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"Guy could do his work in my study. I am never there in the mornings."
"No, no," said Adolphine, joining in. "No, Addie, it wouldn't do. Your mother's busy enough as it is...."
"It's not that I'm so busy," said Constance, "but...."
"Well, Mamma?"
"Our weekly books, you know...."
He had never known his mother so hard or so cruel. And he now said:
"Of course, Mamma, if you think it can't be done ... I'll see what I can do for Aunt Adolphine ... somewhere in the neighbourhood. Perhaps Marietje could go and live in a family at Zeist."
"Do you think you know some one there?" asked Adolphine, mournfully.
But suddenly Constance felt very yielding. She became so yielding because Addie had said this; all her hardness and cruelty melted away in remorse at her last words; and she said:
"Addie ... go upstairs and ... and ask Papa...."
Adolphine looked up with wonder in her red eyes. She was struck that Constance was altering so suddenly in tone, from reluctance to a.s.sent; and she was also struck that Constance did not apparently wish to decide and that she was leaving the decision to Van der Welcke.
Addie went upstairs at once. The sisters remained silent and alone; the old lady was sitting in the conservatory.
"Oh, Constance!" said Adolphine. "_Do_ you think that Van der Welcke ...?" She did not complete her question, but went on, "Yes, I suppose your weekly books are very expensive?"
"They _are_ heavy," said Constance. "You understand it's...."
"What?"
"It's my husband's money ... spent on _my_ relations."
"But Gerrit's children have something."
Constance shrugged her shoulders:
"You know exactly how much they have. A couple of thousand guilders apiece."
"Well, that's something."
"We keep it for them ... and don't touch it."
"Really?" said Adolphine, in surprise. "But then there's Mamma."
"Mamma?"
"Yes, you have her money too," said Adolphine, looking Constance in the eyes.
Constance returned the look: "My dear Adolphine," she said, gently, "as Mamma is not fit to attend to her affairs, her money is in the hands of our solicitor at the Hague; and he controls it for her."
"And the income ...?"
"It's invested. We get none of Mamma's money. Surely you knew that?"
"No, I didn't."
"The books can be seen at the solicitor's by any of the brothers and sisters."
"Why do you do that?"
"Because we don't want to touch Mamma's money."
"But why not? She's living with you!"
"We want to avoid unpleasantness with any of the brothers or sisters."
"But which of us would create any unpleasantness?" asked Adolphine, very humbly.
"By _our_ way ... there's no question of any unpleasantness."
"Yes," said Adolphine. "Still, I thought...."
"That we received all the interest on Mamma's money?"
"Yes. The money's lying there quite useless."
"There will be all the more for her grandchildren later on."
"Yes," said Adolphine, greatly surprised, remembering her long conversations during those many years with Saetzema, Karel and Cateau ... because Van der Welcke and Constance at Driebergen were quietly taking Mamma's money for themselves. "I wonder the solicitor never told us!"
"I thought you knew all about it."
"No," said Adolphine, humbly, and did not add that the solicitor had once told Karel, but that they had all refused to believe it. "So Mamma ... is really living at your expense!"
Constance smiled:
"Her needs are so small ... poor Mamma!"
"But you keep a special maid for her?"
"Yes, that's the only thing."
"Still, it makes everything dearer, in food ... and taxes."[1]
"Yes," said Constance, calmly.
She heard Van der Welcke and Addie come down the stairs; they entered the room. And it was strange to see the father and son together: Van der Welcke with his irrepressibly young, bright face and his boyish eyes, though his hair was turning grey and he was becoming a little stout from his sedentary life; and Addie beside him, with his serious directness of mind, like a very elderly young man, his grey eyes filled with thought and care.
"Addie tells me Marietje's not at all well," said Van der Welcke, by way of preamble.