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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75403 ***
+
+
+ [Cover Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ AUNT ANNE.
+
+ _By Mrs. W. K. Clifford_,
+
+ _Author of “Mrs. Keith’s Crime,” etc._
+
+
+ “As less the olden glow abides,
+ And less the chillier heart aspires,
+ With driftwood beached in past spring-tides
+ We light our sullen fires.”
+ JAMES RUSSELL LOWELL.
+
+ In Two Volumes.
+ Vol. I.
+
+
+
+ London:
+ Richard Bentley & Son,
+ Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty the Queen.
+ 1892.
+
+ (All rights reserved.)
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+ AUNT ANNE.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+
+Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hibbert had been married just four months when Aunt
+Anne first appeared on the scene. They were at Brighton, whither they
+had gone from Friday to Tuesday, so that Mr. Hibbert might get braced up
+after a hard spell of work. Besides doing his usual journalism, he had
+been helping a friend with a popular educational weekly, and altogether
+“had slaved quite wickedly,” so his wife said. But he had declared that,
+though he found matrimony, as far as he had gone, very delightful, it
+had to be paid for, especially at the beginning of its career, when it
+ran into furniture, linen, plate, and expensive presents to a dear
+little wife, though the expensiveness of the last he generously kept to
+himself. So it resulted in the visit to Brighton. They spent the
+happiest four days in the world there, and felt quite sad when Tuesday
+morning arrived. But they wisely did their best to forget that the
+evening train would take them back to London, and resolved that their
+last day should pass merrily.
+
+“Suppose we have a long drowsy morning on the pier,” she suggested;
+“nothing is nicer or more restful than to listen to the band and look
+down into the water. We needn’t see the horrid people—indeed, if we sit
+on one of the end seats and keep our faces turned seawards, we can
+forget that they even exist.”
+
+Mr. Hibbert solemnly considered the proposal.
+
+“The only drawback is the music, it makes so much noise—that’s the
+worst of music, it always does,” he said sadly. “Another thing is, that
+I cannot lie full length on the pier as I can on the beach.”
+
+“Very well, then we’ll go to the beach. The worst of the beach is, that
+we can’t look down into the water, as we can from the end of the pier.”
+
+“That’s true; and then there are lots of pretty girls on the pier, and I
+like to see them, for then I know that there are some left—for the
+other fellows,” he added nobly.
+
+So they went to the pier, and sat on one of the side seats at the far
+end and looked down into the water, and blinked their happy eyes at the
+sunshine. And they felt as if all the beautiful world belonged to them,
+as if they two together were being drawn dreamily on and on into the
+sky, and sea, and light, to make one glorious whole with happy nature;
+but a whole in which they would be for ever conscious of being together,
+and never less sleepy or blissful than now. This was Walter’s idea, and
+he said it all in his dear romantic way that generally ended up with a
+laugh. “It would never do, you know, because we should get nothing to
+eat.”
+
+“Don’t,” she said. “That is so like you; you always spoil a beautiful
+idea, you provoking thing,” and she rubbed her chin against the back of
+the seat and looked down more intently at the water. Without any one in
+the least suspecting it, he managed to stoop and kiss her hand, while he
+pretended to be trying to see something, that of course was not there,
+at the top of a wave.
+
+They were having a delightful morning, they lived in every moment of it,
+and wished it would never come to an end; still, when it did, there
+would be a delicious luncheon to go back to—very large prawns, roast
+chicken and green peas, and an enormous dish of ripe figs, which both
+their souls loved. After all, Walter thought, the world was not a bad
+place, especially when you had a wife who adored you and thought that
+everything you did bore the stamp of genius.
+
+The band was playing a waltz, though to this day they do not know it.
+All manner of people were passing to and fro, but they did not notice
+them.
+
+“I should like to stay here for ever,” Mrs. Hibbert said, with a sweet
+sigh of content. “Do you know, Walter,” she went on suddenly after a
+pause, “it will be four months to-morrow since we were married? Time
+seems to have flown.”
+
+“By Jove! it really is a miracle what those four months have done with
+themselves,” he answered, looking up for a moment; as if to be sure that
+Time was not a conjurer standing before him about to hand the four
+months from beneath a handkerchief, with a polite bow and the remark
+that they would have to be lived through at the ordinary rate.
+
+A spare-looking old lady, dressed in black, passed by, but he did not
+notice her.
+
+“You see,” he went on, with his eyes fixed on a sailing boat in the
+distance, “if things were always going to be——”
+
+At the sound of his voice the lady in black, who was only a few yards
+off, stopped, listened, hesitated, and, turning back, stood before him.
+He recognized her in a moment.
+
+“Aunt Anne!” he exclaimed. His voice was amiable, but embarrassed, as if
+he did not quite know what to do next.
+
+“My dear Walter,” she said, with a sigh and in a tone of great relief,
+“I am so glad to find you; I went to your lodgings, I saw your name and
+address in the visitors’ list yesterday, but you were out; then I
+thought I might find you here. And this is your wife? My dear Florence,
+I am so glad to see you.”
+
+Till that moment Mrs. Walter Hibbert had never heard of the existence of
+Aunt Anne, but Aunt Anne had evidently heard of Mrs. Hibbert. She knew
+her Christian name, and called her by it as naturally as if she had been
+at her christening. She stretched out a small hand covered with a black
+thread glove as she spoke, and held Florence’s fingers affectionately in
+hers. Florence looked at her a little wonderingly. Aunt Anne was slight
+and old, nearly sixty perhaps. All over her face there were little lines
+that crossed and re-crossed, and branched off in every direction. She
+had grey hair, and small dark eyes that blinked quickly and nervously;
+there appeared to be some trifling affection of the left eye, for now
+and then, as if by accident, it winked at you. The odd thing was that,
+in spite of her evident tendency to nervous excitement, her shabby black
+satin dress, almost threadbare shawl, and cheap gloves, there was an air
+of dignity about the spare old lady, and something like determination in
+her kindly voice that, joined to her impulsive tenderness, made you
+quickly understand she would be a very difficult person to oppose.
+
+“Dear boy,” she said gently to Walter, “why didn’t you write to me when
+you were married? You know how glad I should have been to hear of your
+happiness.”
+
+“Why didn’t you write to me, Aunt Anne?” he asked, gaily turning the
+tables.
+
+“Yes, I ought to have done so. You must forgive me, dears, for being so
+remiss,” she said, looking at them both, “and believe me that it was
+from no lack of affection. But,” she went on quickly, “we must not waste
+our time. You are coming to Rottingdean with me, and at once. Mr. Baines
+is longing to see you both.”
+
+“But we can’t go now, Aunt Anne,” Walter declared in his kindest manner;
+“we must get back to the lodgings. We told them to have luncheon ready
+at one o’clock, and to-night we go home. You must come and lunch with
+us.”
+
+“That is impossible, dear Walter; you are coming back with me.”
+
+“It can’t be done to-day,” he said regretfully.
+
+“My dear Walter,” she answered, with a look of dismay and in a voice
+that was almost pained, “what would your uncle say if he heard you? I
+could not possibly return without you.”
+
+“But he has never seen me, Aunt Anne.”
+
+“That is one reason why he would never forgive me if I did not take you
+back.”
+
+“But it is so far, and we should be all day getting there,” Walter
+objected a little helplessly, for he felt already that Aunt Anne would
+carry her point.
+
+“It is only to Rottingdean”—she spoke with hurt surprise—“and we will
+drive. I saw a beautiful fly as I was coming on to the pier, and engaged
+it. I know you too well, my darling, to think that you will refuse me.”
+
+Her manner had changed in a moment; she said the last words with soft
+triumph, and looked at Florence. The sight of the young wife seemed to
+be too much for her; there was something like a tear in the left eye,
+the one that winked, when she spoke again.
+
+“I must give her a kiss,” she said tenderly, and putting out her arms
+she gathered the girl to her heart. “But we must make haste,” she went
+on quickly, hurrying over the fag end of her embrace, as if she had not
+time to indulge in her feelings much as she desired to do so. “Mr.
+Baines will wonder what has happened to us. He is longing to see you;”
+and without their knowing it, she almost chased them along the pier.
+
+Then Walter, thinking of the prawns and the chicken and the large dish
+of ripe green figs, made a wild struggle to get free.
+
+“But really, Aunt Anne,” he said firmly, “we must go back to the
+lodgings. Come and lunch with us now, and let us go and see Mr. Baines
+another time; I dare say we shall be at Brighton again soon. We will
+make a point of coming now that we know you are here, won’t we,
+Floggie?” and he appealed feebly to his wife.
+
+“Yes, indeed we will,” Florence assured her.
+
+“Dear children,” Aunt Anne laughed, “I shall not take any excuse, or
+think of letting you escape now that I have found you.” There was an
+unexpected brightness in her manner, but there was no intention of
+letting them go.
+
+“Besides, there may be important letters at the lodgings, and I ought to
+do a bit of work;” but there was evident invention in Walter’s voice,
+and she did not slacken her pace. Still, as if she wanted him to know
+that she saw through his excuses, she looked at him reproachfully, and
+with a determination that did not falter.
+
+“It would be impossible for me to return without you,” she said, with
+extreme gravity; “he would never forgive me. Besides, dear children, you
+don’t know what a pleasure it is to see you. I could not let you go just
+yet. My heart gave a bound as I recognized Walter’s voice,” she went on,
+turning to Florence; “he is so like what his dear father used to be. I
+knew him directly.”
+
+They were already by the turnstile. They felt helpless. The old lady
+with the thin shoulders and the black shawl loosely floating behind
+seemed to be their master: they were like children doing as they were
+told.
+
+“Here is the fly. Get in, my darlings,” she said triumphantly, and
+Florence meekly took her place. “Get in, dear Walter,” she repeated with
+decision, “I will follow; get in,” and he too obeyed. Another moment and
+they were going towards Rottingdean.
+
+The old lady looked relieved and pleased when they were well on their
+way.
+
+“It is a lovely drive,” she said, “and it will do you far more good than
+sitting on the pier. I am so glad to have you with me, dear children.”
+She seemed to delight in calling them children, and it was odd, but each
+time that she said the word it seemed to give her a stronger hold on
+them. She turned to Florence.
+
+“Are your father and mother quite well, my dear?” she asked, and waited
+with polite eagerness for a reply.
+
+Walter put his hand on his wife’s.
+
+“She only has a mother,” he said gently.
+
+Aunt Anne looked quite penitent. She winked with her left eye and was
+silent for a moment or two, almost as if she meditated shedding a tear
+for the defunct father of the niece by marriage whom she had never seen
+in her life before to-day. Suddenly she turned the subject so
+grotesquely that they nearly laughed.
+
+“Are you fond of chocolates, my darling?”
+
+“Yes——” Florence hesitated a minute and then said softly, “Yes, Aunt
+Anne, very”—she had not had occasion to give the old lady any name in
+the few words she had spoken previously.
+
+“Dear child, I knew you would be,” Aunt Anne said, and from under her
+shawl she produced a box covered with white satin paper and having on
+its lid a very bright picture of a very smart lady. “I bought that box
+of chocolates for you as I came along. I thought Florence would be like
+the picture on the lid,” she added, turning to her nephew; “and she is,
+don’t you think so, Walter dear?”
+
+“Yes, Aunt Anne, she is—it is a most beautiful lady,” he answered, and
+he looked fondly at his wife and drew up his lips a little bit in a
+manner that Florence knew meant, in the language only she and he in all
+the wide world understood, that in his thoughts he kissed her.
+
+Aunt Anne was a dear old lady, Florence thought, and of course she
+liked, and always would like, any relation of Walter’s; still, she did
+so wish that on this particular day, their last by the sea together,
+Aunt Anne had kept her distance. Walter was so pale when they left town,
+but since Friday, with nothing to do but to get brown in the sun, he had
+been looking better and handsomer every day, and this last one they had
+longed to enjoy in their own lazy way; and now all their little plans
+were spoilt. To-morrow he would be at his office: it was really too bad,
+though it was ungrateful to think it, perhaps, with the remembrance of
+Aunt Anne’s embrace fresh upon her, and the box of chocolates on her
+lap. Still, after all, she felt justified, for she knew that Walter was
+raging inwardly, and that if they were alone he would use some short but
+very effective words to describe his own feeling in respect to the
+turning up of Aunt Anne. Only he was so good, so gentle and considerate,
+that, no matter what his thoughts might be, of course he would not let
+Aunt Anne feel how much her kindness bothered him.
+
+Meanwhile, they jogged along in the open fly towards Rottingdean. A
+long, even road, with a view on the right of the open sea, on the left
+alternate high hedges and wide meadows. The grass on the cliffs was
+green; among the grass were little footpaths made by wandering feet that
+had diverged from the main road. Florence followed the little tracks
+with her eyes; she thought of footpaths like them far away, not by the
+sea, but among the hanging woods of Surrey. She and Walter had sauntered
+along them less than a year ago. She thought of home, of the dear mother
+busy with her household duties, but making time between to write to the
+boys in India; of the dear, noisy boys who suddenly grew to be young men
+and vanished into the whirl of life; of the dirty old pony carriage in
+which she had loved to drive her sweetheart; and when she got to this
+point her thoughts came to a full stop to think more particularly of the
+pony. His name was Moses, and he had liked being kissed and eating
+sugar. She remembered, with a pang of self-reproach, that in the last
+months before her marriage she used to forget to kiss Moses, though she
+often stood absently stroking his patient nose. She had sometimes even
+forgotten his morning lump of sugar in the excitement of reading the
+letter that the early post never failed to bring.
+
+“Are you fond of scenery, dear?” Aunt Anne asked.
+
+With a start Florence looked round at the old lady, at Walter, at the
+shabby lining of the fly.
+
+“Yes, very,” she answered.
+
+“I knew it by the expression of your face when you looked at the sea.
+Mr. Baines says it is a lovely view.”
+
+Why should Mr. Baines be quoted? Florence wondered. She looked again—an
+open sea, a misty horizon, a blue sky, and the sun shining. A fine
+sea-view, certainly, and a splendid day, but scenery was hardly the term
+to apply to the distance beside them.
+
+“Is Mr. Baines very fond of the sea?” she asked. She saw that Aunt Anne
+was waiting for her to speak, and she said the first words that
+presented themselves.
+
+“Yes, my love, he delights in scenery. You must call him Uncle Robert,
+Florence. He would be deeply wounded to hear you say Mr. Baines. Neither
+he nor I could think of Walter’s wife as anything but our niece. You
+will remember, won’t you, my love?” Aunt Anne spoke in the gentle but
+authoritative voice which was, as they had already found, difficult to
+resist.
+
+“Yes, Aunt Anne, of course I will if you wish it; it was only because as
+yet I do not know him.”
+
+“But you soon will know him, my love,” the old lady answered
+confidently; “and when you do, you will feel that neither he nor I could
+think of Walter’s wife except to love her. Dear child, how fond he will
+be of you!” And she put her hand affectionately on Florence’s while she
+turned to Walter and asked suddenly—
+
+“Walter dear, have you got a white silk handkerchief for your neck?”
+
+He looked at her for a moment, almost puzzled, wondering whether she
+wanted to borrow one.
+
+“No, Aunt Anne, I fear I have not.”
+
+She dived down into her pocket and pulled out a little soft packet. “I
+thought it possible you hadn’t one,” she said joyfully, “so I bought
+this for you just now;” and she tucked the little parcel into his hand.
+
+It took him by surprise, he did not know what to say. He felt like the
+schoolboy she seemed to take him for, and a schoolboy’s awkwardness
+overtook him; he smiled, nodded mysteriously, and put the handkerchief
+into his pocket. His manner delighted Mrs. Baines.
+
+“He is just the same,” she said to Florence; “I remember him so well
+when he was only ten years old. He had the most lovely eyes I ever saw.
+Walter, do you remember my visit to your father?—Ah! we have reached
+the hill, that’s why he’s going so slowly,” she exclaimed excitedly. “We
+shall be there in five minutes. Now we are close to the village. Drive
+through the street, coachman,” she called out, “past the church, and a
+little way on you will see a house standing back from the road with a
+long garden in front and a white gate. Florence dear,” she asked, still
+keeping her eyes fixed on the driver, “do you like preserve?”
+
+“Like—do you mean jam?” Florence asked, bewildered by another sudden
+question.
+
+“Yes, my love, preserve,” Aunt Anne answered pointedly, as if she
+resented the use of the shorter word.
+
+“Yes, I like it very much,” her newly found niece said humbly, feeling
+that she had been rebuked.
+
+“We have quantities of fruit in our garden, and have been preserving it
+all the week. It is not very firm yet, but you must have some to take
+back with you.”
+
+“I am afraid we shall hardly be able to carry it,” Florence began
+timidly, feeling convinced that if she were made to carry jam to London
+it would be fatal to the rest of her luggage.
+
+“I will pack it for you myself,” Aunt Anne said firmly. She was watching
+the driver too intently to say more. She did not speak again till they
+had driven down the one street of Rottingdean, past the newly built
+cottages and the church, and appeared to be getting into another main
+road. Then suddenly she rose triumphantly from her seat. “There it is,
+coachman, that little cottage to the left. Dear Walter—how pleased your
+uncle will be! Here it is, dears,” and all her kindly face lighted up
+with satisfaction as they stopped before a small whitewashed cottage
+with a long garden in front and a bed of lupins at the side. Florence
+noticed that the garden, stretching far behind, was full of fruit-trees,
+and that a pear-tree rubbed against the sides of the house.
+
+The old lady got out of the fly slowly, she handed out her niece and
+nephew; the latter was going to pay the driver, but she pushed away his
+hand, then stood for a moment feeling absently in her pocket. After a
+moment she looked up and said in an abstracted voice, “Walter dear, you
+must settle with the flyman when you go back to Brighton; he is paid by
+the hour and will wait for you, my darlings;” and she turned towards the
+gate. “Come,” she said, “I must present you to your uncle.—Robert,” she
+called, “are you there?” She walked along the pathway with a quick
+determined step a little in advance of her visitors: when she reached
+the house she stood still, looking in, but hesitating to enter. Florence
+and Walter overtaking her saw that the front door opened into a room
+simply, almost poorly, furnished, with many photographs dotted about the
+walls, and a curious arrangement of quartz and ferns in one corner.
+While Mrs. Baines stood irresolute, there came round the house from the
+right a little shabby-looking maid-servant. Her dress was dirty, and she
+wore a large cap on her untidy head.
+
+“Emma,” said Aunt Anne in the condescending voice of one who struggled,
+but unsuccessfully, to forget her own superior condition in life, “where
+is your master?”
+
+“I don’t know, mum, but I think he’s tying up the beans.”
+
+“Have you prepared luncheon?”
+
+The girl looked up in surprise she evidently did not dare express, and
+answered in the negative.
+
+“Then go and do so immediately.”
+
+“But please, mum, what am I to put on the table?” asked the girl,
+bewildered.
+
+“Put!” exclaimed the old lady; “why, the cold bacon, and the preserved
+cranberries, of course, and the honey and the buns.”
+
+Florence thought that it sounded like the oddest meal in the world.
+
+“I think we had better return, I do indeed, Aunt Anne, if you will
+kindly let us,” urged Walter, thinking regretfully of the chicken.
+
+Aunt Anne waved her hand.
+
+“Walter,” she answered grandly, “you shall not go until you have
+partaken of our hospitality. I wish it were a thousand times better than
+it is,” she added, with a pathetic note in her voice that found their
+hearts directly.
+
+Walter put his hand on her shoulder like the simple affectionate fellow
+he was, and Florence hastened to say heartily—
+
+“It sounds delightful, dear Aunt Anne; it is only that we——” And then
+there came slouching round the left side of the house a tall
+ungainly-looking man of about sixty, a man with a brown beard and brown
+trousers, carrying in his hand a newspaper. He looked at Walter and at
+Florence in almost stupid surprise, and turned from them with a grunt.
+
+“Anne,” he said crossly, “where have you been? I have wasted all my
+morning looking for you; you knew those scarlet runners wanted tying up,
+and the sunflowers trimming. Who are these?” he asked, nodding at his
+visitors as coolly as if they had been out of hearing; “and what is that
+fly doing at the gate?”
+
+“Why, I have been to Brighton, of course,” Aunt Anne answered bravely,
+lifting her head and looking him in the face, but there was a quaver of
+something like fear in her voice; “I told you I was going: I went by the
+omnibus.”
+
+“What did you go to Brighton for? you were there only last week.” He
+lowered his voice and asked again, “Who are these?”
+
+“Robert, I told you yesterday that Walter Hibbert’s name was in the
+visitors’ list in the paper, and that I was longing to see him and his
+wife,” she answered sharply, but still with dignity—it was doubtful
+which of the two was master—“so of course I went off this morning to
+fetch them. I knew how glad you would be to see them.”
+
+Mr. Baines gave a grunt.
+
+The maid, laying the cloth in the whitewashed sitting-room, stopped
+clattering the forks and spoons to hear what was going on and to look
+through the open window. Aunt Anne noticed it in a moment, and turning
+round said sternly—
+
+“Emma, proceed with your work. I told you,” she went on, again speaking
+to her husband, “that these dear children were at Brighton. I have
+brought them back, Robert, to introduce them to you. They have been
+looking forward to it.”
+
+He gave another grunt, and shook his awkward shoulders in what was meant
+to be a civil manner.
+
+“Oh, that’s it,” he said; “well, you had better come in and have
+something to eat.” And he led the way into the cottage.
+
+Aunt Anne entirely recovered herself the moment she was under her own
+roof. “He is so forgetful,” she said softly, “but he has really been
+longing to see you;” and she touched his arm: “I told them how glad you
+would be to see them, Robert,” she said appealingly, as if she felt
+quite certain that he would remember his gladness in a moment or two,
+and wondered if it was yet flowing into his heart. “Dear Florence, you
+must ask him to show you his botanical specimens; he has a wonderful
+collection.”
+
+“We will,” said Walter, good-humouredly.
+
+“And now you must excuse me for a few minutes, dears. I know how much
+your uncle will enjoy a talk with you;” and, to the dismay of the
+Hibberts, Aunt Anne vanished, leaving them alone with the brown man.
+
+Mr. Baines sat slowly down on the arm-chair, the only really comfortable
+one in the room, and stretched out his left leg in a manner that showed
+it was stiff. Then he looked at his visitors grimly, yet with a
+suggestion of odd amusement on his face, as if he knew perfectly how
+embarrassed they felt.
+
+“Sit down, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said, nodding towards an ordinary chair,
+and including Walter in the nod. “I dare say you’ll be glad of your food
+before you look at specimens. I shall,” and he gave a lumbering laugh.
+“I have done a hard morning’s work.”
+
+“I am sure you must be very tired,” Florence said politely, wishing Aunt
+Anne would return.
+
+He seemed to know her thoughts, and answered them in an explanatory
+manner: “Anne won’t be long. She always dresses before we have dinner.
+Great nonsense, living as we do; but it’s no use my speaking. Do you
+make a long stay in Brighton, Mr. Hibbert?”
+
+“No, we go back to town to-night.”
+
+“A good thing,” he said, with another lumbering laugh; “Brighton is a
+horrible place to my mind, and the sooner one leaves it the better. That
+pier, with its band and set of idle people, with nothing else to do but
+to walk up and down;—well, it’s my opinion that railways have done a
+vast deal of mischief and mighty little good to make up for it. The same
+thing can be said of newspapers. What good do they do?”
+
+Walter felt that this sudden turn upon the Press was a little hard on
+him, but he looked up over his moustache with laughter in his eyes, and
+wondered what would come next. Florence was almost angry. Aunt Anne’s
+husband was very rude, she thought, and she determined to come to the
+rescue.
+
+“But you were reading a paper,” she said, and tried to see the name of
+one that Mr. Baines had thrown down beside his chair.
+
+“Oh, yes; I like to try and find out what mischief they are going to do
+next. If I had my way they should only be published monthly, if at all.
+All they do is to try and set people by the ears.”
+
+“But they tell us the news.”
+
+“Well, and what better are we for that? I don’t want to know that a man
+was hanged last week, and a prince will be married to-morrow; I only
+waste my time reading about them when I might be usefully employed
+minding my own business.”
+
+“Walter writes for a paper,” Florence said distantly, determined to find
+out if Mr. Baines was being rude on purpose. A little dull curiosity
+came into his eyes, as he looked up and asked—
+
+“Walter—who’s Walter?”
+
+“I am,” laughed the owner of the name; “but she needn’t have betrayed
+me.” Mr. Baines was in no way disconcerted.
+
+“Oh! you write for a paper, do you? Well, I am sorry for you; you might
+do something much better. Oh, here’s Anne; now we had better go and
+eat.” With the aid of a stick, he shuffled out of the chair, refusing
+Walter’s offered help. “I didn’t know you wrote for a paper, or I would
+have held my tongue,” he said, as a sort of apology. “No, thank you, I
+am all right once I am on my feet.”
+
+Florence and Walter were astonished when they looked at Aunt Anne. They
+hardly knew her again. The shabby black shawl had vanished, the dusty
+bonnet was replaced by a soft white cap; there was lace at her throat
+fastened by a little crinkly gold brooch that had a place for hair in
+the middle: her satin dress trailed an inch or two on the ground behind,
+and she had put a red carnation in her bosom almost coquettishly.
+
+“Now, dears,” she said, with a smile of welcome that was fascinating
+from its absolute genuineness, “I shall be truly hurt if you fail to do
+justice to our simple repast”—and she sat down with an air of
+old-fashioned stateliness as if she were heading a banquet table. “Sit
+down, dears. Robert, you must have Florence on your right hand.”
+
+The Hibberts took their places merrily, their spirits reviving now that
+they were no longer alone with their host. Aunt Anne, too, looked so
+picturesque sitting there in the little summer-like room, with the
+garden beyond, that they could not help being glad they had come. They
+felt that they were living a distinct day in their lives, and not one
+that afterwards in looking back they would find difficult to sort out
+from a hundred others like it.
+
+Even Mr. Baines grew less grumpy, and offered presently to show them the
+garden.
+
+“And the plum-trees and the pear-trees,” said Aunt Anne; “and the view
+from the summer-house in the corner.”
+
+“Oh yes,” her husband said, “we’ll show them all;” and he helped to do
+the honours of the table with what he evidently intended to be genial
+courtesy.
+
+“It does my heart good to see you, dears,” Aunt Anne said, as she
+insisted on helping them to an enormous quantity of stewed cranberries.
+
+“And it does us good to be here,” they answered, forgetting all their
+vexation at losing a day by the sea; forgetting even the poor chicken
+that was being roasted in vain, and the waiting fly to be paid for at so
+much an hour.
+
+“Walter dear,” Mrs. Hibbert said, as they drove back to Brighton,
+carefully balancing on their knees four large pots of jam, while they
+also kept an eye on an enormous nosegay badly tied up, that wobbled
+about on the back seat, “Mr. Baines didn’t seem to know you when we
+arrived.”
+
+“He had never set eyes on me before. Aunt Anne only set eyes on him five
+years ago. He was rather a grumpy beggar. I wonder who the deuce he was?
+We none of us ever knew.”
+
+“He didn’t know you were a journalist, I think.”
+
+“No, I suppose not. I wonder if he ever did anything for a living
+himself?” Then, as if he repented saying anything that sounded unkind of
+a man whose salt he had just eaten, he added, “But you can never tell
+what people are from their talk the first time you see them. He is not
+unlike a man I knew some years ago, who was a great inventive genius. He
+used to shuffle about in shoes too big for him, just as this beggar
+did.”
+
+“I felt quite frightened when he first came round the corner.”
+
+“You see it was rough upon him having his morning spoilt. A man who
+lives in the country like that generally gets wrapped up in his
+surroundings. I suppose I must have known that Aunt Anne was at
+Rottingdean,” he went on; “but if so, I had forgotten it. She quarrelled
+with my father and every one else because she was always quite unable to
+keep any money. There was a great deliberation in the family a few years
+ago, when it was announced that Aunt Anne was destitute and no one
+wanted to keep her.”
+
+“But had she no money of her own?”
+
+“She had a little, but she lived on the capital till it was gone, and
+there was an end of that. Then suddenly she married Mr. Baines. I don’t
+know who he was, but she met him at a railway station. He had a bad
+headache, I believe, and she thought he was ill, and went up and offered
+him some smelling-salts.”
+
+“Why, it was quite romantic,” Florence exclaimed.
+
+Walter had a curious way of looking up when he was amused, and he looked
+up in that curious way now.
+
+“Yes,” he said, “quite romantic.”
+
+“Do go on.”
+
+“I don’t know any more except that somehow they got married, and she
+turned up to-day as you saw; and I wish she hadn’t given us any jam,
+confound it. I say, darling, let’s throw it over that hedge.”
+
+“Oh, I wouldn’t for the world,” Florence said. “It would be so unkind.
+She was a dear old lady, Walter, and I am glad we went to see her. She
+asked for our address in London, and said she should write to us.”
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Aunt Anne did not write for a long time, and then it was only to
+condole with Walter on the death of his father. The first year after
+their visit to Rottingdean she sent a large Christmas card inscribed to
+“My dear Walter and Florence, from Aunt Anne;” but the second year even
+this was omitted. It was not until Mr. and Mrs. Hibbert had been married
+nearly seven years that Aunt Anne again appeared before them.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+
+Many things had happened to Mr. and Mrs. Hibbert in those seven years.
+Most important of all—to themselves, at least—was the birth of their
+two children, lovely children Mrs. Hibbert declared them to be, and in
+his heart her husband agreed with her. But the time came when Walter
+found to his dismay that even lovely children would sometimes cry, and
+that as they grew older they wanted room to run about with that constant
+patter-pattering sound that is usually more delightful to a mother’s ear
+than to a fathers, especially when he has to produce intelligible copy.
+So the Hibberts moved away from the little flat in which they had begun
+their married life, to an ugly little upright house sufficiently near
+Portland Road to enable Walter to get quickly to the office. There a
+nursery could be made at the top of the house, where the children would
+be not only out of sight, but out of hearing.
+
+Walter did a great deal of work, and was fairly well paid, but that did
+not mean a large income for a young couple with two children and three
+servants, trying to keep up an appearance before the world. He wrote for
+magazines and literary journals, occasionally he did a long pot-boiler
+for one of those reviews he called refuges for destitute intellects; and
+altogether was thrown much among men better off than himself, so that he
+did not like to look poor. Besides, he preferred to live with a certain
+amount of comfort, even though it meant a certain amount of anxiety, to
+looking poverty-stricken or shabby for the sake of knowing precisely how
+he would stand at the end of the quarter, or being able at any moment to
+lay his hand on a ten-pound note.
+
+“You not only feel awkward yourself if you look poor, but cause other
+people to feel so,” he said; “and that is making yourself a nuisance:
+you have no business to do that if you can avoid it.”
+
+So, though the Hibberts had only a small house, it was pretty and well
+arranged. Their simple meals were daintily served, and everything about
+them had an air that implies content dashed with luxury. In fact, they
+lived as people can live now, even on a small income, and especially in
+London, in comfort and refinement.
+
+Still, it was a difficult task to pull through, and Walter felt that he
+ought to be making more money. He knew, too, though he did not tell his
+wife so, that the constant work and anxiety were telling on him; he
+wanted another but a far longer bracing-up than the one he had had seven
+years ago at Brighton. “A sea voyage would be the thing,” he thought,
+“only I don’t see how it could be managed, even if I could get away.”
+
+The last year had been a fortunate one in some respects: an aunt of Mrs.
+Hibbert’s had died, leaving them a hundred pounds and a furnished
+cottage near Witley, in Surrey. It was a dear little cottage, they both
+protested—red brick, of course, as all well-bred cottages are nowadays,
+standing in an acre and a half of its own fir-wood, and having round it
+a garden with tan paths and those prim flowers that grow best in the
+vicinity of fir. It would be delightful to stay there in the summer
+holidays, they agreed, or to run down from Saturday to Monday, or,
+by-and-by, to send the children there for a spell with the governess
+when their parents were not able to get away from town. Walter had tried
+sending Florence and the children and going down every week himself, but
+he found “it didn’t work.” She was always longing to be with him, and he
+with her. It was only a broad sea and a few thousand miles that would
+make separation possible, and he did not think he could endure that very
+long: he was absurdly fond of his dear little wife.
+
+All this he thought over as he walked along the Strand one morning to
+his office. He was going to see his chief, who had sent for him on a
+matter of business. His chief was Mr. Fisher, an excellent editor,
+though not quite enough of a partisan perhaps to have a strong
+following. _The Centre_ was a model of fairness, and the mainstay of
+that great section of the reading public that likes its news trustworthy
+and copious, but has no pronounced party leanings. Still, if it was a
+paper without political influence, it was one of great political use,
+for it invariably stated a question from all points of view with equal
+fairness, though it leant, if at all, from sheer editorial generosity,
+towards making the best of it for the weakest side. Thus a minority
+looked to it almost as to an advocate, and the majority knew that any
+strength that was against them would be set forth in _The Centre_, and
+that if none was pleaded there, the right and the triumph were together.
+Mr. Fisher liked Walter Hibbert; and though by tacit agreement their
+relations inside the office were purely formal, outside they were a good
+deal more intimate. Occasionally they took the form of a quiet dinner,
+or a few hours in the little house near Portland Road; for Florence was
+rather a favourite of the editors—perhaps, for one reason, because she
+was obviously of opinion that he ought to be married. A man generally
+likes a woman who pays him this compliment, especially when it is
+disinterested. Mr. Fisher was a widower and childless. There was some
+story connected with his marriage, but the Hibberts never heard the
+rights of it, and it was evidently a painful subject to him. All that
+was known in the office was that years before a gaunt-looking woman used
+to sometimes come for him, and that they always walked silently away
+together. Some one said once that he had married her because he had
+known her for years, and she was poor and he did not know how to provide
+for her except by marrying her, and that she was querulous and worried
+him a good deal. After a time she grew thin and feeble-looking. One day,
+about three years after the marriage, her death appeared in the paper;
+her husband looked almost relieved, but very sad, and no one ventured to
+ask him any questions.
+
+As Walter walked along the Strand that morning he meditated on many ways
+of improving his condition and at the same time of not overworking
+himself. He found that it told on him considerably to be down late at
+the office three nights a week, writing his article, and then, with the
+excitement of work still upon him, to go home tired and hungry in the
+small hours of the morning. It was bad for Florence, too, for she
+generally sat up for him, declaring that to taste his supper and to have
+a little chat with him did her good and made her heart light. Sometimes
+he thought he would take up a different line altogether (he knew his
+editor would aid and abet him in anything for his good) and try living
+in the country, running up to town every day if necessary. But this
+would never do; it would only make him restive. His position was not yet
+strong enough to admit of his taking things so easily. It was important
+to him to live among men of knowledge and influence, to be in the whirl
+and twirl of things, and London was essentially the bull’s-eye, not only
+of wealth and commerce, but of most other things with which men of all
+degrees concern themselves.
+
+And when he got to this point he came to the conclusion that he was
+thinking too much about himself. After all, he only wanted a month’s
+rest or a couple of months’ change of air; a friendly talk such as he
+might possibly get in the next quarter of an hour would probably bring
+about one or the other and in a far better form than he himself could
+devise it. Mr. Fisher was a man of infinite resource, not merely in
+regard to his paper, but for himself and his friends too, when they
+consulted him about their personal affairs. It was one of his
+characteristics that he liked being consulted. Walter felt that the best
+thing would be to get away alone with Florence, to some place where the
+climate had no cause to be ashamed of itself: he wanted to be sated with
+sunshine. It was no good going alone, and no matter how pleasant a
+friend went with him, a time always came when he wanted to go by one
+route and the friend by another. “Now, your wife,” he thought, “not only
+particularly longs to go by your route, but thinks you a genius for
+finding it out.”
+
+He stopped for a moment to look at a bookshop; there was a box of
+second-hand books outside; he hesitated, but remembered that he had no
+time to stay. As he turned away some one touched him on the arm, and a
+voice said doubtfully—
+
+“Will you speak to me, Walter?” He looked up and instantly held out his
+hand with a smile.
+
+“Why, it’s Wimple,” he said; “how are you, old fellow? Of course I’ll
+speak to you. How are you?”
+
+The man who had stopped him was about eight-and-twenty; he was tall and
+thin, his legs were too long and very rickety. To look at he was not
+prepossessing; he had a pinky complexion, pale reddish hair, and small
+round dark eyes with light lashes and weak lids. On either side of his
+face there were some straggling whiskers; his lips were thin and his
+whole expression very grave. His voice was low but firm in its tone, as
+though he wished to convey that even in small matters it would be
+useless to contradict him. He wore rather shabby dark clothes, his thin
+overcoat was unbuttoned and showed that the undercoat was faced with
+watered silk that had worn a little shiny; attached to his waistcoat was
+a watchguard made of brown hair ornamented here and there with bright
+gold clasps. He did not look strong or very flourishing. He was fairly
+gentleman-like, but only fairly so, and he did not look very agreeable.
+The apparent weakness of his legs seemed to prevent him from walking
+uprightly; he looked down a good deal at the toes of his boots, which
+were well polished. The oddest thing about him was that with all his
+unprepossessing appearance he had a certain air of sentiment;
+occasionally a sentimental tone stole into his voice, but he carefully
+repressed it. Walter remembered the moment he looked at him that the
+brown hair watchguard had been the gift of a pretty girl, the daughter
+of a tailor to whom he had made love as if in compensation for not
+paying her father’s bill. He wondered how it had ended, whether the girl
+had broken her heart for him, or found him out. But the next moment he
+hated himself for his ungenerous thoughts, and forcing them back spoke
+in as friendly a voice as he could manage. “It’s ages since we came
+across each other,” he said, “and I should not have seen you just now if
+you had not seen me.”
+
+“I wasn’t sure whether you would speak to me,” Mr. Wimple said solemnly,
+as they walked on together, and then almost hurriedly, as if to avoid
+thinking about unpleasant things, he asked, “How is your wife?”
+
+“All right, thank you. But how are you, and how are you getting on?”
+
+“I am not at all well, Walter”—Mr. Wimple coughed, as if to show that
+he was delicate—“and my uncle has behaved shamefully to me.”
+
+“Why, what has he done?” Walter asked, wishing that he felt more
+cordial, for he had known Alfred Wimple longer almost than he had known
+any one. Old acquaintance was not to be lightly put aside. It
+constituted a claim in Walter’s eyes as strong as did relationship,
+though it was only when the claim was made on him, and never when he
+might have pressed it for his own advantage, that he remembered it.
+
+“Done! Why, he has turned me out of his office, just because he wanted
+to make room for the son of a rich client, for nothing else in the
+world.”
+
+“That was rough,” Walter answered, thinking almost against his will that
+Wimple had never been very accurate and that this account was possibly
+not a fair one. “What excuse did he make?”
+
+“He said my health was bad, that I was not strong enough to do the work,
+and had better take a few months’ holiday.”
+
+“Well, but that was rather kind of him.”
+
+“He didn’t mean it for kindness;” and Mr. Wimple looked at his friend
+with dull severity in his eyes. “He wanted to give my place in his
+office to some one else. But it is quite true about my health. I am very
+delicate, Walter. I must take a few months’ rest.”
+
+“Then perhaps he was right after all. But can you manage the few months’
+rest?” Walter asked, hesitating, for he knew the question was expected
+from him. In old days he had had so much to do with Wimple’s affairs
+that he did not like now to ignore them altogether.
+
+“He makes me an allowance, of course, but it’s not sufficient,” Alfred
+Wimple answered reluctantly; “I wanted him to keep my post open for a
+few months, but he refused, though he’s the only relation I have.”
+
+“Well, but he has been pretty good,” Walter said, in a pacific voice,
+“and perhaps he thinks you really want rest. It’s not bad of him to make
+you an allowance. It’s more than any one would do for me if I had to
+give up work for a bit.”
+
+“He only does it because he can’t well refuse, and it’s a beggarly sum,
+after all.”
+
+To which Walter answered nothing. He had always felt angry with himself
+for not liking Alfred better; they were such very old friends. They had
+been school-fellows long ago, and afterwards, when Walter was at
+Cambridge and Alfred was an articled clerk in London (he was by three
+years the younger of the two), there had been occasions when they had
+met and spent many pleasant hours together. To do Walter justice, it had
+always been Alfred who had sought him and not he who had sought Alfred,
+for in spite of the latter’s much professed affection Walter never
+wholly trusted him; he hated himself for it, but the fact remained. “The
+worst of Alfred is, that he lies,” he had said to himself long ago. He
+remembered his own remark to-day with a certain amount of reproach, but
+he knew that he had not been unjust; still, after all, he thought it was
+not so very great a crime: many people lied nowadays, sometimes merely
+to give their conversation an artistic value, and sometimes without even
+being aware of it. He was inclined to think that he had been rather hard
+on Alfred, who had been very constant to him. Besides, Wimple had been
+unlucky; he had been left a penniless lad to the care of an uncle, a
+rich City solicitor, who had not appreciated the charge; he had never
+had a soul who cared for him, and must have been very miserable and
+lonely at times. If he had had a mother or sister, or any one at all to
+look after him, he might have been different. Then, too, Walter
+remembered that once when he was very ill in the vacation it was Alfred
+who had turned up and nursed him with almost a woman’s anxiety. A
+kindness like that made a link too strong for a few disagreeables to
+break. He could not help thinking that he was a brute not to like his
+old friend better.
+
+“I am sorry things are so bad with you, old man. You must come and dine
+and talk them over.”
+
+Mr. Wimple looked him earnestly in the face.
+
+“I don’t like to come,” he said in a half-ashamed, half-pathetic voice;
+“I behaved so badly to you about that thirty pounds; but luck was
+against me.”
+
+“Never mind, you shall make it all right when luck is with you,” Walter
+answered cheerfully, determined to forget all unpleasant bygones. “Why
+not come to-night? we shall be alone.”
+
+Mr. Wimple shook his head.
+
+“No, not to-night,” he said; “I am not well, and I am going down to the
+country till Wednesday; it will do me good.” A little smile hovered
+round his mouth as he added, “some nice people in Hampshire have asked
+me to stay with them.”
+
+“In Hampshire. Whereabouts in Hampshire?”
+
+There was a certain hesitation in Mr. Wimple’s manner as he answered,
+“You don’t know them, and I don’t suppose you ever heard of the place,
+Walter; it is called Liphook.”
+
+“Liphook? Why, of course I know it. It is on the Portsmouth line; we
+have a cottage, left us by my wife’s aunt only last year, in the same
+direction, only rather nearer town. How long are you going to stay
+there?”
+
+“Till Wednesday. I will come and dine with you on Thursday, if you will
+have me.”
+
+“All right, old man, 7.30. Perhaps you had better tell me where to write
+in case I have to put you off for business reasons.”
+
+Mr. Wimple hesitated a minute, and then gave his London address, adding
+that he should be back on Wednesday night or Thursday morning at latest.
+They were standing by the newspaper office.
+
+“Do you think there might be anything I could do here?” he asked,
+nodding at the poster outside the door; “I might review legal books or
+something of that sort.”
+
+“I expect Fisher has a dozen men ready for anything at a moment’s
+notice,” Walter answered, “but I’ll put in a word for you if I get the
+chance;” and with a certain feeling of relief he shook his friend’s hand
+and rushed upstairs. The atmosphere seemed a little clearer when he was
+alone. “I’ll do what I can for him,” he thought, “but I can’t stand much
+of his company. There is a want of fresh air about him that bothers me
+so. Perhaps he could do a legal book occasionally, he used to write
+rather well. I’ll try what can be done.”
+
+But his talk with Mr. Fisher was so important to himself and so
+interesting in many ways that he forgot all about Alfred until he was
+going out of the door; and then it was too late to speak about him.
+Suddenly a happy thought struck him—Mr. Fisher was to dine with him
+next week, he would ask Wimple also for Thursday. Then, if they got on,
+the rest would arrange itself. He remembered too that Alfred always
+dressed carefully and looked his best in the evening and laid himself
+out to be agreeable.
+
+“By the way, Fisher, I wonder if you would come on Thursday instead of
+on Wednesday. I expect an old friend, and should like you to meet him;
+he is clever and rather off luck just now; of course you’ll get your
+chat with my wife all right—in fact, better if there are one or two
+people to engross me.”
+
+“Very well, Thursday if you like; it will do just as well for me; I am
+free both evenings as far as I know.”
+
+“Agreed, then.” And Walter went down the office stairs pleased at his
+own success.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+“That horrid Mr. Wimple will spoil our dinner; I never liked him,”
+Florence exclaimed when she heard of the arrangement.
+
+“I know you didn’t, and I don’t like him either, which is mean of me,
+for he’s a very old friend.”
+
+“But if we neither of us like him, why should we inflict him on our
+lives?”
+
+“We won’t; we’ll cut him as soon as he has five hundred a year; but it
+wouldn’t be fair to do so just now when he’s down on his luck; he and I
+have been friends too long for that.”
+
+“But not very great friends?”
+
+“Perhaps not; but we won’t throw him over in bad weather—try and be a
+little nice to him to please me, there’s a dear Floggie,” which
+instantly carried the day. “You had better ask Ethel Dunlop; Fisher is
+fond of music, and she will amuse him when he is tired of flirting with
+you,” Walter suggested.
+
+“He’ll never tire of that,” she laughed, “but I’ll invite her if you
+like. She can sing while you talk to Mr. Wimple and your editor
+discusses European politics with me.”
+
+“He’ll probably discuss politics outside Europe, if he discusses any,”
+her husband answered; “things look very queer in the East.”
+
+“They always do,” she said wisely; “but I believe it’s all nonsense, and
+only our idea because we live so far off.”
+
+“You had better tell Fisher to send me out to see.”
+
+“Us, you mean.”
+
+“No, me. They wouldn’t stand you, dear,” and he looked at her anxiously;
+“I shouldn’t be much surprised if he asked me to go for a bit—indeed, I
+think he has an idea of it.”
+
+“Oh, Walter, it would be horrible.”
+
+“Not if it did me good; sometimes I think I need a thorough change.”
+
+She looked at him for a moment.
+
+“No, not then,” she answered.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+
+Florence sat thinking over Walter’s hint concerning his health. She had
+succeeded in frightening herself a good deal; for there was really
+nothing the matter with him that rest and change would not set right.
+She remembered all the years he had been constantly at work, for even in
+their holidays he had taken away something he wanted to get done, and
+for the first time she realized how great the strain must have been upon
+him. “He must long for a change,” she thought, “for a break in his life,
+an upsetting of its present programme. The best thing of all would be a
+sea voyage. That would do him a world of good.” She fancied him on board
+a P. and O., walking up and down the long deck, drinking in life and
+strength. How vigorous he would grow; how sunburnt and handsome, and how
+delightful it would be to see him return. She hoped that Mr. Fisher
+would offer him a special correspondentship for a time, or something
+that would break the routine of his life and give him the excitement and
+pleasure that a spell of rest and complete change would entail. She
+would talk to Mr. Fisher herself, she thought. He always liked arranging
+other people’s lives; he was so clever in setting things right for any
+one who consulted him, and so helpful; and no doubt he had noticed
+already that Walter was looking ill.
+
+“But he is quite well; it is nothing but overwork, and that can soon be
+set right——”
+
+There was a double knock at the street door.
+
+It was only eleven o’clock, too early for visitors. Florence left off
+thinking of Walter to wonder who it could be. The door was opened and
+shut, the servant’s footsteps going up to the drawing-room were followed
+by others so soft that they could scarcely be heard at all.
+
+“Mrs. Baines, ma’am. She told me to say that she was most anxious to see
+you.”
+
+“Mrs. Baines?” Florence exclaimed absently. It was so long since she had
+seen Aunt Anne, and she had never heard her called by her formal name,
+that for the moment she was puzzled. Then she remembered and went up
+quickly to meet her visitor.
+
+Aunt Anne was sitting on the little yellow couch near the window. She
+looked thin and spare, as she had done at Brighton, but she had a
+woebegone air now that had not belonged to her then. She was in deep
+mourning; there was a mass of crape on her bonnet, and a limp cashmere
+shawl clung about her shoulders. She rose slowly as Florence entered,
+but did not advance a single step.
+
+She stretched out her arms; the black shawl gave them the appearance of
+wings; they made her look, as she stood with her back to the light, like
+a large bat. But the illusion was only momentary, and then the wan face,
+the many wrinkles, and the nervous twitch of the left eye all helped to
+make an effect that was pathetic enough.
+
+“Florence,” she said in a tremulous voice, “I felt that I must see you
+and Walter again,” and she folded Mrs. Hibbert to her heart.
+
+“I am very glad to see you, Aunt Anne,” Florence answered simply. “Are
+you quite well, and are you staying in London?—But you are in deep
+mourning; I hope you have not had any very sad loss?”
+
+The tears came into the poor old lady’s eyes.
+
+“My dear,” she said still more tremulously than before, “you are
+evidently not aware of my great bereavement; but I might have known
+that, for if you had been you would have written to me. Florence, I am a
+widow; I am alone in the world.”
+
+Mrs. Hibbert put her hands softly on Aunt Anne’s and kissed her.
+
+“I didn’t know, I had no idea, and Walter had not——”
+
+“I knew it. Don’t think that I have wronged either you or him. I knew
+that you were ignorant of all that had happened to me or you would have
+written to express your sympathy, though, if you had, I might not even
+have received your letter, for I have been homeless too,” Mrs. Baines
+said sadly. She stopped for a moment; then, watching Florence intently,
+she went on in a choking voice, “Mr. Baines has been dead more than
+eight months. He died as he had lived, my darling. He thought of you
+both three weeks before his death,” and her left eye winked.
+
+“It was very kind of him,” Florence said gratefully; “and you, dear Aunt
+Anne,” she asked gently, “are you staying in London for the present?
+Where are you living?”
+
+It seemed as if Aunt Anne gathered up all her strength to answer.
+
+“My dear, I am in London because I am destitute—destitute, Florence,
+and—and I have to work for my living.”
+
+Her niece was too much astonished to answer for a minute.
+
+“But, Aunt Anne,” she exclaimed, “how can you work? what can you have
+strength to do, you poor dear?”
+
+Aunt Anne hesitated a moment; she winked again in an absent unconscious
+manner, and then answered with great solemnity:
+
+“I have accepted a post at South Kensington as chaperon to a young
+married lady whose husband is abroad. She has a young sister staying
+with her, and her husband does not approve of their being alone without
+some older person to protect them.”
+
+“It is very brave of you to go out into the world now,” Florence said
+admiringly.
+
+“My dear, it would be most repugnant to me to be a burden to any one,
+even to those who love me best; that is why—why I did it, Florence.”
+
+“And are they kind to you? do they treat you quite properly?” Mrs.
+Hibbert inquired anxiously.
+
+The old lady drew herself up and answered severely:
+
+“I should not stay with them an hour if they ever forgot what was due to
+me. They treat me with the greatest respect.”
+
+“But why have you been obliged to do this, you poor Aunt Anne? Had Mr.
+Baines no money to leave you?”
+
+Aunt Anne’s mouth twitched as she heard the “Mr. Baines,” but Florence
+had never thought of him as anything else, and when the two last words
+slipped out she felt it would be better to go on and not to notice her
+mistake.
+
+“No, my love, at his death his income ceased; there was barely enough
+for immediate expenses, and then—and then I had to go out into the
+world.”
+
+It was terrible to see how keenly Aunt Anne suffered; how fully alive
+she was to the sad side of her own position. Poor old lady, it was
+impossible to help feeling very much for her, Florence thought.
+
+“And had he no relations at all who could help you, dear?” she asked,
+wondering that none should have held out a helping hand.
+
+“No, not one. I married for love, as you did; that is one reason why I
+knew that you would feel for me.”
+
+There was a world of sadness in her voice as she said the last words;
+her face seemed to grow thinner and paler as she related her troubles.
+She looked far older, too, than she had done on the Brighton day. The
+little lines about her face had become wrinkles; her hair was scantier
+and greyer; her eyes deeper set in her head; her hands were the thin dry
+hands of old age.
+
+Florence ached for her, and pondered things over for a moment. Walter
+was not rich, and he was not strong just now; the hint of yesterday had
+sunk deep in her heart. Still, he and she must try and make this poor
+soul’s few remaining years comfortable, if no one else could be found on
+whom she had a claim. She did not think she could ask Aunt Anne to come
+and live with them; she remembered an aunt who had lived in her
+girlhood’s home, who had not been a success. But they might for all that
+do something; the old lady could not be left to the wide world’s tender
+mercies. Florence knew but little of her husband’s relations, except
+that he had no near or intimate ones left, but there might be some
+outlying cousins sufficiently near to Aunt Anne to make their helping
+her a moral obligation.
+
+“Have you no friends—no relations at all, dear Aunt Anne?” she asked.
+
+With a long sigh Mrs. Baines answered:
+
+“Florence”—she gave a gulp before she went on, as if to show that what
+she had to tell was almost too sad to be put into words,—“Sir William
+Rammage is my own cousin, he has thousands and thousands a year, and he
+refuses to allow me anything. I went to him when I first came to London
+and begged him to give me a small income so that I might not be obliged
+to go out into the world; but he said that he had so many claims upon
+him that it was impossible. Yet he and I were babes together; we lay in
+the same cradle once, while our mothers stood over us, hand in hand. But
+though we had not met since we were six years old till I went to him in
+my distress a few months ago, he refused to do anything for me.”
+
+“Have you been in London long then, Aunt Anne?”
+
+“I have been here five months, Florence. I took a lodging on the little
+means I had left, and then—and then I had to struggle as best I could.”
+
+“You should have come to us before, poor dear.”
+
+“I should have done so, my love, but—my lodging was too simple, and I
+was not in a position to receive you as I could have wished. I waited,
+hoping that Sir William would see that it was incumbent on him to make
+me an adequate allowance; but he has not done so.”
+
+“And won’t he do anything for you? If he is rich he might do something
+temporarily, even if he won’t make you a permanent allowance. Has he
+done nothing?”
+
+Mrs. Baines shook her head sadly.
+
+“He sent me some port wine, my love, but port wine is always pernicious
+to me; I wrote and told him so, but he did not even reply. It is not
+four years ago since he was Lord Mayor of London, and yet he will do
+nothing for me.”
+
+She had lost her air of distress, there was a dogged dignity in her
+manner; she stood up and looked at her niece; it seemed as if, in
+speaking of Sir William Rammage, she remembered that the world had used
+her shamefully, and she had determined to give it back bitter scorn for
+its indifference to her griefs.
+
+“Lord Mayor of London,” Mrs. Hibbert repeated, and rubbed her eyes a
+little; it seemed like part of a play and not a very sane one—the old
+lady, her deep mourning, her winking left eye, and the sudden
+introduction of a Lord Mayor.
+
+“Yes, Lord Mayor of London,” repeated Mrs. Baines, “and he lets me work
+for my daily bread.”
+
+“Is Walter also related to the Lord Mayor?”
+
+“No, my love. Your Walter’s grandfather married twice; I was the
+daughter of the first marriage—my mother was the daughter of a London
+merchant—your Walter’s father was the son of the second marriage.”
+
+“It is too complicated to understand,” Florence answered in despair.
+“And is there no one else, Aunt Anne?”
+
+“There are many others, but they are indifferent as he is, they are cold
+and hard, Florence; that is a lesson one has to learn when fortune
+deserts one,” and the old lady shook her head mournfully.
+
+“But, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence said, aghast at this sudden vista of the
+world, “tell me who they are besides Sir William Rammage; let Walter try
+what can be done. Surely they cannot all be as cold and hard as you
+think.”
+
+“It is of no use, my love,” Mrs. Baines said sadly.
+
+“But perhaps you are mistaken, and they will after all do something for
+you. Do tell me who they are.”
+
+Mrs. Baines drew herself up proudly; the tears that had seemed to be on
+their way a minute ago must have retreated suddenly, for her eyes looked
+bright, and she spoke in a quick, determined voice.
+
+“My love,” she said, “you must not expect me to give you an account of
+all my friends and relations and of what they will or will not do for
+me. Don’t question me, my love, for I cannot allow it—I cannot indeed.
+I have told you that I am destitute, that I am a widow, that I am
+working for my living; and that must suffice. I am deeply attached to
+you and Walter; there is in my heart a picture that will never be
+effaced of you and him standing in our garden at Rottingdean, of your
+going away in the sunshine with flowers and preserve in your hands—the
+preserve that I myself had made. It is because I love you that I have
+come to you to-day, and because I feel assured that you love me; but you
+must remember, Florence, that I am your aunt and you must treat me with
+proper respect and consideration.”
+
+“But, Aunt Anne——” Florence began astonished.
+
+Mrs. Baines put her hand on Mrs. Hibbert’s shoulder.
+
+“There there,” she said forgivingly, “I know you did not mean to hurt
+me, but”—and here her voice grew tender and tremulous again—“no one,
+not even you or Walter, must presume, for I cannot allow it. There—kiss
+me,” and she pulled Florence’s head down on to her breast, while
+suddenly—for there were wonderfully quick transitions of feeling
+expressed on the old wan face all through the interview—a smile that
+was almost joyous came to her lips. “I am so glad to see you again, my
+dear,” she said; “I have looked forward to this day for years. I loved
+you from the very first moment I saw you at Brighton, and I have always
+loved your Walter. I wish,” she went on, as Florence gently disengaged
+herself from the black cashmere embrace, “I wish you could remember him
+a little boy as I do. He had the darkest eyes and the lightest hair in
+the world.”
+
+“His hair is a beautiful brown now,” her niece answered, rather
+thankfully.
+
+“Yes, my love, it is,” the old lady said, with a little glee at the
+young wife’s pride. “And so is yours. I think you have the prettiest
+hair I ever saw.” There was not a shade of flattery in her voice, so
+that Florence was appeased after the severe snub of a moment ago, and
+smoothed her plaits with much complacency. “And now, tell me when will
+your dear one be at home, for I long to see him?”
+
+“He is very uncertain, Aunt Anne; I fear he has no fixed time; but I
+know that he will try and make one to see you when he hears that you are
+in town.”
+
+“I am sure he will,” Mrs. Baines said, evidently certain that there was
+no doubt at all about that. “Are the dear children at home?” she
+inquired. “I long for a sight of them.”
+
+“Shall I call them?”
+
+“Yes, my love; it will do my heart good to look at them.”
+
+Nothing loth, Florence opened the door and called upstairs:
+
+“Monty and Catty, are you there, my beauties? I want you, my chicks.”
+
+There was a quick patter-patter overhead, a door opened and two little
+voices answered both at once—
+
+“We’ll come, mummy, we’ll come.”
+
+A moment later there entered a sturdy boy of six, with eyes like his
+father’s, and a girl of three and a half, with nut-brown hair hanging
+down her back.
+
+“We are come, mummy,” they exclaimed joyfully, as their mother, taking
+their fat hands in hers, led them up to Aunt Anne. The old lady took
+them in her arms and kissed them.
+
+“Bless them,” she said, “bless them. I should have known them anywhere.
+They couldn’t be any one else’s children. My darlings, do you know me?”
+Monty drew back a little way and looked at her saucily, as if he thought
+the question rather a joke.
+
+“No, we don’t know you,” he answered in a jovial voice, “we don’t know
+you a bit.”
+
+“Bless him,” exclaimed Aunt Anne, and laughed aloud for glee. “He is so
+like his father, it makes me forget all my sorrows to see him. My dear
+children,” she went on, solemnly addressing them, “I did not bring you
+anything, but before the day is finished you shall have proof that Aunt
+Anne loves you. Good-bye, my dears, good-bye;” and she looked at their
+mother with an expression that said plainly, “Send them away.”
+
+Florence opened the door and the children pattered back to the nursery.
+When they had gone Mrs. Baines rose.
+
+“I must go too,” she said sadly, as if she had overtaken her griefs and
+sorrows again, “for I am no longer my own mistress. Remember that, dear,
+when you think of me, or when you and Walter converse together.”
+
+“But it is nearly one o’clock, will not you stay and lunch? Walter might
+come, and he would be so glad to see you,” Florence said anxiously,
+remembering that as yet she had done nothing to help the old lady, and
+without her husband she felt it was too awkward a task to attempt.
+
+“No, my dear, no; but I shall come again when you least expect me, on
+the chance of finding you at home.”
+
+“And is there nothing I can do for you, Aunt Anne?” Florence asked
+hesitatingly, “no way in which I can be useful to you?”
+
+“No, my dear, no; but thank you and bless you for your tender heart.
+There is nothing I want. I wish you could see Mrs. North, Florence, she
+is kindness itself. I have been in the house five weeks, and they have
+never once failed to show me the attention that is due to me,” she said,
+with grave dignity. “We went to Covent Garden Theatre last night—I
+refused to go to Drury Lane, for I did not approve of the name of the
+piece—they insisted on giving me the best place, and were most anxious
+when we reached home for fear I had taken cold whilst waiting for the
+carriage.”
+
+It seemed as if Aunt Anne had been extraordinarily lucky.
+
+“And you like being with young people, I think,” Florence said, noticing
+how her sad face lighted up while she spoke of the theatre.
+
+“It is always a pleasure to me to witness happiness in others,” Aunt
+Anne answered, with a long benevolent sigh, “and it is a comfort to know
+that to this beautiful girl—for Mrs. North is only four-and-twenty, my
+dear—my presence is beneficial and my experience of life useful. I wish
+you would come and call on her.”
+
+“But she might not like it? I don’t see why she should desire my
+acquaintance.”
+
+“She would think it the greatest honour to know anybody belonging to
+me.”
+
+“Is she an old friend, Aunt Anne, or how did you know her?” Florence
+asked, wondering at the great kindness extended to the old lady, and
+whether there was a deep foundation for it. She did not think it likely,
+from all that she had heard, that companions were generally treated with
+so much consideration. For a moment Aunt Anne was silent, then she
+answered coldly—
+
+“I met her through an advertisement. But you must not question me, you
+must not indeed, Florence; I never allowed any one to do that, and I am
+too old to begin; too old and feeble and worn out to allow it even from
+you, my love.”
+
+“But, dear Aunt Anne, I did not mean to hurt or offend you in any way. I
+merely wondered, since these people were so kind to you, if they were
+new or old friends,” Florence said affectionately, but still a little
+stiffly, for now that she had been assured the old lady was so well
+provided for, she felt that she might defend herself.
+
+“Then you must forgive me,” Mrs. Baines said penitently; “I know I am
+foolishly sensitive sometimes, but in my heart I shall never misjudge
+you or Walter; be assured of that, my darling.”
+
+She went slowly up to a little ebony-framed looking-glass that was over
+a bracket in an out-of-the-way corner—it was odd that she should even
+have noticed it—and stood before it arranging her bonnet, till she was
+a mass of blackness and woe. “My love,” she said, “would you permit your
+servant to call a cab for me? I prefer a hansom. I promised Mrs. North
+that I would return to luncheon, and I fear that I am already a little
+behindhand.”
+
+“Oh, but hansoms are so expensive, and I have been the cause——”
+Florence began as she put her hand on the bell.
+
+“I must beg you not to mention it. I would spend my last penny on you
+and Walter, you know I would.” Mrs. Baines answered with the manner that
+had carried all before it at Brighton. It brought back to Florence’s
+memory her own helplessness and Walter’s on that morning which had ended
+in the carrying away of jam and yellow flowers from Rottingdean. She
+went downstairs with the old lady and opened the door. Mrs. Baines
+looked at the hansom and winked. “It is a curious thing, my dear
+Florence,” she said, “but ever since I can remember I have had a marked
+repugnance to a grey horse.”
+
+“Shall we send it away and get another?”
+
+“No, my dear, no; I think it foolish to encourage a prejudice: nothing
+would induce me now not to go by that cab.”
+
+She gathered her shawl close round her shoulders and went slowly down
+the steps; when she was safely in the hansom and the door closed in
+front of her, she bowed with dignity to Florence, as if from the private
+box of a theatre.
+
+That same afternoon there arrived a pot of maidenhair fern with a card
+attached to it on which was written, _Mrs. Walter Hibbert, from Aunt
+Anne_, and two smaller pots of bright flowers _For the dear children_.
+
+“How very kind of her,” exclaimed Florence; “but she ought not to spend
+her money on us—the money she earns too. Oh, she is much too generous.”
+
+“Yes, dear,” Walter said to Florence; and Florence thought that his
+voice was a little odd.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+“I WISH we could do something for Aunt Anne,” Mrs. Hibbert said to her
+husband that evening. “It was very kind of her to send us those
+flowers.”
+
+“Let’s ask her to dine.”
+
+“Of course we will—she is longing to see you; still, asking her to dine
+will not be doing anything for her.”
+
+“But it will please her very much; she likes being treated with
+respect,” Walter laughed. “Let’s send her a formal invitation. You see
+these people she is with evidently like her and may give her a hundred
+or two a year, quite as much as she wants, so that all we can do is to
+show her some attention. Therefore, I repeat, let’s ask her to dine.”
+
+“It’s so like a man’s suggestion,” Florence exclaimed; “but still, we’ll
+do it if you like. She wants to see you. Of course she may not be able
+to come if her time is not her own.”
+
+“We must risk that—I’ll tell you what, Floggie dear, ask her for next
+Thursday, with Fisher and Wimple and Ethel Dunlop. She’ll make the
+number up to six, which will be better than five. It will please her
+enormously to be asked to meet people—in your invitation say a small
+dinner-party.”
+
+“Very well. It will be a comfort if she takes Mr. Wimple off our hands.
+Perhaps she will.”
+
+So a quite formal invitation was sent to Aunt Anne, and her reply
+awaited with much anxiety. It came the next morning, and ran thus:
+
+ “MY DEAR FLORENCE,
+
+ “It gives me sincere pleasure to accept the invitation that you
+ and your dear Walter have sent me for next Thursday. It is long
+ since I went into society, except in this house, where it is a
+ matter of duty. But, for your sakes, dears, I will put aside my
+ sorrow for the evening, and try to enjoy, as I ought, the
+ pleasure of seeing you both, and of meeting those whom you
+ honour with your friendship.
+
+ “In the happiness and excitement of seeing you the other day,
+ dear Florence, I forgot to mention one object of my visit. It is
+ most important to me in my present unfortunate position to hide
+ my poverty and to preserve an appearance that will prevent me
+ from being slighted in the society in which—sorely against my
+ will—I am thrown. Will you, therefore, my dear ones, send me a
+ black satin sunshade, plain but good, lined with black in
+ preference to white, and with a handle sufficiently distinctive
+ to prevent its being mistaken for another person’s if it is left
+ in the hall when I am paying visits? There are many other things
+ I require, but I do not like to tax your kindness too far, or,
+ knowing your generous hearts, to cause you disquiet even by
+ naming them. At the same time, dear Florence, I am sure you will
+ understand my embarrassment when I tell you I only possess four
+ pocket-handkerchiefs fit to use in a house like this. If you
+ have any lying by you with a deep black border, and would lend
+ them to me till you require them, it would be a real boon.
+
+ “Kiss your sweet children for me. I sent them yesterday a little
+ token that I did not cease to think of you all as soon as I had
+ left your presence—as the world is only too prone to do.
+
+ “Your affectionate Aunt,
+ “ANNE BAINES.
+
+ “P.S.—I should be glad, my darlings, to have the sunshade
+ without delay, for the afternoons are getting to be so bright
+ and sunny that I have requested Mrs. North to have out the open
+ carriage for her afternoon drive.”
+
+“Really, Walter,” Mrs. Hibbert said, “she is a most extraordinary
+person. If she is so poor that she cannot buy a few
+pocket-handkerchiefs, why did she send us those presents yesterday?
+Flowers are expensive at this time of year.”
+
+“It was very like her. I remember years ago hearing that she had
+quarrelled with my uncle Tom because she sent his son a wedding present,
+and then he would not lend her the money to pay the bill.”
+
+“Of course we will send her the things, but she is a foolish old lady.
+As if I should keep deep black-bordered handkerchiefs by me: really it
+is too absurd.”
+
+“Yes, darling, it is too absurd. Still, send her a nice sunshade, or
+whatever it is she wants; I suppose a pound or two will do it,” Walter
+said, and hurried off to the office.
+
+But Florence sat thinking. The sunshade and the handkerchiefs would make
+a big hole in the money allowed for weekly expenses, could not indeed
+come out of it. She wished she could take things as easily as Walter
+did, but the small worries of life never fell upon him as they did upon
+her. She was inclined to think that it was the small worries that made
+wrinkles, and she thought of those on poor Aunt Anne’s face. Perhaps
+that was why women as a rule had so many more lines than men. The lines
+on a man’s face were generally fewer and deeper, but on a woman’s they
+were small and everywhere; they symbolized the little cares of every
+day, the petty anxieties that found men too hard to mark. She went
+through her accounts: she was one of those women who keep them
+carefully, who know to a penny how they spent their last five-pound
+note. But it was only because she was anxious to give Walter the very
+best that could be got out of his income that she measured so often the
+length and breadth of her purse. However, it was no good. The old lady
+must have her sunshade and her handkerchiefs. So Florence walked to
+Regent Street and back to buy them. She went without the gloves she had
+promised herself, determined that Catty should wait for a hat, and that
+she would cut down the dessert for a week at the little evening dinner.
+
+The brown-paper parcel was directed and sent off to Mrs. Baines. With a
+sigh Florence wished she were more generous, and dismissed the whole
+business from her mind.
+
+“Mrs. Baines called, ma’am,” the servant said, when she reached home
+that day. “She wanted the address of a very good dressmaker.”
+
+“Is she here? I hope you begged her to come in?” Florence asked, with a
+vision of Aunt Anne calling in a hurry, tired by her walk, and
+distressed at finding no one at home.
+
+“Oh no, ma’am; she didn’t get out of the carriage when she heard you
+were not in. I gave her Madame Celestine’s address, and said that she
+had made your best evening dress, as she was very particular about its
+being a grand dressmaker.”
+
+“I suppose it was for Mrs. North,” Florence thought. “Poor Aunt Anne is
+not likely to want Madame Celestine.”
+
+Then she imagined the spare old lady in a scanty black gown going out
+with the pretty and probably beautifully dressed girls to whom she was
+chaperon.
+
+As a sort of amends for the unkindness of fate, Florence made some
+little soft white adornments for throat and wrists such as widows wear
+and that yet look smart, and, packing them in a cardboard box, sent
+them—_With kind love to Aunt Anne_. “Perhaps they will gratify her
+pride a little, poor dear, and it is so nice to have one’s pride
+gratified,” she thought. And then, for a space, Aunt Anne was almost
+forgotten.
+
+The days slipped by anxiously enough to the Hibberts—to Walter, for he
+knew that Mr. Fisher meant to talk with Florence about something that
+had been agreed between them at the office; to Florence, because without
+increasing the bills she really could not manage to put that little
+dinner together. Walter was particular; he liked luxuries, and things
+well managed, and she could not bear to disappoint him. However, the
+evening came at last. The flowers and dessert were arranged, the claret
+was at the right temperature, the champagne was in ice. Florence went
+upstairs to say good-night to the children, and to rest for five
+minutes. Walter came in with a flower for her dress.
+
+“It is so like you,” she said as she kissed it; “you are always the
+thoughtfullest old man in the world.”
+
+“I wished I had bought one for Aunt Anne as I came along in the hansom;
+but I forgot it at first, and then I was afraid to go back because it
+was getting so late.”
+
+He dressed and went downstairs. Florence leisurely began to get ready.
+Ten minutes later a carriage stopped; a bell rang, there was a loud
+double knock—some one had arrived.
+
+“But it is a quarter of an hour too soon?” she said in dismay to Maria
+who was helping her.
+
+The maid stood on tiptoe by the window to see who the early comer might
+be.
+
+“It’s only Mrs. Baines, ma’am.”
+
+They had learned to say “only” already, Florence thought. She was angry
+at the word, yet relieved at its not being a more important visitor.
+
+“I am very vexed at not being dressed to receive her,” she said coldly,
+in order to give Mrs. Baines importance. “Make haste and fasten my
+dress, Maria.”
+
+There was a sound of some one coming upstairs, a rustle of silk, and a
+gentle knock at the bedroom door.
+
+“My darling, I came early on purpose. May I be allowed to enter, dear
+Florence?”
+
+The voice was certainly Aunt Anne’s, but the tone was so joyous, so
+different from the woebegone one of ten days ago that it filled her
+hearer with amazement.
+
+“Come in, Aunt Anne, if you like; but I am not quite ready.”
+
+“I know that, my love. I hoped you would not be;” and Aunt Anne entered,
+beaming with satisfaction, beautifully dressed, her long robe trailing,
+her thin throat wrapped with softest white of some filmy kind, her shoes
+fastened with heavy bows that showed a paste diamond in them, her hands
+full of flowers. Florence could scarcely believe her eyes.
+
+“Aunt Anne!” she exclaimed, and stood still looking at her.
+
+“Yes, my love,” the old lady laughed. “Aunt Anne; and she has brought
+you these flowers. I thought they might adorn your room, and that they
+would prove how much you were in my mind, even while I was away from
+you. Would you gratify me by wearing one or two? I see you have a white
+rose there, but I am sure Walter will not mind your wearing one of his
+aunt’s flowers; and, my love, perhaps you will permit your maid to take
+the rest downstairs to arrange before the arrival of your other guests.
+I will myself help you to finish your toilette.”
+
+With an air that was a command, she gave the flowers to Maria and
+carefully watched her out of the room. Then turning to Florence, she
+asked with the joyousness still in her manner, “And now, my dear, tell
+me if you like my dress?”
+
+“It is quite beautiful, and so handsome.”
+
+“My darling, I am thankful to hear you say that, for I bought it to do
+you honour. I was touched to get your invitation, and determined that
+you should not be ashamed of me. Did the housemaid tell you that she
+gave me Madame Celestine’s address?”
+
+“Yes. But, Aunt Anne, I hope you bargained with her. She costs a fortune
+if you don’t.”
+
+“Never mind what she costs. I wished to prove to you both how much I
+loved you and desired to do you honour. And now, my dear, I perceive
+that you are ready, let us go down. I have not seen Walter yet, and am
+longing to put my arms round his dear neck before any one else arrives
+and forces me into a formality that my heart would resent.”
+
+She turned and led the way downstairs. Florence followed meekly, feeling
+almost shabby and altogether left in the shade by the magnificent
+relation who had appeared for their simple party.
+
+Aunt Anne trod with the footstep of one who knew the house well; she
+opened the drawing-room door with an air of precision, and going towards
+Walter, who met her halfway across the room, dropped her head with its
+white cap on his shoulder.
+
+“My dear Walter, no words can express how glad I am to see you again, to
+meet you in your own house, in your own room. It makes me forget all I
+have suffered since we parted; it even forces me to be gay,” she
+murmured, in an almost sobbing tone.
+
+“Yes, dear, of course it does,” he said cheerily, giving her a kiss.
+“And we are very glad to see you. Why, you look uncommonly well; and, I
+say, what an awful swell you are—isn’t she, Floggie?”
+
+“He is precisely the same—the same as ever,” laughed out the old lady
+just as she had at Brighton seven years before. “Precisely the same. Oh,
+my dear Walter, I shall——”
+
+But here the door opened, and for the moment Mr. Wimple’s arrival put an
+end to Aunt Anne’s remembrances.
+
+Mr. Wimple was evidently conscious of his evening clothes; his waistcoat
+was cut so as to show as much white shirt as possible; his tie looked a
+little rumpled, as though the first attempt at making a bow had not been
+successful. He shook hands solemnly with his host and hostess, then
+looked round almost sadly, and in a voice that was full of grave meaning
+said it was cold and chilly.
+
+“Cough better?” Walter inquired.
+
+“Yes, it is better,” Mr. Wimple replied slowly after a moment’s
+consideration, as if the question was a momentous one.
+
+“That’s right. Now, I must introduce you to my aunt, Mrs. Baines. Alfred
+Wimple is an old schoolfellow of mine, Aunt Anne.”
+
+The old lady put out her gloved hand with the lace ruffle round the
+wrist.
+
+“I am glad to meet you,” she said. “It is always a pleasure to me to
+meet any one who has been intimately associated with my dear Walter.”
+
+“And to me to meet any one belonging to him,” Mr. Wimple responded, with
+much gravity. “Walter is the oldest, and I may say the dearest, friend I
+possess.”
+
+“It makes us also friends;” and Aunt Anne gave him a little gracious
+smile.
+
+He looked up at her.
+
+“It would be impossible that any one loving my dear Walter should not
+possess my friendship,” she said as if explaining her previous speech:
+she made it appear almost a condescension. He looked at her again, but
+more attentively.
+
+“I am very fond of Walter,” he said.
+
+“It is impossible to help it—dear boy,” she said under her breath as
+she looked at her nephew. “It must be a great pleasure to him, Mr.
+Wimple, to preserve your affection; the feelings of our youth are so
+often lost in oblivion as we grow old—as we grow older I should say, in
+speaking to you.”
+
+The other guests entered, Ethel Dunlop a little shy but smiling, as if
+aware that being a girl she had more business at dances than at
+dinner-parties, but was nevertheless quite happy. And lastly Mr. Fisher.
+Alfred Wimple stood on one side till Walter went towards him.
+
+“Fisher, this is a very old friend of mine. I want to introduce him to
+you.”
+
+There was something irritating and savouring of mock humility in Mr.
+Wimple’s manner as he bowed and said, with a little gulp that was one of
+his peculiarities—
+
+“Walter is always conferring benefits upon me—this is a great honour.”
+
+Mr. Fisher looked at him and, with a polite word, turned to Ethel
+Dunlop. She was busy with her glove.
+
+“Buttons always come off,” she said, without looking up. Other people
+might treat him with deference as an editor; to her he was a mere man.
+
+“But you can at least sew them on; my sex is not so accomplished.”
+
+She seemed to be thinking of something else and did not answer, and a
+puzzled look came over his face, as if a girl was a problem he did not
+know how to work out. He was an odd looking man, tall and pale, with a
+quantity of light hair pushed back from his high forehead. He had almost
+tender blue eyes; but there was something hard and firm about the mouth
+and square jaw that gave his face a look of strength. He was not a young
+man, but it was difficult to believe that he had ever been younger or
+would be older; he seemed to have been born for middle age, and the
+direction of people and affairs. The awkwardness of middle age that is
+not accustomed to womankind overtook him as he stood by Ethel. It was a
+little relief to him when dinner was announced.
+
+Aunt Anne turned to Walter, as he went up to her, with a little
+inclination of her head and a smile of dignified happiness.
+
+“It is so like a dream to be here with you, to be going down on your
+arm—dear children,” she whispered as they descended the narrow
+staircase.
+
+Looking back, Florence always felt that Aunt Anne had been the heroine
+of that party. She took the lead in conversation, the others waiting for
+her to speak, and no one dared to break up the group at table into
+_tête-à-tête_ talk. She was so bright and full of life and had so much
+to say that she carried all before her. Ethel Dunlop, young and pretty,
+felt piqued; usually Mr. Fisher was attentive to her, to-night he talked
+entirely to Mrs. Baines. That horrid Mr. Wimple, as she called him in
+her thoughts, had been quite attentive when she met him before, but now
+he too kept his eyes fixed on the old lady opposite; but for her host
+she would have felt neglected. And it was odd how well Aunt Anne managed
+to flirt with everybody.
+
+“Mrs. Baines has given me some useful hints about birds,” Mr. Fisher
+told Florence with a suspicion of amusement in his voice: “if I had been
+as wise formerly as she has made me to-night the white cockatoo might
+have been living still. We ought to have met years ago, Mrs. Baines,” he
+said, turning to her.
+
+“I think so too,” she said winningly. “It is such a pleasure to meet
+dear Walter’s and Florence’s friends,” she added, looking round the
+table and giving a strange little wink at the last word that made Mr.
+Wimple feel almost uncomfortable. “It is a privilege that I have looked
+forward to for years, but that living in the country has hitherto made
+impossible. Now that I am in London I hope I shall meet them all in
+turn.” Then she lowered her voice and went on to the editor: “I have
+heard so much of you, Mr. Fisher, if you will forgive me for saying so,
+though a great career like yours implies that all the world has heard of
+you.”
+
+“I wish it could be called a great career, my dear lady,” he answered,
+feeling that she was a person whose death would deserve a paragraph
+simply on account of the extraordinary knowledge of the world she
+possessed. “Unfortunately it has been a very ordinary one, but I can
+assure you that I am most glad to meet you to-night. I ought to have
+been at a City dinner, and shall always congratulate myself on my
+happier condition.”
+
+“I should like to see a City dinner,” Mrs. Baines said sadly.
+
+“I wish I could send you my invitations. I go to too many, I fear.”
+
+“I suppose you have been to a great many also, Mr. Wimple?” Aunt Anne
+inquired, careful to exclude no one from her little court.
+
+“To one only, I regret to say, Mrs. Baines,” Mr. Wimple answered
+solemnly; “four years ago I went to the solitary one I ever attended.”
+
+“Ah, that was during the mayoralty of Sir William Rammage.”
+
+“Do you know him, Mrs. Baines, or do you keep a record of the Lord
+Mayors?” Mr. Fisher asked.
+
+“I knew him well, years and years—I am afraid I should shock you—you
+are all so young—if I said how many years ago,” she answered; and Mr.
+Fisher, who was well on in his forties, thought she was really a
+charming old lady.
+
+“He is a great friend of my uncle’s, he is a very old client of his,”
+Mr. Wimple said, looking at Mrs. Baines again with his strange fixed
+gaze, while Ethel Dunlop thought that that horrid Mr. Wimple was
+actually making eyes at the old lady as he did at every one else.
+
+“And may I ask if you also are on intimate terms with him?” Mrs. Baines
+said.
+
+“No, I have only met him at my uncle’s. He is very rich,” he added, with
+a sigh, “and rich people are not much in my way. Literary people and
+out-at-elbow scribblers are my usual associates; for,” he went on,
+remembering that there was a possibility of doing some business with Mr.
+Fisher, and that he had better make an impression on the great man, “I
+never met any illustrious members of the profession till to-night,
+excepting our friend Walter of course.”
+
+Mr. Fisher looked a little disgusted and turned to the young lady of the
+party.
+
+“Have you been very musical lately, Miss Dunlop?” he inquired.
+
+“No,” she answered, “not very. But we enjoyed the concert. It was very
+kind of you to send the tickets.”
+
+The editor’s face lighted up.
+
+“I am glad,” he said; “and did you find a pleasant chaperon?”
+
+“Oh yes, thank you. I went with my cousin, George Dighton.”
+
+“Is that the good-looking youth I saw you with once?”
+
+“Youth,” Ethel laughed; “he is three-and-twenty.”
+
+“A most mature age,” and a smile flickered over Mr. Fisher’s grave face;
+“and does he often escort you to concerts?”
+
+“Occasionally.”
+
+“He is fortunate in having the privilege as well as the time to avail
+himself of it,” the editor said formally. His manner was always
+reserved, sometimes even a little stately. Now and then, oddly enough,
+it reminded one of Aunt Anne’s, though it was a generation younger, and
+he had not her faculty for long words.
+
+“You never seem able to go to concerts. It is quite sad and wicked,”
+Ethel said brightly.
+
+He looked up as if he liked her.
+
+“Not often. Perhaps some day if you would honour me, only I am not a
+cousin; still I have passed the giddy age of Mr. Dighton.”
+
+“We will, we will,” she laughed, and nodded; “but relations only are
+able to survive the responsibility of taking me about alone. Perhaps
+Mrs. Hibbert would——”
+
+“Ah yes, Mr. Wimple,” they heard Mrs. Baines say, “I have good reason to
+know Sir William Rammage. He is my own cousin, though for years and
+years we had not met till we did so a few months since, when I came to
+take up my residence in London.”
+
+The old lady’s mouth twitched nervously, the sad note of a week ago made
+itself heard in her voice again. Mrs. Hibbert knew that she was thinking
+of the unsuccessful appeal to her rich relation, and of the port wine
+that had always proved pernicious to her digestion.
+
+“Your cousin!” said Mr. Wimple, and he fixed another long, steady gaze
+upon Mrs. Baines, “that is very interesting;” and he was silent.
+
+“Cousins seem to abound in our conversation this evening,” Miss Dunlop
+said to Mr. Fisher; “it must be terrible to be cousin to the Lord
+Mayor.”
+
+“Like being related to Gog and Magog,” he whispered.
+
+“Even worse,” she answered, pretending to shudder.
+
+But Mrs. Hibbert was looking at Aunt Anne, for it was time to go
+upstairs. Mrs. Baines went out of the door with a stateliness that was
+downright courage, considering how small and slight she was. Ethel
+Dunlop, standing aside to let her pass, looked at her admiringly, but
+the old lady gave her back, with the left eye, a momentary glance that
+was merely condescending. Unless Aunt Anne took a fancy to people, or
+made a point of being agreeable, she was apt to be condescending. Her
+manner to young people was sometimes impatient, and to servants it was
+generally irritating. She had taken a dislike to Miss Dunlop—she
+considered her forward. She did not like the manner in which she did her
+hair. She was of opinion that her dress was unbecoming. All these things
+had determined Mrs. Baines to snub Miss Dunlop, who ill deserved it, for
+she was a pretty, motherless girl of one-and-twenty, very anxious to do
+right and to find the world a pleasant dwelling-place.
+
+The old lady sat down on the yellow couch in the drawing-room again, the
+same couch on which, a fortnight before, she had sat and related her
+misfortunes. But it was difficult to believe that she was the same
+person. Her dress was spread out; her gloves were drawn on and carefully
+buttoned; she opened and shut a small black fan; she looked round the
+drawing-room with an air of condescension, and almost sternly refused
+coffee with a “not any, I thank you,” that made the servant feel rebuked
+for having offered it. Mrs. Hibbert and Ethel felt that she was indeed
+mistress of the situation.
+
+“You are musical, I think, Miss Dunlop,” she asked coldly.
+
+“I am very fond of music, and I play and sing in a very small way,” was
+the modest answer.
+
+“I hope we shall hear you presently,” Mrs. Baines said grandly, and
+then, evidently feeling that she had taken quite enough notice of Miss
+Dunlop, she turned to her niece.
+
+“My dear Florence,” she said, “I think Mr. Wimple is charming. He has
+one of the most expressive countenances I ever beheld.”
+
+“Oh, Mrs. Baines, do you really think so?” Ethel Dunlop exclaimed.
+
+“Certainly I do.” And Mrs. Baines turned her back. “Florence, are not
+you of my opinion?”
+
+“Well, Aunt Anne, I hardly know——” And happily the entrance of the men
+prevented any further discussion. Somehow conversation flagged a little,
+and silence threatened to fall on the party. Florence felt uneasy.
+
+“Are we to have some music?” Walter asked presently. In these days music
+after dinner, unless it is very excellent or there is some special
+reason for introducing it, is generally a flag of distress, a sign that
+dulness is near. Florence knew it, and looking at Ethel tried to cover
+it by asking for a song.
+
+“Ethel sings German songs delightfully, Aunt Anne,” she said; “I think
+you would enjoy listening to her.”
+
+“I should enjoy listening to any friend of yours,” the old lady
+answered. But Miss Dunlop pleaded hoarseness and did not stir.
+
+Mr. Wimple roused himself a little. “I am sure Mrs. Baines plays,” he
+said, standing before her. Aunt Anne gave a long sigh.
+
+“My playing days are over,” she answered.
+
+“Oh no, Aunt Anne,” laughed Walter, “we cannot allow you to make that
+excuse.”
+
+In a moment she had risen.
+
+“I never make excuses, Walter,” she said proudly; “if it is your
+wish—if it will give you pleasure I will touch the keys again, though
+it is long since I brought myself even to sit down before an
+instrument.”
+
+She took her place at the piano; she pulled out her handkerchief, not
+one of the black-bordered ones that Florence had sent her a week ago,
+but a dainty one of lawn and lace, and held it for a moment to her
+forehead; then suddenly, with a strange vibrating touch that almost
+startled her listeners, she began to play “Oft in the stilly night.”
+Only for a moment did the fire last, her fingers grew feeble, they
+missed the notes, she shook her head dreamily.
+
+“I forget—I forget them all,” she said to herself rather than to any
+one else, and then quickly recovering she looked round and apologized.
+“It is so long,” she said, “and I forget.”
+
+She began softly some variations on “I know a bank,” and played them
+through to the end. When they were finished she rose and, with a little
+old-fashioned bow to the piano, turned to Florence, and, saying, with a
+sweet and curious dignity, “Thank you, my dear, and your friends too,
+for listening to me,” went back to her seat.
+
+Mr. Wimple was near her chair, he bent down to her.
+
+“You gave us a great treat,” he said, as if he were stating a scientific
+fact.
+
+Mrs. Baines listened to his words gravely, she seemed to revolve them in
+her mind for a moment before she looked up.
+
+“I am sure you are musical, Mr. Wimple,” she said, “I can see it in your
+face.”
+
+“Aunt Anne,” Walter said, passing her, “should you mind my opening this
+window?”
+
+“No, my darling, I should like it,” she answered tenderly.
+
+Mr. Wimple gave a long sigh.
+
+“Lucky beggar he is; you are very fond of him?”
+
+“Oh yes,” she answered, “he is like my own son;” and she nodded at
+Walter, who was carrying on a laughing conversation with Ethel Dunlop,
+while his wife was having what seemed to be a serious one with Mr.
+Fisher. She looked round the room, her gaze rested on the open window.
+“I think the carriage must be waiting,” she said, almost to herself.
+
+“I will tell you;” and Mr. Wimple went on to the balcony. “It is a
+lovely night, Mrs. Baines,” he said, and turning back he fastened his
+strange eyes upon her. Without a word she rose and followed him.
+
+“Aunt Anne,” Florence said, “you will catch your death of cold; you
+mustn’t go out. Walter dear, get my thick white shawl for Aunt Anne.”
+
+“Oh no, my love, pray continue your conversation; I have always made a
+point of looking up at the sky before I retire to rest, therefore it is
+not likely to do me harm.”
+
+“I wouldn’t let it do you harm for the world,” Mr. Wimple whispered.
+
+She heard him; but she seemed to digest his words slowly, for she nodded
+to herself before, with the manner and smile that were so entirely her
+own, she answered—
+
+“Pray don’t distress yourself, Mr. Wimple, I am accustomed to stand
+before the elements at all seasons of the year, and this air is not
+likely to be detrimental to me; besides,” she added, with a gentle
+laugh, “perhaps though I boasted of my age just now I am not so old as I
+look. Oh, dear Walter, you are too good to me—dear boy;” and she turned
+and let him wrap the thick white shawl about her. He lingered for a
+moment, but there fell the dead silence that sometimes seems to chase
+away a third person, and, feeling that he was not wanted, he went back
+to Ethel Dunlop. It was a good thing Aunt Anne liked Alfred, he thought.
+He had been afraid the latter would not wholly enjoy his evening, but
+the old lady seemed to be making up for Florence’s rather scanty
+attentions.
+
+“It is impossible to you to be old,” Mr. Wimple said, still speaking
+almost in a whisper.
+
+The old lady appeared not to hear him; her hands were holding the white
+shawl close round her neck, her eyes were following the long row of
+street lamps on the right. The horses, waiting with the carriage before
+the house, moved restlessly, and made their harness clink in the
+stillness. Far off, a cornet was playing, as cornets love to do, “Then
+you’ll remember me.” Beside her stood the young man watching. Behind, in
+the drawing-room, dimly lighted by the shaded lamp and candles, the
+others were talking, forgetful of everything but the subject that
+interested them. Cheap sentimental surrounding enough, but they all told
+on the old lady standing out on the balcony. The stars looking down on
+her lighted up the soft white about her throat, and the outline of the
+shawl-wrapped shoulders, almost youthful in their slenderness. Mr.
+Wimple went a little closer, the tears came into her eyes, they trickled
+down her withered cheeks, but he did not know it.
+
+“It is like years ago,” she whispered, “those dear children and
+all—all—it carries me back to forty—more—eight-and-forty years ago,
+when I was a girl, and now I am old, I am old, it is the end of the
+world for me.”
+
+He stooped and picked up the handkerchief with the lace border.
+
+“No,” he said, “don’t say that. It is not the end; age is not counted by
+years, it is counted by other things;” and he coughed uneasily and
+waited as if to watch the effect of his speech before continuing. “In
+reality,” he went on, in the hard voice that would have jarred horribly
+on more sensitive nerves—“in reality I am older than you, for I have
+found the world so much colder than you can have done.” He said it with
+deliberation, as if each word were weighed, or had been learnt
+beforehand. “I wish you would teach me to live out of the abundance of
+youth that will always be yours.”
+
+She listened attentively; she turned and looked towards her left, far
+ahead, away into the distance, as if puzzled and fascinated by it,
+almost as if she were afraid of the darkness to which the distance
+reached. Then she gave a little nod, as if she had remembered that it
+was only the trees of the Regent’s Park that made the blackness.
+
+“If you would teach me to live out of the abundance of youth that will
+always be yours,” he said again, as if on consideration he were well
+satisfied with the sentence, and thought it merited a reply.
+
+She listened attentively for the second time, and looked up half
+puzzled—
+
+“I should esteem myself most fortunate, if I could be of use to any
+friend of Walter’s,” she answered, with an almost sad formality.
+
+“You have so many who love you——” The voice was still hard and
+grating.
+
+“No,” she said, “oh no——”
+
+“There is Sir William Rammage.” He spoke slowly.
+
+“Ah!” she said sadly, “he forgets. And old association has no effect
+upon him.”
+
+“Has he any brothers and sisters?” he asked.
+
+“They are gone. They all died years and years ago.”
+
+“It is remarkable that he never married.”
+
+“I suppose his inclinations did not prompt him to do so.”
+
+“He seems to have no one belonging to him.”
+
+“There are hardly any left,” she answered, with a sigh, “and unhappily
+he does not appreciate the companionship of those——”
+
+“Aunt Anne, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence said, “do come in, you will catch
+your death of cold.”
+
+“My love, the carriage is waiting and you must excuse me; it is growing
+late. It has been delightful to be with you, and to meet your friends.”
+
+She shook hands with Mr. Fisher, and bowed to Ethel Dunlop; then she
+went slowly out of the room on Walter’s arm, the long train of Madame
+Celestine’s dress sweeping behind her.
+
+“Good-night, Mrs. Hibbert,” Mr. Wimple said, and, shaking hands quickly
+with the air of a man who has many engagements and suddenly remembered
+one that must be instantly kept, he too was gone.
+
+He was just in time to reach the carriage door.
+
+“Mrs. Baines,” he said, “I think you said you were going to South
+Kensington—could you take me as far as Queen’s Gate?”
+
+“I wonder where he is going,” Walter said to himself as he went upstairs
+again; “I don’t believe he knows a soul in Queen’s Gate.”
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+
+Walter was going to India for the winter. It had all been arranged while
+Aunt Anne sat out on the balcony with Mr. Wimple. Mr. Fisher had
+explained to Florence that the paper wanted a new correspondent for a
+time, and that it would be an excellent thing for Walter to get the
+change and movement of the new life. He was to go out by P. and O.,
+making a short stay at Gibraltar, for business purposes, as well as one
+at Malta. He had looked anxiously enough at his wife when they were
+alone again that evening; but she had put out her hands as if in
+congratulation.
+
+“I am very glad,” was all she said, “it will do you good and make you
+strong.”
+
+“To live for you and the chicks, my sweet.”
+
+And so they arranged the getting ready; for he was to start by the very
+next boat, and that sailed in ten days’ time.
+
+“If your mother had been in England you might have gone with me as far
+as Gib,” Walter remarked. “I suppose you would be afraid to leave the
+servants in charge?”
+
+“I should like to go,” she answered, as she poured out the coffee—it
+was breakfast time—“but I couldn’t leave the children.”
+
+“By Jove,” Walter exclaimed, not heeding her answer, “there’s Aunt Anne
+in a hansom! I say, Floggie dear, let me escape. What on earth does she
+mean by coming at this hour of the morning? Say I’m not down yet, and
+shall be at least three hours before I am; but keep the breakfast hot
+somehow.”
+
+“Couldn’t you see her?”
+
+“No, no, she would want to weep over me if she heard that I was going,
+and I know I should laugh. Manage to get rid of her soon.” And he flew
+upstairs as the street door was opened.
+
+“My dear Florence,” Mrs. Baines said, as she walked in with a long
+footstep and a truly tragic air, “let me put my arms round you, my poor
+darling.”
+
+“Why, Aunt Anne, what is the matter?” Florence asked cheerfully, and
+with considerable astonishment.
+
+“You are very brave, my love,” the old lady said, scanning her niece’s
+face, “but I know all; an hour ago I had a letter telling me of Walter’s
+departure. My dear, it will break your heart.”
+
+“But why?”
+
+“My love, it will.”
+
+“Oh no,” Florence said, “I am not so foolish. Life is full of ordinary
+events that bring out very keen feelings, I have been thinking that
+lately, but one must learn to take them calmly.”
+
+“You do not know what you will suffer when he is gone.”
+
+“No, Aunt Anne, I shall miss him, of course; but I shall hope that he is
+enjoying himself.”
+
+“My dear Florence, I expected to find you broken-hearted.”
+
+“That would be cruel to him. I am glad he is going, it will do him good,
+and really I have not had time to think of myself yet, I have been so
+busy.”
+
+Mrs. Baines considered for a moment.
+
+“That is the reason, I knew there was an explanation somewhere,” she
+said in an earnest emotional tone. “I knew how unselfish you were from
+the first moment I saw you, Florence. It is like you, my darling, not to
+think of yourself. Try not to do so, for you will feel your loneliness
+bitterly enough when he is gone.”
+
+“But don’t tell me so,” Florence said, half crying, half laughing. “How
+did you know about it, Aunt Anne?”
+
+“Mr. Wimple told me.”
+
+“Mr. Wimple—have you seen him then?”
+
+“My love, he is one of the most cultivated men I ever met; we have many
+tastes and sympathies in common. He wrote to ask me to meet him by the
+Albert Memorial.”
+
+“To meet him!” Florence exclaimed.
+
+“Yes,” answered the old lady solemnly. “He agrees with me that never was
+there in any age or country a more beautiful work than the Albert
+Memorial. We arranged to meet and examine it together; he wrote to me
+just now and mentioned that Walter was going to India; I telegraphed
+instantly that I could see no one else to-day, for I thought you would
+welcome my loving sympathy. I came to offer it to you, Florence.” She
+said the last words in a disappointed and injured voice.
+
+“It was very kind of you, Aunt Anne; but indeed I have only had time to
+be glad that he would get a rest and pleasant change of work.”
+
+“I must see him before he goes; I may never do so again,” Mrs. Baines
+said, after a pause.
+
+“Oh yes, you will, dear.”
+
+“I have brought him two little tokens that I thought of him as I
+hastened to you after hearing the news. I know they will be useful to
+him. These are glycerine lozenges, Florence; they are excellent for the
+throat. The sea mist or the desert sand is sure to affect it.”
+
+“Thank you, it was very kind of you; you are much too generous—you make
+us quite uneasy.” Florence was miserable at the two evils suggested.
+
+“My love, if I had thousands a year you should have them,” Aunt Anne
+answered, and, intent on her present-making, she went on, “and here is a
+little case of scissors, they are of different sizes. I know how much
+gentlemen”—Aunt Anne always said “gentlemen,” never “men,” as do the
+women of to-day—“like to find a pair suited to their requirements at
+the moment; I thought they might be useful to him on the voyage.” She
+gave a sigh of relief as though presenting her gifts had removed a load
+from her mind. “I suppose Walter is not down yet, my love?”
+
+“He is upstairs,” Florence said, a little guiltily, “I am afraid he will
+not be down just yet.”
+
+Aunt Anne gave a reflective wink, as though she perfectly understood the
+reason of Walter’s non-appearance; but if she did she had far too much
+tact to betray it.
+
+“If it be your wish, my dear, I will forego the pleasure of saying a
+last good-bye to him.”
+
+“Well, dear Aunt Anne, when he does come down he will have a great deal
+to do,” Florence answered still more guiltily, for she could not help
+feeling that Aunt Anne saw through the ruse.
+
+“My love, I quite understand,” Mrs. Baines said solemnly, “and he will
+know that it was from no lack of affection that I did not wait to see
+him. Tell him that he will be constantly in my thoughts;” and she slowly
+gathered her cashmere shawl round her shoulders, and buttoned her black
+kid gloves.
+
+“Poor Aunt Anne,” Florence thought when she had gone, she would wring a
+tragedy from every daily trial if she were encouraged. “Oh, you wicked
+coward,” she said to Walter, “to run away like that.”
+
+“Yes, my darling; but I am starved, and really, you know, Floggie,
+confound Aunt Anne.”
+
+“Oh, but she is very kind,” Florence said, as she displayed the
+presents. “How did Mr. Wimple know that you were going to India?” she
+asked.
+
+“I met him yesterday at the office. He went to see Fisher; it was
+arranged that he should the other night.”
+
+“It is very extraordinary his striking up a friendship with Aunt Anne.”
+
+“Yes, very extraordinary,” he laughed and then the old lady was
+forgotten.
+
+The days flew by and the last one came. To-morrow (Thursday) Walter was
+to start by an early train for Southampton. All his arrangements were
+complete, and on that last day he had virtually nothing to do,
+“therefore, Floggie dear,” he pleaded, “let us have a spree.”
+
+“Yes,” she answered, willingly enough, though her heart was heavier than
+his. “How shall we manage it?”
+
+“Let us stroll about all day or go to Richmond, and come back and have a
+cosy little dinner somewhere.”
+
+“Here,” she pleaded, “let us dine here, in our own home on this last
+evening; we’ll have a very nice dinner.”
+
+“Very nice indeed?”
+
+“Very nice indeed, you greedy thing.”
+
+“All right, darling, suppose you go and order it. Then get ready and
+let’s start as soon as possible; we’ll amuse ourselves well, and forget
+that we have not a month to do it in. Live and be happy in the present
+day, dear Floggie,” he went on in a mock-serious tone; “for there is
+always a chance that to-morrow will not declare itself.”
+
+So they went off, like the boy he was in spite of his more than thirty
+years, and the girl that she sometimes felt herself to be still in spite
+of the two children and the eight years of matrimony. They walked a
+little way. Then Walter had a brilliant idea.
+
+“Let’s get into a hansom,” he said, “drive to Waterloo and take the
+first train that is going in any pleasant direction; I think Waterloo is
+the best place for that sort of speculation. This beggar’s horse looks
+pretty good, jump in.”
+
+As they drove up to the station, a four-wheel cab moved away, the cabman
+grumbling at the sum that had been given him by two people, a man and a
+woman, who still stood on the station steps looking after him.
+
+“Why, there’s Wimple!” Walter exclaimed; “and who’s that with him, I
+wonder?”
+
+Florence looked up quickly. Mr. Wimple wore a shabby grey coat, and
+round his neck and over his mouth there was a grey comforter, for the
+October morning was slightly chilly. In his hand he carried a worn brown
+portmanteau. Beside him stood a tall good-looking young woman of
+five-and-twenty, commonly, almost vulgarly dressed. She looked after the
+departing cab with a scowl on her face that told it was she who had paid
+the scanty fare. As they stood together, they looked poor and common and
+singularly unprepossessing; it was impossible to help feeling that they
+were nearly connected. They looked like husband and wife, and of an
+indefinite and insignificant class. Suddenly Alfred Wimple caught
+Walter’s eye, he nodded gravely without the least confusion, but he
+evidently said something quickly and in a low tone to his companion, for
+they hurried away through one of the station doors.
+
+“That horrid Mr. Wimple seems to possess us lately,” Florence thought.
+
+As they went from the ticket office she saw Mr. Wimple and his friend
+hurrying along the platform. A minute later they had entered a
+Portsmouth train which was on the point of starting.
+
+“If that’s his Liphook friend I don’t think much of the looks of her.
+Alfred always picked up odd people,” Walter thought; but he kept these
+reflections to himself; all he said aloud was, “I say, Floggie dear, if
+Wimple turns up while I’m away, don’t be uncivil to him, and give him
+food if you can manage it. Somehow he always looks half starved, poor
+beggar. Fisher is going to give him some reviewing to do, perhaps that
+will help him a bit.”
+
+There was a train starting to Windsor in ten minutes; so they went by
+it, and strolled down by the river and lingered near the boats, and went
+into the town and looked at the shops and the outside of the castle.
+Then they lunched at the confectioner’s, an extravagant lunch which
+Walter ordered, and afterwards, while they were still drowsy and happy,
+they hired an open fly and drove to Virginia Water. They hurried back to
+Windsor in time to catch the 6 p.m. train for town by half a minute, and
+congratulated themselves upon finding an empty carriage.
+
+“I shall always remember this dear day,” Florence said, as they sat over
+their last little dinner at home.
+
+“That’s a good thing,” Walter said, “and so will I, dear wife. When I
+come back we’ll have another like it in memory of this one’s success.”
+Then he remembered Alfred Wimple. “I should like to know who that girl
+was,” he thought; “wonder if she’s the daughter of another tailor he
+doesn’t want to pay, and if I met him to-morrow I wonder what lie he
+would tell me about her—he always lied, poor beggar.” And this shows
+that his thoughts were sometimes not as charitable as his words.
+
+The next day very early Walter departed for Southampton. Florence went
+to see him safely on board.
+
+“We shall have the good little journey together,” he said dismally, for
+he was loth enough to leave her now that the parting time had come.
+
+But it seemed as if the train flew along the rails in its hurry to get
+near the sea, and the journey was over directly. There was all the
+bustle of getting on board; and almost before she knew it, Florence was
+on her way back to London alone. As if in a dream she walked home from
+the station, thinking of her husband watching the sea as it widened
+between him and England. She was glad she had seen the ship, she could
+imagine him seated at the long table in the saloon, with the
+punkahs—useless enough at present—waving overhead, or in his cabin,
+looking out through the porthole at the white crests to the waves. Yes.
+She could see all his surroundings plainly. She gave a long sigh. She
+was a brave little woman, and had tried so hard not to break down before
+Walter, though in the last moment on board, when she had felt as if her
+heart would break, she had not been able altogether to help it. And now,
+as she walked home in the dusk without him, she felt as if she could not
+live through the long months of separation.
+
+“But I will—I will,” she said to herself while the tears trickled down
+her face; “only it _is_ hard, for there is no one in the world like him,
+no one—no one; and we have never been parted before.”
+
+Every moment, too, she remembered, took him farther away. She told
+herself again and again how much good the journey would do him, how glad
+she was that he would get the change; but human nature is human nature
+still, and will not be controlled by argument. So she quickened her
+pace, resolving not to give way till she was safe in the darkness of her
+own room, hidden from the eyes of the servants, and then she would let
+her feelings have their fling.
+
+She looked up at the house with a sigh. It would be so still without
+Walter. There was a flickering light in the drawing-room. Probably the
+servants had put a lamp there, for the days were growing shorter; it was
+nearly dark already. The children would be in bed, but they were certain
+not to be asleep, and she thought of the little shout of welcome they
+would give when they heard her footstep on the stair as she went up to
+kiss them. She let herself in with Walter’s latchkey—she kissed it as
+she took it from her pocket, and nearly cried again—and then, having
+entered, stood still and wondered. There in the hall were two square
+boxes—boxes of the sort that were used before overland trunks came into
+fashion, and when American arks were unknown. They were covered with
+brown holland, bordered with faded red braid, and corded with thick
+brown cord. Stitched on to each cover was a small white card, on each of
+which was written, in a hand Florence knew well, _Mrs. Baines, care of
+Mrs. Walter Hibbert_. While she was still contemplating the address, a
+servant, who had heard her enter, came up.
+
+“Mrs. Baines has been here since eleven o’clock, ma’am,” she said;
+“she’s in the drawing-room, and has had nothing to eat all day except a
+cup of tea, and a little toast that nurse made her have at four o’clock.
+She’s been waiting to see you.”
+
+It was evident that there had been some catastrophe. Florence went
+wearily upstairs, and, after a moment’s hesitation to gather courage,
+entered the drawing-room.
+
+“Aunt Anne!” she exclaimed, “what has happened?”
+
+The old lady had been standing by the fireplace. Her thin white hands
+were bare, but she still wore her cloak and black close-fitting bonnet,
+though she had thrown aside the crape veil. Her face looked worn and
+anxious, but a look of indignation came to her eyes when she saw
+Florence, a last little flash of remembered insult: then she advanced
+with outstretched hands.
+
+“Florence,” she said, “I have come to you for advice and shelter, I have
+been insulted—and humiliated”—a quaver came into her voice, she could
+not go on till indignation returned to give her strength. “Florence,”
+she begun again, “I have come to you. I—I——”
+
+“Aunt Anne, dear Aunt Anne!” Florence said, aching with fatigue, and
+feeling ruefully that her longing for rest and quiet was not likely to
+be satisfied, yet thinking, oddly enough too, even while she spoke, of
+Walter going on, farther and farther away across the darkening sea,
+“what is the matter? tell me, dear.” There was a throbbing pain in her
+head. It was like the thud-thud of the screw on board his ship.
+
+Aunt Anne raised her head and spoke firmly—
+
+“My love, I have been insulted.”
+
+“Insulted, Aunt Anne, but how?”
+
+“Yes, my love, insulted. I frequently had occasion to reprove the
+servants for their conduct, for the want of respect they showed me. The
+cook was abominable, and a reprimand had no effect upon her. To-day her
+impertinence was past endurance, I told Mrs. North so, and that she must
+be dismissed. Mrs. North refused—refused, though her servant had
+forgotten what was due to me, and this morning—— I can’t repeat her
+words.”
+
+“Well,” said Florence, “but surely you did not let a servant drive——”
+
+“No, dear Florence, it was not the cook who drove me away, I should not
+allow a subordinate to interfere with my life; it was Mrs. North. She
+has behaved cruelly to me. She listened to her servants in preference to
+me. I told her that they showed me no respect, that they entirely forgot
+what was due to me, and unless she made an example, and dismissed one of
+them, it would be impossible for me to stay in her house, and then, my
+love, I was told that—that,” she stopped for a moment, “I can’t tell
+you,” she went on suddenly; “I can’t repeat it all, Florence; but, my
+love, there were other reasons—that are impossible to repeat; and I am
+here—I am here, homeless and miserable, and insulted. I flew to you, I
+knew you would be indignant, that your dear heart would feel for me.”
+
+“But you were so happy.”
+
+“Yes, my love, I was.”
+
+“And Mrs. North was so kind to you,” Florence went on regretfully;
+“could you not have managed——”
+
+“No, my love, I must remember what is due to myself.”
+
+“Oh, but, dear Aunt Anne, don’t you think it would have been better to
+have put up——”
+
+“Florence, if you cannot sympathize with me I must ask you not to
+discuss the matter,” the old lady answered, raising her head and
+speaking in a tone of surprise; “there is no trouble you could have come
+to me with that I should not have felt about as you did.”
+
+Aunt Anne had a remarkable gift for fighting her own battles, Florence
+thought.
+
+“But don’t you see, Aunt Anne, that——”
+
+“I would prefer not to discuss the matter, my love,” the old lady said
+loftily. “You are so young and inexperienced that perhaps you cannot
+enter into my feelings. Either the cook or I had to leave the house.
+There were other reasons too, I repeat, why I deemed it
+unadvisable,—why it was impossible to remain. Mrs. North has lately
+shown a levity of manner that I could not countenance; her sister is no
+longer with her, and her husband has been thousands of miles away; is
+away still, yet she is always ready for amusement. I cannot believe that
+she loves him, or she would show more regret at his absence. I have
+known what a happy marriage is, Florence, and you know what it is too,
+my love. You can therefore understand that I thought her conduct
+reprehensible. I felt it my duty to tell her so.”
+
+“Yes,” Florence said wearily, “I know, I know;” but she could not help
+thinking that Aunt Anne had behaved rather foolishly.
+
+Then she rang the bell and ordered tea to be made ready in the
+dining-room, a substantial tea of the sort that women love and men
+abhor.
+
+“Now rest and forget all the worries,” she said gently. “You are tired
+and excited, try and forget everything till you have had some tea and
+are rested. The spare room is quite ready, and you shall go to bed
+early, as I will, for it has been a long day.”
+
+“I know what you must have gone through,” and Mrs. Baines shook her head
+sadly, “and that you want to be alone to think of your dear Walter. But
+I will only intrude on you for one night, to-morrow I will find an
+apartment.”
+
+“You must not talk like that, for you are very welcome, Aunt Anne,”
+Florence said gently, though she could not help inwardly chafing at the
+intrusion, and longing to be alone.
+
+“Tell me, love, did Walter go off comfortably?” Mrs. Baines asked,
+speaking with the air people sometimes speak of those who have died
+rather to the satisfaction of their relations.
+
+“Yes, he sailed a few hours ago. I have just come back from
+Southampton.”
+
+“I know it,” Aunt Anne answered, her voice full of untold feeling; “did
+he take my simple gifts with him, dear?”
+
+“Yes, he took them,” Florence answered gratefully; “but come downstairs,
+Aunt Anne, you must be worn out.”
+
+Then in a moment Aunt Anne recovered her old manner, the manner that had
+some indefinable charm in it, and looked at Florence.
+
+“Yes, my love,” she said, “I am very much fatigued but I am thankful
+indeed to enjoy your hospitality again. Before I retire to rest I must
+write some letters, if you will permit your servant to post them.”
+
+Florence had to write one or two letters also. She gave three to the
+little housemaid to post; as she did so, one of Aunt Anne’s caught her
+eye. It was addressed to Alfred Wimple. “Perhaps she wanted to tell him
+something about the Albert Memorial,” she thought, and dismissed the
+matter from her mind.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+Then it was that Florence discovered that Aunt Anne was really a
+charming person to have in the house, especially with children. She was
+so bright, so clever with them, so full of little surprises. In her
+pocket there always lingered some unexpected little present, and at the
+tip of her tongue some quaint bit of old-world knowledge that was as
+interesting to grown-up folk as to the children. To see her prim figure
+about the place seemed to Florence like having lavender among her linen.
+She was useful too, ready with her fingers to darn some little place in
+a tablecloth that every one else had overlooked, to sew a button on
+Monty’s little shoe, or to mend a tear in Catty’s pinafore. Above all,
+she was so complimentary, so full of admiration, and it was quite
+evident that she meant with her whole heart all the pretty things she
+said. She did too. Walter was the son of her favourite brother, and to
+Florence she had really taken a fancy from the beginning.
+
+“I loved you from the first moment, my love,” she said. “I shall never
+forget the look of happiness on your face that morning at Brighton when
+I met you and your dear Walter together. It endeared you to me. It was a
+happy day,” she added, with a sigh.
+
+“Yes, a very happy day,” Florence answered, affectionately remembering
+how ungrateful both she and dear Walter had been at the time. This was
+at breakfast one morning, a week after Walter’s departure. She was
+pouring out the coffee very quickly because she longed to open her
+letters, though she knew it was not possible to get yet the one he had
+posted from Gibraltar.
+
+Aunt Anne meanwhile was undoing a little packet that had come by post
+addressed to her. Catty and Monty having finished their porridge were
+intently watching. She stopped when she noticed the gravity of their
+faces.
+
+“My love,” she said, in the tone of one asking a great favour, “have I
+your permission to give these dear children some bread and jam?”
+
+“Oh yes, of course,” Florence answered, not looking up from the long
+letter she was reading.
+
+Aunt Anne, quick to notice, saw that it had a foreign postmark and an
+enclosure that looked like a cheque. Then she cut some bread and took
+off the crust before she spread a quantity of butter on the dainty
+slices, and piled on the top of the butter as much jam as they could
+carry.
+
+“Oh!” cried the children, with gleeful surprise.
+
+“Dear Aunt Anne,” exclaimed Florence, looking up when she heard it, “I
+never give them quite so much butter with quite so much jam. It is too
+rich for them, and we don’t cut off the crusts.”
+
+“The servants will eat them.”
+
+“Indeed they will not,” laughed Florence; “they don’t like crusts.”
+
+“You are much too good to them, love, as you are to every one. They
+should do as they are told, and be glad to take what they can get. I
+never have patience with the lower classes,” she added, in the gentlest
+of voices.
+
+But the words gave Florence a sudden insight into the possible reason of
+Aunt Anne’s collapse at Mrs. North’s, a catastrophe to which the old
+lady never referred. The very mention of Mrs. North’s name made her
+manner a little distant.
+
+“And then, you know,” Florence said, for she was always careful, and now
+especially, in order to make the very short allowance on which she had
+put herself in her husband’s absence hold out, “we must not let the
+children learn to be dainty, must we? So they must try to eat up the
+crusts of their bread; and we only give them a little butter when they
+have jam. I never had butter and jam together at all at home,” and she
+stroked Catty’s fat little hand while she went on reading her letter.
+“Grandma has written from France, my babes,” she said, looking up after
+a few minutes; “she sends you each a kiss and five shillings to spend.”
+
+“I shall buy a horse and be a soldier,” Monty declared.
+
+“I shall buy a present for mummy and a little one for Aunt Anne,” said
+Catty.
+
+“Bless you, my darling, for thinking of me,” the old lady said
+fervently, and suddenly opening a tin of Devonshire cream, she piled a
+mass of it on to the bread and butter and jam already before the
+astonished children. Aunt Anne’s nature gloried in profusion.
+
+“Why,” said Florence, not noticing anything at table, “here is a letter
+from Madame Celestine—her name is on the seal at least. I don’t owe her
+anything. Oh no, it isn’t for me. _Mrs. Baines, care of Mrs. Walter
+Hibbert._ It is for you, Aunt Anne.”
+
+“Thank you, my love.” Mrs. Baines took it, with an air of slight but
+dignified vexation. “It was remiss of your servant not to put all my
+letters beside me. I am sorry you should be troubled with my
+correspondence.”
+
+“But it doesn’t matter,” Florence answered. “I hope you have not found
+her very expensive; she can be so sometimes?” and through Florence’s
+mind there went a remembrance of the dress in which Aunt Anne had
+appeared on the night of the dinner-party. A little flush, or something
+like one, went across the old lady’s withered cheek.
+
+“My love,” she said, almost haughtily, “I have not yet given her charges
+my consideration. I have been too much engaged with more important
+matters.”
+
+“I sincerely hope she does not owe for that dress,” Florence thought,
+but she did not dare ask any questions. “Madame Celestine is not a
+comfortable creditor, nor usually a small one.”
+
+Then she understood Catty’s and Monty’s remarkable silence of the past
+few minutes. It had suddenly dawned upon her how unusual it was.
+
+“Why, my beloved babes,” she exclaimed, “what are you eating?” and she
+looked across laughingly at Aunt Anne. “Where did those snowy mountains
+of cream come from?”
+
+“They came by post, just now, my love,” Mrs. Baines said firmly.
+
+“Oh, you are much too kind, Aunt Anne. But you will spoil the children,
+you will indeed, as well as their digestions. You are much too good to
+them; but we shall have to send them away if you corrupt them in this
+delicious manner.”
+
+“It is most nutritious, I assure you,” Aunt Anne answered, with great
+gravity, while with dogged and desperate haste she piled more and more
+cream on to Monty’s plate. “I thought you would like it, Florence. I
+have ordered three pounds to be sent in one-pound tins at intervals of
+three days. I hoped that you would think it good for the dear children,
+that they would have your approbation in eating it.”
+
+“Of course, and I shall eat some too,” Florence answered, trying to
+chase away Aunt Anne’s earnestness; “only you are much too good to
+them.”
+
+The old lady looked up with a tender smile on her face.
+
+“It is not possible to be good enough to your children, my
+darling—yours and Walter’s.”
+
+“Dear Walter,” said Florence, as she rose from the table, “I shall be
+glad to get his letter. Now, my monkeys, my vagabonds, my darlings, go
+upstairs and tell nurse to take you out at once to see the trees and the
+ducks in the pond; go along, go along,” and she ran playfully after the
+children.
+
+“May I go and buy my horse?” asked Monty; “and I think I shall buy a
+sword too. I want to kill a man.”
+
+“He is just like his father!” exclaimed Aunt Anne. “What is Catty going
+to do with her money?” she asked.
+
+“Give it to mummy,” the child answered softly.
+
+“And she is just like you, dear Florence,” said the old lady, in a
+choking voice.
+
+“She is just like herself, and therefore like a dickie-bird, and a white
+rabbit, and a tortoiseshell kitten, and many other things too numerous
+to mention,” Florence laughed, overtaking Catty and kissing her little
+round face. “But go, my babes, go—go and get ready; your beloved mummy
+wants to turn you out of doors;” and shouting with joy the children
+scampered off.
+
+Florence took up _The Centre_.
+
+“Won’t you have the paper, Aunt Anne, and a quiet quarter of an hour?”
+
+“Thank you, no, my love; I rarely care to peruse it until a more leisure
+time of the day. With your permission I will leave you now, I have some
+business to transact out of doors; are there any commissions I could
+execute for you?”
+
+“No, thank you.”
+
+Aunt Anne was always thoughtful, Florence said to herself. Every morning
+since she came this question had been asked and answered in almost the
+same words.
+
+“By the way, Aunt Anne, Mr. Wimple called yesterday. I am sorry I was
+not at home”—and this she felt to be a fib.
+
+“He told me that he intended to do so before he left town.”
+
+There was a strange light on Aunt Anne’s face when she spoke of him; her
+niece saw it with wonder.
+
+“I dare say she takes a sort of motherly interest in him,” she said to
+herself. “He is delicate and she has no belongings; poor old lady, how
+sad it must be to have no belongings, no husband, no children, no
+mother, no anything. I don’t wonder her sympathies go out even to Mr.
+Wimple.” Then aloud she asked, “Is he going away for long?”
+
+“He is going to some friends near Portsmouth by the twelve o’clock train
+to-day,” and Mrs. Baines glanced at the clock; “from Waterloo,” she
+added.
+
+“Are you going to see him off, Aunt Anne?”
+
+“My love, I have an engagement in the City at one o’clock. I am going
+out now, but I cannot say what my movements will be between this and
+then.”
+
+In a moment Aunt Anne’s voice was a shade distant. Florence had only
+asked the question as a little joke, and with no notion that Aunt Anne
+would take it seriously.
+
+“I didn’t mean to be curious,” she said, and stroked the old lady’s
+shoulder.
+
+“I know you did not, my darling. You are the last person in the world to
+commit a solecism,”—and again there came a smile to Aunt Anne’s face.
+It made Florence stoop and kiss her.
+
+“And you told me of your expedition to the Albert Memorial, remember,”
+she went on wickedly; “and I know that you and Mr. Wimple are very
+sympathetic to each other.”
+
+“You are right, Florence. We have many tastes and sympathies in unison.
+We find it pleasant to discuss them altogether. Good-bye, my love; do
+not wait luncheon for me. I shall probably partake of it with a
+friend”—and she left the room. Florence took up _The Centre_ again, but
+she could not read for thinking uneasily of the bill which she felt
+convinced Madame Celestine had just sent to Aunt Anne.
+
+“I wish I could pay it,” she thought; “but I can’t, in spite of mother’s
+present this morning. It is probably at least fifteen pounds. Besides,
+Aunt Anne is such a peculiar old lady that the chances are she would be
+offended if I did.”
+
+She put down the paper and sat thinking for a few minutes. Then she went
+to the writing-table in the corner by the fireplace, unlocked the corner
+drawer and took out a little china bowl in which she was in the habit of
+keeping the money she had in the house. Four pounds in gold and a
+five-pound note. She took out the note, put in a cheque, locked the
+drawer and waited.
+
+When she heard the soft footsteps of Aunt Anne descending the stairs she
+went to the door nervously, uncertain how what she was going to do would
+be received. Mrs. Baines was dressed ready to go out. She was a little
+smarter than usual. Round her throat there was some soft white muslin
+tied in a large bow that fell on her chest and relieved the sombreness
+of her attire. The heavy crape veil she usually wore was replaced by a
+thinner one that had little spots of jet upon it.
+
+“Aunt Anne, you look as if you were going to a party.”
+
+The old lady was almost confused, like a person who is found out in some
+roguish mischief of which she is half, but only half, ashamed.
+
+“My love, I only go to your parties,” she said; “there are no others in
+the world that would tempt me.”
+
+“Can you come to me for five minutes before you start? I won’t keep you
+longer.”
+
+“Yes, with pleasure,” Aunt Anne answered; “but it must only be for five
+minutes, if you will excuse me for saying so, for I have an appointment
+that I should deeply regret not being able to keep.”
+
+Florence led the old lady to an easy-chair and shut the door. Then she
+knelt down by her side, saying humbly but with a voice full of joy, for
+she was delighted at what she was going to do—if Aunt Anne would only
+let her do it.
+
+“I want to tell you that—that I had a letter from my mother this
+morning.”
+
+“I know, my love. I hope she is well, and that you have no anxiety about
+her.”
+
+“Oh no.”
+
+“She must long to see you, Florence dear.”
+
+“She does; she is such a dear mother, and she is coming to England in
+two or three weeks’ time.”
+
+“Her society will be a great solace to you.”
+
+“Yes; but what I wanted to tell you is that she has sent me a present.”
+
+“I hope it is a substantial one,” Aunt Anne said, courteously.
+
+“Indeed it is.”
+
+“It rejoices me greatly to hear it, my love.”
+
+“It is money—a cheque. My mother says she sends it to cheer me up after
+losing Walter.”
+
+“She knew how your tender heart would miss him, my darling;” but she was
+watching Florence intently with a hungry look that a second self seemed
+trying to control.
+
+“And as I have had a present of filthy lucre, Aunt Anne, and am
+delighted and not too proud to take it, so I want you to have a present
+of filthy lucre and not to be too proud to take it; but just to have
+this little five-pound note because you love me and for any little odd
+and end on which you may find it convenient to spend it. It would be so
+sweet of you to let me share my present as my children shared the cream
+with you.”
+
+Florence bent her head and kissed the old lady’s hands as she pushed the
+bit of crisp paper into them. Aunt Anne was not one whit offended, it
+seemed for a moment as if she were going to break down and cry; but she
+controlled herself.
+
+“Bless you, my darling, bless you indeed. I take it in the spirit you
+offer it me; I know the pleasure it is to your generous heart to give,
+and it is equally one to mine to receive. I could not refuse any gift
+from you, Florence,” she said, kissing Mrs. Hibbert; and when she
+departed, it was with an air of having done a gracious and tender deed.
+But besides this, her footstep had grown lighter, there was a joyfulness
+in her voice and a flickering smile on her face that showed how much
+pleasure and relief the money had given her.
+
+“I am so glad,” Florence thought, as she noticed it; “poor old dear. I
+wonder if it will go to Madame Celestine, or what she will do with it.
+And I wonder where she is gone.”
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+Florence’s speculations concerning Aunt Anne were brought to an end by
+the arrival of Mr. Fisher. She was surprised at his paying her so early
+a visit, and for a moment feared lest it should mean bad news from
+Walter. But his benevolent expression reassured her.
+
+“I hope you will forgive my intruding on you at this hour, Mrs.
+Hibbert,” he said. “My visit is almost a business one, if I may venture
+to call it so, and I hope its result may be pleasant to us both.” His
+manner was a faint echo of Aunt Anne’s. “I would have written to ask you
+to see me, but the idea that brings me only occurred to me an hour or
+two ago.”
+
+“But of course I would see you,” she answered brightly. “And I think the
+morning is a delicious time of day to which we devote far too much
+idleness.”
+
+“I thoroughly agree with you,” he said, and looked at her approvingly,
+for he was quite alive to the duties of domesticity. In his short
+married life it had been an everlasting irritation to him that his wife
+was a slattern and wholly indifferent about her home. It had made him
+keen to observe the ways of other women; though the sight of a well-kept
+house always depressed him a little, for it set him thinking of the
+denials in his own life, of what he might have had and could have been;
+it made him also a little extra deferential and gracious to the woman
+who presided over it. He was so to Florence this morning. He had noticed
+quickly that all signs of breakfast had vanished, he divined that the
+children were out of doors, and that she herself, with her slate and
+account-books, was deep in household matters. It was thus he thought
+that a woman should chiefly concern herself. Her husband, children, and
+home were her business in life. The rest could be left to the discretion
+and management of men. He felt that it was almost a duty on his part, in
+the absence of her husband, to discreetly manage Florence. Moreover, in
+the intervals of editing his paper, he had a turn for editing the lives
+of other people, and he felt it almost an obligation to give a good deal
+of time to the consideration of the private affairs of his staff. He
+liked the Hibberts too, and was really anxious to be good and useful to
+them. He had come to the conclusion that it was a pity that Florence and
+her children should stay in London while Walter was away. “She would be
+much better in the country,” he thought; “the children could run about;
+besides, what is the good of keeping that cottage near Witley empty?”
+and then he remembered his own mother, who was seventy years old and
+lived far off in the wilds of Northumberland. Her sole amusement
+appeared to be writing her son letters, lamenting that he never went to
+stay with her, and that since he lived in small and inconvenient
+bachelor chambers, she could not go and stay with him. It had been her
+desire that he should marry again. She had told him that it was foolish
+not to do so, that she could die happy if he had a wife to take care of
+him. But he never answered a word. “It would not be a bad idea if I had
+the old lady up for a couple of months, and took the Hibberts’ house,”
+he said to himself. The idea grew upon him. He imagined the dinners he
+could give to his staff and their wives—not to the outside world, for
+it bothered him. “We might ask Ethel Dunlop occasionally,” he thought;
+“a nice girl in her twenties, fond of pleasure, would brighten up the
+old lady.” He remembered the twenties with regret, and wished they were
+thirties; then he would not have felt so keenly the difference in years
+between them. But he reflected that after all he was still in the prime
+of life, as a man is, if he chooses, till he is fifty; and he struggled
+to feel youthful; but struggle as he would, youthful feelings held
+aloof. They were coy after forty, he supposed, and looking back he
+consoled himself by thinking that they had been rather foolish. Then he
+thought of Ethel’s cousin; confound her cousin! she seemed to like going
+about with him. Perhaps he made love to her; yet he was too much of a
+hobble-de-hoy for that, surely—three-and-twenty at most—a very
+objectionable time of life in the masculine sex, a time of dash and
+impudence and doing of things from sheer bravado at which wisdom,
+knowledge, and middle age hesitated. Ethel was probably only amusing
+herself with him. To fall in love with a cousin would show a lack of
+originality of which he was slow to suspect her. He wondered what the
+cousin did, and if he wanted a post of any sort; if he had a turn for
+writing and adventure. Perhaps he could be sent as special correspondent
+to the Gold Coast, where the climate would probably sufficiently engross
+him. Ethel at any rate might be invited to see his mother, it would
+cheer the old lady up to have a girl about her. Yes, he had quite made
+up his mind. Mrs. Hibbert should go to her country cottage with her two
+children; he would take the house near Portland Road for a couple of
+months, and the rest would arrange itself.
+
+“I don’t know whether Walter would like it,” Florence said, when Mr.
+Fisher had explained his errand.
+
+“I’ll answer for Walter,” Mr. Fisher said concisely. Of course he, a
+man, knew better than she did what Walter, also a man, would like; that
+was plainly conveyed in his manner. “It will be better for you and the
+children,” he went on, with gracious benevolence, for as he looked at
+Florence he thought how girlish she was. He felt quite strongly that in
+her husband’s absence it was his duty to look after her, and to teach
+her, pleasantly, the way in which she should go. It was absurd to
+suppose that a woman should know it without any direction from his sex,
+and he was now the proper person to give it. “I will send you plenty of
+novels to read, and if you would allow me to introduce you to her,” he
+added, with a shade of pomposity in his voice, “there is a friend of
+mine at Witley—Mrs. Burnett. You would be excellent companions for each
+other, I should say, for her husband comes up to town every morning,
+and——”
+
+“I know her a little,” Florence said, “a tall, slight woman with sweet
+grey eyes.”
+
+“I never looked at her eyes,” Mr. Fisher said quickly, and Florence felt
+reproved for having mentioned them. Of course, he would not look at the
+eyes of a married woman. Mr. Fisher had clear and distinct views about
+the proprieties, which he thought were invented especially for married
+and marriageable women. “Perhaps Miss Dunlop would pay you a visit,” he
+suggested.
+
+“She has her father to take care of. Besides, Mrs. Baines is staying
+with me.”
+
+“I saw Mrs. Baines with Wimple the other day. Has she adopted him?”
+
+“With Mr. Wimple,” Florence said, bewildered at the sudden mention of
+the name again; and then remembering Walter, she added loyally, “she
+likes him because he is Walter’s friend.”
+
+“He writes well,” Mr. Fisher answered, as if he were making a remark
+that surprised himself. “He has done some work for us, and done it very
+well too.”
+
+Then he unfolded the details in regard to the taking of the house.
+
+Florence found to her surprise that he had arranged them all carefully.
+
+“Let me see,” he said, “this is Monday. You can go on Saturday, I
+suppose? I think that would be the best day for my mother to arrive.”
+
+“Oh yes. There are things to get ready and to put away, of course.”
+
+“They won’t take you long,” he answered shortly.
+
+“I dare say it will do the children good,” she said, reluctantly.
+
+“Of course it will.”
+
+“I might ask Aunt Anne to take the children to-morrow—I am sure she
+would—then I could soon get the place ready.”
+
+“Mrs. Baines? Yes, it would be an excellent plan to send her on first.”
+
+“It is very kind of you; don’t you think that you are really paying too
+much rent, Mr. Fisher?”
+
+“Not at all, not at all; it is a fair one, and I shall be very glad to
+have the house.”
+
+She was really a nice little woman, he thought, docile, and far from
+stupid; she only wanted a little managing. He had a suspicion that
+Walter was too easy-going, and if so, this little experience would be
+excellent for her; it would teach her that after all men were the
+governing race. It was so foolish when women did not recognize it.
+
+“Very well then, you will go on Saturday? Good-bye. Oh, I should like to
+ask Miss Dunlop to come and see my mother; do you think she would mind
+cheering her up sometimes?”
+
+“Oh no. She is a nice girl too.”
+
+“We might make a party to the theatre one night perhaps. By the way,
+Mrs. Hibbert,” he exclaimed, a sudden thought striking him, “I shall
+write to Walter as soon as I get to the office and tell him of this
+arrangement. I might as well enclose a note from you. The mail goes out
+to-day from Southampton, so that it would be too late to post, but I am
+sending specially by rail. I will wait while you write a note, and
+enclose it in mine.”
+
+“I wrote by this mail last night,” she answered. “But I should like to
+tell him about the house—he might be angry.” She laughed at the last
+words. She only said them to keep up Walter’s dignity.
+
+“Oh no, he won’t be angry,” Mr. Fisher laughed back, and Florence
+thought he was quite good-looking when he was not too grave. He did not
+look more than forty either; perhaps Ethel might be happy with him.
+Then, when she had written a few lines, he departed, satisfied with the
+result of his visit.
+
+An odd thing happened about that note. He went straight to the office
+and found a dozen matters of business awaiting his attention, and all
+remembrance of the Hibberts fled from him. Suddenly, an hour later, he
+dived into his pocket for a memorandum, and pulled out an unopened white
+envelope. He did not look at the address. “What’s this?” he said in
+utter forgetfulness, and tore it open; and—for his own name caught his
+eye—he read a passage in Mrs. Hibbert’s note to her husband:—
+
+“——_he is a kind old fogey, and I think he likes Ethel D. Would it not
+be funny if he married her?_”
+
+He folded it up quickly for fear he should read more. “Why should it be
+funny?” he said to himself. The word haunted him all day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Meanwhile Aunt Anne was deeply engaged. She was delighted with
+Florence’s unexpected gift; it would enable her to do a few things that
+only an hour or two ago she had felt to be impossible. She had not the
+least intention of paying Madame Celestine. She looked upon her as an
+inferior who must be content to wait till it was the pleasure of her
+superior to remember her bill, and any reminder of it she resented as a
+liberty. She spent a happy and very excited hour in Regent Street, and
+at eleven o’clock stood on the kerbstone critically looking for a
+hansom. She let several go by that did not please her; but at last with
+excellent instinct she picked out a good horse and a smart driver, and a
+minute later was whirling on towards Waterloo Station. She liked driving
+in hansoms; she was of opinion that they were well constructed, a great
+improvement on older modes of conveyance, and that it was the positive
+duty of people in a certain rank of life to encourage all meritorious
+achievements with their approval. She never for a moment doubted that
+she was one of those whose approval was important. She felt her own
+individuality very strongly, and was convinced that the world recognized
+it. She was keenly sensible of making effects, and it was odd, but for
+all her eccentricities, there was in her the making of a great lady; or
+it might have seemed to a philosophical speculator that she was made of
+the worn-out fragments of some past great lady, and dimly remembered at
+intervals her former importance. She had perfect control over her
+manner, and could use it to the best advantage; she had reserve, a power
+of keeping off familiarity, a graciousness, a winsomeness when she
+chose, that all belonged to a certain type and a certain class. As she
+went on swiftly to the station she looked half-disdainfully, yet
+compassionately, at the people who walked and the people who passed in
+omnibuses. She told herself that the last were excellent institutions,
+she wondered what the lower class would do without them; it rejoiced her
+to think that they had not got to do without them, it was a satisfaction
+to feel that she could enjoy her own superior condition without
+compunction.
+
+At Waterloo, with an air of decision that showed a perfect knowledge of
+her own generosity, she gave the cabman sixpence over his fare and
+walked slowly into the station. She looked up and down the platform from
+which the Portsmouth train would depart, but saw no one she knew. She
+stood for a moment hesitating, and winked slowly to herself. Then she
+went to the bookstall and bought a _Times_ and a _Morning Post_. The one
+cost threepence and the other was fashionable. She disliked penny
+papers. Again her mania for present-giving asserted itself, and quickly
+she bought also a pile of illustrated papers and magazines. “Gentlemen
+always like the _Field_,” she said to herself, and added it to the heap.
+She turned away with them in her arms, and as she did so Alfred Wimple
+stood facing her.
+
+“I have ventured to get you a few papers, hoping they would beguile you
+on your journey,” she said.
+
+Mr. Wimple was as grave as ever and as rickety on his legs. His face
+showed no sign of pleasure at the sight of the old lady, but his manner
+was deferential; he seemed to be trying to impress certain indefinite
+facts upon her.
+
+“I never read in a train,” he answered, “but I shall be glad of them at
+the end of the journey. Thank you.”
+
+He said the last two words with a sigh, and put them in the corner he
+had already secured of the railway carriage. He looked at the clock.
+Twenty minutes before he started. He seemed to consider something for a
+moment, looking critically at the old lady while he did so.
+
+“Cannot I persuade you to give me your address in Hampshire?” He coughed
+a little. “Have you your glycerine lozenges with you?” she asked
+hurriedly.
+
+“Yes,” he answered, “they are in my pocket. I will write to you, Mrs.
+Baines; I may have something of importance to say.”
+
+“Everything that you say is important,” she answered nervously.
+
+He got into the train and sat down.
+
+“I am tired,” he said; “you must excuse me for not standing any longer.”
+He shivered as he opened the window. “I dislike third class,” he added,
+“but I go by it on principle; I am not rich enough to travel by any
+other, Mrs. Baines,” and he looked at her fixedly.
+
+She was silent, she seemed fascinated, she looked at him for a moment
+and winked absently; then a thought seemed to strike her and she
+started.
+
+“Wait!” she exclaimed; “I will return in a moment,” and she hurried
+away.
+
+In five minutes she came back breathless with excitement. “I have taken
+a great liberty,” she said humbly, “but you must forgive me. I have
+ventured to get you this ticket; will you please me by changing into a
+first-class carriage? You must imagine that you are my guest,” and she
+looked at him anxiously. “The guard is waiting——”
+
+“I cannot refuse you anything, Mrs. Baines.” And with a chastened air he
+pulled his portmanteau from under the seat. The guard was waiting
+outside for it, and took it to an empty carriage. Mr. Wimple followed,
+Aunt Anne carrying the papers. He took his place and looked round
+satisfied. The guard touched his hat to the old lady and went his way.
+Mrs. Baines gave a sigh of satisfaction.
+
+“Now I shall feel content, and you will not be disturbed,” she added
+triumphantly. “I have spoken——” She stopped, for his hacking cough
+came back; she seemed to shrink with pain as she heard it.
+
+“I am quite an invalid,” he said impressively.
+
+“I wish I were going with you to nurse you.”
+
+“I need nursing, Mrs. Baines,” he answered sadly. “I need a great many
+things.”
+
+“I wish I could give them to you.”
+
+He looked at her curiously; as if the words came from him without his
+knowledge, he said suddenly, “I see Sir William Rammage is a little
+better.”
+
+“I am going to inquire after him this morning,” she answered, and then
+she drew a little parcel from beneath her shawl. “I want you to put this
+into your pocket,” she said, “and to open it by-and-by; it is only a
+trifling proof that I thought of you as I came along.”
+
+“I always think of you,” he said, almost reproachfully, as, without a
+word of thanks, he put the parcel out of sight.
+
+“Not more than I do of you,” she said, in a low choking voice. “I hear
+you cough in my sleep; and it grieves me to think how hard you have to
+work.”
+
+“I can’t take care of myself,” he said; “I was always careless, Mrs.
+Baines, and I must work. Fisher is a very fidgety man to work for; it
+has taken me three days to review a small book on American law, and even
+now I am not sure that he will be satisfied.”
+
+His voice never varied, the expression of his eyes never changed save
+once for a moment. She had taken off her gloves and was resting her
+hands, thin and dry, on the ledge of the carriage window while she leant
+forward to talk to him, and suddenly he looked down at them. They seemed
+to repel him, he drew back a very little; she saw the movement and
+followed his eyes; she understood perfectly; for she had quick insight,
+and courage to face unflinchingly even truths that were not pleasant.
+She drew her hands away and rubbed them softly one over the other, as if
+by doing so she could put young life into them. Suddenly with a jerk the
+train moved.
+
+“Good-bye,” she said excitedly. “Good-bye; if I write to the address in
+town will the letter be forwarded?”
+
+But he could only nod. In a moment he was out of sight. He did not lean
+forward to look after her, he sat staring into space. “She must be
+seventy,” he said. “I wonder——” Then he felt in his pocket for the
+third-class ticket he no longer needed. “Probably they will return the
+amount I paid for it.” A sudden thought struck him. He looked at the
+ticket Mrs. Baines had given him. “It is for Portsmouth,” he said
+grimly. The one he had taken himself had been for Liphook.
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+It was not at all a bad thing to do, Florence thought, as she sat and
+considered the arrangement Mr. Fisher had so suddenly made in regard to
+the house in town and the cottage at Witley. The country would do the
+children good, and Aunt Anne would probably enjoy it. Of course the
+latter would consent to go with them. Indeed, she had clearly no other
+resource. Florence wondered if she would like it.
+
+But Mrs. Baines was so full of news herself when she returned that she
+had no time to listen to any one else.
+
+“My love,” she said, “I have passed a most important day.”
+
+“Relate your adventures, Aunt Anne.” But at this request Mrs. Baines
+winked and spoke slowly.
+
+“I had an engagement in the morning,” she began, and hesitated. “When I
+had fulfilled it,” she went on, “I thought it right, Florence, to go and
+call on Sir William Rammage. He has been ill, and I wanted to assure him
+of my sympathy. Besides, I felt that it was due to you—that it was an
+imperative duty on my part to ask him for an allowance, and that it was
+his duty to give it to me.”
+
+“But, Aunt Anne——”
+
+“Yes, my love. I am living now on your generous kindness; don’t think
+that I am insensible to it. But for your tenderness, my darling, I
+should have been alone in a little lodging now, as I was when—when I
+was first left a widow.”
+
+“I should not like to think of you in a little lodging, Aunt Anne,”
+Florence said gently; and then she added gaily, “but continue your
+adventures.”
+
+Mrs. Baines gave a long sigh, and was silent for a moment. She sat down
+on the easy-chair and, as if she had not heard Florence’s interruption,
+went on with a strange tragic note in her voice—
+
+“I never told you about that time, Florence. I had three pounds in the
+world when I came to London; just three pounds to maintain my position
+until I could find something to do. I had a little room at Kilburn—a
+little room at the top of the house; and I used to sit day after day,
+week after week, waiting. I had no coals, only a little spirit-lamp by
+which I made some water hot, then poured it into a jug and covered it
+over and warmed my hands by it; it was often an hour before it grew
+cold, my love.”
+
+“But why did you not come to us?”
+
+“I couldn’t,” the old lady answered in an obstinate tone. “I felt that
+it would not be treating you properly to present myself before you while
+I was so poor and miserable”—she paused and looked into the fire for a
+moment, then suddenly went on: “The woman at the corner where I went
+every morning to buy a newspaper, saw that I was poor, and presumed upon
+it. Once she said I looked nipped up, and asked me to sit down and get
+warm. I reproved her for familiarity, and never went to the shop again.”
+
+“But perhaps she meant it for kindness?”
+
+“She should have remembered her position, my love, and asked me in a
+different manner. There is nothing more painful to bear than the
+remembrance of one’s own rank in life when one has to encounter the
+hardships that belong by right to a lower class.” Aunt Anne paused again
+for a moment, and gave a long sigh before she went on: “We won’t go over
+it, my dear. If Mrs. North had shown less levity in her conduct and more
+consideration to me, I should have been there still instead of living on
+your charity.”
+
+“Oh no, Aunt Anne.”
+
+“Yes, my love, it is so; even though you love me and I love you, it is
+charity; and I felt it keenly when you resented my little offering of
+cream this morning—you, to whom I would give everything I possess.”
+
+“Oh no, Aunt Anne——” interrupted Florence.
+
+“And so—and so,” continued the old lady with a little gasp, “I went to
+Sir William Rammage once more. I told him—I told him”—she stopped—“I
+told him how our mothers had stood over us together, years and years
+ago.”
+
+“Yes, I know,” Florence said soothingly. She had heard this so often
+before. “I hope he was good to you?”
+
+“My dear, he listened with compunction, but he saw the force of what I
+said. He will write and tell me how much he will allow me,” she added
+simply.
+
+“I am very glad, Aunt Anne; I hope he will write soon, and be generous.
+I know it will make you happier.”
+
+“It will, indeed,” and Mrs. Baines gave another long sigh. “I shall not
+be dependent on any one much longer.”
+
+“Except upon him,” Florence said unwittingly.
+
+“No, I shall not feel that I am dependent even upon him,” and she looked
+up quickly. “He will give it and I shall take it for the honour of the
+family. I told him how impossible it was that I could go on living upon
+you and Walter, that it would be a disgrace. I could not live upon him
+either. He has shown me so little sympathy, my love, that I could not
+endure it. I shall take the allowance from him as I should take an
+inheritance, knowing that it is not given to me for my own sake. I could
+not take it in any other spirit; but it would be as wrong in him to
+forget what is due to us, as it would be in me to let him do so. It
+would shed dishonour on his name.”
+
+And again she was silent; she seemed to be living over the past, to be
+groping her way back among days that were over before Florence was even
+born, to be seeing people whose very names had not been heard for years.
+
+“They would rise in their graves if I were left to starve,” she
+continued; “I have always felt it; and it was but right towards them
+that I should go to William; it was due to them even that I should live
+on you and Walter, my darling, till I received an adequate income.”
+
+Suddenly her voice changed again, the wonderful smile came back—the
+happy look that always seemed as if it had travelled from the youth she
+had left long years behind.
+
+“You understand, my love?” she asked. “Bless you for all your kindness,
+but I am not going to intrude upon you much longer. I have already seen
+an apartment that will, I think, suit my requirements.”
+
+“Oh no.”
+
+“Yes, my love, it will be much better. You cut me to the quick this
+morning, Florence,” and her voice grew sad; “you said that you would
+have to send away your dear children because my influence would spoil
+them.”
+
+“Aunt Anne!”—Florence began in consternation.
+
+“Yes, dear, yes,” the old lady said solemnly; “it gave me the deepest
+pain, as I sat and thought it over in the privacy of my own chamber. But
+when I came downstairs and you shared your dear mother’s gift with me, I
+knew that you loved me sincerely.”
+
+“I do,” said Florence, soothingly.
+
+“I am sure of it, my darling,” with even more solemnity, “but it will be
+better that I should take an apartment. It will rejoice your tender
+heart to know that by your gift you have helped me to secure one, and
+when I receive my allowance from Sir William I shall feel that I am
+independent once more. You must forgive me, my love; it is not that I do
+not appreciate your hospitality—yours and Walter’s—I do. But I feel
+that it would sadden all my dear ones who are gone, if they knew that I
+was alone in the world, without a home of my own. That is why I went to
+Sir William Rammage, Florence; and though he said little, I feel sure
+that he saw the matter in a proper light, and felt as I do about it.”
+
+“What did he say?”
+
+“He said he would think it over, and when he had made up his mind he
+would write to me. My love, would you permit me to ring the bell?”
+
+“Yes, of course. Why do you always ask me? Don’t you feel at home here,
+dear Aunt Anne?” Florence asked, thinking that Sir William’s answer had,
+after all, committed him to little.
+
+“I hope I shall never so far forget myself as not to treat you with the
+courtesy that you have a right to expect, my darling. I will never take
+advantage of our relationship.—Jane,” she said, with quite another
+manner, and in a cold and slightly haughty tone, to the servant who had
+entered, “would you have the goodness to divest me of my cloak? and if
+your mistress gives you permission, perhaps you would carry it up to my
+room?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am,” said Jane, respectfully, but without much willingness in
+her manner. The servants had learnt to resent the tone in which Mrs.
+Baines usually spoke to them. “She treats us like dirt,” the housemaid
+explained to the cook; “and if were made of dirt, I should like to know
+what she’s made of? She give me a shilling the other day, and another
+time a new apron done up in a box from the draper’s; but I don’t care
+about her for all her presents. I know she always sees every speck of
+dust that others would be blind to; it’s in her wink that she does.”
+
+“And now that you have told me all your news, I want you to listen to
+mine,” Florence said.
+
+Then she gave an account of Mr. Fisher’s visit, and of the letting of
+the house for a couple of months.
+
+“So, Aunt Anne,” she continued triumphantly, “I want you to be very,
+very good, and to go with the children and two of the servants to the
+cottage at Witley to-morrow, and to be the mistress of the great
+establishment, if you will, and mother to the children till I come; that
+proves how bad I think your influence is for them, doesn’t it, you
+unkind old dear?”—and she stooped and kissed Mrs. Baines.
+
+Aunt Anne was delighted, and consented at once.
+
+“I shall never forget your putting this confidence in me. You have
+proved your affection for me most truly,” she said. “My dear Florence,
+your children shall have the most loving care that it is in my power to
+give them. I will look after everything till you come; more zealously
+than you yourself could. Tell me, love, where do you say the cottage is
+situated?”
+
+“It is near Witley, it is on the direct Portsmouth road; a sweet little
+cottage with a garden, and fir woods stretching on either side.”
+
+“And how far is it from Portsmouth, my love?” Mrs. Baines asked eagerly.
+
+Florence divined the meaning of the question instantly.
+
+“Oh, I don’t know, Aunt Anne; after Witley comes Hindhead, and then
+Liphook, and then Petersfield, and then—then I don’t know. Liphook is
+the place where Mr. Wimple”—the old lady winked to herself—“has
+friends, and sometimes goes to stay.”
+
+“And how far is that?”
+
+“About six miles, I think—six or seven.”
+
+“Thank you, my love; and now, if you will allow me, I will retire. I
+must make preparations for my journey, which is indeed a delightful
+anticipation.”
+
+Florence never forgot the October morning on which she took Aunt Anne
+and the children to Witley. They went from Waterloo. She thought of
+Walter and the day they had spent at Windsor, and of that last one on
+which they had gone together to Southampton, and she had returned alone.
+“Oh, my darling,” she said to herself, “may you grow well and strong,
+and come back to us soon again.”
+
+Mrs. Baines, too, seemed full of memories. She looked up and down the
+platform; she stood for a moment dreamily by the bookstall before it
+occurred to her to buy a cheap illustrated paper to amuse Catty and
+Monty on the journey.
+
+“My love,” she said to Florence, with a little sigh, “a railway station
+is fraught with many recollections of meeting and parting——”
+
+“And meeting again,” said Florence, longingly thinking of Walter.
+
+“Yes, my love,” the old lady answered tenderly; “and may yours with your
+dear one be soon.”
+
+There were three miles to drive from Witley to the cottage. A long white
+road, with fir woods on either side. Gaps in the firs, and glimpses of
+the Surrey hills, distant and blue, of hanging woods and deep valleys.
+The firs came to an end; and there were cliffs of gravel full of the
+holes of sand-martins. More woods, then hedges of blackberry-bushes,
+bare enough now; gorse full of late bloom, heather faded and turning
+from russet to black. Here and there a solitary house, masses of oak and
+larch and fir, patches of sunshine, long wastes of shade; and the road
+going on and on.
+
+“Here we are at last,” Florence said, as they stopped before a red-brick
+cottage that stood only a few yards back from the road. On either side
+of it was a fir plantation. There was a gravel pathway round the house,
+but the other paths were covered with tan. Behind stretched a wilderness
+of garden almost entirely uncultivated. There was a little footway that
+wound through it in and out among beeches and larches and firs and oaks,
+and stopped at last on the ridge of a dip that could hardly be called a
+valley.
+
+“Sometimes,” said Florence, as they walked about, half an hour later,
+while the servants were busy within, “we go down the dip and up the
+other side, and so get over to Hindhead. It is nearer than going there
+by the road.”
+
+“Our house is over there,” the children said.
+
+“Their house,” explained Florence, “is a little, lonely, thatched shed,
+half a mile away. We don’t know who made it. It is in a lovely part on
+the other side of the dip, among the straggling trees. Perhaps some one
+tethered a cow in it once. The children call it their house now, because
+one day they had tea there. After I return next week we must try and
+walk across to it.”
+
+But the old lady’s eyes were turned towards the distance.
+
+“And the road in front of the house,” she asked, “where does that go
+to?”
+
+“It winds round the Devil’s Punch Bowl, and over Hindhead, and on
+through Liphook and Petersfield to Portsmouth.”
+
+Aunt Anne did not answer, she looked still more intently into the
+distance, and gave a long sigh.
+
+“It is most exhilarating to be out of London again, my dear Florence,”
+she said. “I sincerely trust it will prove beneficial to your dear ones.
+I was born in the country, and I hope that some day I shall die in it.
+London is most oppressive after a time.”
+
+“I like London,” Florence answered; “still it does now and then feel
+like a prison.”
+
+“And the rows and rows of houses are the prison bars, my love. May we
+enter the cottage?” she asked suddenly. She was evidently tired; she
+stooped, and looked older and more worn than usual.
+
+“Poor old dear,” Florence thought. “I hope she is not worrying about
+Madame Celestine’s bill, and that she will soon hear from Sir William
+Rammage. Then she will be happier.”
+
+It was a little house, simple inside as well as out, with tiny rooms,
+plainly furnished. The dining-room had been newly done up, with cretonne
+curtains and a dado, and a buttery-hatch in which Florence took a
+certain pride as something rather grand for so small a place. The
+drawing-room was old-fashioned; a stiff roomy sofa with hard flat
+cushions at one end; at the other a sweet jangling piano. There were
+corner cupboards with china bowls of pot-pourri on them; on either side
+of the fireplace a gaunt, high-backed easy-chair, and on the left of
+each chair an old-fashioned screen on which was worked a peacock. Aunt
+Anne stopped on the threshold.
+
+It seemed to Florence as if the room recognized the old lady, as if it
+had been waiting, knowing that she would come. There was something about
+it that said more plainly than any words could have said that the hands
+were still that had first arranged it, and many footsteps had gone out
+from its doorway that would never come in at it more.
+
+“It always depresses me,” Florence explained; “but it is just as we
+found it. We refurnished the dining-room, and sit there a good deal. It
+is more cheerful than this. Come upstairs”—and she led the way.
+
+The bedrooms were all small too, save one in front, that seemed to match
+the drawing-room. It looked like a room to die in: Florence thought so,
+as she entered it for the first time with Aunt Anne. A quaint four-post
+bedstead with dark chintz curtains, a worm-eaten bureau, a sampler
+worked in Berlin wool and framed in black cherry-wood hanging over the
+fireplace.
+
+“This is the best room,” she said, “and we keep it for visitors. There
+is a little one, meant to be a dressing-room, I suppose, leading out of
+it,” and she went to a bright little nook with a bed in it. “I always
+feel that the best bedroom and the drawing-room belong to a past world,
+and the rest of the house to the present one.”
+
+“It is like your life and mine, my darling; mine to the past and yours
+to the present.”
+
+“I think you ought to sleep in the best room, Aunt Anne.”
+
+“No, my love,” the old lady interrupted, “let me have this little one
+which is next it. When you require the other, if I am still with you, I
+can lock the door between. The best one is too grand for me; but
+sometimes while it is empty I will go in, if you have no objection, and
+look out at the fir trees and the road that stretches right and
+left——”
+
+“I like doing that,” Florence interrupted. “It always sets me
+thinking—the road from the city to the sea.”
+
+“From the city to the sea,” the old lady repeated; “from the voices to
+the silences.”
+
+“Aunt Anne, we mustn’t grow sentimental,” Florence began. There was the
+sound of a tinkling bell. It seemed to come at an opportune moment. “Oh,
+happy sound,” she laughed; “it means that our meal is ready. Catty,
+darling,” she called, “Monty, my son, roast chicken is waiting
+downstairs. Auntie and mummy are quite ready; come, dear babes”—and
+patter, patter, came the sound of the little feet, and together they all
+went down.
+
+An hour later the fly came to the door; it was time for Florence to
+start on her way back to town.
+
+“I shall be with you at latest on Tuesday. Perhaps, dear Aunt Anne, if
+you don’t mind taking care of the bad children so long, I may go on
+Saturday for a day or two to an old schoolfellow,” she said. “Then I
+should not be here till the middle of next week.”
+
+“Dear child, you do indeed put confidence in me,” Mrs. Baines answered
+quaintly.
+
+“And, Aunt Anne, I have ordered most things in, but the tradespeople
+come every day if there is anything more you want. What you order is, of
+course, put down, but here is some money for odds and ends. Four pounds,
+I think, will carry you through; and here is a little book in which to
+put down your expenses. I always keep a most careful account of what I
+spend; you don’t mind doing so either, do you?”
+
+“My love, anything you wish will be a pleasure to me.”
+
+“If you please, ma’am,” said Jane, entering, “the driver says you must
+start at once if you want to catch this train.”
+
+“Then good-bye, dear Aunt Anne; good-bye, dear dickie-birds; be happy
+together. You shall see me very soon again; send me a letter every other
+day;” and with many embraces Florence was allowed to get out of the
+door. But Aunt Anne and the children ran excitedly after her to the
+gate, and helped her into the little waggonette, and kissed their hands
+and waved their handkerchiefs as she drove off, and called “Good-bye,
+good-bye;” and so, watching them, Florence went along the white road
+towards the station.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+The days that followed were busy ones for Florence—busy in a domestic
+sense, so that the history of them does not concern us here. Mr. Fisher
+called one afternoon; by a strange coincidence it was while Ethel Dunlop
+was helping Florence with an inventory of china. Miss Dunlop readily
+promised to visit his mother, but she did not show any particular
+interest in the editor.
+
+“He has been so kind,” Florence said, “and don’t you think he is very
+agreeable?”
+
+“Oh yes; but you know, Florrie dear, he has a very square jaw.”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“It is a good thing he never married again; he would have been very
+obstinate.”
+
+“But why do you say never did?—as if he never would. He is only
+forty-odd.”
+
+“Only forty-odd!” laughed Ethel—“only a million. If a man is over
+eight-and-twenty he might as well be over eighty; it is mere modesty
+that he is not.”
+
+“Walter is over thirty, and just as fascinating as ever.”
+
+Florence was rather indignant.
+
+“Ah, yes, but he is married, and married men take such a long time to
+grow old. By the way, Mr. Fisher said something about a theatre-party,
+when his mother is here. Do you think I might ask him to invite George
+Dighton as well? George is very fond of theatres.”
+
+Before Florence could reply, a carriage stopped at the door; it looked
+familiar, it reminded her of Aunt Anne in her triumphant days. But a
+strange lady descended from it now, and was shown upstairs to the
+drawing-room, in which Aunt Anne had sat and related her woes and known
+her triumphs.
+
+“Mrs. North, ma’am,” said the servant; and then Florence understood.
+
+She left Ethel in the dining-room with the inventory, and went up to
+receive the visitor. Mrs. North was as pretty as Aunt Anne had declared
+her to be; a mere girl to look at, tall and slim. Florence thought it
+was quite natural that her husband should like her to have a chaperon.
+
+“I came to see Mrs. Baines,” she said, coming forward in a shy,
+hesitating manner, “but hearing that she was in the country I ventured
+to ask for you. What have you done with the dear old lady?” and she
+laughed nervously. Florence looked at her, fascinated by her beauty; by
+her clothes, that seemed to be a mixture of fur and lace and perfume, by
+the soft brown hair that curled low on her forehead, by the sweet blue
+eyes—by every bit of her. “She told you, probably, that she was very
+angry when she left me; I know it has all been very dreadful in her
+eyes; but she was always kind to me, and I thought by this time that she
+would, perhaps, forgive me and make it up; so I came.” She said it with
+a penitent air.
+
+“I am afraid she is very angry,” Florence answered, laughing, for the
+pretty woman before her did not seem like a stranger. “Do you want her
+again?”
+
+“Oh no!” and Mrs. North shook her head emphatically. “She would not
+come, I know; besides, it would be impossible: she led us a terrible
+life. But we loved her, and wanted just to make it up with her again. I
+think we could have put up with anything if she had not quarrelled with
+the servants.”
+
+“I was afraid it was that,” Florence answered.
+
+“Oh yes!” sighed Mrs. North; “she was horribly autocratic with
+them—‘autocratic’ is her own word. At last she quarrelled with Hetty,
+and wanted me to send her away—to send away Hetty, who is a born
+treasure, and cooks like an angel. It would have broken our hearts—a
+woman who sends up a dinner like a charm; we couldn’t let her go, it was
+impossible, and the old lady fled.”
+
+“I am very sorry. You were so kind to her; she always said that.”
+
+“I loved her,” Mrs. North answered, with a little sigh. “She was so like
+my dear dead mother grown old—that was the secret of her attraction for
+us; but she ruled us with a rod of iron that grew more and more
+unyielding every day. And yet she was very kind. She was always giving
+us presents.”
+
+“Oh yes,” Florence said, in a despairing voice.
+
+“We have had the bills for them since,” Mrs. North went on, with a
+comical air. “She used to say that I was very frivolous,” she added
+suddenly. “She thought it wicked of me to enjoy life while my husband
+was away. But he is old, Mrs. Hibbert; one may have an affection for an
+old husband, but one can’t be in love with him.”
+
+“If she were very nice she would not have made that remark to me, whom
+she never saw before,” Florence thought, beginning to dislike her a
+little.
+
+“Of course I am sorry he is away,” Mrs. North said, as if she perfectly
+understood the impression she was making; “he is coming back now. He has
+telegraphed suddenly.” There was something like fright in her voice as
+she said it. “I did not expect him; but he is coming almost directly. I
+suppose I ought to be very glad,” she added, with a ghostly smile. “I
+am, of course; but I am surprised at his sudden return. I took Mrs.
+Baines because he wished me to have an old lady about me; but I wanted
+my own way. I liked her to have hers when it amused me to see her have
+it, when it didn’t I wanted to have mine.” Mrs. North’s whole expression
+had altered again, and she looked up with two blue eyes that fascinated
+and repelled, and laughed a merry, uncontrolled laugh like a child’s.
+“Oh, she was very droll.”
+
+“Perhaps it is very rude of me to say it,” Florence said primly, for
+deep in her heart there was a great deal of primness, “but I can
+understand Mr. North wishing you to have a chaperon; you are very young
+to be left alone.”
+
+“Oh yes, and very careless, I know that. And Mrs. Baines used to provoke
+me into shocking her. I could shock her so easily, and did—don’t you
+know how one loves power for good or ill over a human being?”
+
+“No, I don’t,” Florence answered, a little stiffly.
+
+“I do; I love it best of all things in the world, whether it leads me
+uphill or downhill. But I am intruding,” for she saw a set cold look
+coming over Florence’s face. “Let me tell you why I asked for you. I
+have been so embarrassed about Mrs. Baines. She gave us presents, and
+she bought all sorts of things: but she didn’t pay for them. These bills
+came, and the people wanted their money.” She pulled a little roll out
+of her pocket. “She probably forgot them, and I thought it would be
+better to pay them, especially as I owed her some money when she left
+which she would not take;” and she laughed out again, but there was the
+odd sound like fright in her voice. “They are from florists and all
+sorts of people.”
+
+Florence looked over the bills quickly and almost guiltily. There were
+the pots of fern and the flowers that had been sent to her and the
+children after Aunt Anne’s first visit; and there were the roses with
+which she had triumphantly entered on the night of the dinner-party.
+“Oh, poor old lady!” she exclaimed sadly.
+
+“They are paid,” Mrs. North said. “Don’t be distressed about them and
+many others—lace-handkerchiefs, shoes, all sorts of things. Don’t tell
+her. She would think I had taken a liberty or committed a solecism,” and
+she made a little wry face. “But what I really wanted to see you about,
+Mrs. Hibbert, was Madame Celestine’s bill. I am afraid I can’t manage
+that all by myself; it is too long. Madame Celestine, of course, is
+sweetly miserable, for she thinks the old lady has vanished into space.
+She came to me yesterday. It seems that she went to you a few days ago,
+but you were out, and she was glad of it when she discovered that Mrs.
+Baines was your aunt, for she doesn’t want to offend you. She came to me
+again to-day. She is very miserable. I believe it will turn her hair
+grey. Oh, it is too funny.”
+
+“I don’t think it is at all funny.”
+
+“But indeed it is, for I don’t believe Mrs. Baines will ever be able to
+pay the fifteen pounds; in fact, we know that she won’t. Probably it is
+worrying her a good deal. I have been wondering whether something could
+not be done; if you and I, for instance, were to arrange it between us.”
+
+“You are very good, Mrs. North,” Florence said, against her will.
+
+“Oh no, but I am sorry for her, and it vexes and worries me to think
+that she is annoyed. I want to get rid of that vexation, and will pay
+something to do so. That is what most generosity comes to,” Mrs. North
+went on, with mock cynicism, “the purchase of a pleasant feeling for
+one’s self, or the getting rid of an unpleasant one. There is little
+really unselfish goodness in the world, and when one meets it, as a
+rule, it isn’t charming, it isn’t fascinating; one feels that one would
+rather be without it.” She rose as she spoke. “Well,” she asked, “what
+shall we do? I’ll pay one half of the old lady’s bill if you will pay
+the other half.”
+
+“You are very good,” Florence repeated, wonderingly.
+
+“No; but I expect you are,” and Mrs. North showed two rows of little
+white teeth. “I should think you are a model of virtue,” she added, with
+an almost childlike air of frankness, which made it impossible to take
+offence at her words, though Florence felt that at best she was only
+regarded as the possessor of a quality that just before her visitor had
+denounced.
+
+“Why,” she asked, smiling against her will, “do I look like a model of
+virtue?”
+
+“Oh yes, you are almost Madonna-like,” Mrs. North said, with a sigh. “I
+wish I were like you, only—only I think I should get very tired of
+myself. I get tired now; till a reaction comes. But a reaction to the
+purely good must be tame at best.”
+
+“You are very clever,” Florence said, almost without knowing it, and
+shrinking from her again.
+
+“How do you know? My husband says I am clever, but I don’t think I am. I
+am alive. So many people are merely in the preface to being alive, and
+never get any farther. I am well in the middle of the book; and I am
+eager, so eager, that sometimes I long to eat up the whole world in
+order to know the taste of everything. Do you understand that?”
+
+“No. I am content with my slice.”
+
+“Ah, that is it. I am not content with mine. You have your husband and
+children.”
+
+“But you have a husband.”
+
+“Yes, I have a husband too; a funny old husband, a long way off, who is
+rapidly—too rapidly, I fear—coming nearer”—Florence hated her—“and
+no children. I amused myself with the old lady—Mrs. Baines—till she
+fled from me. Now I try other things. Good-bye.”
+
+“Good-bye,” Florence said.
+
+As Mrs. North was going out of the door she turned and asked, “Have you
+many friends—women friends?”
+
+“Yes, a great many, thank you,” Mrs. Hibbert said, with a little haughty
+inclination of the head. The haughtiness seemed to amuse Mrs. North, for
+the merry look came over her face again, but only for a moment.
+
+“I thought you had,” she answered. “I have none; I don’t want them.
+Good-bye.”
+
+It was nearly dark, and the one servant left to help Florence get the
+house ready had neglected to light the lamp on the staircase. Mrs. North
+groped her way down.
+
+“I want to tell you something,” she said. “You said just now that I was
+clever. I don’t think I am, but I can divine people’s thoughts pretty
+easily. You are very good, I think; but consider this, your goodness is
+of no use if you are not good to others; good to women especially. The
+good of goodness is that you can wrap others inside it. It ought to be
+like a big cloak that you have on a cold night, while the shivering
+person next to you has none. If you don’t make use of your goodness,”
+she went on with a catch in her breath, “what is the good of it?—I seem
+to be talking paradoxes—you prove how beautiful it is, perhaps, but
+that is all; you make it like the swan that sings its own death-song.
+One listens and watches, and goes away to think of things more
+comprehensible, and to do them. Good-bye, Mrs. Hibbert,” she said
+gently, and almost as if she were afraid she held out her hand. Florence
+took it, a little wonder-struck. “You are like a Madonna, very like one,
+as I said just now; but though you are older than I am, I think I know
+more about some things than you do—good and bad. Madonnas never know
+the world very well. Give my love to the old lady, and say I hope she
+has forgiven me. I am going to Monte Carlo the day after to-morrow, only
+for three days, to brace myself up for my husband’s return; tell her
+that too. It will shock her. Say that I should like to have taken her,”
+and with a last little laugh she went out—into the darkness, it seemed
+to Florence.
+
+But the next minute there were two flashing lamps before the house;
+there was the banging of a door, and Mrs. North was driven away.
+
+Florence went slowly back to the dining-room and the inventory. Ethel
+Dunlop had gone. She was glad of it, for she wanted to think over her
+strange visitor.
+
+“I don’t understand her,” she said to herself. “She is unlike any one I
+ever met; she fascinated and repelled me. I felt as if I wanted to kiss
+her, and yet the touch of her hand made me shiver.” Then she thought of
+Madame Celestine’s bill, and of Aunt Anne, and wished that the dress had
+not been bought, especially for the dinner-party; it made her feel as if
+she had been the unwitting cause of Mrs. Baines’s extravagance. She
+looked into the fire, and remembered the events of that wonderful
+evening, and thought of Walter away, and the bills at home that would
+have to be paid at Christmas. And she thought of her winter cloak that
+was three years old and shabby, and of the things she had longed to buy
+for the children. Above all she thought of the visions she had had of
+saving little by little, and putting her savings away in a very safe
+place, until she had a cosy sum with which some day to give Walter a
+pleasant surprise, and suggest that they should go off together for “a
+little spree,” as he would call it, to Paris or Switzerland. The fire
+burnt low, the red coals grew dull, the light from the street lamp
+outside seemed to come searching into the room as though it were looking
+for some one who was not there. She thought of Walter’s letter safe in
+her pocket. He himself was probably at Malta by this time—getting
+stronger and stronger in the sunshine. Dear Walter, how generous he was;
+he too was a little bit reckless sometimes. She wondered if he inherited
+this last quality from Aunt Anne. She thought of her children at Witley
+having tea, most likely with cakes and jam in abundance; and of Aunt
+Anne in her glory. She wondered if Mr. Wimple had turned up. “Poor Aunt
+Anne,” she sighed, and there was a long bill in her mind. Presently she
+rose, lighted a candle, drew down the blind—shutting out the glare from
+the street lamp—and going slowly to the writing-table in the corner,
+unlocked it, opened a little secret drawer, and looked in. There were
+three five-pound notes there—the remainder of her mother’s gift. “I
+wonder if Mrs. North had Madame Celestine’s bill,” she thought. “But it
+doesn’t matter; she said it was fifteen pounds. I can send her the
+amount.”
+
+A couple of hours later, while she was in the very act of putting a
+cheque into an envelope, a note arrived. It had been left by hand; it
+was scented with violets, and ran thus:—
+
+ “DEAR MRS. HIBBERT,
+
+ “I have ventured to pay Madame Celestine. I determined to do so
+ while I was with you just now; but was afraid to tell you, that
+ was why I changed the conversation so abruptly. Please don’t let
+ the old lady know that it is my doing, for she might be angry;
+ but she was very good to me, and I am glad to do this for her.
+ Forgive all the strange things I said this afternoon, and don’t
+ trouble to acknowledge this.
+
+ “Yours sincerely,
+ “E. NORTH.
+
+ “P.S.—I enclose receipt.”
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+
+
+It was not till Tuesday afternoon in the week following that Florence
+went back to Witley.
+
+Mrs. Burnett was at the station, sitting in a little governess-cart
+drawn by a donkey.
+
+“I am waiting for my husband,” she explained; “he generally comes by
+this train, and I drive him home, donkey permitting. It is a dear little
+donkey, and we are so fond of him.”
+
+“A dear little cart too,” Florence answered as she stood by its side,
+talking. “I have been hoping that you would come and see me, Mrs.
+Burnett; we are going to be here for six or seven weeks.”
+
+“I know, Mr. Fisher told me,” Mrs. Burnett replied in her sweet and
+rather intense voice, “and we are so sorry that your visit takes place
+just while we are away. I am going to Devonshire to-morrow morning to
+stay with my mother while my husband goes to Scotland. I am so-o
+sorry,”—she had a way of drawing out her words as if to give them
+emphasis. Florence liked to look at Mrs. Burnett’s eyes while she spoke,
+they always seemed to attest that every word she said expressed the
+absolute meaning and intention in her mind. Her listeners gained a sense
+of restfulness which comes from being in the presence of a real person
+from whom they might take bitter or sweet, certain of its reality. “I
+hoped from Mr. Fisher’s note that you had arrived before, and ventured
+to call on Saturday.”
+
+“Did you see Mrs. Baines?”
+
+“Only for a moment. What a charming old lady—such old-fashioned
+courtesy; it was like being sent back fifty years to listen to her. She
+wanted me to stay, but I refused, for she was just setting off for a
+drive with your children and her nephew.”
+
+“Setting off for a drive?” Florence repeated.
+
+“Yes, she had Steggall’s waggonette from the Blue Lion, and was going to
+Guildford shopping. She said she meant to buy some surprises for you.”
+
+“Oh,” said Florence meekly, and her heart sank. “Did you say that she
+had a nephew with her?”
+
+“Well, I supposed it was a nephew, unless she has a son—a tall fair
+young man, who looks delicate, and walks as if his legs were not very
+strong.”
+
+“Oh yes, I know,” Florence answered, as she signed to the fly she had
+engaged to come nearer to the donkey-cart, so that she might not waste a
+minute. “He is a friend; he is no relation. Good-bye, Mrs. Burnett; I am
+sorry you are going away. I suppose you are waiting for the fast train,
+as Mr. Burnett did not come by the last one?”
+
+“Yes, it is due in twenty minutes. Good-bye; so sorry not to have been
+at home during your visit. Oh, Mrs. Hibbert, do you think your children
+would like to have the use of this cart while we are away? The donkey is
+so gentle and so good.”
+
+“It is too kind of you to think of it,” Florence began, beaming; for she
+thought of how Catty and Monty would shout for joy at having a
+donkey-cart to potter about in. And in her secret soul, though she felt
+it would not do to betray it, she was nearly as much pleased as they
+would be: she often had an inward struggle for the dignity with which
+she felt her matronly position should be supported.
+
+“It will be such a pleasure to lend it them. It’s a dear little donkey,
+so good and gentle. It doesn’t go well,” Mrs. Burnett added, in an
+apologetic tone; “but it’s a dear little donkey, and does everything
+else well.” And over this remark Florence pondered much as she drove
+away.
+
+When she came in sight of the cottage she wondered if she had been
+absent more than half an hour, or at all. She had left it in the
+afternoon more than a week ago, and the children had stood out in the
+roadway dancing and waving their handkerchiefs till she could see them
+no longer. As she came back, they stood there dancing and waving their
+handkerchiefs again. They shouted for joy as she got out of the fly.
+
+“Welcome, my darling, welcome,” cried Aunt Anne, who was behind them, by
+the gate. “These dear children and I have been watching more than an
+hour for you. Enter your house, my love. It is indeed a privilege to be
+here to receive you.”
+
+“It is a privilege to come back to so warm a welcome,” Florence said
+when, having embraced her children and Aunt Anne, she was allowed to
+enter the cottage; “and how comfortable and nice it looks!” she
+exclaimed, as she stopped by the dining-room doorway. There was a wood
+fire blazing, and the tea set out, and the water in the silver kettle
+singing, and hot cakes in a covered dish in the fender. Flowers set off
+the table, and in the pots about the room were boughs of autumn leaves.
+It was all cosy and inviting, and wore a festival air—festival that
+Florence knew had been made for her. She turned and kissed the old lady
+gratefully. “Dear Aunt Anne,” she said, and that was thanks enough.
+
+“I thought, my love, that you would like to partake of tea with your
+dear children on your return. Your later evening meal I have arranged to
+be a very slender one.”
+
+“But you are too good, Aunt Anne.”
+
+“It is you who have been too good to me,” the old lady answered
+tenderly. “And now, my darling, let me take you up to your chamber; it
+is ready for your reception.”
+
+There was a triumphant note in her voice that prepared Florence for the
+fire in the grate and the bouquet on the dressing-table, and all the
+little arrangements that Mrs. Baines had devised to add to her comfort.
+It was very cheery, she thought when she was alone; Aunt Anne had a
+knack of making one enjoy a home-coming. She sat for a few moments over
+the fire, and pulled out Walter’s letter and read it and kissed it and
+put it back into her pocket. Then she looked round the cosy room again,
+and noticed a little packet on the corner of the drawers. Aunt Anne must
+have placed it there when she went out of the room. On it was written,
+_For my darling Florence_. “Oh,” she said, “it’s another present,” and
+regretfully her fingers undid the string. Inside the white paper was a
+little pin-cushion covered with blue velvet, and having round it a rim
+of silver filigree work. Attached to it was a little note which ran
+thus—
+
+ “MY DARLING,—Accept this token of my love and gratitude. I feel
+ that there is no way in which I can better prove how much I
+ appreciated your generous gift to me than by spending a portion
+ of it on a token of my affection for you. I trust you will
+ honour my little gift with your acceptance.”
+
+“Oh,” said Florence again, in despair, “I wonder if she has once thought
+of Madame Celestine’s bill or the others. What is the good of giving her
+money if one gets it back in the shape of presents?”
+
+But she could not bear to treat the old lady’s generosity with coldness.
+So Aunt Anne was thanked, and the cushion admired, and a happy little
+party gathered round the tea-table.
+
+“And have you had any visitors except Mrs. Burnett?” Florence asked
+artfully, when the meal was over.
+
+“We have had Mr. Wimple,” Aunt Anne said; “he is far from well, my love,
+and is trying to recruit at Liphook.”
+
+“Oh yes, he has friends there.”
+
+“No, my love, not now. He is at present lodging with an old retainer.”
+
+“And have you been to see him?”
+
+“No, dear Florence, he preferred that I should not do so.”
+
+“We took him lots of rides,” said Monty.
+
+“And Aunt Anne gave him a present,” said Catty, “and he put it into his
+pocket and never looked at it. He didn’t know what was inside the
+paper,—we did, didn’t we, auntie?”
+
+“My dear children,” Mrs. Baines said, “if your mother will give you
+permission you had better go into the nursery. It is past your hour for
+bed, my dear ones.”
+
+The children looked a little dismayed, but did not dream of disobeying.
+
+“Was it wrong to say you gave him a present?” asked Catty, with the odd
+perception of childhood, as she put up her face to be kissed.
+
+“My dears,” answered Aunt Anne, sweetly, “in my day children did not
+talk with their elders unless they were invited to do so.”
+
+“We didn’t know,” said Monty, ruefully.
+
+“No, my darlings, I know that. Bless you,” continued the old lady
+sweetly; “and good night, my dear ones. Under your pillows you will each
+find a chocolate which auntie placed there for you this morning.”
+
+“And did you enjoy the drives?” Florence asked, when the children had
+gone.
+
+“Yes, my dear, thank you.” Mrs. Baines was silent for a moment. Then she
+raised her head, and, as if she had gathered courage, went on in a
+slightly louder tone, “I thought it would do your dear children good,
+Florence, to see the country, and, therefore, I ventured to take them
+some drives. Occasionally Mr. Wimple was so kind as to accompany us.”
+
+“And I hope they did him good, too,” Florence said, trying not to betray
+her amusement.
+
+“Yes, my love, I trust they did.”
+
+Then Florence remembered the bills paid by Mrs. North. They were all in
+a sealed envelope in her pocket, but she could not gather the courage to
+deliver it. She wanted to ask after Sir William Rammage, too, to know
+whether he had written yet and settled the question of an allowance; but
+for that, also, her courage failed—the old lady always resented
+questions. Then she remembered Mr. Fisher’s remark about Alfred Wimple’s
+writing, and thought it would please Aunt Anne to hear of it.
+
+“Mr. Fisher says that Mr. Wimple writes very well; he has been doing
+some reviewing for the paper.”
+
+Mrs. Baines winked with satisfaction.
+
+“I am quite sure he writes well, my love,” she answered quickly; “he is
+a most accomplished man.”
+
+“And is there no more news to relate, Aunt Anne?” Florence asked; “no
+more doings during my absence?”
+
+“No, my love, I think not.”
+
+“Then I have some news for you. I hope it won’t vex you, for I know you
+were very angry with her. Mrs. North has been to see me. She really came
+to see you, but when she found you had gone out of town she asked for
+me.”
+
+Mrs. Baines looked almost alarmed and very angry.
+
+“It was most presumptuous of her,” she exclaimed.
+
+“But I don’t understand; why should it be presumptuous?” Florence asked,
+astonished.
+
+“She had no right; she had not my permission.”
+
+“But, dear Aunt Anne, she came to see you; and why should it be
+presumptuous?”
+
+“I should prefer not to discuss the subject. I have expressed my
+opinion, and that is sufficient,” Mrs. Baines said haughtily. “I repeat
+that it was most presumptuous of her, under the circumstances, to call
+upon you—a liberty, a—Florence,” she went on, with sudden alarm in her
+voice, “I hope you did not promise to go and see her.”
+
+“She never asked me.”
+
+“I should have put my veto on it if she had. My dear, you must trust to
+my mature judgment in some things. I know the world better than you do.
+Believe me, I have my reasons for every word I say. I treated Mrs. North
+with the greatest clemency and consideration, though she frequently
+forgot not only what was due to herself, but what was due to me. I was
+blind while I stayed with her, Florence, and did not see many things
+that I do now; for I am not prone to think ill of any one. You know
+that, my love, do you not? I must beg that you will never, on any
+account, mention Mrs. North’s name again in my presence.”
+
+Florence felt as if the envelope would burn a hole in her pocket. It was
+impossible to deliver it now. Perhaps, after all, the wisest way would
+be to say nothing about it. She had an idea that Aunt Anne frequently
+forgot all about her bills as soon as she had come to the conclusion
+that it was impossible to make them any longer. She searched about in
+her mind for some other topic of conversation. It was often difficult to
+find a subject to converse upon with Aunt Anne, for the old lady never
+suggested one herself, and except of past experiences and old-world
+recollections she seldom seemed sufficiently interested to talk much.
+Happily as it seemed for the moment, Jane entered with the housekeeping
+books. They were always brought in on a Tuesday, and paid on a Wednesday
+morning. Florence was very particular on this point. They usually gave
+her a bad half-hour, for she could never contrive to keep them down as
+much as she desired. That week, however, she reflected that they could
+not be very bad; besides, she had left four pounds with Aunt Anne, which
+must be almost intact, unless the drives had been paid out of them; but
+even then there would be plenty left to more than cover the books. The
+prospect of getting through her accounts easily cheered her, and she
+thought that she would set about them at once.
+
+“They are heavy this week, ma’am,” Jane said, not without a trace of
+triumph in her voice, “on account of the chickens and the cream and the
+company.”
+
+“The chickens and the cream and the company,” laughed Florence, as Jane
+went out of the room; “it sounds like a line from a comic poem. What
+does she mean?”
+
+Aunt Anne winked as if to give herself nerve.
+
+“Jane was very impertinent to me one day, my love, because I felt sure
+that after the fatigue of the journey from town, and the change of air,
+you would prefer that your delicately-nurtured children should eat
+chicken and have cream with their second course every day for dinner,
+instead of roast mutton and milk pudding. White meat is infinitely
+preferable for delicate digestions.”
+
+“Yes, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence said sweetly, and she felt a sudden
+dread of opening the books, “you are quite right.” But what did a few
+chickens and a little cream matter in comparison to the poor old lady’s
+feelings? she thought. “And if you had company too, of course you wanted
+to have a smarter table. Whom have you been entertaining, you dear and
+dissipated Aunt Anne?”
+
+“My dear Florence, I have entertained no one but Mr. Wimple. He is a
+friend of yours and your dear Walter’s, and I tried to prove to him that
+I was worthy to belong to you, by showing him such hospitality as lay in
+my power.”
+
+“Yes, dear, and it was very kind of you,” Florence said tenderly. After
+all, why should Aunt Anne be worried through that horrid Mr. Wimple?
+Walter would have invited him if he had found him in the neighbourhood,
+and why should not Aunt Anne do so in peace, if it pleased her? Of
+course, now that she herself had returned she could do as she liked
+about him. She looked at the books. They were not so very bad, after
+all.
+
+“Shall we make up our accounts now, and get it over, or in the morning?”
+she asked.
+
+“I should prefer the morning,” Aunt Anne said meekly. “To-night, love,
+you must be tired, and I am also fatigued with the excitement consequent
+on seeing you.”
+
+“What a shame, poor Aunt Anne!” Florence said brightly. “I have worn you
+out.”
+
+“Only with happiness, my dear,” said the old lady, fondly.
+
+Florence put away her books, and stroked Aunt Anne’s shoulder as she
+passed.
+
+“We will do our work in the morning,” she said.
+
+“Yes, my darling, in the morning. In the afternoon I may possibly have
+an engagement.”
+
+Florence longed to ask where, but a certain stiffness in Aunt Anne’s
+manner made it impossible.
+
+“Have you any news from London?” she ventured to inquire, for she was
+longing to know about Sir William Rammage.
+
+“No, my love, I have no news from London,” Mrs. Baines answered, and she
+evidently meant to say no more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the morning much time was taken up with the arrival of the
+donkey-cart and the delight of the children. A great basket of apples
+was inside the cart, and on the top was a little note explaining that
+they were from Mrs. Burnett’s garden, and she hoped the children might
+like them. Aunt Anne was as much pleased with the donkey as the rest of
+the party.
+
+“There is a rusticity in the appearance of a donkey,” she explained,
+“that always gives me a sense of being really in the country.”
+
+“Not when you meet him in London, I fear,” Florence said.
+
+Mrs. Baines considered for a moment. She seemed to resent the
+observation.
+
+“No, my love, of course not in London; I am speaking of the country,”
+she said reprovingly; then she added, “I should enjoy a little drive
+occasionally myself, if you would trust me with the cart, my love. It
+would remind me of days gone by. I sometimes drove one at Rottingdean.
+You are very fortunate, my dear one, in having so few sorrows to
+remember—for I trust you have few. It always saddens me to think of the
+past. Let us go indoors.”
+
+Florence put her arm through the old lady’s, and led her in. Then she
+thought of the books again; it would be a good time to make them up.
+
+“I am always particular about my accounts, you know, Aunt Anne,” she
+said in an apologetic tone.
+
+“Yes, my love,” answered the old lady; “I admire you for it.”
+
+Florence looked at the figures; they made her wince a little, but she
+said nothing.
+
+“The bill for the waggonettes, Aunt Anne?” she asked.
+
+“That belongs to me, my dear.”
+
+“Oh no, I can’t allow that.”
+
+“My love, I made an arrangement with Mr. Steggall, and that is
+sufficient.”
+
+Again Aunt Anne’s tone forbade any discussion. Florence felt sure that
+one day Steggall’s bill would arrive, but she said nothing.
+
+“Do you mind giving me the change out of the four pounds?” she asked,
+very gently. Mrs. Baines went slowly over to her work-basket, and took
+up a little dress she was making for Catty.
+
+“Not now, my love; I want to get on with my work.”
+
+“Perhaps I could get your account-book, Aunt Anne; then I should know
+how much there is left.”
+
+Mrs. Baines began to sew.
+
+“I did not put anything down in the account-book,” she said doggedly. “I
+considered, dear Florence, that my time was too valuable. It always
+seems to me great nonsense to put down every penny one spends.”
+
+“It is a check on one’s self.”
+
+“I do not wish to keep a check on myself,” Mrs. Baines answered,
+scornfully.
+
+“Could you tell me how much you have left?” Florence asked meekly. “I
+hope there may be enough to help us through the week.”
+
+She did not like to say that she thought it must be nearly untouched.
+
+“Florence,” burst out the old lady, with the injured tone in her voice
+that Florence knew so well, “I have but ten shillings left in the world.
+If you wish to take it from me you must do so; but it is not like you,
+my darling.”
+
+“Oh, Aunt Anne,” Florence began, bewildered, “I am sure you—— I did
+not mean—I did not know——”
+
+“I’m sure you did not,” Mrs. Baines said, with a sense of injury still
+in her voice, “but there is nothing so terrible or so galling to a
+sensitive nature like mine—and your dear Walter’s takes after it,
+Florence, I am sure—as to be worried about money matters.”
+
+“But, indeed, Aunt Anne, I only thought that—that——” but here she
+stopped, not knowing how to go on for a moment; “I thought that perhaps
+the unpaid books represented the household expenses,” she added at last.
+Really, something must be done to make the old lady careful, she
+thought.
+
+“My love,” Mrs. Baines said, with an impatient shake of her head, “I
+cannot go into the details of every little expense. I am not equal to
+it. Everything you do not find charged in the books has either been
+paid, or will be charged, by my request, to my private account, and you
+must leave it so. I really cannot submit to being made to give an
+explanation of every penny I spend. I am not a child, Florence. I am not
+an inexperienced girl; I had kept house before, my love—if you will
+allow me to say so—before you were born.” The treble note had come into
+Aunt Anne’s voice; it was a sign that tears were not far off.
+
+But Florence could not feel as compassionate as she desired. She smarted
+under the loss of her money; there was nothing at all to represent it,
+and Aunt Anne did not seem to have the least idea that it had been of
+any consequence. Florence got up and put the books away, looking across
+at Aunt Anne while she did so. The expression on the old lady’s face was
+set, and almost angry; her lips were firmly closed. She was working at
+Catty’s little dress. She was a beautiful needle-woman, and embroidered
+cuffs and collars on the children’s things that were a source of joyful
+pride to their mother. But even the host of stitches would not pay the
+week’s bills. If only Aunt Anne could be made to understand the value of
+money, Florence thought—but it was no use thinking, for her foolish,
+housekeeping heart was full of domestic woe. She went upstairs to her
+own room, and, like a real woman who makes no pretence to
+strong-mindedness, sat down to cry.
+
+“If Walter were only back,” she sobbed, as she rubbed her tearful face
+against the cushions on the back of the basket-chair by the fireside.
+“If he were here I should not mind, I might even laugh then. But after I
+have tried and tried so hard to save and to spend so little, it is hard,
+and I don’t know what to do.” She pulled out Walter’s letter and read it
+again by way of getting a little comfort, and as she did so, felt the
+envelope containing the receipts of the bills Mrs. North had paid. She
+did not believe that Aunt Anne cared whether they were paid or not paid.
+She always seemed to think that the classes, who were what she pleased
+to consider beneath her, were invented simply for her use and
+convenience, and that protest in any shape on their part was mere
+impertinence.
+
+The day dragged by. The children prevented the early dinner from being
+as awkward as it might have been. Mrs. Baines was cold and courteous.
+Florence had no words to say. She would make it up with the old lady in
+the evening, when they were alone, she thought. Of course she would have
+to make it up. Meanwhile, she would go for a long walk, it would do her
+good. She could think things over quietly, as she tramped along a lonely
+road between the hedges of faded gorse and heather. But it was late in
+the afternoon before she had energy enough to start. On her way out, she
+put her head in at the dining-room door. Mrs. Baines was there with the
+morning paper, which had just come. She was evidently excited and
+agitated, and held the paper in one hand while she looked out towards
+the garden. But she seemed to have forgotten all the unpleasantness of
+the morning when she spoke.
+
+“My love, are you going out?” she asked.
+
+“I thought you had an engagement, Aunt Anne, and would not want me.”
+
+“That is true, my dear, and I shall be glad to be alone for a little
+while, if you will forgive me for saying it. There is an announcement in
+the paper that gives me the deepest pain, Florence. Sir William Rammage
+is ill again—he is confined to his room.”
+
+“Oh, poor Aunt Anne!”
+
+“I must write to him instantly. I felt sure there was some good reason
+for his not having told me his decision in regard to the allowance.”
+Then, as if she had suddenly remembered the little scrimmage of the
+morning, she went on quickly, “My love, give me a kiss. Do not think
+that I am angry with you. I never could be that; but it is unpleasant at
+my time of life to be made to give an exact account of money. You will
+remember that, won’t you, dear? I should never expect it from you. If I
+had hundreds and hundreds a year I would share them with you and your
+darlings, and I would ask you for no accounts, dear Florence. I should
+think that the money was as much yours as mine. You know it, don’t you,
+my love?”
+
+“Yes, dear, I think I do,” Florence answered, and kissed the old lady
+affectionately, thinking that perhaps, after all, she had made rather
+too much fuss.
+
+“Then let us forget about it, my darling,” Mrs. Baines said, with the
+gracious smile that always had its influence; “I could never remember
+anything long of you, but your kindness and hospitality. Believe me, I
+am quite sure that you did not mean to wound me this morning. It was
+your zealous care of dear Walter’s interests that caused you for a
+moment to forget what was due to me. I quite understand, my darling. Now
+go for your walk, and be assured that Aunt Anne loves you.”
+
+And Florence was dismissed, feeling as the children had felt the evening
+before when they had been sent to bed and told of the chocolate under
+their pillows.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+The grey sky and the dim trees, the black hedges and the absolute
+stillness; all these proved excellent comforters to Florence. They made
+her philosophical and almost smiling again. It was only when an empty
+waggonette of Steggall’s passed her that she remembered the vexations of
+the morning. “Poor old lady,” she said to herself with almost a laugh,
+“in future she must not be trusted with money, that is all. If she only
+would not scold me and treat me like a child, I should not mind it so
+much. Of course when Walter does it, I like it; but I don’t like it from
+Aunt Anne.”
+
+She had walked a long way. She was getting tired. The messengers of
+night were abroad, the stray breezes, the dark flecked clouds, the
+shadows loitering by the trees, the strange little sounds among the
+hedges by the wayside. Far off, beyond the wood, she heard a clock
+belonging to a big house strike six. It was time to hurry home. If she
+walked the two miles between herself and the cottage quickly, she would
+be in by half-past six. At seven, after the children had gone to bed,
+she and Aunt Anne were to sit down to a little evening meal they called
+supper. They would be very cosy that night; they would linger over their
+food, and Aunt Anne should talk of bygone days, and the quaint old world
+that always seemed to be just behind her.
+
+It was rather dull in the country, Florence thought. In the summer, of
+course, the outdoor life made it delightful, but now there was so little
+to fill the days, only the children and the housekeeping, wonderings
+about Walter, and the writing of the bit of diary on very thin paper
+which she had promised to post out to him every week. She was not a
+woman who made an intellectual atmosphere for herself. She lived her
+life through her husband, read the same books, and drew her conclusions
+by the light of his. Now that he had gone the world seemed half empty,
+and very dull and tame. There was no glamour over anything. Perhaps it
+was this that had helped to make her a little unkind to Aunt Anne, for
+gradually she was persuading herself that she had been unkind. She
+wished Aunt Anne had an income of her own, and the home for which she
+had said she longed. It would be so much better for everybody.
+
+When she was nearly home, a sudden dread seized her lest Mr. Wimple
+should be there, but this, she reflected, was not likely. It was long
+past calling-time, and Aunt Anne was too great a stickler for etiquette
+to allow him to take a liberty, as she would call it. So Florence
+quickened her steps, and entered her home bravely to the sound of the
+children’s voices upstairs singing as they went to bed. A fire was
+blazing in the dining-room, and everything looked comfortable, just as
+it had the night before. But there was no sign of Aunt Anne. Probably
+she was upstairs “getting ready,” for a lace cap and bit of white at her
+throat and an extra formal, though not less affectionate, manner than
+usual Aunt Anne seemed to think a fitting accompaniment to the evening
+meal. Florence looked round the dining-room with a little pride of
+ownership. She was fond of the cottage, it was their very own, hers and
+Walter’s; and how wise they had been to do up that particular room, it
+made every meal they ate in it a pleasure. That buttery-hatch too, it
+was absurd that it should be so, but really it was a secret joy to her.
+Suddenly her eye caught a package that had evidently come in her
+absence. A parcel of any sort was always exciting. This could not be
+another present from Aunt Anne? and she drew a short breath. Oh no, it
+had come by rail. Books. She knew what it was—some novels from Mr.
+Fisher. “How kind he is,” she said gratefully; “he says so few words,
+but he does so many things. I really don’t see why Ethel should not love
+him. I don’t think she would find it difficult to do so,” she thought,
+with the forgetfulness of womanhood for the days of girlish fancy.
+
+“Mrs. Baines has not yet returned,” the servant said, entering to
+arrange the table.
+
+“Not returned. Is she out, then?”
+
+“Yes, ma’am, she started half an hour after you did. Steggall’s
+waggonette came for her.”
+
+Florence groaned inwardly.
+
+“Do you know where she has gone?”
+
+“I think she has gone to Guildford, ma’am, shopping; she often did while
+you were away. I heard her tell the driver to drive quickly to the
+station, as she feared she was late.”
+
+“Oh. Did any one call, Jane?”
+
+“No, ma’am.”
+
+Then, once more, Florence delivered herself over to despair. Aunt Anne
+must have gone to buy more surprises, and if she had only ten shillings
+in the world it was quite clear she would have to get them on credit.
+Something would have to be done. The tradespeople would have to be
+warned. Walter must be written to, and, if necessary, asked to cable
+over advice. Perhaps Sir William Rammage would interfere. In the midst
+of all her perturbation seven o’clock struck, and there was no Aunt
+Anne.
+
+Florence was a healthy young woman, and she had had a long walk. The
+pangs of hunger assailed her vigorously, so, after resisting them till
+half-past seven, she sat down to her little supper alone. Food has a
+soothing effect on an agitated mind, and a quarter of an hour later,
+though Aunt Anne had not appeared, Florence had come to the conclusion
+that she could not get very deeply into debt, because it was not likely
+that the tradespeople would trust her. Perhaps, too, after all, she had
+not gone to Guildford. Still, what could keep her out so late? The roads
+were dark and lonely, she knew no one in the neighbourhood. It was to be
+hoped that nothing had happened to her, and, at this thought, Florence
+began to reproach herself again for all her unkindness of the morning.
+But while she was still reviewing her own conduct with much severity
+there was a soft patter, patter, along the gravel path outside, and a
+feeble ring at the bell. “That dissipated old lady!” laughed Florence to
+herself, only too delighted to think that she had returned safely at
+last.
+
+A moment later Aunt Anne entered. She was a little breathless, her left
+eye winked more frequently than usual, there was an air of happy
+excitement in her manner. She entered the room quickly, and seated
+herself in the easy-chair with a sigh of relief.
+
+“My darling,” she said, looking fondly at Florence, “I trust you did not
+wait for me, and that I have not caused you any inconvenience. But if I
+have,” she added in an almost cooing voice, “you will forgive me when
+you know all.”
+
+“Oh yes, dear Aunt Anne, I will forgive you,” and Florence signed to
+Jane to bring a plate. “You must be shockingly hungry,” she laughed.
+“Where have you been, may I know?”
+
+“I will tell you presently, my darling; you shall know all. But I cannot
+eat anything,” Aunt Anne answered quickly. Even the thought of food
+seemed to make her impatient. “Jane,” she said, with the little air of
+pride that Jane resented, “you need not bring a plate for me. I do not
+require anything.” Then, speaking to Florence again, she went on with
+half-beaming, half-condescending gentleness, “Finish your repast, my
+darling; pray don’t let my intrusion—for it is an intrusion when I am
+not able to join in your meal—hurry you. When you have finished, but
+not till then, I have a communication to make to you. It is one I feel
+to be due to you before any one else; and it will prove to you how much
+I depend on your sympathy and love.” She spoke with earnestness,
+unfastening her cloak and nervously fastening it the while. Florence
+looked at her with a little pity. Poor old lady, she thought, how easily
+she worked herself into a state of excitement.
+
+“Tell me what it is now, dear Aunt Anne,” she said. “Has anything
+occurred to worry you? Where have you been—to Guildford?”
+
+“To Guildford? No, my dear. Something has occurred, but not to worry me.
+It is something that will make me very happy, and I trust that it will
+make you very happy to hear it. I rely on your sympathy and Walter’s to
+support me.” Florence was not very curious. Aunt Anne had always so much
+earnestness at her command, and was very prodigal of it. Besides, it did
+not seem likely that anything important had happened; some trifling
+pleasure or vexation, probably; nothing more.
+
+At last the little meal was finished, the things pushed through the
+buttery-hatch, the crumbs swept off the cloth by Jane, who seemed to
+linger in a manner that Mrs. Baines in her own mind felt to be wholly
+reprehensible and wanting in respect towards her superiors. But the
+cloth was folded and put away at last, the buttery-hatch closed, the
+fire adjusted, and the door shut. Aunt Anne gave a sigh of relief, then
+throwing her cloak back over the chair, she rose and stood irresolute on
+the hearth-rug. Florence went towards her.
+
+“Have you been anywhere by train?” she asked.
+
+“No, my love. I went to the station to meet some one.” She trembled with
+excitement while she spoke. Florence noticed it with wonder.
+
+“What is it, Aunt Anne?” she asked gently.
+
+The old lady stretched out her two thin hands, and suddenly dropped her
+head for a moment on Florence’s shoulder; but she raised it quickly, and
+evidently struggled to be calm.
+
+“My darling,” she said, “I know you will sympathize with me, I know your
+loving heart. I knew it the first day I saw you, when you were at
+Rottingdean, and stood under the pear-tree with your dear Walter——”
+
+“Yes, oh yes, dear——” Florence had so often heard of that pear-tree.
+But what could it have to do with the present situation?
+
+—“I shall never forget the picture you two made,” the old lady went on,
+not heeding the interruption; “I knew all that was in your dear heart
+then, just as I feel that you will understand all that is in mine now.”
+Her face was flushed, her eyes were almost bright, and there were tears
+in them; the left one winked tremulously.
+
+Florence looked at her in amazement. “What is it, Aunt Anne? Do tell me;
+tell me at once, dear?” she said entreatingly. “And where you have been,
+so late and in the dark.” For a moment Aunt Anne hesitated, then, with a
+gasp and a strong effort to be calm and dignified, she raised her head
+and spoke.
+
+“My dear—my dear, all this time I have been with Alfred Wimple. He
+loves me.”
+
+“He loves you,” Florence repeated, her eyes full of wonder; “he loves
+you. Yes, of course he loves you, we all do,” she said soothingly, too
+much surprised to speculate farther.
+
+“Yes, he loves me,” Aunt Anne said again, in an almost solemn voice,
+“and I have promised to be his wife.”
+
+“Aunt Anne!—to marry him!”
+
+“Yes, dear, to marry him,” and she waited as if for congratulations.
+
+“But, Aunt Anne, dear——” Florence began in astonishment, and then she
+stopped; for though she had had some idea of the old lady’s infatuation,
+she had never dreamt of its ending in matrimony. Mrs. Baines was excited
+and strange; it might be some delusion, some joke that had been played
+on her, for Mr. Wimple could not have seriously asked her to marry him.
+She waited, not knowing what to say. But Aunt Anne’s excitement seemed
+to be passing, and with a tender, pitiful expression on her face, she
+waited for her niece to speak. “But, Aunt Anne, dear,” was all Florence
+could say again in her bewilderment.
+
+“But what, Florence?” Mrs. Baines spoke with a surprised, half-resentful
+manner. “Have you nothing more to say to me, my love?”
+
+“But you are not really going to marry him, are you?” Florence asked, in
+an incredulous voice.
+
+The old lady answered in a terribly earnest one.
+
+“Yes, Florence, I am; and never shall man have truer, more loving
+help-meet than I will be to him,” she burst out heroically, holding
+herself erect and looking her niece in the face. There was something
+infinitely pathetic about her as she stood there, quivering with feeling
+and aching for sympathy, yet old, wrinkled, and absurd, her poor scanty
+hair pushed back and her weak eyes full of tears. For a moment there was
+silence. Then bewildered Florence broke out with—
+
+“But, Aunt Anne, but, Aunt Anne——”
+
+“Well, my love?” the old lady asked with calm dignity.
+
+“He—he is much younger than you,” she said at last, bringing out her
+words slowly, and hating herself for saying them.
+
+“Age is not counted by years, my darling; and if he does not feel my age
+a drawback, why should I count his youth one? He loves me, Florence, I
+know he loves me,” Aunt Anne broke out in a passionate, tearful voice,
+“and you would not have me throw away or depreciate a faithful heart
+that has been given me?”
+
+Then the practical side of Florence’s nature spoke up in despair. “But,
+Aunt Anne, he—is very poor.”
+
+“I know he is poor, but he is young and strong and hopeful; and he will
+work. He says he will work like a slave for me; and if he is content to
+face poverty with me, how can I be afraid to face it with him?”
+
+“But you want comforts, and——”
+
+“Oh no, my love. My tastes are very simple, and I shall be content to do
+without them for his sake.”
+
+“But at your time of life, dear Aunt Anne, you do want them—you are not
+young—as he is.” Then Mrs. Baines burst into tears, tears that were
+evidently a blessed relief, and had been pent up in her poor old heart,
+waiting for an excuse to come forth.
+
+“Florence, I did not think you would tell me of my age. If I do not feel
+it, and he does not, why should you remind me of it? And why should you
+tell me that he is poor? Do you suppose that I am so selfish or—or so
+depraved that I would sell myself for comfort and luxury? If he can face
+poverty with me, I can face it with him.”
+
+“Yes, yes, but——” The old lady did not heed her, and went on
+breathlessly—
+
+“I did think, Florence, that you would have been kind to me, and
+understood and sympathized. I told him that on your heart and Walter’s I
+could rely. You know how lonely I have been, how desolate and how
+miserable. But for your bounty and goodness I should have died——”
+
+“Oh no——”
+
+“And now, in this great crisis—now, when a young, brave, beautiful life
+is laid at my feet, now that I am loved as truly as ever woman was loved
+in this world, as tenderly as Walter loves you, Florence, you fail me,
+as—as if”—she put her hand to her throat to steady her quivering
+voice—“as if you would not let me taste the cup of happiness of which
+you drink every day.”
+
+“But, Aunt Anne, it isn’t that indeed,” Florence answered, thinking
+despairingly of Walter, and wishing that she could begin writing that
+very minute, asking him what on earth she ought to say or do. “It is
+that—that—it is so unexpected, so strange. I knew, of course, that you
+liked him, that you were good friends; but I never dreamt that he was in
+love with you.” Aunt Anne’s tears seemed to vanish as if by magic, her
+left eye winked almost fiercely, her lips opened, but no sound came.
+With a great effort she recovered her voice at last, and with some of
+her old dignity, dashed with severe surprise, she asked—
+
+“My darling, is there any reason why he should not love me?”
+
+She stood gravely waiting for a reply, while Florence felt that she was
+managing badly, that she was somehow hurting and insulting Aunt Anne.
+After all, the old lady had a right to do as she liked; it was evident
+that she was incapable of taking in the absurdity of the situation.
+
+“But, Aunt Anne——” she began and stopped.
+
+“My dear Florence,” Mrs. Baines repeated still more severely, “will you
+tell me if there is any very obvious reason why he should not love me? I
+am not an ogress, my darling—I am not an ogress,” she cried, suddenly
+breaking down and bursting into floods of tears, while her head dropped
+on to her black merino dress.
+
+She looked so old and worn, so wretched and lonely as she stood there
+weeping bitterly, that Florence could stand it no longer, and going
+forward she put her arms round the poor old soul, and kissed her fondly.
+
+“No, dear Aunt Anne,” she said, “you are not an ogress; you are a sweet
+old dear, and I love you. Don’t cry—don’t cry, you dear.”
+
+“My love, you are cruel to me,” Aunt Anne sobbed.
+
+“Oh no, I am not, and you shall marry any one you like. It was a little
+surprising, you know, and of course I didn’t—I didn’t think that
+marrying was in your thoughts,” she added feebly, for she didn’t know
+what to say.
+
+“Bless you, my darling, bless you,” the old lady gasped, grateful for
+even that straw of comfort; “I knew you would be staunch to me when you
+had recovered from the surprise of my communication, but——” and she
+gently disengaged herself from Florence’s embrace and spoke in the
+nervous quivering voice that always came to her in moments of
+excitement—“but, Florence, since the first moment we met, Alfred Wimple
+and I have felt that we were ordained for each other.”
+
+“Yes, dear,” Florence said soothingly.
+
+“He says he shall never forget the moments we sat together on your
+balcony that night when your dear Walter fetched the white shawl—of
+yours, Florence—to put round my shoulders,” the old lady went on
+earnestly. “And the sympathy between us is so great that we do not feel
+the difference of years; besides, he says he has never liked very young
+women, he has always felt that the power to love accumulated with time,
+as my power to love has done. Few of the women who have been loved by
+great men have been very young, my darling.”
+
+“I didn’t know,” Florence began, for Aunt Anne had paused, almost as if
+she were repeating something she had learned by heart.
+
+“He asked me to-night,” she went on with another little gasp, “if I
+remembered—if I remembered—I forget——but all the great passions of
+history have been concentrated on women in their prime. Petrarch’s Laura
+had eight children when the poet fell in love with her, and Helen of
+Troy was sixty when—when—I forget,” she said again, shaking her head;
+“but he remembers; he went through them all to-night. Besides, I may be
+old in years, but I am not old at heart; you cannot say that I am,
+Florence.”
+
+She was getting excited again. Almost without her knowledge Florence led
+her to the easy-chair, and gently pushing her on to it, undid the
+strings and tried to take off her bonnet; but the old lady resisted.
+
+“No, my dear, don’t take off my bonnet,” she said, “unless you will
+permit me to ring,” she added, getting back to her old-fashioned ways,
+“and request Jane to bring me my cap from upstairs.”
+
+But Florence felt that Jane might look curiously at the wrinkled face
+that still showed signs of recent agitation, so she put her hand softly
+on the one that Aunt Anne had stretched out to touch the bell.
+
+“I will get it for you, dear,” she said, and in a moment she had flown
+upstairs and brought down the soft lace cap put ready on the bed, and
+the cashmere slippers edged with fur and lined with red flannel, in
+which Aunt Anne liked to encase her feet in the evening. “There, now,
+you will feel better, you poor dear,” she said when they were put on and
+the old lady sat silent and composed, looking as if she were
+contemplating her future, and the new life before her. Florence stood by
+her silently for a moment, thinking over the past weeks in which Aunt
+Anne, with her poverty and dignity, her generosity and recklessness, had
+formed so striking a figure. Then she thought of the lonely life the
+poor old lady had led in the Kilburn lodging.
+
+After all, if she only had even a very little happiness with that horrid
+Mr. Wimple, it would be something; and of course, if he didn’t behave
+properly, Walter could take her away. The worst of it was she had
+understood that Mr. Wimple had no money. She had heard that he lived on
+a small allowance from an uncle, and the uncle might stop that allowance
+when he heard that his nephew had married an old woman who had not a
+penny.
+
+“Aunt Anne,” she asked gently, “does he know that you are not rich?”
+
+“Florence, I told him plainly that I had no fortune,” the old lady
+answered, with a pathetic half-hunted look on her face that made
+Florence hate herself for her lack of sympathy. But she felt that she
+ought to ask some questions. Walter would be so angry if she allowed her
+to go into misery and fresh poverty without making a single effort to
+save her.
+
+“And has he money, dear—enough to keep you both, at any rate?”
+
+The tears trickled down Aunt Anne’s face again while she answered—
+
+“If I did not ask him that question, Florence, it is not for you to ask
+it me. I neither know nor care what he has. If he is willing to take me
+for myself only, so am I willing to take him, loving him for himself
+only too. I am too old to marry for money, and he is too noble to do so.
+We are grown-up man and woman, Florence, and know our own hearts; we
+will brook no interference, my darling, not even from you.” She got up
+tremblingly. “I must retire; you must allow me to retire, and in the
+privacy of my own room I shall be able to reflect.”
+
+The long words were coming back; they were a sign that Aunt Anne was
+herself again.
+
+“Yes, dear Aunt Anne; I am sure you must want to be alone, and to
+think,” Florence said gently.
+
+The old lady was not appeased.
+
+“You know—you remember what you felt yourself when your Walter first
+loved you, Florence,” she said distantly. “Yes, I must be alone; my
+heart is full—I must be alone.”
+
+Florence led her upstairs to her room. Mrs. Baines stood formally in the
+doorway.
+
+“Good-night, my love,” she said, with cold disappointment in her voice.
+
+“May not I help you, Aunt Anne?” Florence asked, almost entreatingly.
+
+“No, my love, I must be alone,” Mrs. Baines repeated firmly, and shut
+the door.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+The next morning Aunt Anne did not appear. She sent word that she would
+like her breakfast carried up, a fire lighted in her room, and to be
+left alone for a couple of hours.
+
+Florence was distracted. She had written to Walter, but as the mail did
+not go out till three days later, nothing was gained by her haste. She
+had considered things all round, and the more she did so the more
+amazing did Mr. Wimple’s proposal seem. It was all nonsense to suppose,
+as Aunt Anne evidently believed, that he was in love with a woman more
+than twice his age. Florence mentally reviewed Aunt Anne’s charms. She
+was not even a round, plump old lady with rosy cheeks, and a stray
+dimple that seemed to have found her company so good it was loath to
+vanish altogether. She was wrinkled, and thin, and feeble-looking. Her
+eyes were small and weak, the left one had the nervous affection that so
+often provided an almost droll accompaniment to her talk. Her skin was
+withered and sallow. Florence tried to feel like a young man about to
+marry Aunt Anne, and the idea was not pleasant. She felt that it was
+almost a duty to prevent the marriage if possible—that Aunt Anne owed
+it to her past years, to her own dignity, to her relations, to every one
+and everything not to make a fool of herself.
+
+The children went out at ten o’clock. Florence listened to their shouts
+of joy as they drove off in the donkey-cart. Then, hurrying through her
+domestic affairs, she sat down on one of the gaunt easy-chairs by the
+drawing-room fire to think matters over again. It somehow seemed fitting
+to sit in the old-world little room while she considered Aunt Anne’s
+romance. She could hear the old lady moving about overhead, but was
+afraid to go up, for she had been refused admittance two hours ago.
+Jane, who was overwhelmed with curiosity, had managed to go in and out
+once or twice, and reported that Mrs. Baines was dressed and looking
+through the contents of her trunks “just as if she was packing up.”
+Florence wondered what it meant, and a dim suspicion of the truth
+crossed her mind. She felt too as if in the little cottage by the lonely
+roadside a tragedy was beginning in which Aunt Anne would play the
+central figure. She shut her eyes for a moment, and, as if in a dream,
+could see the old lady wringing her thin hands, and stretching them out
+almost imploringly. “Oh, dear Aunt Anne,” she cried, “something must be
+done. No good can come of this wild nonsense.”
+
+Suddenly on the gravel footpath outside she heard a footstep, just as
+she had heard Aunt Anne’s footstep the night before. She got up quickly
+and looked out. It was Mr. Wimple. He must have come up from the dip at
+the end of the garden, the short way from Hindhead and the Liphook Road.
+He was going round the house. Florence darted out and opened the front
+door before he had time to ring. All in a moment it had struck her that
+if she could get a talk with him, some explanation, perhaps some good,
+might come of it. Yet her heart ached, she felt cruel and treacherous,
+as if she were trying to cheat Aunt Anne of a promise—even though it
+was a ridiculous promise—of happiness. She thought of the poor old
+lady’s tears, of her pleading, of her piteous, “as if you grudged me the
+cup of happiness of which you taste every day.” After all, she had a
+right to do as she pleased; but that was a foolish argument. She had a
+right to put herself on the kitchen fire if she pleased, but it would be
+distinctly the duty of the nearest person to pull her off and prevent
+her from being burnt.
+
+Mr. Wimple stared at Florence. “How do you do, Mrs. Hibbert?” he said
+with extreme gravity. He did not hold out his hand or look as if he
+expected to enter, but stood still on the door-step.
+
+“I saw you coming and wanted to speak to you, Mr. Wimple,” she said
+almost breathlessly. “Won’t you come in?” Without a word he entered. She
+led the way to the drawing-room and shut the door. She pointed to one of
+the chairs beside the screen with a peacock on it, and he sat down,
+still without a word, and waited for her to speak. She took the other
+chair and faced him. The light was full upon him, but there was no
+expression in his eyes, not even one of inquiry.
+
+“Mr. Wimple,” she said, in a low voice, for she was afraid of Aunt Anne
+above hearing the hum of conversation, “I wanted to speak to you about
+Aunt Anne—Mrs. Baines.” He looked at her then, but still he said
+nothing. “I am very fond of her,” she added, as if in excuse for her
+interference.
+
+“I am sure you are,” he answered, and waited. Florence was forced to go
+on.
+
+“She came home last night, and she surprised me so—she told me—oh, Mr.
+Wimple, it can’t be true?”
+
+“What cannot be true, Mrs. Hibbert?” he asked, speaking like an
+automaton.
+
+“That—that—you had asked her to marry you?”
+
+“It is quite true,” he said, and looked at her unflinchingly; his face
+wore an expression of slight surprise.
+
+“But it is so strange and unsuitable; she is so much older than you.”
+
+“I know she is much older.” He seemed to unlock his lips every time he
+spoke.
+
+“She is quite old and feeble,” Florence said compassionately.
+
+“Yes, she is quite old and feeble,” he repeated.
+
+“And, Mr. Wimple, do you know that she is not rich, that—that she has
+no money, nothing. She is poor.”
+
+“I know she is poor, Mrs. Hibbert.” He seemed to be afflicted with an
+utter destitution of language, an incapacity to say anything but the
+shortest, most cut-and-dried sentence. It affected Florence. But again
+she struggled on; though she felt her words come with difficulty.
+
+“And you—forgive me, but I am fond of her—and you, I believe, are not
+rich. Walter told me that you were not, and—and——” She was beginning
+to despair of making any way with Mr. Wimple, his eyes were dull and
+uninterested, he seemed insensible to everything except the burden of
+his own gravity.
+
+“I am not rich, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said. The manner in which he repeated
+her name at the end of every sentence irritated Florence.
+
+“And oh, Mr. Wimple,” she went on, “it is so—so absurd.” But he said
+nothing, though she waited. “It is so strange, and Walter will be very
+angry.”
+
+“It is not Walters affair, Mrs. Hibbert, it is mine,” he said.
+
+“And hers, and Aunt Anne’s too.”
+
+“And hers,” he repeated.
+
+“And she is old, she wants comforts and luxury; and oh, I cannot bear to
+think of it. It seems cruel.”
+
+“We have talked it all over, Mrs. Hibbert; she knows best herself what
+she wants,” he answered, without the slightest change in his manner.
+
+“But are you really in love with her?”
+
+“I am very fond of her,” he said blankly.
+
+Florence put her hand to her throat to steady her utterance.
+
+“But you are not in love with her? You can’t be; she is old enough to be
+your mother. She is a dear, sweet old lady, but you can’t be in love
+with her.”
+
+“I don’t see the necessity of our discussing this,” he said, still with
+extreme gravity.
+
+“But she is my aunt, at least she is Walter’s, which is all the same.”
+He gave a little dry cough.
+
+“Mrs. Baines and I have settled our affairs, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said.
+“There is no necessity to go over them.”
+
+“But it is so ridiculous.”
+
+“Then we will not talk about it.” Suddenly he looked at her; there was
+no change in his tone, but he opened his eyes a little wider as if to
+impress upon her the importance of his next words. “We don’t wish our
+private affairs made known to the world,” he said. “There is no
+necessity to talk of them at all; they are of no importance except to
+ourselves. We don’t wish to talk about them or to hear of their being
+talked about. Will you remember this, Mrs. Hibbert?” It was quite a
+relief to get three consecutive sentences out of him.
+
+“But, Mr. Wimple, do tell me that, if you persist in marrying her, you
+will make her happy, you will be good to her, and—that you can keep her
+in some sort of comfort,” Florence said in despair.
+
+“I will talk to her about this, Mrs. Hibbert. It is her affair,” he said
+solemnly; and Florence felt altogether worsted, left out in the cold,
+put back, and powerless. She sat silently by the fire, not knowing what
+to do or say. Mr. Wimple made no sign. She looked up at him after a
+minute or two. What could Aunt Anne see to like in him, in his dull
+eyes, his thin lips, his straggling sandy hair and whiskers, his
+pink-and-white, yet unhealthy-looking complexion? He met her gaze
+steadily. “Is there anything more you wish to say to me?” he asked; “I
+have not much time.”
+
+“No,” she answered, chokingly, “there is nothing—if you would only be a
+son to her, a friend, anything, rather than marry her. Oh, Mr. Wimple,
+if you really do care for her, don’t make her ridiculous in her old age,
+don’t make her unhappy. Happiness cannot come of an absurd marriage like
+this. You ought to marry a girl, a young woman. One day Walter and I saw
+you at Waterloo——”
+
+He fixed his eyes upon her, and there was a slight look of curiosity in
+them now, but he was absolutely calm.
+
+“Well, Mrs. Hibbert?” he said.
+
+“We thought that perhaps she was—was some one you liked; she was young,
+it would have been much more suitable.”
+
+“I must know what I desire, and what is most suitable for myself, Mrs.
+Hibbert,” he answered, without a shade of vexation, but with quiet
+determination in his voice. Then Jane, evidently to her own
+satisfaction, entered.
+
+“If you please, ma’am, Mrs. Baines says she would like to speak to Mr.
+Wimple when you have quite finished with him.”
+
+“Tell Mrs. Baines I will go up to her in a moment; I want to see her.”
+She turned to Mr. Wimple again when Jane had gone. He rose as if to
+signify that he considered their conversation at an end. “I fear there
+is nothing more to say,” she said lamely, for this man, with his silence
+and utter lack of response, had made every word that suggested itself
+seem weak and hopeless.
+
+“I think not, Mrs. Hibbert.”
+
+“But for your own happiness, Mr. Wimple,” she said suddenly, struck with
+a new way of putting it, “you surely can’t want to marry Mrs. Baines for
+the sake of your own happiness.”
+
+“I want to marry Mrs. Baines as much for my own sake as for hers,” and
+he looked at her in a manner that was almost a dismissal. It had an
+influence over her she could not help; almost against her will she rose,
+feeling that there was no excuse for prolonging the interview.
+
+“I will send Mrs. Baines to you,” she said, in despair.
+
+“Thank you, Mrs. Hibbert, if you will,” and he held open the door for
+her to pass out.
+
+Aunt Anne heard the drawing-room door open and Florence coming up. She
+waited eagerly on the top of the stairs. She wore her best dress; round
+her throat there was a white silk handkerchief, in her manner more than
+the usual nervous agitation. Glancing in at the bedroom Florence could
+see that she had been packing, and making ready for a journey.
+
+“Oh, Aunt Anne——” she began.
+
+“Yes, my love, I am going to town,” the old lady said, with a cold
+reserve in her tenderness that showed clearly she was displeased. “I
+cannot stay longer under your roof. You must not ask me to do so,” she
+went on. “I was cut to the quick by your want of sympathy last night. I
+cannot recover from it; I could not expose myself to it again. My
+luggage is ready, and when I have seen my dear Alfred I shall be able to
+tell you the time of my departure.”
+
+“Oh, Aunt Anne, it is cruel,” Florence said, dismayed.
+
+“No, my love, it is not cruel; but I must respect myself. I would not
+hurt you for the world, Florence; but you have hurt me.”
+
+“I wouldn’t hurt you either for the world, but——”
+
+“Where is Mr. Wimple, my love?” the old lady asked, interrupting her
+niece with a long sigh.
+
+“He is downstairs; I have been talking to him.”
+
+“Yes, my love, I understand. I appreciate all your solicitude for my
+happiness; but you should allow those who are older and wiser than you
+to know what is best for themselves. I will see you again when he is
+gone, Florence,” and almost imperiously Mrs. Baines went downstairs.
+
+She entered the drawing-room and shut the door. Mr. Wimple was standing
+on the hearth-rug. She looked at him for a moment nervously, and winked
+solemnly as usual with her left eye.
+
+“My darling,” she said, and putting her arms round his neck she kissed
+his face on both sides, “my darling Alfred, are you glad to see me?” He
+submitted to her caress half reluctantly, then drew back a little. His
+manner was no warmer than it had been to Florence.
+
+“Yes, I am glad to see you,” he said, and looked at her with his eyes
+wide open, as if to show that he perfectly understood the position.
+
+“My darling, I have suffered terribly. Florence had no sympathy for us;
+she said it was an unsuitable marriage; that you had no fortune, and
+that I had none; as if my poverty was not hard enough to bear without
+being told of it. What did she say to you? Alfred, my dear one, she has
+not turned your love from me?” She put out her arms again as if to
+gather him to her, but he looked blindly past her.
+
+“Sit down,” he said, and pushed her gently on to the chair beside the
+peacock-screen.
+
+“She has not taken your love from me, tell me that,” Mrs. Baines said
+entreatingly. “A few hours ago you assured me of your devotion. She has
+not taken it from me?”
+
+“No.”
+
+“I am just the same to you?” she asked. He turned his eyes on her again.
+
+“You are just the same,” he said, with a gulp, but there was no
+tenderness in his manner. He seemed to be speaking almost under
+compulsion.
+
+“My darling, my darling,” she said softly, “bless you for those dear
+words. I will be truer to you, Alfred, than ever woman was to man
+before. But I cannot stay here; you must take me away. I have already
+packed my things, I cannot remain another night, not knowing to what
+treatment I may be subjected. I love Florence most sincerely; she and
+Walter and their children are very dear to me. But after her coldness to
+me last night when I came in full of your love and my own happiness, and
+she denied me her sympathy, I cannot stay. You must not ask me to do
+that, Alfred.” There was more interest in his manner now, though his
+gravity never relaxed.
+
+“Where will you go?” he asked.
+
+“I shall go to London, my darling,” she said, stretching out her hands.
+“But I cannot go alone, after all I have suffered during the last
+twenty-four hours?” He looked at her questioningly.
+
+“Suffered? What have you suffered?” he asked. “I thought you were happy
+about it.”
+
+“About you? Yes, my darling; but Florence has tortured me.”
+
+“It does not take much to torture you,” he interrupted. “What did she
+say?”
+
+“I have told you already; I cannot go over it again. Don’t ask me to do
+so. You could torture me, Alfred, with a word or a look—if you ceased
+to love me.”
+
+“We need not discuss that improbability now,” he said solemnly. “What
+about your going to London?”
+
+“I shall go by the quarter-past one o’clock train this afternoon,” she
+answered. “You will take me, will you not?”
+
+“I cannot go to-day,” he said firmly. “I must get back to Liphook now.”
+He pulled out his watch, a dull worn Waterbury one, at which Aunt Anne
+looked keenly. “But I will go to-morrow; I want to see my uncle.” His
+thoughts seemed to be intent on business matters. She waited a moment
+after he had finished speaking, and winked slowly to herself before she
+answered.
+
+“Alfred,” she asked, “you do truly love me?” He looked at her
+steadfastly.
+
+“Yes,” he answered, “I told you so last night.” She half rose from her
+chair again, but he waved her back. “Sit down,” he said, and she obeyed.
+
+“I know you did, and I will never doubt it. In bygone days, my darling,
+I was foolish and wicked, and played with the truest love ever given to
+woman. But I am wiser now. You must never doubt me. Promise me that you
+never will.”
+
+“I promise you,” he said, and closed his lips.
+
+“My dear, my dear,” she said softly to herself, and stopped for a moment
+before she went on aloud, “I must go to town this afternoon, and you
+must take me. My courage is not equal to encountering the journey alone.
+Do take me, my darling.”
+
+“Where will you go when you get to London?” he asked.
+
+“I know of some apartments—two rooms—I saw them the day before I came
+away. If they are still unlet, I shall rent them. But when we arrive I
+shall go straight to Sir William Rammage. I have business with him. He
+is very ill, Alfred, it was in the paper yesterday; but he will see me,
+and when he knows all——”
+
+“You will tell him nothing about me,” he said, in his slow determined
+voice. She looked up indignantly.
+
+“Alfred,” she answered, “I must tell him. I shall tell him that you love
+me; that I have won a true and noble heart, and that we are going
+through life together.”
+
+“You will tell him nothing,” Mr. Wimple repeated, with something like
+fright in his dull eyes. “If you did my uncle would hear of it, and
+would think I was mad.” He added the clause about his uncle as if he
+thought an explanation due to her.
+
+“Mad to marry me?” she asked.
+
+“Mad to think of marriage at all. He objects to it on principle.”
+
+“But if he knew how tenderly and truly I loved you——”
+
+“You must not say one word about it, to him or to any one,” came the
+firm hard voice.
+
+“Is it because you are—you are ashamed of loving me, Alfred?” she
+asked, quivering.
+
+“No. But it is my wish. That should be enough.”
+
+She was silent for a moment.
+
+“It is enough,” she answered slowly, “your wish shall be my law in this
+as in all things. But you will take me up to town?” she pleaded. “You
+can go to the Blue Lion, to Steggalls’, and tell them to drive you back
+to Liphook now.”
+
+“I have no money with me,” he said firmly.
+
+“It will go down to my account, darling,” she continued, as if she had
+not heard the interruption. “You can take the quarter to one train from
+Liphook to London; it stops at Witley. I will be on the platform, and we
+will go on together.” She ventured to stand now, and held out her hands
+again, almost entreatingly.
+
+“You will say nothing to Sir William?”
+
+“Alfred, you are my lord and master,” and she bowed her head on to her
+breast. But he was wholly untouched.
+
+“Very well,” he said, “I will drive back at once—there is not too much
+time—and meet you as you say. Good-bye.” He kissed her forehead, and as
+before, swiftly drew back again.
+
+“Will you order a waggonette for me too, Alfred?” she asked as she
+followed him to the door. “I shall want one to take me to the station.
+Tell them to put it all down to me.” He did not answer till the door was
+open, and he saw the dark trees against the sky, and the withered leaves
+beneath lying on the garden pathway. Then a smile crossed his lips, his
+face wore an air of relief, he looked like a free man. He crossed the
+threshold with a light step, and stopped and looked over his shoulder at
+her.
+
+“Good-bye,” he said. “I will order the waggonette. It is lovely weather.
+We shall enjoy the journey to town.”
+
+“My darling,” she said, with a world of tenderness in her voice, “I
+shall enjoy anything with you as long as I live.” He looked at her for a
+minute with the strange dumb expression that was so peculiarly his own,
+and walked away.
+
+Mrs. Baines went back to the drawing-room, and shut the door with a
+manner that conveyed to the whole house that she wanted to be alone for
+a little space. She stood thoughtfully beside the chair on which he had
+sat. Suddenly she caught sight of her own face in the chimney-glass. She
+looked at it critically and winked slowly, she pulled the white
+handkerchief up a little higher round her throat and turned away
+satisfied. “He loves me,” she said, “I know he loves me, and no power on
+earth shall separate me from him. I will marry him if I walk to church
+without my shoes. I was faithless once, but this time I will be true.”
+She crept softly upstairs, and when she came down an hour later she was
+dressed and ready to depart. She went to the dining-room, where Florence
+in despair had had a little luncheon-tray brought in with sandwiches and
+biscuits on it.
+
+“My love,” she said, “I have finished the preparations for my journey;
+will you permit your servants to bring down my luggage? Steggalls’ man
+is coming immediately to drive me to the station. Thank you, but I do
+not need any refreshment.”
+
+“Aunt Anne, I can’t bear you to go,” poor Florence said in dismay.
+
+“I must go—I cannot stay,” the old lady answered solemnly, “and I beg
+you not to ask me to do so again.”
+
+“But you will come back?” Florence entreated.
+
+“No, I cannot,” Aunt Anne answered in the same voice. “You did not mean
+it, but you cut me to the quick last night; I have had no sleep since,
+my love. I must go away, I want to be alone. Besides, I have private
+business to transact. Thank you for all your goodness and hospitality to
+me, yours, and your dear ones. It has been a great privilege to be with
+you and the dear children since Walter went away, and to come here and
+see your second home.” She sat down for a moment by the buttery-hatch,
+turning a quick sharp glance as she did so to see that it was well
+closed, for one of her firm beliefs was that “servants were always ready
+to listen to the private speech of their employers.” As she seated
+herself, she looked as if she were trying to practise some of Mr.
+Wimple’s firmness.
+
+But Florence knelt lovingly by the old lady’s side, and put her pretty
+head down on the black merino dress. “I would not be unkind to you for
+the world,” she said, “you know I would not.”
+
+Mrs. Baines winked sorrowfully, but did not falter.
+
+“You were very unkind. You hurt me more than I can say,” she said
+coldly.
+
+Florence turned her lips towards the old lady’s hands, and kissed them.
+“Aunt Anne dear,” she said very softly, “you have no money——” Mrs.
+Baines stiffened herself, her voice became polite and distant.
+
+“Thank you, my love, but I have sufficient to defray the expenses of my
+journey; and at the other end I shall be in a position to make
+arrangements.”
+
+“Let me lend you a little,” her niece said humbly.
+
+“No, my love”—and Mrs. Baines shook her head—“I cannot take it.”
+
+But Florence thought of the ten shillings that constituted all the old
+lady’s funds, and felt miserable.
+
+“You could pay me back,” she pleaded. “And don’t be angry, dear Aunt
+Anne, but you told me how poor you were in that lodging last year, and
+how cold; it makes my heart ache every time I think of it; and the
+winter and the cold are coming again. Oh, do stay here. You shall do
+anything in the world that makes you happy. I cannot bear to think of
+you in London; and it’s unkind of you to go, for we shall miss you so
+much, the children and I——” and she burst into tears.
+
+Then Aunt Anne melted.
+
+“Florence,” she said tenderly, “that was like your dear self.”
+
+“Then stay with us. You shall do as you like in all ways.”
+
+“Thank you, my love; and bless you for your goodness. But I cannot stay.
+I do love you, and I will believe that your heart feels for me in this
+great crisis of my life. You must not think that because I love him I
+shall love you less; that would be impossible. But you must allow me to
+terminate my visit now. I want to be alone, to be in retirement for a
+little while; besides I have, as I said just now, imperative business to
+transact in town. You must not ask me to prolong my time here, love.”
+
+“Let me, at any rate, be a little useful to you, Aunt Anne. I know you
+are not rich.”
+
+For a moment Aunt Anne was silent. Then she winked her left eye very
+slowly, and looked up.
+
+“Florence,” she said, “I know that you always mean your words, and I
+should not like to hurt your generous heart. I will prove my affection
+for you by letting you lend me two sovereigns. Don’t ask me to take
+more, my love, for it would be impossible. There——” and she gave a
+long sigh as she put the coins into her glove. “Now I hope you are
+satisfied. Remember I only take them to prove my affection for you. Let
+me kiss those dear children;” and quickly opening the door she called
+them by their names, and laughed in an absent, excited manner, as they
+came running down the stairs. “Come, my darlings,” she said; “Aunt Anne
+is going away, and wants to say good-bye.”
+
+“But we don’t want you to go,” said Monty.
+
+“We don’t want you to go at all,” echoed Catty.
+
+“You dear children,” the old lady said, “I must go; but I shall not
+forget you, and to-night when you look under your pillows you will find
+some chocolates as usual. I have put them there ready for you, so that
+some day you might remember that, even in the midst of her own
+happiness, Aunt Anne thought of you.” She said the last words almost
+mechanically, while with one eye she watched her trunks being carried
+out, and with the other looked at the children. Suddenly she turned to
+Florence. “I should like to wish you good-bye alone; there is something
+I want to say to you.” She turned quickly and entered the drawing-room.
+The fire had burnt low, the room had grown chilly, and Florence shivered
+a little as she stood waiting for Aunt Anne to speak. “My dear,” the old
+lady said, “will you try not to think me ungrateful for all your care of
+me, for all your solicitude for my happiness? I know you think that I am
+in my dotage——”
+
+“Oh no——”
+
+“—That I am doing a foolish thing in marrying a man so much younger
+than myself, that——”
+
+“You must do as you like, Aunt Anne; it is a free country, and we can
+all do as we like.”
+
+“Yes, my love,” Mrs. Baines answered with a sudden wink, which showed
+that this was a new bit of argument to her, and one that she would try
+to use to her own advantage if she had the opportunity; “we can all do
+as we like, as you did when you married your dear Walter, as I shall
+when I marry Alfred Wimple, for, as you say, it is a free country.”
+
+“I only hope that you may be happy,” Florence said earnestly.
+
+“Yes, my love,” Mrs. Baines said, and her eyes filled with tears, “I
+hope so too, and that I may make him happy.” She was silent for a
+minute, and then it seemed as if what she said were forced from her. “I
+wanted to tell you,” she began with a little gasp, “I want you to know
+something in my past life, so that you may better understand the reason
+of what I am doing. When I was a girl, Florence, a very true love was
+given to me. I won it heedlessly, and did not know its value. I played
+with it and threw it away—a fresh young life like Alfred Wimple’s. It
+was in my power to make him happy; but I made him miserable. He was
+taken ill and died. Sometimes I think that I am answerable to God for
+the loss of that life; had I acted differently it might have been in the
+world now. I never had a young love offered to me again; I thought that
+God had denied it to me as a punishment; for Mr. Baines’s youth had gone
+when I married him; it was the marriage of his middle age. But through
+all the years I have not grown old, and all things that have youth in
+them are precious to me. One reason why I love you all—you, and Walter
+and the children—is that I am young too, at heart. It is only the lines
+on my face that make me look old, and the years I can count that make me
+feel so. I am young still in all else.” She stopped for a moment, as if
+waiting for some response, but Florence could think of nothing to say;
+she looked at the old lady wonderingly, and put her hand on the nervous
+ones that rested on the chair-back. “I remember the night of your
+party,” Mrs. Baines went on. “I thought of the past all the evening
+while I sat there—your guest, my darling—it came back again and again,
+it enveloped me, one year after another. I went on to the balcony, and
+all my dear ones who had gone gathered round me in the darkness. I heard
+your fresh young voices behind, but the years had set a mark on me that
+cut me off from you, and death had taken most of those I remembered, but
+left my heart young and longing for love, longing to live again just as
+you loved and as you lived. I said to myself, ‘I am old, I am old!’
+Alfred Wimple was standing by me, and whispered, ‘You are not old.’ He
+was like my dead come back, like the one who had loved me when I was
+young; I felt as if through all the years I had been waiting by a dead
+man’s side, but that now perhaps out of his life that loved me this
+other had grown, or else that God had sent him, my dear one, into the
+world again to love me once more, and to prove I was forgiven. Do you
+understand, Florence? I could not refuse the beautiful life that was
+laid at my feet, the love that has come to bless me once more after all
+the long years. We are young man and young woman to each other, and we
+love each other with all our hearts. It is like you and your dear
+Walter. I wanted to say this to you; I thought it would help you to
+understand, to sympathize with me. You cannot be sorry that I am going
+to be less lonely, or grudge me the love that will make my life happier.
+That is all. And now, my darling, I must go; and good-bye once more.”
+
+Florence could not speak—she felt the hot tears filling her eyes
+again—a lump had come to her throat.
+
+“God bless you, Aunt Anne,” she said at last, with something almost like
+a sob.
+
+“And God bless you, dearest Florence,” the old lady said, and kissed her
+niece’s face and stroked her head. “You know I always admire your hair,
+my love,” she said, and pulling her forward she kissed it. Then she went
+out to the waggonette. Jane held open the door. “This is for you,” Mrs.
+Baines said haughtily, and slipped half a crown into the servant’s hand.
+“There are some old slippers in my bedroom; I don’t know if you will
+deem them worthy of your acceptance.”
+
+“Thank you, ma’am,” said Jane, unwillingly.
+
+“I trust you will study your mistress’s comfort and interests in every
+way,” Mrs. Baines continued as she put a shawl over her knees, “and that
+you will be good to those dear children.” The next moment she was on her
+way to Witley Station.
+
+ END OF VOL. I.
+
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ LONDON AND BECCLES. _G., C. & Co._
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER NOTES
+
+ Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where
+ multiple spellings occur, majority use has been employed.
+
+ Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer
+ errors occur.
+
+ New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to
+ the public domain
+
+ [The end of _Aunt Anne_, by Mrs. W. K. Clifford.]
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75403 ***
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+ <meta name="DC.Title" content="Aunt Anne, Vol. 1"/>
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+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75403 ***</div>
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+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:1em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<p class='line' style='margin-bottom:1em;font-size:3em;'><span class='sc'>Aunt Anne.</span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:2em;'><span class='it'>By Mrs. W. K. Clifford</span>,</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'><span style='font-size:smaller'><span class='it'>Author of “Mrs. Keith’s Crime,” etc.</span></span></p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+
+ <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
+ <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<div class='stanza-outer'>
+<div class='stanza-inner'>
+<p class='line0'>“As less the olden glow abides,</p>
+<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;And less the chillier heart aspires,</p>
+<p class='line0'>&ensp;With driftwood beached in past spring-tides</p>
+<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;We light our sullen fires.”</p>
+<p class='line0' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;'><span class='sc'>James Russell Lowell.</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
+
+<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:3em;margin-bottom:3em;'> <!-- rend=';' -->
+<p class='line'>In Two Volumes.</p>
+<p class='line'>Vol. I.</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'>London:</p>
+<p class='line'><span style='font-size:larger'>Richard Bentley &amp; Son,</span></p>
+<p class='line'>Publishers in Ordinary to Her Majesty the Queen.</p>
+<p class='line'>1892.</p>
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+<p class='line'><span style='font-size:smaller'>(All rights reserved.)</span></p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap1.jpg' alt='sea coast scene' id='iid-0001' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:2.5em;'>AUNT ANNE.</p>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER I.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capm.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='M'/>r.</span> and Mrs. Walter Hibbert had been
+married just four months when Aunt
+Anne first appeared on the scene. They were
+at Brighton, whither they had gone from
+Friday to Tuesday, so that Mr. Hibbert might
+get braced up after a hard spell of work.
+Besides doing his usual journalism, he had
+been helping a friend with a popular educational
+weekly, and altogether “had slaved
+quite wickedly,” so his wife said. But he
+had declared that, though he found matrimony,
+as far as he had gone, very delightful,
+it had to be paid for, especially at the beginning
+of its career, when it ran into furniture,
+linen, plate, and expensive presents to a dear
+little wife, though the expensiveness of the
+last he generously kept to himself. So it
+resulted in the visit to Brighton. They
+spent the happiest four days in the world
+there, and felt quite sad when Tuesday
+morning arrived. But they wisely did their
+best to forget that the evening train would
+take them back to London, and resolved
+that their last day should pass merrily.</p>
+
+<p>“Suppose we have a long drowsy morning
+on the pier,” she suggested; “nothing is
+nicer or more restful than to listen to the
+band and look down into the water. We
+needn’t see the horrid people—indeed, if we
+sit on one of the end seats and keep our
+faces turned seawards, we can forget that
+they even exist.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hibbert solemnly considered the proposal.</p>
+
+<p>“The only drawback is the music, it makes
+so much noise—that’s the worst of music,
+it always does,” he said sadly. “Another
+thing is, that I cannot lie full length on
+the pier as I can on the beach.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, then we’ll go to the beach.
+The worst of the beach is, that we can’t
+look down into the water, as we can from
+the end of the pier.”</p>
+
+<p>“That’s true; and then there are lots of
+pretty girls on the pier, and I like to see
+them, for then I know that there are some
+left—for the other fellows,” he added nobly.</p>
+
+<p>So they went to the pier, and sat on one
+of the side seats at the far end and looked
+down into the water, and blinked their happy
+eyes at the sunshine. And they felt as if
+all the beautiful world belonged to them, as
+if they two together were being drawn
+dreamily on and on into the sky, and sea,
+and light, to make one glorious whole with
+happy nature; but a whole in which they
+would be for ever conscious of being together,
+and never less sleepy or blissful than now.
+This was Walter’s idea, and he said it all
+in his dear romantic way that generally ended
+up with a laugh. “It would never do, you
+know, because we should get nothing to
+eat.”</p>
+
+<p>“Don’t,” she said. “That is so like you;
+you always spoil a beautiful idea, you provoking
+thing,” and she rubbed her chin
+against the back of the seat and looked
+down more intently at the water. Without
+any one in the least suspecting it, he
+managed to stoop and kiss her hand, while
+he pretended to be trying to see something,
+that of course was not there, at the top of
+a wave.</p>
+
+<p>They were having a delightful morning,
+they lived in every moment of it, and wished
+it would never come to an end; still, when
+it did, there would be a delicious luncheon
+to go back to—very large prawns, roast
+chicken and green peas, and an enormous
+dish of ripe figs, which both their souls
+loved. After all, Walter thought, the world
+was not a bad place, especially when you
+had a wife who adored you and thought that
+everything you did bore the stamp of genius.</p>
+
+<p>The band was playing a waltz, though to
+this day they do not know it. All manner
+of people were passing to and fro, but they
+did not notice them.</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to stay here for ever,”
+Mrs. Hibbert said, with a sweet sigh of
+content. “Do you know, Walter,” she
+went on suddenly after a pause, “it will
+be four months to-morrow since we were
+married? Time seems to have flown.”</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove! it really is a miracle what
+those four months have done with themselves,”
+he answered, looking up for a
+moment; as if to be sure that Time was
+not a conjurer standing before him about
+to hand the four months from beneath a
+handkerchief, with a polite bow and the
+remark that they would have to be lived
+through at the ordinary rate.</p>
+
+<p>A spare-looking old lady, dressed in black,
+passed by, but he did not notice her.</p>
+
+<p>“You see,” he went on, with his eyes fixed
+on a sailing boat in the distance, “if things
+were always going to be——”</p>
+
+<p>At the sound of his voice the lady in
+black, who was only a few yards off, stopped,
+listened, hesitated, and, turning back, stood
+before him. He recognized her in a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne!” he exclaimed. His voice
+was amiable, but embarrassed, as if he did
+not quite know what to do next.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Walter,” she said, with a sigh
+and in a tone of great relief, “I am so glad
+to find you; I went to your lodgings, I saw
+your name and address in the visitors’ list
+yesterday, but you were out; then I thought
+I might find you here. And this is your
+wife? My dear Florence, I am so glad to
+see you.”</p>
+
+<p>Till that moment Mrs. Walter Hibbert
+had never heard of the existence of Aunt
+Anne, but Aunt Anne had evidently heard
+of Mrs. Hibbert. She knew her Christian
+name, and called her by it as naturally as
+if she had been at her christening. She
+stretched out a small hand covered with a
+black thread glove as she spoke, and held
+Florence’s fingers affectionately in hers.
+Florence looked at her a little wonderingly.
+Aunt Anne was slight and old, nearly sixty
+perhaps. All over her face there were
+little lines that crossed and re-crossed, and
+branched off in every direction. She had
+grey hair, and small dark eyes that blinked
+quickly and nervously; there appeared to be
+some trifling affection of the left eye, for now
+and then, as if by accident, it winked at you.
+The odd thing was that, in spite of her evident
+tendency to nervous excitement, her
+shabby black satin dress, almost threadbare
+shawl, and cheap gloves, there was an air
+of dignity about the spare old lady, and
+something like determination in her kindly
+voice that, joined to her impulsive tenderness,
+made you quickly understand she would
+be a very difficult person to oppose.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear boy,” she said gently to Walter,
+“why didn’t you write to me when you were
+married? You know how glad I should
+have been to hear of your happiness.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why didn’t you write to me, Aunt
+Anne?” he asked, gaily turning the tables.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I ought to have done so. You
+must forgive me, dears, for being so remiss,”
+she said, looking at them both, “and believe
+me that it was from no lack of affection.
+But,” she went on quickly, “we must not
+waste our time. You are coming to Rottingdean
+with me, and at once. Mr. Baines is
+longing to see you both.”</p>
+
+<p>“But we can’t go now, Aunt Anne,”
+Walter declared in his kindest manner; “we
+must get back to the lodgings. We told
+them to have luncheon ready at one o’clock,
+and to-night we go home. You must come
+and lunch with us.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is impossible, dear Walter; you are
+coming back with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“It can’t be done to-day,” he said regretfully.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Walter,” she answered, with a
+look of dismay and in a voice that was
+almost pained, “what would your uncle say
+if he heard you? I could not possibly
+return without you.”</p>
+
+<p>“But he has never seen me, Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is one reason why he would never
+forgive me if I did not take you back.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it is so far, and we should be all
+day getting there,” Walter objected a little
+helplessly, for he felt already that Aunt Anne
+would carry her point.</p>
+
+<p>“It is only to Rottingdean”—she spoke
+with hurt surprise—“and we will drive. I
+saw a beautiful fly as I was coming on to the
+pier, and engaged it. I know you too well,
+my darling, to think that you will refuse
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>Her manner had changed in a moment;
+she said the last words with soft triumph,
+and looked at Florence. The sight of the
+young wife seemed to be too much for her;
+there was something like a tear in the left
+eye, the one that winked, when she spoke
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“I must give her a kiss,” she said tenderly,
+and putting out her arms she gathered the
+girl to her heart. “But we must make
+haste,” she went on quickly, hurrying over
+the fag end of her embrace, as if she had not
+time to indulge in her feelings much as she
+desired to do so. “Mr. Baines will wonder
+what has happened to us. He is longing to
+see you;” and without their knowing it, she
+almost chased them along the pier.</p>
+
+<p>Then Walter, thinking of the prawns and
+the chicken and the large dish of ripe green
+figs, made a wild struggle to get free.</p>
+
+<p>“But really, Aunt Anne,” he said firmly,
+“we must go back to the lodgings. Come
+and lunch with us now, and let us go and
+see Mr. Baines another time; I dare say we
+shall be at Brighton again soon. We will
+make a point of coming now that we know
+you are here, won’t we, Floggie?” and he
+appealed feebly to his wife.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, indeed we will,” Florence assured
+her.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear children,” Aunt Anne laughed, “I
+shall not take any excuse, or think of letting
+you escape now that I have found you.”
+There was an unexpected brightness in her
+manner, but there was no intention of letting
+them go.</p>
+
+<p>“Besides, there may be important letters
+at the lodgings, and I ought to do a bit of
+work;” but there was evident invention in
+Walter’s voice, and she did not slacken her
+pace. Still, as if she wanted him to know
+that she saw through his excuses, she looked
+at him reproachfully, and with a determination
+that did not falter.</p>
+
+<p>“It would be impossible for me to return
+without you,” she said, with extreme gravity;
+“he would never forgive me. Besides, dear
+children, you don’t know what a pleasure it
+is to see you. I could not let you go just
+yet. My heart gave a bound as I recognized
+Walter’s voice,” she went on, turning to
+Florence; “he is so like what his dear
+father used to be. I knew him directly.”</p>
+
+<p>They were already by the turnstile. They
+felt helpless. The old lady with the thin
+shoulders and the black shawl loosely floating
+behind seemed to be their master: they
+were like children doing as they were told.</p>
+
+<p>“Here is the fly. Get in, my darlings,”
+she said triumphantly, and Florence meekly
+took her place. “Get in, dear Walter,” she
+repeated with decision, “I will follow; get
+in,” and he too obeyed. Another moment
+and they were going towards Rottingdean.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady looked relieved and pleased
+when they were well on their way.</p>
+
+<p>“It is a lovely drive,” she said, “and it
+will do you far more good than sitting on
+the pier. I am so glad to have you with me,
+dear children.” She seemed to delight in
+calling them children, and it was odd, but
+each time that she said the word it seemed
+to give her a stronger hold on them. She
+turned to Florence.</p>
+
+<p>“Are your father and mother quite well,
+my dear?” she asked, and waited with
+polite eagerness for a reply.</p>
+
+<p>Walter put his hand on his wife’s.</p>
+
+<p>“She only has a mother,” he said gently.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne looked quite penitent. She
+winked with her left eye and was silent for
+a moment or two, almost as if she meditated
+shedding a tear for the defunct father of the
+niece by marriage whom she had never seen
+in her life before to-day. Suddenly she
+turned the subject so grotesquely that they
+nearly laughed.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you fond of chocolates, my darling?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes——” Florence hesitated a minute
+and then said softly, “Yes, Aunt Anne,
+very”—she had not had occasion to give the
+old lady any name in the few words she had
+spoken previously.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear child, I knew you would be,” Aunt
+Anne said, and from under her shawl she
+produced a box covered with white satin
+paper and having on its lid a very bright
+picture of a very smart lady. “I bought
+that box of chocolates for you as I came
+along. I thought Florence would be like
+the picture on the lid,” she added, turning to
+her nephew; “and she is, don’t you think
+so, Walter dear?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Aunt Anne, she is—it is a most
+beautiful lady,” he answered, and he looked
+fondly at his wife and drew up his lips a
+little bit in a manner that Florence knew
+meant, in the language only she and he in
+all the wide world understood, that in his
+thoughts he kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne was a dear old lady, Florence
+thought, and of course she liked, and always
+would like, any relation of Walter’s; still,
+she did so wish that on this particular day,
+their last by the sea together, Aunt Anne
+had kept her distance. Walter was so pale
+when they left town, but since Friday, with
+nothing to do but to get brown in the sun,
+he had been looking better and handsomer
+every day, and this last one they had longed
+to enjoy in their own lazy way; and now
+all their little plans were spoilt. To-morrow
+he would be at his office: it was really too
+bad, though it was ungrateful to think it,
+perhaps, with the remembrance of Aunt
+Anne’s embrace fresh upon her, and the
+box of chocolates on her lap. Still, after
+all, she felt justified, for she knew that
+Walter was raging inwardly, and that if
+they were alone he would use some short
+but very effective words to describe his own
+feeling in respect to the turning up of Aunt
+Anne. Only he was so good, so gentle
+and considerate, that, no matter what his
+thoughts might be, of course he would not
+let Aunt Anne feel how much her kindness
+bothered him.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, they jogged along in the open
+fly towards Rottingdean. A long, even
+road, with a view on the right of the open
+sea, on the left alternate high hedges and
+wide meadows. The grass on the cliffs
+was green; among the grass were little
+footpaths made by wandering feet that had
+diverged from the main road. Florence
+followed the little tracks with her eyes; she
+thought of footpaths like them far away, not
+by the sea, but among the hanging woods
+of Surrey. She and Walter had sauntered
+along them less than a year ago. She
+thought of home, of the dear mother busy
+with her household duties, but making time
+between to write to the boys in India; of
+the dear, noisy boys who suddenly grew
+to be young men and vanished into the
+whirl of life; of the dirty old pony carriage
+in which she had loved to drive her sweetheart;
+and when she got to this point her
+thoughts came to a full stop to think more
+particularly of the pony. His name was
+Moses, and he had liked being kissed and
+eating sugar. She remembered, with a pang
+of self-reproach, that in the last months
+before her marriage she used to forget to
+kiss Moses, though she often stood absently
+stroking his patient nose. She had sometimes
+even forgotten his morning lump of
+sugar in the excitement of reading the letter
+that the early post never failed to bring.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you fond of scenery, dear?” Aunt
+Anne asked.</p>
+
+<p>With a start Florence looked round at
+the old lady, at Walter, at the shabby lining
+of the fly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, very,” she answered.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew it by the expression of your face
+when you looked at the sea. Mr. Baines
+says it is a lovely view.”</p>
+
+<p>Why should Mr. Baines be quoted?
+Florence wondered. She looked again—an
+open sea, a misty horizon, a blue sky,
+and the sun shining. A fine sea-view,
+certainly, and a splendid day, but scenery
+was hardly the term to apply to the distance
+beside them.</p>
+
+<p>“Is Mr. Baines very fond of the sea?”
+she asked. She saw that Aunt Anne was
+waiting for her to speak, and she said the
+first words that presented themselves.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, he delights in scenery.
+You must call him Uncle Robert, Florence.
+He would be deeply wounded to hear you
+say Mr. Baines. Neither he nor I could
+think of Walter’s wife as anything but our
+niece. You will remember, won’t you, my
+love?” Aunt Anne spoke in the gentle
+but authoritative voice which was, as they
+had already found, difficult to resist.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Aunt Anne, of course I will if you
+wish it; it was only because as yet I do not
+know him.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you soon will know him, my love,”
+the old lady answered confidently; “and
+when you do, you will feel that neither he
+nor I could think of Walter’s wife except
+to love her. Dear child, how fond he will
+be of you!” And she put her hand affectionately
+on Florence’s while she turned to
+Walter and asked suddenly—</p>
+
+<p>“Walter dear, have you got a white silk
+handkerchief for your neck?”</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her for a moment, almost
+puzzled, wondering whether she wanted to
+borrow one.</p>
+
+<p>“No, Aunt Anne, I fear I have not.”</p>
+
+<p>She dived down into her pocket and
+pulled out a little soft packet. “I thought
+it possible you hadn’t one,” she said joyfully,
+“so I bought this for you just now;” and
+she tucked the little parcel into his hand.</p>
+
+<p>It took him by surprise, he did not know
+what to say. He felt like the schoolboy she
+seemed to take him for, and a schoolboy’s
+awkwardness overtook him; he smiled,
+nodded mysteriously, and put the handkerchief
+into his pocket. His manner
+delighted Mrs. Baines.</p>
+
+<p>“He is just the same,” she said to
+Florence; “I remember him so well when
+he was only ten years old. He had the
+most lovely eyes I ever saw. Walter, do
+you remember my visit to your father?—Ah!
+we have reached the hill, that’s why
+he’s going so slowly,” she exclaimed excitedly.
+“We shall be there in five minutes.
+Now we are close to the village. Drive
+through the street, coachman,” she called
+out, “past the church, and a little way on
+you will see a house standing back from the
+road with a long garden in front and a white
+gate. Florence dear,” she asked, still keeping
+her eyes fixed on the driver, “do you
+like preserve?”</p>
+
+<p>“Like—do you mean jam?” Florence
+asked, bewildered by another sudden question.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, preserve,” Aunt Anne
+answered pointedly, as if she resented the
+use of the shorter word.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I like it very much,” her newly
+found niece said humbly, feeling that she
+had been rebuked.</p>
+
+<p>“We have quantities of fruit in our garden,
+and have been preserving it all the week.
+It is not very firm yet, but you must have
+some to take back with you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid we shall hardly be able to
+carry it,” Florence began timidly, feeling
+convinced that if she were made to carry
+jam to London it would be fatal to the rest
+of her luggage.</p>
+
+<p>“I will pack it for you myself,” Aunt
+Anne said firmly. She was watching the
+driver too intently to say more. She did
+not speak again till they had driven down
+the one street of Rottingdean, past the
+newly built cottages and the church, and
+appeared to be getting into another main
+road. Then suddenly she rose triumphantly
+from her seat. “There it is, coachman,
+that little cottage to the left. Dear Walter—how
+pleased your uncle will be! Here
+it is, dears,” and all her kindly face lighted
+up with satisfaction as they stopped before
+a small whitewashed cottage with a long
+garden in front and a bed of lupins at the
+side. Florence noticed that the garden,
+stretching far behind, was full of fruit-trees,
+and that a pear-tree rubbed against the sides
+of the house.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady got out of the fly slowly,
+she handed out her niece and nephew; the
+latter was going to pay the driver, but she
+pushed away his hand, then stood for a
+moment feeling absently in her pocket.
+After a moment she looked up and said
+in an abstracted voice, “Walter dear, you
+must settle with the flyman when you go
+back to Brighton; he is paid by the hour
+and will wait for you, my darlings;” and
+she turned towards the gate. “Come,” she
+said, “I must present you to your uncle.—Robert,”
+she called, “are you there?” She
+walked along the pathway with a quick
+determined step a little in advance of her
+visitors: when she reached the house she
+stood still, looking in, but hesitating to enter.
+Florence and Walter overtaking her saw
+that the front door opened into a room
+simply, almost poorly, furnished, with many
+photographs dotted about the walls, and a
+curious arrangement of quartz and ferns
+in one corner. While Mrs. Baines stood
+irresolute, there came round the house
+from the right a little shabby-looking maid-servant.
+Her dress was dirty, and she wore
+a large cap on her untidy head.</p>
+
+<p>“Emma,” said Aunt Anne in the condescending
+voice of one who struggled, but
+unsuccessfully, to forget her own superior
+condition in life, “where is your master?”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know, mum, but I think he’s
+tying up the beans.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you prepared luncheon?”</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked up in surprise she evidently
+did not dare express, and answered
+in the negative.</p>
+
+<p>“Then go and do so immediately.”</p>
+
+<p>“But please, mum, what am I to put on
+the table?” asked the girl, bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>“Put!” exclaimed the old lady; “why,
+the cold bacon, and the preserved cranberries,
+of course, and the honey and the buns.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence thought that it sounded like the
+oddest meal in the world.</p>
+
+<p>“I think we had better return, I do indeed,
+Aunt Anne, if you will kindly let us,” urged
+Walter, thinking regretfully of the chicken.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne waved her hand.</p>
+
+<p>“Walter,” she answered grandly, “you
+shall not go until you have partaken of our
+hospitality. I wish it were a thousand
+times better than it is,” she added, with a
+pathetic note in her voice that found their
+hearts directly.</p>
+
+<p>Walter put his hand on her shoulder like
+the simple affectionate fellow he was, and
+Florence hastened to say heartily—</p>
+
+<p>“It sounds delightful, dear Aunt Anne;
+it is only that we——” And then there came
+slouching round the left side of the house
+a tall ungainly-looking man of about sixty,
+a man with a brown beard and brown
+trousers, carrying in his hand a newspaper.
+He looked at Walter and at Florence in
+almost stupid surprise, and turned from
+them with a grunt.</p>
+
+<p>“Anne,” he said crossly, “where have
+you been? I have wasted all my morning
+looking for you; you knew those scarlet
+runners wanted tying up, and the sunflowers
+trimming. Who are these?” he asked,
+nodding at his visitors as coolly as if they
+had been out of hearing; “and what is that
+fly doing at the gate?”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, I have been to Brighton, of
+course,” Aunt Anne answered bravely,
+lifting her head and looking him in the
+face, but there was a quaver of something
+like fear in her voice; “I told you I was
+going: I went by the omnibus.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did you go to Brighton for? you
+were there only last week.” He lowered
+his voice and asked again, “Who are these?”</p>
+
+<p>“Robert, I told you yesterday that Walter
+Hibbert’s name was in the visitors’ list in
+the paper, and that I was longing to see
+him and his wife,” she answered sharply,
+but still with dignity—it was doubtful which
+of the two was master—“so of course I went
+off this morning to fetch them. I knew
+how glad you would be to see them.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Baines gave a grunt.</p>
+
+<p>The maid, laying the cloth in the whitewashed
+sitting-room, stopped clattering the
+forks and spoons to hear what was going
+on and to look through the open window.
+Aunt Anne noticed it in a moment, and
+turning round said sternly—</p>
+
+<p>“Emma, proceed with your work. I told
+you,” she went on, again speaking to her
+husband, “that these dear children were at
+Brighton. I have brought them back,
+Robert, to introduce them to you. They
+have been looking forward to it.”</p>
+
+<p>He gave another grunt, and shook his
+awkward shoulders in what was meant to
+be a civil manner.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, that’s it,” he said; “well, you had
+better come in and have something to eat.”
+And he led the way into the cottage.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne entirely recovered herself the
+moment she was under her own roof. “He
+is so forgetful,” she said softly, “but he has
+really been longing to see you;” and she
+touched his arm: “I told them how glad
+you would be to see them, Robert,” she
+said appealingly, as if she felt quite certain
+that he would remember his gladness in a
+moment or two, and wondered if it was yet
+flowing into his heart. “Dear Florence,
+you must ask him to show you his botanical
+specimens; he has a wonderful collection.”</p>
+
+<p>“We will,” said Walter, good-humouredly.</p>
+
+<p>“And now you must excuse me for a
+few minutes, dears. I know how much
+your uncle will enjoy a talk with you;” and,
+to the dismay of the Hibberts, Aunt Anne
+vanished, leaving them alone with the brown
+man.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Baines sat slowly down on the arm-chair,
+the only really comfortable one in the
+room, and stretched out his left leg in a
+manner that showed it was stiff. Then he
+looked at his visitors grimly, yet with a
+suggestion of odd amusement on his face,
+as if he knew perfectly how embarrassed
+they felt.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said, nodding
+towards an ordinary chair, and including
+Walter in the nod. “I dare say you’ll be
+glad of your food before you look at specimens.
+I shall,” and he gave a lumbering
+laugh. “I have done a hard morning’s
+work.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure you must be very tired,”
+Florence said politely, wishing Aunt Anne
+would return.</p>
+
+<p>He seemed to know her thoughts, and
+answered them in an explanatory manner:
+“Anne won’t be long. She always dresses
+before we have dinner. Great nonsense,
+living as we do; but it’s no use my speaking.
+Do you make a long stay in Brighton,
+Mr. Hibbert?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, we go back to town to-night.”</p>
+
+<p>“A good thing,” he said, with another
+lumbering laugh; “Brighton is a horrible
+place to my mind, and the sooner one leaves
+it the better. That pier, with its band and
+set of idle people, with nothing else to do
+but to walk up and down;—well, it’s my
+opinion that railways have done a vast deal
+of mischief and mighty little good to make
+up for it. The same thing can be said of
+newspapers. What good do they do?”</p>
+
+<p>Walter felt that this sudden turn upon
+the Press was a little hard on him, but he
+looked up over his moustache with laughter
+in his eyes, and wondered what would come
+next. Florence was almost angry. Aunt
+Anne’s husband was very rude, she thought,
+and she determined to come to the rescue.</p>
+
+<p>“But you were reading a paper,” she said,
+and tried to see the name of one that Mr.
+Baines had thrown down beside his chair.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, yes; I like to try and find out what
+mischief they are going to do next. If I
+had my way they should only be published
+monthly, if at all. All they do is to try and
+set people by the ears.”</p>
+
+<p>“But they tell us the news.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, and what better are we for that?
+I don’t want to know that a man was hanged
+last week, and a prince will be married to-morrow;
+I only waste my time reading
+about them when I might be usefully employed
+minding my own business.”</p>
+
+<p>“Walter writes for a paper,” Florence
+said distantly, determined to find out if Mr.
+Baines was being rude on purpose. A little
+dull curiosity came into his eyes, as he
+looked up and asked—</p>
+
+<p>“Walter—who’s Walter?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am,” laughed the owner of the name;
+“but she needn’t have betrayed me.” Mr.
+Baines was in no way disconcerted.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh! you write for a paper, do you?
+Well, I am sorry for you; you might do
+something much better. Oh, here’s Anne;
+now we had better go and eat.” With the
+aid of a stick, he shuffled out of the chair,
+refusing Walter’s offered help. “I didn’t
+know you wrote for a paper, or I would
+have held my tongue,” he said, as a sort of
+apology. “No, thank you, I am all right
+once I am on my feet.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence and Walter were astonished
+when they looked at Aunt Anne. They
+hardly knew her again. The shabby black
+shawl had vanished, the dusty bonnet was
+replaced by a soft white cap; there was lace
+at her throat fastened by a little crinkly gold
+brooch that had a place for hair in the
+middle: her satin dress trailed an inch or
+two on the ground behind, and she had put
+a red carnation in her bosom almost coquettishly.</p>
+
+<p>“Now, dears,” she said, with a smile of
+welcome that was fascinating from its absolute
+genuineness, “I shall be truly hurt if
+you fail to do justice to our simple repast”—and
+she sat down with an air of old-fashioned
+stateliness as if she were heading a banquet
+table. “Sit down, dears. Robert, you must
+have Florence on your right hand.”</p>
+
+<p>The Hibberts took their places merrily,
+their spirits reviving now that they were
+no longer alone with their host. Aunt
+Anne, too, looked so picturesque sitting
+there in the little summer-like room, with
+the garden beyond, that they could not help
+being glad they had come. They felt that
+they were living a distinct day in their lives,
+and not one that afterwards in looking back
+they would find difficult to sort out from a
+hundred others like it.</p>
+
+<p>Even Mr. Baines grew less grumpy, and
+offered presently to show them the garden.</p>
+
+<p>“And the plum-trees and the pear-trees,”
+said Aunt Anne; “and the view from the
+summer-house in the corner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes,” her husband said, “we’ll show
+them all;” and he helped to do the honours
+of the table with what he evidently intended
+to be genial courtesy.</p>
+
+<p>“It does my heart good to see you,
+dears,” Aunt Anne said, as she insisted on
+helping them to an enormous quantity of
+stewed cranberries.</p>
+
+<p>“And it does us good to be here,” they
+answered, forgetting all their vexation at
+losing a day by the sea; forgetting even the
+poor chicken that was being roasted in vain,
+and the waiting fly to be paid for at so much
+an hour.</p>
+
+<p>“Walter dear,” Mrs. Hibbert said, as they
+drove back to Brighton, carefully balancing
+on their knees four large pots of jam, while
+they also kept an eye on an enormous nosegay
+badly tied up, that wobbled about on
+the back seat, “Mr. Baines didn’t seem to
+know you when we arrived.”</p>
+
+<p>“He had never set eyes on me before.
+Aunt Anne only set eyes on him five years
+ago. He was rather a grumpy beggar. I
+wonder who the deuce he was? We none
+of us ever knew.”</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t know you were a journalist,
+I think.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I suppose not. I wonder if he ever
+did anything for a living himself?” Then, as
+if he repented saying anything that sounded
+unkind of a man whose salt he had just
+eaten, he added, “But you can never tell
+what people are from their talk the first time
+you see them. He is not unlike a man I
+knew some years ago, who was a great inventive
+genius. He used to shuffle about
+in shoes too big for him, just as this beggar
+did.”</p>
+
+<p>“I felt quite frightened when he first came
+round the corner.”</p>
+
+<p>“You see it was rough upon him having
+his morning spoilt. A man who lives in the
+country like that generally gets wrapped up
+in his surroundings. I suppose I must have
+known that Aunt Anne was at Rottingdean,”
+he went on; “but if so, I had forgotten it.
+She quarrelled with my father and every one
+else because she was always quite unable to
+keep any money. There was a great deliberation
+in the family a few years ago,
+when it was announced that Aunt Anne was
+destitute and no one wanted to keep her.”</p>
+
+<p>“But had she no money of her own?”</p>
+
+<p>“She had a little, but she lived on the
+capital till it was gone, and there was an
+end of that. Then suddenly she married
+Mr. Baines. I don’t know who he was, but
+she met him at a railway station. He had
+a bad headache, I believe, and she thought
+he was ill, and went up and offered him
+some smelling-salts.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, it was quite romantic,” Florence
+exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Walter had a curious way of looking up
+when he was amused, and he looked up in
+that curious way now.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he said, “quite romantic.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do go on.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know any more except that somehow
+they got married, and she turned up
+to-day as you saw; and I wish she hadn’t
+given us any jam, confound it. I say,
+darling, let’s throw it over that hedge.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I wouldn’t for the world,” Florence
+said. “It would be so unkind. She was
+a dear old lady, Walter, and I am glad we
+went to see her. She asked for our address
+in London, and said she should write to us.”</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p>But Aunt Anne did not write for a long
+time, and then it was only to condole with
+Walter on the death of his father. The first
+year after their visit to Rottingdean she sent
+a large Christmas card inscribed to “My
+dear Walter and Florence, from Aunt Anne;”
+but the second year even this was omitted.
+It was not until Mr. and Mrs. Hibbert had
+been married nearly seven years that Aunt
+Anne again appeared before them.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail1.jpg' alt='moth' id='iid-0002' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap2.jpg' alt='scene with trees and a castle in the background' id='iid-0003' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER II.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capm.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='M'/>any</span> things had happened to Mr. and
+Mrs. Hibbert in those seven years.
+Most important of all—to themselves, at
+least—was the birth of their two children,
+lovely children Mrs. Hibbert declared them
+to be, and in his heart her husband agreed
+with her. But the time came when Walter
+found to his dismay that even lovely children
+would sometimes cry, and that as they grew
+older they wanted room to run about with
+that constant patter-pattering sound that is
+usually more delightful to a mother’s ear than
+to a fathers, especially when he has to produce
+intelligible copy. So the Hibberts
+moved away from the little flat in which they
+had begun their married life, to an ugly little
+upright house sufficiently near Portland Road
+to enable Walter to get quickly to the office.
+There a nursery could be made at the top of
+the house, where the children would be not
+only out of sight, but out of hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Walter did a great deal of work, and was
+fairly well paid, but that did not mean a
+large income for a young couple with two
+children and three servants, trying to keep
+up an appearance before the world. He
+wrote for magazines and literary journals,
+occasionally he did a long pot-boiler for one
+of those reviews he called refuges for destitute
+intellects; and altogether was thrown much
+among men better off than himself, so that
+he did not like to look poor. Besides, he
+preferred to live with a certain amount of
+comfort, even though it meant a certain
+amount of anxiety, to looking poverty-stricken
+or shabby for the sake of knowing precisely
+how he would stand at the end of the quarter,
+or being able at any moment to lay his hand
+on a ten-pound note.</p>
+
+<p>“You not only feel awkward yourself if
+you look poor, but cause other people to feel
+so,” he said; “and that is making yourself a
+nuisance: you have no business to do that
+if you can avoid it.”</p>
+
+<p>So, though the Hibberts had only a small
+house, it was pretty and well arranged.
+Their simple meals were daintily served, and
+everything about them had an air that
+implies content dashed with luxury. In fact,
+they lived as people can live now, even on a
+small income, and especially in London, in
+comfort and refinement.</p>
+
+<p>Still, it was a difficult task to pull through,
+and Walter felt that he ought to be making
+more money. He knew, too, though he did
+not tell his wife so, that the constant work
+and anxiety were telling on him; he wanted
+another but a far longer bracing-up than the
+one he had had seven years ago at Brighton.
+“A sea voyage would be the thing,” he
+thought, “only I don’t see how it could be
+managed, even if I could get away.”</p>
+
+<p>The last year had been a fortunate one in
+some respects: an aunt of Mrs. Hibbert’s
+had died, leaving them a hundred pounds
+and a furnished cottage near Witley, in
+Surrey. It was a dear little cottage, they
+both protested—red brick, of course, as all
+well-bred cottages are nowadays, standing in
+an acre and a half of its own fir-wood, and
+having round it a garden with tan paths and
+those prim flowers that grow best in the
+vicinity of fir. It would be delightful to stay
+there in the summer holidays, they agreed,
+or to run down from Saturday to Monday,
+or, by-and-by, to send the children there for
+a spell with the governess when their parents
+were not able to get away from town.
+Walter had tried sending Florence and the
+children and going down every week himself,
+but he found “it didn’t work.” She was
+always longing to be with him, and he with
+her. It was only a broad sea and a few
+thousand miles that would make separation
+possible, and he did not think he could
+endure that very long: he was absurdly fond
+of his dear little wife.</p>
+
+<p>All this he thought over as he walked
+along the Strand one morning to his office.
+He was going to see his chief, who had sent
+for him on a matter of business. His chief
+was Mr. Fisher, an excellent editor, though
+not quite enough of a partisan perhaps to
+have a strong following. <span class='it'>The Centre</span> was a
+model of fairness, and the mainstay of that
+great section of the reading public that likes
+its news trustworthy and copious, but has no
+pronounced party leanings. Still, if it was a
+paper without political influence, it was one
+of great political use, for it invariably stated
+a question from all points of view with equal
+fairness, though it leant, if at all, from sheer
+editorial generosity, towards making the best
+of it for the weakest side. Thus a minority
+looked to it almost as to an advocate, and
+the majority knew that any strength that
+was against them would be set forth in <span class='it'>The
+Centre</span>, and that if none was pleaded there,
+the right and the triumph were together.
+Mr. Fisher liked Walter Hibbert; and
+though by tacit agreement their relations
+inside the office were purely formal, outside
+they were a good deal more intimate.
+Occasionally they took the form of a quiet
+dinner, or a few hours in the little house
+near Portland Road; for Florence was rather
+a favourite of the editors—perhaps, for one
+reason, because she was obviously of opinion
+that he ought to be married. A man generally
+likes a woman who pays him this
+compliment, especially when it is disinterested.
+Mr. Fisher was a widower and
+childless. There was some story connected
+with his marriage, but the Hibberts never
+heard the rights of it, and it was evidently a
+painful subject to him. All that was known
+in the office was that years before a gaunt-looking
+woman used to sometimes come for
+him, and that they always walked silently
+away together. Some one said once that he
+had married her because he had known her
+for years, and she was poor and he did not
+know how to provide for her except by
+marrying her, and that she was querulous
+and worried him a good deal. After a time
+she grew thin and feeble-looking. One day,
+about three years after the marriage, her
+death appeared in the paper; her husband
+looked almost relieved, but very sad, and
+no one ventured to ask him any questions.</p>
+
+<p>As Walter walked along the Strand that
+morning he meditated on many ways of
+improving his condition and at the same
+time of not overworking himself. He found
+that it told on him considerably to be down
+late at the office three nights a week, writing
+his article, and then, with the excitement of
+work still upon him, to go home tired and
+hungry in the small hours of the morning.
+It was bad for Florence, too, for she generally
+sat up for him, declaring that to taste his
+supper and to have a little chat with him did
+her good and made her heart light. Sometimes
+he thought he would take up a different
+line altogether (he knew his editor would aid
+and abet him in anything for his good) and
+try living in the country, running up to town
+every day if necessary. But this would never
+do; it would only make him restive. His
+position was not yet strong enough to admit
+of his taking things so easily. It was important
+to him to live among men of knowledge
+and influence, to be in the whirl and
+twirl of things, and London was essentially
+the bull’s-eye, not only of wealth and commerce,
+but of most other things with which
+men of all degrees concern themselves.</p>
+
+<p>And when he got to this point he came to
+the conclusion that he was thinking too much
+about himself. After all, he only wanted a
+month’s rest or a couple of months’ change of
+air; a friendly talk such as he might possibly
+get in the next quarter of an hour would
+probably bring about one or the other and
+in a far better form than he himself could
+devise it. Mr. Fisher was a man of infinite
+resource, not merely in regard to his paper,
+but for himself and his friends too, when they
+consulted him about their personal affairs.
+It was one of his characteristics that he liked
+being consulted. Walter felt that the best
+thing would be to get away alone with
+Florence, to some place where the climate
+had no cause to be ashamed of itself: he
+wanted to be sated with sunshine. It was
+no good going alone, and no matter how
+pleasant a friend went with him, a time
+always came when he wanted to go by one
+route and the friend by another. “Now,
+your wife,” he thought, “not only particularly
+longs to go by your route, but thinks you a
+genius for finding it out.”</p>
+
+<p>He stopped for a moment to look at a
+bookshop; there was a box of second-hand
+books outside; he hesitated, but remembered
+that he had no time to stay. As he turned
+away some one touched him on the arm, and
+a voice said doubtfully—</p>
+
+<p>“Will you speak to me, Walter?” He
+looked up and instantly held out his hand
+with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, it’s Wimple,” he said; “how are
+you, old fellow? Of course I’ll speak to
+you. How are you?”</p>
+
+<p>The man who had stopped him was about
+eight-and-twenty; he was tall and thin, his
+legs were too long and very rickety. To
+look at he was not prepossessing; he had a
+pinky complexion, pale reddish hair, and
+small round dark eyes with light lashes and
+weak lids. On either side of his face there
+were some straggling whiskers; his lips were
+thin and his whole expression very grave.
+His voice was low but firm in its tone, as
+though he wished to convey that even in
+small matters it would be useless to contradict
+him. He wore rather shabby dark
+clothes, his thin overcoat was unbuttoned
+and showed that the undercoat was faced
+with watered silk that had worn a little
+shiny; attached to his waistcoat was a watchguard
+made of brown hair ornamented here
+and there with bright gold clasps. He did
+not look strong or very flourishing. He
+was fairly gentleman-like, but only fairly so,
+and he did not look very agreeable. The
+apparent weakness of his legs seemed to
+prevent him from walking uprightly; he
+looked down a good deal at the toes of his
+boots, which were well polished. The oddest
+thing about him was that with all his unprepossessing
+appearance he had a certain
+air of sentiment; occasionally a sentimental
+tone stole into his voice, but he carefully
+repressed it. Walter remembered the
+moment he looked at him that the brown
+hair watchguard had been the gift of a pretty
+girl, the daughter of a tailor to whom he
+had made love as if in compensation for not
+paying her father’s bill. He wondered how
+it had ended, whether the girl had broken
+her heart for him, or found him out. But
+the next moment he hated himself for his
+ungenerous thoughts, and forcing them back
+spoke in as friendly a voice as he could
+manage. “It’s ages since we came across
+each other,” he said, “and I should not have
+seen you just now if you had not seen
+me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wasn’t sure whether you would speak
+to me,” Mr. Wimple said solemnly, as they
+walked on together, and then almost hurriedly,
+as if to avoid thinking about unpleasant
+things, he asked, “How is your wife?”</p>
+
+<p>“All right, thank you. But how are you,
+and how are you getting on?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am not at all well, Walter”—Mr.
+Wimple coughed, as if to show that he was
+delicate—“and my uncle has behaved shamefully
+to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, what has he done?” Walter asked,
+wishing that he felt more cordial, for he had
+known Alfred Wimple longer almost than
+he had known any one. Old acquaintance
+was not to be lightly put aside. It constituted
+a claim in Walter’s eyes as strong
+as did relationship, though it was only when
+the claim was made on him, and never when
+he might have pressed it for his own advantage,
+that he remembered it.</p>
+
+<p>“Done! Why, he has turned me out of his
+office, just because he wanted to make room
+for the son of a rich client, for nothing else
+in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“That was rough,” Walter answered,
+thinking almost against his will that Wimple
+had never been very accurate and that this
+account was possibly not a fair one. “What
+excuse did he make?”</p>
+
+<p>“He said my health was bad, that I was
+not strong enough to do the work, and had
+better take a few months’ holiday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, but that was rather kind of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“He didn’t mean it for kindness;” and
+Mr. Wimple looked at his friend with dull
+severity in his eyes. “He wanted to give
+my place in his office to some one else. But
+it is quite true about my health. I am very
+delicate, Walter. I must take a few months’
+rest.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then perhaps he was right after all.
+But can you manage the few months’ rest?”
+Walter asked, hesitating, for he knew the
+question was expected from him. In old
+days he had had so much to do with Wimple’s
+affairs that he did not like now to ignore
+them altogether.</p>
+
+<p>“He makes me an allowance, of course,
+but it’s not sufficient,” Alfred Wimple
+answered reluctantly; “I wanted him to
+keep my post open for a few months, but
+he refused, though he’s the only relation I
+have.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, but he has been pretty good,”
+Walter said, in a pacific voice, “and perhaps
+he thinks you really want rest. It’s not bad
+of him to make you an allowance. It’s more
+than any one would do for me if I had to
+give up work for a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>“He only does it because he can’t well
+refuse, and it’s a beggarly sum, after all.”</p>
+
+<p>To which Walter answered nothing. He
+had always felt angry with himself for not
+liking Alfred better; they were such very
+old friends. They had been school-fellows
+long ago, and afterwards, when Walter was
+at Cambridge and Alfred was an articled clerk
+in London (he was by three years the younger
+of the two), there had been occasions when
+they had met and spent many pleasant hours
+together. To do Walter justice, it had
+always been Alfred who had sought him and
+not he who had sought Alfred, for in spite of
+the latter’s much professed affection Walter
+never wholly trusted him; he hated himself
+for it, but the fact remained. “The worst
+of Alfred is, that he lies,” he had said to
+himself long ago. He remembered his own
+remark to-day with a certain amount of
+reproach, but he knew that he had not been
+unjust; still, after all, he thought it was not
+so very great a crime: many people lied
+nowadays, sometimes merely to give their
+conversation an artistic value, and sometimes
+without even being aware of it. He was
+inclined to think that he had been rather
+hard on Alfred, who had been very constant
+to him. Besides, Wimple had been unlucky;
+he had been left a penniless lad to the care
+of an uncle, a rich City solicitor, who had not
+appreciated the charge; he had never had a
+soul who cared for him, and must have been
+very miserable and lonely at times. If he
+had had a mother or sister, or any one at all
+to look after him, he might have been
+different. Then, too, Walter remembered
+that once when he was very ill in the vacation
+it was Alfred who had turned up and
+nursed him with almost a woman’s anxiety.
+A kindness like that made a link too strong
+for a few disagreeables to break. He could
+not help thinking that he was a brute not to
+like his old friend better.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sorry things are so bad with you,
+old man. You must come and dine and talk
+them over.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple looked him earnestly in the
+face.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t like to come,” he said in a half-ashamed,
+half-pathetic voice; “I behaved
+so badly to you about that thirty pounds; but
+luck was against me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind, you shall make it all right
+when luck is with you,” Walter answered
+cheerfully, determined to forget all unpleasant
+bygones. “Why not come to-night? we
+shall be alone.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple shook his head.</p>
+
+<p>“No, not to-night,” he said; “I am not
+well, and I am going down to the country
+till Wednesday; it will do me good.” A
+little smile hovered round his mouth as he
+added, “some nice people in Hampshire
+have asked me to stay with them.”</p>
+
+<p>“In Hampshire. Whereabouts in Hampshire?”</p>
+
+<p>There was a certain hesitation in Mr.
+Wimple’s manner as he answered, “You
+don’t know them, and I don’t suppose you
+ever heard of the place, Walter; it is called
+Liphook.”</p>
+
+<p>“Liphook? Why, of course I know it.
+It is on the Portsmouth line; we have a
+cottage, left us by my wife’s aunt only last
+year, in the same direction, only rather nearer
+town. How long are you going to stay
+there?”</p>
+
+<p>“Till Wednesday. I will come and dine
+with you on Thursday, if you will have me.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right, old man, 7.30. Perhaps you
+had better tell me where to write in case I
+have to put you off for business reasons.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple hesitated a minute, and then
+gave his London address, adding that he
+should be back on Wednesday night or
+Thursday morning at latest. They were
+standing by the newspaper office.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you think there might be anything
+I could do here?” he asked, nodding at the
+poster outside the door; “I might review
+legal books or something of that sort.”</p>
+
+<p>“I expect Fisher has a dozen men ready
+for anything at a moment’s notice,” Walter
+answered, “but I’ll put in a word for you if
+I get the chance;” and with a certain feeling
+of relief he shook his friend’s hand and
+rushed upstairs. The atmosphere seemed
+a little clearer when he was alone. “I’ll do
+what I can for him,” he thought, “but I
+can’t stand much of his company. There is
+a want of fresh air about him that bothers
+me so. Perhaps he could do a legal book
+occasionally, he used to write rather well.
+I’ll try what can be done.”</p>
+
+<p>But his talk with Mr. Fisher was so important
+to himself and so interesting in many
+ways that he forgot all about Alfred until he
+was going out of the door; and then it was
+too late to speak about him. Suddenly a
+happy thought struck him—Mr. Fisher was
+to dine with him next week, he would ask
+Wimple also for Thursday. Then, if they
+got on, the rest would arrange itself. He remembered
+too that Alfred always dressed
+carefully and looked his best in the evening
+and laid himself out to be agreeable.</p>
+
+<p>“By the way, Fisher, I wonder if you
+would come on Thursday instead of on
+Wednesday. I expect an old friend, and
+should like you to meet him; he is clever
+and rather off luck just now; of course you’ll
+get your chat with my wife all right—in fact,
+better if there are one or two people to
+engross me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well, Thursday if you like; it will
+do just as well for me; I am free both evenings
+as far as I know.”</p>
+
+<p>“Agreed, then.” And Walter went down
+the office stairs pleased at his own success.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p>“That horrid Mr. Wimple will spoil our
+dinner; I never liked him,” Florence exclaimed
+when she heard of the arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>“I know you didn’t, and I don’t like him
+either, which is mean of me, for he’s a very
+old friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if we neither of us like him, why
+should we inflict him on our lives?”</p>
+
+<p>“We won’t; we’ll cut him as soon as he
+has five hundred a year; but it wouldn’t be
+fair to do so just now when he’s down on his
+luck; he and I have been friends too long
+for that.”</p>
+
+<p>“But not very great friends?”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps not; but we won’t throw him
+over in bad weather—try and be a little nice
+to him to please me, there’s a dear Floggie,”
+which instantly carried the day. “You had
+better ask Ethel Dunlop; Fisher is fond of
+music, and she will amuse him when he is
+tired of flirting with you,” Walter suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll never tire of that,” she laughed,
+“but I’ll invite her if you like. She can sing
+while you talk to Mr. Wimple and your editor
+discusses European politics with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“He’ll probably discuss politics outside
+Europe, if he discusses any,” her husband
+answered; “things look very queer in the
+East.”</p>
+
+<p>“They always do,” she said wisely; “but
+I believe it’s all nonsense, and only our idea
+because we live so far off.”</p>
+
+<p>“You had better tell Fisher to send me
+out to see.”</p>
+
+<p>“Us, you mean.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, me. They wouldn’t stand you,
+dear,” and he looked at her anxiously; “I
+shouldn’t be much surprised if he asked me
+to go for a bit—indeed, I think he has an
+idea of it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Walter, it would be horrible.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not if it did me good; sometimes I
+think I need a thorough change.”</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“No, not then,” she answered.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail2.jpg' alt='moth' id='iid-0004' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap3.jpg' alt='sea coast scene with a sailboat' id='iid-0005' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER III.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capf.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='F'/>lorence</span> sat thinking over Walter’s
+hint concerning his health. She had
+succeeded in frightening herself a good deal;
+for there was really nothing the matter with
+him that rest and change would not set right.
+She remembered all the years he had been
+constantly at work, for even in their holidays
+he had taken away something he wanted to
+get done, and for the first time she realized
+how great the strain must have been upon
+him. “He must long for a change,” she
+thought, “for a break in his life, an upsetting
+of its present programme. The best thing
+of all would be a sea voyage. That would
+do him a world of good.” She fancied him
+on board a P. and O., walking up and down
+the long deck, drinking in life and strength.
+How vigorous he would grow; how sunburnt
+and handsome, and how delightful it
+would be to see him return. She hoped
+that Mr. Fisher would offer him a special
+correspondentship for a time, or something
+that would break the routine of his life and
+give him the excitement and pleasure that
+a spell of rest and complete change would
+entail. She would talk to Mr. Fisher herself,
+she thought. He always liked arranging
+other people’s lives; he was so clever in
+setting things right for any one who consulted
+him, and so helpful; and no doubt
+he had noticed already that Walter was
+looking ill.</p>
+
+<p>“But he is quite well; it is nothing but
+overwork, and that can soon be set
+right——”</p>
+
+<p>There was a double knock at the street
+door.</p>
+
+<p>It was only eleven o’clock, too early for
+visitors. Florence left off thinking of Walter
+to wonder who it could be. The door was
+opened and shut, the servant’s footsteps
+going up to the drawing-room were followed
+by others so soft that they could scarcely be
+heard at all.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines, ma’am. She told me to say
+that she was most anxious to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines?” Florence exclaimed
+absently. It was so long since she had
+seen Aunt Anne, and she had never heard her
+called by her formal name, that for the moment
+she was puzzled. Then she remembered
+and went up quickly to meet her visitor.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne was sitting on the little yellow
+couch near the window. She looked thin
+and spare, as she had done at Brighton,
+but she had a woebegone air now that had
+not belonged to her then. She was in deep
+mourning; there was a mass of crape on her
+bonnet, and a limp cashmere shawl clung about
+her shoulders. She rose slowly as Florence
+entered, but did not advance a single step.</p>
+
+<p>She stretched out her arms; the black
+shawl gave them the appearance of wings;
+they made her look, as she stood with her
+back to the light, like a large bat. But the
+illusion was only momentary, and then the
+wan face, the many wrinkles, and the nervous
+twitch of the left eye all helped to make an
+effect that was pathetic enough.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence,” she said in a tremulous voice,
+“I felt that I must see you and Walter again,”
+and she folded Mrs. Hibbert to her heart.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very glad to see you, Aunt Anne,”
+Florence answered simply. “Are you quite
+well, and are you staying in London?—But
+you are in deep mourning; I hope you have
+not had any very sad loss?”</p>
+
+<p>The tears came into the poor old lady’s
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear,” she said still more tremulously
+than before, “you are evidently not aware
+of my great bereavement; but I might have
+known that, for if you had been you would
+have written to me. Florence, I am a
+widow; I am alone in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Hibbert put her hands softly on
+Aunt Anne’s and kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know, I had no idea, and Walter
+had not——”</p>
+
+<p>“I knew it. Don’t think that I have
+wronged either you or him. I knew that
+you were ignorant of all that had happened
+to me or you would have written to express
+your sympathy, though, if you had, I might
+not even have received your letter, for I
+have been homeless too,” Mrs. Baines said
+sadly. She stopped for a moment; then,
+watching Florence intently, she went on in
+a choking voice, “Mr. Baines has been dead
+more than eight months. He died as he
+had lived, my darling. He thought of you
+both three weeks before his death,” and her
+left eye winked.</p>
+
+<p>“It was very kind of him,” Florence said
+gratefully; “and you, dear Aunt Anne,”
+she asked gently, “are you staying in
+London for the present? Where are you
+living?”</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as if Aunt Anne gathered up
+all her strength to answer.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, I am in London because I am
+destitute—destitute, Florence, and—and I
+have to work for my living.”</p>
+
+<p>Her niece was too much astonished to
+answer for a minute.</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne,” she exclaimed, “how
+can you work? what can you have strength
+to do, you poor dear?”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne hesitated a moment; she
+winked again in an absent unconscious
+manner, and then answered with great
+solemnity:</p>
+
+<p>“I have accepted a post at South Kensington
+as chaperon to a young married lady
+whose husband is abroad. She has a
+young sister staying with her, and her husband
+does not approve of their being
+alone without some older person to protect
+them.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very brave of you to go out into
+the world now,” Florence said admiringly.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, it would be most repugnant
+to me to be a burden to any one, even to
+those who love me best; that is why—why
+I did it, Florence.”</p>
+
+<p>“And are they kind to you? do they
+treat you quite properly?” Mrs. Hibbert
+inquired anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady drew herself up and answered
+severely:</p>
+
+<p>“I should not stay with them an hour
+if they ever forgot what was due to me.
+They treat me with the greatest respect.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why have you been obliged to do
+this, you poor Aunt Anne? Had Mr.
+Baines no money to leave you?”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne’s mouth twitched as she heard
+the “Mr. Baines,” but Florence had never
+thought of him as anything else, and when
+the two last words slipped out she felt it
+would be better to go on and not to notice
+her mistake.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, at his death his income
+ceased; there was barely enough for immediate
+expenses, and then—and then I had
+to go out into the world.”</p>
+
+<p>It was terrible to see how keenly Aunt
+Anne suffered; how fully alive she was to
+the sad side of her own position. Poor old
+lady, it was impossible to help feeling very
+much for her, Florence thought.</p>
+
+<p>“And had he no relations at all who could
+help you, dear?” she asked, wondering that
+none should have held out a helping hand.</p>
+
+<p>“No, not one. I married for love, as
+you did; that is one reason why I knew
+that you would feel for me.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a world of sadness in her voice
+as she said the last words; her face seemed
+to grow thinner and paler as she related her
+troubles. She looked far older, too, than
+she had done on the Brighton day. The
+little lines about her face had become
+wrinkles; her hair was scantier and greyer;
+her eyes deeper set in her head; her hands
+were the thin dry hands of old age.</p>
+
+<p>Florence ached for her, and pondered
+things over for a moment. Walter was not
+rich, and he was not strong just now; the
+hint of yesterday had sunk deep in her heart.
+Still, he and she must try and make this
+poor soul’s few remaining years comfortable,
+if no one else could be found on whom she
+had a claim. She did not think she could
+ask Aunt Anne to come and live with
+them; she remembered an aunt who had
+lived in her girlhood’s home, who had not
+been a success. But they might for all that
+do something; the old lady could not be
+left to the wide world’s tender mercies.
+Florence knew but little of her husband’s
+relations, except that he had no near or
+intimate ones left, but there might be some
+outlying cousins sufficiently near to Aunt
+Anne to make their helping her a moral
+obligation.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you no friends—no relations at all,
+dear Aunt Anne?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>With a long sigh Mrs. Baines answered:</p>
+
+<p>“Florence”—she gave a gulp before she
+went on, as if to show that what she had to
+tell was almost too sad to be put into words,—“Sir
+William Rammage is my own cousin,
+he has thousands and thousands a year, and
+he refuses to allow me anything. I went to
+him when I first came to London and begged
+him to give me a small income so that I
+might not be obliged to go out into the
+world; but he said that he had so many
+claims upon him that it was impossible. Yet
+he and I were babes together; we lay in the
+same cradle once, while our mothers stood
+over us, hand in hand. But though we had
+not met since we were six years old till I
+went to him in my distress a few months
+ago, he refused to do anything for me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Have you been in London long then,
+Aunt Anne?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have been here five months, Florence.
+I took a lodging on the little means I had
+left, and then—and then I had to struggle as
+best I could.”</p>
+
+<p>“You should have come to us before,
+poor dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should have done so, my love, but—my
+lodging was too simple, and I was not in a
+position to receive you as I could have
+wished. I waited, hoping that Sir William
+would see that it was incumbent on him to
+make me an adequate allowance; but he has
+not done so.”</p>
+
+<p>“And won’t he do anything for you? If
+he is rich he might do something temporarily,
+even if he won’t make you a permanent
+allowance. Has he done nothing?”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines shook her head sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“He sent me some port wine, my love,
+but port wine is always pernicious to me; I
+wrote and told him so, but he did not even
+reply. It is not four years ago since he was
+Lord Mayor of London, and yet he will do
+nothing for me.”</p>
+
+<p>She had lost her air of distress, there was
+a dogged dignity in her manner; she stood
+up and looked at her niece; it seemed as if,
+in speaking of Sir William Rammage, she
+remembered that the world had used her
+shamefully, and she had determined to give
+it back bitter scorn for its indifference to her
+griefs.</p>
+
+<p>“Lord Mayor of London,” Mrs. Hibbert
+repeated, and rubbed her eyes a little; it
+seemed like part of a play and not a very
+sane one—the old lady, her deep mourning,
+her winking left eye, and the sudden introduction
+of a Lord Mayor.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Lord Mayor of London,” repeated
+Mrs. Baines, “and he lets me work for my
+daily bread.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is Walter also related to the Lord
+Mayor?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love. Your Walter’s grandfather
+married twice; I was the daughter of
+the first marriage—my mother was the daughter
+of a London merchant—your Walter’s
+father was the son of the second marriage.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is too complicated to understand,”
+Florence answered in despair. “And is
+there no one else, Aunt Anne?”</p>
+
+<p>“There are many others, but they are indifferent
+as he is, they are cold and hard,
+Florence; that is a lesson one has to learn
+when fortune deserts one,” and the old lady
+shook her head mournfully.</p>
+
+<p>“But, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence said,
+aghast at this sudden vista of the world,
+“tell me who they are besides Sir William
+Rammage; let Walter try what can be done.
+Surely they cannot all be as cold and hard as
+you think.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is of no use, my love,” Mrs. Baines
+said sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“But perhaps you are mistaken, and they
+will after all do something for you. Do tell
+me who they are.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines drew herself up proudly; the
+tears that had seemed to be on their way a
+minute ago must have retreated suddenly,
+for her eyes looked bright, and she spoke in
+a quick, determined voice.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said, “you must not expect
+me to give you an account of all my
+friends and relations and of what they will
+or will not do for me. Don’t question me,
+my love, for I cannot allow it—I cannot
+indeed. I have told you that I am destitute,
+that I am a widow, that I am working
+for my living; and that must suffice. I am
+deeply attached to you and Walter; there
+is in my heart a picture that will never be
+effaced of you and him standing in our
+garden at Rottingdean, of your going away
+in the sunshine with flowers and preserve in
+your hands—the preserve that I myself had
+made. It is because I love you that I have
+come to you to-day, and because I feel assured
+that you love me; but you must remember, Florence,
+that I am your aunt and you must treat
+me with proper respect and consideration.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne——” Florence began
+astonished.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines put her hand on Mrs. Hibbert’s
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“There there,” she said forgivingly, “I
+know you did not mean to hurt me,
+but”—and here her voice grew tender and
+tremulous again—“no one, not even you or
+Walter, must presume, for I cannot allow it.
+There—kiss me,” and she pulled Florence’s
+head down on to her breast, while suddenly—for
+there were wonderfully quick transitions
+of feeling expressed on the old wan face all
+through the interview—a smile that was
+almost joyous came to her lips. “I am so
+glad to see you again, my dear,” she said;
+“I have looked forward to this day for years.
+I loved you from the very first moment I
+saw you at Brighton, and I have always
+loved your Walter. I wish,” she went on,
+as Florence gently disengaged herself from
+the black cashmere embrace, “I wish you
+could remember him a little boy as I do.
+He had the darkest eyes and the lightest
+hair in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“His hair is a beautiful brown now,” her
+niece answered, rather thankfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, it is,” the old lady said,
+with a little glee at the young wife’s pride.
+“And so is yours. I think you have the
+prettiest hair I ever saw.” There was not
+a shade of flattery in her voice, so that
+Florence was appeased after the severe snub
+of a moment ago, and smoothed her plaits
+with much complacency. “And now, tell
+me when will your dear one be at home, for
+I long to see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is very uncertain, Aunt Anne; I fear
+he has no fixed time; but I know that he will
+try and make one to see you when he hears
+that you are in town.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure he will,” Mrs. Baines said,
+evidently certain that there was no doubt at all
+about that. “Are the dear children at home?”
+she inquired. “I long for a sight of them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall I call them?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love; it will do my heart good
+to look at them.”</p>
+
+<p>Nothing loth, Florence opened the door
+and called upstairs:</p>
+
+<p>“Monty and Catty, are you there, my
+beauties? I want you, my chicks.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a quick patter-patter overhead,
+a door opened and two little voices answered
+both at once—</p>
+
+<p>“We’ll come, mummy, we’ll come.”</p>
+
+<p>A moment later there entered a sturdy
+boy of six, with eyes like his father’s, and
+a girl of three and a half, with nut-brown
+hair hanging down her back.</p>
+
+<p>“We are come, mummy,” they exclaimed
+joyfully, as their mother, taking their fat
+hands in hers, led them up to Aunt Anne.
+The old lady took them in her arms and
+kissed them.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless them,” she said, “bless them. I
+should have known them anywhere. They
+couldn’t be any one else’s children. My
+darlings, do you know me?” Monty drew
+back a little way and looked at her saucily,
+as if he thought the question rather a joke.</p>
+
+<p>“No, we don’t know you,” he answered
+in a jovial voice, “we don’t know you a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>“Bless him,” exclaimed Aunt Anne, and
+laughed aloud for glee. “He is so like
+his father, it makes me forget all my sorrows
+to see him. My dear children,” she went on,
+solemnly addressing them, “I did not bring
+you anything, but before the day is finished
+you shall have proof that Aunt Anne loves
+you. Good-bye, my dears, good-bye;” and
+she looked at their mother with an expression
+that said plainly, “Send them away.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence opened the door and the children
+pattered back to the nursery. When they
+had gone Mrs. Baines rose.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go too,” she said sadly, as if she
+had overtaken her griefs and sorrows again,
+“for I am no longer my own mistress. Remember
+that, dear, when you think of me, or
+when you and Walter converse together.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it is nearly one o’clock, will not you
+stay and lunch? Walter might come, and
+he would be so glad to see you,” Florence
+said anxiously, remembering that as yet she
+had done nothing to help the old lady, and
+without her husband she felt it was too
+awkward a task to attempt.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my dear, no; but I shall come again
+when you least expect me, on the chance
+of finding you at home.”</p>
+
+<p>“And is there nothing I can do for you,
+Aunt Anne?” Florence asked hesitatingly,
+“no way in which I can be useful to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my dear, no; but thank you and
+bless you for your tender heart. There is
+nothing I want. I wish you could see Mrs.
+North, Florence, she is kindness itself. I
+have been in the house five weeks, and they
+have never once failed to show me the
+attention that is due to me,” she said, with
+grave dignity. “We went to Covent Garden
+Theatre last night—I refused to go to Drury
+Lane, for I did not approve of the name of
+the piece—they insisted on giving me the
+best place, and were most anxious when we
+reached home for fear I had taken cold
+whilst waiting for the carriage.”</p>
+
+<p>It seemed as if Aunt Anne had been
+extraordinarily lucky.</p>
+
+<p>“And you like being with young people,
+I think,” Florence said, noticing how her
+sad face lighted up while she spoke of the
+theatre.</p>
+
+<p>“It is always a pleasure to me to witness
+happiness in others,” Aunt Anne answered,
+with a long benevolent sigh, “and it is a
+comfort to know that to this beautiful girl—for
+Mrs. North is only four-and-twenty, my
+dear—my presence is beneficial and my
+experience of life useful. I wish you would
+come and call on her.”</p>
+
+<p>“But she might not like it? I don’t see
+why she should desire my acquaintance.”</p>
+
+<p>“She would think it the greatest honour
+to know anybody belonging to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is she an old friend, Aunt Anne, or how
+did you know her?” Florence asked, wondering
+at the great kindness extended to the
+old lady, and whether there was a deep
+foundation for it. She did not think it
+likely, from all that she had heard, that
+companions were generally treated with so
+much consideration. For a moment Aunt
+Anne was silent, then she answered coldly—</p>
+
+<p>“I met her through an advertisement.
+But you must not question me, you must not
+indeed, Florence; I never allowed any one
+to do that, and I am too old to begin; too
+old and feeble and worn out to allow it even
+from you, my love.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, dear Aunt Anne, I did not mean
+to hurt or offend you in any way. I merely
+wondered, since these people were so kind
+to you, if they were new or old friends,”
+Florence said affectionately, but still a little
+stiffly, for now that she had been assured
+the old lady was so well provided for, she
+felt that she might defend herself.</p>
+
+<p>“Then you must forgive me,” Mrs. Baines
+said penitently; “I know I am foolishly
+sensitive sometimes, but in my heart I shall
+never misjudge you or Walter; be assured
+of that, my darling.”</p>
+
+<p>She went slowly up to a little ebony-framed
+looking-glass that was over a bracket
+in an out-of-the-way corner—it was odd that
+she should even have noticed it—and stood
+before it arranging her bonnet, till she was
+a mass of blackness and woe. “My love,”
+she said, “would you permit your servant
+to call a cab for me? I prefer a hansom. I
+promised Mrs. North that I would return
+to luncheon, and I fear that I am already
+a little behindhand.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but hansoms are so expensive, and
+I have been the cause——” Florence began
+as she put her hand on the bell.</p>
+
+<p>“I must beg you not to mention it. I
+would spend my last penny on you and
+Walter, you know I would.” Mrs. Baines
+answered with the manner that had carried
+all before it at Brighton. It brought back
+to Florence’s memory her own helplessness
+and Walter’s on that morning which had
+ended in the carrying away of jam and yellow
+flowers from Rottingdean. She went downstairs
+with the old lady and opened the door.
+Mrs. Baines looked at the hansom and
+winked. “It is a curious thing, my dear
+Florence,” she said, “but ever since I can
+remember I have had a marked repugnance
+to a grey horse.”</p>
+
+<p>“Shall we send it away and get another?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my dear, no; I think it foolish to
+encourage a prejudice: nothing would induce
+me now not to go by that cab.”</p>
+
+<p>She gathered her shawl close round her
+shoulders and went slowly down the steps;
+when she was safely in the hansom and the
+door closed in front of her, she bowed with
+dignity to Florence, as if from the private
+box of a theatre.</p>
+
+<p>That same afternoon there arrived a pot
+of maidenhair fern with a card attached to it
+on which was written, <span class='it'>Mrs. Walter Hibbert,
+from Aunt Anne</span>, and two smaller pots of
+bright flowers <span class='it'>For the dear children</span>.</p>
+
+<p>“How very kind of her,” exclaimed
+Florence; “but she ought not to spend her
+money on us—the money she earns too. Oh,
+she is much too generous.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear,” Walter said to Florence; and
+Florence thought that his voice was a little odd.</p>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap4.jpg' alt='mountains and valley' id='iid-0006' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER IV.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capi2.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt=' “I'/> WISH</span> we could do something for
+Aunt Anne,” Mrs. Hibbert said to
+her husband that evening. “It was very
+kind of her to send us those flowers.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s ask her to dine.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course we will—she is longing to see
+you; still, asking her to dine will not be
+doing anything for her.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it will please her very much; she
+likes being treated with respect,” Walter
+laughed. “Let’s send her a formal invitation.
+You see these people she is with evidently
+like her and may give her a hundred or two
+a year, quite as much as she wants, so that
+all we can do is to show her some attention.
+Therefore, I repeat, let’s ask her to dine.”</p>
+
+<p>“It’s so like a man’s suggestion,” Florence
+exclaimed; “but still, we’ll do it if you like.
+She wants to see you. Of course she may
+not be able to come if her time is not her
+own.”</p>
+
+<p>“We must risk that—I’ll tell you what,
+Floggie dear, ask her for next Thursday, with
+Fisher and Wimple and Ethel Dunlop.
+She’ll make the number up to six, which
+will be better than five. It will please her
+enormously to be asked to meet people—in
+your invitation say a small dinner-party.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very well. It will be a comfort if she
+takes Mr. Wimple off our hands. Perhaps
+she will.”</p>
+
+<p>So a quite formal invitation was sent to
+Aunt Anne, and her reply awaited with much
+anxiety. It came the next morning, and
+ran thus:</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“<span class='sc'>My dear Florence</span>,</p>
+
+<p>“It gives me sincere pleasure to
+accept the invitation that you and your dear
+Walter have sent me for next Thursday.
+It is long since I went into society, except
+in this house, where it is a matter of duty.
+But, for your sakes, dears, I will put aside
+my sorrow for the evening, and try to enjoy,
+as I ought, the pleasure of seeing you both,
+and of meeting those whom you honour with
+your friendship.</p>
+
+<p>“In the happiness and excitement of seeing
+you the other day, dear Florence, I forgot
+to mention one object of my visit. It is
+most important to me in my present unfortunate
+position to hide my poverty and
+to preserve an appearance that will prevent
+me from being slighted in the society in
+which—sorely against my will—I am thrown.
+Will you, therefore, my dear ones, send me
+a black satin sunshade, plain but good, lined
+with black in preference to white, and with
+a handle sufficiently distinctive to prevent
+its being mistaken for another person’s if it
+is left in the hall when I am paying visits?
+There are many other things I require, but
+I do not like to tax your kindness too far,
+or, knowing your generous hearts, to cause
+you disquiet even by naming them. At the
+same time, dear Florence, I am sure you
+will understand my embarrassment when I
+tell you I only possess four pocket-handkerchiefs
+fit to use in a house like this. If you
+have any lying by you with a deep black
+border, and would lend them to me till you
+require them, it would be a real boon.</p>
+
+<p>“Kiss your sweet children for me. I
+sent them yesterday a little token that I did
+not cease to think of you all as soon as I had
+left your presence—as the world is only too
+prone to do.</p>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:5em;'>“Your affectionate Aunt,</p>
+<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:2em;'>“<span class='sc'>Anne Baines</span>.</p>
+
+<p>“P.S.—I should be glad, my darlings, to
+have the sunshade without delay, for the
+afternoons are getting to be so bright and
+sunny that I have requested Mrs. North to
+have out the open carriage for her afternoon
+drive.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>“Really, Walter,” Mrs. Hibbert said, “she
+is a most extraordinary person. If she is
+so poor that she cannot buy a few pocket-handkerchiefs,
+why did she send us those
+presents yesterday? Flowers are expensive
+at this time of year.”</p>
+
+<p>“It was very like her. I remember years
+ago hearing that she had quarrelled with
+my uncle Tom because she sent his son a
+wedding present, and then he would not lend
+her the money to pay the bill.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course we will send her the things,
+but she is a foolish old lady. As if I should
+keep deep black-bordered handkerchiefs by
+me: really it is too absurd.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, darling, it is too absurd. Still, send
+her a nice sunshade, or whatever it is she
+wants; I suppose a pound or two will do it,”
+Walter said, and hurried off to the office.</p>
+
+<p>But Florence sat thinking. The sunshade
+and the handkerchiefs would make a big hole
+in the money allowed for weekly expenses,
+could not indeed come out of it. She wished
+she could take things as easily as Walter
+did, but the small worries of life never fell
+upon him as they did upon her. She was
+inclined to think that it was the small worries
+that made wrinkles, and she thought of those
+on poor Aunt Anne’s face. Perhaps that
+was why women as a rule had so many more
+lines than men. The lines on a man’s face
+were generally fewer and deeper, but on a
+woman’s they were small and everywhere;
+they symbolized the little cares of every day,
+the petty anxieties that found men too hard
+to mark. She went through her accounts:
+she was one of those women who keep them
+carefully, who know to a penny how they
+spent their last five-pound note. But it was
+only because she was anxious to give Walter
+the very best that could be got out of his
+income that she measured so often the length
+and breadth of her purse. However, it was
+no good. The old lady must have her sunshade
+and her handkerchiefs. So Florence
+walked to Regent Street and back to buy
+them. She went without the gloves she
+had promised herself, determined that Catty
+should wait for a hat, and that she would
+cut down the dessert for a week at the
+little evening dinner.</p>
+
+<p>The brown-paper parcel was directed and
+sent off to Mrs. Baines. With a sigh
+Florence wished she were more generous,
+and dismissed the whole business from her
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines called, ma’am,” the servant
+said, when she reached home that day.
+“She wanted the address of a very good
+dressmaker.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is she here? I hope you begged her
+to come in?” Florence asked, with a vision
+of Aunt Anne calling in a hurry, tired by
+her walk, and distressed at finding no one
+at home.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, ma’am; she didn’t get out of the
+carriage when she heard you were not in.
+I gave her Madame Celestine’s address, and
+said that she had made your best evening
+dress, as she was very particular about its
+being a grand dressmaker.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose it was for Mrs. North,”
+Florence thought. “Poor Aunt Anne is
+not likely to want Madame Celestine.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she imagined the spare old lady in
+a scanty black gown going out with the
+pretty and probably beautifully dressed girls
+to whom she was chaperon.</p>
+
+<p>As a sort of amends for the unkindness
+of fate, Florence made some little soft white
+adornments for throat and wrists such as
+widows wear and that yet look smart, and,
+packing them in a cardboard box, sent them—<span class='it'>With
+kind love to Aunt Anne</span>. “Perhaps
+they will gratify her pride a little, poor
+dear, and it is so nice to have one’s pride
+gratified,” she thought. And then, for a
+space, Aunt Anne was almost forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>The days slipped by anxiously enough to
+the Hibberts—to Walter, for he knew that
+Mr. Fisher meant to talk with Florence
+about something that had been agreed between
+them at the office; to Florence,
+because without increasing the bills she
+really could not manage to put that little
+dinner together. Walter was particular; he
+liked luxuries, and things well managed, and
+she could not bear to disappoint him.
+However, the evening came at last. The
+flowers and dessert were arranged, the claret
+was at the right temperature, the champagne
+was in ice. Florence went upstairs to say
+good-night to the children, and to rest for
+five minutes. Walter came in with a flower
+for her dress.</p>
+
+<p>“It is so like you,” she said as she kissed
+it; “you are always the thoughtfullest old
+man in the world.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wished I had bought one for Aunt
+Anne as I came along in the hansom; but
+I forgot it at first, and then I was afraid to
+go back because it was getting so late.”</p>
+
+<p>He dressed and went downstairs. Florence
+leisurely began to get ready. Ten
+minutes later a carriage stopped; a bell
+rang, there was a loud double knock—some
+one had arrived.</p>
+
+<p>“But it is a quarter of an hour too soon?”
+she said in dismay to Maria who was helping
+her.</p>
+
+<p>The maid stood on tiptoe by the window
+to see who the early comer might be.</p>
+
+<p>“It’s only Mrs. Baines, ma’am.”</p>
+
+<p>They had learned to say “only” already,
+Florence thought. She was angry at the
+word, yet relieved at its not being a more
+important visitor.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very vexed at not being dressed
+to receive her,” she said coldly, in order to
+give Mrs. Baines importance. “Make
+haste and fasten my dress, Maria.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a sound of some one coming
+upstairs, a rustle of silk, and a gentle knock
+at the bedroom door.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling, I came early on purpose.
+May I be allowed to enter, dear Florence?”</p>
+
+<p>The voice was certainly Aunt Anne’s, but
+the tone was so joyous, so different from the
+woebegone one of ten days ago that it filled
+her hearer with amazement.</p>
+
+<p>“Come in, Aunt Anne, if you like; but I
+am not quite ready.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know that, my love. I hoped you
+would not be;” and Aunt Anne entered,
+beaming with satisfaction, beautifully dressed,
+her long robe trailing, her thin throat
+wrapped with softest white of some filmy
+kind, her shoes fastened with heavy bows
+that showed a paste diamond in them, her
+hands full of flowers. Florence could scarcely
+believe her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne!” she exclaimed, and stood
+still looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” the old lady laughed.
+“Aunt Anne; and she has brought you
+these flowers. I thought they might adorn
+your room, and that they would prove how
+much you were in my mind, even while I
+was away from you. Would you gratify me
+by wearing one or two? I see you have
+a white rose there, but I am sure Walter
+will not mind your wearing one of his aunt’s
+flowers; and, my love, perhaps you will
+permit your maid to take the rest downstairs
+to arrange before the arrival of your other
+guests. I will myself help you to finish
+your toilette.”</p>
+
+<p>With an air that was a command, she
+gave the flowers to Maria and carefully
+watched her out of the room. Then turning
+to Florence, she asked with the joyousness
+still in her manner, “And now, my dear,
+tell me if you like my dress?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite beautiful, and so handsome.”</p>
+
+<p>“My darling, I am thankful to hear you
+say that, for I bought it to do you honour.
+I was touched to get your invitation, and
+determined that you should not be ashamed
+of me. Did the housemaid tell you that
+she gave me Madame Celestine’s address?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes. But, Aunt Anne, I hope you
+bargained with her. She costs a fortune if
+you don’t.”</p>
+
+<p>“Never mind what she costs. I wished
+to prove to you both how much I loved you
+and desired to do you honour. And now,
+my dear, I perceive that you are ready, let
+us go down. I have not seen Walter yet,
+and am longing to put my arms round his
+dear neck before any one else arrives and
+forces me into a formality that my heart
+would resent.”</p>
+
+<p>She turned and led the way downstairs.
+Florence followed meekly, feeling almost
+shabby and altogether left in the shade by
+the magnificent relation who had appeared
+for their simple party.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne trod with the footstep of one
+who knew the house well; she opened the
+drawing-room door with an air of precision,
+and going towards Walter, who met her
+halfway across the room, dropped her head
+with its white cap on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Walter, no words can express
+how glad I am to see you again, to meet
+you in your own house, in your own room.
+It makes me forget all I have suffered since
+we parted; it even forces me to be gay,”
+she murmured, in an almost sobbing tone.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear, of course it does,” he said
+cheerily, giving her a kiss. “And we are
+very glad to see you. Why, you look
+uncommonly well; and, I say, what an awful
+swell you are—isn’t she, Floggie?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is precisely the same—the same as
+ever,” laughed out the old lady just as she
+had at Brighton seven years before. “Precisely
+the same. Oh, my dear Walter, I
+shall——”</p>
+
+<p>But here the door opened, and for the
+moment Mr. Wimple’s arrival put an end
+to Aunt Anne’s remembrances.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple was evidently conscious of
+his evening clothes; his waistcoat was cut
+so as to show as much white shirt as
+possible; his tie looked a little rumpled,
+as though the first attempt at making a bow
+had not been successful. He shook hands
+solemnly with his host and hostess, then
+looked round almost sadly, and in a voice
+that was full of grave meaning said it was
+cold and chilly.</p>
+
+<p>“Cough better?” Walter inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it is better,” Mr. Wimple replied
+slowly after a moment’s consideration, as if
+the question was a momentous one.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s right. Now, I must introduce
+you to my aunt, Mrs. Baines. Alfred
+Wimple is an old schoolfellow of mine, Aunt
+Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>The old lady put out her gloved hand
+with the lace ruffle round the wrist.</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad to meet you,” she said. “It
+is always a pleasure to me to meet any one
+who has been intimately associated with my
+dear Walter.”</p>
+
+<p>“And to me to meet any one belonging
+to him,” Mr. Wimple responded, with much
+gravity. “Walter is the oldest, and I may
+say the dearest, friend I possess.”</p>
+
+<p>“It makes us also friends;” and Aunt
+Anne gave him a little gracious smile.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up at her.</p>
+
+<p>“It would be impossible that any one
+loving my dear Walter should not possess
+my friendship,” she said as if explaining her
+previous speech: she made it appear almost
+a condescension. He looked at her again,
+but more attentively.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very fond of Walter,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“It is impossible to help it—dear boy,” she
+said under her breath as she looked at her
+nephew. “It must be a great pleasure to
+him, Mr. Wimple, to preserve your affection;
+the feelings of our youth are so often lost in
+oblivion as we grow old—as we grow older
+I should say, in speaking to you.”</p>
+
+<p>The other guests entered, Ethel Dunlop
+a little shy but smiling, as if aware that
+being a girl she had more business at dances
+than at dinner-parties, but was nevertheless
+quite happy. And lastly Mr. Fisher. Alfred
+Wimple stood on one side till Walter went
+towards him.</p>
+
+<p>“Fisher, this is a very old friend of mine.
+I want to introduce him to you.”</p>
+
+<p>There was something irritating and savouring
+of mock humility in Mr. Wimple’s manner
+as he bowed and said, with a little gulp that
+was one of his peculiarities—</p>
+
+<p>“Walter is always conferring benefits
+upon me—this is a great honour.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fisher looked at him and, with a
+polite word, turned to Ethel Dunlop. She
+was busy with her glove.</p>
+
+<p>“Buttons always come off,” she said, without
+looking up. Other people might treat
+him with deference as an editor; to her he
+was a mere man.</p>
+
+<p>“But you can at least sew them on; my
+sex is not so accomplished.”</p>
+
+<p>She seemed to be thinking of something
+else and did not answer, and a puzzled look
+came over his face, as if a girl was a
+problem he did not know how to work out.
+He was an odd looking man, tall and pale,
+with a quantity of light hair pushed back
+from his high forehead. He had almost
+tender blue eyes; but there was something
+hard and firm about the mouth and
+square jaw that gave his face a look of
+strength. He was not a young man, but it
+was difficult to believe that he had ever been
+younger or would be older; he seemed to
+have been born for middle age, and the direction
+of people and affairs. The awkwardness
+of middle age that is not accustomed to
+womankind overtook him as he stood by
+Ethel. It was a little relief to him when
+dinner was announced.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne turned to Walter, as he
+went up to her, with a little inclination
+of her head and a smile of dignified happiness.</p>
+
+<p>“It is so like a dream to be here with
+you, to be going down on your arm—dear
+children,” she whispered as they descended
+the narrow staircase.</p>
+
+<p>Looking back, Florence always felt that
+Aunt Anne had been the heroine of that
+party. She took the lead in conversation,
+the others waiting for her to speak, and no
+one dared to break up the group at table
+into <span class='it'>tête-à-tête</span> talk. She was so bright and
+full of life and had so much to say that she
+carried all before her. Ethel Dunlop, young
+and pretty, felt piqued; usually Mr. Fisher
+was attentive to her, to-night he talked
+entirely to Mrs. Baines. That horrid Mr.
+Wimple, as she called him in her thoughts,
+had been quite attentive when she met him
+before, but now he too kept his eyes fixed on
+the old lady opposite; but for her host she
+would have felt neglected. And it was odd
+how well Aunt Anne managed to flirt with
+everybody.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines has given me some useful
+hints about birds,” Mr. Fisher told
+Florence with a suspicion of amusement in
+his voice: “if I had been as wise formerly
+as she has made me to-night the white
+cockatoo might have been living still. We
+ought to have met years ago, Mrs. Baines,”
+he said, turning to her.</p>
+
+<p>“I think so too,” she said winningly. “It
+is such a pleasure to meet dear Walter’s and
+Florence’s friends,” she added, looking round
+the table and giving a strange little wink at
+the last word that made Mr. Wimple feel
+almost uncomfortable. “It is a privilege
+that I have looked forward to for years, but
+that living in the country has hitherto made
+impossible. Now that I am in London I
+hope I shall meet them all in turn.” Then
+she lowered her voice and went on to the
+editor: “I have heard so much of you, Mr.
+Fisher, if you will forgive me for saying so,
+though a great career like yours implies that
+all the world has heard of you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish it could be called a great career,
+my dear lady,” he answered, feeling that she
+was a person whose death would deserve a
+paragraph simply on account of the extraordinary
+knowledge of the world she possessed.
+“Unfortunately it has been a very ordinary
+one, but I can assure you that I am most
+glad to meet you to-night. I ought to have
+been at a City dinner, and shall always
+congratulate myself on my happier condition.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to see a City dinner,” Mrs.
+Baines said sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I could send you my invitations.
+I go to too many, I fear.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose you have been to a great many
+also, Mr. Wimple?” Aunt Anne inquired,
+careful to exclude no one from her little
+court.</p>
+
+<p>“To one only, I regret to say, Mrs.
+Baines,” Mr. Wimple answered solemnly;
+“four years ago I went to the solitary one
+I ever attended.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, that was during the mayoralty of Sir
+William Rammage.”</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know him, Mrs. Baines, or do
+you keep a record of the Lord Mayors?”
+Mr. Fisher asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I knew him well, years and years—I am
+afraid I should shock you—you are all so
+young—if I said how many years ago,” she
+answered; and Mr. Fisher, who was well on
+in his forties, thought she was really a charming
+old lady.</p>
+
+<p>“He is a great friend of my uncle’s, he is
+a very old client of his,” Mr. Wimple said,
+looking at Mrs. Baines again with his strange
+fixed gaze, while Ethel Dunlop thought that
+that horrid Mr. Wimple was actually making
+eyes at the old lady as he did at every one
+else.</p>
+
+<p>“And may I ask if you also are on
+intimate terms with him?” Mrs. Baines
+said.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I have only met him at my uncle’s.
+He is very rich,” he added, with a sigh,
+“and rich people are not much in my way.
+Literary people and out-at-elbow scribblers
+are my usual associates; for,” he went on,
+remembering that there was a possibility of
+doing some business with Mr. Fisher, and
+that he had better make an impression on
+the great man, “I never met any illustrious
+members of the profession till to-night, excepting
+our friend Walter of course.”</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Fisher looked a little disgusted and
+turned to the young lady of the party.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you been very musical lately, Miss
+Dunlop?” he inquired.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered, “not very. But we
+enjoyed the concert. It was very kind of
+you to send the tickets.”</p>
+
+<p>The editor’s face lighted up.</p>
+
+<p>“I am glad,” he said; “and did you find
+a pleasant chaperon?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, thank you. I went with my
+cousin, George Dighton.”</p>
+
+<p>“Is that the good-looking youth I saw
+you with once?”</p>
+
+<p>“Youth,” Ethel laughed; “he is three-and-twenty.”</p>
+
+<p>“A most mature age,” and a smile flickered
+over Mr. Fisher’s grave face; “and does he
+often escort you to concerts?”</p>
+
+<p>“Occasionally.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is fortunate in having the privilege
+as well as the time to avail himself of it,” the
+editor said formally. His manner was always
+reserved, sometimes even a little stately.
+Now and then, oddly enough, it reminded
+one of Aunt Anne’s, though it was a generation
+younger, and he had not her faculty for
+long words.</p>
+
+<p>“You never seem able to go to concerts. It
+is quite sad and wicked,” Ethel said brightly.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up as if he liked her.</p>
+
+<p>“Not often. Perhaps some day if you
+would honour me, only I am not a cousin;
+still I have passed the giddy age of Mr.
+Dighton.”</p>
+
+<p>“We will, we will,” she laughed, and
+nodded; “but relations only are able to
+survive the responsibility of taking me about
+alone. Perhaps Mrs. Hibbert would——”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah yes, Mr. Wimple,” they heard Mrs.
+Baines say, “I have good reason to know
+Sir William Rammage. He is my own
+cousin, though for years and years we had
+not met till we did so a few months since,
+when I came to take up my residence in
+London.”</p>
+
+<p>The old lady’s mouth twitched nervously,
+the sad note of a week ago made itself heard
+in her voice again. Mrs. Hibbert knew that
+she was thinking of the unsuccessful appeal
+to her rich relation, and of the port wine that
+had always proved pernicious to her digestion.</p>
+
+<p>“Your cousin!” said Mr. Wimple, and he
+fixed another long, steady gaze upon Mrs.
+Baines, “that is very interesting;” and he
+was silent.</p>
+
+<p>“Cousins seem to abound in our conversation
+this evening,” Miss Dunlop said to Mr.
+Fisher; “it must be terrible to be cousin to
+the Lord Mayor.”</p>
+
+<p>“Like being related to Gog and Magog,”
+he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>“Even worse,” she answered, pretending
+to shudder.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Hibbert was looking at Aunt
+Anne, for it was time to go upstairs. Mrs.
+Baines went out of the door with a stateliness
+that was downright courage, considering how
+small and slight she was. Ethel Dunlop,
+standing aside to let her pass, looked at her
+admiringly, but the old lady gave her back,
+with the left eye, a momentary glance that
+was merely condescending. Unless Aunt
+Anne took a fancy to people, or made a
+point of being agreeable, she was apt to be
+condescending. Her manner to young people
+was sometimes impatient, and to servants it
+was generally irritating. She had taken a
+dislike to Miss Dunlop—she considered her
+forward. She did not like the manner in
+which she did her hair. She was of opinion
+that her dress was unbecoming. All these
+things had determined Mrs. Baines to snub
+Miss Dunlop, who ill deserved it, for she was
+a pretty, motherless girl of one-and-twenty,
+very anxious to do right and to find the
+world a pleasant dwelling-place.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady sat down on the yellow couch
+in the drawing-room again, the same couch
+on which, a fortnight before, she had sat and
+related her misfortunes. But it was difficult
+to believe that she was the same person.
+Her dress was spread out; her gloves were
+drawn on and carefully buttoned; she opened
+and shut a small black fan; she looked round
+the drawing-room with an air of condescension,
+and almost sternly refused coffee with
+a “not any, I thank you,” that made the
+servant feel rebuked for having offered it.
+Mrs. Hibbert and Ethel felt that she was
+indeed mistress of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>“You are musical, I think, Miss Dunlop,”
+she asked coldly.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very fond of music, and I play and
+sing in a very small way,” was the modest
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope we shall hear you presently,”
+Mrs. Baines said grandly, and then, evidently
+feeling that she had taken quite enough
+notice of Miss Dunlop, she turned to her
+niece.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Florence,” she said, “I think
+Mr. Wimple is charming. He has one of
+the most expressive countenances I ever
+beheld.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Mrs. Baines, do you really think
+so?” Ethel Dunlop exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Certainly I do.” And Mrs. Baines turned
+her back. “Florence, are not you of my
+opinion?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Aunt Anne, I hardly know——”
+And happily the entrance of the men prevented
+any further discussion. Somehow
+conversation flagged a little, and silence
+threatened to fall on the party. Florence
+felt uneasy.</p>
+
+<p>“Are we to have some music?” Walter
+asked presently. In these days music after
+dinner, unless it is very excellent or there
+is some special reason for introducing it, is
+generally a flag of distress, a sign that dulness
+is near. Florence knew it, and looking at
+Ethel tried to cover it by asking for a
+song.</p>
+
+<p>“Ethel sings German songs delightfully,
+Aunt Anne,” she said; “I think you would
+enjoy listening to her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should enjoy listening to any friend
+of yours,” the old lady answered. But
+Miss Dunlop pleaded hoarseness and did
+not stir.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple roused himself a little. “I
+am sure Mrs. Baines plays,” he said, standing
+before her. Aunt Anne gave a long sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“My playing days are over,” she answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, Aunt Anne,” laughed Walter, “we
+cannot allow you to make that excuse.”</p>
+
+<p>In a moment she had risen.</p>
+
+<p>“I never make excuses, Walter,” she said
+proudly; “if it is your wish—if it will give
+you pleasure I will touch the keys again,
+though it is long since I brought myself even
+to sit down before an instrument.”</p>
+
+<p>She took her place at the piano; she
+pulled out her handkerchief, not one of the
+black-bordered ones that Florence had sent
+her a week ago, but a dainty one of lawn and
+lace, and held it for a moment to her forehead;
+then suddenly, with a strange vibrating
+touch that almost startled her listeners, she
+began to play “Oft in the stilly night.” Only
+for a moment did the fire last, her fingers
+grew feeble, they missed the notes, she shook
+her head dreamily.</p>
+
+<p>“I forget—I forget them all,” she said to
+herself rather than to any one else, and then
+quickly recovering she looked round and
+apologized. “It is so long,” she said, “and
+I forget.”</p>
+
+<p>She began softly some variations on “I
+know a bank,” and played them through to
+the end. When they were finished she rose
+and, with a little old-fashioned bow to the
+piano, turned to Florence, and, saying, with
+a sweet and curious dignity, “Thank you,
+my dear, and your friends too, for listening
+to me,” went back to her seat.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple was near her chair, he bent
+down to her.</p>
+
+<p>“You gave us a great treat,” he said, as if
+he were stating a scientific fact.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines listened to his words gravely,
+she seemed to revolve them in her mind for
+a moment before she looked up.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure you are musical, Mr. Wimple,”
+she said, “I can see it in your face.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne,” Walter said, passing her,
+“should you mind my opening this window?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my darling, I should like it,” she
+answered tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple gave a long sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“Lucky beggar he is; you are very fond
+of him?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes,” she answered, “he is like my
+own son;” and she nodded at Walter, who
+was carrying on a laughing conversation
+with Ethel Dunlop, while his wife was having
+what seemed to be a serious one with Mr.
+Fisher. She looked round the room, her
+gaze rested on the open window. “I think
+the carriage must be waiting,” she said,
+almost to herself.</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you;” and Mr. Wimple went
+on to the balcony. “It is a lovely night,
+Mrs. Baines,” he said, and turning back he
+fastened his strange eyes upon her. Without
+a word she rose and followed him.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne,” Florence said, “you will
+catch your death of cold; you mustn’t go
+out. Walter dear, get my thick white shawl
+for Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, my love, pray continue your
+conversation; I have always made a point
+of looking up at the sky before I retire
+to rest, therefore it is not likely to do me
+harm.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t let it do you harm for the
+world,” Mr. Wimple whispered.</p>
+
+<p>She heard him; but she seemed to digest
+his words slowly, for she nodded to herself
+before, with the manner and smile that were
+so entirely her own, she answered—</p>
+
+<p>“Pray don’t distress yourself, Mr. Wimple,
+I am accustomed to stand before the elements
+at all seasons of the year, and this air is not
+likely to be detrimental to me; besides,” she
+added, with a gentle laugh, “perhaps though
+I boasted of my age just now I am not so
+old as I look. Oh, dear Walter, you are too
+good to me—dear boy;” and she turned and
+let him wrap the thick white shawl about her.
+He lingered for a moment, but there fell the
+dead silence that sometimes seems to chase
+away a third person, and, feeling that he
+was not wanted, he went back to Ethel
+Dunlop. It was a good thing Aunt Anne
+liked Alfred, he thought. He had been
+afraid the latter would not wholly enjoy his
+evening, but the old lady seemed to be
+making up for Florence’s rather scanty
+attentions.</p>
+
+<p>“It is impossible to you to be old,” Mr.
+Wimple said, still speaking almost in a
+whisper.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady appeared not to hear him;
+her hands were holding the white shawl close
+round her neck, her eyes were following the
+long row of street lamps on the right. The
+horses, waiting with the carriage before the
+house, moved restlessly, and made their
+harness clink in the stillness. Far off, a
+cornet was playing, as cornets love to do,
+“Then you’ll remember me.” Beside her
+stood the young man watching. Behind,
+in the drawing-room, dimly lighted by the
+shaded lamp and candles, the others were
+talking, forgetful of everything but the subject
+that interested them. Cheap sentimental
+surrounding enough, but they all told on the
+old lady standing out on the balcony. The
+stars looking down on her lighted up the soft
+white about her throat, and the outline of the
+shawl-wrapped shoulders, almost youthful in
+their slenderness. Mr. Wimple went a little
+closer, the tears came into her eyes, they
+trickled down her withered cheeks, but he
+did not know it.</p>
+
+<p>“It is like years ago,” she whispered,
+“those dear children and all—all—it carries
+me back to forty—more—eight-and-forty
+years ago, when I was a girl, and now I
+am old, I am old, it is the end of the world
+for me.”</p>
+
+<p>He stooped and picked up the handkerchief
+with the lace border.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” he said, “don’t say that. It is not
+the end; age is not counted by years, it is
+counted by other things;” and he coughed
+uneasily and waited as if to watch the effect
+of his speech before continuing. “In reality,”
+he went on, in the hard voice that would have
+jarred horribly on more sensitive nerves—“in
+reality I am older than you, for I have
+found the world so much colder than you can
+have done.” He said it with deliberation,
+as if each word were weighed, or had been
+learnt beforehand. “I wish you would teach
+me to live out of the abundance of youth
+that will always be yours.”</p>
+
+<p>She listened attentively; she turned and
+looked towards her left, far ahead, away into
+the distance, as if puzzled and fascinated by
+it, almost as if she were afraid of the darkness
+to which the distance reached. Then
+she gave a little nod, as if she had remembered
+that it was only the trees of the
+Regent’s Park that made the blackness.</p>
+
+<p>“If you would teach me to live out of the
+abundance of youth that will always be yours,”
+he said again, as if on consideration he were
+well satisfied with the sentence, and thought
+it merited a reply.</p>
+
+<p>She listened attentively for the second
+time, and looked up half puzzled—</p>
+
+<p>“I should esteem myself most fortunate,
+if I could be of use to any friend of
+Walter’s,” she answered, with an almost
+sad formality.</p>
+
+<p>“You have so many who love you——”
+The voice was still hard and grating.</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she said, “oh no——”</p>
+
+<p>“There is Sir William Rammage.” He
+spoke slowly.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah!” she said sadly, “he forgets. And
+old association has no effect upon him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Has he any brothers and sisters?” he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“They are gone. They all died years
+and years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is remarkable that he never married.”</p>
+
+<p>“I suppose his inclinations did not prompt
+him to do so.”</p>
+
+<p>“He seems to have no one belonging to
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“There are hardly any left,” she answered,
+with a sigh, “and unhappily he does not
+appreciate the companionship of those——”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence
+said, “do come in, you will catch your death
+of cold.”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, the carriage is waiting and you
+must excuse me; it is growing late. It has
+been delightful to be with you, and to meet
+your friends.”</p>
+
+<p>She shook hands with Mr. Fisher, and
+bowed to Ethel Dunlop; then she went
+slowly out of the room on Walter’s arm, the
+long train of Madame Celestine’s dress
+sweeping behind her.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-night, Mrs. Hibbert,” Mr. Wimple
+said, and, shaking hands quickly with the
+air of a man who has many engagements
+and suddenly remembered one that must be
+instantly kept, he too was gone.</p>
+
+<p>He was just in time to reach the carriage
+door.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines,” he said, “I think you said
+you were going to South Kensington—could
+you take me as far as Queen’s Gate?”</p>
+
+<p>“I wonder where he is going,” Walter
+said to himself as he went upstairs again;
+“I don’t believe he knows a soul in Queen’s
+Gate.”</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail4.jpg' alt='butterfly' id='iid-0007' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap5.jpg' alt='view of a bridge' id='iid-0008' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER V.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capw.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='W'/>alter</span> was going to India for the
+winter. It had all been arranged
+while Aunt Anne sat out on the balcony
+with Mr. Wimple. Mr. Fisher had explained
+to Florence that the paper wanted a new
+correspondent for a time, and that it would
+be an excellent thing for Walter to get the
+change and movement of the new life. He
+was to go out by P. and O., making a short
+stay at Gibraltar, for business purposes, as
+well as one at Malta. He had looked
+anxiously enough at his wife when they
+were alone again that evening; but she had
+put out her hands as if in congratulation.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very glad,” was all she said, “it
+will do you good and make you strong.”</p>
+
+<p>“To live for you and the chicks, my
+sweet.”</p>
+
+<p>And so they arranged the getting ready;
+for he was to start by the very next boat,
+and that sailed in ten days’ time.</p>
+
+<p>“If your mother had been in England
+you might have gone with me as far as Gib,”
+Walter remarked. “I suppose you would
+be afraid to leave the servants in charge?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should like to go,” she answered, as
+she poured out the coffee—it was breakfast
+time—“but I couldn’t leave the children.”</p>
+
+<p>“By Jove,” Walter exclaimed, not heeding
+her answer, “there’s Aunt Anne in a hansom!
+I say, Floggie dear, let me escape. What
+on earth does she mean by coming at this
+hour of the morning? Say I’m not down
+yet, and shall be at least three hours before
+I am; but keep the breakfast hot somehow.”</p>
+
+<p>“Couldn’t you see her?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, no, she would want to weep over me
+if she heard that I was going, and I know
+I should laugh. Manage to get rid of her
+soon.” And he flew upstairs as the street
+door was opened.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Florence,” Mrs. Baines said,
+as she walked in with a long footstep and a
+truly tragic air, “let me put my arms round
+you, my poor darling.”</p>
+
+<p>“Why, Aunt Anne, what is the matter?”
+Florence asked cheerfully, and with considerable
+astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>“You are very brave, my love,” the old
+lady said, scanning her niece’s face, “but I
+know all; an hour ago I had a letter telling
+me of Walter’s departure. My dear, it will
+break your heart.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why?”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, it will.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no,” Florence said, “I am not so
+foolish. Life is full of ordinary events that
+bring out very keen feelings, I have been
+thinking that lately, but one must learn to
+take them calmly.”</p>
+
+<p>“You do not know what you will suffer
+when he is gone.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, Aunt Anne, I shall miss him, of
+course; but I shall hope that he is enjoying
+himself.”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Florence, I expected to find
+you broken-hearted.”</p>
+
+<p>“That would be cruel to him. I am glad
+he is going, it will do him good, and really
+I have not had time to think of myself yet,
+I have been so busy.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines considered for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“That is the reason, I knew there was
+an explanation somewhere,” she said in an
+earnest emotional tone. “I knew how unselfish
+you were from the first moment I saw
+you, Florence. It is like you, my darling,
+not to think of yourself. Try not to do so,
+for you will feel your loneliness bitterly
+enough when he is gone.”</p>
+
+<p>“But don’t tell me so,” Florence said, half
+crying, half laughing. “How did you know
+about it, Aunt Anne?”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Wimple told me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Wimple—have you seen him then?”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, he is one of the most cultivated
+men I ever met; we have many
+tastes and sympathies in common. He
+wrote to ask me to meet him by the Albert
+Memorial.”</p>
+
+<p>“To meet him!” Florence exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” answered the old lady solemnly.
+“He agrees with me that never was there
+in any age or country a more beautiful work
+than the Albert Memorial. We arranged to
+meet and examine it together; he wrote to
+me just now and mentioned that Walter was
+going to India; I telegraphed instantly that
+I could see no one else to-day, for I thought
+you would welcome my loving sympathy. I
+came to offer it to you, Florence.” She said
+the last words in a disappointed and injured
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>“It was very kind of you, Aunt Anne;
+but indeed I have only had time to be glad
+that he would get a rest and pleasant change
+of work.”</p>
+
+<p>“I must see him before he goes; I may
+never do so again,” Mrs. Baines said, after
+a pause.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, you will, dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have brought him two little tokens
+that I thought of him as I hastened to you
+after hearing the news. I know they will
+be useful to him. These are glycerine
+lozenges, Florence; they are excellent for
+the throat. The sea mist or the desert sand
+is sure to affect it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, it was very kind of you;
+you are much too generous—you make us
+quite uneasy.” Florence was miserable at
+the two evils suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“My love, if I had thousands a year you
+should have them,” Aunt Anne answered,
+and, intent on her present-making, she went
+on, “and here is a little case of scissors,
+they are of different sizes. I know how
+much gentlemen”—Aunt Anne always said
+“gentlemen,” never “men,” as do the women
+of to-day—“like to find a pair suited to their
+requirements at the moment; I thought they
+might be useful to him on the voyage.” She
+gave a sigh of relief as though presenting
+her gifts had removed a load from her mind.
+“I suppose Walter is not down yet, my
+love?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is upstairs,” Florence said, a little
+guiltily, “I am afraid he will not be down
+just yet.”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne gave a reflective wink, as
+though she perfectly understood the reason
+of Walter’s non-appearance; but if she did
+she had far too much tact to betray it.</p>
+
+<p>“If it be your wish, my dear, I will forego
+the pleasure of saying a last good-bye to him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, dear Aunt Anne, when he does
+come down he will have a great deal to
+do,” Florence answered still more guiltily,
+for she could not help feeling that Aunt
+Anne saw through the ruse.</p>
+
+<p>“My love, I quite understand,” Mrs.
+Baines said solemnly, “and he will know
+that it was from no lack of affection that
+I did not wait to see him. Tell him that
+he will be constantly in my thoughts;” and
+she slowly gathered her cashmere shawl
+round her shoulders, and buttoned her black
+kid gloves.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor Aunt Anne,” Florence thought when
+she had gone, she would wring a tragedy
+from every daily trial if she were encouraged.
+“Oh, you wicked coward,” she said to Walter,
+“to run away like that.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my darling; but I am starved, and
+really, you know, Floggie, confound Aunt
+Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but she is very kind,” Florence said,
+as she displayed the presents. “How did
+Mr. Wimple know that you were going to
+India?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I met him yesterday at the office. He
+went to see Fisher; it was arranged that he
+should the other night.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very extraordinary his striking up
+a friendship with Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, very extraordinary,” he laughed
+and then the old lady was forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>The days flew by and the last one came.
+To-morrow (Thursday) Walter was to start
+by an early train for Southampton. All his
+arrangements were complete, and on that
+last day he had virtually nothing to do,
+“therefore, Floggie dear,” he pleaded, “let
+us have a spree.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” she answered, willingly enough,
+though her heart was heavier than his.
+“How shall we manage it?”</p>
+
+<p>“Let us stroll about all day or go to
+Richmond, and come back and have a cosy
+little dinner somewhere.”</p>
+
+<p>“Here,” she pleaded, “let us dine here,
+in our own home on this last evening; we’ll
+have a very nice dinner.”</p>
+
+<p>“Very nice indeed?”</p>
+
+<p>“Very nice indeed, you greedy thing.”</p>
+
+<p>“All right, darling, suppose you go and
+order it. Then get ready and let’s start as
+soon as possible; we’ll amuse ourselves well,
+and forget that we have not a month to do
+it in. Live and be happy in the present
+day, dear Floggie,” he went on in a mock-serious
+tone; “for there is always a chance
+that to-morrow will not declare itself.”</p>
+
+<p>So they went off, like the boy he was in
+spite of his more than thirty years, and the
+girl that she sometimes felt herself to be
+still in spite of the two children and the
+eight years of matrimony. They walked a
+little way. Then Walter had a brilliant
+idea.</p>
+
+<p>“Let’s get into a hansom,” he said, “drive
+to Waterloo and take the first train that is
+going in any pleasant direction; I think
+Waterloo is the best place for that sort of
+speculation. This beggar’s horse looks pretty
+good, jump in.”</p>
+
+<p>As they drove up to the station, a four-wheel
+cab moved away, the cabman grumbling
+at the sum that had been given him
+by two people, a man and a woman, who
+still stood on the station steps looking after
+him.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, there’s Wimple!” Walter exclaimed;
+“and who’s that with him, I
+wonder?”</p>
+
+<p>Florence looked up quickly. Mr. Wimple
+wore a shabby grey coat, and round his
+neck and over his mouth there was a grey
+comforter, for the October morning was
+slightly chilly. In his hand he carried a
+worn brown portmanteau. Beside him stood
+a tall good-looking young woman of five-and-twenty,
+commonly, almost vulgarly dressed.
+She looked after the departing cab with a
+scowl on her face that told it was she who
+had paid the scanty fare. As they stood
+together, they looked poor and common and
+singularly unprepossessing; it was impossible
+to help feeling that they were nearly connected.
+They looked like husband and wife,
+and of an indefinite and insignificant class.
+Suddenly Alfred Wimple caught Walter’s
+eye, he nodded gravely without the least
+confusion, but he evidently said something
+quickly and in a low tone to his companion,
+for they hurried away through one of the
+station doors.</p>
+
+<p>“That horrid Mr. Wimple seems to possess
+us lately,” Florence thought.</p>
+
+<p>As they went from the ticket office she
+saw Mr. Wimple and his friend hurrying
+along the platform. A minute later they
+had entered a Portsmouth train which was
+on the point of starting.</p>
+
+<p>“If that’s his Liphook friend I don’t think
+much of the looks of her. Alfred always
+picked up odd people,” Walter thought;
+but he kept these reflections to himself; all
+he said aloud was, “I say, Floggie dear, if
+Wimple turns up while I’m away, don’t be
+uncivil to him, and give him food if you can
+manage it. Somehow he always looks half
+starved, poor beggar. Fisher is going to
+give him some reviewing to do, perhaps that
+will help him a bit.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a train starting to Windsor in
+ten minutes; so they went by it, and strolled
+down by the river and lingered near the
+boats, and went into the town and looked
+at the shops and the outside of the castle.
+Then they lunched at the confectioner’s, an
+extravagant lunch which Walter ordered, and
+afterwards, while they were still drowsy and
+happy, they hired an open fly and drove to
+Virginia Water. They hurried back to
+Windsor in time to catch the 6 p.m. train for
+town by half a minute, and congratulated
+themselves upon finding an empty carriage.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall always remember this dear day,”
+Florence said, as they sat over their last
+little dinner at home.</p>
+
+<p>“That’s a good thing,” Walter said, “and
+so will I, dear wife. When I come back
+we’ll have another like it in memory of this
+one’s success.” Then he remembered Alfred
+Wimple. “I should like to know who that
+girl was,” he thought; “wonder if she’s the
+daughter of another tailor he doesn’t want to
+pay, and if I met him to-morrow I wonder
+what lie he would tell me about her—he
+always lied, poor beggar.” And this shows
+that his thoughts were sometimes not as
+charitable as his words.</p>
+
+<p>The next day very early Walter departed
+for Southampton. Florence went to see him
+safely on board.</p>
+
+<p>“We shall have the good little journey
+together,” he said dismally, for he was loth
+enough to leave her now that the parting
+time had come.</p>
+
+<p>But it seemed as if the train flew along the
+rails in its hurry to get near the sea, and the
+journey was over directly. There was all
+the bustle of getting on board; and almost
+before she knew it, Florence was on her way
+back to London alone. As if in a dream
+she walked home from the station, thinking
+of her husband watching the sea as it widened
+between him and England. She was glad
+she had seen the ship, she could imagine him
+seated at the long table in the saloon, with
+the punkahs—useless enough at present—waving
+overhead, or in his cabin, looking out
+through the porthole at the white crests to
+the waves. Yes. She could see all his surroundings
+plainly. She gave a long sigh.
+She was a brave little woman, and had tried
+so hard not to break down before Walter,
+though in the last moment on board, when
+she had felt as if her heart would break,
+she had not been able altogether to help
+it. And now, as she walked home in the
+dusk without him, she felt as if she could
+not live through the long months of separation.</p>
+
+<p>“But I will—I will,” she said to herself
+while the tears trickled down her face;
+“only it <span class='it'>is</span> hard, for there is no one in the
+world like him, no one—no one; and we
+have never been parted before.”</p>
+
+<p>Every moment, too, she remembered, took
+him farther away. She told herself again
+and again how much good the journey would
+do him, how glad she was that he would get
+the change; but human nature is human
+nature still, and will not be controlled by
+argument. So she quickened her pace,
+resolving not to give way till she was safe
+in the darkness of her own room, hidden
+from the eyes of the servants, and then she
+would let her feelings have their fling.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at the house with a sigh.
+It would be so still without Walter. There
+was a flickering light in the drawing-room.
+Probably the servants had put a lamp there,
+for the days were growing shorter; it was
+nearly dark already. The children would
+be in bed, but they were certain not to be
+asleep, and she thought of the little shout
+of welcome they would give when they heard
+her footstep on the stair as she went up to
+kiss them. She let herself in with Walter’s
+latchkey—she kissed it as she took it from
+her pocket, and nearly cried again—and then,
+having entered, stood still and wondered.
+There in the hall were two square boxes—boxes
+of the sort that were used before overland
+trunks came into fashion, and when
+American arks were unknown. They were
+covered with brown holland, bordered with
+faded red braid, and corded with thick brown
+cord. Stitched on to each cover was a small
+white card, on each of which was written, in
+a hand Florence knew well, <span class='it'>Mrs. Baines,
+care of Mrs. Walter Hibbert</span>. While she
+was still contemplating the address, a servant,
+who had heard her enter, came up.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines has been here since eleven
+o’clock, ma’am,” she said; “she’s in the drawing-room,
+and has had nothing to eat all day
+except a cup of tea, and a little toast that
+nurse made her have at four o’clock. She’s
+been waiting to see you.”</p>
+
+<p>It was evident that there had been some
+catastrophe. Florence went wearily upstairs,
+and, after a moment’s hesitation to gather
+courage, entered the drawing-room.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne!” she exclaimed, “what has
+happened?”</p>
+
+<p>The old lady had been standing by the
+fireplace. Her thin white hands were bare,
+but she still wore her cloak and black close-fitting
+bonnet, though she had thrown aside
+the crape veil. Her face looked worn and
+anxious, but a look of indignation came to
+her eyes when she saw Florence, a last
+little flash of remembered insult: then she
+advanced with outstretched hands.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence,” she said, “I have come to
+you for advice and shelter, I have been
+insulted—and humiliated”—a quaver came
+into her voice, she could not go on till
+indignation returned to give her strength.
+“Florence,” she begun again, “I have come
+to you. I—I——”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne, dear Aunt Anne!” Florence
+said, aching with fatigue, and feeling ruefully
+that her longing for rest and quiet was not
+likely to be satisfied, yet thinking, oddly
+enough too, even while she spoke, of Walter
+going on, farther and farther away across the
+darkening sea, “what is the matter? tell me,
+dear.” There was a throbbing pain in her
+head. It was like the thud-thud of the screw
+on board his ship.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne raised her head and spoke
+firmly—</p>
+
+<p>“My love, I have been insulted.”</p>
+
+<p>“Insulted, Aunt Anne, but how?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, insulted. I frequently
+had occasion to reprove the servants for
+their conduct, for the want of respect they
+showed me. The cook was abominable, and
+a reprimand had no effect upon her. To-day
+her impertinence was past endurance, I told
+Mrs. North so, and that she must be dismissed.
+Mrs. North refused—refused,
+though her servant had forgotten what was
+due to me, and this morning—— I can’t
+repeat her words.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well,” said Florence, “but surely you
+did not let a servant drive——”</p>
+
+<p>“No, dear Florence, it was not the cook
+who drove me away, I should not allow a
+subordinate to interfere with my life; it was
+Mrs. North. She has behaved cruelly to
+me. She listened to her servants in preference
+to me. I told her that they showed
+me no respect, that they entirely forgot what
+was due to me, and unless she made an
+example, and dismissed one of them, it would
+be impossible for me to stay in her house,
+and then, my love, I was told that—that,” she
+stopped for a moment, “I can’t tell you,”
+she went on suddenly; “I can’t repeat it all,
+Florence; but, my love, there were other
+reasons—that are impossible to repeat; and
+I am here—I am here, homeless and
+miserable, and insulted. I flew to you, I
+knew you would be indignant, that your
+dear heart would feel for me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you were so happy.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, I was.”</p>
+
+<p>“And Mrs. North was so kind to you,”
+Florence went on regretfully; “could you
+not have managed——”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, I must remember what is
+due to myself.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, but, dear Aunt Anne, don’t you
+think it would have been better to have put
+up——”</p>
+
+<p>“Florence, if you cannot sympathize with
+me I must ask you not to discuss the matter,”
+the old lady answered, raising her head and
+speaking in a tone of surprise; “there is no
+trouble you could have come to me with that
+I should not have felt about as you did.”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne had a remarkable gift for
+fighting her own battles, Florence thought.</p>
+
+<p>“But don’t you see, Aunt Anne, that——”</p>
+
+<p>“I would prefer not to discuss the matter,
+my love,” the old lady said loftily. “You
+are so young and inexperienced that perhaps
+you cannot enter into my feelings. Either
+the cook or I had to leave the house. There
+were other reasons too, I repeat, why I
+deemed it unadvisable,—why it was impossible
+to remain. Mrs. North has lately shown a
+levity of manner that I could not countenance;
+her sister is no longer with her, and
+her husband has been thousands of miles
+away; is away still, yet she is always ready
+for amusement. I cannot believe that she
+loves him, or she would show more regret at
+his absence. I have known what a happy
+marriage is, Florence, and you know what
+it is too, my love. You can therefore understand
+that I thought her conduct reprehensible.
+I felt it my duty to tell her so.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” Florence said wearily, “I know,
+I know;” but she could not help thinking
+that Aunt Anne had behaved rather foolishly.</p>
+
+<p>Then she rang the bell and ordered tea to
+be made ready in the dining-room, a substantial
+tea of the sort that women love and
+men abhor.</p>
+
+<p>“Now rest and forget all the worries,”
+she said gently. “You are tired and excited,
+try and forget everything till you have
+had some tea and are rested. The spare
+room is quite ready, and you shall go to bed
+early, as I will, for it has been a long day.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know what you must have gone
+through,” and Mrs. Baines shook her head
+sadly, “and that you want to be alone to
+think of your dear Walter. But I will only
+intrude on you for one night, to-morrow I
+will find an apartment.”</p>
+
+<p>“You must not talk like that, for you are
+very welcome, Aunt Anne,” Florence said
+gently, though she could not help inwardly
+chafing at the intrusion, and longing to be
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me, love, did Walter go off comfortably?”
+Mrs. Baines asked, speaking with
+the air people sometimes speak of those who
+have died rather to the satisfaction of their
+relations.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, he sailed a few hours ago. I have
+just come back from Southampton.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know it,” Aunt Anne answered, her
+voice full of untold feeling; “did he take my
+simple gifts with him, dear?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, he took them,” Florence answered
+gratefully; “but come downstairs, Aunt
+Anne, you must be worn out.”</p>
+
+<p>Then in a moment Aunt Anne recovered
+her old manner, the manner that had some
+indefinable charm in it, and looked at
+Florence.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” she said, “I am very
+much fatigued but I am thankful indeed to
+enjoy your hospitality again. Before I retire
+to rest I must write some letters, if you will
+permit your servant to post them.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence had to write one or two letters
+also. She gave three to the little housemaid
+to post; as she did so, one of Aunt Anne’s
+caught her eye. It was addressed to Alfred
+Wimple. “Perhaps she wanted to tell him
+something about the Albert Memorial,” she
+thought, and dismissed the matter from her
+mind.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail5.jpg' alt='triangle shape with leaves' id='iid-0009' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap6.jpg' alt='coastal scene with a broken fence' id='iid-0010' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VI.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capt.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='T'/>hen</span> it was that Florence discovered
+that Aunt Anne was really a charming
+person to have in the house, especially
+with children. She was so bright, so clever
+with them, so full of little surprises. In her
+pocket there always lingered some unexpected
+little present, and at the tip of her
+tongue some quaint bit of old-world knowledge
+that was as interesting to grown-up
+folk as to the children. To see her prim
+figure about the place seemed to Florence
+like having lavender among her linen. She
+was useful too, ready with her fingers to darn
+some little place in a tablecloth that every
+one else had overlooked, to sew a button on
+Monty’s little shoe, or to mend a tear in
+Catty’s pinafore. Above all, she was so
+complimentary, so full of admiration, and it
+was quite evident that she meant with her
+whole heart all the pretty things she said.
+She did too. Walter was the son of her
+favourite brother, and to Florence she had
+really taken a fancy from the beginning.</p>
+
+<p>“I loved you from the first moment, my
+love,” she said. “I shall never forget the
+look of happiness on your face that morning
+at Brighton when I met you and your dear
+Walter together. It endeared you to me.
+It was a happy day,” she added, with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, a very happy day,” Florence answered,
+affectionately remembering how ungrateful
+both she and dear Walter had been
+at the time. This was at breakfast one
+morning, a week after Walter’s departure.
+She was pouring out the coffee very quickly
+because she longed to open her letters,
+though she knew it was not possible to get
+yet the one he had posted from Gibraltar.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne meanwhile was undoing a little
+packet that had come by post addressed to
+her. Catty and Monty having finished
+their porridge were intently watching. She
+stopped when she noticed the gravity of
+their faces.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said, in the tone of one
+asking a great favour, “have I your permission
+to give these dear children some bread
+and jam?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, of course,” Florence answered,
+not looking up from the long letter she was
+reading.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne, quick to notice, saw that it
+had a foreign postmark and an enclosure
+that looked like a cheque. Then she cut
+some bread and took off the crust before she
+spread a quantity of butter on the dainty
+slices, and piled on the top of the butter as
+much jam as they could carry.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh!” cried the children, with gleeful
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Aunt Anne,” exclaimed Florence,
+looking up when she heard it, “I never give
+them quite so much butter with quite so
+much jam. It is too rich for them, and we
+don’t cut off the crusts.”</p>
+
+<p>“The servants will eat them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed they will not,” laughed Florence;
+“they don’t like crusts.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are much too good to them, love,
+as you are to every one. They should do
+as they are told, and be glad to take what
+they can get. I never have patience with
+the lower classes,” she added, in the gentlest
+of voices.</p>
+
+<p>But the words gave Florence a sudden
+insight into the possible reason of Aunt
+Anne’s collapse at Mrs. North’s, a catastrophe
+to which the old lady never referred. The
+very mention of Mrs. North’s name made her
+manner a little distant.</p>
+
+<p>“And then, you know,” Florence said, for
+she was always careful, and now especially,
+in order to make the very short allowance on
+which she had put herself in her husband’s
+absence hold out, “we must not let the
+children learn to be dainty, must we? So
+they must try to eat up the crusts of their
+bread; and we only give them a little butter
+when they have jam. I never had butter and
+jam together at all at home,” and she stroked
+Catty’s fat little hand while she went on
+reading her letter. “Grandma has written
+from France, my babes,” she said, looking
+up after a few minutes; “she sends you
+each a kiss and five shillings to spend.”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall buy a horse and be a soldier,”
+Monty declared.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall buy a present for mummy and a
+little one for Aunt Anne,” said Catty.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless you, my darling, for thinking of
+me,” the old lady said fervently, and suddenly
+opening a tin of Devonshire cream,
+she piled a mass of it on to the bread and
+butter and jam already before the astonished
+children. Aunt Anne’s nature gloried in
+profusion.</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” said Florence, not noticing anything
+at table, “here is a letter from Madame
+Celestine—her name is on the seal at least.
+I don’t owe her anything. Oh no, it isn’t
+for me. <span class='it'>Mrs. Baines, care of Mrs. Walter
+Hibbert.</span> It is for you, Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, my love.” Mrs. Baines took
+it, with an air of slight but dignified vexation.
+“It was remiss of your servant not
+to put all my letters beside me. I am sorry
+you should be troubled with my correspondence.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it doesn’t matter,” Florence answered.
+“I hope you have not found her very expensive;
+she can be so sometimes?” and
+through Florence’s mind there went a remembrance
+of the dress in which Aunt
+Anne had appeared on the night of the
+dinner-party. A little flush, or something
+like one, went across the old lady’s withered
+cheek.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said, almost haughtily, “I
+have not yet given her charges my consideration.
+I have been too much engaged with
+more important matters.”</p>
+
+<p>“I sincerely hope she does not owe for that
+dress,” Florence thought, but she did not
+dare ask any questions. “Madame Celestine
+is not a comfortable creditor, nor usually
+a small one.”</p>
+
+<p>Then she understood Catty’s and Monty’s
+remarkable silence of the past few minutes.
+It had suddenly dawned upon her how unusual
+it was.</p>
+
+<p>“Why, my beloved babes,” she exclaimed,
+“what are you eating?” and she looked
+across laughingly at Aunt Anne. “Where
+did those snowy mountains of cream come
+from?”</p>
+
+<p>“They came by post, just now, my love,”
+Mrs. Baines said firmly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, you are much too kind, Aunt Anne.
+But you will spoil the children, you will
+indeed, as well as their digestions. You
+are much too good to them; but we shall
+have to send them away if you corrupt
+them in this delicious manner.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is most nutritious, I assure you,” Aunt
+Anne answered, with great gravity, while
+with dogged and desperate haste she piled
+more and more cream on to Monty’s plate.
+“I thought you would like it, Florence.
+I have ordered three pounds to be sent in
+one-pound tins at intervals of three days.
+I hoped that you would think it good for
+the dear children, that they would have your
+approbation in eating it.”</p>
+
+<p>“Of course, and I shall eat some too,”
+Florence answered, trying to chase away
+Aunt Anne’s earnestness; “only you are
+much too good to them.”</p>
+
+<p>The old lady looked up with a tender
+smile on her face.</p>
+
+<p>“It is not possible to be good enough
+to your children, my darling—yours and
+Walter’s.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear Walter,” said Florence, as she
+rose from the table, “I shall be glad to get
+his letter. Now, my monkeys, my vagabonds,
+my darlings, go upstairs and tell
+nurse to take you out at once to see the
+trees and the ducks in the pond; go along,
+go along,” and she ran playfully after the
+children.</p>
+
+<p>“May I go and buy my horse?” asked
+Monty; “and I think I shall buy a sword
+too. I want to kill a man.”</p>
+
+<p>“He is just like his father!” exclaimed
+Aunt Anne. “What is Catty going to do
+with her money?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Give it to mummy,” the child answered
+softly.</p>
+
+<p>“And she is just like you, dear Florence,”
+said the old lady, in a choking voice.</p>
+
+<p>“She is just like herself, and therefore
+like a dickie-bird, and a white rabbit, and
+a tortoiseshell kitten, and many other things
+too numerous to mention,” Florence laughed,
+overtaking Catty and kissing her little round
+face. “But go, my babes, go—go and get
+ready; your beloved mummy wants to turn
+you out of doors;” and shouting with joy
+the children scampered off.</p>
+
+<p>Florence took up <span class='it'>The Centre</span>.</p>
+
+<p>“Won’t you have the paper, Aunt Anne,
+and a quiet quarter of an hour?”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, no, my love; I rarely care
+to peruse it until a more leisure time of the
+day. With your permission I will leave you
+now, I have some business to transact out of
+doors; are there any commissions I could
+execute for you?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne was always thoughtful, Florence
+said to herself. Every morning since she
+came this question had been asked and
+answered in almost the same words.</p>
+
+<p>“By the way, Aunt Anne, Mr. Wimple
+called yesterday. I am sorry I was not at
+home”—and this she felt to be a fib.</p>
+
+<p>“He told me that he intended to do so
+before he left town.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange light on Aunt Anne’s
+face when she spoke of him; her niece saw
+it with wonder.</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say she takes a sort of motherly
+interest in him,” she said to herself. “He
+is delicate and she has no belongings; poor
+old lady, how sad it must be to have no
+belongings, no husband, no children, no
+mother, no anything. I don’t wonder her
+sympathies go out even to Mr. Wimple.”
+Then aloud she asked, “Is he going away
+for long?”</p>
+
+<p>“He is going to some friends near Portsmouth
+by the twelve o’clock train to-day,”
+and Mrs. Baines glanced at the clock; “from
+Waterloo,” she added.</p>
+
+<p>“Are you going to see him off, Aunt
+Anne?”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, I have an engagement in the
+City at one o’clock. I am going out now,
+but I cannot say what my movements will
+be between this and then.”</p>
+
+<p>In a moment Aunt Anne’s voice was a
+shade distant. Florence had only asked the
+question as a little joke, and with no notion
+that Aunt Anne would take it seriously.</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t mean to be curious,” she said,
+and stroked the old lady’s shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>“I know you did not, my darling. You
+are the last person in the world to commit
+a solecism,”—and again there came a smile
+to Aunt Anne’s face. It made Florence
+stoop and kiss her.</p>
+
+<p>“And you told me of your expedition
+to the Albert Memorial, remember,” she went
+on wickedly; “and I know that you and Mr.
+Wimple are very sympathetic to each other.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are right, Florence. We have many
+tastes and sympathies in unison. We find it
+pleasant to discuss them altogether. Good-bye,
+my love; do not wait luncheon for me.
+I shall probably partake of it with a friend”—and
+she left the room. Florence took up
+<span class='it'>The Centre</span> again, but she could not read for
+thinking uneasily of the bill which she felt
+convinced Madame Celestine had just sent
+to Aunt Anne.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I could pay it,” she thought;
+“but I can’t, in spite of mother’s present
+this morning. It is probably at least fifteen
+pounds. Besides, Aunt Anne is such a
+peculiar old lady that the chances are she
+would be offended if I did.”</p>
+
+<p>She put down the paper and sat thinking
+for a few minutes. Then she went to the
+writing-table in the corner by the fireplace,
+unlocked the corner drawer and took out a
+little china bowl in which she was in the
+habit of keeping the money she had in the
+house. Four pounds in gold and a five-pound
+note. She took out the note, put in
+a cheque, locked the drawer and waited.</p>
+
+<p>When she heard the soft footsteps of Aunt
+Anne descending the stairs she went to the
+door nervously, uncertain how what she was
+going to do would be received. Mrs. Baines
+was dressed ready to go out. She was a
+little smarter than usual. Round her throat
+there was some soft white muslin tied in a
+large bow that fell on her chest and relieved
+the sombreness of her attire. The heavy
+crape veil she usually wore was replaced by
+a thinner one that had little spots of jet
+upon it.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne, you look as if you were
+going to a party.”</p>
+
+<p>The old lady was almost confused, like a
+person who is found out in some roguish
+mischief of which she is half, but only half,
+ashamed.</p>
+
+<p>“My love, I only go to your parties,” she
+said; “there are no others in the world that
+would tempt me.”</p>
+
+<p>“Can you come to me for five minutes
+before you start? I won’t keep you
+longer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, with pleasure,” Aunt Anne answered;
+“but it must only be for five minutes, if you
+will excuse me for saying so, for I have an
+appointment that I should deeply regret not
+being able to keep.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence led the old lady to an easy-chair
+and shut the door. Then she knelt down
+by her side, saying humbly but with a voice
+full of joy, for she was delighted at what she
+was going to do—if Aunt Anne would only
+let her do it.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to tell you that—that I had a
+letter from my mother this morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know, my love. I hope she is well,
+and that you have no anxiety about her.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no.”</p>
+
+<p>“She must long to see you, Florence dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“She does; she is such a dear mother, and
+she is coming to England in two or three
+weeks’ time.”</p>
+
+<p>“Her society will be a great solace to you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes; but what I wanted to tell you is
+that she has sent me a present.”</p>
+
+<p>“I hope it is a substantial one,” Aunt
+Anne said, courteously.</p>
+
+<p>“Indeed it is.”</p>
+
+<p>“It rejoices me greatly to hear it, my love.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is money—a cheque. My mother
+says she sends it to cheer me up after losing
+Walter.”</p>
+
+<p>“She knew how your tender heart would
+miss him, my darling;” but she was watching
+Florence intently with a hungry look
+that a second self seemed trying to control.</p>
+
+<p>“And as I have had a present of filthy
+lucre, Aunt Anne, and am delighted and not
+too proud to take it, so I want you to have
+a present of filthy lucre and not to be too
+proud to take it; but just to have this little
+five-pound note because you love me and
+for any little odd and end on which you may
+find it convenient to spend it. It would be
+so sweet of you to let me share my present
+as my children shared the cream with you.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence bent her head and kissed the old
+lady’s hands as she pushed the bit of crisp
+paper into them. Aunt Anne was not one
+whit offended, it seemed for a moment as if
+she were going to break down and cry; but
+she controlled herself.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless you, my darling, bless you indeed.
+I take it in the spirit you offer
+it me; I know the pleasure it is to your
+generous heart to give, and it is equally
+one to mine to receive. I could not refuse
+any gift from you, Florence,” she said, kissing
+Mrs. Hibbert; and when she departed,
+it was with an air of having done a gracious
+and tender deed. But besides this, her
+footstep had grown lighter, there was a joyfulness
+in her voice and a flickering smile
+on her face that showed how much pleasure
+and relief the money had given her.</p>
+
+<p>“I am so glad,” Florence thought, as she
+noticed it; “poor old dear. I wonder if it
+will go to Madame Celestine, or what she
+will do with it. And I wonder where she
+is gone.”</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail6.jpg' alt='griffen' id='iid-0011' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap7.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0012' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VII.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capf.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='F'/>lorence’s</span> speculations concerning
+Aunt Anne were brought to an end
+by the arrival of Mr. Fisher. She was surprised
+at his paying her so early a visit, and
+for a moment feared lest it should mean bad
+news from Walter. But his benevolent expression
+reassured her.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope you will forgive my intruding on
+you at this hour, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said.
+“My visit is almost a business one, if I may
+venture to call it so, and I hope its result
+may be pleasant to us both.” His manner
+was a faint echo of Aunt Anne’s. “I would
+have written to ask you to see me, but the
+idea that brings me only occurred to me an
+hour or two ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“But of course I would see you,” she
+answered brightly. “And I think the morning
+is a delicious time of day to which we
+devote far too much idleness.”</p>
+
+<p>“I thoroughly agree with you,” he said,
+and looked at her approvingly, for he was
+quite alive to the duties of domesticity. In
+his short married life it had been an everlasting
+irritation to him that his wife was
+a slattern and wholly indifferent about her
+home. It had made him keen to observe
+the ways of other women; though the sight
+of a well-kept house always depressed him
+a little, for it set him thinking of the denials
+in his own life, of what he might have had
+and could have been; it made him also a
+little extra deferential and gracious to the
+woman who presided over it. He was so
+to Florence this morning. He had noticed
+quickly that all signs of breakfast had vanished,
+he divined that the children were out
+of doors, and that she herself, with her slate
+and account-books, was deep in household
+matters. It was thus he thought that a
+woman should chiefly concern herself. Her
+husband, children, and home were her business
+in life. The rest could be left to the
+discretion and management of men. He
+felt that it was almost a duty on his part, in
+the absence of her husband, to discreetly
+manage Florence. Moreover, in the intervals
+of editing his paper, he had a turn for
+editing the lives of other people, and he
+felt it almost an obligation to give a good
+deal of time to the consideration of the
+private affairs of his staff. He liked the
+Hibberts too, and was really anxious to be
+good and useful to them. He had come to
+the conclusion that it was a pity that
+Florence and her children should stay in
+London while Walter was away. “She
+would be much better in the country,” he
+thought; “the children could run about;
+besides, what is the good of keeping that
+cottage near Witley empty?” and then he remembered
+his own mother, who was seventy
+years old and lived far off in the wilds of
+Northumberland. Her sole amusement
+appeared to be writing her son letters,
+lamenting that he never went to stay with
+her, and that since he lived in small and inconvenient
+bachelor chambers, she could not
+go and stay with him. It had been her
+desire that he should marry again. She
+had told him that it was foolish not to do
+so, that she could die happy if he had a
+wife to take care of him. But he never
+answered a word. “It would not be a bad
+idea if I had the old lady up for a couple
+of months, and took the Hibberts’ house,”
+he said to himself. The idea grew upon
+him. He imagined the dinners he could
+give to his staff and their wives—not to the
+outside world, for it bothered him. “We
+might ask Ethel Dunlop occasionally,” he
+thought; “a nice girl in her twenties, fond of
+pleasure, would brighten up the old lady.”
+He remembered the twenties with regret,
+and wished they were thirties; then he
+would not have felt so keenly the difference
+in years between them. But he reflected
+that after all he was still in the prime of
+life, as a man is, if he chooses, till he is
+fifty; and he struggled to feel youthful; but
+struggle as he would, youthful feelings held
+aloof. They were coy after forty, he supposed,
+and looking back he consoled himself
+by thinking that they had been rather foolish.
+Then he thought of Ethel’s cousin;
+confound her cousin! she seemed to like
+going about with him. Perhaps he made
+love to her; yet he was too much of a
+hobble-de-hoy for that, surely—three-and-twenty
+at most—a very objectionable time
+of life in the masculine sex, a time of dash
+and impudence and doing of things from
+sheer bravado at which wisdom, knowledge,
+and middle age hesitated. Ethel was probably
+only amusing herself with him. To
+fall in love with a cousin would show a lack
+of originality of which he was slow to suspect
+her. He wondered what the cousin
+did, and if he wanted a post of any sort; if
+he had a turn for writing and adventure.
+Perhaps he could be sent as special correspondent
+to the Gold Coast, where the climate
+would probably sufficiently engross him.
+Ethel at any rate might be invited to see his
+mother, it would cheer the old lady up to
+have a girl about her. Yes, he had quite
+made up his mind. Mrs. Hibbert should go
+to her country cottage with her two children;
+he would take the house near Portland Road
+for a couple of months, and the rest would
+arrange itself.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t know whether Walter would like
+it,” Florence said, when Mr. Fisher had explained
+his errand.</p>
+
+<p>“I’ll answer for Walter,” Mr. Fisher said
+concisely. Of course he, a man, knew
+better than she did what Walter, also a
+man, would like; that was plainly conveyed
+in his manner. “It will be better for you
+and the children,” he went on, with gracious
+benevolence, for as he looked at Florence
+he thought how girlish she was. He felt
+quite strongly that in her husband’s absence
+it was his duty to look after her, and to
+teach her, pleasantly, the way in which she
+should go. It was absurd to suppose that
+a woman should know it without any direction
+from his sex, and he was now the proper
+person to give it. “I will send you plenty
+of novels to read, and if you would allow
+me to introduce you to her,” he added, with
+a shade of pomposity in his voice, “there is
+a friend of mine at Witley—Mrs. Burnett.
+You would be excellent companions for each
+other, I should say, for her husband comes
+up to town every morning, and——”</p>
+
+<p>“I know her a little,” Florence said, “a
+tall, slight woman with sweet grey eyes.”</p>
+
+<p>“I never looked at her eyes,” Mr. Fisher
+said quickly, and Florence felt reproved for
+having mentioned them. Of course, he
+would not look at the eyes of a married
+woman. Mr. Fisher had clear and distinct
+views about the proprieties, which he
+thought were invented especially for married
+and marriageable women. “Perhaps Miss
+Dunlop would pay you a visit,” he suggested.</p>
+
+<p>“She has her father to take care of.
+Besides, Mrs. Baines is staying with me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I saw Mrs. Baines with Wimple the
+other day. Has she adopted him?”</p>
+
+<p>“With Mr. Wimple,” Florence said, bewildered
+at the sudden mention of the name
+again; and then remembering Walter, she
+added loyally, “she likes him because he is
+Walter’s friend.”</p>
+
+<p>“He writes well,” Mr. Fisher answered,
+as if he were making a remark that surprised
+himself. “He has done some work
+for us, and done it very well too.”</p>
+
+<p>Then he unfolded the details in regard to
+the taking of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Florence found to her surprise that he had
+arranged them all carefully.</p>
+
+<p>“Let me see,” he said, “this is Monday.
+You can go on Saturday, I suppose? I
+think that would be the best day for my
+mother to arrive.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes. There are things to get ready
+and to put away, of course.”</p>
+
+<p>“They won’t take you long,” he answered
+shortly.</p>
+
+<p>“I dare say it will do the children good,”
+she said, reluctantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course it will.”</p>
+
+<p>“I might ask Aunt Anne to take the
+children to-morrow—I am sure she would—then
+I could soon get the place ready.”</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines? Yes, it would be an excellent
+plan to send her on first.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is very kind of you; don’t you think
+that you are really paying too much rent,
+Mr. Fisher?”</p>
+
+<p>“Not at all, not at all; it is a fair one,
+and I shall be very glad to have the house.”</p>
+
+<p>She was really a nice little woman, he
+thought, docile, and far from stupid; she only
+wanted a little managing. He had a suspicion
+that Walter was too easy-going, and
+if so, this little experience would be excellent
+for her; it would teach her that after
+all men were the governing race. It was
+so foolish when women did not recognize it.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well then, you will go on Saturday?
+Good-bye. Oh, I should like to ask Miss
+Dunlop to come and see my mother; do
+you think she would mind cheering her up
+sometimes?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no. She is a nice girl too.”</p>
+
+<p>“We might make a party to the theatre
+one night perhaps. By the way, Mrs. Hibbert,”
+he exclaimed, a sudden thought striking
+him, “I shall write to Walter as soon
+as I get to the office and tell him of this
+arrangement. I might as well enclose a
+note from you. The mail goes out to-day
+from Southampton, so that it would be too
+late to post, but I am sending specially by
+rail. I will wait while you write a note,
+and enclose it in mine.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wrote by this mail last night,” she
+answered. “But I should like to tell him
+about the house—he might be angry.” She
+laughed at the last words. She only said
+them to keep up Walter’s dignity.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, he won’t be angry,” Mr. Fisher
+laughed back, and Florence thought he was
+quite good-looking when he was not too
+grave. He did not look more than forty
+either; perhaps Ethel might be happy with
+him. Then, when she had written a few
+lines, he departed, satisfied with the result
+of his visit.</p>
+
+<p>An odd thing happened about that note.
+He went straight to the office and found a
+dozen matters of business awaiting his attention,
+and all remembrance of the Hibberts
+fled from him. Suddenly, an hour later, he
+dived into his pocket for a memorandum,
+and pulled out an unopened white envelope.
+He did not look at the address. “What’s
+this?” he said in utter forgetfulness, and
+tore it open; and—for his own name caught
+his eye—he read a passage in Mrs. Hibbert’s
+note to her husband:—</p>
+
+<p>“——<span class='it'>he is a kind old fogey, and I think
+he likes Ethel D. Would it not be funny if
+he married her?</span>”</p>
+
+<p>He folded it up quickly for fear he should
+read more. “Why should it be funny?” he
+said to himself. The word haunted him all
+day.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Aunt Anne was deeply engaged.
+She was delighted with Florence’s unexpected
+gift; it would enable her to do a few things
+that only an hour or two ago she had felt
+to be impossible. She had not the least
+intention of paying Madame Celestine. She
+looked upon her as an inferior who must
+be content to wait till it was the pleasure of
+her superior to remember her bill, and any
+reminder of it she resented as a liberty.
+She spent a happy and very excited hour
+in Regent Street, and at eleven o’clock stood
+on the kerbstone critically looking for a
+hansom. She let several go by that did
+not please her; but at last with excellent
+instinct she picked out a good horse and a
+smart driver, and a minute later was whirling
+on towards Waterloo Station. She liked
+driving in hansoms; she was of opinion
+that they were well constructed, a great
+improvement on older modes of conveyance,
+and that it was the positive duty of people
+in a certain rank of life to encourage all
+meritorious achievements with their approval.
+She never for a moment doubted that she
+was one of those whose approval was important.
+She felt her own individuality very
+strongly, and was convinced that the world
+recognized it. She was keenly sensible of
+making effects, and it was odd, but for all
+her eccentricities, there was in her the
+making of a great lady; or it might have
+seemed to a philosophical speculator that
+she was made of the worn-out fragments of
+some past great lady, and dimly remembered
+at intervals her former importance. She
+had perfect control over her manner, and
+could use it to the best advantage; she had
+reserve, a power of keeping off familiarity,
+a graciousness, a winsomeness when she
+chose, that all belonged to a certain type
+and a certain class. As she went on swiftly
+to the station she looked half-disdainfully,
+yet compassionately, at the people who
+walked and the people who passed in
+omnibuses. She told herself that the last
+were excellent institutions, she wondered
+what the lower class would do without
+them; it rejoiced her to think that they
+had not got to do without them, it was a
+satisfaction to feel that she could enjoy her
+own superior condition without compunction.</p>
+
+<p>At Waterloo, with an air of decision that
+showed a perfect knowledge of her own
+generosity, she gave the cabman sixpence
+over his fare and walked slowly into the
+station. She looked up and down the
+platform from which the Portsmouth train
+would depart, but saw no one she knew.
+She stood for a moment hesitating, and
+winked slowly to herself. Then she went
+to the bookstall and bought a <span class='it'>Times</span> and a
+<span class='it'>Morning Post</span>. The one cost threepence
+and the other was fashionable. She disliked
+penny papers. Again her mania for present-giving
+asserted itself, and quickly she bought
+also a pile of illustrated papers and magazines.
+“Gentlemen always like the <span class='it'>Field</span>,” she said
+to herself, and added it to the heap. She
+turned away with them in her arms, and as
+she did so Alfred Wimple stood facing her.</p>
+
+<p>“I have ventured to get you a few
+papers, hoping they would beguile you on
+your journey,” she said.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple was as grave as ever and as
+rickety on his legs. His face showed no
+sign of pleasure at the sight of the old lady,
+but his manner was deferential; he seemed
+to be trying to impress certain indefinite
+facts upon her.</p>
+
+<p>“I never read in a train,” he answered,
+“but I shall be glad of them at the end of
+the journey. Thank you.”</p>
+
+<p>He said the last two words with a sigh,
+and put them in the corner he had already
+secured of the railway carriage. He looked
+at the clock. Twenty minutes before he
+started. He seemed to consider something
+for a moment, looking critically at the old
+lady while he did so.</p>
+
+<p>“Cannot I persuade you to give me your
+address in Hampshire?” He coughed a
+little. “Have you your glycerine lozenges
+with you?” she asked hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he answered, “they are in my
+pocket. I will write to you, Mrs. Baines;
+I may have something of importance to say.”</p>
+
+<p>“Everything that you say is important,”
+she answered nervously.</p>
+
+<p>He got into the train and sat down.</p>
+
+<p>“I am tired,” he said; “you must excuse
+me for not standing any longer.” He
+shivered as he opened the window. “I dislike
+third class,” he added, “but I go by it
+on principle; I am not rich enough to travel
+by any other, Mrs. Baines,” and he looked at
+her fixedly.</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, she seemed fascinated, she
+looked at him for a moment and winked
+absently; then a thought seemed to strike
+her and she started.</p>
+
+<p>“Wait!” she exclaimed; “I will return in
+a moment,” and she hurried away.</p>
+
+<p>In five minutes she came back breathless
+with excitement. “I have taken a great
+liberty,” she said humbly, “but you must
+forgive me. I have ventured to get you
+this ticket; will you please me by changing
+into a first-class carriage? You must
+imagine that you are my guest,” and she
+looked at him anxiously. “The guard is
+waiting——”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot refuse you anything, Mrs.
+Baines.” And with a chastened air he
+pulled his portmanteau from under the seat.
+The guard was waiting outside for it, and
+took it to an empty carriage. Mr. Wimple
+followed, Aunt Anne carrying the papers.
+He took his place and looked round satisfied.
+The guard touched his hat to the old lady
+and went his way. Mrs. Baines gave a sigh
+of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>“Now I shall feel content, and you will
+not be disturbed,” she added triumphantly.
+“I have spoken——” She stopped, for his
+hacking cough came back; she seemed to
+shrink with pain as she heard it.</p>
+
+<p>“I am quite an invalid,” he said impressively.</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I were going with you to nurse
+you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I need nursing, Mrs. Baines,” he answered
+sadly. “I need a great many things.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wish I could give them to you.”</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her curiously; as if the
+words came from him without his knowledge,
+he said suddenly, “I see Sir William
+Rammage is a little better.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am going to inquire after him this
+morning,” she answered, and then she drew
+a little parcel from beneath her shawl. “I
+want you to put this into your pocket,” she
+said, “and to open it by-and-by; it is only
+a trifling proof that I thought of you as I
+came along.”</p>
+
+<p>“I always think of you,” he said, almost
+reproachfully, as, without a word of thanks,
+he put the parcel out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>“Not more than I do of you,” she said,
+in a low choking voice. “I hear you cough
+in my sleep; and it grieves me to think how
+hard you have to work.”</p>
+
+<p>“I can’t take care of myself,” he said; “I
+was always careless, Mrs. Baines, and I must
+work. Fisher is a very fidgety man to work
+for; it has taken me three days to review
+a small book on American law, and even now
+I am not sure that he will be satisfied.”</p>
+
+<p>His voice never varied, the expression of
+his eyes never changed save once for a
+moment. She had taken off her gloves and
+was resting her hands, thin and dry, on the
+ledge of the carriage window while she leant
+forward to talk to him, and suddenly he
+looked down at them. They seemed to
+repel him, he drew back a very little; she
+saw the movement and followed his eyes;
+she understood perfectly; for she had quick
+insight, and courage to face unflinchingly
+even truths that were not pleasant. She
+drew her hands away and rubbed them softly
+one over the other, as if by doing so she
+could put young life into them. Suddenly
+with a jerk the train moved.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye,” she said excitedly. “Good-bye;
+if I write to the address in town will
+the letter be forwarded?”</p>
+
+<p>But he could only nod. In a moment he
+was out of sight. He did not lean forward
+to look after her, he sat staring into space.
+“She must be seventy,” he said. “I
+wonder——” Then he felt in his pocket
+for the third-class ticket he no longer needed.
+“Probably they will return the amount I
+paid for it.” A sudden thought struck him.
+He looked at the ticket Mrs. Baines had
+given him. “It is for Portsmouth,” he said
+grimly. The one he had taken himself had
+been for Liphook.</p>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap8.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0013' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER VIII.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capi.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='I'/>t</span> was not at all a bad thing to do,
+Florence thought, as she sat and considered
+the arrangement Mr. Fisher had so
+suddenly made in regard to the house in town
+and the cottage at Witley. The country
+would do the children good, and Aunt Anne
+would probably enjoy it. Of course the latter
+would consent to go with them. Indeed,
+she had clearly no other resource. Florence
+wondered if she would like it.</p>
+
+<p>But Mrs. Baines was so full of news herself
+when she returned that she had no time
+to listen to any one else.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said, “I have passed a
+most important day.”</p>
+
+<p>“Relate your adventures, Aunt Anne.”
+But at this request Mrs. Baines winked and
+spoke slowly.</p>
+
+<p>“I had an engagement in the morning,”
+she began, and hesitated. “When I had
+fulfilled it,” she went on, “I thought it right,
+Florence, to go and call on Sir William
+Rammage. He has been ill, and I wanted
+to assure him of my sympathy. Besides, I
+felt that it was due to you—that it was an
+imperative duty on my part to ask him for
+an allowance, and that it was his duty to give
+it to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne——”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love. I am living now on your
+generous kindness; don’t think that I am
+insensible to it. But for your tenderness,
+my darling, I should have been alone in a
+little lodging now, as I was when—when I
+was first left a widow.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should not like to think of you in a
+little lodging, Aunt Anne,” Florence said
+gently; and then she added gaily, “but continue
+your adventures.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines gave a long sigh, and was
+silent for a moment. She sat down on the
+easy-chair and, as if she had not heard
+Florence’s interruption, went on with a
+strange tragic note in her voice—</p>
+
+<p>“I never told you about that time,
+Florence. I had three pounds in the world
+when I came to London; just three pounds
+to maintain my position until I could find
+something to do. I had a little room at
+Kilburn—a little room at the top of the
+house; and I used to sit day after day,
+week after week, waiting. I had no coals,
+only a little spirit-lamp by which I made
+some water hot, then poured it into a jug
+and covered it over and warmed my hands
+by it; it was often an hour before it grew
+cold, my love.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why did you not come to us?”</p>
+
+<p>“I couldn’t,” the old lady answered in an
+obstinate tone. “I felt that it would not be
+treating you properly to present myself before
+you while I was so poor and miserable”—she
+paused and looked into the fire for a
+moment, then suddenly went on: “The
+woman at the corner where I went every
+morning to buy a newspaper, saw that I was
+poor, and presumed upon it. Once she said
+I looked nipped up, and asked me to sit down
+and get warm. I reproved her for familiarity,
+and never went to the shop again.”</p>
+
+<p>“But perhaps she meant it for kindness?”</p>
+
+<p>“She should have remembered her position,
+my love, and asked me in a different
+manner. There is nothing more painful to
+bear than the remembrance of one’s own
+rank in life when one has to encounter the
+hardships that belong by right to a lower
+class.” Aunt Anne paused again for a
+moment, and gave a long sigh before she
+went on: “We won’t go over it, my dear.
+If Mrs. North had shown less levity in her
+conduct and more consideration to me, I
+should have been there still instead of living
+on your charity.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, it is so; even though you
+love me and I love you, it is charity; and I
+felt it keenly when you resented my little
+offering of cream this morning—you, to
+whom I would give everything I possess.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, Aunt Anne——” interrupted
+Florence.</p>
+
+<p>“And so—and so,” continued the old lady
+with a little gasp, “I went to Sir William
+Rammage once more. I told him—I told
+him”—she stopped—“I told him how our
+mothers had stood over us together, years
+and years ago.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I know,” Florence said soothingly.
+She had heard this so often before. “I
+hope he was good to you?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, he listened with compunction,
+but he saw the force of what I said. He
+will write and tell me how much he will
+allow me,” she added simply.</p>
+
+<p>“I am very glad, Aunt Anne; I hope he
+will write soon, and be generous. I know it
+will make you happier.”</p>
+
+<p>“It will, indeed,” and Mrs. Baines gave
+another long sigh. “I shall not be dependent
+on any one much longer.”</p>
+
+<p>“Except upon him,” Florence said unwittingly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I shall not feel that I am dependent
+even upon him,” and she looked up quickly.
+“He will give it and I shall take it for the
+honour of the family. I told him how impossible
+it was that I could go on living upon
+you and Walter, that it would be a disgrace.
+I could not live upon him either. He has
+shown me so little sympathy, my love, that
+I could not endure it. I shall take the
+allowance from him as I should take an
+inheritance, knowing that it is not given to
+me for my own sake. I could not take it in
+any other spirit; but it would be as wrong in
+him to forget what is due to us, as it would
+be in me to let him do so. It would shed
+dishonour on his name.”</p>
+
+<p>And again she was silent; she seemed to
+be living over the past, to be groping her
+way back among days that were over before
+Florence was even born, to be seeing people
+whose very names had not been heard for
+years.</p>
+
+<p>“They would rise in their graves if I were
+left to starve,” she continued; “I have always
+felt it; and it was but right towards them
+that I should go to William; it was due to
+them even that I should live on you and
+Walter, my darling, till I received an adequate
+income.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly her voice changed again, the
+wonderful smile came back—the happy look
+that always seemed as if it had travelled
+from the youth she had left long years
+behind.</p>
+
+<p>“You understand, my love?” she asked.
+“Bless you for all your kindness, but I am
+not going to intrude upon you much longer.
+I have already seen an apartment that will,
+I think, suit my requirements.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, it will be much better.
+You cut me to the quick this morning,
+Florence,” and her voice grew sad; “you
+said that you would have to send away your
+dear children because my influence would
+spoil them.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne!”—Florence began in consternation.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear, yes,” the old lady said
+solemnly; “it gave me the deepest pain, as
+I sat and thought it over in the privacy of
+my own chamber. But when I came downstairs
+and you shared your dear mother’s gift
+with me, I knew that you loved me sincerely.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do,” said Florence, soothingly.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure of it, my darling,” with even
+more solemnity, “but it will be better that I
+should take an apartment. It will rejoice
+your tender heart to know that by your gift
+you have helped me to secure one, and when
+I receive my allowance from Sir William I
+shall feel that I am independent once more.
+You must forgive me, my love; it is not
+that I do not appreciate your hospitality—yours
+and Walter’s—I do. But I feel that
+it would sadden all my dear ones who are
+gone, if they knew that I was alone in the
+world, without a home of my own. That
+is why I went to Sir William Rammage,
+Florence; and though he said little, I feel
+sure that he saw the matter in a proper light,
+and felt as I do about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“What did he say?”</p>
+
+<p>“He said he would think it over, and
+when he had made up his mind he would
+write to me. My love, would you permit
+me to ring the bell?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, of course. Why do you always ask
+me? Don’t you feel at home here, dear
+Aunt Anne?” Florence asked, thinking that
+Sir William’s answer had, after all, committed
+him to little.</p>
+
+<p>“I hope I shall never so far forget myself
+as not to treat you with the courtesy that
+you have a right to expect, my darling. I
+will never take advantage of our relationship.—Jane,”
+she said, with quite another manner,
+and in a cold and slightly haughty tone, to
+the servant who had entered, “would you
+have the goodness to divest me of my cloak?
+and if your mistress gives you permission,
+perhaps you would carry it up to my room?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, ma’am,” said Jane, respectfully, but
+without much willingness in her manner.
+The servants had learnt to resent the tone
+in which Mrs. Baines usually spoke to them.
+“She treats us like dirt,” the housemaid
+explained to the cook; “and if were made
+of dirt, I should like to know what she’s
+made of? She give me a shilling the other
+day, and another time a new apron done up
+in a box from the draper’s; but I don’t care
+about her for all her presents. I know she
+always sees every speck of dust that others
+would be blind to; it’s in her wink that she
+does.”</p>
+
+<p>“And now that you have told me all
+your news, I want you to listen to mine,”
+Florence said.</p>
+
+<p>Then she gave an account of Mr. Fisher’s
+visit, and of the letting of the house for a
+couple of months.</p>
+
+<p>“So, Aunt Anne,” she continued triumphantly,
+“I want you to be very, very good,
+and to go with the children and two of the
+servants to the cottage at Witley to-morrow,
+and to be the mistress of the great establishment,
+if you will, and mother to the children
+till I come; that proves how bad I think
+your influence is for them, doesn’t it, you
+unkind old dear?”—and she stooped and
+kissed Mrs. Baines.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne was delighted, and consented
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall never forget your putting this
+confidence in me. You have proved your
+affection for me most truly,” she said. “My
+dear Florence, your children shall have the
+most loving care that it is in my power to
+give them. I will look after everything till
+you come; more zealously than you yourself
+could. Tell me, love, where do you say the
+cottage is situated?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is near Witley, it is on the direct
+Portsmouth road; a sweet little cottage with
+a garden, and fir woods stretching on either
+side.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how far is it from Portsmouth, my
+love?” Mrs. Baines asked eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>Florence divined the meaning of the question
+instantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, I don’t know, Aunt Anne; after
+Witley comes Hindhead, and then Liphook,
+and then Petersfield, and then—then I don’t
+know. Liphook is the place where Mr.
+Wimple”—the old lady winked to herself—“has
+friends, and sometimes goes to stay.”</p>
+
+<p>“And how far is that?”</p>
+
+<p>“About six miles, I think—six or seven.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, my love; and now, if you
+will allow me, I will retire. I must make
+preparations for my journey, which is indeed
+a delightful anticipation.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence never forgot the October morning
+on which she took Aunt Anne and the children
+to Witley. They went from Waterloo.
+She thought of Walter and the day they had
+spent at Windsor, and of that last one on
+which they had gone together to Southampton,
+and she had returned alone. “Oh, my
+darling,” she said to herself, “may you grow
+well and strong, and come back to us soon
+again.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines, too, seemed full of memories.
+She looked up and down the platform; she
+stood for a moment dreamily by the bookstall
+before it occurred to her to buy a cheap
+illustrated paper to amuse Catty and Monty
+on the journey.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said to Florence, with
+a little sigh, “a railway station is fraught
+with many recollections of meeting and
+parting——”</p>
+
+<p>“And meeting again,” said Florence, longingly
+thinking of Walter.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” the old lady answered
+tenderly; “and may yours with your dear
+one be soon.”</p>
+
+<p>There were three miles to drive from
+Witley to the cottage. A long white road,
+with fir woods on either side. Gaps in the
+firs, and glimpses of the Surrey hills, distant
+and blue, of hanging woods and deep valleys.
+The firs came to an end; and there were
+cliffs of gravel full of the holes of sand-martins.
+More woods, then hedges of blackberry-bushes,
+bare enough now; gorse full of
+late bloom, heather faded and turning from
+russet to black. Here and there a solitary
+house, masses of oak and larch and fir,
+patches of sunshine, long wastes of shade;
+and the road going on and on.</p>
+
+<p>“Here we are at last,” Florence said, as
+they stopped before a red-brick cottage that
+stood only a few yards back from the road.
+On either side of it was a fir plantation.
+There was a gravel pathway round the
+house, but the other paths were covered
+with tan. Behind stretched a wilderness of
+garden almost entirely uncultivated. There
+was a little footway that wound through it
+in and out among beeches and larches and
+firs and oaks, and stopped at last on the
+ridge of a dip that could hardly be called a
+valley.</p>
+
+<p>“Sometimes,” said Florence, as they
+walked about, half an hour later, while the
+servants were busy within, “we go down the
+dip and up the other side, and so get over
+to Hindhead. It is nearer than going there
+by the road.”</p>
+
+<p>“Our house is over there,” the children said.</p>
+
+<p>“Their house,” explained Florence, “is a
+little, lonely, thatched shed, half a mile away.
+We don’t know who made it. It is in a
+lovely part on the other side of the dip,
+among the straggling trees. Perhaps some
+one tethered a cow in it once. The children
+call it their house now, because one day they
+had tea there. After I return next week
+we must try and walk across to it.”</p>
+
+<p>But the old lady’s eyes were turned towards
+the distance.</p>
+
+<p>“And the road in front of the house,” she
+asked, “where does that go to?”</p>
+
+<p>“It winds round the Devil’s Punch Bowl,
+and over Hindhead, and on through Liphook
+and Petersfield to Portsmouth.”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne did not answer, she looked
+still more intently into the distance, and gave
+a long sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“It is most exhilarating to be out of
+London again, my dear Florence,” she said.
+“I sincerely trust it will prove beneficial to
+your dear ones. I was born in the country,
+and I hope that some day I shall die in it.
+London is most oppressive after a time.”</p>
+
+<p>“I like London,” Florence answered;
+“still it does now and then feel like a
+prison.”</p>
+
+<p>“And the rows and rows of houses are
+the prison bars, my love. May we enter the
+cottage?” she asked suddenly. She was
+evidently tired; she stooped, and looked
+older and more worn than usual.</p>
+
+<p>“Poor old dear,” Florence thought. “I
+hope she is not worrying about Madame
+Celestine’s bill, and that she will soon hear
+from Sir William Rammage. Then she will
+be happier.”</p>
+
+<p>It was a little house, simple inside as well
+as out, with tiny rooms, plainly furnished.
+The dining-room had been newly done up,
+with cretonne curtains and a dado, and a
+buttery-hatch in which Florence took a
+certain pride as something rather grand for
+so small a place. The drawing-room was
+old-fashioned; a stiff roomy sofa with hard
+flat cushions at one end; at the other a sweet
+jangling piano. There were corner cupboards
+with china bowls of pot-pourri on
+them; on either side of the fireplace a
+gaunt, high-backed easy-chair, and on the
+left of each chair an old-fashioned screen on
+which was worked a peacock. Aunt Anne
+stopped on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed to Florence as if the room
+recognized the old lady, as if it had been
+waiting, knowing that she would come.
+There was something about it that said more
+plainly than any words could have said that
+the hands were still that had first arranged
+it, and many footsteps had gone out from its
+doorway that would never come in at it
+more.</p>
+
+<p>“It always depresses me,” Florence explained;
+“but it is just as we found it. We
+refurnished the dining-room, and sit there a
+good deal. It is more cheerful than this.
+Come upstairs”—and she led the way.</p>
+
+<p>The bedrooms were all small too, save
+one in front, that seemed to match the drawing-room.
+It looked like a room to die in:
+Florence thought so, as she entered it for
+the first time with Aunt Anne. A quaint
+four-post bedstead with dark chintz curtains,
+a worm-eaten bureau, a sampler worked in
+Berlin wool and framed in black cherry-wood
+hanging over the fireplace.</p>
+
+<p>“This is the best room,” she said, “and
+we keep it for visitors. There is a little one,
+meant to be a dressing-room, I suppose,
+leading out of it,” and she went to a bright
+little nook with a bed in it. “I always feel
+that the best bedroom and the drawing-room
+belong to a past world, and the rest of the
+house to the present one.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is like your life and mine, my darling;
+mine to the past and yours to the
+present.”</p>
+
+<p>“I think you ought to sleep in the best
+room, Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love,” the old lady interrupted,
+“let me have this little one which is next it.
+When you require the other, if I am still
+with you, I can lock the door between. The
+best one is too grand for me; but sometimes
+while it is empty I will go in, if you
+have no objection, and look out at the fir
+trees and the road that stretches right and
+left——”</p>
+
+<p>“I like doing that,” Florence interrupted.
+“It always sets me thinking—the road from
+the city to the sea.”</p>
+
+<p>“From the city to the sea,” the old lady
+repeated; “from the voices to the silences.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne, we mustn’t grow sentimental,”
+Florence began. There was the sound of
+a tinkling bell. It seemed to come at an
+opportune moment. “Oh, happy sound,”
+she laughed; “it means that our meal is
+ready. Catty, darling,” she called, “Monty,
+my son, roast chicken is waiting downstairs.
+Auntie and mummy are quite ready; come,
+dear babes”—and patter, patter, came the
+sound of the little feet, and together they all
+went down.</p>
+
+<p>An hour later the fly came to the door;
+it was time for Florence to start on her way
+back to town.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall be with you at latest on Tuesday.
+Perhaps, dear Aunt Anne, if you don’t mind
+taking care of the bad children so long, I
+may go on Saturday for a day or two to
+an old schoolfellow,” she said. “Then I
+should not be here till the middle of next
+week.”</p>
+
+<p>“Dear child, you do indeed put confidence
+in me,” Mrs. Baines answered quaintly.</p>
+
+<p>“And, Aunt Anne, I have ordered most
+things in, but the tradespeople come every day
+if there is anything more you want. What
+you order is, of course, put down, but here
+is some money for odds and ends. Four
+pounds, I think, will carry you through; and
+here is a little book in which to put down
+your expenses. I always keep a most careful
+account of what I spend; you don’t mind
+doing so either, do you?”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, anything you wish will be a
+pleasure to me.”</p>
+
+<p>“If you please, ma’am,” said Jane, entering,
+“the driver says you must start at once
+if you want to catch this train.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then good-bye, dear Aunt Anne; good-bye,
+dear dickie-birds; be happy together.
+You shall see me very soon again; send me
+a letter every other day;” and with many
+embraces Florence was allowed to get out
+of the door. But Aunt Anne and the
+children ran excitedly after her to the gate,
+and helped her into the little waggonette,
+and kissed their hands and waved their
+handkerchiefs as she drove off, and called
+“Good-bye, good-bye;” and so, watching
+them, Florence went along the white road
+towards the station.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail8.jpg' alt='butterfly' id='iid-0014' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap1.jpg' alt='sea coast scene with lighthouse' id='iid-0015' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER IX.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capt.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='T'/>he</span> days that followed were busy ones
+for Florence—busy in a domestic
+sense, so that the history of them does not
+concern us here. Mr. Fisher called one afternoon;
+by a strange coincidence it was while
+Ethel Dunlop was helping Florence with an
+inventory of china. Miss Dunlop readily
+promised to visit his mother, but she did not
+show any particular interest in the editor.</p>
+
+<p>“He has been so kind,” Florence said,
+“and don’t you think he is very agreeable?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes; but you know, Florrie dear, he
+has a very square jaw.”</p>
+
+<p>“Well?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a good thing he never married
+again; he would have been very obstinate.”</p>
+
+<p>“But why do you say never did?—as if
+he never would. He is only forty-odd.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only forty-odd!” laughed Ethel—“only
+a million. If a man is over eight-and-twenty
+he might as well be over eighty; it is mere
+modesty that he is not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Walter is over thirty, and just as fascinating
+as ever.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence was rather indignant.</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, yes, but he is married, and married
+men take such a long time to grow old. By
+the way, Mr. Fisher said something about
+a theatre-party, when his mother is here.
+Do you think I might ask him to invite
+George Dighton as well? George is very
+fond of theatres.”</p>
+
+<p>Before Florence could reply, a carriage
+stopped at the door; it looked familiar, it
+reminded her of Aunt Anne in her triumphant
+days. But a strange lady descended from
+it now, and was shown upstairs to the drawing-room,
+in which Aunt Anne had sat and
+related her woes and known her triumphs.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. North, ma’am,” said the servant;
+and then Florence understood.</p>
+
+<p>She left Ethel in the dining-room with
+the inventory, and went up to receive the
+visitor. Mrs. North was as pretty as Aunt
+Anne had declared her to be; a mere girl
+to look at, tall and slim. Florence thought
+it was quite natural that her husband should
+like her to have a chaperon.</p>
+
+<p>“I came to see Mrs. Baines,” she said,
+coming forward in a shy, hesitating manner,
+“but hearing that she was in the country I
+ventured to ask for you. What have you done
+with the dear old lady?” and she laughed
+nervously. Florence looked at her, fascinated
+by her beauty; by her clothes, that seemed
+to be a mixture of fur and lace and perfume,
+by the soft brown hair that curled low on
+her forehead, by the sweet blue eyes—by
+every bit of her. “She told you, probably,
+that she was very angry when she left me;
+I know it has all been very dreadful in her
+eyes; but she was always kind to me, and
+I thought by this time that she would,
+perhaps, forgive me and make it up; so I
+came.” She said it with a penitent air.</p>
+
+<p>“I am afraid she is very angry,” Florence
+answered, laughing, for the pretty woman
+before her did not seem like a stranger.
+“Do you want her again?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no!” and Mrs. North shook her
+head emphatically. “She would not come,
+I know; besides, it would be impossible:
+she led us a terrible life. But we loved her,
+and wanted just to make it up with her
+again. I think we could have put up with
+anything if she had not quarrelled with the
+servants.”</p>
+
+<p>“I was afraid it was that,” Florence
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes!” sighed Mrs. North; “she was
+horribly autocratic with them—‘autocratic’
+is her own word. At last she quarrelled
+with Hetty, and wanted me to send her
+away—to send away Hetty, who is a born
+treasure, and cooks like an angel. It would
+have broken our hearts—a woman who sends
+up a dinner like a charm; we couldn’t let her
+go, it was impossible, and the old lady fled.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am very sorry. You were so kind to
+her; she always said that.”</p>
+
+<p>“I loved her,” Mrs. North answered, with
+a little sigh. “She was so like my dear dead
+mother grown old—that was the secret of her
+attraction for us; but she ruled us with a
+rod of iron that grew more and more unyielding
+every day. And yet she was very
+kind. She was always giving us presents.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes,” Florence said, in a despairing
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>“We have had the bills for them since,”
+Mrs. North went on, with a comical air.
+“She used to say that I was very frivolous,”
+she added suddenly. “She thought it wicked
+of me to enjoy life while my husband was
+away. But he is old, Mrs. Hibbert; one
+may have an affection for an old husband,
+but one can’t be in love with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“If she were very nice she would not have
+made that remark to me, whom she never
+saw before,” Florence thought, beginning to
+dislike her a little.</p>
+
+<p>“Of course I am sorry he is away,” Mrs.
+North said, as if she perfectly understood
+the impression she was making; “he is
+coming back now. He has telegraphed
+suddenly.” There was something like fright
+in her voice as she said it. “I did not
+expect him; but he is coming almost directly.
+I suppose I ought to be very glad,” she
+added, with a ghostly smile. “I am, of
+course; but I am surprised at his sudden
+return. I took Mrs. Baines because he
+wished me to have an old lady about me;
+but I wanted my own way. I liked her to
+have hers when it amused me to see her
+have it, when it didn’t I wanted to have
+mine.” Mrs. North’s whole expression had
+altered again, and she looked up with two
+blue eyes that fascinated and repelled, and
+laughed a merry, uncontrolled laugh like a
+child’s. “Oh, she was very droll.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps it is very rude of me to say it,”
+Florence said primly, for deep in her heart
+there was a great deal of primness, “but I
+can understand Mr. North wishing you to
+have a chaperon; you are very young to be
+left alone.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, and very careless, I know that.
+And Mrs. Baines used to provoke me into
+shocking her. I could shock her so easily,
+and did—don’t you know how one loves
+power for good or ill over a human being?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, I don’t,” Florence answered, a little
+stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>“I do; I love it best of all things in the
+world, whether it leads me uphill or downhill.
+But I am intruding,” for she saw a set
+cold look coming over Florence’s face. “Let
+me tell you why I asked for you. I have
+been so embarrassed about Mrs. Baines.
+She gave us presents, and she bought all
+sorts of things: but she didn’t pay for them.
+These bills came, and the people wanted
+their money.” She pulled a little roll out of
+her pocket. “She probably forgot them,
+and I thought it would be better to pay
+them, especially as I owed her some money
+when she left which she would not take;”
+and she laughed out again, but there was
+the odd sound like fright in her voice.
+“They are from florists and all sorts of
+people.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence looked over the bills quickly and
+almost guiltily. There were the pots of fern
+and the flowers that had been sent to her
+and the children after Aunt Anne’s first
+visit; and there were the roses with which
+she had triumphantly entered on the night
+of the dinner-party. “Oh, poor old lady!”
+she exclaimed sadly.</p>
+
+<p>“They are paid,” Mrs. North said. “Don’t
+be distressed about them and many others—lace-handkerchiefs,
+shoes, all sorts of things.
+Don’t tell her. She would think I had taken
+a liberty or committed a solecism,” and she
+made a little wry face. “But what I really
+wanted to see you about, Mrs. Hibbert, was
+Madame Celestine’s bill. I am afraid I can’t
+manage that all by myself; it is too long.
+Madame Celestine, of course, is sweetly
+miserable, for she thinks the old lady has
+vanished into space. She came to me yesterday.
+It seems that she went to you a
+few days ago, but you were out, and she
+was glad of it when she discovered that Mrs.
+Baines was your aunt, for she doesn’t want
+to offend you. She came to me again to-day.
+She is very miserable. I believe it
+will turn her hair grey. Oh, it is too
+funny.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t think it is at all funny.”</p>
+
+<p>“But indeed it is, for I don’t believe Mrs.
+Baines will ever be able to pay the fifteen
+pounds; in fact, we know that she won’t.
+Probably it is worrying her a good deal. I
+have been wondering whether something
+could not be done; if you and I, for instance,
+were to arrange it between us.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very good, Mrs. North,”
+Florence said, against her will.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, but I am sorry for her, and it
+vexes and worries me to think that she is
+annoyed. I want to get rid of that vexation,
+and will pay something to do so. That is
+what most generosity comes to,” Mrs. North
+went on, with mock cynicism, “the purchase
+of a pleasant feeling for one’s self, or the
+getting rid of an unpleasant one. There is
+little really unselfish goodness in the world,
+and when one meets it, as a rule, it isn’t
+charming, it isn’t fascinating; one feels that
+one would rather be without it.” She rose
+as she spoke. “Well,” she asked, “what
+shall we do? I’ll pay one half of the old
+lady’s bill if you will pay the other half.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very good,” Florence repeated,
+wonderingly.</p>
+
+<p>“No; but I expect you are,” and Mrs.
+North showed two rows of little white teeth.
+“I should think you are a model of virtue,”
+she added, with an almost childlike air of
+frankness, which made it impossible to take
+offence at her words, though Florence felt
+that at best she was only regarded as the
+possessor of a quality that just before her
+visitor had denounced.</p>
+
+<p>“Why,” she asked, smiling against her
+will, “do I look like a model of virtue?”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, you are almost Madonna-like,”
+Mrs. North said, with a sigh. “I wish I
+were like you, only—only I think I should
+get very tired of myself. I get tired now;
+till a reaction comes. But a reaction to the
+purely good must be tame at best.”</p>
+
+<p>“You are very clever,” Florence said,
+almost without knowing it, and shrinking
+from her again.</p>
+
+<p>“How do you know? My husband says
+I am clever, but I don’t think I am. I am
+alive. So many people are merely in the
+preface to being alive, and never get any
+farther. I am well in the middle of the
+book; and I am eager, so eager, that sometimes
+I long to eat up the whole world in
+order to know the taste of everything. Do
+you understand that?”</p>
+
+<p>“No. I am content with my slice.”</p>
+
+<p>“Ah, that is it. I am not content with
+mine. You have your husband and children.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you have a husband.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I have a husband too; a funny old
+husband, a long way off, who is rapidly—too
+rapidly, I fear—coming nearer”—Florence
+hated her—“and no children. I amused
+myself with the old lady—Mrs. Baines—till
+she fled from me. Now I try other things.
+Good-bye.”</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye,” Florence said.</p>
+
+<p>As Mrs. North was going out of the door
+she turned and asked, “Have you many
+friends—women friends?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, a great many, thank you,” Mrs.
+Hibbert said, with a little haughty inclination
+of the head. The haughtiness seemed to
+amuse Mrs. North, for the merry look came
+over her face again, but only for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you had,” she answered. “I
+have none; I don’t want them. Good-bye.”</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly dark, and the one servant
+left to help Florence get the house ready
+had neglected to light the lamp on the
+staircase. Mrs. North groped her way
+down.</p>
+
+<p>“I want to tell you something,” she said.
+“You said just now that I was clever. I
+don’t think I am, but I can divine people’s
+thoughts pretty easily. You are very good,
+I think; but consider this, your goodness is
+of no use if you are not good to others; good
+to women especially. The good of goodness
+is that you can wrap others inside it. It
+ought to be like a big cloak that you have
+on a cold night, while the shivering person
+next to you has none. If you don’t make
+use of your goodness,” she went on with a
+catch in her breath, “what is the good of
+it?—I seem to be talking paradoxes—you
+prove how beautiful it is, perhaps, but that is
+all; you make it like the swan that sings its
+own death-song. One listens and watches,
+and goes away to think of things more comprehensible,
+and to do them. Good-bye,
+Mrs. Hibbert,” she said gently, and almost
+as if she were afraid she held out her hand.
+Florence took it, a little wonder-struck.
+“You are like a Madonna, very like one, as
+I said just now; but though you are older
+than I am, I think I know more about
+some things than you do—good and bad.
+Madonnas never know the world very well.
+Give my love to the old lady, and say I hope
+she has forgiven me. I am going to Monte
+Carlo the day after to-morrow, only for three
+days, to brace myself up for my husband’s
+return; tell her that too. It will shock her.
+Say that I should like to have taken her,”
+and with a last little laugh she went out—into
+the darkness, it seemed to Florence.</p>
+
+<p>But the next minute there were two
+flashing lamps before the house; there was
+the banging of a door, and Mrs. North was
+driven away.</p>
+
+<p>Florence went slowly back to the dining-room
+and the inventory. Ethel Dunlop had
+gone. She was glad of it, for she wanted to
+think over her strange visitor.</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t understand her,” she said to
+herself. “She is unlike any one I ever met;
+she fascinated and repelled me. I felt as if
+I wanted to kiss her, and yet the touch of
+her hand made me shiver.” Then she
+thought of Madame Celestine’s bill, and of
+Aunt Anne, and wished that the dress had
+not been bought, especially for the dinner-party;
+it made her feel as if she had been
+the unwitting cause of Mrs. Baines’s extravagance.
+She looked into the fire, and
+remembered the events of that wonderful
+evening, and thought of Walter away, and
+the bills at home that would have to be paid
+at Christmas. And she thought of her
+winter cloak that was three years old and
+shabby, and of the things she had longed to
+buy for the children. Above all she thought
+of the visions she had had of saving little by
+little, and putting her savings away in a
+very safe place, until she had a cosy sum
+with which some day to give Walter a
+pleasant surprise, and suggest that they
+should go off together for “a little spree,”
+as he would call it, to Paris or Switzerland.
+The fire burnt low, the red coals grew dull,
+the light from the street lamp outside seemed
+to come searching into the room as though
+it were looking for some one who was not
+there. She thought of Walter’s letter safe
+in her pocket. He himself was probably at
+Malta by this time—getting stronger and
+stronger in the sunshine. Dear Walter, how
+generous he was; he too was a little bit
+reckless sometimes. She wondered if he
+inherited this last quality from Aunt Anne.
+She thought of her children at Witley having
+tea, most likely with cakes and jam in
+abundance; and of Aunt Anne in her glory.
+She wondered if Mr. Wimple had turned
+up. “Poor Aunt Anne,” she sighed, and
+there was a long bill in her mind. Presently
+she rose, lighted a candle, drew down the
+blind—shutting out the glare from the street
+lamp—and going slowly to the writing-table
+in the corner, unlocked it, opened a little
+secret drawer, and looked in. There were
+three five-pound notes there—the remainder
+of her mother’s gift. “I wonder if Mrs.
+North had Madame Celestine’s bill,” she
+thought. “But it doesn’t matter; she said
+it was fifteen pounds. I can send her the
+amount.”</p>
+
+<p>A couple of hours later, while she was in
+the very act of putting a cheque into an
+envelope, a note arrived. It had been left
+by hand; it was scented with violets, and
+ran thus:—</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“<span class='sc'>Dear Mrs. Hibbert</span>,</p>
+
+<p>“I have ventured to pay Madame
+Celestine. I determined to do so while I
+was with you just now; but was afraid to
+tell you, that was why I changed the conversation
+so abruptly. Please don’t let the
+old lady know that it is my doing, for she
+might be angry; but she was very good to
+me, and I am glad to do this for her. Forgive
+all the strange things I said this afternoon,
+and don’t trouble to acknowledge
+this.</p>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:5em;'>“Yours sincerely,</p>
+<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:2em;'>“<span class='sc'>E. North</span>.</p>
+
+<p>“P.S.—I enclose receipt.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail9.jpg' alt='goathead within an emblem' id='iid-0016' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap4.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0017' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER X.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capi.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='I'/>t</span> was not till Tuesday afternoon in the
+week following that Florence went
+back to Witley.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Burnett was at the station, sitting in
+a little governess-cart drawn by a donkey.</p>
+
+<p>“I am waiting for my husband,” she explained;
+“he generally comes by this train,
+and I drive him home, donkey permitting.
+It is a dear little donkey, and we are so fond
+of him.”</p>
+
+<p>“A dear little cart too,” Florence answered
+as she stood by its side, talking. “I have
+been hoping that you would come and see
+me, Mrs. Burnett; we are going to be here
+for six or seven weeks.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know, Mr. Fisher told me,” Mrs.
+Burnett replied in her sweet and rather
+intense voice, “and we are so sorry that
+your visit takes place just while we are
+away. I am going to Devonshire to-morrow
+morning to stay with my mother while my
+husband goes to Scotland. I am so-o sorry,”—she
+had a way of drawing out her words
+as if to give them emphasis. Florence liked
+to look at Mrs. Burnett’s eyes while she
+spoke, they always seemed to attest that
+every word she said expressed the absolute
+meaning and intention in her mind. Her
+listeners gained a sense of restfulness which
+comes from being in the presence of a real
+person from whom they might take bitter or
+sweet, certain of its reality. “I hoped from
+Mr. Fisher’s note that you had arrived
+before, and ventured to call on Saturday.”</p>
+
+<p>“Did you see Mrs. Baines?”</p>
+
+<p>“Only for a moment. What a charming
+old lady—such old-fashioned courtesy; it
+was like being sent back fifty years to listen
+to her. She wanted me to stay, but I refused,
+for she was just setting off for a drive
+with your children and her nephew.”</p>
+
+<p>“Setting off for a drive?” Florence
+repeated.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, she had Steggall’s waggonette from
+the Blue Lion, and was going to Guildford
+shopping. She said she meant to buy some
+surprises for you.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Florence meekly, and her
+heart sank. “Did you say that she had a
+nephew with her?”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, I supposed it was a nephew, unless
+she has a son—a tall fair young man, who
+looks delicate, and walks as if his legs were
+not very strong.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, I know,” Florence answered, as
+she signed to the fly she had engaged to
+come nearer to the donkey-cart, so that she
+might not waste a minute. “He is a friend;
+he is no relation. Good-bye, Mrs. Burnett;
+I am sorry you are going away. I suppose
+you are waiting for the fast train, as Mr.
+Burnett did not come by the last one?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, it is due in twenty minutes. Good-bye;
+so sorry not to have been at home
+during your visit. Oh, Mrs. Hibbert, do
+you think your children would like to have
+the use of this cart while we are away?
+The donkey is so gentle and so good.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is too kind of you to think of it,”
+Florence began, beaming; for she thought
+of how Catty and Monty would shout for
+joy at having a donkey-cart to potter about
+in. And in her secret soul, though she felt
+it would not do to betray it, she was nearly
+as much pleased as they would be: she
+often had an inward struggle for the dignity
+with which she felt her matronly position
+should be supported.</p>
+
+<p>“It will be such a pleasure to lend it them.
+It’s a dear little donkey, so good and gentle.
+It doesn’t go well,” Mrs. Burnett added, in
+an apologetic tone; “but it’s a dear little
+donkey, and does everything else well.”
+And over this remark Florence pondered
+much as she drove away.</p>
+
+<p>When she came in sight of the cottage she
+wondered if she had been absent more than
+half an hour, or at all. She had left it in
+the afternoon more than a week ago, and
+the children had stood out in the roadway
+dancing and waving their handkerchiefs till
+she could see them no longer. As she came
+back, they stood there dancing and waving
+their handkerchiefs again. They shouted
+for joy as she got out of the fly.</p>
+
+<p>“Welcome, my darling, welcome,” cried
+Aunt Anne, who was behind them, by the
+gate. “These dear children and I have
+been watching more than an hour for you.
+Enter your house, my love. It is indeed a
+privilege to be here to receive you.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a privilege to come back to so warm
+a welcome,” Florence said when, having
+embraced her children and Aunt Anne, she
+was allowed to enter the cottage; “and how
+comfortable and nice it looks!” she exclaimed,
+as she stopped by the dining-room
+doorway. There was a wood fire blazing,
+and the tea set out, and the water in the
+silver kettle singing, and hot cakes in a
+covered dish in the fender. Flowers set off
+the table, and in the pots about the room
+were boughs of autumn leaves. It was all
+cosy and inviting, and wore a festival air—festival
+that Florence knew had been made
+for her. She turned and kissed the old lady
+gratefully. “Dear Aunt Anne,” she said,
+and that was thanks enough.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought, my love, that you would like
+to partake of tea with your dear children on
+your return. Your later evening meal I have
+arranged to be a very slender one.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you are too good, Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is you who have been too good to me,”
+the old lady answered tenderly. “And now,
+my darling, let me take you up to your
+chamber; it is ready for your reception.”</p>
+
+<p>There was a triumphant note in her voice
+that prepared Florence for the fire in the
+grate and the bouquet on the dressing-table,
+and all the little arrangements that Mrs.
+Baines had devised to add to her comfort.
+It was very cheery, she thought when she
+was alone; Aunt Anne had a knack of
+making one enjoy a home-coming. She sat
+for a few moments over the fire, and pulled
+out Walter’s letter and read it and kissed it
+and put it back into her pocket. Then she
+looked round the cosy room again, and
+noticed a little packet on the corner of the
+drawers. Aunt Anne must have placed it
+there when she went out of the room. On
+it was written, <span class='it'>For my darling Florence</span>.
+“Oh,” she said, “it’s another present,” and
+regretfully her fingers undid the string.
+Inside the white paper was a little pin-cushion
+covered with blue velvet, and having round
+it a rim of silver filigree work. Attached
+to it was a little note which ran thus—</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p>“<span class='sc'>My Darling</span>,—Accept this token of my
+love and gratitude. I feel that there is no
+way in which I can better prove how much
+I appreciated your generous gift to me than
+by spending a portion of it on a token of my
+affection for you. I trust you will honour my
+little gift with your acceptance.”</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<p>“Oh,” said Florence again, in despair,
+“I wonder if she has once thought of Madame
+Celestine’s bill or the others. What is the
+good of giving her money if one gets it back
+in the shape of presents?”</p>
+
+<p>But she could not bear to treat the old
+lady’s generosity with coldness. So Aunt
+Anne was thanked, and the cushion admired,
+and a happy little party gathered round the
+tea-table.</p>
+
+<p>“And have you had any visitors except
+Mrs. Burnett?” Florence asked artfully,
+when the meal was over.</p>
+
+<p>“We have had Mr. Wimple,” Aunt Anne
+said; “he is far from well, my love, and is
+trying to recruit at Liphook.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, he has friends there.”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, not now. He is at present
+lodging with an old retainer.”</p>
+
+<p>“And have you been to see him?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, dear Florence, he preferred that I
+should not do so.”</p>
+
+<p>“We took him lots of rides,” said Monty.</p>
+
+<p>“And Aunt Anne gave him a present,”
+said Catty, “and he put it into his pocket
+and never looked at it. He didn’t know
+what was inside the paper,—we did, didn’t
+we, auntie?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear children,” Mrs. Baines said, “if
+your mother will give you permission you
+had better go into the nursery. It is past
+your hour for bed, my dear ones.”</p>
+
+<p>The children looked a little dismayed, but
+did not dream of disobeying.</p>
+
+<p>“Was it wrong to say you gave him a
+present?” asked Catty, with the odd perception
+of childhood, as she put up her face
+to be kissed.</p>
+
+<p>“My dears,” answered Aunt Anne,
+sweetly, “in my day children did not talk
+with their elders unless they were invited
+to do so.”</p>
+
+<p>“We didn’t know,” said Monty, ruefully.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my darlings, I know that. Bless
+you,” continued the old lady sweetly; “and
+good night, my dear ones. Under your
+pillows you will each find a chocolate which
+auntie placed there for you this morning.”</p>
+
+<p>“And did you enjoy the drives?” Florence
+asked, when the children had gone.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my dear, thank you.” Mrs. Baines
+was silent for a moment. Then she raised
+her head, and, as if she had gathered
+courage, went on in a slightly louder tone,
+“I thought it would do your dear children
+good, Florence, to see the country, and,
+therefore, I ventured to take them some
+drives. Occasionally Mr. Wimple was so
+kind as to accompany us.”</p>
+
+<p>“And I hope they did him good, too,”
+Florence said, trying not to betray her
+amusement.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, I trust they did.”</p>
+
+<p>Then Florence remembered the bills paid
+by Mrs. North. They were all in a sealed
+envelope in her pocket, but she could not
+gather the courage to deliver it. She wanted
+to ask after Sir William Rammage, too, to
+know whether he had written yet and settled
+the question of an allowance; but for that,
+also, her courage failed—the old lady always
+resented questions. Then she remembered
+Mr. Fisher’s remark about Alfred Wimple’s
+writing, and thought it would please Aunt
+Anne to hear of it.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Fisher says that Mr. Wimple writes
+very well; he has been doing some reviewing
+for the paper.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines winked with satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>“I am quite sure he writes well, my love,”
+she answered quickly; “he is a most accomplished
+man.”</p>
+
+<p>“And is there no more news to relate,
+Aunt Anne?” Florence asked; “no more
+doings during my absence?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, I think not.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then I have some news for you. I
+hope it won’t vex you, for I know you were
+very angry with her. Mrs. North has been
+to see me. She really came to see you, but
+when she found you had gone out of town
+she asked for me.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines looked almost alarmed and
+very angry.</p>
+
+<p>“It was most presumptuous of her,” she
+exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>“But I don’t understand; why should it be
+presumptuous?” Florence asked, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>“She had no right; she had not my
+permission.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, dear Aunt Anne, she came to see
+you; and why should it be presumptuous?”</p>
+
+<p>“I should prefer not to discuss the subject.
+I have expressed my opinion, and that
+is sufficient,” Mrs. Baines said haughtily.
+“I repeat that it was most presumptuous
+of her, under the circumstances, to call
+upon you—a liberty, a—Florence,” she
+went on, with sudden alarm in her voice,
+“I hope you did not promise to go and see
+her.”</p>
+
+<p>“She never asked me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I should have put my veto on it if she
+had. My dear, you must trust to my mature
+judgment in some things. I know the world
+better than you do. Believe me, I have my
+reasons for every word I say. I treated
+Mrs. North with the greatest clemency and
+consideration, though she frequently forgot
+not only what was due to herself, but what
+was due to me. I was blind while I stayed
+with her, Florence, and did not see many
+things that I do now; for I am not prone to
+think ill of any one. You know that, my
+love, do you not? I must beg that you will
+never, on any account, mention Mrs. North’s
+name again in my presence.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence felt as if the envelope would
+burn a hole in her pocket. It was impossible
+to deliver it now. Perhaps, after all, the
+wisest way would be to say nothing about it.
+She had an idea that Aunt Anne frequently
+forgot all about her bills as soon as she had
+come to the conclusion that it was impossible
+to make them any longer. She searched
+about in her mind for some other topic
+of conversation. It was often difficult to
+find a subject to converse upon with Aunt
+Anne, for the old lady never suggested
+one herself, and except of past experiences
+and old-world recollections she seldom
+seemed sufficiently interested to talk much.
+Happily as it seemed for the moment, Jane
+entered with the housekeeping books. They
+were always brought in on a Tuesday, and
+paid on a Wednesday morning. Florence
+was very particular on this point. They
+usually gave her a bad half-hour, for she
+could never contrive to keep them down as
+much as she desired. That week, however,
+she reflected that they could not be very
+bad; besides, she had left four pounds with
+Aunt Anne, which must be almost intact,
+unless the drives had been paid out of them;
+but even then there would be plenty left to
+more than cover the books. The prospect
+of getting through her accounts easily cheered
+her, and she thought that she would set
+about them at once.</p>
+
+<p>“They are heavy this week, ma’am,” Jane
+said, not without a trace of triumph in her
+voice, “on account of the chickens and the
+cream and the company.”</p>
+
+<p>“The chickens and the cream and the
+company,” laughed Florence, as Jane went
+out of the room; “it sounds like a line from
+a comic poem. What does she mean?”</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne winked as if to give herself
+nerve.</p>
+
+<p>“Jane was very impertinent to me one
+day, my love, because I felt sure that after
+the fatigue of the journey from town, and the
+change of air, you would prefer that your
+delicately-nurtured children should eat chicken
+and have cream with their second course
+every day for dinner, instead of roast mutton
+and milk pudding. White meat is infinitely
+preferable for delicate digestions.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear Aunt Anne,” Florence said
+sweetly, and she felt a sudden dread of opening
+the books, “you are quite right.” But
+what did a few chickens and a little cream
+matter in comparison to the poor old lady’s
+feelings? she thought. “And if you had
+company too, of course you wanted to have
+a smarter table. Whom have you been entertaining,
+you dear and dissipated Aunt Anne?”</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Florence, I have entertained
+no one but Mr. Wimple. He is a friend
+of yours and your dear Walter’s, and I tried
+to prove to him that I was worthy to belong
+to you, by showing him such hospitality as
+lay in my power.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear, and it was very kind of you,”
+Florence said tenderly. After all, why
+should Aunt Anne be worried through that
+horrid Mr. Wimple? Walter would have
+invited him if he had found him in the neighbourhood,
+and why should not Aunt Anne
+do so in peace, if it pleased her? Of course,
+now that she herself had returned she could
+do as she liked about him. She looked at the
+books. They were not so very bad, after all.</p>
+
+<p>“Shall we make up our accounts now,
+and get it over, or in the morning?” she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I should prefer the morning,” Aunt Anne
+said meekly. “To-night, love, you must be
+tired, and I am also fatigued with the excitement
+consequent on seeing you.”</p>
+
+<p>“What a shame, poor Aunt Anne!”
+Florence said brightly. “I have worn you
+out.”</p>
+
+<p>“Only with happiness, my dear,” said the
+old lady, fondly.</p>
+
+<p>Florence put away her books, and stroked
+Aunt Anne’s shoulder as she passed.</p>
+
+<p>“We will do our work in the morning,”
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my darling, in the morning. In the
+afternoon I may possibly have an engagement.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence longed to ask where, but a certain
+stiffness in Aunt Anne’s manner made it
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you any news from London?”
+she ventured to inquire, for she was longing
+to know about Sir William Rammage.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, I have no news from London,”
+Mrs. Baines answered, and she evidently
+meant to say no more.</p>
+
+<hr class='tbk'/>
+
+<p>In the morning much time was taken up
+with the arrival of the donkey-cart and the
+delight of the children. A great basket of
+apples was inside the cart, and on the top
+was a little note explaining that they were
+from Mrs. Burnett’s garden, and she hoped
+the children might like them. Aunt Anne
+was as much pleased with the donkey as the
+rest of the party.</p>
+
+<p>“There is a rusticity in the appearance of
+a donkey,” she explained, “that always gives
+me a sense of being really in the country.”</p>
+
+<p>“Not when you meet him in London, I
+fear,” Florence said.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines considered for a moment.
+She seemed to resent the observation.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, of course not in London;
+I am speaking of the country,” she said
+reprovingly; then she added, “I should
+enjoy a little drive occasionally myself, if you
+would trust me with the cart, my love. It
+would remind me of days gone by. I sometimes
+drove one at Rottingdean. You are
+very fortunate, my dear one, in having so few
+sorrows to remember—for I trust you have
+few. It always saddens me to think of the
+past. Let us go indoors.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence put her arm through the old
+lady’s, and led her in. Then she thought
+of the books again; it would be a good time
+to make them up.</p>
+
+<p>“I am always particular about my accounts,
+you know, Aunt Anne,” she said in an apologetic
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” answered the old lady;
+“I admire you for it.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence looked at the figures; they made
+her wince a little, but she said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“The bill for the waggonettes, Aunt
+Anne?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“That belongs to me, my dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, I can’t allow that.”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, I made an arrangement with
+Mr. Steggall, and that is sufficient.”</p>
+
+<p>Again Aunt Anne’s tone forbade any discussion.
+Florence felt sure that one day
+Steggall’s bill would arrive, but she said
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you mind giving me the change out
+of the four pounds?” she asked, very gently.
+Mrs. Baines went slowly over to her work-basket,
+and took up a little dress she was
+making for Catty.</p>
+
+<p>“Not now, my love; I want to get on
+with my work.”</p>
+
+<p>“Perhaps I could get your account-book,
+Aunt Anne; then I should know how much
+there is left.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines began to sew.</p>
+
+<p>“I did not put anything down in the
+account-book,” she said doggedly. “I considered,
+dear Florence, that my time was
+too valuable. It always seems to me great
+nonsense to put down every penny one
+spends.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is a check on one’s self.”</p>
+
+<p>“I do not wish to keep a check on myself,”
+Mrs. Baines answered, scornfully.</p>
+
+<p>“Could you tell me how much you have
+left?” Florence asked meekly. “I hope
+there may be enough to help us through
+the week.”</p>
+
+<p>She did not like to say that she thought
+it must be nearly untouched.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence,” burst out the old lady, with
+the injured tone in her voice that Florence
+knew so well, “I have but ten shillings left
+in the world. If you wish to take it from
+me you must do so; but it is not like you,
+my darling.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Aunt Anne,” Florence began, bewildered,
+“I am sure you—— I did not
+mean—I did not know——”</p>
+
+<p>“I’m sure you did not,” Mrs. Baines said,
+with a sense of injury still in her voice,
+“but there is nothing so terrible or so galling
+to a sensitive nature like mine—and
+your dear Walter’s takes after it, Florence,
+I am sure—as to be worried about money
+matters.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, indeed, Aunt Anne, I only thought
+that—that——” but here she stopped, not
+knowing how to go on for a moment; “I
+thought that perhaps the unpaid books represented
+the household expenses,” she
+added at last. Really, something must be
+done to make the old lady careful, she
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” Mrs. Baines said, with an
+impatient shake of her head, “I cannot go
+into the details of every little expense. I
+am not equal to it. Everything you do not
+find charged in the books has either been
+paid, or will be charged, by my request, to
+my private account, and you must leave it
+so. I really cannot submit to being made
+to give an explanation of every penny I
+spend. I am not a child, Florence. I am
+not an inexperienced girl; I had kept house
+before, my love—if you will allow me to say
+so—before you were born.” The treble note
+had come into Aunt Anne’s voice; it was a
+sign that tears were not far off.</p>
+
+<p>But Florence could not feel as compassionate
+as she desired. She smarted under
+the loss of her money; there was nothing
+at all to represent it, and Aunt Anne did not
+seem to have the least idea that it had been
+of any consequence. Florence got up and
+put the books away, looking across at Aunt
+Anne while she did so. The expression on
+the old lady’s face was set, and almost
+angry; her lips were firmly closed. She
+was working at Catty’s little dress. She
+was a beautiful needle-woman, and embroidered
+cuffs and collars on the children’s
+things that were a source of joyful pride to
+their mother. But even the host of stitches
+would not pay the week’s bills. If only
+Aunt Anne could be made to understand
+the value of money, Florence thought—but
+it was no use thinking, for her foolish, housekeeping
+heart was full of domestic woe. She
+went upstairs to her own room, and, like a
+real woman who makes no pretence to strong-mindedness,
+sat down to cry.</p>
+
+<p>“If Walter were only back,” she sobbed,
+as she rubbed her tearful face against the
+cushions on the back of the basket-chair by
+the fireside. “If he were here I should not
+mind, I might even laugh then. But after I
+have tried and tried so hard to save and to
+spend so little, it is hard, and I don’t know
+what to do.” She pulled out Walter’s letter
+and read it again by way of getting a little
+comfort, and as she did so, felt the envelope
+containing the receipts of the bills Mrs.
+North had paid. She did not believe that
+Aunt Anne cared whether they were paid
+or not paid. She always seemed to think
+that the classes, who were what she pleased
+to consider beneath her, were invented
+simply for her use and convenience, and
+that protest in any shape on their part was
+mere impertinence.</p>
+
+<p>The day dragged by. The children prevented
+the early dinner from being as awkward
+as it might have been. Mrs. Baines
+was cold and courteous. Florence had no
+words to say. She would make it up with
+the old lady in the evening, when they
+were alone, she thought. Of course she
+would have to make it up. Meanwhile,
+she would go for a long walk, it would
+do her good. She could think things over
+quietly, as she tramped along a lonely road
+between the hedges of faded gorse and
+heather. But it was late in the afternoon
+before she had energy enough to start. On
+her way out, she put her head in at the
+dining-room door. Mrs. Baines was there
+with the morning paper, which had just
+come. She was evidently excited and agitated,
+and held the paper in one hand
+while she looked out towards the garden.
+But she seemed to have forgotten all the
+unpleasantness of the morning when she
+spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“My love, are you going out?” she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I thought you had an engagement, Aunt
+Anne, and would not want me.”</p>
+
+<p>“That is true, my dear, and I shall be
+glad to be alone for a little while, if you will
+forgive me for saying it. There is an announcement
+in the paper that gives me the
+deepest pain, Florence. Sir William Rammage
+is ill again—he is confined to his
+room.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, poor Aunt Anne!”</p>
+
+<p>“I must write to him instantly. I felt
+sure there was some good reason for his not
+having told me his decision in regard to the
+allowance.” Then, as if she had suddenly
+remembered the little scrimmage of the
+morning, she went on quickly, “My love,
+give me a kiss. Do not think that I am
+angry with you. I never could be that; but
+it is unpleasant at my time of life to be made
+to give an exact account of money. You
+will remember that, won’t you, dear? I
+should never expect it from you. If I had
+hundreds and hundreds a year I would share
+them with you and your darlings, and I
+would ask you for no accounts, dear Florence.
+I should think that the money was as much
+yours as mine. You know it, don’t you, my
+love?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear, I think I do,” Florence
+answered, and kissed the old lady affectionately,
+thinking that perhaps, after all,
+she had made rather too much fuss.</p>
+
+<p>“Then let us forget about it, my darling,”
+Mrs. Baines said, with the gracious smile
+that always had its influence; “I could never
+remember anything long of you, but your
+kindness and hospitality. Believe me, I am
+quite sure that you did not mean to wound
+me this morning. It was your zealous care
+of dear Walter’s interests that caused you for
+a moment to forget what was due to me. I
+quite understand, my darling. Now go for
+your walk, and be assured that Aunt Anne
+loves you.”</p>
+
+<p>And Florence was dismissed, feeling as
+the children had felt the evening before
+when they had been sent to bed and told
+of the chocolate under their pillows.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail10.jpg' alt='design within an emblem' id='iid-0018' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap11.jpg' alt='pathway with a fence and rabbits' id='iid-0019' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER XI.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capt.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='T'/>he</span> grey sky and the dim trees, the
+black hedges and the absolute stillness;
+all these proved excellent comforters
+to Florence. They made her philosophical
+and almost smiling again. It was only when
+an empty waggonette of Steggall’s passed
+her that she remembered the vexations of
+the morning. “Poor old lady,” she said to
+herself with almost a laugh, “in future she
+must not be trusted with money, that is all.
+If she only would not scold me and treat me
+like a child, I should not mind it so much.
+Of course when Walter does it, I like it;
+but I don’t like it from Aunt Anne.”</p>
+
+<p>She had walked a long way. She was
+getting tired. The messengers of night
+were abroad, the stray breezes, the dark
+flecked clouds, the shadows loitering by the
+trees, the strange little sounds among the
+hedges by the wayside. Far off, beyond
+the wood, she heard a clock belonging to
+a big house strike six. It was time to hurry
+home. If she walked the two miles between
+herself and the cottage quickly, she would be
+in by half-past six. At seven, after the children
+had gone to bed, she and Aunt Anne
+were to sit down to a little evening meal
+they called supper. They would be very
+cosy that night; they would linger over their
+food, and Aunt Anne should talk of bygone
+days, and the quaint old world that always
+seemed to be just behind her.</p>
+
+<p>It was rather dull in the country, Florence
+thought. In the summer, of course, the outdoor
+life made it delightful, but now there
+was so little to fill the days, only the children
+and the housekeeping, wonderings about
+Walter, and the writing of the bit of diary
+on very thin paper which she had promised
+to post out to him every week. She was
+not a woman who made an intellectual atmosphere
+for herself. She lived her life through
+her husband, read the same books, and drew
+her conclusions by the light of his. Now
+that he had gone the world seemed half
+empty, and very dull and tame. There was
+no glamour over anything. Perhaps it was
+this that had helped to make her a little
+unkind to Aunt Anne, for gradually she was
+persuading herself that she had been unkind.
+She wished Aunt Anne had an income of
+her own, and the home for which she had
+said she longed. It would be so much
+better for everybody.</p>
+
+<p>When she was nearly home, a sudden
+dread seized her lest Mr. Wimple should
+be there, but this, she reflected, was not
+likely. It was long past calling-time, and
+Aunt Anne was too great a stickler for
+etiquette to allow him to take a liberty, as
+she would call it. So Florence quickened
+her steps, and entered her home bravely to
+the sound of the children’s voices upstairs
+singing as they went to bed. A fire was
+blazing in the dining-room, and everything
+looked comfortable, just as it had the night
+before. But there was no sign of Aunt
+Anne. Probably she was upstairs “getting
+ready,” for a lace cap and bit of white at her
+throat and an extra formal, though not less
+affectionate, manner than usual Aunt Anne
+seemed to think a fitting accompaniment to
+the evening meal. Florence looked round
+the dining-room with a little pride of ownership.
+She was fond of the cottage, it was
+their very own, hers and Walter’s; and how
+wise they had been to do up that particular
+room, it made every meal they ate in it a
+pleasure. That buttery-hatch too, it was
+absurd that it should be so, but really it was
+a secret joy to her. Suddenly her eye caught
+a package that had evidently come in her
+absence. A parcel of any sort was always
+exciting. This could not be another present
+from Aunt Anne? and she drew a short
+breath. Oh no, it had come by rail. Books.
+She knew what it was—some novels from
+Mr. Fisher. “How kind he is,” she said
+gratefully; “he says so few words, but he
+does so many things. I really don’t see why
+Ethel should not love him. I don’t think
+she would find it difficult to do so,” she
+thought, with the forgetfulness of womanhood
+for the days of girlish fancy.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines has not yet returned,” the
+servant said, entering to arrange the table.</p>
+
+<p>“Not returned. Is she out, then?”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, ma’am, she started half an hour
+after you did. Steggall’s waggonette came
+for her.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence groaned inwardly.</p>
+
+<p>“Do you know where she has gone?”</p>
+
+<p>“I think she has gone to Guildford, ma’am,
+shopping; she often did while you were
+away. I heard her tell the driver to drive
+quickly to the station, as she feared she was
+late.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh. Did any one call, Jane?”</p>
+
+<p>“No, ma’am.”</p>
+
+<p>Then, once more, Florence delivered herself
+over to despair. Aunt Anne must have
+gone to buy more surprises, and if she had
+only ten shillings in the world it was quite
+clear she would have to get them on credit.
+Something would have to be done. The
+tradespeople would have to be warned.
+Walter must be written to, and, if necessary,
+asked to cable over advice. Perhaps Sir
+William Rammage would interfere. In the
+midst of all her perturbation seven o’clock
+struck, and there was no Aunt Anne.</p>
+
+<p>Florence was a healthy young woman, and
+she had had a long walk. The pangs of
+hunger assailed her vigorously, so, after resisting
+them till half-past seven, she sat down
+to her little supper alone. Food has a soothing
+effect on an agitated mind, and a quarter
+of an hour later, though Aunt Anne had not
+appeared, Florence had come to the conclusion
+that she could not get very deeply
+into debt, because it was not likely that the
+tradespeople would trust her. Perhaps, too,
+after all, she had not gone to Guildford. Still,
+what could keep her out so late? The roads
+were dark and lonely, she knew no one in
+the neighbourhood. It was to be hoped that
+nothing had happened to her, and, at this
+thought, Florence began to reproach herself
+again for all her unkindness of the morning.
+But while she was still reviewing her own
+conduct with much severity there was a soft
+patter, patter, along the gravel path outside,
+and a feeble ring at the bell. “That dissipated
+old lady!” laughed Florence to herself,
+only too delighted to think that she had
+returned safely at last.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later Aunt Anne entered. She
+was a little breathless, her left eye winked
+more frequently than usual, there was an air
+of happy excitement in her manner. She
+entered the room quickly, and seated herself
+in the easy-chair with a sigh of relief.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling,” she said, looking fondly at
+Florence, “I trust you did not wait for me,
+and that I have not caused you any inconvenience.
+But if I have,” she added in an
+almost cooing voice, “you will forgive me
+when you know all.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh yes, dear Aunt Anne, I will forgive
+you,” and Florence signed to Jane to bring
+a plate. “You must be shockingly hungry,”
+she laughed. “Where have you been, may
+I know?”</p>
+
+<p>“I will tell you presently, my darling; you
+shall know all. But I cannot eat anything,”
+Aunt Anne answered quickly. Even the
+thought of food seemed to make her impatient.
+“Jane,” she said, with the little air of pride
+that Jane resented, “you need not bring
+a plate for me. I do not require anything.”
+Then, speaking to Florence again, she went
+on with half-beaming, half-condescending
+gentleness, “Finish your repast, my darling;
+pray don’t let my intrusion—for it is an
+intrusion when I am not able to join in your
+meal—hurry you. When you have finished,
+but not till then, I have a communication to
+make to you. It is one I feel to be due to
+you before any one else; and it will prove
+to you how much I depend on your sympathy
+and love.” She spoke with earnestness, unfastening
+her cloak and nervously fastening
+it the while. Florence looked at her with
+a little pity. Poor old lady, she thought,
+how easily she worked herself into a state
+of excitement.</p>
+
+<p>“Tell me what it is now, dear Aunt
+Anne,” she said. “Has anything occurred
+to worry you? Where have you been—to
+Guildford?”</p>
+
+<p>“To Guildford? No, my dear. Something
+has occurred, but not to worry me. It
+is something that will make me very happy,
+and I trust that it will make you very happy
+to hear it. I rely on your sympathy and
+Walter’s to support me.” Florence was not
+very curious. Aunt Anne had always so
+much earnestness at her command, and was
+very prodigal of it. Besides, it did not
+seem likely that anything important had
+happened; some trifling pleasure or vexation,
+probably; nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>At last the little meal was finished, the
+things pushed through the buttery-hatch, the
+crumbs swept off the cloth by Jane, who
+seemed to linger in a manner that Mrs.
+Baines in her own mind felt to be wholly
+reprehensible and wanting in respect towards
+her superiors. But the cloth was folded and
+put away at last, the buttery-hatch closed,
+the fire adjusted, and the door shut. Aunt
+Anne gave a sigh of relief, then throwing
+her cloak back over the chair, she rose
+and stood irresolute on the hearth-rug.
+Florence went towards her.</p>
+
+<p>“Have you been anywhere by train?”
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love. I went to the station to
+meet some one.” She trembled with excitement
+while she spoke. Florence noticed
+it with wonder.</p>
+
+<p>“What is it, Aunt Anne?” she asked
+gently.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady stretched out her two thin
+hands, and suddenly dropped her head for
+a moment on Florence’s shoulder; but she
+raised it quickly, and evidently struggled to
+be calm.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling,” she said, “I know you will
+sympathize with me, I know your loving
+heart. I knew it the first day I saw
+you, when you were at Rottingdean, and
+stood under the pear-tree with your dear
+Walter——”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, oh yes, dear——” Florence had
+so often heard of that pear-tree. But what
+could it have to do with the present
+situation?</p>
+
+<p>—“I shall never forget the picture you
+two made,” the old lady went on, not heeding
+the interruption; “I knew all that was
+in your dear heart then, just as I feel that
+you will understand all that is in mine now.”
+Her face was flushed, her eyes were almost
+bright, and there were tears in them; the left
+one winked tremulously.</p>
+
+<p>Florence looked at her in amazement.
+“What is it, Aunt Anne? Do tell me;
+tell me at once, dear?” she said entreatingly.
+“And where you have been, so late and in
+the dark.” For a moment Aunt Anne
+hesitated, then, with a gasp and a strong
+effort to be calm and dignified, she raised
+her head and spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear—my dear, all this time I have
+been with Alfred Wimple. He loves me.”</p>
+
+<p>“He loves you,” Florence repeated, her
+eyes full of wonder; “he loves you. Yes,
+of course he loves you, we all do,” she said
+soothingly, too much surprised to speculate
+farther.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, he loves me,” Aunt Anne said
+again, in an almost solemn voice, “and I
+have promised to be his wife.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne!—to marry him!”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear, to marry him,” and she waited
+as if for congratulations.</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne, dear——” Florence
+began in astonishment, and then she stopped;
+for though she had had some idea of the old
+lady’s infatuation, she had never dreamt of
+its ending in matrimony. Mrs. Baines was
+excited and strange; it might be some
+delusion, some joke that had been played
+on her, for Mr. Wimple could not have
+seriously asked her to marry him. She
+waited, not knowing what to say. But
+Aunt Anne’s excitement seemed to be
+passing, and with a tender, pitiful expression
+on her face, she waited for her niece
+to speak. “But, Aunt Anne, dear,” was
+all Florence could say again in her bewilderment.</p>
+
+<p>“But what, Florence?” Mrs. Baines
+spoke with a surprised, half-resentful manner.
+“Have you nothing more to say to me,
+my love?”</p>
+
+<p>“But you are not really going to marry
+him, are you?” Florence asked, in an incredulous
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady answered in a terribly earnest
+one.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, Florence, I am; and never shall
+man have truer, more loving help-meet than
+I will be to him,” she burst out heroically,
+holding herself erect and looking her niece
+in the face. There was something infinitely
+pathetic about her as she stood there, quivering
+with feeling and aching for sympathy,
+yet old, wrinkled, and absurd, her poor
+scanty hair pushed back and her weak eyes
+full of tears. For a moment there was
+silence. Then bewildered Florence broke
+out with—</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne, but, Aunt Anne——”</p>
+
+<p>“Well, my love?” the old lady asked
+with calm dignity.</p>
+
+<p>“He—he is much younger than you,”
+she said at last, bringing out her words
+slowly, and hating herself for saying them.</p>
+
+<p>“Age is not counted by years, my darling;
+and if he does not feel my age a drawback,
+why should I count his youth one? He
+loves me, Florence, I know he loves me,”
+Aunt Anne broke out in a passionate,
+tearful voice, “and you would not have me
+throw away or depreciate a faithful heart
+that has been given me?”</p>
+
+<p>Then the practical side of Florence’s
+nature spoke up in despair. “But, Aunt
+Anne, he—is very poor.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know he is poor, but he is young and
+strong and hopeful; and he will work. He
+says he will work like a slave for me; and if
+he is content to face poverty with me, how
+can I be afraid to face it with him?”</p>
+
+<p>“But you want comforts, and——”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, my love. My tastes are very
+simple, and I shall be content to do without
+them for his sake.”</p>
+
+<p>“But at your time of life, dear Aunt Anne,
+you do want them—you are not young—as
+he is.” Then Mrs. Baines burst into tears,
+tears that were evidently a blessed relief,
+and had been pent up in her poor old heart,
+waiting for an excuse to come forth.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence, I did not think you would tell
+me of my age. If I do not feel it, and he
+does not, why should you remind me of it?
+And why should you tell me that he is poor?
+Do you suppose that I am so selfish or—or
+so depraved that I would sell myself for
+comfort and luxury? If he can face poverty
+with me, I can face it with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, yes, but——” The old lady did
+not heed her, and went on breathlessly—</p>
+
+<p>“I did think, Florence, that you would
+have been kind to me, and understood and
+sympathized. I told him that on your heart
+and Walter’s I could rely. You know how
+lonely I have been, how desolate and how
+miserable. But for your bounty and goodness
+I should have died——”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no——”</p>
+
+<p>“And now, in this great crisis—now, when
+a young, brave, beautiful life is laid at my
+feet, now that I am loved as truly as ever
+woman was loved in this world, as tenderly
+as Walter loves you, Florence, you fail me,
+as—as if”—she put her hand to her throat
+to steady her quivering voice—“as if you
+would not let me taste the cup of happiness
+of which you drink every day.”</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne, it isn’t that indeed,”
+Florence answered, thinking despairingly of
+Walter, and wishing that she could begin
+writing that very minute, asking him what
+on earth she ought to say or do. “It is
+that—that—it is so unexpected, so strange.
+I knew, of course, that you liked him, that
+you were good friends; but I never dreamt
+that he was in love with you.” Aunt Anne’s
+tears seemed to vanish as if by magic, her
+left eye winked almost fiercely, her lips
+opened, but no sound came. With a great
+effort she recovered her voice at last, and
+with some of her old dignity, dashed with
+severe surprise, she asked—</p>
+
+<p>“My darling, is there any reason why he
+should not love me?”</p>
+
+<p>She stood gravely waiting for a reply,
+while Florence felt that she was managing
+badly, that she was somehow hurting and
+insulting Aunt Anne. After all, the old lady
+had a right to do as she liked; it was
+evident that she was incapable of taking in
+the absurdity of the situation.</p>
+
+<p>“But, Aunt Anne——” she began and
+stopped.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear Florence,” Mrs. Baines repeated
+still more severely, “will you tell me if there
+is any very obvious reason why he should
+not love me? I am not an ogress, my
+darling—I am not an ogress,” she cried,
+suddenly breaking down and bursting into
+floods of tears, while her head dropped on
+to her black merino dress.</p>
+
+<p>She looked so old and worn, so wretched
+and lonely as she stood there weeping
+bitterly, that Florence could stand it no
+longer, and going forward she put her arms
+round the poor old soul, and kissed her
+fondly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, dear Aunt Anne,” she said, “you
+are not an ogress; you are a sweet old dear,
+and I love you. Don’t cry—don’t cry, you
+dear.”</p>
+
+<p>“My love, you are cruel to me,” Aunt
+Anne sobbed.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no, I am not, and you shall marry
+any one you like. It was a little surprising,
+you know, and of course I didn’t—I didn’t
+think that marrying was in your thoughts,”
+she added feebly, for she didn’t know what
+to say.</p>
+
+<p>“Bless you, my darling, bless you,” the
+old lady gasped, grateful for even that straw
+of comfort; “I knew you would be staunch
+to me when you had recovered from the
+surprise of my communication, but——” and
+she gently disengaged herself from Florence’s
+embrace and spoke in the nervous quivering
+voice that always came to her in moments
+of excitement—“but, Florence, since the
+first moment we met, Alfred Wimple and I
+have felt that we were ordained for each
+other.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear,” Florence said soothingly.</p>
+
+<p>“He says he shall never forget the
+moments we sat together on your balcony
+that night when your dear Walter fetched
+the white shawl—of yours, Florence—to put
+round my shoulders,” the old lady went on
+earnestly. “And the sympathy between us
+is so great that we do not feel the difference
+of years; besides, he says he has never liked
+very young women, he has always felt that
+the power to love accumulated with time, as
+my power to love has done. Few of the
+women who have been loved by great men
+have been very young, my darling.”</p>
+
+<p>“I didn’t know,” Florence began, for
+Aunt Anne had paused, almost as if she
+were repeating something she had learned
+by heart.</p>
+
+<p>“He asked me to-night,” she went on
+with another little gasp, “if I remembered—if
+I remembered—I forget——but all the
+great passions of history have been concentrated
+on women in their prime. Petrarch’s
+Laura had eight children when the poet fell
+in love with her, and Helen of Troy was
+sixty when—when—I forget,” she said again,
+shaking her head; “but he remembers; he
+went through them all to-night. Besides,
+I may be old in years, but I am not old at
+heart; you cannot say that I am, Florence.”</p>
+
+<p>She was getting excited again. Almost
+without her knowledge Florence led her to
+the easy-chair, and gently pushing her on to
+it, undid the strings and tried to take off her
+bonnet; but the old lady resisted.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my dear, don’t take off my bonnet,”
+she said, “unless you will permit me to ring,”
+she added, getting back to her old-fashioned
+ways, “and request Jane to bring me my
+cap from upstairs.”</p>
+
+<p>But Florence felt that Jane might look
+curiously at the wrinkled face that still
+showed signs of recent agitation, so she put
+her hand softly on the one that Aunt Anne
+had stretched out to touch the bell.</p>
+
+<p>“I will get it for you, dear,” she said, and
+in a moment she had flown upstairs and
+brought down the soft lace cap put ready
+on the bed, and the cashmere slippers edged
+with fur and lined with red flannel, in which
+Aunt Anne liked to encase her feet in the
+evening. “There, now, you will feel better,
+you poor dear,” she said when they were put
+on and the old lady sat silent and composed,
+looking as if she were contemplating her
+future, and the new life before her. Florence
+stood by her silently for a moment, thinking
+over the past weeks in which Aunt Anne,
+with her poverty and dignity, her generosity
+and recklessness, had formed so striking a
+figure. Then she thought of the lonely life
+the poor old lady had led in the Kilburn
+lodging.</p>
+
+<p>After all, if she only had even a very little
+happiness with that horrid Mr. Wimple, it
+would be something; and of course, if he
+didn’t behave properly, Walter could take
+her away. The worst of it was she had
+understood that Mr. Wimple had no money.
+She had heard that he lived on a small
+allowance from an uncle, and the uncle
+might stop that allowance when he heard
+that his nephew had married an old woman
+who had not a penny.</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne,” she asked gently, “does he
+know that you are not rich?”</p>
+
+<p>“Florence, I told him plainly that I had
+no fortune,” the old lady answered, with a
+pathetic half-hunted look on her face that
+made Florence hate herself for her lack
+of sympathy. But she felt that she ought
+to ask some questions. Walter would be so
+angry if she allowed her to go into misery
+and fresh poverty without making a single
+effort to save her.</p>
+
+<p>“And has he money, dear—enough to
+keep you both, at any rate?”</p>
+
+<p>The tears trickled down Aunt Anne’s face
+again while she answered—</p>
+
+<p>“If I did not ask him that question,
+Florence, it is not for you to ask it me. I
+neither know nor care what he has. If he
+is willing to take me for myself only, so am
+I willing to take him, loving him for himself
+only too. I am too old to marry for money,
+and he is too noble to do so. We are grown-up
+man and woman, Florence, and know
+our own hearts; we will brook no interference,
+my darling, not even from you.”
+She got up tremblingly. “I must retire;
+you must allow me to retire, and in the
+privacy of my own room I shall be able to
+reflect.”</p>
+
+<p>The long words were coming back; they
+were a sign that Aunt Anne was herself
+again.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, dear Aunt Anne; I am sure you
+must want to be alone, and to think,”
+Florence said gently.</p>
+
+<p>The old lady was not appeased.</p>
+
+<p>“You know—you remember what you felt
+yourself when your Walter first loved you,
+Florence,” she said distantly. “Yes, I must
+be alone; my heart is full—I must be
+alone.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence led her upstairs to her room.
+Mrs. Baines stood formally in the doorway.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-night, my love,” she said, with cold
+disappointment in her voice.</p>
+
+<p>“May not I help you, Aunt Anne?”
+Florence asked, almost entreatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, I must be alone,” Mrs.
+Baines repeated firmly, and shut the door.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter' style='width:30%'>
+<img src='images/tail11.jpg' alt='sprig of flowers' id='iid-0020' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/chap5.jpg' alt='bridge scene' id='iid-0021' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
+</div>
+
+<div><h1>CHAPTER XII.</h1></div>
+
+<p class='noindent'><span class='lead-in'><img class='dropcap' src='images/capt.jpg' style='float:left;width:5%;' alt='T'/>he</span> next morning Aunt Anne did not
+appear. She sent word that she
+would like her breakfast carried up, a fire
+lighted in her room, and to be left alone for
+a couple of hours.</p>
+
+<p>Florence was distracted. She had written
+to Walter, but as the mail did not go out till
+three days later, nothing was gained by her
+haste. She had considered things all round,
+and the more she did so the more amazing
+did Mr. Wimple’s proposal seem. It was
+all nonsense to suppose, as Aunt Anne
+evidently believed, that he was in love with
+a woman more than twice his age. Florence
+mentally reviewed Aunt Anne’s charms.
+She was not even a round, plump old lady
+with rosy cheeks, and a stray dimple that
+seemed to have found her company so good
+it was loath to vanish altogether. She was
+wrinkled, and thin, and feeble-looking. Her
+eyes were small and weak, the left one had
+the nervous affection that so often provided
+an almost droll accompaniment to her talk.
+Her skin was withered and sallow. Florence
+tried to feel like a young man about to marry
+Aunt Anne, and the idea was not pleasant.
+She felt that it was almost a duty to prevent
+the marriage if possible—that Aunt Anne
+owed it to her past years, to her own dignity,
+to her relations, to every one and everything
+not to make a fool of herself.</p>
+
+<p>The children went out at ten o’clock.
+Florence listened to their shouts of joy as
+they drove off in the donkey-cart. Then,
+hurrying through her domestic affairs, she
+sat down on one of the gaunt easy-chairs by
+the drawing-room fire to think matters over
+again. It somehow seemed fitting to sit in
+the old-world little room while she considered
+Aunt Anne’s romance. She could hear the
+old lady moving about overhead, but was
+afraid to go up, for she had been refused
+admittance two hours ago. Jane, who was
+overwhelmed with curiosity, had managed to
+go in and out once or twice, and reported
+that Mrs. Baines was dressed and looking
+through the contents of her trunks “just as
+if she was packing up.” Florence wondered
+what it meant, and a dim suspicion of the
+truth crossed her mind. She felt too as if
+in the little cottage by the lonely roadside
+a tragedy was beginning in which Aunt Anne
+would play the central figure. She shut
+her eyes for a moment, and, as if in a dream,
+could see the old lady wringing her thin
+hands, and stretching them out almost imploringly.
+“Oh, dear Aunt Anne,” she
+cried, “something must be done. No good
+can come of this wild nonsense.”</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly on the gravel footpath outside
+she heard a footstep, just as she had heard
+Aunt Anne’s footstep the night before. She
+got up quickly and looked out. It was Mr.
+Wimple. He must have come up from the
+dip at the end of the garden, the short way
+from Hindhead and the Liphook Road. He
+was going round the house. Florence darted
+out and opened the front door before he had
+time to ring. All in a moment it had struck
+her that if she could get a talk with him,
+some explanation, perhaps some good, might
+come of it. Yet her heart ached, she felt
+cruel and treacherous, as if she were trying
+to cheat Aunt Anne of a promise—even
+though it was a ridiculous promise—of
+happiness. She thought of the poor old
+lady’s tears, of her pleading, of her piteous,
+“as if you grudged me the cup of happiness
+of which you taste every day.” After all,
+she had a right to do as she pleased; but
+that was a foolish argument. She had a
+right to put herself on the kitchen fire if she
+pleased, but it would be distinctly the duty
+of the nearest person to pull her off and
+prevent her from being burnt.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Wimple stared at Florence. “How do
+you do, Mrs. Hibbert?” he said with extreme
+gravity. He did not hold out his hand or
+look as if he expected to enter, but stood
+still on the door-step.</p>
+
+<p>“I saw you coming and wanted to speak
+to you, Mr. Wimple,” she said almost breathlessly.
+“Won’t you come in?” Without
+a word he entered. She led the way to
+the drawing-room and shut the door. She
+pointed to one of the chairs beside the screen
+with a peacock on it, and he sat down, still
+without a word, and waited for her to speak.
+She took the other chair and faced him.
+The light was full upon him, but there was
+no expression in his eyes, not even one of
+inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>“Mr. Wimple,” she said, in a low voice,
+for she was afraid of Aunt Anne above
+hearing the hum of conversation, “I wanted
+to speak to you about Aunt Anne—Mrs.
+Baines.” He looked at her then, but still
+he said nothing. “I am very fond of her,”
+she added, as if in excuse for her interference.</p>
+
+<p>“I am sure you are,” he answered, and
+waited. Florence was forced to go on.</p>
+
+<p>“She came home last night, and she
+surprised me so—she told me—oh, Mr.
+Wimple, it can’t be true?”</p>
+
+<p>“What cannot be true, Mrs. Hibbert?”
+he asked, speaking like an automaton.</p>
+
+<p>“That—that—you had asked her to marry
+you?”</p>
+
+<p>“It is quite true,” he said, and looked at
+her unflinchingly; his face wore an expression
+of slight surprise.</p>
+
+<p>“But it is so strange and unsuitable; she
+is so much older than you.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know she is much older.” He seemed
+to unlock his lips every time he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>“She is quite old and feeble,” Florence
+said compassionately.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, she is quite old and feeble,” he
+repeated.</p>
+
+<p>“And, Mr. Wimple, do you know that she
+is not rich, that—that she has no money,
+nothing. She is poor.”</p>
+
+<p>“I know she is poor, Mrs. Hibbert.” He
+seemed to be afflicted with an utter destitution
+of language, an incapacity to say anything
+but the shortest, most cut-and-dried sentence.
+It affected Florence. But again she struggled
+on; though she felt her words come with
+difficulty.</p>
+
+<p>“And you—forgive me, but I am fond of
+her—and you, I believe, are not rich. Walter
+told me that you were not, and—and——”
+She was beginning to despair of making any
+way with Mr. Wimple, his eyes were dull
+and uninterested, he seemed insensible to
+everything except the burden of his own
+gravity.</p>
+
+<p>“I am not rich, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said.
+The manner in which he repeated her name
+at the end of every sentence irritated
+Florence.</p>
+
+<p>“And oh, Mr. Wimple,” she went on, “it
+is so—so absurd.” But he said nothing, though
+she waited. “It is so strange, and Walter
+will be very angry.”</p>
+
+<p>“It is not Walters affair, Mrs. Hibbert, it
+is mine,” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“And hers, and Aunt Anne’s too.”</p>
+
+<p>“And hers,” he repeated.</p>
+
+<p>“And she is old, she wants comforts and
+luxury; and oh, I cannot bear to think of it.
+It seems cruel.”</p>
+
+<p>“We have talked it all over, Mrs. Hibbert;
+she knows best herself what she wants,” he
+answered, without the slightest change in his
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>“But are you really in love with her?”</p>
+
+<p>“I am very fond of her,” he said blankly.</p>
+
+<p>Florence put her hand to her throat to
+steady her utterance.</p>
+
+<p>“But you are not in love with her? You
+can’t be; she is old enough to be your
+mother. She is a dear, sweet old lady, but
+you can’t be in love with her.”</p>
+
+<p>“I don’t see the necessity of our discussing
+this,” he said, still with extreme gravity.</p>
+
+<p>“But she is my aunt, at least she is
+Walter’s, which is all the same.” He gave
+a little dry cough.</p>
+
+<p>“Mrs. Baines and I have settled our
+affairs, Mrs. Hibbert,” he said. “There is
+no necessity to go over them.”</p>
+
+<p>“But it is so ridiculous.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then we will not talk about it.” Suddenly
+he looked at her; there was no change
+in his tone, but he opened his eyes a little
+wider as if to impress upon her the importance
+of his next words. “We don’t wish
+our private affairs made known to the world,”
+he said. “There is no necessity to talk of
+them at all; they are of no importance except
+to ourselves. We don’t wish to talk about
+them or to hear of their being talked about.
+Will you remember this, Mrs. Hibbert?”
+It was quite a relief to get three consecutive
+sentences out of him.</p>
+
+<p>“But, Mr. Wimple, do tell me that, if you
+persist in marrying her, you will make her
+happy, you will be good to her, and—that
+you can keep her in some sort of comfort,”
+Florence said in despair.</p>
+
+<p>“I will talk to her about this, Mrs. Hibbert.
+It is her affair,” he said solemnly; and
+Florence felt altogether worsted, left out in
+the cold, put back, and powerless. She sat
+silently by the fire, not knowing what to do
+or say. Mr. Wimple made no sign. She
+looked up at him after a minute or two.
+What could Aunt Anne see to like in him,
+in his dull eyes, his thin lips, his straggling
+sandy hair and whiskers, his pink-and-white,
+yet unhealthy-looking complexion? He met
+her gaze steadily. “Is there anything more
+you wish to say to me?” he asked; “I have
+not much time.”</p>
+
+<p>“No,” she answered, chokingly, “there is
+nothing—if you would only be a son to her,
+a friend, anything, rather than marry her.
+Oh, Mr. Wimple, if you really do care for
+her, don’t make her ridiculous in her old age,
+don’t make her unhappy. Happiness cannot
+come of an absurd marriage like this. You
+ought to marry a girl, a young woman.
+One day Walter and I saw you at Waterloo——”</p>
+
+<p>He fixed his eyes upon her, and there was
+a slight look of curiosity in them now, but he
+was absolutely calm.</p>
+
+<p>“Well, Mrs. Hibbert?” he said.</p>
+
+<p>“We thought that perhaps she was—was
+some one you liked; she was young, it would
+have been much more suitable.”</p>
+
+<p>“I must know what I desire, and what
+is most suitable for myself, Mrs. Hibbert,”
+he answered, without a shade of vexation,
+but with quiet determination in his voice.
+Then Jane, evidently to her own satisfaction,
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>“If you please, ma’am, Mrs. Baines says
+she would like to speak to Mr. Wimple when
+you have quite finished with him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Tell Mrs. Baines I will go up to her in a
+moment; I want to see her.” She turned
+to Mr. Wimple again when Jane had gone.
+He rose as if to signify that he considered
+their conversation at an end. “I fear there
+is nothing more to say,” she said lamely, for
+this man, with his silence and utter lack of
+response, had made every word that suggested
+itself seem weak and hopeless.</p>
+
+<p>“I think not, Mrs. Hibbert.”</p>
+
+<p>“But for your own happiness, Mr.
+Wimple,” she said suddenly, struck with a
+new way of putting it, “you surely can’t
+want to marry Mrs. Baines for the sake of
+your own happiness.”</p>
+
+<p>“I want to marry Mrs. Baines as much for
+my own sake as for hers,” and he looked at
+her in a manner that was almost a dismissal.
+It had an influence over her she could not
+help; almost against her will she rose, feeling
+that there was no excuse for prolonging the
+interview.</p>
+
+<p>“I will send Mrs. Baines to you,” she said,
+in despair.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, Mrs. Hibbert, if you will,”
+and he held open the door for her to pass
+out.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Anne heard the drawing-room door
+open and Florence coming up. She waited
+eagerly on the top of the stairs. She wore
+her best dress; round her throat there was
+a white silk handkerchief, in her manner
+more than the usual nervous agitation.
+Glancing in at the bedroom Florence could
+see that she had been packing, and making
+ready for a journey.</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Aunt Anne——” she began.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, I am going to town,” the
+old lady said, with a cold reserve in her
+tenderness that showed clearly she was displeased.
+“I cannot stay longer under your
+roof. You must not ask me to do so,” she
+went on. “I was cut to the quick by your
+want of sympathy last night. I cannot
+recover from it; I could not expose myself
+to it again. My luggage is ready, and when
+I have seen my dear Alfred I shall be able
+to tell you the time of my departure.”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh, Aunt Anne, it is cruel,” Florence said,
+dismayed.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love, it is not cruel; but I must
+respect myself. I would not hurt you for
+the world, Florence; but you have hurt me.”</p>
+
+<p>“I wouldn’t hurt you either for the world,
+but——”</p>
+
+<p>“Where is Mr. Wimple, my love?” the old
+lady asked, interrupting her niece with a
+long sigh.</p>
+
+<p>“He is downstairs; I have been talking to
+him.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love, I understand. I appreciate
+all your solicitude for my happiness;
+but you should allow those who are older
+and wiser than you to know what is best for
+themselves. I will see you again when he
+is gone, Florence,” and almost imperiously
+Mrs. Baines went downstairs.</p>
+
+<p>She entered the drawing-room and shut
+the door. Mr. Wimple was standing on the
+hearth-rug. She looked at him for a moment
+nervously, and winked solemnly as usual
+with her left eye.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling,” she said, and putting her
+arms round his neck she kissed his face on
+both sides, “my darling Alfred, are you glad
+to see me?” He submitted to her caress
+half reluctantly, then drew back a little.
+His manner was no warmer than it had been
+to Florence.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, I am glad to see you,” he said, and
+looked at her with his eyes wide open, as if
+to show that he perfectly understood the
+position.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling, I have suffered terribly.
+Florence had no sympathy for us; she said
+it was an unsuitable marriage; that you had
+no fortune, and that I had none; as if my
+poverty was not hard enough to bear without
+being told of it. What did she say to you?
+Alfred, my dear one, she has not turned
+your love from me?” She put out her arms
+again as if to gather him to her, but he
+looked blindly past her.</p>
+
+<p>“Sit down,” he said, and pushed her
+gently on to the chair beside the peacock-screen.</p>
+
+<p>“She has not taken your love from me,
+tell me that,” Mrs. Baines said entreatingly.
+“A few hours ago you assured me of your
+devotion. She has not taken it from me?”</p>
+
+<p>“No.”</p>
+
+<p>“I am just the same to you?” she asked.
+He turned his eyes on her again.</p>
+
+<p>“You are just the same,” he said, with a
+gulp, but there was no tenderness in his
+manner. He seemed to be speaking almost
+under compulsion.</p>
+
+<p>“My darling, my darling,” she said softly,
+“bless you for those dear words. I will be
+truer to you, Alfred, than ever woman was
+to man before. But I cannot stay here;
+you must take me away. I have already
+packed my things, I cannot remain another
+night, not knowing to what treatment I may
+be subjected. I love Florence most sincerely;
+she and Walter and their children are very
+dear to me. But after her coldness to me
+last night when I came in full of your love
+and my own happiness, and she denied me
+her sympathy, I cannot stay. You must not
+ask me to do that, Alfred.” There was
+more interest in his manner now, though his
+gravity never relaxed.</p>
+
+<p>“Where will you go?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I shall go to London, my darling,” she
+said, stretching out her hands. “But I
+cannot go alone, after all I have suffered
+during the last twenty-four hours?” He
+looked at her questioningly.</p>
+
+<p>“Suffered? What have you suffered?” he
+asked. “I thought you were happy about it.”</p>
+
+<p>“About you? Yes, my darling; but
+Florence has tortured me.”</p>
+
+<p>“It does not take much to torture you,”
+he interrupted. “What did she say?”</p>
+
+<p>“I have told you already; I cannot go
+over it again. Don’t ask me to do so. You
+could torture me, Alfred, with a word or a
+look—if you ceased to love me.”</p>
+
+<p>“We need not discuss that improbability
+now,” he said solemnly. “What about your
+going to London?”</p>
+
+<p>“I shall go by the quarter-past one o’clock
+train this afternoon,” she answered. “You
+will take me, will you not?”</p>
+
+<p>“I cannot go to-day,” he said firmly. “I
+must get back to Liphook now.” He
+pulled out his watch, a dull worn Waterbury
+one, at which Aunt Anne looked keenly.
+“But I will go to-morrow; I want to see
+my uncle.” His thoughts seemed to be
+intent on business matters. She waited a
+moment after he had finished speaking, and
+winked slowly to herself before she answered.</p>
+
+<p>“Alfred,” she asked, “you do truly love
+me?” He looked at her steadfastly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes,” he answered, “I told you so last
+night.” She half rose from her chair again,
+but he waved her back. “Sit down,” he
+said, and she obeyed.</p>
+
+<p>“I know you did, and I will never doubt
+it. In bygone days, my darling, I was foolish
+and wicked, and played with the truest love
+ever given to woman. But I am wiser now.
+You must never doubt me. Promise me
+that you never will.”</p>
+
+<p>“I promise you,” he said, and closed his
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>“My dear, my dear,” she said softly to
+herself, and stopped for a moment before
+she went on aloud, “I must go to town
+this afternoon, and you must take me. My
+courage is not equal to encountering the
+journey alone. Do take me, my darling.”</p>
+
+<p>“Where will you go when you get to
+London?” he asked.</p>
+
+<p>“I know of some apartments—two rooms—I
+saw them the day before I came away.
+If they are still unlet, I shall rent them.
+But when we arrive I shall go straight to Sir
+William Rammage. I have business with
+him. He is very ill, Alfred, it was in the
+paper yesterday; but he will see me, and
+when he knows all——”</p>
+
+<p>“You will tell him nothing about me,”
+he said, in his slow determined voice. She
+looked up indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>“Alfred,” she answered, “I must tell him.
+I shall tell him that you love me; that I
+have won a true and noble heart, and that
+we are going through life together.”</p>
+
+<p>“You will tell him nothing,” Mr. Wimple
+repeated, with something like fright in his
+dull eyes. “If you did my uncle would hear
+of it, and would think I was mad.” He
+added the clause about his uncle as if he
+thought an explanation due to her.</p>
+
+<p>“Mad to marry me?” she asked.</p>
+
+<p>“Mad to think of marriage at all. He
+objects to it on principle.”</p>
+
+<p>“But if he knew how tenderly and truly
+I loved you——”</p>
+
+<p>“You must not say one word about it, to
+him or to any one,” came the firm hard
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>“Is it because you are—you are ashamed
+of loving me, Alfred?” she asked, quivering.</p>
+
+<p>“No. But it is my wish. That should
+be enough.”</p>
+
+<p>She was silent for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>“It is enough,” she answered slowly, “your
+wish shall be my law in this as in all things.
+But you will take me up to town?” she
+pleaded. “You can go to the Blue Lion, to
+Steggalls’, and tell them to drive you back
+to Liphook now.”</p>
+
+<p>“I have no money with me,” he said
+firmly.</p>
+
+<p>“It will go down to my account, darling,”
+she continued, as if she had not heard the
+interruption. “You can take the quarter
+to one train from Liphook to London; it
+stops at Witley. I will be on the platform,
+and we will go on together.” She ventured
+to stand now, and held out her hands again,
+almost entreatingly.</p>
+
+<p>“You will say nothing to Sir William?”</p>
+
+<p>“Alfred, you are my lord and master,”
+and she bowed her head on to her breast.
+But he was wholly untouched.</p>
+
+<p>“Very well,” he said, “I will drive back
+at once—there is not too much time—and
+meet you as you say. Good-bye.” He
+kissed her forehead, and as before, swiftly
+drew back again.</p>
+
+<p>“Will you order a waggonette for me too,
+Alfred?” she asked as she followed him to
+the door. “I shall want one to take me to
+the station. Tell them to put it all down
+to me.” He did not answer till the door
+was open, and he saw the dark trees against
+the sky, and the withered leaves beneath
+lying on the garden pathway. Then a
+smile crossed his lips, his face wore an air
+of relief, he looked like a free man. He
+crossed the threshold with a light step, and
+stopped and looked over his shoulder at her.</p>
+
+<p>“Good-bye,” he said. “I will order the
+waggonette. It is lovely weather. We
+shall enjoy the journey to town.”</p>
+
+<p>“My darling,” she said, with a world of
+tenderness in her voice, “I shall enjoy anything
+with you as long as I live.” He
+looked at her for a minute with the strange
+dumb expression that was so peculiarly his
+own, and walked away.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines went back to the drawing-room,
+and shut the door with a manner
+that conveyed to the whole house that she
+wanted to be alone for a little space. She
+stood thoughtfully beside the chair on which
+he had sat. Suddenly she caught sight of
+her own face in the chimney-glass. She
+looked at it critically and winked slowly,
+she pulled the white handkerchief up a little
+higher round her throat and turned away
+satisfied. “He loves me,” she said, “I know
+he loves me, and no power on earth shall
+separate me from him. I will marry him
+if I walk to church without my shoes. I
+was faithless once, but this time I will be
+true.” She crept softly upstairs, and when
+she came down an hour later she was dressed
+and ready to depart. She went to the
+dining-room, where Florence in despair had
+had a little luncheon-tray brought in with
+sandwiches and biscuits on it.</p>
+
+<p>“My love,” she said, “I have finished the
+preparations for my journey; will you permit
+your servants to bring down my luggage?
+Steggalls’ man is coming immediately to
+drive me to the station. Thank you, but
+I do not need any refreshment.”</p>
+
+<p>“Aunt Anne, I can’t bear you to go,”
+poor Florence said in dismay.</p>
+
+<p>“I must go—I cannot stay,” the old lady
+answered solemnly, “and I beg you not to
+ask me to do so again.”</p>
+
+<p>“But you will come back?” Florence
+entreated.</p>
+
+<p>“No, I cannot,” Aunt Anne answered in
+the same voice. “You did not mean it, but
+you cut me to the quick last night; I have
+had no sleep since, my love. I must go
+away, I want to be alone. Besides, I have
+private business to transact. Thank you for
+all your goodness and hospitality to me, yours,
+and your dear ones. It has been a great
+privilege to be with you and the dear children
+since Walter went away, and to come
+here and see your second home.” She sat
+down for a moment by the buttery-hatch,
+turning a quick sharp glance as she did so to
+see that it was well closed, for one of her firm
+beliefs was that “servants were always ready
+to listen to the private speech of their employers.”
+As she seated herself, she looked
+as if she were trying to practise some of
+Mr. Wimple’s firmness.</p>
+
+<p>But Florence knelt lovingly by the old
+lady’s side, and put her pretty head down
+on the black merino dress. “I would not
+be unkind to you for the world,” she said,
+“you know I would not.”</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Baines winked sorrowfully, but did
+not falter.</p>
+
+<p>“You were very unkind. You hurt me
+more than I can say,” she said coldly.</p>
+
+<p>Florence turned her lips towards the old
+lady’s hands, and kissed them. “Aunt
+Anne dear,” she said very softly, “you
+have no money——” Mrs. Baines stiffened
+herself, her voice became polite and distant.</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, my love, but I have sufficient
+to defray the expenses of my journey; and
+at the other end I shall be in a position to
+make arrangements.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me lend you a little,” her niece said
+humbly.</p>
+
+<p>“No, my love”—and Mrs. Baines shook
+her head—“I cannot take it.”</p>
+
+<p>But Florence thought of the ten shillings
+that constituted all the old lady’s funds, and
+felt miserable.</p>
+
+<p>“You could pay me back,” she pleaded.
+“And don’t be angry, dear Aunt Anne, but
+you told me how poor you were in that
+lodging last year, and how cold; it makes
+my heart ache every time I think of it; and
+the winter and the cold are coming again.
+Oh, do stay here. You shall do anything
+in the world that makes you happy. I
+cannot bear to think of you in London; and
+it’s unkind of you to go, for we shall miss
+you so much, the children and I——” and
+she burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p>Then Aunt Anne melted.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence,” she said tenderly, “that was
+like your dear self.”</p>
+
+<p>“Then stay with us. You shall do as you
+like in all ways.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, my love; and bless you for
+your goodness. But I cannot stay. I do
+love you, and I will believe that your heart
+feels for me in this great crisis of my life.
+You must not think that because I love him
+I shall love you less; that would be impossible.
+But you must allow me to terminate
+my visit now. I want to be alone, to be in
+retirement for a little while; besides I have, as
+I said just now, imperative business to transact
+in town. You must not ask me to prolong
+my time here, love.”</p>
+
+<p>“Let me, at any rate, be a little useful to
+you, Aunt Anne. I know you are not rich.”</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Aunt Anne was silent.
+Then she winked her left eye very slowly,
+and looked up.</p>
+
+<p>“Florence,” she said, “I know that you
+always mean your words, and I should not
+like to hurt your generous heart. I will
+prove my affection for you by letting you
+lend me two sovereigns. Don’t ask me to
+take more, my love, for it would be impossible.
+There——” and she gave a long
+sigh as she put the coins into her glove.
+“Now I hope you are satisfied. Remember
+I only take them to prove my affection for
+you. Let me kiss those dear children;” and
+quickly opening the door she called them
+by their names, and laughed in an absent,
+excited manner, as they came running down
+the stairs. “Come, my darlings,” she said;
+“Aunt Anne is going away, and wants to say
+good-bye.”</p>
+
+<p>“But we don’t want you to go,” said
+Monty.</p>
+
+<p>“We don’t want you to go at all,” echoed
+Catty.</p>
+
+<p>“You dear children,” the old lady said, “I
+must go; but I shall not forget you, and
+to-night when you look under your pillows
+you will find some chocolates as usual. I
+have put them there ready for you, so that
+some day you might remember that, even in
+the midst of her own happiness, Aunt Anne
+thought of you.” She said the last words
+almost mechanically, while with one eye she
+watched her trunks being carried out, and
+with the other looked at the children. Suddenly
+she turned to Florence. “I should
+like to wish you good-bye alone; there is
+something I want to say to you.” She turned
+quickly and entered the drawing-room. The
+fire had burnt low, the room had grown
+chilly, and Florence shivered a little as she
+stood waiting for Aunt Anne to speak. “My
+dear,” the old lady said, “will you try not to
+think me ungrateful for all your care of
+me, for all your solicitude for my happiness?
+I know you think that I am in my
+dotage——”</p>
+
+<p>“Oh no——”</p>
+
+<p>“—That I am doing a foolish thing in
+marrying a man so much younger than
+myself, that——”</p>
+
+<p>“You must do as you like, Aunt Anne; it
+is a free country, and we can all do as we
+like.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” Mrs. Baines answered
+with a sudden wink, which showed that this
+was a new bit of argument to her, and one
+that she would try to use to her own advantage
+if she had the opportunity; “we can
+all do as we like, as you did when you
+married your dear Walter, as I shall when I
+marry Alfred Wimple, for, as you say, it is a
+free country.”</p>
+
+<p>“I only hope that you may be happy,”
+Florence said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, my love,” Mrs. Baines said, and her
+eyes filled with tears, “I hope so too, and
+that I may make him happy.” She was
+silent for a minute, and then it seemed as if
+what she said were forced from her. “I
+wanted to tell you,” she began with a little
+gasp, “I want you to know something in my
+past life, so that you may better understand
+the reason of what I am doing. When I
+was a girl, Florence, a very true love was
+given to me. I won it heedlessly, and did
+not know its value. I played with it and
+threw it away—a fresh young life like Alfred
+Wimple’s. It was in my power to make
+him happy; but I made him miserable. He
+was taken ill and died. Sometimes I think
+that I am answerable to God for the loss of
+that life; had I acted differently it might
+have been in the world now. I never had a
+young love offered to me again; I thought
+that God had denied it to me as a punishment;
+for Mr. Baines’s youth had gone
+when I married him; it was the marriage of
+his middle age. But through all the years I
+have not grown old, and all things that have
+youth in them are precious to me. One
+reason why I love you all—you, and Walter
+and the children—is that I am young too, at
+heart. It is only the lines on my face that
+make me look old, and the years I can count
+that make me feel so. I am young still in
+all else.” She stopped for a moment, as if
+waiting for some response, but Florence
+could think of nothing to say; she looked at
+the old lady wonderingly, and put her hand
+on the nervous ones that rested on the chair-back.
+“I remember the night of your party,”
+Mrs. Baines went on. “I thought of the
+past all the evening while I sat there—your
+guest, my darling—it came back again and
+again, it enveloped me, one year after
+another. I went on to the balcony, and all
+my dear ones who had gone gathered round
+me in the darkness. I heard your fresh
+young voices behind, but the years had set a
+mark on me that cut me off from you, and
+death had taken most of those I remembered,
+but left my heart young and longing for love,
+longing to live again just as you loved and
+as you lived. I said to myself, ‘I am old, I
+am old!’ Alfred Wimple was standing by
+me, and whispered, ‘You are not old.’ He
+was like my dead come back, like the one
+who had loved me when I was young; I felt
+as if through all the years I had been waiting
+by a dead man’s side, but that now perhaps
+out of his life that loved me this other had
+grown, or else that God had sent him, my
+dear one, into the world again to love me
+once more, and to prove I was forgiven.
+Do you understand, Florence? I could not
+refuse the beautiful life that was laid at my
+feet, the love that has come to bless me
+once more after all the long years. We
+are young man and young woman to each
+other, and we love each other with all
+our hearts. It is like you and your dear
+Walter. I wanted to say this to you; I
+thought it would help you to understand, to
+sympathize with me. You cannot be sorry
+that I am going to be less lonely, or grudge
+me the love that will make my life happier.
+That is all. And now, my darling, I must
+go; and good-bye once more.”</p>
+
+<p>Florence could not speak—she felt the hot
+tears filling her eyes again—a lump had come
+to her throat.</p>
+
+<p>“God bless you, Aunt Anne,” she said at
+last, with something almost like a sob.</p>
+
+<p>“And God bless you, dearest Florence,”
+the old lady said, and kissed her niece’s face
+and stroked her head. “You know I always
+admire your hair, my love,” she said, and
+pulling her forward she kissed it. Then she
+went out to the waggonette. Jane held open
+the door. “This is for you,” Mrs. Baines
+said haughtily, and slipped half a crown into
+the servant’s hand. “There are some old
+slippers in my bedroom; I don’t know if you
+will deem them worthy of your acceptance.”</p>
+
+<p>“Thank you, ma’am,” said Jane, unwillingly.</p>
+
+<p>“I trust you will study your mistress’s
+comfort and interests in every way,” Mrs.
+Baines continued as she put a shawl over
+her knees, “and that you will be good to
+those dear children.” The next moment
+she was on her way to Witley Station.</p>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:2em;font-size:1.5em;'>END OF VOL. I.</p>
+
+<div class='lgc' style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:2em;'> <!-- rend=';fs:.8em;' -->
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,</p>
+<p class='line' style='font-size:.8em;'>LONDON AND BECCLES. <span class='it'>G., C. &amp; Co.</span></p>
+</div> <!-- end rend -->
+
+<hr class='pbk'/>
+
+<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:4em;margin-bottom:2em;font-size:1.2em;'>TRANSCRIBER NOTES</p>
+
+<div class='blockquote'>
+
+<p class='noindent'>Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected.
+Where multiple spellings occur, majority use has been
+employed.</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious
+printer errors occur.</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain</p>
+
+<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
+
+<p class='noindent'>[The end of <span class='it'>Aunt Anne</span>, by Mrs. W. K. Clifford.]</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75403 ***</div>
+ </body>
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