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Collected Works of E M Delafield

Page 124

by E M Delafield


  V

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  XIV

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  XVI

  XVII

  XVIII

  XIX

  XX

  TO SUPPLEMENT THE OFFERING OF A VERY EARLY AND UNFINISHED EFFORT, OF WHICH THE DEDICATION RAN:

  “TO MY MATERNAL PARENT”

  I

  “AUNTIE IRIS has written a book!”

  “A book!” echoed both auditors of the announcement, in keys varying between astonishment and dismay.

  “Yes, and it’s going to be published, and put into a blue cover, and sold, and Auntie Iris is going to make heaps and heaps of money!”

  “What is it to be called?” said Lady Rossiter rather gloomily, fixing an apprehensive eye on the exuberant niece of the authoress.

  “It’s called, ‘Why, Ben! ‘and it’s a Story of the Sexes,” glibly quoted that young lady, unaware of the shock inflicted by this brazen announcement, delivered at the top of her squeaky, nine-year-old voice.

  “Good God!” said Sir Julian Rossiter.

  His wife said, “Hush, Julian!” in a rather automatic aside and turned again to the herald of “Why, Ben!” now hopping exultantly round and round the breakfast- table.

  “Did you get a letter from Aunt Iris this morning, Ruthie?”

  “Daddy did, and he said it was a secret before, but now the publishers had accepted the book and everybody might know, and I said I said.”

  Ruthie consecrated the briefest possible instant to drawing a sufficiently deep breath to enable her to resume her rapid, high-pitched narrative. “I said, ‘Me and Peekaboo must come and tell you and Sir Julian, because you’d be so pleased and so excited, and so surprised!’

  “Is your little brother here as well?” said Sir Julian, gazing distastefully through his eye-glasses at Ruthie, heated, breathless, hopping persistently on one leg, and with a general air of having escaped from the supervision of whoever might have charge of her morning toilette before that toilette had received even the minimum of attention. Ruthie cast a look of artless surprise about her.

  “I thought he was here. He came with me but you know how he dawdles. He may be still in the drive.”

  A slow fumbling at the door-handle discredited the supposition.

  “There he is!” shrieked Ruthie joyfully, and violently turning the handle of the door. “Ow! I can’t open the door!”

  “Of course you can’t, if he is holding the handle at the other side. Let go.”

  “He won’t be able to open it himself, he never can and besides, his hands are all sticky, I know, because he upset the treacle at breakfast. Let go, Peekaboo!” bawled his sister through the keyhole.

  “H’sh sh. Don’t shriek like that, he can hear quite well.”

  “But he won’t let go.”

  “Come away from the door, Ruthie, and don’t make that noise.”

  Lady Rossiter herself went to the door of which the handle was being ineffectually jerked from without, and said with that peculiar distinctness of utterance characteristic of exasperation kept consciously under control:

  “Is that you, Ambrose? Turn the handle towards you no, not that way, towards you, I said right round.”

  “Turn it towards you, Peekaboo!” shrieked Ruthie, suddenly thrusting her head under Lady Rossiter’s arm.

  “Be quiet, Ruthie. There, that’s right.”

  The door slowly opened, and a rather emaciated, seven-year-old edition in knickerbockers of the stalwart Ruthie advanced languidly into the room.

  “How do you do?” he remarked, extending a treacle-glazed hand for the morning greetings entirely omitted by his excited elder sister.

  “Good morning, Ambrose dear. You’re paying us a very early visit.”

  “Auntie Iris has written a book!” announced Ambrose, more deliberately than, but quite as loudly and distinctly as, his senior. “And it’s called, ‘Why, Ben! A Story of the Sexes.’”

  “Yes, dear, Ruthie told us,” said Lady Rossiter, a rather repressed note in her voice indicating a renewed sense of outrage at the singular title selected by Ambrose’s aunt for her maiden attempt at literature.

  Ambrose turned pallid eyes of fury behind a large pair of spectacles upon his sister.

  “You said you wouldn’t tell them till I came.... It’s very, very mean of you.... I’ll tell Daddy the minute I get home.... I... I...”

  His objurgations became incoherent, through none the less expressive for that, and gaining steadily in volume as he sought, in vain, to overpower the torrent of self-defence instantly emitted from Ruthie’s lungs of brass.

  Sir Julian Rossiter laid down his paper, opened the French window, and thrust both his visitors into the drive.

  “Bolt the window, Julian,” said his wife hastily. “And I will tell Horber not to let them in at the front door. Much as I love children, I can’t have them rushing in on us at breakfast; it’s really too much.”

  “Do you suppose all their morning calls end like this?” remarked Sir Julian, as he watched their departing guests stagger down the drive, Ambrose’s large head still shaking with his wrath, and the voice of his sister still audibly browbeating and calling him “Peekaboo.”

  “Why does she call her brother by that senseless and revolting nickname?”

  “I don’t know. I think it’s a nursery relic, and dates from the days of their unfortunate mother.”

  “The dipsomaniac?”

  Lady Rossiter said nothing. She was aware that Mrs. Easter’s enforced retirement into a home for inebriates was an ancient scandal, and that Julian had only introduced a reference to it in the idle hope of trapping her into disregarding her favourite touchstone in conversation “Is it kind, is it wise, is it true?”

  Unlike his wife, but in common with many people less apt at analysing the idiosyncrasy than himself, Sir Julian habitually preferred silence to speech, unless he had anything unpleasant to say. It was one of the many differences which did not make for unity between them.

  “I wonder,” Sir Julian presently observed, “what publisher is undertaking the responsibility of ‘Why, Ben! ‘How exactly like Auntie Iris to choose such a preposterous name, and to call it ‘A Story of the Sexes ‘into the bargain! She can’t be more than twenty.”

  “It rather made me shudder when those two poor children spoke the name so glibly. ‘A Story of the Sexes ‘imagine their knowing such a word at all, at their age!”

  Sir Julian shrugged his shoulder. “Nothing could surprise me, from the egregious Ruthie. I suppose I shall have to congratulate Mark Easter on his half-sister’s achievement this morning.”

  “Are you going to the College?”

  “I must. There is a meeting of the directors, and I have to take the chair.”

  “Not a General Committee meeting?” said Lady Rossiter quickly.

  “No, Edna,” replied her husband, with a great finality. “Not a General Committee meeting.”

  If he did not add an ejaculatory thanksgiving aloud to the statement, his wife was none the less aware that he regarded with the extreme of disfavour her presence at the general meetings of the committee which presided over that venture known as the “Commercial and Technical College for the South- West of England.” On this reflection, Lady Rossiter infused as much proprietary interest as possible into the tone of her next enquiry.

  “Have we got a Lady Superintendent yet? I can’t bear to think of all my girls without a woman to look after them. There are so many little things for which women need a woman.”

  “One of the subjects before the meeting to-day is to discuss an application for the post. Fuller thinks he has found some one.”

  Edna Rossiter raised her well-marked, dark eyebrows.

  “Surely Mr. Fuller is hardly qualified to judge?”

  “Probably not. That’s why the question is to be laid before
the directors” said her husband drily.

  Lady Rossiter, tall and beautiful, with the maturity of a woman whom the years had left with auburn hair unfaded and opaque white skin almost unlined, moved restlessly about the room.

  Sir Julian, aware instantly that she was anxious to pursue the subject, perversely remained silent behind the newspaper.

  “Do you know anything about this woman? Is she a lady?”

  “I have not the least idea.”

  “Is she from the West Country?”

  “She writes from London.”

  “Ah, our Devonians won’t take to her if she’s a Cockney. I should prefer some one de nous autres, Julian.”

  “So she may be, for all we know.”

  “You had better tell me her name, Julian.”

  “Why?” enquired Sir Julian childishly, and also disconcertingly.

  “Why?” echoed his wife, momentarily nonplussed.

  She looked at him for a moment with black- fringed, amber-coloured eyes.

  “Why not?” she demanded at last.

  “It would convey nothing more to you than to the rest of us.”

  “Oh, the perversity of man!” cried Lady Rossiter playfully. “Here am I backing up the great venture heart and soul, knowing every member of the staff individually and offering prizes to every class in every subject, and even putting all my savings into the concern and then I’m not allowed to hear what the high and mighty directors are going to talk about! Really, Julian, you men are very childish sometimes.”

  “She is a Miss Marchrose.”

  “Marchrose!”

  Sir Julian, perceiving recognition in the tone of the exclamation, and recollecting his own prediction that the name would convey nothing to his wife, looked annoyed.

  “It is a most uncommon name.”

  Julian carefully refrained from questioning.

  “I told you I might know something about her! The girl who jilted poor Clarence Isbister in that abominable way was a Miss Marchrose.”

  “It doesn’t seem probable that this girl could have any connection with the woman who jilted your cousin Clarence; she is a certified teacher of shorthand and typewriting.”

  “Well, Clarence’s girl was nobody at all, and she was older than he, poor boy the Isbisters were not at all pleased about it, I remember. But they’d made up their minds to it, and it was all arranged, and then came this thunderbolt.”

  “If it was such an unpopular engagement, the Isbisters may owe her a debt of gratitude for throwing him over.”

  “Ah, it was more than that. Don’t you remember, Julian? They’d been engaged six weeks, and Clarence was like a lunatic about her, and simply made his father and mother consent to it all, and they kept on saying the girl wasn’t good enough for him, and didn’t seem to care for him much. And then he had that appalling hunting smash.”

  “I remember,” said Sir Julian, “when they thought he was going to be paralysed for the rest of his life, poor chap.”

  “So he was, from the waist downwards, for nearly a year, and all the doctors said that his recovery was a perfect miracle. But when he was still helpless, and nobody knew if he had to be an invalid or not, he offered to release Miss Marchrose from the engagement and she gave him up.”

  “H’m,” said Julian noncommittally.

  “There have been women,” said Lady Rossiter, with tears in her eyes, and in her voice that peculiar emotional quality which indicates that the general is merely being used to indicate the particular, “there have been women who have waited all their lives long for just such an opportunity of giving.”

  “On the whole, I am of opinion that the majority of fiancés would prefer not to provide the opportunity.”

  “Ah, Julian, it’s easy enough for you to be cynical. But to me it’s simply inconceivable how she could do it. How any woman could be so utterly heartless.”

  “Didn’t Clarence Isbister marry somebody else last year?”

  “Thank God, yes.”

  Lady Rossiter was always ready, in a reverent and uplifted manner, to render verbal recognition to her Maker. “Thank God, it didn’t destroy his faith in women. He married a true, pure, sweet, loving girl and one in his own class of life just a well-bred English maiden.”

  “And what happened to the other one Miss Marchrose?”

  “I don’t know, but she was very badly off, and had been teaching when Clarence met her of course, it was the money and position that made her accept him, one supposes.”

  “Only the price was too high when it included attendance on an invalid?” suggested Sir Julian, with a malicious satisfaction in thus encouraging oblivion of the, “Is it kind, is it wise, is it true?” axiom.

  Perhaps a similar recollection flashed rather tardily across Lady Rossiter’s mind, for she replied with circumspection:

  “God forbid that I should judge another! But one holds Love so infinitely sacred, that it is unbelievable that, if she had once known it, she could have profaned it so.”

  “I remember now; we heard about it at the time. Wasn’t young Clarence very much cut up?”

  “Poor boy! He took it very hard. Don’t you remember? his nurse came to me last year when I had influenza, and of course she talked they always do.”

  “So long as they find anyone to listen.”

  “Do you know, Julian, that after she had thrown him over, they could do nothing with him? The nurse told me herself that they thought he was going mad. He actually beat his head against the wall of the bedroom in the nursing-home.”

  “How sensible!”

  In the face of this reverend and sympathetic comment, Lady Rossiter not unnaturally ceased the recital of her relative’s unfortunate affaire du coeur.

  “I suppose if this turns out to be the same woman, you will advise the directors to refuse her application?”

  “On what grounds? We did not advertise for a Lady Superintendent of undeviating constancy and infinite capacity for self-sacrifice. If she is a woman of business and has the experience necessary, I really don’t see how I can bring it up against her that she once gave the chuck to Clarence Isbister and was responsible for his beating his head against the walls of his nursing-home.”

  “I am only a woman, Julian,” said Lady Rossiter incontrovertibly, but with a certain pathetic smile which she reserved for that particular statement, “but I somehow don’t like to think that the Superintendent who is to look after the staff to whom the girls and women and boys whom I have grown to know, will turn to that she has no higher ideal of Life than poor Clarence’s Miss Marchrose.”

  “Most probably it is not the same person at all.”

  “I could remember her Christian name, if I were to think a minute....”

  “Then please don’t, Edna. I have not the slightest wish to connect her with the Clarence drama, if it should turn out to be the same woman. In fact, I had much better not know it.”

  “It began with an ‘L,’ I’m almost sure,” said Lady Rossiter, unheeding.

  “I hear the car,” said her husband, rising hastily.

  “Laura Lilian Lena Lucy Louisa.... It was Pauline, Julian I remember it now.”

  “I have not the least idea what the Superintendent’s Christian name may be, Edna.” Sir Julian went into the hall. “I shall not come back to lunch. What time do you want the car this afternoon?”

  “Oh, that doesn’t matter,” declared Lady Rossiter brightly. “Don’t think of that, dear. It’s only my nature-class this afternoon, you know, and I can quite well walk down to the meeting-place. It’s only at Duckpool Cove. I want the class to see some of those wonderful effects in sepia and green in the rock-pools when the tide is out.”

  Sir Julian made the unwonted effort of restraining a strong inclination to ask whether the class could not witness these natural phenomena unchaperoned by their president.

  “I will send the car back, then. I shall walk home.”

  “As you like, but it really isn’t necessary.”


  Sir Julian began to pull on his driving-gloves.

  “Don’t forget, Julian, to say something about ‘Why, Ben! ‘to Mark Easter. I suppose he will be pleased. And couldn’t one without hurting his feelings, of course say something about the children being up and about rather early? I mean to say, I’m fond of the little things, when Ruthie behaves and Ambrose doesn’t whine, and they don’t quarrel but we can’t have them getting into the habit of running in and out of the house at breakfast-time.”

  “Heaven forbid!”

  “Well, try and say something, if you can.”

  “I’ll see.”

  Sir Julian took his place at the steering-wheel.

  He was a tall, thin man, ten years older than his wife, his dark hair already sparse upon the crown of his head, his clean-shaven hatchet face wearing an habitual look of sardonic melancholy. His dark eyes, set in a network of wrinkles, betrayed humour, but, nevertheless, they seldom smiled.

  At the bottom of the winding, shady drive he turned the car out of the stone gateway and on to the highroad. A hundred yards further on he stopped in front of a small slate-roofed villa standing in an enclosure of raggedly-growing laurel hedge and untidy fencing, of which half the wooden palings were tumbling down.

  At the first sound of the horn hooting an announcement of arrival, the small, pretentious-looking front door burst open, and Miss and Master Easter precipitated themselves down the garden-path, vociferating greetings in unresentfully complete oblivion of their recent unceremonious ejection at the hands of their neighbour.

  “Is your father ready?”

  “Coming this minute,” said Ruthie, and added in a sudden falsetto, designed to penetrate to an upper window of the villa, “Aren’t you, Daddy?”

  “I’ll sound the horn to let him know you’re ready,” volunteered Ambrose, outstretching a pair of hands, noted with disgust by Sir Julian as displaying the identical traces of syrup proclaimed by his sister an hour ago.

  “No, Peekaboo! Not you me!”

  “Neither of you,” said Sir Julian succinctly.

  “May I get up beside you?”

  “No.”

  “Will you take me into Culmouth too? Oh, do!”

  “Certainly not. You are too dirty.”

 

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