Mrs. Prockter was compelled to ask
for admission, because James, struck moveless and
speechless by the extraordinary sight of her, offered
no invitation to enter. He merely stood in front
of the half-opened door.
“May I come in, Mr. Ollerenshaw?”
she said, very urbanely. “I hope you will
excuse this very informal call. I’ve altered
my dinner hour in order to pay it.”
And she smiled. The smile seemed
to rouse him from a spell.
“Come in, missis, do!” he conjured her,
warmly.
He was James; he was even Jimmy; but
he was also a man, very much a man, though the fact
had only recently begun to impress itself on him.
Mrs. Prockter, while a dowager-portly,
possibly fussy, perhaps slightly comic to a younger
generation-was still considerably younger
than James. With her rich figure, her excellent
complexion, her carefully-cherished hair, and her
apparel, she was a woman to captivate a man of sixty,
whose practical experience of the sex extended over
nine days.
“Thank you,” said she, gratefully.
He shut the front door, as if he were
shutting a bird in a cage; and he also shut the door
leading to the kitchen-a door which had
not been shut since the kitchen fire smoked in the
celebrated winter of 1897. She sat down at once
in the easy-chair.
“Ah!” she exclaimed, in
relief. And then she began to fan herself with
a fan which was fastened to her person by a chain
that might have moored a steamer.
James, searching about for something
else to do while he was collecting his forces, drew
the blind and lighted the gas. But it was not
yet dark.
“I wonder what you will think
of me, calling like this?” she said, with a
sardonic smile.
It was apparent that, whatever he
thought of her, she would not be disturbed or abashed.
She was utterly at her ease. She could not, indeed,
have recalled the moment when she had not been at her
ease. She sat in the front room with all the
external symptoms of being at home. This was
what chiefly surprised James Ollerenshaw in his grand
guests-they all took his front room for
granted. They betrayed no emotion at its smallness
or its plainness, or its eccentricities. He would
somehow have expected them to signify, overtly or covertly,
that that kind of room was not the kind of room to
which they were accustomed.
“Anyhow, I’m glad to see
ye, Mrs. Prockter,” James returned.
A speech which did not in the least
startle Mrs. Prockter, who was thoroughly used to
people being glad to see her. But it startled
James. He had uttered it instinctively; it was
the expression of an instinctive gladness which took
hold of him and employed his tongue on its own account,
and which rose superior even to his extreme astonishment
at the visit. He was glad to see her.
She was stout and magnificent, in her silk and her
ribbons. He felt that he preferred stout women
to thin; and that, without being aware of it, he had
always preferred stout women to thin. It was
a question of taste. He certainly preferred Mrs.
Prockter to Sarah Swetnam. Mrs. Prockter’s
smile was the smile of a benevolently cynical creature
whose studies in human nature had reached the advanced
stage. James was reassured by this, for it avoided
the necessity for “nonsense."....Yes, she was
decidedly better under a roof and a gas-jet than in
the street.
“May I ask if your niece is
in?” she said, in a low voice.
“She isn’t.”
He had been sure that she had called
about Helen, if not to see Helen. But there was
a conspiratorial accent in her question for which he
was unprepared. So he sat down at last.
“Well,” said Mrs. Prockter,
“I’m not sorry she isn’t. But
if she had been I should have spoken just the same-not
to her, but to you. Now, Mr. Ollerenshaw, I think
you and I are rather alike in some things. I hate
beating about the bush, and I imagine that you do.”
He was flattered. And he was
perfectly eased by her tone. She was a woman
to whom you could talk sense. And he perceived
that, though a casual observer might fail to find
the points of resemblance between them, they were
rather alike.
“I expect,” said he, “it’s
pretty well known i’ this town as I’m not
one that beats about the bush.”
“Good!” said she. “You know
my stepson, Emanuel?”
“He was here a bit since,” James replied.
“What do you think of him?”
“How?”
“As a man?”
“Well, missis, as we are na’
beating about the bush, I think he’s a foo’.”
“Now that’s what I like!”
she exclaimed, quite ravished. “He is
a fool, Mr. Ollerenshaw-between ourselves.
I can see that you and I will get on together splendidly!
Emanuel is a fool. I can’t help it.
I took him along with my second husband, and I do
my best for him. But I’m not responsible
for his character. As far as that goes, he isn’t
responsible for it, either. Not only is he a
fool, but he is a conceited fool, and an idle fool;
and he can’t see a joke. At the same time
he is quite honest, and I think he’s a gentleman.
But being a gentleman is no excuse for being a fool;
indeed, I think it makes it worse.”
“Nothing can make it worse,” James put
in.
She drew down the corners of her lips and stroked
her fine grey hair.
“You say Emanuel has been here to-day?”
“Ay!” said James. “He came
in an’ had a sup o’ tea.”
“Do you know why he came?”
“Maybe he felt faintlike, and
slipped in here, as there’s no public nearer
than the Queen Adelaide. Or maybe he thought as
I was getting on in years, and he wanted for to make
my acquaintance afore I died. I didna’
ask him.”
“I see you understand,”
said Mrs. Prockter. “Mr. Ollerenshaw, my
stepson is courting your niece.”
“Great-stepniece,” James
corrected; and added: “Is he now? To
tell ye th’ truth I didn’t know till th’
other day as they were acquainted.”
“They haven’t been acquainted
long,” Mrs. Prockter informed him. “You
may have heard that Emanuel is thinking of going into
partnership with Mr. Andrew Dean-a new
glaze that Mr. Dean has invented. The matter may
turn out well, because all that Mr. Dean really wants
is a sleeping partner with money. Emanuel has
the money, and I think he can be guaranteed to sleep.
Your stepniece met Emanuel by accident through Mr.
Dean some weeks ago, over at Longshaw. They must
have taken to each other at once. And I must
tell you that not merely is my stepson courting your
niece, but your niece is courting my stepson.”
“You surprise me, missis!”
“I daresay I do. But it
is the fact. She isn’t a Churchwoman; at
least, she wasn’t a Churchwoman at Longshaw;
she was Congregational, and not very much at that.
You aren’t a Churchman, either; but your niece
now goes to St. Luke’s every Sunday. So
does my stepson. Your niece is out to-night.
So is my stepson. And if they are not together
somewhere I shall be very much astonished. Of
course, the new generation does as it likes.”
“And what next?” James inquired.
“I’ll tell you what next,”
cried the mature lady, with the most charming vivacity.
“I like your niece. I’ve met her twice
at the St. Luke’s Guild, and I like her.
I should have asked her to come and see me, only I’m
determined not to encourage her with Emanuel.
Mr. Ollerenshaw, I’m not going to have her marrying
Emanuel, and that’s why I’ve come to see
you.”
The horror of his complicated situation
displayed itself suddenly to James. He who had
always led a calm, unworried life, was about to be
shoved into the very midst of a hullabaloo of women
and fools.
His wizened body shrank; and he was
not sure that his pride was quite unhurt. Mrs.
Prockter noticed this.
“Oh!” she resumed, with
undiminished vivacity, “it’s not because
I think your niece isn’t good enough for Emanuel;
it’s because I think she’s a great deal
too good! And yet it isn’t that, either.
The truth is, Mr. Ollerenshaw, I’m a purely
selfish woman. I’m the last person in the
world to stand in the way of my poor stepson getting
a better wife than he deserves. And if the woman
chooses to throw herself away on him, that’s
not my affair. What I scent danger in is that
your stepniece would find my stepson out. At
present she’s smitten by his fancy waistcoat.
But she would soon see through the fancy waistcoat-and
then there would be a scandal. If I have not
misjudged your stepniece, there would be a scandal,
and I do not think that I have misjudged her.
She is exactly the sort of young woman who, when she
had discovered she had made a mistake, would walk
straight out of the house.”
“She is!” James agreed
with simple heartiness of conviction.
“And Emanuel, having no sense
of humour, would leave nothing undone to force her
back again. Imagine the scandal, Mr. Ollerenshaw!
Imagine my position; imagine yours! Me, in
an affair like that! I won’t have it-that
is to say, I won’t have it if I can stop it.
Now, what can we do?”
Despite the horror of the situation,
he had sufficient loose, unemployed sentiment (left
over from pitying himself) to be rather pleased by
her manner of putting it: What can we
do?
But he kept this pleasure to himself.
“Nowt!” he said, drily.
He spoke to her as one sensible person
speaks to another sensible person in the Five Towns.
Assuredly she was a very sensible person. He had
in past years credited, or discredited, her with “airs.”
But here she was declaring that Helen was too good
for her stepson. If his pride had momentarily
suffered, through a misconception, it was now in the
full vigour of its strength.
“You think we can do nothing?”
she said, reflectively, and leant forward on her chair
towards him, as if struck by his oracular wisdom.
“What can us do?”
“You might praise Emanuel to
her-urge her on.” She fixed him
with her eye.
Sensible? She was prodigious.
She was the serpent of serpents.
He took her gaze twinkling. “Ay!”
he said. “I might. But if I’m
to urge her on, why didna’ ye ask her to your
house like, and chuck ’em at each other?”
She nodded several times, impressed
by this argument. “You are quite right,
Mr. Ollerenshaw,” she admitted.
“It’s a dangerous game,” he warned
her.
She put her lips together in meditation, and stared
into a corner.
“I must think it over”-she
emerged from her reflections. “I feel much
easier now I’ve told you all about it. And
I feel sure that two common-sense, middle-aged people
like you and me can manage to do what we want.
Dear me! How annoying stepsons are! Obviously,
Emanuel ought to marry another fool. And goodness
knows there are plenty to choose from. And yet
he must needs go and fall in love with almost the only
sensible girl in the town! There’s no end
to that boy’s foolishness. He actually
wants me to buy Wilbraham Hall, furniture, and everything!
What do you think it’s worth, Mr. Ollerenshaw?”
“Worth? It’s worth what it’ll
fetch.”
“Eight thousand?”
“Th’ land’s worth that,” said
James.
“It’s a silly idea.
But he put it into my head. Now will you drop
in one day and see me?”
“No,” said James. “I’m
not much for tea-parties, thank ye.”
“I mean when I’m alone,”
she pleaded, delightfully; “so that we can talk
over things, and you can tell me what is going on.”
He saw clearly all the perils of such
a course, but his instinct seized him again.
“Happen I may look in some morning
when I’m round yonder.”
“That will be very nice of you,”
she flattered him, and rose.
Helen came home about ten o’clock,
and went direct to bed. Never before had James
Ollerenshaw felt like a criminal, but as Helen’s
eyes dwelt for a moment on his in bidding him good-night,
he could scarcely restrain the blush of the evildoer.
And him sixty! Turn which way he would he saw
nothing but worry. What an incredible day he had
lived through! And how astounding was human existence!