Moor Fires - novelonlinefull.com
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"But the noises would send you mad. Your eyes are all red. Have you been crying too?"
"It's the wind. Here's the rain coming. And where's my hair?" She smoothed it back and took off her muddy shoes before she sat down in the armchair and looked about her. "Isn't it as if somebody were dead?" she asked. "There are more shadows."
"I'll turn up the lamp," John said.
The tinkle of Helen's cup and saucer had the clearness of a bell in the quiet room, and she moved more stealthily. Miriam paused as she spread b.u.t.ter on the toast.
"This house is full of dead people," she whispered. "If you begin to think about them--John, you're not going, are you?"
"Only to draw the curtains. Yes, here's the rain."
"And soon Notya will be on the sea," Helen said, listening to the sounds of storm.
"And I hope," Miriam added on a rich burst of laughter, "that Uncle Alfred will be sea-sick. Oh, wouldn't he look queer!" She flourished the knife. "Can't we be merry when we have the chance? Now that she's gone, why should the house still feel full of her? It isn't fair!"
"You're dripping b.u.t.ter on the floor," Helen said.
"Make your old toast yourself, then!"
"It's not only Notya," Helen went on, as she picked up the knife. "It's the Pinderwells and their thoughts, and the people who lived here before them. Their thoughts are in the walls and they come out when the house is quiet."
"Then let us make a noise!" Miriam cried. "Tomorrow's Sat.u.r.day, and Daniel will come up. Shall we ask him to stay? It would make more live people in the house."
"If he stays, I'm not going to have Rupert in my room again. He talks in his sleep."
"It's better than snoring," Helen said.
"Awful to marry a man who snores," Miriam remarked. "Uncle Alfred does.
I heard him."
"You're not thinking of marrying him?" John asked.
"No. I don't like the little man," she said incisively. "He gave me his card as though he'd met me in a train. In case we needed him! I've thrown it into Mrs. Pinderwell's desk." She looked frowningly at the fire. "But he liked me," she said, throwing up her head and defying the silent criticism of the company. "Yes, he did, but I hadn't enough time."
"That's better than too much," Helen said shrewdly, and stretched her stockinged feet to the bars. "Thank you for the tea, and now let us wash up."
"You're scorching," Miriam said, and no one moved. The lamplight had driven the shadows further back, and the room was the more peaceful for the cry of the wind and the hissing of the rain.
"Rupert will get wet," Helen said.
"Poor lad!" John mocked drowsily over his pipe.
"And he doesn't know about our father," Miriam said from her little stool. "Our father, who may be in Heaven."
"That's where Notya is afraid he is," Helen sighed remembering her stepmother's lonely figure on the sofa backed by the bare window and the great moor.
"Does she hate him as much as that?"
"Oh, I hate jokes about Heaven and h.e.l.l. They're so obvious," Helen said.
"If they weren't, you wouldn't see them, my dear."
Helen let that pa.s.s, but trouble looked from her eyes and sounded in her voice. "She wanted to see him and she was afraid, and no one should ever be afraid. It's ugly."
"Perhaps," Miriam said hopefully, "he will be ill for a very long time, and then she'll have to stay with him, and we can have fun. Fun! Where can we get it? What right had she to bring us here?"
"For G.o.d's sake," John said, "don't begin that again. We're warm and fed and roofed, and it's raining outside, and we needn't stir. That ought to make you thankful for your mercies. Suppose you were a tramp."
"Yes, suppose I was a tramp." She clasped her knees and forgot her anger in this make-believe. "A young tramp. Just like me, but ragged."
"Cold and wet."
"My hair would still be curly and my face would be very brown."
"You'd be dirty," Helen reminded her, "and your boots would be crumpled and too big and sodden." She looked at her own slim feet. "That is what I should hate."
"Of course there'd be disadvantages, but if I were a tramp and dwelt on my mercies, what would they be? First--freedom!"
"Ha!" John snorted.
"Well?"
"Freedom! Where is it?"
"With the lady tramp."
"And what is it?"
"Being able to do what you like," Miriam said promptly, "and having no Notya."
John was trying to look patient. "Very well. Let us consider that."
"Yes, grandpapa," Miriam answered meekly, and tweaked Helen's toe.
"You think the tramp can do what she likes, but she has no money in her pocket, so she can't buy the comfortable bed and the good meal she is longing for. She can only go to the first workhouse or sell herself for the price of a gla.s.s of gin."
"A pretty tramp like me," Miriam began, and stopped at Helen's pleading.
"But John and I are facing facts, so you must not be squeamish. When you come to think of it," she went on, "lady tramps generally have gentlemen tramps with them."
"And there's your Notya."
"Ah!"
"And he'd beat you."
"I might like it."
"And he'd be foul-mouthed."