Mrs Thornton took counsel with her
husband as to the best form of hospitality she could
show to the squire’s visitors.
“I want to be one of the first
to entertain them formally. It is a duty in
our position,” she explained. “The
girls have been to tea several times, and that dear
Mollie runs up to the nursery as naturally as if she
were at home; but I think we ought to do more.
The squire will expect it; and then the question
is, dear-what can we do?”
“Just so.” The vicar
smiled, half amused, half quizzical. “The
means at our disposal are distinctly limited.
We can’t ask them to dinner, because the staff
is incapable of cooking and serving an extensive meal.”
“And there are only three sherry-glasses
left, and Mary broke the round glass dish last week-the
one I always used for the trifle. And the dinner-service...
We really must buy a new dinner-service, Stanford!”
“We really must, Agnes-some
time! I think all the objections taken together
put the dinner-party out of the question. Would
not a somewhat more formal tea-”
“No.” Mrs Thornton
shook her head decidedly. “A formal tea
is the most depressing function imaginable.
If it was a little later on, I would suggest a hay-party.
As it is, I am afraid it must be a garden-party,
pure and simple.”
The vicar laughed.
“Simple, it certainly would
be. Our poor little lawn, one tennis-court,
and the flower-garden a mass of weeds! We can’t
afford a band of minstrels, or even the ordinary ices
and hothouse fruits. I am afraid it might be
rather a failure, Agnes.”
But Mrs Thornton refused to be discouraged.
“Nonsense, dear! People
don’t expect extravagant entertainments at a
vicarage! The children and I can undertake the
weeding, and when that is done the dear old herbaceous
borders will look charming! The lawn is not
big, but there is delightful shade beneath the beech-trees,
and we can draw the piano up to the drawing-room window,
and get a few people to sing for us-Maud
Bailey and Mrs Reed; and I believe Mr Druce has a
fine voice. I’ll ask him to be very kind,
and give us a song. As for refreshments, I can
give good tea and coffee, and the best cream for miles
around, and people can exist without ices for once
in a way. Given a bright, fine day, I could manage
beautifully!”
“I have no doubt you could.
But why go through the ceremony of asking my advice,
Mistress Thornton, when your mind has been made up
from the beginning? Go your ways-go
your ways! I wash my hands of all responsibility!”
cried the vicar, laughing, as he walked back to his
study, leaving his wife to sit down to her desk and
make out a lengthy list of guests, which included
everyone of note for miles round.
During the days to come Mr Thornton
often sympathised with his wife on the amount of work
she had undertaken in order to entertain the squire’s
guests; but, even to his unobservant eyes, it was apparent
that, so far from being exhausted, she throve beneath
it, and appeared brighter and younger than for years
past. All work and no play has an even more
depressing effect upon Jill than on Jack, and Mrs Thornton
was by instinct a hospitable creature, who would have
loved nothing better than a houseful of guests and
a constant succession of entertainments. With
small means, a large family, and a straggling parish,
her time and energy were for the most part engrossed
in sheer hard work, so that the prospect of a little
“jollification,” as she laughingly expressed
it, came as a welcome variety.
The invitations to the Court were
sent out first, to make sure of the most important
guests, and down came the girls with notes of acceptance,
and a hundred curious questions.
“Who is coming? What are
you going to do? What dresses shall we wear?
Can we help?” they asked eagerly; whereupon Mrs
Thornton laughed, and replied hesitatingly-
“It is most incorrect; you ought
to know nothing of the make-shifts, but just drive
down to enjoy the completed effect; but, yes,-I
cannot resist the pleasure of your company.
Come, if you like, and I’ll promise you some
real hard work.”
“That’s right; and you’ll
find us so useful! We have been born and brought
up on make-shifts, and can make anything out of nothing,
and a box of tacks-can’t we, Ruth?”
cried Mollie, in the brutally outspoken manner which
always brought a flush into her sister’s face.
It was not so much foolish shame at
the fact of poverty, but the stab of painful repugnance
which came with the remembrance of the bareness and
lack of beauty which characterised the old life.
After a month’s sojourn at the Court the day
of small things seemed far away, and she shrank at
the possibility of returning to it as a permanency.
When Mrs Thornton began to enumerate
her difficulties, and escorted the girls from one
room to another to ask their advice upon various knotty
points, it was like the probing of a wound to Ruth’s
sensitive nerves. The house itself was roomy
and well built, but in a hopeless state of disrepair.
The paint was worn and dingy; the wallpapers so old-fashioned
and discoloured that all Mrs Thornton’s painstaking
efforts after cheerfulness and beauty were foiled
by the inartistic background.
“I shed tears over the drawing-room
paper when I was first married,” said Mrs Thornton,
with a laugh and a shrug. “But, as one
gets older, there are so many more serious things
to cry over that one learns to be philosophical.
I thought I might put some big, spreading branches
in these old pots to cover the walls as much as possible,
for we must have some rooms available in case of a
shower. A wet day is too terrible a catastrophe
to contemplate, so we won’t even imagine it.
Given sunshine and unlimited borrowing, we can struggle
through. Think of it, my dears-I
have invited over a hundred people, and we possess
twelve teaspoons!”
Mollie gurgled with laughter in her
hearty, infectious manner.
“I’d give up sugar for
the day, and do without. That’s one off
the list. Shall we ask the butler to send down
a supply? I’m sure he has hundreds stowed
away in those great plate-chests.”
“My dear, no! I should
not think of it!” cried Mrs Thornton, aghast.
“I can manage quite well without troubling the
squire. Pray don’t repeat any of my thoughtless
remarks to him. My husband says that my tongue
runs away with me far too often.”
Ruth protested politely, but Mollie
preserved an unusual silence for the rest of the visit.
She was evidently thinking hard, and the result of
her cogitations was, that when she returned to
the Court she paid a surprise visit to Mr Farrell
in his sanctum.
The old man was sitting reading in
his favourite chair, and as he looked up it struck
Mollie that he looked more alert than she had seen
him since her arrival. The voice in which he
answered her greeting was certainly less wearied and
fretful than usual. He looked, if such a miracle
could be believed, almost pleased to see her.
“Well,-so you have returned from
your wanderings!”
“Yes, here I am, come to bother
you again. There’s a whole half-hour before
you need begin to dress, and I’ve something very
important to talk to you about.”
“What does that mean, pray?
More new dresses? I should have thought you
could hardly have come to the end of the last supply
by this time.”
“Goodness, no! They will
last for years. It is something far more important.”
Mollie seated herself on a low chair
directly opposite the old man, leant her elbows on
her knees, her chin on her hands, and said hesitatingly-
“Uncle Bernard!”
“Mary!”
“Do you remember the first evening
we were here, when you spoke to us about our visit?
You said that you might possibly allow each of us
in turn to act as master or mistress of the ceremonies
for a short time?”
“I believe I did say something
of the kind. It occurred to me that it might
be an interesting experiment.”
“And did you mean that we could
really do what we liked, about money and everything
else, just as if we were really and truly the real
owner in your place?”
Mr Farrell smiled somewhat grimly.
“If your sister asked me that
question, I should say `Yes.’ Knowing as
I do your capacity for extravagance, I am a little
more cautious. Within reasonable limits that
is, however, what I meant to imply.”
“Ah!” sighed Mollie deeply.
“But it all depends on what you call reasonable.
At any rate, you can only refuse, and things can be
no worse than they are at present. Please, Uncle
Bernard, may I begin my reign from to-day?”
“Your reign! You put it
forcibly, my dear-more so than is perhaps
quite pleasant in my ears. And you are the youngest
of the four; your turn should come last, not first.
When the others have had their trial-”
“But they have never asked for
it; they don’t want it, and I do; and you said
nothing about taking turns when you made the suggestion.
If you let me begin, they could take warning from
my mistakes. I don’t think you would find
they disliked the arrangement. Do, please, be
kind and say `Yes.’”
Mr Farrell reflected for a moment,
bringing the tips of his fingers together.
“As you say, you are the first
to express any desire to take me at my word.
If it pleases you to assume the reins of government
for a short time, I have no objection.”
“You mean it really? I
can begin at once, and give what orders I like?”
“Subject, as I have said, to
some possible restrictions if your enthusiasm carries
you too far. There is evidently some big scheme
looming behind this request. You had better let
me know the worst at once. What is to be your
first extravagance?”
Mollie’s head still rested in
the cup of her hands. She looked at him steadily,
with a little flame of determination in her grey eyes.
“I am going to have the vicarage
painted and papered from top to bottom. It’s
disgracefully shabby! The paper is hanging off
the walls in some places, and where it isn’t,
it would be almost better if it were, it is so ugly
and worn. It is too bad to expect Mr and Mrs
Thornton to do all the hard, depressing work of the
parish and keep bright and cheerful themselves, when
their home is enough to give the blues to a clown!
It looks as if it hadn’t been touched for a
century!”
Mr Farrell lowered his eyelids and
sat in a grim silence, while the clock ticked a full
two minutes. Mollie, watching his face, saw the
thin lips grow thinner and thinner, as they were pressed
the more firmly together; the horizontal lines in
his forehead deepened into furrows. There was
no mistaking the fact that he was displeased, and deeply
displeased, even before the cold eyes met hers once
more.
“I had no intention now, or
at any other time, of allowing you to assume control
over the whole parish! My proposition referred
simply to this house and your own entertainment.
I am still capable of looking after my own property.”
“But-” began Mollie, and stopped
short.
Even her courage failed before the
obvious retort that the property was not looked after,
but allowed to fall into dilapidation; but Mr Farrell
understood without the need of words, and his eyes
flashed with anger.
“You must permit me to judge
for myself! When my day is over, whoever comes
into possession can squander my money as he or she
sees fit, but I cannot hurry the time forward, however
much you may desire it. You must be patient
and wait. It may come sooner than you think.”
Mollie sprang to her feet with an
exclamation of mingled pain and anger.
“Oh, Uncle Bernard, how cruel!
How can you say anything so horrid and unjust!
It isn’t true, and you know it isn’t true,
and I don’t deserve it! I only asked for
what you yourself suggested.”
“I never suggested that you
should interfere with my property, and criticise what
I had chosen to do or left undone. As for not
deserving reproach, you must have made very sure of
stepping into my shoes since you wish to wear them
while I am still here. No doubt I appear to you
a mere cumberer of the ground; but it is my ground,
I would have you remember. You cannot take liberties
with it yet awhile.”
“I don’t want it!
I never want it! I’ll go home to-morrow!
You have no right to taunt me like this!” cried
Mollie, trembling with such a storm of indignation
and wounded feeling as she had rarely known in her
bright, easy-going existence.
A rush of ugly words came to her lips,
and struggled for utterance, while Mr Farrell sank
back in his chair, and lay crouched against the cushions,
one thin hand pressed heavily over his heart.
The look, the action, brought Mollie to herself with
a stab of recollection.
Whatever he had said to wound her
pride, she had no right to forget his weakness, his
danger, his lonely, piteous age. Anger died a
rapid death, and gave place to an even keener sympathy.
When Mr Farrell looked up again, it was to find the
grey eyes wet with tears, and the lips trembling with
emotion.
“Oh, you poor old man-you
poor old man! Why will you make it so difficult?
Why won’t you let us love you and be a comfort,
instead of a trouble? We would, if you would
allow us. We want to, but you keep us at arm’s
length, and scold and sneer. I am not thinking
of myself. I am young and strong, and I have
my home and my dear little mother. I shall be
happy, whatever happens. It’s you
I am sorry for! I hate to see you ill and lonely.
You have given a great deal to me; can’t you
be generous enough to take something in return?
There are only two months left. The time is
nearly half over. Can’t we be friends-real
friends-until the end?”
She drew nearer as she spoke, and
saw no rebuff in the watching face, until at last
she sank on her knees before him, and timidly touched
his hand.
“Uncle Bernard, speak! Say something to
me!”
Still the old man hesitated; but his
hand lay quietly in hers, and did not try to escape.
“What can I say?” he asked
slowly at last. “I believe you are a good
child; I believe you are honest; but my days are past
for making friendships. I have felt deeply in
my time, but the power of loving died away with everything
else which made life worth living. I cannot
promise what is impossible.”
“But you can at least give me
a chance of loving you. I won’t ask any
more favours if you will just talk to me a little sometimes,
without sneering at me, and let me walk with you about
the grounds and be a little bit of a companion.
Will you? You might get to like me a little
bit in time, and it would not be quite so lonely.”
“I can imagine things less impossible.
You are a good child; but remember, Mollie, my liking
or not liking has nothing to do with my choice of
an heir. The condition to which I referred might
easily apply to one who appealed to me in no other
way. It is only right to warn you.”
But the listener took no heed of the
warning. Her face was one radiant beam of delight.
“You called me `Mollie’!”
she cried. “It was the very first time!
That really does sound as if we were going to be
friends?”