“Well!” exclaimed Ruth,
sinking back in armchair number one, at the right
of the bedroom fireplace.
“Well!” exclaimed Mollie,
sinking back in armchair number two, facing her sister.
“Likewise, good sooth! By my halidom!
Gadzooks! Of a surety these are great happenings,
fair sis!”
“Don’t be so tiresome,
Mollie! You make a joke out of everything.
I want to talk over the position seriously.”
“So do I-just dying to. Go
on! Where shall we begin?”
“With the time, of course.
Three months! I never dreamt of more than a
fortnight, at most. Do you think we can possibly
be spared?”
“I don’t think at all-I
know! If it was three years, with such an interest
at stake, the poor little mother would jump at it.
Three months soon pass, and there will be two people
less to feed and wait upon, and a room less to keep
in order. Every little tells when people are
as hard up as we are, and with the savings mother will
be able to pay Miss Carter to help with the mending.
It will be good for Trix, too. The more you
depend upon Trix the more she rises to the occasion.
I have a shrewd suspicion that she is going to cut
us out, and be the show daughter of the family.
Mother will be blissfully happy building castles
in the air; Trix will be blissfully happy playing eldest
daughter, and bossing the family. We shall be
blissfully happy not pretending, but actually being,
Berengaria and Lucille. It’s all quite
smooth and easy!”
Ruth heaved a sigh, half convinced, half reluctant.
“That’s what you always
say! I see such crowds of objections. To
begin with, I hate the position; it’s awkward
and humiliating. To stay here on approval, studied
like specimens in a case; being on one’s good
behaviour, and `acting pretty’ to try to get
a fortune for oneself, away from other people-bah!
It makes me hot even to think of it. I should
feel a hypocrite!”
“Don’t be high-flown,
dear; it’s quite unnecessary. You couldn’t
be a hypocrite if you tried; you are too ridiculously
`proud,’ I suppose you would say. I call
it quick-tempered! If Uncle Bernard snubs you,
you will flare out, fortune or no fortune, and if
you feel mopey, mope you will, if he disinherits you
the next moment. I shall be honest, too, because
I’m too lazy to be anything else; besides, you
know, there is always the pleasing reflection that
he may prefer us to be crotchety! Everything
is possible where everything is vague. Imagine
how maddening it would be if we kept our tempers,
and smiled sweetly from morning till night, and in
the end he left everything to that cross Mr Melland,
because he considered it necessary for the owner of
wealth to have a will of his own!”
Ruth laughed involuntarily.
“You are a goose!
Not much chance of your being the chosen one, I am
afraid. Uncle Bernard is not in the mood for
appreciating nonsense; he is too sad and ill, poor
old man! That’s another hateful thing.
I should love to nurse and coddle him, and read aloud,
and be good to him generally; but if one does, it
will seem- Oh, you know- you
understand! It’s a loathsome position!”
“If I feel affectionate, I shall
act affectionate! He will probably loathe it,
so there’s just as much chance of injuring one’s
chance as of bettering it. In fact, if we are
to get on at all, we had better try to forget the
wretched money, and behave as if it did not exist.
If anyone had told us a month ago that we should
be staying in a big house with two quite good-looking
young men as fellow-guests, and carte blanche
to enjoy ourselves as much as we pleased, we would
have thought it too impossibly good to be true; but
now that it has come true, we shall be idiots if we
don’t make the most of it. I hope Uncle
Bernard keeps to his idea of making us each master
of the ceremonies in turn. Won’t I make
the money fly when it comes to my turn! Picnics
and luncheons by day, dances and theatricals by night-one
giddy whirl of excitement the whole time long.
I’ll take the old dear at his word, and give
no thought to expense, and entertain the whole countryside
until the name of Mollie Farrell is immortalised for
ever in grateful hearts. I have always credited
myself with a genius for social life; now for the first
time you will behold me in the halls of the great,
and gaze with surprise at your sister reigning as
queen over the assembled throngs?”
“In your one black dress?”
“Certainly not! I’ve
thought of that, too. Suitable equipments must,
of course, be part of the carte blanche.”
“I am sure nothing was further
from Uncle Bernard’s thoughts. He looks
to me like a man who would never notice clothes, or
care what we looked like, so long, of course, as we
were respectable. He has more important things
on his mind.”
“Humph!” Mollie tossed
her saucy head. “If he doesn’t notice
of his own accord, his eyes must be gently, but firmly
opened. We stay at his special request; at his
special request we entertain and are entertained;
it is only reasonable that he should bear the expense
of making our appearance do him credit. I’ll
tell him so, too, if he doesn’t see it for himself.”
“Mollie, you won’t! You shan’t!
You never could!”
“Couldn’t I? You wait and see!”
“And if you did I would never
touch a farthing. I warn you, once for all,
that it is useless, so far as I am concerned.”
Mollie looked at her sister’s
flushed, defiant face, and laughed her happy, light-hearted
laugh.
“Dear old High-falutin’!
We won’t argue about it. Half a dozen
invitations will show you the soundness of my position
better than a hundred discussions. Meantime,
I’m going to dress. I have a horrible
conviction that that maid will return and offer to
do `your hair, madam,’ so I mean to be beforehand
with her.”
Ruth sat still in her chair, enjoying
the unwonted luxury of idling, with no disturbing
spasm of conscience to remind her that she ought to
be mending or patching, or giving Betty a music lesson,
or helping Mary to hang clean curtains in the drawing-room.
It was delightful to nestle back against the cushions
and study one by one the dainty appointments of the
room, and revel in the unaccustomed sense of space.
Imagine just for a moment-imagine possessing
such a home of one’s own! The house, with
its treasures of beautiful and artistic furnishings,
which represented the lifelong gatherings of a man
renowned for his taste; the extensive grounds, with
gardens and vineries and forests of glass, providing
an endless summer of blossom; the income, that in itself
was a fortune, and held such inexhaustible possibilities
of good. What she could do with it, if it were
only hers! With one stroke of the pen she would
repay the poor old tired pater for all his goodness
in the past, and lift the weight of care for the future
from his shoulders. She would heap luxuries
upon the dear little mother, who was still a child
at heart; so pathetically easy to please that it seemed
a sin that she should ever be sad. The girls
should be sent to finishing schools, and the boys
given a thorough training to equip them for their fight
in life. Mollie, of course, should live at the
Court, and share equally in all her possessions; and
they would travel, and help the poor, and be kind
to everyone, and never forget the day of small things!
or grow arrogant and purse-proud. Ruth dreamed
on in a passion of longing till Mollie, standing before
the dressing-table, with her white arms raised to
her head, caught sight of her face in the mirror, and
uttered a sharp exclamation.
“Ruth! What is it, darling?”
Ruth started nervously and glanced
upwards with guilty eyes, but there was nothing alarming
in the aspect of the figure which stood over her,
white necked, white armed, with the loosened golden
hair falling round the anxious face. She caught
the outstretched hand, and gripped it tightly between
her own.
“Oh, Mollie, I want it!
I want it dreadfully! When I think of
the possibility I feel half wild. If I am disappointed,
I believe I shall die! I can’t be unselfish,
even for you. I want it for myself!”
She was on the verge of tears, but
Mollie’s matter-of-fact cheeriness had the usual
bracing effect. She seemed neither shocked nor
surprised, but only anxious to soothe.
“Of course you do; so do we
all!” she replied easily. “It’s
humbug to pretend anything else, only I’m not
going to die, in any case, but live and make myself
agreeable to the Chosen. If it’s you, I
shall sponge on you for life, so don’t imagine
you will have all the fun to yourself. Now get
dressed, and don’t think about it any more.
We must look our best to awe those two superior young
men. I am convinced that they look upon us as
country bumpkins, and it’s most important to
put them in their proper position at once, so that
we may start fair. If you are going to do your
hair in skriggles it will take you an age, so do begin!”
Ruth rose obediently. “Skriggles”
was an inelegant but descriptive title for her most
becoming coiffure, which she had already decided must
be adopted for the first eventful evening at the Court.
She set to work at once, and was half-way through
her task when the maid appeared, as Mollie had prophesied,
paused upon the threshold for one horrified moment,
and then hurried forward with an “Allow me, miss!”
which could not be gainsaid.
The girls grimaced at one another
furtively, but in the end the value of the skilled
hands was proved by a dainty finish to hair and toilette
which sent them downstairs agreeably conscious of looking
their best.