At dinner-time she had not returned.
It being Saturday, Mumford was back early in the afternoon,
and Miss Derrick’s absence caused no grief.
Emmeline could play with baby in the garden, whilst
her husband smoked his pipe and looked on in the old
comfortable way. They already felt that domestic
life was not quite the same with a stranger to share
it. Doubtless they would get used to the new
restraints; but Miss Derrick must not expect them to
disorganise their mealtimes on her account. Promptly
at half-past seven they sat down to dine, and had
just risen from the table, when Louise appeared.
She was in excellent spirits, without
a trace of the morning’s ill-humour. No
apologies! If she didn’t feel quite free
to come and go, without putting people out, there
would be no comfort in life. A slice of the joint,
that was all she wanted, and she would have done in
a few minutes.
’I’ve taken tickets for
Toole’s Theatre on Monday night. You must
both come. You can, can’t you?’
Mumford and his wife glanced at each
other. Yes, they could go; it was very kind of
Miss Derrick; but
’That’s all right, it’ll
be jolly. The idea struck me in the train, as
I was going up; so I took a cab from Victoria and booked
the places first thing. Third row from the front,
dress circle; the best I could do. Please let
me have my dinner alone. Mrs. Mumford, I want
to tell you something afterwards.’
Clarence went round to see his friend
Fentiman, with whom he usually had a chat on Saturday
evening. Emmeline was soon joined by the guest
in the drawing-room.
‘There, you may read that,’
said Louise, holding out a letter. ’It’s
from Mr. Cobb; came yesterday, but I didn’t care
to talk about it then. Yes, please read it; I
want you to.’
Reluctantly, but with curiosity, Emmeline
glanced over the sheet. Mr. Cobb wrote in ignorance
of Miss Derrick’s having left home. It
was a plain, formal letter, giving a brief account
of his doings in Ireland, and making a request that
Louise would meet him, if possible, on Streatham Common,
at three o’clock on Saturday afternoon.
And he signed himself ’Very sincerely
yours.’
‘I made up my mind at once,’
said the girl, ’that I wouldn’t meet him.
That kind of thing will have to stop. I’m
not going to think any more of him, and it’s
better to make him understand it at once isn’t
it?’
Emmeline heartily concurred.
‘Still,’ pursued the other,
with an air of great satisfaction, ’I thought
I had better go home for this afternoon. Because
when he didn’t see me on the Common he was pretty
sure to call at the house, and I didn’t want
mother or Cissy to be talking about me to him before
he had heard my own explanation.’
‘Didn’t you answer the letter?’
asked Emmeline.
’No. I just sent a line
to mother, to let her know I was coming over to-day,
so that she might stay at home. Well, and it happened
just as I thought. Mr. Cobb came to the house
at half-past three. But before that I’d
had a terrible row with Cissy. That isn’t
a nice expression, I know, but it really was one of
our worst quarrels. Mr. Bowling hasn’t
been near since I left, and Cissy is furious.
She said such things that I had to tell her very plainly
what I thought of her; and she positively foamed at
the mouth! “Now look here,” she said,
“if I find out that he goes to Sutton, you’ll
see what will happen.” “What will
happen?” I asked. “Father will stop
your allowance, and you’ll have to get on as
best you can.” “Oh, very well,”
I said, “in that case I shall marry Mr. Bowling.”
You should have seen her rage! “You said
you wouldn’t marry him if he had ten thousand
a year!” she screamed. “I dare say
I did; but if I’ve nothing to live upon ”
“You can marry your Mr. Cobb, can’t you?”
And she almost cried; and I should have felt sorry
for her if she hadn’t made me so angry.
“No,” I said, “I can’t marry
Mr. Cobb. And I never dreamt of marrying Mr.
Cobb. And “’
Emmeline interposed.
’Really, Louise, that kind of
talk isn’t at all ladylike. What a pity
you went home.’
’Yes, I was sorry for it afterwards.
I shan’t go again for a long time; I promise
you I won’t. However, Mr. Cobb came, and
I saw him alone. He was astonished when he heard
what had been going on; he was astonished at me,
too I mean, the way I spoke. I wanted
him to understand at once that there was nothing between
us; I talked in rather a you know the sort
of way.’ She raised her chin slightly,
and looked down from under her eyelids. ’Oh,
I assure you I behaved quite nicely. But he got
into a rage, as he always does, and began to call
me names, and I wouldn’t stand it. “Mr.
Cobb,” I said, very severely, “either
you will conduct yourself properly, or you will leave
the house.” Then he tried another tone,
and said very different things the kind
of thing one likes to hear, you know; but I pretended
that I didn’t care for it a bit. “It’s
all over between us then?” he shouted at last;
yes, really shouted, and I’m sure people must
have heard. “All over?” I said.
“But there never was anything nothing
serious.” “Oh, all right. Good-bye,
then.” And off he rushed. And I dare
say I’ve seen the last of him for
a time.’
‘Now do try to live quietly,
my dear,’ said Emmeline. ’Go on with
your music, and read a little each day ’
’Yes, that’s just what
I’m going to do, dear Mrs. Mumford. And
your friends will be here to-morrow; it’ll be
so quiet and nice. And on Monday we shall go
to the theatre, just for a change. And I’m
not going to think of those people. It’s
all settled. I shall live very quietly indeed.’
She banged on the piano till nearly
eleven o’clock, and went off to bed with a smile
of virtuous contentment.
The guests who arrived on Sunday morning
were Mr. and Mrs. Grove, Mr. Bilton, and Mr. Dunnill.
Mrs. Grove was Emmeline’s elder sister, a merry,
talkative, kindly woman. Aware of the circumstances,
she at once made friends with Miss Derrick, and greatly
pleased that young lady by a skilful blending of “superior”
talk with easy homeliness. Mr. Bilton, a stockbroker’s
clerk, represented the better kind of City young man athletic,
yet intelligent, spirited without vulgarity a breezy,
good-humoured, wholesome fellow. He came down
on his bicycle, and would return in the same way.
Louise at once made a resolve to learn cycling.
’I wish you lived at Sutton,
Mr. Bilton. I should ask you to teach me.’
‘I’m really very sorry
that I don’t,’ replied the young man discreetly.
‘Oh, never mind. I’ll find somebody.’
The fourth arrival, Mr. Dunnill, was
older and less affable. He talked chiefly with
Mr. Grove, a very quiet, somewhat careworn man; neither
of them seemed able to shake off business, but they
did not obtrude it on the company in general.
The day passed pleasantly, but in Miss Derrick’s
opinion, rather soberly. Doing her best to fascinate
Mr. Bilton, she felt a slight disappointment at her
inability to engross his attention, and at the civil
friendliness which he thought a sufficient reply to
her gay sallies. For so good-looking and well-dressed
a man he struck her as singularly reserved. But
perhaps he was “engaged”; yes, that must
be the explanation. When the guests had left,
she put a plain question to Mrs. Mumford.
‘I don’t think
he is engaged,’ answered Emmeline, who on the
whole was satisfied with Miss Derrick’s demeanour
throughout the day.
’Oh! But, of course, he
may be, without you knowing it. Or is it
always made known?’
‘There’s no rule about it, my dear.’
‘Well, they’re very nice
people,’ said Louise, with a little sigh.
’And I like your sister so much. I’m
glad she asked me to go and see her. Is Mr. Bilton
often at her house? Don’t misunderstand
me, Mrs. Mumford. It’s only that I do
like men’s society; there’s no harm, is
there? And people like Mr. Bilton are very different
from those I’ve known; and I want to see more
of them, you know.’
‘There’s no harm in saying
that to me, Louise,’ replied Mrs. Mumford.
’But pray be careful not to seem “forward.”
People think and say such disagreeable
things.’
Miss Derrick was grateful, and again
gave an assurance that repose and modesty should be
the rule of her life.
At the theatre on Monday evening she
exhibited a childlike enjoyment which her companions
could not but envy. The freshness of her sensibilities
was indeed remarkable, and Emmeline observed with
pleasure that her mind seemed to have a very wholesome
tone. Louise might commit follies, and be guilty
of bad taste to any extent, but nothing in her savoured
of depravity.
Tuesday she spent at home, pretending
to read a little, and obviously thinking a great deal.
On Wednesday morning she proposed of a sudden that
Emmeline should go up to town with her on a shopping
expedition. They had already turned over her wardrobe,
numerous articles whereof were condemned by Mrs. Mumford’s
taste, and by Louise cheerfully sacrificed; she could
not rest till new purchases had been made. So,
after early luncheon, they took train to Victoria,
Louise insisting that all the expenses should be hers.
By five o’clock she had laid out some fifteen
pounds, vastly to her satisfaction. They took
tea at a restaurant, and reached Sutton not long before
Mumford’s return.
On Friday they went to London again,
to call upon Mrs. Grove. Louise promised that
this should be her last “outing” for a
whole week. She admitted a feeling of restlessness,
but after to-day she would overcome it. And that
night she apologised formally to Mumford for taking
his wife so much from home.
’Please don’t think I
shall always be running about like this. I feel
that I’m settling down. We are going to
be very comfortable and quiet.’
And, to the surprise of her friends,
more than a week went by before she declared that
a day in town was absolutely necessary. Mr. Higgins
had sent her a fresh supply of money, as there were
still a few things she needed to purchase. But
this time Emmeline begged her to go alone, and Louise
seemed quite satisfied with the arrangement.
Early in the afternoon, as Mrs. Mumford
was making ready to go out, the servant announced
to her that a gentleman had called to see Miss Derrick;
on learning that Miss Derrick was away, he had asked
sundry questions, and ended by requesting an interview
with Mrs. Mumford. His name was Cobb.
‘Show him into the drawing-room,’
said Emmeline, a trifle agitated. ‘I will
be down in a few moments.’
Beset by anxious anticipations, she
entered the room, and saw before her a figure not
wholly unlike what she had imagined: a wiry,
resolute-looking man, with knitted brows, lips close-set,
and heavy feet firmly planted on the carpet.
He was respectably dressed, but nothing more, and
in his large bare hands held a brown hat marked with
a grease spot. One would have judged him a skilled
mechanic. When he began to speak, his blunt but
civil phrases were in keeping with this impression.
He had not the tone of an educated man, yet committed
no vulgar errors.
’My name is Cobb. I must
beg your pardon for troubling you. Perhaps you
have heard of me from Miss Derrick?’
‘Yes, Mr. Cobb, your name has
been mentioned,’ Emmeline replied nervously.
‘Will you sit down?’
‘Thank you, I will.’
He twisted his hat about, and seemed
to prepare with difficulty the next remark, which
at length burst, rather than fell, from his lips.
’I wanted to see Miss Derrick.
I suppose she is still living with you? They
told me so.’
A terrible man, thought Emmeline,
when roused to anger; his words must descend like
sledge-hammers. And it would not take much to
anger him. For all that, he had by no means a
truculent countenance. He was trying to smile,
and his features softened agreeably enough. The
more closely she observed him, the less grew Emmeline’s
wonder that Louise felt an interest in the man.
’Miss Derrick is likely to stay
with us for some time, I believe. She has only
gone to town, to do some shopping.’
’I see. When I met her
last she talked a good deal about you, Mrs. Mumford,
and that’s why I thought I would ask to see you.
You have a good deal of influence over her.’
‘Do you think so?’ returned
Emmeline, not displeased. ’I hope I may
use it for her good.’
’So do I. But well,
it comes to this, Mrs. Mumford. She seemed to
hint though she didn’t exactly say
so that you were advising her to have nothing
more to do with me. Of course you don’t
know me, and I’ve no doubt you do what you think
the best for her. I should feel it a kindness
if you would just tell me whether you are really persuading
her to think no more about me.’
It was an alarming challenge.
Emmeline’s fears returned; she half expected
an outbreak of violence. The man was growing very
nervous, and his muscles showed the working of strong
emotion.
‘I have given her no such advice,
Mr. Cobb,’ she answered, with an attempt at
calm dignity. ’Miss Derrick’s private
affairs don’t at all concern me. In such
matters as this she is really quite old enough to
judge for herself.’
‘That’s what I
should have said,’ remarked Mr. Cobb sturdily.
’I hope you’ll excuse me; I don’t
wish to make myself offensive. After what she
said to me when we met last, I suppose most men would
just let her go her own way. But but
somehow I can’t do that. The thing is,
I can’t trust what she says; I don’t believe
she knows her own mind. And so long as you tell
me that you’re not interfering I
mean, that you don’t think it right to set her
against me ’
‘I assure you, nothing of the kind.’
There was a brief silence, then Cobb’s
voice again sounded with blunt emphasis.
’We’re neither of us very
good-tempered. We’ve known each other about
a year, and we must have quarrelled about fifty times.’
‘Do you think, then,’
ventured the hostess, ’that it would ever be
possible for you to live peacefully together?’
‘Yes, I do,’ was the robust
answer. ’It would be a fight for the upper
hand, but I know who’d get it, and after that
things would be all right.’
Emmeline could not restrain a laugh,
and her visitor joined in it with a heartiness which
spoke in his favour.
’I promise you, Mr. Cobb, that
I will do nothing whatever against your interests.’
‘That’s very kind of you,
and it’s all I wanted to know.’
He stood up. Emmeline, still
doubtful how to behave, asked him if he would call
on another day, when Miss Derrick might be at home.
‘It’s only by chance I
was able to get here this afternoon,’ he replied.
’I haven’t much time to go running about
after her, and that’s where I’m at a disadvantage.
I don’t know whether there’s anyone else,
and I’m not asking you to tell me, if you know.
Of course I have to take my chance; but so long as
you don’t speak against me and she
thinks a great deal of your advice ’
’I’m very glad to be assured
of that. All I shall do, Mr. Cobb, is to keep
before her mind the duty of behaving straightforwardly.’
‘That’s the thing! Nobody can ask
more than that.’
Emmeline hesitated, but could not
dismiss him without shaking hands. That he did
not offer to do so until invited, though he betrayed
no sense of social inferiority, seemed another point
in his favour.