‘Runnymede’ (so the Mumfords’
house was named) stood on its own little plot of ground
in one of the tree-shadowed roads which persuade the
inhabitants of Sutton that they live in the country.
It was of red brick, and double-fronted, with a porch
of wood and stucco; bay windows on one side of the
entrance, and flat on the other, made a contrast pleasing
to the suburban eye. The little front garden
had a close fence of unpainted lath, a characteristic
of the neighbourhood. At the back of the house
lay a long, narrow lawn, bordered with flower-beds,
and shaded at the far end by a fine horse-chestnut.
Emmeline talked much of the delightful
proximity of the Downs; one would have imagined her
taking long walks over the breezy uplands to Ban stead
or Epsom, or yet further afield The fact was, she saw
no more of the country than if she had lived at Brixton.
Her windows looked only upon the surrounding houses
and their garden foliage. Occasionally she walked
along the asphalte pavement of the Brighton
Road a nursemaids’ promenade as
far as the stone which marks twelve miles from Westminster
Bridge. Here, indeed, she breathed the air of
the hills, but villas on either hand obstructed the
view, and brought London much nearer than the measured
distance. Like her friends and neighbours, Emmeline
enjoyed Sutton because it was a most respectable little
portion of the great town, set in a purer atmosphere.
The country would have depressed her.
In this respect Miss Derrick proved
a congenial companion. Louise made no pretence
of rural inclinations, but had a great liking for
tree-shadowed asphalte, for the results of elaborate
horticulture, for the repose and the quiet of villadom.
‘I should like to have a house
just like this,’ she declared, on her first
evening at “Runnymede,” talking with her
host and hostess out in the garden. ’It’s
quite big enough, unless, of course, you have a very
large family, which must be rather a bore.’
She laughed ingenuously. ’And one gets
to town so easily. What do you pay for your season-ticket,
Mr. Mumford? Oh, well! that isn’t much.
I almost think I shall get one.’
‘Do you wish to go up very often,
then?’ asked Emmeline, reflecting on her new
responsibilities.
’Oh! not every day, of course.
But a season-ticket saves the bother each time, and
you have a sort of feeling, you know, that you can
be in town whenever you like.’
It had not hitherto been the Mumfords’
wont to dress for dinner, but this evening they did
so, and obviously to Miss Derrick’s gratification.
She herself appeared in a dress which altogether outshone
that of her hostess. Afterwards, in private, she
drew Emmeline’s attention to this garb, and
frankly asked her opinion of it.
‘Very nice indeed,’ murmured
the married lady, with a good-natured smile.
‘Perhaps a little ’
’There, I know what you’re
going to say. You think it’s too showy.
Now I want you to tell me just what you think about
everything everything. I shan’t
be offended. I’m not so silly. You
know I’ve come here to learn all sorts of things.
To-morrow you shall go over all my dresses with me,
and those you don’t like I’ll get rid
of. I’ve never had anyone to tell me what’s
nice and what isn’t. I want to be oh,
well, you know what I mean.’
‘But, my dear,’ said Emmeline,
’there’s something I don’t quite
understand. You say I’m to speak plainly,
and so I will. How is it that you haven’t
made friends long ago with the sort of people you
wish to know? It isn’t as if you were in
poor circumstances.’
’How could I make friends
with nice people when I was ashamed to have them at
home? The best I know are quite poor girls
I went to school with. They’re much better
educated than I am, but they make their own living,
and so I can’t see very much of them, and I’m
not sure they want to see much of me.
I wish I knew what people think of me; they call me
vulgar, I believe the kind I’m speaking
of. Now, do tell me, Mrs. Mumford, am
I vulgar?’
‘My dear Miss Derrick ’
Emmeline began in protest, but was at once interrupted.
’Oh! that isn’t what I
want. You must call me Louise, or Lou, if you
like, and just say what you really think. Yes,
I see, I am rather vulgar, and what can you
expect? Look at mother; and if you saw Mr. Higgins,
oh! The mistake I made was to leave school so
soon. I got sick of it, and left at sixteen,
and of course the idiots at home I mean
the foolish people let me have my own way.
I’m not clever, you know, and I didn’t
get on well at school. They used to say I could
do much better if I liked, and perhaps it was more
laziness than stupidity, though I don’t care
for books I wish I did. I’ve
had lots of friends, but I never keep them for very
long. I don’t know whether it’s their
fault or mine. My oldest friends are Amy Barker
and Muriel Featherstone; they were both at the school
at Clapham, and now Amy does type-writing in the City,
and Muriel is at a photographer’s. They’re
awfully nice girls, and t like them so much; but then,
you see, they haven’t enough money to live in
what I call a nice way, and, you know, I should
never think of asking them to advise me about my dresses,
or anything of that kind. A friend of mine once
began to say something and I didn’t like it;
after that we had nothing to do with each other.’
Emmeline could not hide her amusement.
‘Well, that’s just it,’
went on the other frankly. ’I have
rather a sharp temper, and I suppose I don’t
get on well with most people. I used to quarrel
dreadfully with some of the girls at school the
uppish sort. And yet all the time I wanted to
be friends with them. But, of course, I could
never have taken them home.’
Mrs. Mumford began to read the girl’s
character, and to understand how its complexity had
shaped her life. She was still uneasy as to the
impression this guest would make upon their friends,
but on the whole it seemed probable that Louise would
conscientiously submit herself to instruction, and
do her very best to be “nice.” Clarence’s
opinion was still favourable; he pronounced Miss Derrick
“very amusing,” and less of a savage than
his wife’s description had led him to expect.
Having the assistance of two servants
and a nurse-girl, Emmeline was not overburdened with
domestic work. She soon found it fortunate that
her child, a girl of two years old, needed no great
share of her attention; for Miss Derrick, though at
first she affected an extravagant interest in the
baby, very soon had enough of that plaything, and
showed a decided preference for Emmeline’s society
out of sight and hearing of nursery affairs. On
the afternoon of the second day they went together
to call upon Mrs. Fentiman, who lived at a distance
of a quarter of an hour’s walk, in a house called
“Hazeldene”; a semi-detached house, considerably
smaller than “Runnymede,” and neither
without nor within so pleasant to look upon.
Mrs. Fentiman, a tall, hard-featured, but amiable lady,
had two young children who occupied most of her time;
at present one of them was ailing, and the mother
could talk of nothing else but this distressing circumstance.
The call lasted only for ten minutes, and Emmeline
felt that her companion was disappointed.
‘Children are a great trouble,’
Louise remarked, when they had left the house.
’People ought never to marry unless they can
keep a lot of servants. Not long ago I was rather
fond of somebody, but I wouldn’t have him because
he had no money. Don’t you think I was
quite right?’
‘I have no doubt you were.’
‘And now,’ pursued the
girl, poking the ground with her sunshade as she walked,
’there’s somebody else. And that’s
one of the things I want to tell you about. He
has about three hundred a year. It isn’t
much, of course; but I suppose Mr. Higgins would give
me something. And yet I’m sure it won’t
come to anything. Let’s go home and have
a good talk, shall we?’
Mrs. Higgins’s letter had caused
Emmeline and her husband no little amusement; but
at the same time it led them to reflect. Certainly
they numbered among their acquaintances one or two
marriageable young men who might perchance be attracted
by Miss Derrick, especially if they learnt that Mr.
Higgins was disposed to ’behave handsomely’
to his stepdaughter; but the Mumfords had no desire
to see Louise speedily married. To the bribe
with which the letter ended they could give no serious
thought. Having secured their “paying guest,”
they hoped she would remain with them for a year or
two at least. But already Louise had dropped hints
such as Emmeline could not fail to understand, and
her avowal of serious interest in a lover came rather
as an annoyance than a surprise to Mrs. Mumford.
It was a hot afternoon, and they had
tea brought out into the garden, under the rustling
leaves of the chestnut.
‘You don’t know anyone
else at Sutton except Mrs. Fentiman?’ said Louise,
as she leaned back in the wicker chair.
’Not intimately. But some
of our friends from London will be coming on Sunday.
I’ve asked four people to lunch.’
’How jolly! Of course you’ll
tell me all about them before then. But I want
to talk about Mr. Cobb. Please, two lumps
of sugar. I’ve known him for about a year
and a half. We seem quite old friends, and he
writes to me; I don’t answer the letters, unless
there’s something to say. To tell the truth,
I don’t like him.’
‘How can that be if you seem old friends?’
’Well, he likes me; and
there’s no harm in that, so long as he understands.
I’m sure you wouldn’t like him.
He’s a rough, coarse sort of man, and has a
dreadful temper.’
‘Good gracious! What is his position?’
’Oh, he’s connected with
the what-d’ye-call-it Electric Lighting Company.
He travels about a good deal. I shouldn’t
mind that; it must be rather nice not to have one’s
husband always at home. Just now I believe he’s
in Ireland. I shall be having a letter from him
very soon, no doubt. He doesn’t know I’ve
left home, and it’ll make him wild. Yes,
that’s the kind of man he is. Fearfully
jealous, and such a temper! If I married him,
I’m quite sure he would beat me some day.’
‘Oh!’ Emmeline exclaimed.
’How can you have anything to do with such a
man?’
‘He’s very nice sometimes,’
answered Louise, thoughtfully.
‘But do you really mean that
he is “rough and coarse"?’
’Yes, I do. You couldn’t
call him a gentleman. I’ve never seen his
people; they live somewhere a long way off; and I shouldn’t
wonder if they are a horrid lot. His last letter
was quite insulting. He said let me
see, what was it? Yes “You have
neither heart nor brains, and I shall do my best not
to waste another thought on you?” What do you
think of that?’
’It seems very extraordinary,
my dear. How can he write to you in that way
if you never gave him any encouragement?’
’Well, but I suppose I have
done. We’ve met on the Common now and then,
and and that kind of thing. I’m
afraid you’re shocked, Mrs. Mumford. I
know it isn’t the way that nice people behave,
and I’m going to give it up.’
‘Does your mother know him?’
’Oh, yes! there’s no secret
about it. Mother rather likes him. Of course
he behaves himself when he’s at the house.
I’ve a good mind to ask him to call here so
that you could see him. Yes, I should like you
to sea him. You wouldn’t mind?’
’Not if you really wish it,
Louise. But I can’t help thinking
you exaggerate his faults.’
‘Not a bit. He’s a regular brute
when he gets angry.’
‘My dear,’ Emmeline interposed
softly, ’that isn’t quite a ladylike expression.’
’No, it isn’t. Thank
you, Mrs. Mumford. I meant to say he is horrid very
disagreeable. Then there’s something else
I want to tell you about. Cissy Higgins that’s
Mr. Higgins’s daughter, you know is
half engaged to a man called Bowling an
awful idiot ’
‘I don’t think I would use that word,
dear.’
’Thank you, Mrs. Mumford.
I mean to say he’s a regular silly. But
he’s in a very good position a partner
in Jannaway Brothers of Woolwich, though he isn’t
thirty yet. Well, now, what do you think?
Mr. Bowling doesn’t seem to know his own mind,
and just lately he’s been paying so much attention
to me that Cissy has got quite frantic about
it. This was really and truly the reason why I
left home.’
‘I see,’ murmured the
listener, with a look of genuine interest.
’Yes. They wanted to get
me out of the way. There wasn’t the slightest
fear that I should try to cut Cissy Higgins out; but
it was getting very awkward for her, I admit.
Now that’s the kind of thing that doesn’t
go on among nice people, isn’t it?’
’But what do you mean, Louise,
when you say that Miss Higgins and Mr. Mr.
Bowling are half engaged?’
’Oh, I mean she has refused
him once, just for form’s sake; but he knows
very well she means to have him. People of your
kind don’t do that sort of thing, do they?’
‘I hardly know,’ Emmeline
replied, colouring a little at certain private reminiscences.
’And am I to understand that you wouldn’t
on any account listen to Mr. Bowling?’
Louise laughed.
’Oh, there’s no knowing
what I might do to spite Cissy. We hate each
other, of course. But I can’t fancy myself
marrying him, He has a long nose, and talks through
it. And he says “think you” for “thank
you,” and he sings oh, to hear him
sing! I can’t bear the man.’
The matter of this conversation Emmeline
reported to her husband at night, and they agreed
in the hope that neither Mr. Cobb nor Mr. Bowling
would make an appearance at “Runnymede.”
Mumford opined that these individuals were “cads.”
Small wonder, he said, that the girl wished to enter
a new social sphere. His wife, on the other hand,
had a suspicion that Miss Derrick would not be content
to see the last of Mr. Cobb. He, the electrical
engineer, or whatever he was, could hardly be such
a ruffian as the girl depicted. His words, ’You
have neither heart nor brains,’ seemed to indicate
anything but a coarse mind.
‘But what a bad-tempered lot
they are!’ Mumford observed. ’I suppose
people of that sort quarrel and abuse each other merely
to pass the time. They seem to be just one degree
above the roughs who come to blows and get into the
police court. You must really do your best to
get the girl out of it; I’m sure she is worthy
of better things.’
‘She is in one way,’
answered his wife judicially. ’But her
education stopped too soon. I doubt if it’s
possible to change her very much. And I
really should like, after all, to see Mr. Cobb.’
Mumford broke into a laugh.
’There you go! The eternal
feminine. You’ll have her married in six
months.’
’Don’t be vulgar, Clarence.
And we’ve talked enough of Louise for the present.’
Miss Derrick’s presentiment
that a letter from Mr. Cobb would soon reach her was
justified the next day; it arrived in the afternoon,
readdressed from Tulse Hill. Emmeline observed
the eagerness with which this epistle was pounced
upon and carried off for private perusal. She
saw, too, that in half-an-hour’s time Louise
left the house doubtless to post a reply.
But, to her surprise, not a word of the matter escaped
Miss Derrick during the whole evening.
In her school-days, Louise had learned
to “play the piano,” but, caring little
or nothing for music, she had hardly touched a key
for several years. Now the idea possessed her
that she must resume her practising, and to-day she
had spent hours at the piano, with painful effect
upon Mrs. Mumford’s nerves. After dinner
she offered to play to Mumford, and he, good-natured
fellow, stood by her to turn over the leaves.
Emmeline, with fancy work in her hands, watched the
two. She was not one of the most foolish of her
sex, but it relieved her when Clarence moved away.
The next morning Louise was an hour
late for breakfast. She came down when Mumford
had left the house, and Emmeline saw with surprise
that she was dressed for going out.
’Just a cup of coffee, please.
I’ve no appetite this morning, and I want to
catch a train for Victoria as soon as possible.’
‘When will you be back?’
‘Oh, I don’t quite know. To tea,
I think.’
The girl had all at once grown reticent,
and her lips showed the less amiable possibilities
of their contour.