HOWARDS END
Chapter 26
Next morning a fine mist covered the peninsula. The weather promised
well, and the outline of the castle mound grew clearer each moment that Margaret
watched it. Presently she saw the keep, and the sun painted the rubble
gold, and charged the white sky with blue. The shadow of the house
gathered itself together and fell over the garden. A cat looked up at her
window and mewed. Lastly the river appeared, still holding the mists
between its banks and its overhanging alders, and only visible as far as a hill,
which cut off its upper reaches.
Margaret was
fascinated by Oniton. She had said that she loved it, but it was rather
its romantic tension that held her. The rounded Druids of whom she had
caught glimpses in her drive, the rivers hurrying down from them to England, the
carelessly modelled masses of the lower hills, thrilled her with poetry.
The house was insignificant, but the prospect from it would be an eternal joy,
and she thought of all the friends she would have to stop in it, and of the
conversion of Henry himself to a rural life. Society, too, promised
favourably. The rector of the parish had dined with them last night, and
she found that he was a friend of her father's, and so knew what to find in
her. She liked him. He would introduce her to the town. While,
on her other side, Sir James Bidder sat, repeating that she only had to give the
word, and he would whip up the county families for twenty miles round.
Whether Sir James, who was Garden Seeds, had promised what he could perform, she
doubted, but so long as Henry mistook them for the county families when they did
call, she was content.
Charles and Albert Fussell now
crossed the lawn. They were going for a morning dip, and a servant
followed them with their bathing-dresses. She had meant to take a stroll
herself before breakfast, but saw that the day was still sacred to men, and
amused herself by watching their contretemps. In the first place the key
of the bathing-shed could not be found. Charles stood by the riverside
with folded hands, tragical, while the servant shouted, and was misunderstood by
another servant in the garden. Then came a difficulty about a
spring-board, and soon three people were running backwards and forwards over the
meadow, with orders and counter orders and recriminations and apologies.
If Margaret wanted to jump from a motor-car, she jumped; if Tibby thought
paddling would benefit his ankles, he paddled; if a clerk desired adventure, he
took a walk in the dark. But these athletes seemed paralysed. They
could not bathe without their appliances, though the morning sun was calling and
the last mists were rising from the dimpling stream. Had they found the
life of the body after all? Could not the men whom they despised as
milksops beat them, even on their own
ground?
She thought of the bathing arrangements
as they should be in her day--no worrying of servants, no appliances, beyond
good sense. Her reflections were disturbed by the quiet child, who had
come out to speak to the cat, but was now watching her watch the men. She
called, "Good-morning, dear," a little sharply. Her voice spread
consternation. Charles looked round, and though completely attired in
indigo blue, vanished into the shed, and was seen no
more.
"Miss Wilcox is up--" the child whispered, and
then became unintelligible.
"What's
that?"
It sounded like, "--cut-yoke--sack
back--"
"I can't
hear."
"--On the
bed--tissue-paper--"
Gathering that the wedding-dress
was on view, and that a visit would be seemly, she went to Evie's room.
All was hilarity here. Evie, in a petticoat, was dancing with one of the
Anglo-Indian ladies, while the other was adoring yards of white satin.
They screamed, they laughed, they sang, and the dog
barked.
Margaret screamed a little too, but without
conviction. She could not feel that a wedding was so funny. Perhaps
something was missing in her equipment.
Evie gasped:
"Dolly is a rotter not to be here! Oh, we would rag just then!" Then
Margaret went down to breakfast.
Henry was already
installed; he ate slowly and spoke little, and was, in Margaret's eyes, the only
member of their party who dodged emotion successfully. She could not
suppose him indifferent either to the loss of his daughter or to the presence of
his future wife. Yet he dwelt intact, only issuing orders
occasionally--orders that promoted the comfort of his guests. He inquired
after her hand; he set her to pour out the coffee and Mrs. Warrington to pour
out the tea. When Evie came down there was a moment's awkwardness, and
both ladies rose to vacate their places. "Burton," called Henry, "serve
tea and coffee from the side-board!" It wasn't genuine tact, but it was
tact, of a sort--the sort that is as useful as the genuine, and saves even more
situations at Board meetings. Henry treated a marriage like a funeral,
item by item, never raising his eyes to the whole, and "Death, where is thy
sting? Love, where is thy victory?" one would exclaim at the
close.
After breakfast she claimed a few words with
him. It was always best to approach him formally. She asked for the
interview, because he was going on to shoot grouse tomorrow, and she was
returning to Helen in town.
"Certainly, dear," said
he. "Of course, I have the time. What do you
want?"
"Nothing."
"I was
afraid something had gone wrong."
"No; I have nothing
to say, but you may talk."
Glancing at his watch, he
talked of the nasty curve at the lych-gate. She heard him with
interest. Her surface could always respond to his without contempt, though
all her deeper being might be yearning to help him. She had abandoned any
plan of action. Love is the best, and the more she let herself love him,
the more chance was there that he would set his soul in order. Such a
moment as this, when they sat under fair weather by the walks of their future
home, was so sweet to her that its sweetness would surely pierce to him.
Each lift of his eyes, each parting of the thatched lip from the clean-shaven,
must prelude the tenderness that kills the Monk and the Beast at a single
blow. Disappointed a hundred times, she still hoped. She loved him
with too clear a vision to fear his cloudiness. Whether he droned
trivialities, as today, or sprang kisses on her in the twilight, she could
pardon him, she could respond.
"If there is this
nasty curve," she suggested, "couldn't we walk to the church? Not, of
course, you and Evie; but the rest of us might very well go on first, and that
would mean fewer carriages."
"One can't have ladies
walking through the Market Square. The Fussells wouldn't like it; they
were awfully particular at Charles's wedding. My--she--one of our party
was anxious to walk, and certainly the church was just round the corner, and I
shouldn't have minded; but the Colonel made a great point of
it."
"You men shouldn't be so chivalrous," said
Margaret thoughtfully.
"Why
not?"
She knew why not, but said that she did not
know.
He then announced that, unless she had anything
special to say, he must visit the wine-cellar, and they went off together in
search of Burton. Though clumsy and a little inconvenient, Oniton was a
genuine country house. They clattered down flagged passages, looking into
room after room, and scaring unknown maids from the performance of obscure
duties. The wedding-breakfast must be in readiness when they came back
from church, and tea would be served in the garden. The sight of so many
agitated and serious people made Margaret smile, but she reflected that they
were paid to be serious, and enjoyed being agitated. Here were the lower
wheels of the machine that was tossing Evie up into nuptial glory. A
little boy blocked their way with pig-tails. His mind could not grasp
their greatness, and he said: "By your leave; let me pass, please." Henry asked
him where Burton was. But the servants were so new that they did not know
one another's names. In the still-room sat the band, who had stipulated
for champagne as part of their fee, and who were already drinking beer.
Scents of Araby came from the kitchen, mingled with cries. Margaret knew
what had happened there, for it happened at Wickham Place. One of the
wedding dishes had boiled over, and the cook was throwing cedar-shavings to hide
the smell. At last they came upon the butler. Henry gave him the
keys, and handed Margaret down the cellar-stairs. Two doors were
unlocked. She, who kept all her wine at the bottom of the linen-cupboard,
was astonished at the sight. "We shall never get through it!" she cried,
and the two men were suddenly drawn into brotherhood, and exchanged
smiles. She felt as if she had again jumped out of the car while it was
moving.
Certainly Oniton would take some
digesting. It would be no small business to remain herself, and yet to
assimilate such an establishment. She must remain herself, for his sake as
well as her own, since a shadowy wife degrades the husband whom she accompanies;
and she must assimilate for reasons of common honesty, since she had no right to
marry a man and make him uncomfortable. Her only ally was the power of
Home. The loss of Wickham Place had taught her more than its
possession. Howards End had repeated the lesson. She was determined
to create new sanctities among these hills.
After
visiting the wine-cellar, she dressed, and then came the wedding, which seemed a
small affair when compared with the preparations for it. Everything went
like one o'clock. Mr. Cahill materialized out of space, and was waiting
for his bride at the church door. No one dropped the ring or mispronounced
the responses, or trod on Evie's train, or cried. In a few minutes--the
clergymen performed their duty, the register was signed, and they were back in
their carriages, negotiating the dangerous curve by the lych-gate.
Margaret was convinced that they had not been married at all, and that the
Norman church had been intent all the time on other
business.
There were more documents to sign at the
house, and the breakfast to eat, and then a few more people dropped in for the
garden party. There had been a great many refusals, and after all it was
not a very big affair--not as big as Margaret's would be. She noted the
dishes and the strips of red carpet, that outwardly she might give Henry what
was proper. But inwardly she hoped for something better than this blend of
Sunday church and fox-hunting. If only someone had been upset! But
this wedding had gone off so particularly well--"quite like a Durbar" in the
opinion of Lady Edser, and she thoroughly agreed with
her.
So the wasted day lumbered forward, the bride
and bridegroom drove off, yelling with laughter, and for the second time the sun
retreated towards the hills of Wales. Henry, who was more tired than he
owned, came up to her in the castle meadow, and, in tones of unusual softness,
said that he was pleased. Everything had gone off so well. She felt
that he was praising her, too, and blushed; certainly she had done all she could
with his intractable friends, and had made a special point of kowtowing to the
men. They were breaking camp this evening: only the Warringtons and quiet
child would stay the night, and the others were already moving towards the house
to finish their packing. "I think it did go off well," she agreed.
"Since I had to jump out of the motor, I'm thankful I lighted on my left
hand. I am so very glad about it, Henry dear; I only hope that the guests
at ours may be half as comfortable. You must all remember that we have no
practical person among us, except my aunt, and she is not used to entertainments
on a large scale."
"I know," he said gravely.
"Under the circumstances, it would be better to put everything into the hands of
Harrod's or Whiteley's, or even to go to some
hotel."
"You desire a
hotel?"
"Yes, because--well, I mustn't interfere with
you. No doubt you want to be married from your old
home."
"My old home's falling into pieces,
Henry. I only want my new. Isn't it a perfect
evening--"
"The Alexandrina isn't
bad--"
"The Alexandrina," she echoed, more occupied
with the threads of smoke that were issuing from their chimneys, and ruling the
sunlit slopes with parallels of grey.
"It's off
Curzon Street."
"Is it? Let's be married from
off Curzon Street."
Then she turned westward, to gaze
at the swirling gold. Just where the river rounded the hill the sun caught
it. Fairyland must lie above the bend, and its precious liquid was pouring
towards them past Charles's bathing-shed. She gazed so long that her eyes
were dazzled, and when they moved back to the house, she could not recognize the
faces of people who were coming out of it. A parlour-maid was preceding
them.
"Who are those people?" she
asked.
"They're callers!" exclaimed Henry.
"It's too late for callers."
"Perhaps they're town
people who want to see the wedding presents."
"I'm
not at home yet to townees."
"Well, hide among the
ruins, and if I can stop them, I will."
He thanked
her.
Margaret went forward, smiling socially.
She supposed that these were unpunctual guests, who would have to be content
with vicarious civility, since Evie and Charles were gone, Henry tired, and the
others in their rooms. She assumed the airs of a hostess; not for
long. For one of the group was Helen--Helen in her oldest clothes, and
dominated by that tense, wounding excitement that had made her a terror in their
nursery days.
"What is it?" she called. "Oh,
what's wrong? Is Tibby ill?"
Helen spoke to her
two companions, who fell back. Then she bore forward
furiously.
"They're starving!" she shouted. "I
found them starving!"
"Who? Why have you
come?"
"The Basts."
"Oh,
Helen!" moaned Margaret. "Whatever have you done
now?"
"He has lost his place. He has been
turned out of his bank. Yes, he's done for. We upper classes have
ruined him, and I suppose you'll tell me it's the battle of life.
Starving. His wife is ill. Starving. She fainted in the
train."
"Helen, are you
mad?"
"Perhaps. Yes. If you like, I'm
mad. But I've brought them. I'll stand injustice no longer.
I'll show up the wretchedness that lies under this luxury, this talk of
impersonal forces, this cant about God doing what we're too slack to do
ourselves."
"Have you actually brought two starving
people from London to Shropshire, Helen?"
Helen was
checked. She had not thought of this, and her hysteria abated.
"There was a restaurant car on the train," she
said.
"Don't be absurd. They aren't starving,
and you know it. Now, begin from the beginning. I won't have such
theatrical nonsense. How dare you! Yes, how dare you!" she repeated,
as anger filled her, "bursting in to Evie's wedding in this heartless way.
My goodness! but you've a perverted notion of philanthropy.
Look"--she indicated the house--"servants, people out of the windows. They
think it's some vulgar scandal, and I must explain, 'Oh no, it's only my sister
screaming, and only two hangers-on of ours, whom she has brought here for no
conceivable reason.'"
"Kindly take back that word
'hangers-on,'" said Helen, ominously calm.
"Very
well," conceded Margaret, who for all her wrath was determined to avoid a real
quarrel. "I, too, am sorry about them, but it beats me why you've brought
them here, or why you're here yourself.
"It's our
last chance of seeing Mr. Wilcox."
Margaret moved
towards the house at this. She was determined not to worry
Henry.
"He's going to Scotland. I know he
is. I insist on seeing him."
"Yes,
tomorrow."
"I knew it was our last
chance."
"How do you do, Mr. Bast?" said Margaret,
trying to control her voice. "This is an odd business. What view do
you take of it?"
"There is Mrs. Bast, too," prompted
Helen.
Jacky also shook hands. She, like her
husband, was shy, and, furthermore, ill, and furthermore, so bestially stupid
that she could not grasp what was happening. She only knew that the lady
had swept down like a whirlwind last night, had paid the rent, redeemed the
furniture, provided them with a dinner and breakfast, and ordered them to meet
her at Paddington next morning. Leonard had feebly protested, and when the
morning came, had suggested that they shouldn't go. But she, half
mesmerized, had obeyed. The lady had told them to, and they must, and
their bed-sitting-room had accordingly changed into Paddington, and Paddington
into a railway carriage, that shook, and grew hot, and grew cold, and vanished
entirely, and reappeared amid torrents of expensive scent. "You have
fainted," said the lady in an awe-struck voice. "Perhaps the air will do
you good." And perhaps it had, for here she was, feeling rather better among a
lot of flowers.
"I'm sure I don't want to intrude,"
began Leonard, in answer to Margaret's question. "But you have been so
kind to me in the past in warning me about the Porphyrion that I wondered--why,
I wondered whether--"
"Whether we could get him back
into the Porphyrion again," supplied Helen. "Meg, this has been a cheerful
business. A bright evening's work that was on Chelsea
Embankment."
Margaret shook her head and returned to
Mr. Bast.
"I don't understand. You left the
Porphyrion because we suggested it was a bad concern, didn't
you?"
"That's right."
"And
went into a bank instead?"
"I told you all that,"
said Helen; "and they reduced their staff after he had been in a month, and now
he's penniless, and I consider that we and our informant are directly to
blame."
"I hate all this," Leonard
muttered.
"I hope you do, Mr. Bast. But it's no
good mincing matters. You have done yourself no good by coming here.
If you intend to confront Mr. Wilcox, and to call him to account for a chance
remark, you will make a very great mistake."
"I
brought them. I did it all," cried Helen.
"I
can only advise you to go at once. My sister has put you in a false
position, and it is kindest to tell you so. It's too late to get to town,
but you'll find a comfortable hotel in Oniton, where Mrs. Bast can rest, and I
hope you'll be my guests there."
"That isn't what I
want, Miss Schlegel," said Leonard. "You're very kind, and no doubt it's a
false position, but you make me miserable. I seem no good at
all."
"It's work he wants," interpreted Helen.
"Can't you see?"
Then he said: "Jacky, let's
go. We're more bother than we're worth. We're costing these ladies
pounds and pounds already to get work for us, and they never will. There's
nothing we're good enough to do."
"We would like to
find you work," said Margaret rather conventionally. "We want to--I, like
my sister. You're only down in your luck. Go to the hotel, have a
good night's rest, and some day you shall pay me back the bill, if you prefer
it."
But Leonard was near the abyss, and at such
moments men see clearly. "You don't know what you're talking about," he
said. "I shall never get work now. If rich people fail at one
profession, they can try another. Not I. I had my groove, and I've
got out of it. I could do one particular branch of insurance in one
particular office well enough to command a salary, but that's all.
Poetry's nothing, Miss Schlegel. One's thoughts about this and that are
nothing. Your money, too, is nothing, if you'll understand me. I
mean if a man over twenty once loses his own particular job, it's all over with
him. I have seen it happen to others. Their friends gave them money
for a little, but in the end they fall over the edge. It's no good.
It's the whole world pulling. There always will be rich and
poor."
He ceased.
"Won't
you have something to eat?" said Margaret. "I don't know what to do.
It isn't my house, and though Mr. Wilcox would have been glad to see you at any
other time--as I say, I don't know what to do, but I undertake to do what I can
for you. Helen, offer them something. Do try a sandwich, Mrs.
Bast."
They moved to a long table behind which a
servant was still standing. Iced cakes, sandwiches innumerable, coffee,
claret-cup, champagne, remained almost intact: their overfed guests could do no
more. Leonard refused. Jacky thought she could manage a
little. Margaret left them whispering together and had a few more words
with Helen.
She said: "Helen, I like Mr. Bast.
I agree that he's worth helping. I agree that we are directly
responsible."
"No, indirectly. Via Mr.
Wilcox."
"Let me tell you once for all that if you
take up that attitude, I'll do nothing. No doubt you're right logically,
and are entitled to say a great many scathing things about Henry. Only, I
won't have it. So choose.
Helen looked at the
sunset.
"If you promise to take them quietly to the
George, I will speak to Henry about them--in my own way, mind; there is to be
none of this absurd screaming about justice. I have no use for
justice. If it was only a question of money, we could do it
ourselves. But he wants work, and that we can't give him, but possibly
Henry can."
"It's his duty to," grumbled
Helen.
"Nor am I concerned with duty. I'm
concerned with the characters of various people whom we know, and how, things
being as they are, things may be made a little better. Mr. Wilcox hates
being asked favours: all business men do. But I am going to ask him, at
the risk of a rebuff, because I want to make things a little
better."
"Very well. I promise. You take
it very calmly. "
"Take them off to the George,
then, and I'll try. Poor creatures! but they look tried." As
they parted, she added: "I haven't nearly done with you, though, Helen.
You have been most self-indulgent. I can't get over it. You have
less restraint rather than more as you grow older. Think it over and alter
yourself, or we shan't have happy lives."
She
rejoined Henry. Fortunately he had been sitting down: these physical
matters were important. "Was it townees?" he asked, greeting her with a
pleasant smile.
"You'll never believe me," said
Margaret, sitting down beside him. "It's all right now, but it was my
sister."
"Helen here?" he cried, preparing to
rise. "But she refused the invitation. I thought she despised
weddings."
"Don't get up. She has not come to
the wedding. I've bundled her off to the
George."
Inherently hospitable, he
protested.
"No; she has two of her protégés with her,
and must keep with them."
"Let 'em all
come."
"My dear Henry, did you see
them?"
"I did catch sight of a brown bunch of a
woman, certainly.
"The brown bunch was Helen, but did
you catch sight of a sea-green and salmon
bunch?"
"What! are they out
beanfeasting?"
"No; business. They wanted to
see me, and later on I want to talk to you about
them."
She was ashamed of her own diplomacy. In
dealing with a Wilcox, how tempting it was to lapse from comradeship, and to
give him the kind of woman that he desired! Henry took the hint at once,
and said: "Why later on? Tell me now. No time like the
present."
"Shall I?"
"If
it isn't a long story."
"Oh, not five minutes; but
there's a sting at the end of it, for I want you to find the man some work in
your office."
"What are his
qualifications?"
"I don't know. He's a
clerk."
"How
old?"
"Twenty-five,
perhaps."
"What's his
name?"
"Bast," said Margaret, and was about to remind
him that they had met at Wickham Place, but stopped herself. It had not
been a successful meeting.
"Where was he
before?"
"Dempster's
Bank."
"Why did he leave?" he asked, still
remembering nothing.
"They reduced their
staff."
"All right; I'll see
him."
It was the reward of her tact and devotion
through the day. Now she understood why some women prefer influence to
rights. Mrs. Plynlimmon, when condemning suffragettes, had said: "The
woman who can't influence her husband to vote the way she wants ought to be
ashamed of herself." Margaret had winced, but she was influencing Henry
now, and though pleased at her little victory, she knew that she had won it by
the methods of the harem.
"I should be glad if you
took him," she said, "but I don't know whether he's
qualified."
"I'll do what I can. But, Margaret,
this mustn't be taken as a precedent."
"No, of
course--of course--"
"I can't fit in your protégés
every day. Business would suffer."
"I can
promise you he's the last. He--he's rather a special
case."
"Protégés always
are."
She let it stand at that. He rose with a
little extra touch of complacency, and held out his hand to help her up.
How wide the gulf between Henry as he was and Henry as Helen thought he ought to
be! And she herself--hovering as usual between the two, now accepting men
as they are, now yearning with her sister for Truth. Love and Truth--their
warfare seems eternal. Perhaps the whole visible world rests on it, and if
they were one, life itself, like the spirits when Prospero was reconciled to his
brother, might vanish into air, into thin air.
"Your
protégé has made us late," said he. "The Fussells will just be
starting."
On the whole she sided with men as they
are. Henry would save the Basts as he had saved Howards End, while Helen
and her friends were discussing the ethics of salvation. His was a
slap-dash method, but the world has been built slap-dash, and the beauty of
mountain and river and sunset may be but the varnish with which the unskilled
artificer hides his joins. Oniton, like herself, was imperfect. Its
apple-trees were stunted, its castle ruinous. It, too, had suffered in the
border warfare between the Anglo Saxon and the Kelt, between things as they are
and as they ought to be. Once more the west was retreating, once again the
orderly stars were dotting the eastern sky. There is certainly no rest for
us on the earth. But there is happiness, and as Margaret descended the
mound on her lover's arm, she felt that she was having her
share.
To her annoyance, Mrs. Bast was still in the
garden; the husband and Helen had left her there to finish her meal while they
went to engage rooms. Margaret found this woman repellent. She had
felt, when shaking her hand, an overpowering shame. She remembered the
motive of her call at Wickham Place, and smelt again odours from the
abyss--odours the more disturbing because they were involuntary. For there
was no malice in Jacky. There she sat, a piece of cake in one hand, an
empty champagne glass in the other, doing no harm to
anybody.
"She's overtired," Margaret
whispered.
"She's something else," said Henry.
"This won't do. I can't have her in my garden in this
state."
"Is she--" Margaret hesitated to add "drunk."
Now that she was going to marry him, he had grown particular. He
discountenanced risqué conversations now.
Henry went
up to the woman. She raised her face, which gleamed in the twilight like a
puff-ball.
"Madam, you will be more comfortable at
the hotel," he said sharply.
Jacky replied: "If it
isn't Hen!"
"Ne crois pas que le mari lui ressemble,"
apologized Margaret. "Il est tout à fait
différent."
"Henry!" she repeated, quite
distinctly.
Mr. Wilcox was much annoyed. "I
can't congratulate you on your protégés," he
remarked.
"Hen, don't go. You do love me, dear,
don't you?"
"Bless us, what a person!" sighed
Margaret, gathering up her skirts.
Jacky pointed with
her cake. "You're a nice boy, you are." She yawned. "There now, I
love you."
"Henry, I am awfully
sorry."
"And pray why?" he asked, and looked at her
so sternly that she feared he was ill. He seemed more scandalized than the
facts demanded.
"To have brought this down on
you."
"Pray don't
apologize."
The voice
continued.
"Why does she call you 'Hen'?" said
Margaret innocently. "Has she ever seen you
before?"
"Seen Hen before!" said Jacky. "Who
hasn't seen Hen? He's serving you like me, my dear. These
boys! You wait--Still we love 'em."
"Are you
now satisfied?" Henry asked.
Margaret began to grow
frightened. "I don't know what it is all about," she said. "Let's
come in."
But he thought she was acting. He
thought he was trapped. He saw his whole life crumbling. "Don't you
indeed?" he said bitingly. "I do. Allow me to congratulate you on
the success of your plan."
"This is Helen's plan, not
mine."
"I now understand your interest in the
Basts. Very well thought out. I am amused at your caution,
Margaret. You are quite right--it was necessary. I am a man, and
have lived a man's past. I have the honour to release you from your
engagement."
Still she could not understand.
She knew of life's seamy side as a theory; she could not grasp it as a
fact. More words from Jacky were necessary--words unequivocal,
undenied.
"So that--" burst from her, and she went
indoors. She stopped herself from saying
more.
"So what?" asked Colonel Fussell, who was
getting ready to start in the hall.
"We were
saying--Henry and I were just having the fiercest argument, my point being--"
Seizing his fur coat from a footman, she offered to help him on. He
protested, and there was a playful little scene.
"No,
let me do that," said Henry, following.
"Thanks so
much! You see--he has forgiven me!"
The Colonel
said gallantly: "I don't expect there's much to
forgive.
He got into the car. The ladies
followed him after an interval. Maids, courier, and heavier luggage had
been sent on earlier by the branch--line. Still chattering, still thanking
their host and patronizing their future hostess, the guests were home
away.
Then Margaret continued: "So that woman has
been your mistress?"
"You put it with your usual
delicacy," he replied.
"When,
please?"
"Why?"
"When,
please?"
"Ten years
ago."
She left him without a word. For it was
not her tragedy: it was Mrs. Wilcox's.