problems;
-by desires that seemed to lead straight to a just
-and happy end, and were blocked always, sooner
-or later, by some defect of the quality that engendered
-them. Equality had a way of elbowing
-the grace of respect off the path, social recognition
-bred snobbery and civic responsibility led to
-jobbery, philanthropy grew so easily into impertinence,
-reform into self-righteousness and contentment
-into smugness; there seemed no end to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>fine and stupid ideas that had started along the
-same road. Innocence and discipline fought for
-perfection in every imaginative task. She saw
-a world full of Evans and Evangelines quarrelling
-irreconcilably for ever, like Tweedledum and Tweedledee.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The car trundled and swayed, grinding along
-its rails. The distorted, grotesquely-dressed forms
-that had been made beautiful all these years in
-her imagination by the belief that they were princes
-and princesses in disguise, waiting for the magic
-touch of recognition to restore them to their kingdom,
-failed for the first time to excite her interest.
-The desire which used to entice her with the promise
-of a new world had vanished, and left in its place
-a message rather like the traditional note on the
-pincushion left by the escaping heroine of romance.
-The message said that the only truth on which
-heaven and earth were agreed was that a marriage
-would shortly take place.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She cheered up a little as she looked at the fog-bound
-faces on either side of her, and thought how
-greatly any of them might be improved by loving
-any one as much as she loved David. Another
-still more cheerful idea occurred to her, that perhaps
-they did! Perhaps it was only the mud
-filtering down upon the city that made them look
-so depressed. Inside their minds there might be
-an inextinguishable flame that only needed to
-be kindled to destroy all anger and discontent.
-“I suppose there will always be Evans and Evangelines,”
-she thought, “all the Tweedledums and
-Tweedledees, and they will fight about nothing
-whenever they meet; but if they were really in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>love Evan wouldn’t look for trouble and Evangeline
-wouldn’t try to walk round it; they would go
-through it together as it came. I am glad David
-doesn’t either worry or shirk—but then, of course,
-he wouldn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When she reached home she went up to the
-nursery where Evangeline was putting Ivor to bed,
-it being nurse’s afternoon out. When he was
-tucked up and Evangeline was tidying the nursery,
-Teresa sat down by the fire and said, “I met Lady
-Varens and had tea with her. David is coming
-home in a few days, and they are going to stay with
-Mr. Manley. They are going to make up their
-minds what they will do with Aldwych.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, are they?” said Evangeline. “Do you
-suppose they will go back?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should think quite likely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You look very pleased, Dicky,” said Evangeline,
-looking at her sister’s face in the firelight.
-“I am so glad if it is all right. But Dicky——” she
-hesitated in a frightened way—“you know I
-have no nerves in these days, and I get unnecessary
-panics—, don’t build on his being the same as
-when he went away, will you? You know what
-men are.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Chips, do drop that men and women
-business,” said Teresa wearily. “There are men
-and men and David is David.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know,” she admitted, “but you see Evan is
-also Evan, so I warn you from my experience—quite
-kindly meant, and you are angry, quite
-fairly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think you would like him best to be Evan if
-you loved him,” said Teresa. “He wouldn’t be
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>‘men’ any more, and you wouldn’t compare him
-with yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do love him,” Evangeline answered; “but
-he thinks I don’t because I deceived him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you suppose he doesn’t love you because he
-deceived you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sure he doesn’t, because men—I am sorry,
-I won’t say it. But he is always talking about
-‘women’ too. In fact, he began.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you know, as I was coming up in the tram
-it occurred to me how like Tweedledum and Tweedledee
-you two are, and now what you say makes you
-more absurdly like. They never knew which began
-the quarrels. You need a ‘monstrous crow’ to
-send you both flying into one another’s arms. Of
-course if you were in a book Ivor would have a
-dangerous illness or something silly like that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That would only make us hate each other more
-because he would say that God did it for our good,
-and I should say that God was sorry the devil
-did it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And suppose Ivor died, whose doing would you
-say it was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No one’s doing at all. But I should say the
-devil made the germs and that God did nothing,
-except that He was glad to have Ivor back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am sure that is very bad theology,” said
-Teresa, “You can’t have Badness with a definite
-intention and Goodness without any.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why not? Intentions mean brains and theories
-and I do loathe them more than I can tell you.
-I’m content with things that are alive and perfect;
-I mean without diseases and sins. One doesn’t
-need any intention for loving the sun and everything
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>that I call ‘God.’ But Evan sets his brain
-humming and buzzing like a factory to make up
-the awful Moloch of a creature that he worships.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is very odd,” said Teresa, “how people
-have always been more annoyed by each other’s
-religions than by anything else. I am myself.
-I could put up with Mrs. Carpenter’s face, if it
-were not for the things she says about the Church.
-But there we go again! I suppose if a monstrous
-crow could frighten quarrellers apart a monstrous
-dove might prevent them from fighting; but I
-don’t know, and there would probably be some
-drawback to that too; there always is. I am
-going to meet David next week.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You know, I can’t go on living at home for
-ever,” said Evangeline. “I shall have to arrange
-something when all this business is over, and what
-am I going to tell people? I can’t keep an unexplained
-husband in the background all my life.
-Just think of it! Very little money, no man, no
-father for the children and no explanation to give.
-I shall have to become a paid agitator in self-defence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“To agitate about what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, anything. Mrs. Vachell belongs to all
-sorts of societies. I might help to run a paper.
-I’ve always liked papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know you have,” said Teresa. “I
-think, Chips, if you hadn’t sat so comfortably in
-the sun, and been content with sensations you might
-have found out more for yourself. Isn’t that why
-we called you ‘Chips,’ just because you were always
-picking up bits of information? I always think of
-toast and newspapers when I remember you as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>my elder sister in the nursery. Either with toast
-and newspapers by the fire or else out in the garden
-when you ought to have been somewhere else.
-Do you remember when you brought in a worm
-when we were away in the country, and you put
-it on a doll’s chair on the tea-table, and tried to
-make it sit up, and Miss Jacks came in? But to
-go back to your newspaper; you can’t do that.
-Do wait until you are well again, and then go
-away from Mrs. Vachell, and write to Evan. I
-am not sure you hadn’t better leave your family
-with nurse and me somewhere, and go to Egypt
-yourself; but, anyhow, it will be all right. I
-have told you things are always happening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Evan’s sisters are another problem,” Evangeline
-said presently. “They don’t know anything
-yet, but they keep on wanting Ivor to go there,
-and when they do find out they will do everything
-they can to get him taken away from me. They
-will think I am an active danger if I differ from
-Evan in any way. And they are so silly with
-Ivor. They do spoil him so.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I think that is awfully funny,” said Teresa.
-“Doesn’t it amuse you if you think of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean because Evan complains of me
-spoiling him? But then, you see, I don’t and they
-do. You never saw such drivel as they carry on.
-Ivor gets quite imbecile when he is there; he hardly
-seems the same. It isn’t gaiety, it is a sort of
-orgie of pranks; like those wearisome film comedies
-where a lot of people slip up on a piece of soap,
-and get covered with whitewash and food. Really
-when I am staying there I often feel like asking the
-cook to shoot me into the dining-room by the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>hatch and fling a basin of custard after me just
-so as not to damp the party.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Doesn’t Evan mind that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, he doesn’t, because it is something that
-can be explained. It doesn’t amuse him, but he
-can pigeon-hole it as ‘all good girls’’ way of amusing
-themselves. It has nothing to do with him,
-but it is a necessary cog in the machinery of a nice
-family so he can get on with something else while
-they do it. It is almost like a domestic rite. But
-when I enjoy myself he thinks it is moral indulgence
-because it isn’t planned out and it isn’t tiring.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know how father gets on so well with
-all sorts of different people,” said Teresa. “It
-never seems to bother him if they don’t understand
-what he is talking about. He never tries to explain
-himself or cares whether they agree with him or
-not.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I daresay, but then he has only got himself
-to bother about,” said Evangeline. “If he had
-to protect us from a wife with high principles it
-might make him think a bit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa dreaded telling her mother about the
-Varens’ return. Experience has taught me that
-there are many painstaking minds who will come
-to a knot at this point, and want to be told why
-any young girl with a clear conscience should
-dread to tell so amiable and good a mother that an
-eligible young man, dear to them both, has returned
-to the neighbourhood. But it cannot be made
-quite clear to all readers. The nearest thing that
-can be said is that perhaps if Susie had been known
-to approve less of the possibility with which Teresa
-was secretly aglow, the girl would have been less
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>anxious to keep it to herself. “Alice in Wonderland”
-is full of the everyday experience of simple people,
-and in one of those irrational gambollings of the
-female mind which have been referred to on another
-page I seem to see Susie represented by the kindly
-Dodo who said to Alice after she had won the race,
-“I beg your acceptance of this elegant thimble,”
-and presented her with her own property. Teresa
-was as straight-forward as Alice, and liked things
-to work out logically, so she resented being led up
-to her lover, as much as she disliked hearing Mrs.
-Carpenter instruct Mrs. Potter in the art of patience.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She decided now that the dangerous moment could
-be most successfully faced under Cyril’s protection,
-so she announced at dinner, “I met Lady Varens
-to-day, and they are both coming back, probably
-for good.” She made the news sound as gossipy
-and impersonal as she could, and shot a rapid glance
-at her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am glad to hear that,” he replied. “The
-Perkin Warbecks can now resume their normal
-occupations.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who are they?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know who they were, but I remember
-being sent to bed because I didn’t know that they
-aspired to the throne. I’ve remembered their
-beastly names ever since.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“They are staying with Mr. Manley,” Teresa
-went on, “at least she is, and David is going there
-next week. I promised to go to dinner one evening,
-so I can tell them about the Perkin Warbecks. It
-is nice to think how pleased the farmers will be,
-isn’t it?” She felt some pride in the way she was
-conducting this affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>“Very nice, dear,” said Susie quietly. “Do you
-know at all how he got on in the Argentine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, she didn’t say,” Teresa answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought perhaps you might have heard
-sometimes,” said Susie. “So often out in those
-lonely places people are so glad of posts, and they
-write and tell one all sorts of things about themselves,
-just with the idea of getting an answer. I
-remember I had a cousin who used to write dreadfully
-dull letters all about the country and then
-strings and strings of questions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa need not have been afraid. Her mother
-did, as Evangeline had pointed out, achieve what
-seemed like conjuring tricks in the lives of other
-people, but she only prepared spiritual omelets in
-places where no omelet was likely to be made in the
-ordinary way. Having satisfied herself now that
-Teresa had been completely cut off from David
-while he was away and was full of suppressed excitement
-at his return, she was too great an artist in
-mystery to use apparatus when the laws of nature
-were already operating in the direction she wished.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Three days after this was Christmas Day, and
-both Susie and Teresa had a busy day before them.
-Susie was to attend a tea and distribution of useful
-Christmas presents to the inmates of the Mary
-Popley Home, and Teresa was to help serve dinner
-to some hundreds of street urchins, members of
-one of the many organisations with which Emma’s
-devoted band worked ceaselessly and hopefully,
-undeterred by rumours of class war or theories
-about the reconstruction of the State. Emma’s
-workers got on with the business of cleaning the city
-as best they could, while Fisk, the people’s friend,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>raved of blood and destruction, and then went home
-to tend his dormice. Teresa’s post was at the end
-of a trestle table with nearly fifty boys on each side.
-She was buttoned up to the neck in an overall;
-her face was hot from the stove beside her and from
-the crowded atmosphere; her head felt bursting
-from the smell of poor homes and the clapper of
-voices; her feet were icy from the draught along
-the wooden floor which was only separated from the
-street by an open door and a long stone passage. In
-front of her was a gigantic hot-pot, replaced by
-another as soon as empty. She held in her hand a
-long iron spoon, greasy from top to bottom and
-heavy to wield. At her elbow were a pile of plates,
-which were snatched up and borne away by other
-helpers as fast as she filled them. There were three
-tables altogether, and the same thing was happening
-at both ends of each. Other people, visitors and
-members of the committee, stood about the room
-and looked on, giving a hand with any extra job
-that was needed. When the last plate was filled
-Teresa had a moment in which to look at the faces
-down the table. They were all faces from behind
-the fog, but they were young, and the Great Depression
-(as she called the public expression of
-countenance when she first came to Millport) had
-not yet reached them. Many of them were pale
-and pinched, many were apple-faced, some fat and
-white, but they were all young and as free as
-squirrels. They bore marks of cold and hunger,
-some of them of cruelty and disease, every single
-one of them had a cold in the head and took no
-notice of it. “The plum pudding, Miss——. May
-I pass?” said a voice beside her, and, as she moved,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>a monstrous pudding was put before her and the
-helpers pawed the ground in their impatience to be
-off with the plates. Teresa doled out great helpings
-of the stuff as fast as she could, grasping her heavy
-spoon with both hands. Once more she had time
-to look at the boys. They were not talking now;
-they were stuffing, and they had said all they had to
-say to their neighbours. She saw one of them
-deposit a large tablespoonful of the pudding in a
-pocket of his little age-worn waistcoat, and in the
-horror of the moment she exclaimed, “Child! what
-on earth are you doing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It’s for me granny,” he said, “she’s sick.”
-Teresa experienced the upheaval of mind and body
-that used to shake her with a general sense of topsy-turvydom
-when she first took up Emma’s work,
-and which she had nearly lost during the last years.
-She remembered Ivor as she had left him that
-morning, happily engaged in discussion on seasonable
-topics of revelry, she thought of dirty little faces
-assembled outside toyshops lighted up early on
-account of the penetrating fog; she had a vision
-of the Price family in paper caps seated among a
-débris of hothouse dessert and wine and coffee and
-expensive trifles in leather and gold, recently unwrapped
-from parcels, each “novelty” designed
-to save small discomforts, such as the lighting of a
-match or the turn of a head to see the time; she
-thought of Evan’s sisters, giggling happily beneath
-banners that advertised Peace and Goodwill, and of
-Fisk at the other end of the Christmas dinner-table,
-gloomily contemplating his father’s mésalliance, the
-Gainsboroughs’ old cook who never could cook
-anything decently, and who had now become the last
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>straw on all that an unjust government had heaped
-upon him at his birth. Teresa’s mind, which had
-by now established David in its background as a
-referee in all debated questions, recalled at this
-moment her first visit to Aldwych and her self-reproach
-for having eaten the price of Albert
-Potter’s splints. “I have been along that road,”
-David had said, “and it leads nowhere except to a
-maze where you lose yourself and die for want of a
-new argument.” “David!” she cried now, in her
-heart, “David! get me out of this and take me
-with you, if you know where you are going.”</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Susie, meanwhile, was performing prodigies of peace
-and goodwill at the Mary Popley Home. She
-radiated the most suitable atmosphere that a lady
-visitor to a rescue home could possibly have evolved
-after years of thought, and she did it without any
-thought at all! The “inmates,” as they were
-called, and as we will call them for want of a less
-lively word, literally basked in her smile. Grave
-kindness they were accustomed to; breeziness they
-knew to satiety; Mrs. Abel’s generous pity almost
-inconvenienced them; but Susie’s veil of aloofness
-from everything real wrapped them in gossamer
-of the angels who have no bodies. “Isn’t she a
-nice lady?” they said among themselves, feeling
-that, where she was, neither shame nor hope of
-doing well eventually, nor gratitude for tolerance
-would be expected of them. “It must be nice to be
-a lady and able to do what yer like without any ’arm
-coming of it,” was what they mostly thought, in
-place of the bitter reflections that stung them in the
-presence of Mrs. Carpenter. “What does she know
-about it?” they were used to mutter, when that
-excellent visitor explained to them the duties of
-self-respect, the necessity for self-control, the joys
-of home that they had forfeited, and the useful-even-though-damaged
-lives they might yet lead.
-“That there Jack, I used to tell you about, would
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>’ave taught ’er what for,” was a favourite comment
-of one of them after these occasions. “Telling us
-as men is what we makes them, and ’adn’t ought to
-be encouraged! ’E don’t want much encouragin’,
-she’d find, if she got ’im ’ome, in spite of ’er face.”
-It seems almost a pity that this inmate could not
-have heard Susie second the vote of thanks to the
-committee at the Town Hall; for one feels that
-justice was hardly done to Mrs. Carpenter, while
-Susie, who had said the same thing in other words,
-was so much admired. But that, of course, was
-never known, and probably if it had been, her
-manner and her expression would have caused a
-different interpretation to be put upon her words.
-The inmates would have pictured themselves as
-partakers in a scene of innocent pleasure, ended in
-sorrow by the devil, while Mrs. Carpenter only
-succeeded in offending them by the suggestion of
-mischief done to an honest fellow.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’Ain’t she a nice lady!” they repeated in admiration.
-“I do like ’er ’at, and the way it is done at
-the back. Just pass my cup up along there,
-Veronica, would you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Give old pasty-face something to do for ’er
-living,” said Veronica, as she passed the cup up
-the line, to where the under-matron was presiding
-over the urns.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You know, some of them are such nice girls,”
-Mrs. Abel was saying enthusiastically to Susie at
-the same moment. “I can’t tell you what splendid
-natures they have. That one down there—Veronica
-Baker—it’s the saddest history, but I won’t tell
-you now. She is simply devoted to the baby—such
-a darling it is—and I am hoping to get her a really
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>good job where she can keep it with her. It is with
-her mother at present.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do hope the old woman is good to it,” said
-Susie. “It would be terrible if anything happened
-to it while the mother is here. That is the worst
-of Homes I always think, although they are so
-necessary and splendid in every way. But so few
-of them are able to arrange to keep the mothers
-and children together, and it does separate them so
-in cases where it isn’t possible. Don’t you think
-there is that about them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but then what can one do?” said Mrs.
-Abel a little sadly. “One can’t leave them to go
-on with the life, and in many cases it is better that
-the child should be sent to some place that is known
-to be all right, so that the mother may not be
-hampered in finding work. It goes against them
-very much with some people if the child is seen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I do think,” said Susie, “that if the girls could be
-got to see before they go so far what will happen if
-they do, it might prevent them. It seems to me
-sadder than any amount of difficulty in making
-ends meet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, indeed, it does,” said Mrs. Abel, greatly
-touched, poor little thing. “When I think of
-my own home and how difficult things are just
-now, and yet how we have been kept from all
-unhappiness, I think I hardly know how to be
-thankful enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It must be so delightful to have your husband
-with you in everything,” Susie said with a little
-sigh. “It must make up for any anxiety. If one
-is thoroughly understood nothing else matters.
-I was so glad you did so well with the sale of work
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>in the summer. Drink is really another of the
-worst problems, I think. Do you find many in your
-Home are any better?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, it is impossible to say whether any of
-them are really cured,” said Mrs. Abel. “But a
-great many have gone out and kept steady for
-several years, and now and then we hear from
-them that they are doing well. But of course some
-of them relapse and then they sometimes come back
-for a time. But if we get them quite early on I
-believe there is every chance of their keeping
-straight. Only it is so difficult to persuade them
-to come in then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What a pity it is that wine was ever invented,”
-said Susie. “I can’t think what people want with
-it. It only makes them noisy and stupid; not
-really cheerful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think it is wine that matters,” said
-Mrs. Abel. “In fact a little of it would do them
-good if they could get it. It is the beer and spirits
-that are so bad, because they take such quantities
-of beer and so little spirits affects them, especially
-the stuff they can afford. My husband doesn’t at
-all believe in actual teetotalism, except as a help
-to those who can’t keep away from it. The doctor
-says a glass of port would do him all the good in
-the world in the evening, but I can’t get him to
-take it, just for the sake of the example.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How splendid of him!” Susie exclaimed.
-“I wish I could persuade my husband to set the
-example to his men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You see, it is the evenings that are such a
-temptation,” Mrs. Abel went on. “Their homes
-are so dreadfully uncomfortable, with the children
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>all about and everything in a mess and nothing to
-do. Of course they prefer the public-houses and
-the clubs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But if the children went to bed in proper time
-and the wives kept their sewing until the evening
-it would be quite simple,” Susie declared. “They
-seem to have no idea of time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Still, I know myself that it is not easy to have
-everything straight by the evening,” Mrs. Abel
-sighed. “Now my little maid has gone and I
-have everything to do for the children, besides the
-house and the parish, I find it very difficult to be
-all neat and good tempered, and ready to listen to
-my husband, though I am longing to hear all about
-his day. And then, you see, very often with those
-people the children have nowhere to sleep except
-the living-room, and there is hardly room for them
-all to sit round—and perhaps no fire—and if there
-is illness—and they have no occupations to keep
-them quiet. And besides, some of the houses you
-really can’t make clean or cheerful, and if the man
-does get good wages for a time it all goes as soon as
-there is unemployment or if he meets with an
-accident; the insurance doesn’t cover it all. At
-least I know my husband will get his stipend whatever
-happens, and people are very kind and good.
-We were so touched by the amount of the Easter
-Offering this year, although it is such a poor parish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Fulton, would you like to come and see
-the distribution of presents?” said the matron,
-advancing to Susie with a smile that she did her
-best to make genial. Long years of bringing the
-passions of other people into line had made it
-difficult for her to relax at different milestones of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>the Almanack into the requirements of a moral
-armistice.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Susie followed her into the next room, where a
-small Christmas tree was glimmering and dropping
-wax on to a table; round it, piled high, were parcels
-with the forbiddingly soft contours that betray
-to the experienced eye the presence of wool in
-unattractive shapes. Two smiling men with eyeglasses
-and gay waistcoats, and Mr. Abel, well-bred,
-shabby, harassed, devoted and obviously in need
-of port wine, stood by with sponges, ready to quench
-any untoward splutterings between the dim flames
-and the branches on which they drooped. Festoons
-of tinselled cotton hung between the pine needles
-which still smelled of the forest, and on the top
-spike, precariously inclined, was a cardboard Father
-Christmas with frosted boots and a face like Mr.
-Price after dinner. The inmates crowded round,
-murmuring among themselves in drawling exclamations
-peculiar to the class who spend so much of
-their lives as onlookers at all kinds of pageantry.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Eh, luk!” they said. “H’m—yes, it is, i’nt
-it! eh, to be sure! See, Lily, the li’l moonkey wi’
-th’ baal in its mouth! See Father Christmas?
-Where? Eh, yes, a see ’im. Seems a pity there
-a’nt no children here to see it. What’s the good
-of it?” A terrific sniff raised the speaker’s nose
-in wrinkles almost into her low-growing hair.
-“Eh, luk! the parcel! ’tis for the paarson!”
-Roars of laughter broke out while Mr. Abel unwrapped
-a neat silver cigar-cutter and sought in
-vain for words that should combine truth with the
-idea that it was the thing he was most in need of.
-Mrs. Abel received a pocket manicure case, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>matron was delighted with Miss Gilworth’s <cite>Outlook
-of the Saints</cite>, the under-matron had a sponge,
-“specially designed for continental use,” and the
-rest of the staff were given various articles ranging
-from penwipers to plaster dogs with one eye bandaged.
-The proceedings ended with a carol, in
-which Susie joined with her very kindest expression
-and a most delicate voice, reinforced by the powerful
-bass of one of the gentlemen with eyeglasses who
-was a member of Mr. Abel’s choir. Mr. Abel moved
-a vote of thanks in his high-pitched Oxford plaint,
-and soon after a piercing wind from the front door
-and a hum of voices and flutter of aprons in the
-passage betokened that the Mary Popley inmates
-would be left to their own reflections on a year that
-was about to slink away like a defaulter with the
-happiness they had invested.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline’s daughter was born between Christmas
-and the New Year. Teresa arrived home late
-from her dinner at Mr. Manley’s and was met by
-Strickland looking as if she were about to perform
-some religious rite. Her cap lay across her head
-at an angle that gave her a slightly mystic appearance,
-her eyes were full of indefinite purpose and
-her mouth was set tight.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you got toothache again, you poor
-thing?” Teresa exclaimed the moment she saw her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, Miss Teresa; it’s <em>that</em>,” Strickland replied
-in a hushed voice. “We’ve got the nurse, and the
-doctor is coming along now. Mrs. Fulton is upstairs,
-but I was to tell you there’s nothing to worry
-about and you was to go into the General’s study.
-I’ll bring you a cup of tea and then you’ll go to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>bed. It’ll be all over in the morning, you’ll see.
-You’ll not hinder me by worrying, now, will you?
-For I’ve the kettles to see to and all.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“N—no,” said Teresa rather doubtfully. “I
-won’t hinder you anyhow, old lady. Go on with
-your fussing and don’t mind me. But I wish you
-would come and tell me when it is there. I don’t
-suppose I shall be asleep.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you will, then, Miss Teresa, or I shall be
-angry. No, I mean it. You’ll be doing very wrong
-if you’re not asleep. The General is in the study,
-if you’ll go up now, so I needn’t keep up the drawing-room
-fire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Strickland—here a moment,” said Teresa,
-pulling her into the darkened drawing-room. “Just
-tell me before you go. Is it very, very awful?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, Miss Teresa, of course it isn’t,” she replied
-quite angrily, shaking herself away. “My brother’s
-wife thinks nothing of it. It’s what we’ve all
-got to go through—unless it’s a poor thing like me
-that has no one. And there’s the nurse and doctor
-and everything she can want. There’s a great
-many that hasn’t——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, yes, yes, I know,” Teresa interrupted.
-“I shall stop my ears if you say any more of that.
-I’ve finished with it. I’m not going to hear any
-more until I can begin again. Strickland, I’m
-engaged; but please don’t tell them downstairs.
-I want to do it myself when it is all over. Only
-I am so happy I had to tell you; and now I have
-come home to be so frightened. Never mind; you
-see, I am not in the least worried. I’m going up.
-And about twelve o’clock I shall go to my room—and
-take off all my clothes—and go to bed—and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>put my head on the pillow—Oh, Strickland, you
-are an ass, aren’t you? How do you suppose I
-am going to sleep? Well, good-night.” She ran
-upstairs very quietly and went into the study.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril was sitting by the fire, smoking and reading.
-He looked round as she came in and said, “Well,
-did you have a good time? I suppose they’ve
-told you about Chips?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she said. “I shan’t go to bed yet if
-you are not going. We’ll wait together if you like.
-And, Father—I saw David.” She brought a chair
-up to the fire.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And did he see you?” Cyril inquired. “You
-please my eye very much when you are happy and
-you’ve been a withered little object lately.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, that is really about all about it,” she
-said. “I’ve stopped withering. You do like David,
-don’t you, Father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’m devoted to him,” Cyril answered. “Do I
-understand that you have fixed it up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she answered. “Oh, Father, listen,
-what was that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I didn’t hear anything,” he said, rather
-hastily, “but there’s a devil of a draught up
-those back stairs. I think I’ll shut the passage
-door.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll do it,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, stay where you are.” He went out, shutting
-the door after him, shut the passage door that led
-to the top storey and met Strickland coming up.
-“Keep that door shut, would you?” he said.
-“Miss Teresa’s in there; and don’t worry her to
-go to bed. I’ll send her when I think it is a good
-plan.” He went back to the study.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>“Was that Strickland you were talking to?”
-she asked. “There’s nothing wrong, is there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, but I can’t do with her damned singing. I
-told her to wait until the Philharmonic was open.
-Now then, tell us all about it, Dicky; that is, as
-much of it as you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you see, I refused him before,” she began
-slowly. “He wouldn’t combine with what I was
-doing and I wouldn’t give it up——” She stopped,
-and Cyril poured himself out a glass of whiskey.
-“Have some?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Now you know, dear, that is silly,” said Teresa.
-“I don’t want to take to drink because I am going
-to be married—— Oh, father, what is that?
-Something is bothering me—is there a wind or
-something? It was quite still when I came
-back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Cyril hesitated a moment and then said, “You’re
-not the woman your mother is. She thought me
-very foolish—I am not sure she didn’t say very
-wrong—for spending the night in the Turkish bath
-when you were born. I should be there now if
-you weren’t at home, but if you are going to sit
-there behaving like some damned fox-terrier whenever
-a door opens I shall have to get out the car and
-drive you round till we both freeze.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“All right,” she said. “I am sorry, but I didn’t
-know what it was. I just felt creepy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>They heard the front door slam.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That’s the doctor,” said Cyril. “Now you can
-go ahead. The pilot is on board and a tot of rum
-will be served to all those in favour. I wish you
-would have some.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I am going to have tea presently,” she said.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>“I do wish you wouldn’t interrupt. I was going
-to tell you why I changed my mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes?” he said, encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let’s see. You see, the thing is like this. I
-think David started with the same idea that I did
-and I don’t know exactly what happened but he
-found that he hadn’t enough brains for argument,
-so he studied fox-hunting which he had always had
-a passion for, only he got slightly mixed like I did
-about people who live in towns. He is really very
-sensitive about cruelty, and his father gave him
-such a lot of money at college that when he found
-anyone who wanted it he gave like anything; and
-when you have once begun doing that in person,
-not just by subscription, it is very difficult not to
-feel that you ought to be earning some instead.
-But anyhow that is what he did. And then he had
-to go to Aldwych to help his father who wasn’t well,
-and then he got interested in the land and he met
-some people who wanted experiments done—I
-forget what in—and who couldn’t afford to do
-them; and, it is very odd, but he seems to find out
-more by common sense than I ever should by
-working and working at an idea, trying to make it
-fit whatever happens, because it never does. As
-soon as one stops worrying and works at whatever
-one can do best, the idea one had tried to fit on to
-all sorts of contradictions seems suddenly to grow
-up out of the middle of one’s work, with a root
-fastened to all the different things it wouldn’t fit
-before. It is impossible to explain but I assure you
-you would have found that happen if you had ever
-had an idea of any sort or done any work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should like to direct your next piece of purposeless
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>labour to respecting the forces of the
-Crown a little if you can,” said Cyril. “I’m damned!
-No ideas and no work! Do you know who I am?
-I suppose your mother is right. Marriage does
-mean something to a girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why? What?” she asked in bewilderment.
-“What have I said?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go on, my love; don’t let me interrupt you,”
-he said. Strickland came in with some tea and a
-plate of sandwiches. “I suppose it is no good
-offering you tea, sir?” she inquired.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, thank you, I have got everything I want,”
-he answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am coming to bed in a few minutes,” Teresa
-said, nodding to her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Strickland looked appealingly at Cyril and hesitated.
-“You’d better stay here a bit I think,” he
-said. “You won’t sleep after that stuff.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh yes, I shall. I’m awfully sleepy,” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Strickland pulled herself together and cleared
-her throat. “I’m sorry, Miss Teresa,” she said
-boldly, “but there’s been a slight accident in your
-room. Your hot water bottle leaked, and the bed
-was wet through so I’ve taken the things down to
-the fire. I’ll tell you as soon as they are dry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Very well; but goodness, how late it is!”
-Teresa said as she glanced at the clock. “Nearly
-one. Has mother gone to bed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not yet,” said Strickland. “She’ll be down
-by-and-by. You’ll see her if you wait a little.”
-She shut the door and Teresa settled herself again
-in the armchair with her tea. “The Prices have got
-Aldwych for another six months,” she said, “but
-David thought perhaps if we were married in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>spring I might go out with him to see his place over
-there and help him to settle up, and then come back
-when they leave. I shouldn’t so much mind leaving
-all of it if I didn’t go straight from Emma’s office
-to a house with hot towel rails and pheasant for
-breakfast and a peach house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, we all have our troubles, but I feel if I
-were given my choice that that is the one I could
-face with most courage,” said Cyril. “I could tear
-myself away from Emma’s office more resolutely
-than from almost any luxury I know. But then I
-can’t live up to your friend Mrs. Vachell, who hunts
-with George Washington and runs with Ananias
-from a sense of duty. I admit I wasn’t happy in the
-office when you took me there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What are we going to do with Chips when she
-gets well?” said Teresa. “I can’t bear to go away
-and leave her here. Mrs. Vachell would get her
-altogether in time and mother wouldn’t be any good.
-Mother thinks that when she says what fine creatures
-women are and all that, and when Mrs. Vachell
-begins on the same subject, they both mean the same
-thing. But they don’t. Did you know that? Mrs.
-Vachell is quite serious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I knew that,” he answered. “She told
-me herself that nothing was too bad to do in the
-cause of the noblest of God’s creatures, and a woman
-in that frame of mind is always beyond a joke.
-You can’t get it into their heads that there are
-certain things that are not done, such as vitriol and
-so on. Not that I have heard of any of them doing
-that, but she seemed to be speaking inclusively.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, that sort of thing isn’t a bit like her. Really
-father, it isn’t. I only meant that the more depressed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>Chips gets about being away from Evan
-the more Mrs. Vachell uses it to make it impossible
-for her ever to go back. Chips is quite right in
-saying that she can’t live here. It would be so
-dreary for her and she hates having no explanation
-for it. People will think that either she or Evan
-have done something bad. And it is cruel to think
-of her without a man for the rest of her life; it is
-far worse than being a widow. I don’t think either
-you or mother have realised that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It hadn’t, as you say, occurred to me that they
-wouldn’t finish it up sometime. I hope marriage
-doesn’t mean too much to her after all. I have
-always supposed that so long as people mind their
-own business there is very little to complain of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>As he stopped speaking, a long, high-pitched
-sound, seeming to come from nowhere in particular
-and too faint to be more than just audible, rose,
-grew and died away again. Teresa turned white and
-looked at her father with frightened, questioning
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Was it a lie that Strickland told me about my
-hot bottle?” she asked. “Didn’t she want me to
-go up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I expect not,” said Cyril. “You can’t do
-anything. Would you like me to get the car out?
-We can wrap up quite warm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, what is the good of running away,” she
-answered. “I have got to know. But Strickland
-said it was nothing. She was quite indignant and
-was going to tell me that there are people who
-aren’t as well looked after as Chips, but I wouldn’t
-listen. Let’s go on talking. I do so want to get
-out of this mess of pity on to a road that leads
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>somewhere. It is like being for ever shot at and
-hurt by something you can’t see. Strickland is
-wrong. Evidently in the main things one person
-suffers as much as another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve often told you you were worrying unnecessarily,”
-said Cyril. “I am sorry we didn’t
-send you away just now, but I never thought of it
-and your mother doesn’t descend to details much,
-as you know. She takes the most alarming things
-as a matter of course. I believe she was born a
-favourite of the gods. I found out the other day
-that she has never had a tooth out. I was away
-when Chips was born and, as I told you, I spent
-the night of your arrival in the Turkish bath, so I
-don’t know what happened; but it wouldn’t surprise
-me in the least to hear she slept through it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door opened and Susie came in. As she stood
-there for a moment a smell unknown to Teresa came
-in with the air from the passage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What! are you two still here?” she said in the
-gently reproving tone she used when any of them
-did anything not wholly normal. “Why didn’t you
-go to bed, Teresa dear? I told Strickland to tell
-you not to worry. I hope you weren’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no,” she replied, “it wasn’t that. I got
-your message, but I’m not sleepy. What is that
-odd smell?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just a little something the doctor used to give
-her some sleep,” said Susie. “I think I shall wait
-here until he comes down.” She had left the door
-open and Teresa sat tense and agonised, dreading
-the sound that might come again at any moment.
-But everything was quiet. Strickland shuffled down
-the back stairs and shut the kitchen door. Cyril
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>got up and shut the door of the study and drew up
-another chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, and how did your dinner go off?” Susie
-asked. “Did you see David?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Teresa. “He—he enjoyed himself
-very much in the Argentine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How nice. And is he going back or is he going
-to take up Aldwych again? I do hope he will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” she said still more nervously. “Yes—we
-are going to take it up together—we arranged—I
-hope you don’t mind. I got a little worried with
-Chips and everything, or I should have told you.
-I really came home to tell you—I——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My darling, I quite understand,” said Susie.
-“Don’t trouble to explain. I am so glad that you
-have come to see what a dear fellow he is. I always
-told you he was a great deal nicer than you thought;
-but you wouldn’t believe me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa’s just feeling of indignation gave way to a
-second thought that she had much rather her mother
-supposed her not to have cared for David before,
-than that she should suspect her of having listened
-to wisdom on the subject of a prudent marriage.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And so that is all settled!” Susie continued,
-warming her toes peacefully. “And when dear
-Evangeline is strong again we must make another
-effort to put that right. And then we shall have
-nothing left to wish for, shall we? Evan is a silly
-fellow, really. I wish he were here now; it might
-bring it home to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How, Mother?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I mean that he might see that women have quite
-enough to go through without being teased about
-their children when they have got them. All those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>stupid rules and that kind of thing! Really, you
-know, I think that anyone who has had a child—I
-mean any woman, of course,—deserves to be let
-alone. Now those poor women I saw last week——.
-I don’t know that it is a very nice subject for you,
-Teresa, but as you have taken to work among the
-poor you are bound to hear of it, and you are going
-to be married yourself—what I was going to say
-is that those poor women I saw at Christmas have
-been most foolish, there is no doubt, and the law
-ought to oblige the men to marry them. But if it
-won’t do that, at least it might be made more easy
-for the mother to keep the child with her instead of
-her living alone with that matron, who I am sure,
-is extremely kind, but with such a cross face. The
-poor little child has to be brought up elsewhere
-because the mother has lost her character! Men
-lose their characters quickly enough in the public-house,
-and no one says anything. They are allowed
-to take the bottle home with them, too, and it is not
-thought a disgrace, although they do it deliberately.
-Whereas a child——” She paused, becoming
-suddenly aware that Cyril’s eye was fixed on her
-with delighted interest. “Cyril, dear,” she said,
-“are you sure you want to wait up? There is really
-no need.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wouldn’t miss a word, Sue, I assure you,” he
-said politely. “Dicky, pass me the syphon, would
-you?” Teresa passed it, and said nothing. No
-one spoke for a short time, and then a bell rang upstairs
-and another sound, a sort of rapid, angry
-mewing, was heard as Susie opened the door of the
-study and Strickland vanished up the stairs. Susie
-disappeared into the passage and presently Strickland
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>ran down again. “It’s a dear little girl, sir,
-the doctor says,” she remarked, thrusting her head
-round the study door, “and now you get to bed, Miss
-Teresa, please, while I get a cup of something for the
-nurse. The doctor will be pleased to join you, sir,
-presently, but he won’t stop to have nothing but a
-glass of wine and a biscuit. He’s got another case
-waiting for him he says.” She disappeared before
-Teresa had grasped the wonderful details of her
-déshabille. This was indeed a new Strickland,
-or at least one unknown to the family. “My
-brother’s wife” and Evangeline were one and indivisible
-in Strickland’s heart that night.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Lady Varens and David stayed for some weeks
-with Mr. Manley, and then took a furnished cottage
-by the sea, at a place not far from Millport. It was
-a place of everlasting winds, sandy as the desert,
-flat as a tablecloth, ugly as every other nest of the
-speculative builder. It is true that the owners of
-the land had imposed restrictions on the invaders,
-but the only result of this was to make a certain
-style of architecture a duty, instead of an unfortunate
-occurrence, so the town had as little chance of achieving
-beauty as a society for the suppression of
-marriage would have of evolving true love. The
-little caskets of the home, that were dumped down
-in groups along the shore, roofed to excess in the
-prevailing fashion, neatly gardened with rock plants
-that could not blow away and might be disinterred
-from an avalanche of sand without obvious
-damage, were designed to catch the greatest possible
-quantity of ozone. Painstaking mothers, whose
-husbands were occupied in Millport, immured themselves
-heroically there all the year round for the good
-of their offspring, who rewarded them by thriving
-exceedingly on the hurricanes of health that swept
-along the mud flats. The tide rose from time to
-time—generally in the night—, took a rapid survey
-of the villas, and fled back into the distant sea.
-Squadrons of perambulators were marched daily
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>along the most exposed part of the shore, which the
-speculative builder had kindly laid with asphalt
-for the purpose. There, prevented by stout iron
-railings from being blown into the sea, the mothers
-and sisters and aunts and nurses of young Millport
-wrestled up and down twice a day, their skirts lashed
-impedingly against their knees or their calves,
-according to whether they were going to or coming
-from, the butcher. Their faces were set with a
-permanent expression of having been blown crooked,
-nose slightly aslant and a little richer in tone on one
-side than the other, eyes half closed to keep out the
-volleying sand, ears all but inside out, and the mouth
-set at the gasp, owing to the nostrils having been
-banged to as soon as the owner struggled out of her
-front door; heads were mostly a little on one side,
-cocked to meet the shouts of a succession of acquaintances
-all endeavouring to hear whether Reggie
-would come to tea with Edna on Thursday or Friday,
-or whether the bridge party began at three or four.
-But then, as the inhabitants say when strangers
-are critical about the place, “we do have such
-beautiful sunsets. They say it is something phosphorescent
-about the mud.” So there’s always
-something either way to keep the balance between
-good and evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Lady Varens took one of the villas for a few
-months. The place more nearly resembled country
-than any other in the neighbourhood where she
-could get a house; it was at least in the open air,
-or rather, as she said, in an open draught, and the
-mud stayed where it was, instead of going up into
-the sky and down again all the time. The sun shone
-a little when it was anywhere handy, and one could
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>smell the sea, and even see it for a few minutes if
-one looked sharp about it. There was a golf course,
-and a train to bring Teresa and anyone else who had
-sufficient patience and a solid enough frame to hold
-together during the requisite period. Maids were
-found who, being attached by love to the butcher’s
-assistants, were willing to oblige a titled lady to
-whom money was no object. The villa was designed
-for a large family and attendants, so when Evangeline
-was well again, Lady Varens asked her to stay
-for a time with the children; she persuaded her
-that it would be good for them to be blown into the
-state of solidity that comes to the young of that
-scourging place from constant tossing between the
-consuming ozone and the replenishing butcher.
-Evangeline accepted, and at the end of a week or
-two the shadow of Millport and all the human
-vexatiousness which had darkened the last months
-for her began to stir and rise, taking with it her
-newspaper problems, Mrs. Vachell’s sphinxery and
-the episodes of her life at Drage that were stored in
-her recollection like toys broken in a long-forgotten
-quarrel. The dear inanities of that time were
-like poor Tweedledum and Tweedledee’s nice new
-rattle which had brought them both out armed with
-deceptions against each other, till the monstrous
-crow they had brought down frightened them apart.
-She laughed aloud one day as she thought of Teresa’s
-comparison, and presently she went to the nursery
-and brought Ivor’s copy of “Through the Looking
-Glass” into the drawing-room and sat down with
-it in the window seat, where she used to watch the
-sunsets. She turned up the part where the quarrel
-begins about nothing, when Tweedledum and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>Tweedledee have been sitting together under an
-umbrella. “That is exactly like us,” she thought
-and she laughed as she read. “But Evan will never
-see that. I shall have to explain the situation in
-some other way.” Her thoughts wandered back
-down a train of other things that she had tried to
-explain to him. Before their engagement she had
-expounded a good deal and listened very little. To
-tell the truth, Evan had been attending more to the
-distraction of her presence than to the matter of her
-speech, but she did not know that. He had been
-unaccustomed to the society of women who lulled,
-and she did lull his natural embarrassment in conversation
-by the largeness of her interest in everything that
-went on in the world. Such luxuriant living
-and lack of analysis was new to him. He had formed
-an idea of women from his sisters’ giggling little
-comments on every subject; they inspected life
-at too close quarters to make their view interesting
-to anyone with Evan’s passion for Universal study.
-The world was contained for them in their village
-interests; England was a garden where God lived
-and their village was one of His boundary lodges;
-foreign countries were something akin to a nobleman’s
-other residences, managed by agents and let
-to strangers; the mission field a wild region that
-must be brought into cultivation. Evan had loved
-his sisters while the war was on, for they thought
-neither to the right hand nor to the left. They had
-trotted out of their village in the wake of England,
-Harry and St. George, never doubting that God
-was with them as they bandaged and stitched and
-prayed that Ypres might hold out, and that Evan
-and the men from the village might come home safe.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>They never spoke of the enemy as sheep or devils.
-War was a medicine which England had to take
-now and then for the good of her health, and whether
-it was against Zulus, Boers, or Germans had nothing
-whatever to do with the village. <cite>The Graphic</cite> of
-the past or <cite>The Graphic</cite> of the present, depicted
-“the dead,” with troops advancing over them
-through smoke, and dropping as they came; or a
-hillock and a gun and a few figures lying bandaged—perhaps
-with the very bandages that Emily had
-made—and that was Victory, and would end someday
-in “The Soldier’s Return,” and a dinner in the
-village. Such a dinner! The sisters were at their
-best at such times; no one could be cross with them;
-but in private life, during peace, Evan found them
-trying beyond words. He was suffering from reaction
-against their village interests when he met
-Evangeline, and listened to her impersonal prattle
-of sunshine and wide spaces of the earth where
-parties are unknown and no man is obliged to ask
-the nymph of his choice how many theatres she
-has been to. Then, as we know, Evangeline encouraged
-him. She wouldn’t let him keep himself
-to himself as he had always done. She forced him,
-in the name of politeness to his General’s daughter,
-to say something, and it had to be something true.
-She refused all substitutes for his treasures; so he
-brought them out one at a time, and she handled
-them so respectfully, owing to a “gentleman’s”
-instinct, which was part of her inheritance from
-Cyril, that in the end he married her; married her,
-poor dear, supposing her to be what he called a lady.
-Then after a time they began to quarrel. He said his
-nice new rattle was spoiled, his lady was not ladylike.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>She always behaved “like a gentleman”
-towards him, but that wasn’t right; she must behave
-like a lady. Then Evangeline said that she had
-done nothing to the rattle. It was just as it was
-when he first got it. So he pointed to Mrs. Vachell
-and said that was what he wanted his rattle to look
-like, a ladylike woman who could understand a man’s
-idea of the way he wanted his sons brought up.
-They fought battles and separated in fear of the
-darkness that came down over everything after
-that and now——. “Really, really,” she thought,
-“it is too silly for anything. He knows by now
-that Mrs. Vachell was having him on and never
-cared twopence for what he said. If he could know
-that I love him he might see that his rattle isn’t
-broken at all. After all, we were happy—. Ivor
-doesn’t seem to mind very much whether he is
-approved of or not. Evan wouldn’t find his
-‘moulding’ made much difference in a year or
-two’s time, and Father says Ivor is all right; he
-is not afraid of things and tells the truth; and
-perhaps Evan might let him alone if he came back
-now. What a good thing Susan is a girl. I don’t
-think he would be so keen about bringing her up
-to be ladylike after coming such a cropper. Oh,
-dear! I do wish we could begin all over again.”
-She remembered the daily event of Evan’s homecoming
-when they were at Drage; the pleasure of
-his being in to lunch unexpectedly; his atrocious
-singing while he had a hot bath; the general
-disturbance in every room; the comfortable,
-foolish conversations; the friendly disputes and
-dear kisses; one or two tiresome occurrences, as
-when there was a drunken cook to be dealt with and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>people coming to dinner and Evan was so decent
-and helpful. Then a happy, out-of-door summer,
-and later on their eagerness about Ivor. After that,
-Evan began to shun the nursery foolishness and she
-had got bored by his details of tinkering with the
-little car he bought. They had gone to Millport
-one Christmas and Ivor had screamed a good deal,
-and the nurse complained. There were no complaints
-now. Everything went like clockwork, and
-life was dull as ditchwater with no man to promote
-irrationality by treating all episodes with common
-sense. No household can be really merry without
-someone to supply the spectacle of common sense,
-meeting with little accidents from the mischievous
-contradictions of the human heart. Presently
-David came in.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You can’t see to read there, can you?” he
-said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wasn’t reading,” she answered. “I was
-wondering. I must do something about Evan, do
-you know? It isn’t really a quarrel if you come to
-think of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David looked at her inquiringly, and sat down
-on the window seat. “I wonder what I had better
-do. Go out to him, or what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The children would be all right with us here, but
-I suppose you would want them,” he said. “Your
-husband has never thought of leaving the army, has
-he? He could get something to do in England
-that would probably pay him better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What sort of thing?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know, but I could find out. I know
-some engineering people.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Evangeline was silent. “I haven’t the least
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>idea when it began,” she said, after a few minutes’
-thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Have you tried writing to him?” he suggested.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not yet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Does he know about Susan?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dicky wrote,” said Evangeline.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is no difficulty in getting out of the
-army,” he remarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But how am I to put that? What shall I
-say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just tell him,” said David; “there’s no
-difficulty in that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, David!” said Evangeline in despair, “don’t
-go on saying there’s no difficulty in anything. I
-daresay there isn’t if you can do the things, but just
-think of it! He went away in the blackest huff
-you ever saw, and all about nothing, so there is, in a
-way, nothing to begin on. I can’t say, ‘Are you
-still angry?’ because he must be, or he would have
-written. I can’t say, ‘I am not angry any more,’
-because I wasn’t. I was depressed and frightened
-to death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>David sat with his hands in his pockets, slowly
-swinging his legs and gazing at the floor, wrapped in
-thought. “I don’t think I should think at all,”
-he advised. “I should just take a pen and
-write.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Would you take a J pen or a quill pen?”
-Evangeline inquired, while she tossed the volume
-of “Alice” backwards and forwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Either,” he replied. “There’s no difficulty in
-that.” She all but threw the book at his head,
-but refrained. “No difficulty at all,” he repeated,
-with his eye on the book.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>“Can I say you thought he could get a job in
-England?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, if you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But do you think I had better?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shouldn’t begin with it,” said David.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you think I might put it in at the end?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I should see how the letter looks when it is
-done. If it seems to fit, put that in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I suppose you are doing your best to be helpful.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’d do anything I could for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But you don’t know how frightening he is when
-he just turns his back. Suppose he says, ‘No’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you might have to go out there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What! and just walk up to him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, or else wait till he came in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And what should I say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’d have to tell him you had come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am going to see where Dicky is,” he said,
-getting off the window seat. “I really came in to
-look for her. You had better have a light.” He
-brought a small lamp over from the writing-table
-and fastened it to a switch beside her. Then he
-got a blotting book and some paper and envelopes
-and took a fountain pen from his pocket. “That
-will write, you’ll find,” he said, as he laid the things
-by her and then he went out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>She took up the paper and turned it over; paused,
-and took up the pen. It was rather like the preliminaries
-to a letter written by planchette, when
-the fingers are loose upon the board and the eye
-fixed on vacancy. Presently she began and wrote
-a few words rapidly, stopped, wrote again, and this
-time she was off. She filled the four sides of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_306'>306</span>paper with what she wrote, and then folded it,
-screwing up her eyes resolutely. “I daren’t read
-it,” she said to herself, and pushed it, with shaking
-fingers, into the envelope, stuck it down and
-addressed it. Then she went into the hall and
-opened a cupboard, groped in the dark for a coat, and
-took the first she touched, which happened to be
-David’s. She slipped her arms into it, and without
-stopping for fastenings, wrapped it round her and
-opened the outer door. The pillar box was about
-twenty yards away and the letter was posted before
-anything but the speed of her actions had time to
-guide her thoughts. When it was done she felt as
-if she had given the world a kick and sent a villa or
-two toppling about her ears. “Oh!——” she
-thought, and “Oh——! suppose it doesn’t work!”
-She ran back into the house and flung David’s coat
-upon a seat without thinking. Then she went to
-the drawing-room and drew the curtains and sat
-down by the fire. “Suppose I should have to go
-out,” she thought. “Suppose he wouldn’t look
-at me. Suppose he doesn’t care for old times after
-all.” She was still sitting there when Lady Varens
-came in. “I thought there was no wind this
-afternoon,” she remarked, “but there is something;
-I think it must be suction, because there is not a
-twig stirring, but my hat was drawn off my head
-and my eyes are full of sand. Have you been out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Only to the letter box,” said Evangeline. “I
-wrote to Evan and raced out to post it before I had
-time to think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What made you do that?” Lady Varens asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David,” she answered. “He kept repeating
-that there was no difficulty. If anyone goes on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_307'>307</span>saying a thing often enough I begin to believe it,
-and he went on and on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But I don’t understand yet,” Lady Varens
-said. “What sort of a letter was it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Just a nice letter. There are a great many
-things that he may have forgotten. I haven’t.
-It was all right, you know, once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David thinks Evan might leave the army,” she
-went on presently. “I shouldn’t have to go out
-then—unless he won’t answer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What would he do if he left?” asked Lady
-Varens.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know, but David seemed to have some
-idea in his mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then I expect if he seemed to, he had. If he
-goes after a fox there generally is one.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>The post to Egypt is not a very long one, but
-measured by the emotions Evangeline went through
-between the earliest day when Evan’s answer could
-be expected, and the day when it came, the interval
-was about a year and a half. The extra length of
-time was put in three strips. One between the
-moment when the postman knocked at the front
-door and the time it took the maid to examine and
-bring up the letters. The second was when Evangeline
-was out in the afternoon and remembered that
-another post would be there when she got back; it
-took the length of several days to look at the letters
-on the hall table as she crossed the threshold and
-judge from their appearance whether they were all
-circulars. The third age was when she and Teresa
-were talking in their bedrooms before going to bed
-and went through their nightly review of all the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_308'>308</span>things he would be likely to say, and compared
-them with the likelihood of his saying nothing at
-all. The nights were all right, for Evangeline, when
-in health, would sleep though the earth cracked
-asunder. One day people came to lunch and stayed
-talking, so she did not go out, and the maid brought
-the letters to Lady Varens before anyone had
-remembered the postman.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Here’s yours, Evangeline,” Lady Varens said,
-passing it to her. “Do you know whether the
-children have gone out yet? I wanted them to call
-at the butcher’s for me. He didn’t send the mutton
-I ordered this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ll go and see,” said Evangeline, and she carried
-off her letter. Ten minutes or a quarter-of-an-hour
-went by, and then Ivor came in dressed for
-going out.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mother’s being a dog on the stairth,” he said.
-“It’s dangerous; you’d better not go past, but
-we’re going to do your message now if Nurth can
-get past.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can’t you say your s’s yet, darling?” said the
-visitor. “Well, I’m quite shocked! Come and
-tell me where you are going.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Can’t thtop,” said Ivor. “You oughtn’t to
-path remarkth. Good-bye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He went out, leaving the door open, and Teresa
-got up and shut it. She heard cacklings from the
-baby and Ivor and respectful protests from the nurse
-near the top landing. “Now go off,” she heard
-Evangeline say in a tone she had nearly forgotten.
-“I don’t know where the dog has gone; probably to
-the butcher’s. You may find him there.” Teresa
-shut the door behind her. “Chips!” she called
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_309'>309</span>gently, “shall I come up or are you coming
-down?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know what I am going to do,” said a
-dishevelled head through the banisters. “What
-about those people? ‘Massacre them all!’ as the
-Peace Delegate said.” Nurse, carrying the baby,
-brushed past with an apology, and went down,
-herding Ivor before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is quite all right,” said Evangeline. “Very
-much all right. Excessively all right.” Teresa sat
-down on a lower step.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“David is clever, isn’t he?” she remarked with
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I thought of it first,” said Evangeline. “He
-only suggested writing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well what is going to happen? Are you going
-out or what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, he says Joseph Price offered him a job in
-their works when the regiment was sent out, but he
-refused. If he can still get it he will clear out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why did he refuse it before?” asked Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Because of Ivor I think—but we won’t go into
-that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where is the Price place? Would you have
-to be in Millport?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, it is a new one they have started somewhere
-near London. I forget what the name is; it is
-somewhere I never heard of except that I know
-some famous person was born there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Hush!” said Teresa. “They’re coming out.
-Let me up, quick!” They both disappeared into
-Evangeline’s room as the drawing-room door
-opened.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, he’s a thoroughly decent f’ller,” said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_310'>310</span>Joseph Price to his father, that evening. “Marv’llous
-engineer, I’m told. But ’f course, it’s just ’s you
-like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What does he want to leave the army for?”
-inquired Mr. Price suspiciously. “Nothing fishy
-about it, I suppose? The army’s a very good
-profession for a man that has got up in it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’T’s not lucrative, very,” observed Joseph,
-“nor int’resting exactly, I should think. And
-Egypt’s a tedious sort of place; nothing t’ do
-except learn about it and so on; th’ sort of thing
-Vachell’s good at. You know, so far as Hatton’s
-concerned I c’n understand a man pr’ferring to
-use his intell’gence in the panoply of war, rather
-than th’ executive; specially if there’s nothing t’
-execute, if you see what I mean. And, aft’r all,
-the sort of thing he’d be doing f’r us might be
-useful in all sorts of ways in ’nother war. There’s
-no earthly reason, if you come t’ think of it, why
-he shouldn’t join up again ’n that case and take th’
-thing up where he left it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, yes,” said Mr. Price, “but that’s not the
-point. What I want to find out is, has he any
-business capacity apart from this talent?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’Mense capacity, I b’lieve,” said Joseph.
-“It’s his strong point.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How do you know? What experience have
-you of him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“When I was at Drage the f’llers talked of nothing
-else. He was the very man that ought to have
-taken over your plant then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But surely he was in France at that time,”
-said the perplexed parent.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I know, but everyone was going backwards
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_311'>311</span>and forwards all th’ time, and they all knew what
-th’ others were doing. There was a story about him,
-I r’member——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well?” said Mr. Price, as his son stopped.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, you must get him t’ tell it you himself; I
-might spoil it. But kait sairysly, Dad, he’s the
-very f’ller you’re looking for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Why are you so keen about this?” asked Mr.
-Price, frowning to himself. “You’re not after the
-wife, are you, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, my dear dirty old man, I’m not, and you
-mustn’t say that kind ’f thing now; ’t’s not done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t see why not,” his father remarked.
-“There’s nothing to be ashamed of. I remember
-a time when a lot of jobs were handled that way,
-but people are mealy-mouthed now. Well, write
-and say we’ll try him, if you like.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I’ve his letter ’f acceptance here, as a matt’r
-of fact,” said Joseph. “Subject, of course, t’ your
-approval. I sounded him more ’r less befur he
-went away, but it didn’t appeal t’ him then. However,
-Egypt’s kait ’mpossible they tell me, f’r a
-young family; flies get int’ the milk, ’n’ so on. I’ll
-fix it up with him for you, ’f you like. By th’ bye,
-when exactly d’ we clear out ’f here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“In June,” replied his father. “It’s a great
-disappointment to me, the whole thing. I had
-thought of settling down here and leaving you with
-a decent place to call your own. However, there
-are plenty more in the market. I shouldn’t be
-surprised if Brackenbury didn’t come up for sale
-some time, and of course this doesn’t hold a candle
-to it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“If you’re thinking of me, I’d leave it,” said
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_312'>312</span>Joseph. “You know, the thing’s hardly done ’t
-all now. You won’t find any decent f’llers left in
-houses like this in a year or two, I b’lieve. Nobody’s
-got ’ny money, except a few people like you,
-and you might b’ left stranded here with practic’lly
-no one to talk to. Personally, I should say th’ thing
-to do is to live ’s quietly and comf’rtably as
-possible, and say we’ve lost th’ money. You’d find
-yourself in a far better set t’-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Tut! nonsense!” said his father.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“’T’s true, I ’ssure you. I’ve been sairysly c’nsidering
-putting in a couple ’f hours a day at the
-’lectric light plant at Brackenbury. Th’ Duke’s
-fairf’lly keen on getting his daughters off, and they
-won’t look ’t anybody ’nless he’s a mechanic ’r dustman
-or that kind ’f thing. Two ’f them are starting
-’n old-fashioned inn and calling it ‘Th’ Star ’nd
-Garter.’ They want t’ have th’ old f’ller’s trophies
-framed t’ stick up outside. ’T’s an awf’lly jolly
-little idea ’f you come t’ think of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>We will here leave Mr. Price to his reflections.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_313'>313</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>“Well now, tell me,” said Mrs. Carpenter, drawing
-her chair near to Mrs. Vachell’s tea-table. “What
-is all this about the Hattons, do you know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I haven’t heard anything,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“What have they, or rather, what has she, been
-doing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Haven’t you heard that he is coming home?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Let me see, where was it he went to? Egypt,
-wasn’t it? I haven’t seen Evangeline for some
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Amy,” Mrs. Carpenter said earnestly, wedging
-her large face close up to Mrs. Vachell, “tell me
-now—you know I never repeat things—what did
-happen then? You know people say all sorts of
-things, and some of them have really said so much
-about you that I want to be able to contradict
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You can contradict them all, certainly,” said
-Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I may do that from you, may I?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not from me, from yourself. I don’t know
-what they have said, but whatever it is, I am sure
-you can safely say it is untrue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You really had nothing to do with his going to
-Egypt? I was told to-day, on the very best
-authority, that you had sent him off because Evangeline—you
-know those young wives—they can’t bear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_314'>314</span>anyone even to look at their husbands, can they?
-Do you know, I thought she was quite strange in her
-manner one evening at our house when he would
-talk to me all the time about India. We said something
-about the heat, and I remember I thought to
-myself, ‘Yes, my dear boy, you would find it very
-hot indeed out there with a wife who looks after you
-with those eyes!’ Why, half the women at any
-station would run after him on purpose, if they saw
-she was jealous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,—women!” said Mrs. Vachell. “How
-these Christians love one another, don’t they? We
-are a very united sex when we are running with the
-hounds to show what the hare can do to please
-them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then it really wasn’t you who made him go to
-Egypt?” Mrs. Carpenter persisted.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No. I am very much flattered at being mistaken
-for the War Office, but it wasn’t me. I
-should like to take the credit for ridding the country
-of the dullest regiment in England, but I am afraid I
-can’t truthfully.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is very sarcastic of you, dear Amy, but I
-know you don’t like soldiers,” said Mrs. Carpenter
-affectionately. “You have never mixed with them
-enough to know how honest and simple they are.
-What do you think of General Fulton, though,
-really and truly? He is an odd sort of man, isn’t
-he? I get on with him very well because I love his
-humour and we have great arguments together, but
-I know he is not popular as a rule. He is very
-naughty in the things he says to her sometimes,
-and she never seems to see. Emmie Trotter doesn’t
-like her at all; she thinks she is not genuine, but
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_315'>315</span>I don’t think that. I think she is perfectly sincere
-in the work she does but I don’t think she is business-like.
-Someone told me that Evan Hatton is coming
-back and going into business. Had you heard of
-it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I had heard that,” said Mrs. Vachell.
-“And Teresa has given up her work with Emma and
-is going to study unemployment from the most
-favourable standpoint, by having nothing to do.
-She is very lucky, I think, though I couldn’t do it
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You mean you don’t care for the Varens’?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I know nothing about them one way or the
-other. He used to be in and out of the University,
-I don’t know what for; learning to make chemical
-manures perhaps; but I never saw much of him.
-He belongs to what Mrs. Harding calls the ‘polo
-set’ and they don’t interest me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, now, some of them are very charming and
-delightful. All the Brackenbury set are dears.
-Bobo, as they call him, is a splendid player and a
-real dear boy. However, the Duke says he can’t
-afford to let him play next year and he must do
-something. You have heard about the girls setting
-up an inn, haven’t you? It is a pity, I think, but as
-Bobo says, what are you to do? He pretends he
-is going to run a circus, but seriously, I’m sure I
-don’t know. They can’t keep themselves in the
-army now, not even in the Guards. But David
-Varens—how did we get off the track——? He is
-all right, apparently. His father seems to have left
-him plenty of money, and of course he is not extravagant
-like Bobo and that terrible elder brother.
-Wasn’t it dreadful about him! Did you say Teresa
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_316'>316</span>is going to give up all her work as soon as she
-marries? Now I do think that is a great mistake,
-don’t you? All the more reason she should go
-on with it now that she will have money. Of
-course I can see that she couldn’t come in every day
-in the same way, but there is no reason why she
-shouldn’t visit and take an interest in it all. A few
-meetings would be good for her and prevent her
-from getting self-centred.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The door opened and Mr. Vachell was heard to
-say, “Come in. I think my wife is in here,” and
-Teresa walked into the room, followed by the little
-man with a pile of books. “I was bringing these
-back,” she said to Mrs. Vachell. “They are some
-that you lent to Evangeline and she had forgotten
-about them. I am so sorry. I met Mr. Vachell on
-the step and he brought me up, but I am afraid I
-mustn’t stay.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, you must,” said Mrs. Vachell. “I haven’t
-seen any of you for so long and Mrs. Carpenter was
-saying just now that I am given credit for all sorts of
-things in your family—for Captain Hatton’s regiment
-being sent to Egypt and—what else was it, Mrs.
-Carpenter? I have just told her that I never see
-you, but she is still suspicious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa frowned and blushed and had nothing to
-say for a minute. Then she turned on Mrs. Carpenter
-in sudden wrath. “I do wish women wouldn’t be
-sweet when they want to make mischief,” she said.
-“I never knew anything like this place. It is like
-a lot of flies walking in muck and then settling on
-the jam.” The expression on Mrs. Carpenter’s
-face moved her to compunction, and she stopped.
-After all, the woman had had children and battled
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_317'>317</span>with pain and death and denied herself for her
-fellow-creatures in more ways than Teresa, for she
-had no love of them to carry her over the discomforts
-of bearing other people’s burdens. If she did gossip
-and preach and plume herself by the way, she was
-entitled to that relaxation, knowing no other. So
-long as Britons never shall be slaves let us allow the
-Potters their public-house, the Carpenters their tea-table,
-the Fisks their blood and the passionate
-philanthropists their feast of reason and flow of
-soul. The Emma Gainsboroughs will go on patiently
-and methodically clearing up, taking no notice of
-themselves, and by-and-bye, as Susie so often
-justly remarked, “Anything that is really good is
-sure to make the rest seem so small in comparison.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What was it you wanted to know?” she asked
-Mrs. Carpenter gently. “I would so much rather
-tell you, if you are interested, than have you going
-about asking all sorts of people whether they have
-heard anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dear little Teresa!” Mrs. Carpenter said,
-recovering her usual smile. “What a set-down for
-poor me! You fierce little thing! Well then, since
-you ask, tell me what Evangeline has been doing to
-set all the tongues wagging? I shouldn’t have liked
-to ask you, dear, until you offered me your confidence
-so sweetly. I appreciate it, I assure you.
-But you know it is distressing to hear a thing hinted
-at everywhere and not to be able to put it right
-authoritatively. Now we will have it all fair and
-square, shall we? Sit down there and tell me——have
-they separated?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, they haven’t,” said Teresa. “Mrs. Vachell
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_318'>318</span>lent Evangeline those books that I have brought
-back, and they are all written to dish up rows that
-needn’t happen if people’s minds weren’t as stuffy
-as mouldy cupboards. Evangeline’s is like a wide
-open door, you know; she is not at all stuffy; but
-she wants so much to have everyone enjoy everything
-they can that she took on the idea of women
-being oppressed, and of course, wanted to help to
-let them out, as she thought. That is true, isn’t
-it?” she turned to Mrs. Vachell.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Vachell shrugged her shoulders. “It is
-true as far as it goes,” she said. “Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well then, you know Evan Hatton, don’t you,”
-Teresa continued. She had forgotten her anger
-against Mrs. Carpenter, and was trying to tell the
-story as if she were in a Court of Justice, presenting
-Evangeline’s case and Evan’s as one against the
-world. “He is not so naturally anxious for everyone
-to be happy. In fact he doesn’t mind whether
-they are enjoying themselves or not, so long as he
-thinks they are doing what has got to be done. He
-got really worried about her trying to undo all the
-doors and locks everywhere. I think he got a
-sort of panic about it; as if she would or could
-possibly have done any harm! Anyhow, he thought
-it was the thing to do, so they had it out; that is
-all. And now he is coming back. They hated
-being away from each other, and he is going into
-Mr. Price’s engineering place, a new one he has
-started near London. Now aren’t you sorry you
-helped to make people think there was some nasty,
-frowsy mystery?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“That is nonsense, dear Teresa,” Mrs. Carpenter
-protested. “You ought not to let yourself run away
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_319'>319</span>with such ideas. But I am more than delighted it
-is so simple as you say. You know Mrs. Trotter
-had quite a different impression, and I must say
-Evangeline talked to her a good deal when you were
-all together that summer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, that is what she does,” Teresa admitted
-regretfully. “She talks to everybody as
-if they were all straight and decent, and she
-doesn’t realise what worms some of them are.
-Of course they just mix whatever she says with
-slime.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Mrs. Carpenter gave the little laugh which she
-used to express offence. “Hardly flattering to her
-audience, is it?” she said.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I didn’t mean to flatter them,” said Teresa.
-“They can do that for themselves when they have
-finished. I was telling you how it looks to me
-when I know how Evangeline loves all sunny and
-kind things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I hear you are going to be married and give
-up all your work,” said Mrs. Carpenter. “I must
-congratulate you and I hope you will be very happy.
-Aldwych is a lovely place and David Varens is quite
-delightful I think. You find you can’t keep on with
-your poor people, don’t you? With so many new
-interests, I daresay it is not easy for young people
-to think of others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes,” said Teresa, her cheeks glowing. “But
-you know you will never make anything different
-out of Mrs. Potter, any more than I have.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Who is Mrs. Potter? I don’t remember her,”
-asked Mrs. Carpenter.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There are some people called Potter in that
-long street—Boaling Street—just by Emma’s office;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_320'>320</span>but I don’t mean them alone. I was thinking of
-them as a class, and I forgot you didn’t know them.
-I don’t think either you or I are any good to them.
-They laugh at you for thinking you are wiser than
-they are, and they think I am mad because I keep
-on supposing they are feeling the same things as I do.
-Emma understands everything they say and is
-never surprised, nor ever tells them anything about
-herself, so they think she is perfectly normal and
-never suspect her of being a lady. She is just ‘The
-lady at the depôt,’ like the girl behind the counter
-is ‘the young lady in the shop.’ They go to her
-when they want sensible things, and I don’t suppose
-they have any more theory as to why she is there
-than they have about any official. They probably
-think she is paid by the Government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And you are really sure you are not going to
-keep it up, even twice a week?” said Mrs. Carpenter.
-Then, without waiting for further answer, she
-changed the subject. “By-the-bye, Mr. Vachell,
-can you tell me what the Sphinx really is? Someone
-was asking the other day, and I said you could
-tell us if anyone could.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa excused herself and went away, depressed
-by what had happened. She felt crushed by the
-weight of the heaviest burden that society brings,
-the failure to impress a living thought on a
-dead comprehension. She had offered sincerity,
-and been met with the corpse-like hand of
-offence.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Both those Fulton girls have been very much
-spoiled,” said Mrs. Carpenter, when she had shut
-the door.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>When Teresa got home she found David sitting
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_321'>321</span>stiffly in a chair beside Susie, who was knitting a
-small coat for her grandchild. There had been a
-conversation between them which it may be worth
-recording, and Teresa arrived at a critical moment.
-Susie’s knitting was a curious performance, and
-David, sadly at a loss for an occupation while he
-waited for Teresa, had watched it and wondered in
-what way it differed from his mother’s. Lady
-Varens at work with needles suggested Penelope
-filling in time to avert the intrusion of emotions.
-Susie evidently undertook the thing as part of the
-equipment of a rôle. It was like all household
-affairs performed by stage characters, the dusting
-of a room by a saucy maid who flicks the mantelpiece
-twice and then gets on with her lines, the dinner-party
-where everything is swept away after the first
-morsel of fish has been tasted. Susie’s knitting was
-the “business” connected with the rôle of “Mrs.
-Fulton; beautiful, refined, well-dressed, awaiting
-the eventide of life with the calm philosophy of one
-who has known much suffering.” She was now
-“discovered seated, centre R.f., expecting the
-return of her husband, a typical twentieth century
-rake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You do a great deal of knitting, don’t you?”
-David remarked at last.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not as much as I should like,” said Susie. “I
-hope that when you and Dicky are married you will
-encourage her to do something of that kind in the
-evening. If she is giving up all her other work she
-will need something to take its place. You don’t
-sing or play at all, do you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” he said, feeling some apology was needed,
-“I don’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_322'>322</span>“I almost think I should take up some interest if
-I were you,” she said gently. “Of course there is
-no doubt that there is no happiness like being
-married if people understand each other, but at the
-same time it is impossible not to feel the need for
-change of thought sometimes. You are not fond
-of wine, are you, David?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, not at odd times, thanks very much,” David
-replied. He was mildly startled by the question
-and wondered what she was driving at.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And no more is Dicky. She never cared for it
-at all, and yet Evangeline would always take a glass
-when it was offered her. It gives people quite a
-different outlook. I don’t know how far you have
-studied Dicky’s character but I understand her, in a
-way, better than Evangeline. Dicky takes a much
-wider view of spiritual things.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I expect so,” said David, polite and noncommittal.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“And just for that reason I am a little sad at
-her giving up all her work among the poor. I am
-afraid she will feel the want of it.” David was
-struck dumb, so she went on, supposing his silence
-to be due to a wish to hear more. “She has no
-artistic interests, you see. When I was her age I
-had a great many. I was devoted to music, for
-instance, and if I had not fallen in love with my
-husband the course of my life might have been
-quite different. I hope you will forgive these little
-bits of personal history, dear David, but I should be
-so glad if they helped you in any way to clear up
-difficulties that may come when the ‘first fine
-careless rapture,’ as I heard it described the other
-day at a wonderful lecture of Professor Gaskie’s—I
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_323'>323</span>thought of you two at once—when that is over. I
-felt it so much when I had to give up all that side
-of things when I married. You see my husband has
-his wine, for instance, and his men; he had a great
-number of old friends when we first married, whom I
-must say, I thought extremely uninteresting. They
-talked by the hour about foxes; not in connection
-with all the beautiful country life that you have, for
-he never hunted except when he was asked to stay
-with people, but they were always talking about
-that kind of thing. Some of them were purely
-politicians and some very much worse. Not the
-old intellectual type like Disraeli, who really cared
-for beautiful things, but the sort who run away
-from a drawing-room and hide themselves somewhere
-with decanters and laugh and roar and sing half the
-night. I can’t tell you how much I used to feel
-the want of something else. Then the children
-came, and of course it was all right, and I had
-friends who were very kind, so that I could go
-now and then and hear music and talk about the
-things I cared for. That is why I have taken up
-the work I do here. It is not an intellectual place,
-as you see; and those concerts! Have you ever
-been to them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, sometimes,” said David. “I thought they
-were supposed to be rather good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“The performers are often very good,” she agreed,
-“but there is an atmosphere about the place that
-I don’t like; a want of appreciation. Have you
-noticed that there is often quite a fog in the hall? I
-have wondered sometimes whether it was anything
-like what Professor Bole was describing the other
-day. I forget how he put it, but I thought of those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_324'>324</span>concerts and wondered whether people’s tastes—their
-love of rich dinners and wine and all that, had
-been chased out of them by the music and was
-wanting to get back and preventing them from
-hearing it fully. Dear little Dicky used to find the
-fog in the town so depressing when we first came,
-and I expect she felt the same as I do. Now
-Evangeline is different altogether, more like her
-father. She will throw off anything of that sort
-in a minute and be all ready for a gallop or a dance
-or party. Haven’t you noticed that? And yet
-I always think any art is such a happy thing. One
-has no real need of other people——” Her knitting
-had gone down on to her lap long ago.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, perhaps not,” said David.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am so glad you think so,” she continued in
-her purry voice. “For of course, you will be a great
-deal cut off in the country. What is that Mrs. Lake
-like whom I used to meet now and then? She
-seemed to have quite taken up the Prices. She is
-very typical of the society round there, isn’t
-she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t know much about her,” said David.
-“But I believe she is all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Dicky will find friends, of course,” said Susie.
-“One can always find some good in everybody if
-one is prepared to look for it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, I don’t think there will be any difficulty,”
-said David.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“What do you think about Evan going into this
-business of Mr. Price’s?” she asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It ought to be quite easy I think,” he answered.
-“It is what he likes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but Evan does like such curious things,”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_325'>325</span>said Susie. “His is a most interesting nature; so
-upright; but I often wonder how Evangeline, with
-her very sunny disposition, chose anyone with such
-very strong religious views. Religion always seems
-to me to be a thing that should be so helpful in
-making it easier to stand up against things that go
-wrong. One sees so much suffering in a place like
-this that unless one can be sure that it is all intended
-and for the best, one would be inclined to dwell too
-much on it. Now Evan, it seems to me, instead of
-seeing it like that, often makes it sadder by supposing
-things to be worse than they are. He used to take the
-gloomiest view of poor little Ivor in his childish
-naughtiness, though he is really a good little boy
-and very obedient if one just smooths over difficulties
-with a little tact. Nurse is not always very wise
-with him. She goes on persisting at the time,
-instead of waiting until he has forgotten and letting
-him do whatever it is of his own accord, when he is
-interested in something else. That is Evan’s
-mistake I am sure. He is always on the look out
-for sad things and it makes him so difficult to interest.
-Now my husband is all the other way. He won’t
-believe that anything matters, and I think that
-Evangeline is rather like him. They have no
-sympathy for any aims beyond the present. Do
-you know Mrs. Vachell well?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Not very,” David replied.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Do you like her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think she wants people to either like or
-dislike her, so I haven’t got so far,” he said. He
-would have been candid with Teresa or Evangeline
-or many other people, but he had a deep-rooted
-distrust of Susie as a receptacle for words. They
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_326'>326</span>meant so little to her that she was liable to pass
-them on as coinage in conversation and give no
-goods of her own in exchange, so there was no
-bargain that she was likely to respect between her
-and whoever she talked to. He felt this instinctively
-and had no dealings with her, not being willing, like
-Cyril, to declare himself bankrupt for the joy of
-riotous living.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“She believes very much in women,” Susie went
-on. “Her idea is that some day all those things
-that I was talking about, the love of finer tastes
-and of children, and all the confidence and dislike
-of harshness and ugliness that woman feels so much
-will come more to the front and have more influence.
-There may be something in it, for although I dislike
-the idea of women going into the world, still, if they
-can do any good I am sure it is right for them not
-to hold back; for the sake of the unmarried ones
-who have to earn a living. It does seem terrible,
-don’t you think, that there should be no way for
-those who are not intellectual to live except by
-pleasing men in the wrong way; because that is
-what it comes to, whether they are married or not.
-And if they are not good looking it is even worse.
-They ought to be as well paid for cultivating the
-higher side of life as for pandering to the lower.
-A loving nature is of as much value to the world
-as a brain that invents war material; and, as it
-is, men only use it as a toy for every sort of coarser
-instinct.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But does Mrs. Vachell suggest a sort of spiritual—market?”
-David asked, hesitatingly, roused at
-last out of his burrow by the logical enticements
-that Susie had been aiming at him. “Aren’t
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_327'>327</span>there enough people who sell themselves in that way
-already?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t think you have quite understood my
-point, dear David,” she replied, and at that moment
-Teresa came in and found them.</p>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_328'>328</span>
- <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Teresa and Joseph Price were going back to Millport
-together in the rickety little train that joggled
-up and down the coast every few hours. Teresa had
-spent the day with the Varens’ and Joseph had called
-about tea time with some information from his father
-for Evangeline about her husband’s new work.
-Evan was expected in about ten days, and was to
-take up his work at first under Mr. Price’s own eye
-before being entrusted with the final appointment
-at a distance. Joseph and Teresa were each occupied
-in trying to hold an evening paper still enough in the
-dim light to read the last news of a riot that had
-broken out in the Midlands over a labour dispute.
-They had hardly deciphered more than a few lines
-when the train wriggled itself to a standstill, and Mr.
-Fisk junior jumped into the carriage. He threw
-himself down in a corner and took some papers from
-his pocket and then recognised his companions.
-“How do you do?” said Teresa. “I don’t think
-you can see anything by this lamp. We were trying
-to read a paper, but it is no good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How d’ you do, Fisk?” said Joseph. “Been
-playing golf down here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No,” said Mr. Fisk, frowning. “What I have
-been doing is a game to some but deadly earnest to
-others. If it ends in bloodshed the responsibility
-will lie with those who treated it as a game.” He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_329'>329</span>settled himself into his corner and glared at
-Teresa.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Kait sairysly, though, Fisk, what d’ you think
-of this?” Joseph asked, tapping his paper. “D’
-you think it’ll come t’ anything, what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It has come to something already,” said Fisk,
-“as you will find if you study your newspaper. And
-it will come to something that you have not yet
-experienced, the search for a crust of bread by those
-who have treated the misery of their fellow-creatures
-as a game.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, but you know, that won’t do any good,”
-said Joseph. “Somebody’s got t’ hold the purse,
-or the money’s bound to get lost. That’s been
-gone into pretty thoroughly. You and I can’t decide
-the thing ’n a railway carriage, like this. Now I’ll
-tell you a thing ’s an instance. My father, the other
-day, was thinking of buying a big place—since you’ve
-turned us out—” he added politely to Teresa, “and
-I said t’ him, ‘Don’t. I don’t want the thing. In a
-year or two’s time we shan’t have a soul left t’ talk
-to. All the f’llers we know will be in trade or driving
-their own engines and so on, and the people at the
-top will be the sort that nobody c’n ask out and all
-that. ’T’s abs’lutely not done,’ I said, ‘’t’s played
-out.’ Th’ only thing t’ do now, ’f you want to be
-in it, is t’ cover yourself with grease and get up at
-th’ most ungodly hours. Th’ old aristocracy won’t
-look at you if you offer them a really decent dinner.
-At my club th’ other day, I met a f’ller ordering tripe
-and onions; ’t’s a fact.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, don’t be so stupid,” said Teresa angrily.
-“You can’t always go on shifting from one branch
-to another as soon as anyone else sits down on yours.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_330'>330</span>All people want is to be let alone to do anything they
-are able to do, and it is snobbery like yours that
-makes it impossible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, no, really, I assure you,” Joseph protested.
-“That’s not Fisk’s idea, I’m sure, is it?” He
-appealed to the indignant spectacled form opposite.
-“What? I heard about you th’ other day, you
-know. I was down canv’ssing your way for my
-father and turned up ’t your house. Your father
-gave us his vote—’t’s a fact, abs’lutely—because he
-said he was f’d up with socialism. ‘My son’s one
-of them,’ he said, ‘and he won’t work, and he objects
-t’ me and my wife working.’ Now there’s snobb’ry
-for you ’f you like, I think, what? I’m willing t’
-associate with people who won’t associate with
-themselves. What are you t’ do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“My father knows nothing about economic
-questions,” said Fisk, with dignity. “He has been
-ground down to the level he is at now, but he has
-never been below into the pit from which a class
-must either become submerged or rise above the
-one that is holding it down. They may rise through
-blood——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, do stop, Mr. Fisk,” Teresa implored him,
-“I believe England got on a lot better when people
-only argued at elections and went on with things
-in between. But look here. Will you tell me what
-you get paid for stopping people working and I will
-find you something to do where you shall get the
-same for being of some use. I have promised to
-find someone who will give their whole time to
-doing properly what I did so badly in scraps for
-Miss Gainsborough. You have had an education
-which I haven’t, and you have much longer legs——”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'><span class='pageno' id='Page_331'>331</span>“No, pardon me, I don’t approve of palliative
-methods,” said Mr. Fisk.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, you won’t argue any more till we get
-out, will you?” asked Teresa. “How are the
-dormice?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>He launched into the subject with enthusiasm.
-He forsaw a great future for dormice in the field of
-knowledge when their habits had been studied
-more. After he got out at the next station Joseph
-remarked:</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Kerious sort of f’ller, isn’t he? Typical of a
-kind that’s dying out, I b’lieve. In a year or two
-you’ll find that sort of thing’ll hardly be done at all.
-Abs’lutely the latest thing already is t’ work at
-something and it’ll come in, you’ll find, and then
-everybody’ll want to do it for a bit. Fisk’ll be as
-jealous as poss’ble when he finds someone else has
-collared his little shovel and his paint pot and all
-that, and that there isn’t any loose money about to
-pay him for talking. It’s a very kerious thing how
-’n idea gets out ’f date. I don’t know if you’re
-interested in morals and all that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Go on,” said Teresa, “I shall be grateful if you
-will make me really cross with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“How’s that?” inquired Joseph.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“It is like a sneeze that won’t come off—but never
-mind; you have worked me up into an explosion
-sometimes. What were you going to say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I said I didn’t know if you are int’rested in
-morals; because I b’lieve very strongly that illicit
-love affairs and all that sort ’f thing’s going t’ be
-frightfully stale, what? Don’t you think so? Of
-course it’ll go on happ’ning; you can’t prevent it;
-but people will have t’ run the risk of being thought
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_332'>332</span>middle class. I’m fairf’lly bored with th’ idea of
-sex, myself, aren’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, I must say I am glad there are two,” said
-Teresa. “But then I am ‘fairf’lly bored,’ as you call it,
-with the idea of anything being ‘middle class.’ Perhaps
-that is newer still. I hope not for your sake.
-However, in the meantime I am ever so grateful
-for what you have done for Evan. My sister is
-so happy about having him back and that he is
-going to do something he will like so awfully.
-I hope it won’t bore your father, having him
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh no, my father’s never bored,” said Joseph.
-“That’s really th’ thing about him that bores me
-sometimes, ’f you know what I mean.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The train stopped for the last time and Teresa
-got out into the brightly-lit station. Outside it
-there was semi-darkness, and the mud dripping imperceptibly.
-Along the slimy pavements three or
-four of the little boys to whom she had ladled out
-hot-pot and plum pudding ran to and fro, shouting
-the latest news. “—’clock ‘Echo’—special edi—shun!
-six-o’clock—‘Echo’—’clock—edi—shun!
-‘Echo’—riots—in—Blankshire—forty-seven—persons—injured!
-‘Echo’—edi—shun—serious-rioting—in
-Midland—town—forty-seven—’ere you are,
-sir.—’clock—‘Echo’——” and away he sped. “I
-wonder if he has got any awfulness buttoned into
-his waistcoat for Grannie to-night,” thought Teresa,
-“or whether she died——. Shall I ever be able to
-stand knowing that ‘Grannie’ and the waistcoat
-are there and I am with David, and not doing
-anything?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I met Joseph Price to-day,” she said to her father
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_333'>333</span>when she got home. “He has really been very good
-about Evan. I believe he invented the whole idea
-himself. Mr. Price seems suspicious about it and
-wants to have Evan at the works here first, to make
-sure that he is all right. David says he is quite sure
-that he is in fact what is wanted, and there won’t be
-any difficulty, as he keeps on saying, but how Joseph
-knew, or why he took the trouble, I can’t imagine.
-He is such an absolute ass and yet he seems to pick
-up ideas and he makes the old man do just what he
-likes. He is also the greatest snob and time-server,
-and yet he will do anything or go anywhere for anybody
-for no reason. Fisk was in the train, raving
-about blood as usual, and Joseph said he was going
-to ask him to stay for a week-end and meet some of
-the people who are coming down about the election.
-Joseph will sit there quite undisturbed by his family
-and get any amount of amusement out of the fluttering
-in the dovecot there will be, and Lady Varens
-says that Mrs. Lake—the select Mrs. Lake—thinks
-he would make a nice son-in-law. She thought
-that he liked Lady Angela Brackenbury who started
-the inn, the Star and Garter. They wanted to have
-the Duke’s Star and Garter framed as a sign outside.
-I am getting so muddled with them all. I couldn’t
-go and live there if it weren’t for David. Joseph
-told me he was bored with sex, so I suppose, as he
-can’t find anything newer than a woman to marry, it
-won’t be either of them and the Price money will
-have to go to anyone who marries the girls after
-Joseph has lolled about on it enough. It is distracting
-to ravel out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“You’ve got an abnormal love of the social order,”
-said Cyril. “You’d much better leave it alone
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_334'>334</span>and concentrate on your man. He’ll repay it with
-far more gratitude.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I don’t want gratitude,” she said. “It is just
-the Lady Bountiful idea that has annoyed me
-from the beginning. I want to feel one of a colossal
-family, that’s all; not to be the housekeeper in the
-store cupboard or a cow being milked.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Then you must put up with poor relations, and
-they’re always a damned nuisance,” said Cyril.
-“Your mother had a great love of humanity, she
-said, but her idea was more to be the head of a
-family of her own than to be mixed up in a general
-one. Gad! she used to rope them in, too! I
-never saw anything like it. And nothing about it of
-a grosser nature, like your friend Joseph. All pure,
-unadulterated love. It’s a wonderful gift.” He
-was lost in retrospect.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Where have you wandered off to?” she asked
-in perplexity. “Mother had only two of us and you
-said once that she wasn’t in love with you. I have
-thought over that sometimes, and I think you must
-be wrong. I don’t mean to say you oughtn’t to
-have said it, because I don’t want nasty things
-covered up; I want them not to happen. But you
-were probably talking to the gallery that time,
-weren’t you? People forget. Evan forgot a lot
-of things that Chips remembered afterwards.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I wasn’t thinking about anything at all nasty,”
-Cyril replied. “There’s nothing wrong with the
-instinct of the nesting season, and the number of
-eggs laid has nothing to do with it. The selection
-of a mate has also been sung by poets, so I have
-every right to use the comparison without being
-blamed by you. Chips is another of you loving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_335'>335</span>ladies,” he went on. “That makes three of you.
-What a trio for one man to keep under the same
-roof! No wonder that I give way sometimes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Chips loves the sun, with people thrown in as
-something that hatches out under it, I think,” said
-Teresa. “There’s not much actual family about it—though
-Ivor—goodness! You talk of birds!
-That is nothing to her. Do you know, I think she
-imagined she had hatched out the whole of creation
-at once when Ivor was born. And now she lives in
-him in a way, and doesn’t mind how independent
-he is. She never wants to hold on to him or push
-him this way or that, like some mothers do. She
-forgets so easily what other people think, so long
-as they don’t make obstacles and set them up in
-front of her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I daresay,” said Cyril. “Your sex amuse me
-very much, and I am very fond of a great many of
-you. But I wish you didn’t all think so much. It
-keeps one for ever tripping about for fear of disturbing
-a valued plan. That’s a thing I detested during
-the war, having to make arrangements. You see
-a thing to do and you do it or don’t. That’s the
-only reasonable way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>About a fortnight later Evangeline went to London
-to meet Evan. They were to stay there for a few
-days while he went to see Mr. Price’s engineering
-works. They were then to take rooms in Millport
-until after Teresa’s wedding, and make arrangements
-for the future. There was not much money
-to spare for the moment, and Susie had urged
-Evangeline to economise by staying with them until
-Evan began to receive his new income. But the
-sisters decided between themselves that the suggestion
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_336'>336</span>held too many risks. “He does so hate being
-looked at,” Evangeline had said, at the conclusion
-of her remarks on the subject in Teresa’s bedroom
-one night.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“There is too much of what Father calls ‘damned
-noticing’ in this family, isn’t there?” said Teresa.
-“And yet Mother never tells you she has seen anything;
-she only points out what someone else has
-seen. And Father never seems to see anything
-unless you ask him, and I don’t spy round, but still
-I understand. I should hate not to be away with
-David. I am so glad we are going away into
-another continent before we end up among neighbours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“But this isn’t a honeymoon, so it ought not to
-matter,” said Evangeline. “But I know you will
-all look so nervous if we disagree, and since the
-Vachell episode I feel that Evan will suspect the
-devil in every female eye he sees for a long time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Mrs. Vachell is the only person I know from
-whom I feel absolutely cut off,” said Teresa. “I
-don’t mean since the episode, but always. You
-and I have thought she wasn’t human, but that is
-not true. She is fond—I mean fond really—of that
-little Vachell. He fainted one day at his lecture
-and was brought home in a cab; I don’t know if I
-ever told you; and I happened to be there. She
-didn’t say anything hardly, but you can’t mistake.
-That is all I know about her. I think from something
-she said once that her father ill-treated her
-mother, but I am not sure. If you had left Evan
-I have an idea she would have carried the luggage—taken
-the blame and all that—and you would have
-kept Ivor even if she had to seduce Evan and all
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_337'>337</span>the jury, so if you come to principles——! She
-would have been burnt in the Middle Ages and
-Evan would have burnt her and been burnt himself.
-Isn’t it a mercy there is nothing worse than Fisk to
-make opinions unpleasant in this country.” The
-hour was very late and honest Robert’s footsteps
-could be heard coming down the street. “Certainly
-not; certainly not,” they said. But neither Teresa
-nor Evangeline was aware of him. “But I don’t
-know her in the very least,” Teresa added.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I was a fool,” said Evangeline, reflecting. “As
-if it mattered!”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“As if what mattered?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Whether Evan understood either her or me.
-Things come out in the wash. But it would be nice
-to live with someone whom one could say just anything
-to, instead of only being in love with them,
-wouldn’t it? But I suppose that hardly ever
-happens.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>Teresa didn’t answer.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>A day arrived when Evangeline stood waiting for
-the train that was to bring Evan. She was shivering
-and impatient, like a swimmer about to dive on a
-rough day; anticipating the joy of achievement and
-the thrill after stale security, but aware also of
-what would happen if she failed. The noise of the
-station was deafening; other trains came in, discharging
-crowds that pushed past her in their search
-for relatives and luggage. An engine let off steam
-close behind her and then thudded and puffed
-interminably, it seemed, until the noise added to
-her nervousness and the smell of smoke and the
-pushing of unlovely strangers gave her an utter
-revulsion against the thought of contending with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_338'>338</span>Evan’s sunlessness. She forgot everything except
-the weariness of contention. All of a sudden the
-platform was magically clear except for a line of
-porters drawn up at intervals along it. The engine
-was still screeching somewhere near and now a
-second one appeared before her in a rush of smoke
-and noise. The powerful movement of the axle,
-bringing the inexorable moment, was the only thing
-she noticed, and then she was fairly in the crowd,
-trying to remember what Evan looked like. She
-caught sight of him at last, standing a little apart,
-with a drawn, chilly expression of disappointment.
-She ran up to him, pushing porters and passengers
-out of her way and caught his arm. “Here——”
-she said breathlessly, “I’m here—I couldn’t find
-you for ages.” He smiled, and she began to feel
-less at the mercy of events. He said something
-not very distinctly, that was drowned in a blast
-from the engine. She made a sign to him to look
-for his luggage, and after a time they drove away to
-the hotel. Poor Evan felt as though he had been
-washed ashore right into his own home after a shipwreck.
-He wanted to hear everything, to pick up
-lost threads of small events; to hear about this
-new job, and Teresa’s marriage. Evangeline found
-plenty to talk about over their meal, but she was
-conscious all the time of the strength of the sea and
-that she would have to swim again presently. She
-longed for a sunny beach and warm blue ripples with
-no danger lurking in them. She was tired with
-excitement, and all her natural distaste for effort
-oppressed her with a wish that the man she loved
-were in charge of the situation, and not she. She
-wanted to bask in the certainty that nothing she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_339'>339</span>could say would matter, and yet she knew that his
-face might cloud at any moment and become chilled
-by a chance slip of her speech.</p>
-
-<hr class='c008' />
-
-<p class='c007'>The story ends at the Fultons’ house a few weeks
-after this. Luncheon was over and Cyril had poured
-himself out a glass of port and pushed the decanter
-towards Evan. The Hattons were to leave Millport
-in ten days after Teresa’s wedding and move into
-their new home. Even Mr. Price was satisfied that
-there was no hanky-panky about the appointment
-his son had made, and Evan’s prospects were bright.
-He and Evangeline had been to lunch and the
-children were to go afterwards for a drive with Susie.
-David was also there.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Well, here’s luck,” said Cyril. “Luck to
-marriage and all it may mean to a girl. Isn’t that
-it, Sue?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I will drink the health in my cup of coffee, I
-think, dear,” said Susie. “Hadn’t you better send
-the wine down to this end of the table? David may
-like to reply with some idea that is a little brighter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I am not sure that I won’t drink Mrs. Potter’s
-health,” said David. “May I, Dicky?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, do,” she said eagerly. “And you do
-really mean it, don’t you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Yes, of course I do,” he answered. “Where’s
-the difficulty?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“No, there isn’t any, I know,” said Teresa. The
-door was pushed gently open and Ivor came in.
-Nurse stood in the doorway holding young Susan.</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I shall be ready in about twenty minutes,” said
-Susie. “I must be at the bank before it shuts.
-Would you like to walk up and down a little, in the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_340'>340</span>garden, Nurse, and get what sun there is till the car
-comes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>The little party went out and Evan got up to
-watch them from the window. “How they do wrap
-that child up,” he observed to Evangeline. “Just
-look at the forest of shawls in that thing. I am
-sure it is not good for her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c007'>“Oh, Evan,” she said, wincing, “please, please
-don’t begin over again. You may find the wheel
-of the perambulator is loose or something,” she
-added hastily, to make her request sound like a
-kindly joke. She opened the window to say something
-to the nurse, and Strickland, who had come
-out into the garden, intoxicated with the atmosphere
-of nuptial gaiety, was heard carolling to the baby, as
-she pushed the perambulator up and down:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c009'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“It’s a—long, long trail a—winding</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Unto the—land of—my dreams——”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c007'>“I always think that is so true,” said Susie with
-a little sigh.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
-
-<div class='chapter ph2'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
- <ol class='ol_1 c002'>
- <li>Silently corrected obvious typographical errors and variations in spelling.
-
- </li>
- <li>Retained archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings as printed.
- </li>
- </ol>
-
-</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THREE LOVING LADIES ***</div>
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