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'Have you ever been down a coal-mine?' she went on.

'Don't let's talk about coal-mines, Katharine,' he protested. 'We shall probably never see each other again. When you're married-'

Tremendously to his surprise, he saw the tears stand in her eyes.

'Why do you all tease me?' she said. 'It isn't kind.'

Henry could not pretend that he was altogether ignorant of her meaning, though, certainly, he had never guessed that she minded the teasing. But before he knew what to say, her eyes were clear again, and the sudden crack in the surface was almost filled up.



'Things aren't easy, anyhow,' she stated.

Obeying an impulse of genuine affection, Henry spoke.

'Promise me, Katharine, that if I can ever help you, you will let me.'

She seemed to consider, looking once more into the red of the fire, and decided to refrain from any explanation.

'Yes, I promise that,' she said at length, and Henry felt himself gratified by her complete sincerity, and began to tell her now about the coal-mine, in obedience to her love of facts.

They were, indeed, descending the shaft in a small cage, and could hear the picks of the miners, something like the gnawing of rats, in the earth beneath them, when the door burst open, without any knocking.

'Well, here you are!' Rodney exclaimed. Both Katharine and Henry turned round very quickly and rather guiltily. Rodney was in evening dress. It was clear that his temper was ruffled.

'That's where you've been all the time,' he repeated, looking at Katharine.

'I've only been here ten minutes,' she replied.

'My dear Katharine, you left the drawing-room over an hour ago.

She said nothing.

'Does it very much matter?' Henry asked.

Rodney found it hard to be unreasonable in the presence of another man, and did not answer him.

'They don't like it,' he said. 'It isn't kind to old people to leave them alone-although I've no doubt it's much more amusing to sit up here and talk to Henry.'

'We were discussing coal-mines,' said Henry urbanely.

'Yes. But we were talking about much more interesting things before that,' said Katharine.

From the apparent determination to hurt him with which she spoke, Henry thought that some sort of explosion on Rodney's part was about to take place.

'I can quite understand that,' said Rodney, with his little chuckle, leaning over the back of his chair and tapping the woodwork lightly with his fingers. They were all silent, and the silence was acutely uncomfortable to Henry, at least.

'Was it very dull, William?' Katharine suddenly asked, with a complete change of tone and a little gesture of her hand.

'Of course it was dull,' William said sulkily.

'Well, you stay and talk to Henry, and I'll go down,' she replied.

She rose as she spoke, and as she turned to leave the room, she laid her hand, with a curiously caressing gesture, upon Rodney's shoulder. Instantly Rodney clasped her hand in his, with such an impulse of emotion that Henry was annoyed, and rather ostentatiously opened a book.

'I shall come down with you,' said William, as she drew back her hand, and made as if to pa.s.s him.

'Oh no,' she said hastily. 'You stay here and talk to Henry.'

'Yes, do,' said Henry, shutting up his book again. His invitation was polite, without being precisely cordial. Rodney evidently hesitated as to the course he should pursue, but seeing Katharine at the door, he exclaimed: 'No. I want to come with you.'

She looked back, and said in a very commanding tone, and with an expression of authority upon her face: 'It's useless for you to come. I shall go to bed in ten minutes. Good night.'

She nodded to them both, but Henry could not help noticing that her last nod was in his direction. Rodney sat down rather heavily.

His mortification was so obvious that Henry scarcely liked to open the conversation with some remark of a literary character. On the other hand, unless he checked him, Rodney might begin to talk about his feelings, and irreticence is apt to be extremely painful, at any rate in prospect. He therefore adopted a middle course; that is to say, he wrote a note upon the fly-leaf of his book, which ran, 'The situation is becoming most uncomfortable.' This he decorated with those flourishes and decorative borders which grow of themselves upon these occasions; and as he did so, he thought to himself that whatever Katharine's difficulties might be, they did not justify her behaviour. She had spoken with a kind of brutality which suggested that, whether it is natural or a.s.sumed, women have a peculiar blindness to the feelings of men.

The pencilling of this note gave Rodney time to recover himself. Perhaps, for he was a very vain man, he was more hurt that Henry had seen him rebuffed than by the rebuff itself. He was in love with Katharine, and vanity is not decreased but increased by love, especially, one may hazard, in the presence of one's own s.e.x. But Rodney enjoyed the courage which springs from that laughable and lovable defect, and when he had mastered his first impulse, in some way to make a fool of himself, he drew inspiration from the perfect fit of his evening dress. He chose a cigarette, tapped it on the back of his hand, displayed his exquisite pumps on the edge of the fender, and summoned his self-respect.

'You've several big estates round here, Otway,' he began. 'Any good hunting? Let me see, what pack would it be?'

'Sir William Budge, the sugar king, has the biggest estate. He bought out poor Stanham, who went bankrupt.'

'Which Stanham would that be? Verney or Alfred?'

Alfred ... I don't hunt myself. You're a great huntsman, aren't you? You have a great reputation as a horseman, anyhow,' he added, desiring to help Rodney in his effort to recover his complacency.

'Oh, I love riding,' Rodney replied. 'Could I get a horse down here? Stupid of me! I forgot to bring any clothes. I can't imagine, though, who told you I was anything of a rider.'

To tell the truth, Henry laboured under the same difficulty; he did not wish to introduce Katharine's name, and, therefore, he replied vaguely that he had always heard that Rodney was a great rider. In truth, he had heard very little about him, one way or another, accepting him as a figure often to be found in the background at his aunt's house, and inevitably, though inexplicably, engaged to his cousin.

'I don't care much for shooting,' Rodney continued; 'but one has to do it, unless one wants to be altogether out of things. I dare say there's some very pretty country round here. I stayed once at Bolham Hall. Young Cranthorpe was up with you, wasn't he? He married old Lord Bolham's daughter. Very nice people-in their way.'

'I don't mix in that society,' Henry remarked, rather shortly. But Rodney, now started on an agreeable current of reflection, could not resist the temptation of pursuing it a little further. He appeared to himself as a man who moved easily in very good society, and knew enough about the true values of life to be himself above it.

'Oh, but you should,' he went on. 'It's well worth staying there, anyhow, once a year. They make one very comfortable, and the women are ravishing.'

'The women?' Henry thought to himself, with disgust. 'What could any woman see in you?' His tolerance was rapidly becoming exhausted, but he could not help liking Rodney nevertheless, and this appeared to him strange, for he was fastidious, and such words in another mouth would have condemned the speaker irreparably. He began, in short, to wonder what kind of creature this man who was to marry his cousin might be. Could any one, except a rather singular character, afford to be so ridiculously vain?

'I don't think I should get on in that society,' he replied. 'I don't think I should know what to say to Lady Rose if I met her.'

'I don't find any difficulty,' Rodney chuckled. 'You talk to them about their children, if they have any, or their accomplishments-painting, gardening, poetry-they're so delightfully sympathetic. Seriously, you know I think a woman's opinion of one's poetry is always worth having. Don't ask them for their reasons. Just ask them for their feelings. Katharine, for example-'

'Katharine,' said Henry, with an emphasis upon the name, almost as if he resented Rodney's use of it, 'Katharine is very unlike most women.

'Quite,' Rodney agreed. 'She is-' He seemed about to describe her, and he hesitated for a long time. 'She's looking very well,' he stated, or rather almost inquired, in a different tone from that in which he had been speaking. Henry bent his head.

'But, as a family, you're given to moods, eh?'

'Not Katharine,' said Henry, with decision.

'Not Katharine,' Rodney repeated, as if he weighed the meaning of the words. 'No, perhaps you're right. But her engagement has changed her. Naturally,' he added, 'one would expect that to be so.' He waited for Henry to confirm this statement, but Henry remained silent.

'Katharine has had a difficult life, in some ways,' he continued. 'I expect that marriage will be good for her. She has great powers.'

'Great,' said Henry, with decision.

'Yes-but now what direction d'you think they take?'

Rodney had completely dropped his pose as a man of the world and seemed to be asking Henry to help him in a difficulty.

'I don't know,' Henry hesitated cautiously.

'D'you think children-a household-that sort of thing-d'you think that'll satisfy her? Mind, I'm out all day.'

'She would certainly be very competent,' Henry stated.

'Oh, she's wonderfully competent,' said Rodney. 'But-I get absorbed in my poetry. Well, Katharine hasn't got that. She admires my poetry, you know, but that wouldn't be enough for her?'

'No,' said Henry. He paused. 'I think you're right,' he added, as if he were summing up his thoughts. 'Katharine hasn't found herself yet. Life isn't altogether real to her yet-I sometimes think-'

'Yes?' Rodney inquired, as if he were eager for Henry to continue. 'That is what I-' he was going on, as Henry remained silent, but the sentence was not finished, for the door opened, and they were interrupted by Henry's younger brother Gilbert, much to Henry's relief, for he had already said more than he liked.

CHAPTER XVII.

WHEN THE SUN SHONE, as it did with unusual brightness that Christmas week, it revealed much that was faded and not altogether well-kept-up in Stogdon House and its grounds. In truth, Sir Francis had retired from service under the Government of India with a pension that was not adequate, in his opinion, to his services, as it certainly was not adequate to his ambitions. His career had not come up to his expectations, and although he was a very fine, white-whiskered, mahogany-coloured old man to look at, and had laid down a very choice cellar of good reading and good stories, you could not long remain ignorant of the fact that some thunder-storm had soured them; he had a grievance. This grievance dated back to the middle years of the last century, when, owing to some official intrigue, his merits had been pa.s.sed over in a disgraceful manner in favour of another, his junior.

The rights and wrongs of the story, presuming that they had some existence in fact, were no longer clearly known to his wife and children; but this disappointment had played a very large part in their lives, and had poisoned the life of Sir Francis much as a disappointment in love is said to poison the whole life of a woman. Long brooding on his failure, continual arrangement and rearrangement of his deserts and rebuffs, had made Sir Francis much of an egoist, and in his retirement his temper became increasingly difficult and exacting.

His wife now offered so little resistance to his moods that she was practically useless to him. He made his daughter Euphemia into his chief confidante, and the prime of her life was being rapidly consumed by her father. To her he dictated the memoirs which were to avenge his memory, and she had to a.s.sure him constantly that his treatment had been a disgrace. Already, at the age of thirty-five, her cheeks were whitening as her mother's had whitened, but for her there would be no memories of Indian suns and Indian rivers, and clamour of children in a nursery; she would have very little of substance to think about when she sat, as Lady Otway now sat, knitting white wool, with her eyes fixed almost perpetually upon the same embroidered bird upon the same firescreen. But then Lady Otway was one of the people for whom the great make-believe game of English social life has been invented; she spent most of her time in pretending to herself and her neighbours that she was a dignified, important, much-occupied person, of considerable social standing and sufficient wealth. In view of the actual state of things this game needed a great deal of skill; and, perhaps, at the age she had reached-she was over sixty-she played far more to deceive herself than to deceive any one else. Moreover, the armour was wearing thin; she forgot to keep up appearances more and more.

The worn patches in the carpets, and the pallor of the drawing-room, where no chair or cover had been renewed for some years, were due not only to the miserable pension, but to the wear and tear of twelve children, eight of whom were sons. As often happens in these large families, a distinct dividing-line could be traced, about half-way in the succession, where the money for educational purposes had run short, and the six younger children had grown up far more economically than the elder. If the boys were clever, they won scholarships, and went to school; if they were not clever, they took what the family connexion had to offer them. The girls accepted situations occasionally, but there were always one or two at home, nursing sick animals, tending silkworms, or playing the flute in their bedrooms. The distinction between the elder children and the younger corresponded almost to the distinction between a higher cla.s.s and a lower one, for with only a haphazard education and insufficient allowances, the younger children had picked up accomplishments, friends, and points of view which were not to be found within the walls of a public school or of a Government office. Between the two divisions there was considerable hostility, the elder trying to patronize the younger, the younger refusing to respect the elder; but one feeling united them and instantly closed any risk of a breach-their common belief in the superiority of their own family to all others. Henry was the eldest of the younger, group, and their leader; he bought strange books and joined odd societies; he went without a tie for a whole year, and had six shirts made of black flannel. He had long refused to take a seat either in a shipping office or in a tea-merchant's warehouse; and persisted, in spite of the disapproval of uncles and aunts, in practising both violin and piano, with the result that he could not perform professionally upon either. Indeed, for thirty-two years of life he had nothing more substantial to show than a ma.n.u.script book containing the score of half an opera. In this protest of his, Katharine had always given him her support, and as she was generally held to be an extremely sensible person, who dressed too well to be eccentric, he had found her support of some use. Indeed, when she came down at Christmas she usually spent a great part of her time in private conferences with Henry and with Ca.s.sandra, the youngest girl, to whom the silkworms belonged. With the younger section she had a great reputation for common sense, and for something that they despised but inwardly respected and called knowledge of the world-that is to say, of the way in which respectable elderly people, going to their clubs and dining out with ministers, think and behave. She had more than once played the part of amba.s.sador between Lady Otway and her children. That poor lady, for instance, consulted her for advice when, one day, she opened Ca.s.sandra's bedroom door on a mission of discovery, and found the ceiling hung with mulberry-leaves, the windows blocked with cages, and the tables stacked with home-made machines for the manufacture of silk dresses.

'I wish you could help her to take an interest in something that other people are interested in, Katharine,' she observed, rather plaintively, detailing her grievances. 'It's all Henry's doing, you know, giving up her parties and taking to these nasty insects. It doesn't follow that if a man can do a thing a woman may too.'

The morning was sufficiently bright to make the chairs and sofas in Lady Otway's private sitting-room appear more than usually shabby, and the gallant gentlemen, her brothers and cousins, who had defended the Empire and left their bones on many frontiers, looked at the world through a film of yellow which the morning light seemed to have drawn across their photographs. Lady Otway sighed, it may be at the faded relics, and turned, with resignation, to her b.a.l.l.s of wool, which, curiously and characteristically, were not an ivory-white, but rather a tarnished yellow-white. She had called her niece in for a little chat. She had always trusted her, and now more than ever, since her engagement to Rodney, which seemed to Lady Otway extremely suitable, and just what one would wish for one's own daughter. Katharine unwittingly increased her reputation for wisdom by asking to be given knitting-needles too.

'It's so very pleasant,' said Lady Otway, 'to knit while one's talking. And now, my dear Katharine, tell me about your plans.'

The emotions of the night before, which she had suppressed in such a way as to keep her awake till dawn, had left Katharine a little jaded, and thus more matter-of-fact than usual. She was quite ready to discuss her plans-houses and rents, servants and economy-without feeling that they concerned her very much. As she spoke, knitting methodically meanwhile, Lady Otway noted, with approval, the upright, responsible bearing of her niece, to whom the prospect of marriage had brought some gravity most becoming in a bride, and yet, in these days, most rare. Yes, Katharine's engagement had changed her a little.

'What a perfect daughter, or daughter-in-law!' she thought to herself, and could not help contrasting her with Ca.s.sandra, surrounded by innumerable silkworms in her bedroom.

'Yes,' she continued, glancing at Katharine, with the round, greenish eyes which were as inexpressive as moist marbles, 'Katharine is like the girls of my youth. We took the serious things of life seriously.' But just as she was deriving satisfaction from this thought, and was producing some of the h.o.a.rded wisdom which none of her own daughters, alas! seemed now to need, the door opened, and Mrs Hilbery came in, or rather, did not come in, but stood in the doorway and smiled, having evidently mistaken the room.

'I never shall shall know my way about this house!' she exclaimed. 'I'm on my way to the library, and I don't want to interrupt. You and Katharine were having a little chat?' know my way about this house!' she exclaimed. 'I'm on my way to the library, and I don't want to interrupt. You and Katharine were having a little chat?'

The presence of her sister-in-law made Lady Otway slightly uneasy. How could she go on with what she was saying in Maggie's presence? for she was saying something that she had never said, all these years, to Maggie herself.

'I was telling Katharine a few little commonplaces about marriage,' she said, with a little laugh. 'Are none of my children looking after you, Maggie?'

'Marriage,' said Mrs Hilbery, coming into the room, and nodding her head once or twice, 'I always say marriage is a school. And you don't get the prizes unless you go to school. Charlotte has won all the prizes,' she added, giving her sister-in-law a little pat, which made Lady Otway more uncomfortable still. She half laughed, muttered something, and ended on a sigh.

'Aunt Charlotte was saying that it's no good being married unless you submit to your husband,' said Katharine, framing her aunt's words into a more definite shape than they had really worn; and when she spoke thus she did not appear at all old-fashioned. Lady Otway looked at her and paused for a moment.

'Well, I really don't advise a woman who wants to have things her own way to get married,' she said, beginning a fresh row rather elaborately.

Mrs Hilbery knew something of the circ.u.mstances which, as she thought, had inspired this remark. In a moment her face was clouded with sympathy which she did not quite know how to express.

'What a shame it was!' she exclaimed, forgetting that her train of thought might not be obvious to her listeners. 'But, Charlotte, it would have been much worse if Frank had disgraced himself in any way. And it isn't what our husbands get, get, but what they but what they are. are. I used to dream of white horses and palanquins, I used to dream of white horses and palanquins,ca too; but still, I like the ink-pots best. And who knows?' she concluded, looking at Katharine, 'your father may be made a baronet to-morrow' too; but still, I like the ink-pots best. And who knows?' she concluded, looking at Katharine, 'your father may be made a baronet to-morrow'

Lady Otway, who was Mr Hilbery's sister, knew quite well that, in private, the Hilberys called Sir Francis 'that old Turk', and though she did not follow the drift of Mrs Hilbery's remarks, she knew what prompted them.

'But if you can give way to your husband,' she said, speaking to Katharine, as if there were a separate understanding between them, 'a happy marriage is the happiest thing in the world.'

'Yes,' said Katharine, 'but-' She did not mean to finish her sentence, she merely wished to induce her mother and her aunt to go on talking about marriage, for she was in the mood to feel that other people could help her if they would. She went on knitting, but her fingers worked with a decision that was oddly unlike the smooth and contemplative sweep of Lady Otway's plump hand. Now and then she looked swiftly at her mother, then at her aunt. Mrs Hilbery held a book in her hand, and was on her way, as Katharine guessed, to the library, where another paragraph was to be added to that varied a.s.sortment of paragraphs, the Life of Richard Alardyce. Normally, Katharine would have hurried her mother downstairs, and seen that no excuse for distraction came her way. Her att.i.tude towards the poet's life, however, had changed with other changes; and she was content to forget all about her scheme of hours. Mrs Hilbery was secretly delighted. Her relief at finding herself excused manifested itself in a series of sidelong glances of sly humour in her daughter's direction, and the indulgence put her in the best of spirits. Was she to be allowed merely to sit and talk? It was so much pleasanter to sit in a nice room filled with all sorts of interesting odds and ends which she hadn't looked at for a year, at least, than to seek out one date which contradicted another in a dictionary.

'We've all had perfect husbands,' she concluded, generously forgiving Sir Francis all his faults in a lump. 'Not that I think a bad temper is really a fault in a man. I don't mean a bad temper,' she corrected herself, with a glance obviously in the direction of Sir Francis. 'I should say a quick, impatient temper. Most, in fact all, all, great men have had bad tempers-except your grandfather, Katharine,' and here she sighed, and suggested that, perhaps, she ought to go down to the library. great men have had bad tempers-except your grandfather, Katharine,' and here she sighed, and suggested that, perhaps, she ought to go down to the library.

'But in the ordinary marriage, is it necessary to give way to one's husband?' said Katharine, taking no notice of her mother's suggestion, blind even to the depression which had now taken possession of her at the thought of her own inevitable death.

'I should say yes, certainly,' said Lady Otway, with a decision must unusual for her.

'Then one ought to make up one's mind to that before one is married,' Katharine mused, seeming to address herself.

Mrs Hilbery was not much interested in these remarks, which seemed to have a melancholy tendency, and to revive her spirits she had recourse to an infallible remedy-she looked out of the window.

'Do look at that lovely little blue bird!' she exclaimed, and her eye looked with extreme pleasure at the soft sky, at the trees, at the green fields visible behind those trees, and at the leafless branches which surrounded the body of the small blue t.i.t. Her sympathy with nature was exquisite.

'Most women know by instinct whether they can give it or not,' Lady Otway slipped in quickly, in rather a low voice, as if she wanted to get this said while her sister-in-law's attention was diverted. 'And if not-well then, my advice would be-don't marry.'

'Oh, but marriage is the happiest life for a woman,' said Mrs Hilbery, catching the word marriage, as she brought her eyes back to the room again. Then she turned her mind to what she had said.

'It's the most interesting interesting life,' she corrected herself. She looked at her daughter with a look of vague alarm. It was the kind of maternal scrutiny which suggests that, in looking at her daughter a mother is really looking at herself. She was not altogether satisfied; but she purposely made no attempt to break down the reserve which, as a matter of fact, was a quality she particularly admired and depended upon in her daughter. But when her mother said that marriage was the most interesting life, Katharine felt, as she was apt to do suddenly, for no definite reason, that they understood each other, in spite of differing in every possible way. Yet the wisdom of the old seems to apply more to feelings which we have in common with the rest of the human race than to our feelings as individuals, and Katharine knew that only some one of her own age could follow her meaning. Both these elderly women seemed to her to have been content with so little happiness, and at the moment she had not sufficient force to feel certain that their version of marriage was the wrong one. In London, certainly, this temperate att.i.tude towards her own marriage had seemed to her just. Why had she now changed? Why did it now depress her? It never occurred to her that her own conduct would be anything of a puzzle to her mother, or that elder people are as much affected by the young as the young are by them. And yet it was true that love-pa.s.sion-whatever one chose to call it, had played far less part in Mrs Hilbery's life than might have seemed likely, judging from her enthusiastic and imaginative temperament. She had always been more interested by other things. Lady Otway, strange though it seemed, guessed more accurately at Katharine's state of mind than her mother did. life,' she corrected herself. She looked at her daughter with a look of vague alarm. It was the kind of maternal scrutiny which suggests that, in looking at her daughter a mother is really looking at herself. She was not altogether satisfied; but she purposely made no attempt to break down the reserve which, as a matter of fact, was a quality she particularly admired and depended upon in her daughter. But when her mother said that marriage was the most interesting life, Katharine felt, as she was apt to do suddenly, for no definite reason, that they understood each other, in spite of differing in every possible way. Yet the wisdom of the old seems to apply more to feelings which we have in common with the rest of the human race than to our feelings as individuals, and Katharine knew that only some one of her own age could follow her meaning. Both these elderly women seemed to her to have been content with so little happiness, and at the moment she had not sufficient force to feel certain that their version of marriage was the wrong one. In London, certainly, this temperate att.i.tude towards her own marriage had seemed to her just. Why had she now changed? Why did it now depress her? It never occurred to her that her own conduct would be anything of a puzzle to her mother, or that elder people are as much affected by the young as the young are by them. And yet it was true that love-pa.s.sion-whatever one chose to call it, had played far less part in Mrs Hilbery's life than might have seemed likely, judging from her enthusiastic and imaginative temperament. She had always been more interested by other things. Lady Otway, strange though it seemed, guessed more accurately at Katharine's state of mind than her mother did.

'Why don't we all live in the country?' exclaimed Mrs Hilbery, once more looking out of the window. 'I'm sure one would think such beautiful things if one lived in the country. No horrid slum houses to depress one, no trams or motor-cars; and the people all looking so plump and cheerful. Isn't there some little cottage near you, Charlotte, which would do for us, with a spare room, perhaps, in case we asked a friend down? And we should save so much money that we should be able to travel-'

'Yes. You would find it very nice for a week or two, no doubt,' said Lady Otway. 'But what hour would you like the carriage this morning?' she continued, touching the bell.

'Katharine shall decide,' said Mrs Hilbery, feeling herself unable to prefer one hour to another. And I was just going to tell you, Katharine, how, when I woke this morning, everything seemed so clear in my head that if I'd had a pencil I believe I could have written quite a long chapter. When we're out on our drive I shall find us a house. A few trees round it, and a little garden, a pond with a Chinese duck, a study for your father, a study for me, and a sitting-room for Katharine, because then she'll be a married lady.'

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Night and Day Part 11 summary

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