As I approach the crisis in Leonora’s
life, I hesitate, fearing lest by an unfit phrase
I should deprive her of your sympathies, and fearing
also that this fear may incline me to set down less
than the truth about her.
She was possessed by a mysterious
sensation of content. She wished to lie supine except
in her domestic affairs and to dream that
all was well or would be well. It was as though
she had determined that nothing could extinguish or
even disturb the mild flame of happiness which burned
placidly within her. And yet the anxieties of
her existence were certainly increasing again.
On the morning after the opera, John had departed
on one of his sudden flying visits to London; these
journeys, formerly frequent, had been in abeyance
for a time, and their resumption seemed to point to
some renewal of his difficulties. He had called
at Church Street on his way to Knype, and Carpenter
had brought back word that Miss Myatt was wonderfully
better; but when Leonora herself called at Church
Street later in the morning and at last saw Aunt Hannah,
she was impressed by the change in the old creature,
whose nervous system had the appearance of being utterly
disorganised. Then there was the difficult case
of Ethel and Fred Ryley, in which Leonora had done
nothing whatever; and there was the case of Rose, whose
alienation from the rest of the household became daily
more marked. Finally there was the new and portentous
case of Millicent, probably the most disconcerting
of the three. Nevertheless, amid all these solicitudes,
Leonora remained equable, optimistic, and quietly joyous.
Her state of mind, so miraculously altered in a few
hours, gave her no surprise. It seemed natural;
everything seemed natural; she ceased for a period
to waste emotion in the futile desire for her lost
youth.
On the second day after the opera
she was sitting at her Sheraton desk in the small
nondescript room which opened off the dining-room.
In front of her lay a large tablet with innumerable
names of things printed on it in three columns; opposite
each name a little hole had been drilled, and in many
of the holes little sticks of wood stood upright.
Leonora uprooted a stick, exiling it to a long horizontal
row of holes at the top of the tablet, and then wrote
in a pocket-book; she uprooted another stick and wrote
again, so continuing till only a few sticks were left
in the columns; these she spared. Then she rang
the bell for the parlourmaid and relinquished to her
the tablet; the peculiar rite was over.
‘Is dinner ready?’ she
asked, looking at the small clock which she usually
carried about with her from room to room.
’Yes ‘m.’
’Then ring the gong. And
tell Carpenter I shall want the trap at a quarter
past two, for two. I’m going to shop in
Hanbridge and then to meet Mr. Stanway at Knype.
We shall be in before four. Have some tea ready.
And don’t forget the éclairs to-day, Bessie.’
She smiled.
’No ‘m. Did you think
on to write about them new dog-biscuits, ma’am?’
‘I’ll write now,’
said Leonora, and she turned to the desk.
The gong sounded; the dinner was brought
in. Through the doorway between the two rooms there
was no door, only a portiere Leonora heard
Ethel’s rather heavy footsteps. ’I
don’t think mother will want you to wait to-day,
Bessie,’ Ethel’s voice said. Then
followed, after the maid’s exit, the noise of
a dish-cover being lifted and dropped, and Ethel’s
exclamation: ‘Um!’ And then the voices
of Rose and Millicent approached, in altercation.
‘Come along, mother,’ Ethel called out.
‘Coming,’ answered Leonora, putting the
note in an envelope.
‘The idea!’ said Rose’s voice scornfully.
‘Yes,’ retorted Milly’s voice.
‘The idea.’
Leonora listened as she wrote the address.
’You always were a conceited
thing, Milly, and since this wonderful opera you’re
positively ridiculous. I almost wish I’d
gone to it now, just to see what you were like.’
‘Ah well! You just didn’t, and so
you don’t know.’
’No indeed! I’d got
something better to do than watch a pack of amateurs ’
There was a pause for silent contempt.
‘Well? Keep it up, keep it up.’
‘Anyhow I’m perfectly certain father won’t
let you go.’
‘I shall go.’
’And besides, I want
to go to London, and you may be absolutely certain,
my child, that he won’t let two of us go.’
‘I shall speak to him first.’
‘Oh no, you won’t.’
‘Shan’t I? You’ll see.’
’No, you won’t. Because
it just happens that I spoke to him the night before
last. And he’s making inquiries and he’ll
tell me to-night. So what do you think of that?’
Leonora drew aside the portiere.
‘My dear girls!’ she protested benevolently,
standing there.
The feud, always apt thus to leap
into a perfectly Corsican fury of bitterness, sank
back at once to its ordinary level of passive mutual
repudiation. Rose and Millicent were not bereft
of the finer feelings which distinguish humanity from
the beasts of the jungle; sometimes they could be
almost affectionate. There were, however, moments
when to all appearance they hated each other with
a tigerish and crouching hatred such as may be found
only between two opposing feminine temperaments linked
together by the family tie.
‘What’s this about your
going to London, Rosie?’ Leonora asked in a
voice soothing but surprised, when the meal had begun.
‘You know, mamma. I mentioned
it to you the other day.’ The girl’s
tone implied that what she had said to Leonora perhaps
went in at one ear and out at the other.
Leonora remembered. Rose had
in fact casually told her that a school friend in
Oldcastle who was studying for the same examination
as herself had gone to London for six weeks’
final coaching under what Rose called a ‘lady-crammer.’
‘But you didn’t tell me
that you wanted to go as well,’ Leonora said.
‘Yes, mother, I did,’
Rose affirmed with calm. ’You forget.
I’m sure I shan’t pass if I don’t
go. So I asked father while you were all at this
opera affair.’
‘And what did he say?’ Ethel demanded.
‘He said he would make inquiries this morning
and see.’
Ethel gave a laugh of good-natured
derision. ‘Yes,’ she exclaimed, ’and
you’ll see, too!’
In response to this oracular utterance,
Rose merely bent lower over her plate.
Millicent, conscious of a brilliant
vocation and of an impassioned resolve, refrained
from the discussion, and the sense of her ineffable
superiority bore hard on that lithe, mercurial youthfulness.
The ‘Signal,’ in praising Millicent’s
performance at the opera, had predicted for her a
career, and had thoughtfully quoted instances of well-born
amateurs who had become professionals and made great
names on the stage. Millicent knew that all Bursley
was talking about her. And yet the family life
was unaltered; no one at home seemed to be much impressed,
not even Ethel, though Ethel’s sympathy could
be depended upon; Milly was still Milly, the youngest,
the least important, the chit of a thing. At
times it appeared to her as though the triumph of that
ecstatic and glorious night was after all nothing but
an illusion, and that only the interminable dailiness
of family life was real. Then the ruthless and
calculating minx in her shut tight those pretty lips
and coldly determined that nothing should stand against
ambition.
‘I do hope you will pass,’
said Leonora cordially to Rose. ’You certainly
deserve to.’
’I know I shan’t, unless
I get some outside help. My brain isn’t
that sort of brain. It’s another sort.
Only one has to knuckle down to these wretched exams
first.’
Leonora did not understand her daughter.
She knew, however, that there was not the slightest
chance of Rose being allowed to go to London alone
for any lengthened period, and she wondered that Rose
could be so blind as not to perceive this. As
for Millicent’s vague notions, which the child
had furtively broached during her father’s absence,
the more Leonora thought upon them, the more fantastically
impossible they seemed. She changed the subject.
The repast, which had commenced with
due ceremony, degenerated into a feminine mess, hasty,
informal, counterfeit. That elaborate and irksome
pretence that a man is present, with which women when
they are alone always begin to eat, was gradually
dropped, and the meal ended abruptly, inconclusively,
like a bad play.
‘Let’s go for a walk,’ said Ethel.
‘Yes,’ said Milly, ‘let’s.’
‘Mamma!’ Milly called from the drawing-room
window.
Leonora was walking about the misty
garden, where little now remained that was green,
save the yews, the cypresses, and the rhododendrons;
Bran, his white-and-fawn coat glittering with minute
drops of water, plodded heavily and content by her
side along the narrow damp paths. She was dressed
for driving, and awaited Carpenter with the trap.
In reply to Leonora’s gesture
of attention, Milly, instead of speaking from the
window, ran quickly to her across the sodden lawn.
And Milly’s running was so girlish, simple,
and unaffected, that Leonora seemed by means of it
to have found her daughter again, the daughter who
had disappeared in the adroit and impudent creature
of the footlights. She was glad of the reassurance.
‘Here’s Mr. Twemlow, mamma,’
said Milly, with a rather embarrassed air; and they
looked at each other, while Bran frowned in glancing
upwards.
At the same moment, Arthur Twemlow
and Ethel entered the garden together. The social
atmosphere was rendered bracing by this invasion of
the masculine; every personality awoke and became vigilantly
itself.
’We met Mr. Twemlow on the marsh,
mother, walking from Oldcastle to Bursley,’
said Ethel, after the ritual of greeting, ’and
so we brought him in.’
As Leonora was on the point of leaving
the house, the situation was somewhat awkward, and
a slight hesitation on her part showed this.
‘You’re going out?’ he said.
‘Oh, mamma,’ Milly cried
quickly, ’do let me go and meet father instead
of you. I want to.’
‘What, alone?’ Leonora exclaimed in a
kind of dream.
‘I’ll go too,’ said Ethel.
‘And suppose you have the horse down?’
‘Well then, we’ll take
Carpenter,’ Milly suggested. ’I’ll
run and tell him to put his overcoat on and put the
back-seat in.’ And she scampered off.
Twemlow was fondling the dog with an air of detachment.
In the fraction of an instant, a thousand
wild and disturbing thoughts swept through Leonora’s
brain. Was it possible that Arthur Twemlow had
suggested this change of plan to the girls? Or
had the girls already noticed with the keen eyes of
youth that she and Arthur Twemlow enjoyed each other’s
society, and naively wished to give her pleasure?
Would Arthur Twemlow, but for the accidental encounter
on the Marsh, have passed by her home without calling?
If she remained, what conclusion could not be drawn?
If she persisted in going, might not he want to come
with her? She was ashamed of the preposterous
inward turmoil.
‘And my shopping?’ she smiled, blushing.
‘Give me the list, mater,’
said Ethel, and took the morocco book out of her hand.
Never before had Leonora felt so helpless
in the sudden clutch of fate. She knew she was
a willing prey. She wished to remain, and politeness
to Arthur Twemlow demanded that this wish should not
be disguised. Yet what would she not have given
even to have felt herself able to disguise it?
‘How incredibly stupid I am!’ she thought.
No sooner had the two girls departed than Twemlow
began to laugh.
‘I must tell you,’ he
said, with candid amusement, ’that this is a
plant. Those two daughters of yours calculated
to leave you and me here alone together.’
‘Yes?’ she murmured, still constrained.
’Miss Milly wants me to talk
you round about her going in for the stage. When
I met them on the Marsh, of course I began to pay her
compliments, and I just happened to say I thought
she was a born comedienne, and before I knew
it T was blindfolded, handcuffed, and carried off,
so to speak.’
This was the simple, innocent explanation!
’Oh, how incredibly stupid, stupid, stupid,
I was!’ she thought again, and a feeling of exquisite
relief surged into her being. Mingled with that
relief was the deep joy of realising that Ethel and
Milly fully shared her instinctive predilection for
Arthur Twemlow. Here indeed was the supreme security.
‘I must say my daughters get
more and more surprising every day,’ she remarked,
impelled to offer some sort of conventional apology
for her children’s unconventional behaviour.
‘They are charming girls,’ he said briefly.
On the surface of her profound relief
and joy there played like a flying fish the thought:
’Was he meaning to call in any case? Was
he on his way here?’
They talked about Aunt Hannah, whom
Twemlow had seen that morning and who was improving
rapidly. But he agreed with Leonora that the old
lady’s vitality had been irretrievably shattered.
Then there was a pause, followed by some remarks on
the weather, and then another pause. Bran, after
watching them attentively for a few moments as they
stood side by side near the French window, rose up
from off his haunches, and walked gloomily away.
‘Bran, Bran!’ Twemlow cried.
‘It’s no use,’ she
laughed. ’He’s vexed. He thinks
he’s being neglected. He’ll go to
his kennel and nothing will bring him out of it, except
food. Come into the house. It’s going
to rain again.’
‘Well,’ the visitor exclaimed familiarly.
They were seated by the fire in the
drawing-room. Leonora was removing her gloves.
‘Well?’ she repeated.
’And so you still think Milly ought to be allowed
to go on the stage?’
‘I think she will go on the stage,’
he said.
‘You can’t imagine how
it upsets me even to think of it.’ Leonora
seemed to appeal for his sympathy.
‘Oh, yes, I can,’ he replied.
’Didn’t I tell you the other night that
I knew exactly how you felt? But you’ve
got to get over that, I guess. You’ve got
to get on to yourself. Mr. Myatt told me what
he said to you ’
‘So Uncle Meshach has been talking
about it too?’ she interrupted.
’Why, yes, certainly. Of
course he’s quite right. Milly’s bound
to go her own way. Why not make up your mind
to it, and help her, and straighten things out for
her?’
‘But ’
‘Look here, Mrs. Stanway,’
he leaned forward; ’will you tell me just why
it upsets you to think of your daughter going on the
stage?’
‘I don’t know. I can’t explain.
But it does.’
She smiled at him, smoothing out her
gloves one after the other on her lap.
‘It’s nothing but superstition,
you know,’ he said gently, returning her smile.
‘Yes,’ she admitted. ‘I suppose
it is.’
He was silent for a moment, as if
undecided what to say next. She glanced at him
surreptitiously, and took in all the details of his
attire the high white collar, the dark tweed
suit obviously of American origin, the thin silver
chain that emerged from beneath his waistcoat and
disappeared on a curve into the hip pocket of his trousers,
the boots with their long pointed toes. His heavy
moustache, and the smooth bluish chin, struck her
as ideally masculine.
‘No parents,’ he burst
out, ’no parents can see things from their children’s
point of view.’
‘Oh!’ she protested.
’There are times when I feel so like my daughters
that I am them.’
He nodded. ‘Yes,’
he said, abandoning his position at once, ’I
can believe that. You’re an exception.
If I hadn’t sort of known all the time that
you were, I wouldn’t be here now talking like
this.’
‘It’s so accidental, the
whole business,’ she remarked, branching off
to another aspect of the case in order to mask the
confusion caused by the sincere flattery in his voice.
’It was only by chance that Milly had that particular
part at all. Suppose she hadn’t had it.
What then?’
‘Everything’s accidental,’
he replied. ’Everything that ever happened
is accidental, in a way in another it isn’t.
If you look at your own life, for instance, you’ll
find it’s been simply a series of coincidences.
I’m sure mine has been. Sheer chance from
beginning to end.’
‘Yes,’ she said thoughtfully,
and put her chin in the palm of her left hand.
’And as for the stage, why,
nearly every one goes on the stage by chance.
It just occurs, that’s all. And moreover
I guarantee that the parents of fifty per cent. of
all the actresses now on the boards began by thinking
what a terrible blow it was to them that their
daughters should want to do that. Can’t
you see what I mean?’ He emphasised his words
more and more. ‘I’m certain you can.’
She signified assent. It seemed
to her, as he continued to talk, that for the first
time she was listening to natural convincing common
sense in that home of hers, where existence was governed
by precedent and by conventional ideas and by the
profound parental instinct which meets all requests
with a refusal. It seemed to her that her children,
though to outward semblance they had much freedom,
had never listened to anything but ‘No,’
‘No, dear,’ ‘Of course you can’t,’
’I think you had better not,’ and ‘Once
for all, I forbid it.’ She wondered why
this should have been so, and why its strangeness
had not impressed her before. She had a distant
fleeting vision of a household in which parents and
children behaved like free and sensible human beings,
instead of like the virtuous and the martyrised puppets
of a terrible system called ’acting for the
best.’ And she thought again what an extraordinary
man Arthur Twemlow was, strong-minded, clear-headed,
sympathetic, and delightful. She enjoyed intensely
the sensation of their intimacy.
‘Jack will never agree,’
she said, when she could say nothing else.
‘Ah! “Jack!"’
He slightly imitated her tone. ’Well, that
remains to be seen.’
‘Why do you take all this trouble
for Milly?’ she asked him. ’It’s
very good of you.’
‘Because I’m a fool, a
meddling ass,’ he replied lightly, standing up
and stroking his clothes.
‘You aren’t,’ her eyes said, ‘you
are a dear.’
‘No,’ he went on, in a
serious tone, ’Milly just wanted me to speak
to you, and after all I didn’t see why I shouldn’t.
It’s no earthly business of mine, but oh,
well! Good-bye, I must be getting along.’
‘Have you got an appointment
to keep?’ she questioned him.
‘No not an appointment.’
’Well then, you will stay a
little longer. The trap will be back quite soon.’
Her voice seemed playfully to indicate that, as she
had submitted to his domination, so he must submit
now to hers. ’And if you will excuse me
one moment, I will go and take off this thick jacket.’
Up in the bedroom, as she removed
her coat in front of the pier-glass, she smiled at
her image timorously, yet in full content. Milly’s
prospects did not appear to her to have been practically
improved, nor could she piece out of Arthur Twemlow’s
conversation a definite argument; nevertheless she
felt that he had made her see something more clearly
than heretofore, that he had induced in her, not by
logic but by persuasiveness, a mood towards her children
which was brighter, more sanguine, and even more loving,
than any in her previous experience. She was
glad that she had left him alone for a minute, because
such familiar treatment of him somehow established
definitely his status as a friend of the house.
‘Listen, Twemlow,’ said
Stanway loudly, ’I meant to run down to the
office for an hour this afternoon, but if you’ll
stay, I’ll stay. That’s a bargain,
eh?’
John had returned from London blusterously
cheerful, and Twemlow stood in the centre of his vehement
noisy hospitality as in the centre of a typhoon.
He consented to stay, because the two girls, with hair
blown and still in their wet macintoshes, took him
by the arm and said he must. He was not the first
guest in that house whom the apparent heartiness of
the host had failed to convince. Always there
was something sinister, insincere, and bullying in
the invitations which John gave, and in his reception
of visitors. Hence it was, perhaps, that visitors
did not abound under his roof, despite the richness
of the table and the ordered elegance of every appointment.
Women paid calls; the girls, unlike Leonora, had their
intimates, including Harry; but men seldom came; and
it was not often that the principal meals of the day
were shared by an outsider of either sex.
Arthur’s presence on a second
occasion was therefore the more stimulating.
It affected the whole house, even to the kitchen, which,
indeed, usually vibrates in sympathy with the drawing-room.
In Bessie’s vivacious demeanour as she served
the high-tea at six o’clock might be observed
the symptoms of the agreeable excitation which all
felt. Even Rose unbent, and Leonora thought how
attractive the girl could be when she chose.
But towards the end of the meal, it became evident
that Rose was preoccupied. Leonora, Ethel, and
Millicent passed into the drawing-room. John
pulled out his immense cigar-case, and the two men
began to smoke.
‘Come along,’ said Stanway,
speaking thickly with the cigar in his mouth.
‘Papa,’ said Rose ominously,
just as he was following Twemlow out of the door.
She spoke with quiet, cold distinctness.
‘What is it?’
‘Did you inquire about that?’
He paused. ‘Oh yes, Rose,’
he answered rapidly.’ I inquired. She
seemed a very clever woman, I must say. But I’ve
been thinking it over, and I’ve come to the
conclusion that it won’t do for you to go.
I don’t like the idea of it you in
London for six weeks or more alone. You must do
what you can here. And if you fail this time you
must try again.’
’But I can stay in the same
lodgings as Sarah Fuge. The house is kept
by her cousin or some relation.’
‘And then there’s the expense,’
he proceeded.
’Father, I told you the other
night I didn’t want to put you to any expense.
I’ve got thirty-seven pounds of my own, and I
will pay; I prefer to pay.’
‘Oh, no, no!’ he exclaimed.
‘Well, why can’t I go?’ she demanded
bluntly.
‘I’ll think it over again but
I don’t like it, Rose, I don’t like it.’
‘But there isn’t a day to waste, father!’
she complained.
Bessie entered to clear the table.
‘Hum! Well! I’ll
think it over again.’ He breathed out smoke,
and departed. Rose set her lips hard. She
was seen no more that evening.
In the drawing-room, Stanway found
Twemlow and Millicent talking in low voices on the
hearthrug. Ethel lounged on the sofa. Leonora
was not present, but she came in immediately.
‘Let’s have a game at
solo,’ John suggested. And because five
was a convenient number they all played. Twemlow
and Milly were the best performers; Milly’s
gift for card-playing was notorious in the family.
‘Do you ever play poker?’
Twemlow asked, when the other three had been beggared
of counters.
‘No,’ said John, cautiously. ‘Not
here.’
‘It’s lots of fun,’ Twemlow went
on, looking at the girls.
‘Oh, Mr. Twemlow,’ Milly
cried. ’It’s awfully gambly, isn’t
it? Do teach us.’
In a quarter of an hour Milly was
bluffing her father with success. She said that
in future she should never want to play at any other
game. As for Leonora, though she lost and gained
counters with happy equanimity, she did not like the
game; it frightened her. When Milly had shown
a straight flush and scooped the kitty she sent the
child out of the room with a message to the kitchen
concerning coffee and sandwiches.
‘Won’t Milly sing?’ Twemlow asked.
‘Certainly, if you wish,’ Leonora responded.
‘Ay! Let’s have something,’
said Stanway, lazily.
And when Millicent returned, she was
told that she must sing before eating. She sang
‘Love is a Plaintive Song,’ to Ethel’s
inert accompaniment, and she gave it exactly as though
she had been on the stage, with all the dramatic action,
all the freedom, all the allurements, which she had
lavished on the audience in the Town Hall.
‘Very good,’ said her
father. ’I like that. It’s very
pretty. I didn’t hear it the other night.’
Twemlow merely thanked the artist. Leonora was
silently uncomfortable.
After coffee both the girls disappeared.
Twemlow looked round, and then spoke to Stanway.
‘I’ve been very much impressed
by your daughter’s talent,’ he said.
His tone was extremely serious. It implied that,
now the children were gone, the adults could talk
with freedom.
Stanway was a little startled, and
more than a little flattered.
‘Really?’ he questioned.
‘Really,’ said Twemlow,
emphasising still further his seriousness. ’Has
she ever been taught?’
‘Only by a local teacher up
here at Hillport,’ Leonora told him.
‘She ought to have lessons from a first-class
master.’
‘Why?’ asked Stanway abruptly.
‘Well,’ Twemlow said, ‘you never
know ’
‘You honestly think her voice
is worth cultivating?’ John demanded, impelled
to participate in Twemlow’s gravity.
‘I do. And not only her voice ’
‘Ah,’ Stanway mused, ‘there’s
no first-class masters in this district.’
‘Why, I met a man from Manchester
at the Five Towns Hotel last night,’ said Twemlow,
’who comes down to Knype once a week to give
lessons. He used to sing in opera. They
say he’s the best man about, and that he’s
taught a lot of good people. I forget his name.’
‘I expect you mean Cecil Corfe,’
Leonora said cheerfully. She had been amazed
at the compliance of John’s attitude.
‘Yes, that’s it.’
At the same moment there was a faint
noise at the French window. John went to investigate.
As soon as his back was turned, Twemlow glanced at
Leonora with eyes full of a private amusement which
he invited her to share. ‘Can’t I
just handle him?’ he seemed to say. She
smiled, but cautiously, less she should disclose too
fully her intense appreciation of his personality.
‘Why, it’s the dog!’
Stanway proclaimed, ’and wet through! What’s
he doing loose? It’s raining like the devil.’
‘I’m afraid I didn’t
fasten him up this afternoon. I forgot,’
said Leonora. ‘Oh! my new rug!’
Bran plunged into the room with a
glad deafening bark, his tail thwacking the furniture
like the flat of a sword.
‘Get out, you great brute!’
Stanway ordered, and then, on the step, he shouted
into the darkness for Carpenter.
Twemlow rose to look on.
‘I can’t let you walk
to the station to-night, Twemlow,’ said Stanway,
still outside the room. ’Carpenter shall
drive you. Yes, he shall, so don’t argue.
And while he’s about it he may as well take you
straight to Knype. You can go in the buggy there’s
a hood to it.’
When the time came for departure,
John insisted on lending to Twemlow a large driving
overcoat. They stood in the hall together, while
Twemlow fumbled with the complicated apparatus of
buttons. Stanway whistled.
‘By the way,’ he said,
’when are you coming in to look through those
old accounts?’
‘Oh, I don’t know,’
Twemlow answered, somewhat taken by surprise.
‘I tell you what I’ll
do I’ll send you copies of them, eh?’
‘I think you needn’t trouble,’
said Twemlow, carelessly. ’I guess I shall
write to my sister, and tell her I can’t see
any use in trying to worry out the old man’s
finances at this time of day.’
‘However,’ Stan way repeated,
’I’ll send you the copies all the same.
And when you write to your sister, will you give her
my kindest regards?’
The whole family, except Rose, came
into the porch to bid him good-night. In the
darkness and the heavy rain could dimly be seen the
rounded form of the buggy; the cob’s flanks shone
in the glittering ray of the lamps; Carpenter was
hidden under the hood; his mysterious hand raised
the apron, and Twemlow stepped quickly in.
‘Good-night,’ said Ethel.
‘Good-night, Mr. Twemlow,’ said Milly.
‘Be good.’
‘You’ll see us again before
you leave, Twemlow?’ said John’s imperious
voice.
‘You aren’t going back
to America just yet, are you?’ Leonora asked,
from the back.
No reply came from within the hood.
’Mother says you aren’t
going back to America just yet, are you, Mr. Twemlow?’
Milly screamed in her treble.
Arthur Twemlow showed his face.
‘No, not yet, I think,’ he called.
’See you again, certainly.... And thanks
once more.’
‘Tchick!’ said Carpenter.
The next evening, after tea, John,
Leonora, and Rose were in the drawing-room. Milly
had run down to see her friend Cissie Burgess, having
with fine cruelty chosen that particular night because
she happened to know that Harry would be out.
Ethel was invisible. Rose had returned with bitter
persistence to the siege of her father’s obstinacy.
‘I should have six weeks clear,’ she was
saying.
John consulted his pocket-calendar.
‘No,’ he corrected her,
’you would only have a month. It isn’t
worth while.’
‘I should have six weeks,’
she repeated. ’The exam isn’t till
January the seventh.’
‘But Christmas, what about Christmas?
You must be here for Christmas.’
‘Why?’ demanded Rose.
‘Oh, Rosie!’ Leonora protested.’
You can’t be away for Christmas!’
‘Why not?’ the girl demanded again, coldly.
Both parents paused.
‘Because you can’t,’ said John angrily.
‘The idea’s absurd.’
‘I don’t see it,’ Rose persevered.
‘Well, I do,’ John delivered himself.
‘And let that suffice.’
Rose’s face indicated the near approach of tears.
It was at this juncture that Bessie
opened the door and announced Mr. Twemlow.
‘I just called to bring back
that magnificent great-coat,’ he said.
‘It’s hanging up on its proper hook in
the hall.’
Then he turned specially to Leonora,
who sat isolated near the fire. She was not surprised
to see him, because she had felt sure that he would
at once return the overcoat in person; she had counted
on him doing so. As he came towards her she languorously
lifted her arm, without rising, and the two bangles
which she wore slipped tinkling down the wide sleeve.
They shook hands in silence, smiling.
‘I hope you didn’t take cold last night?’
she said at length.
‘Not I,’ he replied, sitting down by her
side.
He was quick to detect the disturbance
in the social atmosphere, and though he tried to appear
unconscious of it, he did not succeed in the impossible.
Moreover, Rose had evidently decided that despite his
presence she would finish what she had begun.
‘Very well, father,’ she
said. ’If you’ll let me go at once
I’ll come down for two days at Christmas.’
‘Yes,’ John grumbled,
’that’s all very well. But who’s
to take you? You can’t go alone. And
you know perfectly well that I only came back yesterday.’
He recited this fact precisely as though it constituted
a grievance against Rose.
‘As if I couldn’t go alone!’ Rose
exclaimed.
‘If it’s London you’re
talking about,’ Twemlow said, ’I will be
going up to-morrow by the midday flyer, and could
look after any lady that happened to be on that train
and would accept my services.’ He glanced
pleasantly at Rose.
‘Oh, Mr. Twemlow!’ the
girl murmured. It was a ludicrously inadequate
expression of her profound passionate gratitude to
this knight; but she could say no more.
‘But can you be ready, my dear?’ Leonora
inquired.
‘I am ready,’ said Rose.
‘It’s understood then,’
Twemlow said later. ’We shall meet at the
depot. I can’t stop another moment now.
I’ve got a cab waiting outside.’
Leonora wished to ask him whether,
notwithstanding his partial assurance of the previous
evening, his journey would really end at Euston, or
whether he was not taking London en route for
New York. But she could not bring herself to
put the question. She hoped that John might put
it; John, however, was taciturn.
‘We shall see Rose off to-morrow,
of course,’ was her last utterance to Twemlow.
Leonora and her three daughters stood
in the crowd on the platform of Knype railway station,
waiting for Arthur Twemlow and for the London express.
John had brought them to the station in the waggonette,
had kissed Rose and purchased her ticket, and had
then driven off to a creditors’ meeting at Hanbridge.
All the women felt rather mournful amid that bustle
and confusion. Leonora had said to herself again
and again that it was absurd to regard this absence
of Rose for a few weeks as a break in the family existence.
Yet the phrase, ’the first break, the first
break,’ ran continually in her mind. The
gentle sadness of her mood noticeably affected the
girls. It was as though they had all suddenly
discovered a mutual unsuspected tenderness. Milly
put her hand on Rose’s shoulder, and Rose did
not resent the artless gesture.
‘I hope Mr. Twemlow isn’t
going to miss it,’ said Ethel, voicing the secret
apprehension of all.
‘I shan’t miss it, anyhow,’ Rose
remarked defiantly.
Scarcely a minute before the train
was due, Milly descried Twemlow coming out of the
booking office. They pressed through the crowd
towards him.
‘Ah!’ he exclaimed genially.
‘Here you are! Baggage labelled?’
‘We thought you weren’t coming, Mr. Twemlow,’
Milly said.
’You did? I was kept quite
a few minutes at the hotel. You see I only had
to walk across the road.’
‘We didn’t really think any such thing,’
said Leonora.
The conversation fell to pieces.
Then the express, with its two engines,
its gilded luncheon-cars, and its post-office van,
thundered in, shaking the platform, and seeming to
occupy the entire station. It had the air of pausing
nonchalantly, disdainfully, in its mighty rush from
one distant land of romance to another, in order to
suffer for a brief moment the assault of a puny and
needlessly excited multitude.
‘First stop Willesden,’ yelled the porters.
‘Say, conductor,’ said
Twemlow sharply, catching the luncheon-car attendant
by the sleeve, ’you’ve got two seats reserved
for me Twemlow?’
‘Twemlow? Yes, sir.’
‘Come along,’ he said, ‘come along.’
The girls kissed at the steps of the car: ‘Good-bye.’
‘Well, good-bye all!’
said Twemlow. ’I hope to see you again some
time. Say next fall.’
‘You surely aren’t ’
Leonora began.
‘Yes,’ he resumed quickly, ‘I sail
Saturday. Must get back.’
‘Oh, Mr. Twemlow!’ Ethel and Milly complained
together.
Rose was standing on the steps.
Leonora leaned and kissed the pale girl madly, pressing
her lips into Rose’s cheek. Then she shook
hands with Arthur Twemlow.
‘Good-bye!’ she murmured.
‘I guess I shall write to you,’
he said jauntily, addressing all three of them; and
Ethel and Milly enthusiastically replied: ‘Oh,
do!’
The travellers penetrated into the
car, and reappeared at a window, one on either side
of a table covered with a white cloth and laid for
two persons.
‘Oh, don’t I wish I was
going!’ Milly exclaimed, perceiving them.
Rose was now flushed with triumph.
She looked at Twemlow, her lips moved, she smiled.
She was a woman in the world. Then they nodded
and waved hands.
The guard unfurled his green flag,
the engine gave a curt, scornful whistle, and lo!
the luncheon-car was gliding away from Leonora, Ethel,
and Milly! Lo! the station was empty!
‘I wonder what he will talk
to her about,’ thought Leonora.
They had to cross the station by the
under-ground passage and wait twenty minutes for a
squalid, shambling local train which took them to
Shawport, at the foot of the rise to Hillport.