<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>COMIC OPERA</h3>
<p>Early one evening a few weeks later, Leonora, half attired for
the gala night of the operatic performance, was again delicately
fingering her hair in that large bedroom whose mirrors daily
reflected the leisured process of her toilette. Her black skirt
trimmed with yellow made a sudden sharp contrast with the pale
tints of her corset and her long bare arms. The bodice lay like a
trifling fragment on the blue-green eiderdown of her bed, a pair of
satin shoes glistened in front of the fire, and two chairs bore the
discarded finery of the day. The dressing-table was littered with
silver and ivory. A faint and charming odour of violets mingled
mysteriously with the warmth of the fire as Leonora moved away from
the pier-glass between the two curtained windows where the light
was centred, and with accustomed hands picked up the bodice
apparently so frail that a touch might have ruined it.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page144' id="Page144"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">144</span>The door was brusquely opened, and some one
entered.</p>
<p>'Not dressed, Rose?' said Leonora, a little startled. 'We ought
to be going in ten minutes.'</p>
<p>'Oh, mother! I mustn't go. I mustn't really!'</p>
<p>The tall slightly-stooping girl, with her flat figure, her plain
shabby serge frock, her tired white face, and the sinister glance
of the idealist in her great, fretful eyes, seemed to stand there
and accuse the whole of Leonora's existence. Utterly absorbed in
the imminent examination, her brain a welter of sterile facts, Rose
found all the seriousness of life in dates, irregular participles,
algebraic symbols, chemical formulas, the altitudes of mountains,
and the areas of inland seas. To the cruelty of the too earnest
enthusiast she added the cruelty of youth, and it was with a
merciless justice that she judged everyone with whom she came into
opposition.</p>
<p>'But, my dear, you'll be ill if you keep on like this. And you
know what your father said.'</p>
<p>Rose smiled, bitterly superior, at the misguided creature whose
horizons were bounded by domesticity on one side and by dress on
the other.</p>
<p>'I shall not be ill, mother,' she said firmly, sniffing at the
scent in the room. 'I can't help it. I must work at my chemistry
again to-night. <SPAN name='Page145' id="Page145"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">145</span>Father knows perfectly well that chemistry is
my weak point. I must work. I just came in to tell you.'</p>
<p>She departed slowly, as it were daring her mother to protest
further.</p>
<p>Leonora sighed, overpowered by a feeling of impotence. What
could she do, what could any person do, when challenged by an
individuality at once so harsh and so impassioned? She finished her
toilette with minute care, but she had lost her pleasure in it. The
sense of the contrariety of things deepened in her. She looked
round the circle of her environment and saw hope and gladness
nowhere. John's affairs were perhaps running more smoothly, but who
could tell? The shameful fact that the house was mortgaged remained
always with her. And she was intimately conscious of a soilure, a
moral stain, as the result of her recent contacts with the man of
business in her husband. Why had she not been able to keep
femininely aloof from those puzzling and repellent matters,
ignorant of them, innocent of them? And Ethel, too! Twelve days of
the office had culminated for Ethel in a slight illness, which
Doctor Hawley described as lack of tone. Her father had said airily
that she must resume her clerkship in due season, but the entire
household well knew that she would not do so, and that the <SPAN name=
'Page146' id="Page146"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">146</span>experiment was one of the failures which
invariably followed John's interference in domestic concerns. As
for Milly's housekeeping, it was an admitted absurdity. Millicent
had lived of late solely for the opera, and John resented any
preoccupation which detached the girls' interest from their home.
When Ethel recovered in the nick of time to attend the final
rehearsals, he grew sarcastic, and irrelevantly made cutting
remarks about the letter from Paris which Ethel had never
translated and which she thought he had forgotten. Finally he said
he probably could not go to the opera at all, and that at best he
might look in at it for half an hour. He was careful to disclaim
all interest in the performance.</p>
<p>Carpenter had driven the two girls to the Town Hall at seven
o'clock, and at a quarter to eight he returned to fetch his
mistress. Enveloped in her fur cloak, Leonora climbed silently into
the cart.</p>
<p>'I did hear,' said Carpenter, respectfully gossiping, 'as Mr.
Twemlow was gone back to America; but I seed him yesterday as I was
coming back from taking the mester to that there manufacturers'
meeting at Knype.... Wonderful like his mother he is, mum.'</p>
<p>'Oh, indeed!' said Leonora.</p>
<p>Her first impatient querulous thought was <SPAN name='Page147' id="Page147"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">147</span>that she would have
preferred Mr. Twemlow to be in America.</p>
<p>The illuminated windows of the Town Hall, and the knot of
excited people at the principal portico, gave her a sort of
preliminary intimation that the eternal quest for romance was still
active on earth, though she might have abandoned it. In the
corridor she met Uncle Meshach, wearing an antique frock-coat. His
eye caught hers with quiet satisfaction. There was no sign in his
wrinkled face of their last interview.</p>
<p>'Your aunt's not very well,' he answered her inquiry. 'She
wasn't equal to coming, she said. I bid her go to bed. So I'm all
alone.'</p>
<p>'Come and sit by me,' Leonora suggested. 'I have two spare
tickets.'</p>
<p>'Nay, I think not,' he faintly protested.</p>
<p>'Yes, do,' she said, 'you must.'</p>
<p>As his trembling thin hands stole away her cloak, disclosing the
perfection and dark magnificence of her toilette, and as she
perceived in his features the admiration of a connoisseur, and in
the eyes of other women envy and astonishment, she began to forget
her despondencies. She lived again. She believed again in the
possibility of joy. And perhaps it was not strange that her thought
travelled at once to Ethel—Ethel whom she had not questioned
further about her lover, <SPAN name='Page148' id="Page148"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">148</span>Ethel whom till then
she had figured as the wretched victim of love, but whom now she
saw wistfully as love's elect.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>The front seats of the auditorium were filled with all that was
dashing, and much that was solidly serious, in Bursley. Hoarded
wealth, whose religion was spotless kitchens and cash down, sat
side by side with flightiness and the habit of living by credit on
rather more than one's income. The members of the Society had
exerted themselves in advance to impress upon the public mind that
the entertainment would be nothing if not fashionable and
brilliant; and they had succeeded. There was not a single young
man, and scarcely an old one, but wore evening-dress, and the
frocks of the women made a garden of radiant blossoms. Supreme
among the eminent dandies who acted as stewards in that part of the
house was Harry Burgess, straight out of Conduit Street, W., with a
mien plainly indicating that every reserved seat had been sold two
days before. From the second seats the sterling middle classes,
half envy and half disdain, examined the glittering ostentation in
front of them; they had no illusions concerning it; their knowledge
of financial realities was exact. Up in the gloom of the balcony
the crowded faces of <SPAN name='Page149' id="Page149"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">149</span>the unimportant and
the obscure rose tier above tier to the organ-loft. Here was
Florence Gardner, come incognito to deride; here was Fred Ryley,
thief of an evening's time; and here were sundry dressmakers who
experienced the thrill of the creative artist as they gazed at
their confections below.</p>
<p>The entire audience was nervous, critical, and excited: partly
because nearly every unit of it boasted a relative or an intimate
friend in the Society, and partly because, as an entity
representing the town, it had the trepidations natural to a mother
who is about to hear her child say a piece at a party. It hoped,
but it feared. If any outsider had remarked that the youthful
Bursley Operatic Society could not expect even to approach the
achievements of its remarkable elder sister at Hanbridge, the
audience would have chafed under that invidious suggestion.
Nevertheless it could not believe that its native talent would be
really worth hearing. And yet rumours of a surprising excellence
were afloat. The excitement was intensified by the tuning of
instruments in the orchestra, by certain preliminary experiments of
a too anxious gasman, and most of all by a delay in beginning.</p>
<p>At length the Mayor entered, alone; the interesting absence of
the Mayoress had some <SPAN name='Page150' id="Page150"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">150</span>connection with a
silver cradle that day ordered from Birmingham as a civic gift.</p>
<p>'Well, Burgess,' the Mayor whispered benevolently, 'what sort of
a show are we to have?'</p>
<p>'You will see, Mr. Mayor,' said Harry, whose confident smile
expressed the spirit of the Society.</p>
<p>Then the conductor—the man to whom twenty instrumentalists
and thirty singers looked for guidance, help, encouragement, and
the nullifying of mistakes otherwise disastrous; the man on whose
nerve and animating enthusiasm depended the reputation of the
Society and of Bursley—tapped his baton and stilled the
chatter of the audience with a glance. The footlights went up, the
lights of the chandelier went down, and almost before any one was
aware of the fact the overture had commenced. There could be no
withdrawal now; the die was cast; the boats were burnt. In the
artistic history of Bursley a decisive moment had arrived.</p>
<p>In a very few seconds people began to realise, slowly, timidly,
but surely, that after all they were listening to a real orchestra.
The mere volume of sound startled them; the verve and decision of
the players filled them with confidence; the bright grace of the
well-known airs laid them <SPAN name='Page151' id="Page151"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">151</span>under a spell. They
looked diffidently at each other, as if to say: 'This is not so
bad, you know.' And when the finale was reached, with its
prodigious succession of crescendos, and its irresistible melody
somehow swimming strongly through a wild sea of tone, the audience
forgot its pose of critical aloofness and became unaffectedly
human. The last three bars of the overture were smothered in
applause.</p>
<p>The conductor, as pale as though he had seen a ghost, turned and
bowed stiffly. 'Put that in your pipe and smoke it,' his unrelaxing
features said to the audience; and also: 'If you have ever heard
the thing better played in the Five Towns, be good enough to inform
me where!'</p>
<p>There was a hesitation, the brief murmur of a hidden voice, and
the curtains of the fit-up stage swung apart and disclosed the
roseate environs of Castle Bunthorne, ornamented by those famous
maidens who were dying for love of its æsthetic owner. The
audience made no attempt to grasp the situation of the characters
until it had satisfactorily settled the private identity of each.
That done, it applied itself to the sympathetic comprehension of
the feelings of a dozen young women who appeared to spend their
whole existence in statuesque poses and <SPAN name='Page152' id="Page152"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">152</span>plaintive but
nonsensical lyricism. It failed, honestly; and even when the action
descended from song to banal dialogue, it was not reassured.
'Silly' was the unspoken epithet on a hundred tongues, despite the
delicate persuasion of the music, the virginal charm of the
maidens, and the illuminated richness of costumes and scene. The
audience understood as little of the operatic convention as of the
æstheticism caricatured in the roseate environs of Castle
Bunthorne. A number of people present had never been in a theatre,
either for lack of opportunity or from a moral objection to
theatres. Many others, who seldom missed a melodrama at the
Hanbridge Theatre Royal, avoided operas by virtue of the infallible
instinct which caused them to recoil from anything exotic enough to
disturb the calm of their lifelong mental lethargy. As for the
minority which was accustomed to opera, including the still smaller
minority which had seen <i>Patience</i> itself, it assumed the
right that evening critically to examine the convention anew, to
reconsider it unintimidated by the crushing prestige of the Savoy
or of D'Oyly Carte's No. 1 Touring Company. And for the most part
it found in the convention small basis of common sense.</p>
<p>Then Patience appeared on the eminence. <SPAN name='Page153' id="Page153"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">153</span>She was a dairymaid,
and she could not understand the philosophy prevalent in the
roseate environs of Castle Bunthorne. The audience hailed her with
joy and relief. The dairymaid and her costume were pretty in a
familiar way which it could appreciate. She was extremely young,
adorably impudent, airy, tripping, and supple as a circus-rider.
She had marvellous confidence. 'We are friends, are we not, you and
I?' her gestures seemed to say to the audience. And with the utmost
complacency she gazed at herself in the eyes of the audience as in
a mirror. Her opening song renewed the triumph of the overture. It
was recognisably a ballad, and depended on nothing external for its
effectiveness. It gave the bewildered listeners something to take
hold of, and in return for this gift they acclaimed and continued
to acclaim. Milly glanced coolly at the conductor, who winked back
his permission, and the next moment the Bursley Operatic Society
tasted the delight of its first encore. The pert fascinations of
the heroine, the bravery of the Colonel and his guards, the
clowning of Bunthorne, combined with the continuous seduction of
the music and the scene, very quickly induced the audience to
accept without reserve this amazing intrigue of logical absurdities
which was being unrolled before it. The opera <SPAN name='Page154' id="Page154"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">154</span>ceased to appear
preposterous; the convention had won, and the audience had lost.
Small slips in delivery were unnoticed, big ones condoned, and
nervousness encouraged to depart. The performance became a
homogeneous whole, in which the excellence of the best far more
than atoned for the clumsy mediocrity of the worst. When the
curtains fell amid storms of applause and cut off the stage, the
audience perceived suddenly, like a revelation, that the young men
and women whom it knew so well in private life had been creating
something—an illusion, an ecstasy, a mood—which
transcended the sum total of their personalities. It was this
miracle, but dimly apprehended perhaps, which left the audience
impressed, and eager for the next act.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>'That madam will go her own road,' said Uncle Meshach under
cover of the clapping.</p>
<p>Leonora's smile was embarrassed. 'What do you mean?' she asked
him.</p>
<p>He bent his head towards her, looking into her face with a sort
of generous cynicism.</p>
<p>'I mean she'll go her own road,' he repeated.</p>
<p>And then, observing that most of the men were leaving their
seats, he told Leonora that he should step across to the Tiger if
she would let him. As he passed out, leaning forward on a <SPAN name=
'Page155' id="Page155"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">155</span>stick
lightly clutched in the left hand, several people demanded his
opinion about the spectacle. 'Nay, nay——' he replied
again and again, waving one after another out of his course.</p>
<p>In the bar-parlour of the Tiger, the young blades, the genuine
fast men, the deliberate middle-aged persons who took one glass
only, and the regular nightly customers, mingled together in a
dense and noisy crowd under a canopy of smoke. The barmaid and her
assistant enjoyed their brief minutes of feverish contact with the
great world. Behind the counter, walled in by a rampart of
dress-shirts, they conjured with bottles, glasses, and taps, heard
and answered ten men at once, reckoned change by a magic beyond
arithmetic, peered between shoulders to catch the orders of their
particular friends, and at the same time acquired detailed
information as to the progress of the opera. Late comers who,
forcing a way into the room, saw the multitude of men drinking and
smoking, and the unapproachable white faces of these two girls
distantly flowering in the haze and the odour, had that saturnalian
sensation of seeing life which is peculiar to saloons during the
entr'actes of theatrical entertainments. The success of the opera,
and of that chit Millicent Stanway, formed the staple of the eager
conversation, though here and there a sober <SPAN name='Page156' id="Page156"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">156</span>couple would be
discussing the tramcars or the quinquennial assessment exactly as
if Gilbert and Sullivan had never been born. It appeared that Milly
had a future, that she was the best Patience yet seen in the
district amateur <i>or</i> professional, that any burlesque manager
would jump at her, that in five years, if she liked, she might be
getting a hundred a week, and that Dolly Chose, the idol of the
Tivoli and the Pavilion, had not half her style. It also appeared
that Milly had no brains of her own, that the leading man had
taught her all her business, that her voice was thin and a trifle
throaty, that she was too vulgar for the true Savoy tradition, and
that in five years she would have gone off to nothing. But the
optimists carried the argument. Sundry men who had seen Meshach in
the second row of the stalls expressed a keen desire to ask the old
bachelor point-blank what he thought of his nephew's daughter; but
Meshach did not happen to come into the Tiger.</p>
<p>When the crowd had thinned somewhat, Harry Burgess entered
hurriedly and called for a whisky and potass, which the barmaid,
who fancied him, served on the instant.</p>
<p>'I wanted to get a wreath,' he confided to her. 'But Pointon's
is closed.'</p>
<p>'Why, Mr. Burgess,' she said smiling, <SPAN name='Page157' id="Page157"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">157</span>'there's a lot of
flowers in the coffee-room, and with them and the leaves off that
laurel down the yard, and a bit of wire, I could make you one in no
time.'</p>
<p>'Can you?' He seemed doubtful.</p>
<p>'Can I!' she exclaimed. 'I should think I could, and a beauty!
As soon as these gentleman are gone——'</p>
<p>'It's awfully kind of you,' said Harry, brightening. 'Can you
send it round to me at the artists' entrance in half an hour?'</p>
<p>She nodded, beaming at the prospect. The manufacture of that
wreath would be a source of colloquial gratification to her for
days.</p>
<p>Harry politely responded to such remarks as 'Devilish good show,
Burgess,' drank in one gulp another whisky and potass, and hastened
away. The remainder of the company soon followed; the barmaid
disappeared from the bar, and her assistant was left languidly to
watch a solitary pair of topers who would certainly not leave till
the clock showed eleven.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>The auditorium during the entr'acte was more ceremonious, but
not less noisy, than the bar-parlour of the Tiger. The pleasant
warmth, the sudden increase of light after the fall of the curtain,
the certainty of a success, and the <SPAN name='Page158' id="Page158"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">158</span>consciousness of
sharing in the brilliance of that success—all these things
raised the spirits, and produced the loquacity of an intoxication.
The individuality of each person was set free from its customary
prison and joyously displayed its best side to the company. The
universal chatter amounted to a din.</p>
<p>But Leonora, cut off by empty seats on either hand, sat silent.
She was glad to be able to do so. She would have liked to be at
home in solitude, to think. For she was, if not unhappy, at any
rate disturbed and dubious. She felt embarrassed amid this glare
and this bright murmur of conversation, as though she were being
watched, discussed, and criticised. She was the mother of the star,
responsible for the star, guilty of all the star's indiscretions.
And it was a timorous, reluctant pride which she took in her
daughter's success. The truth was that Milly had astonished and
frightened her. When Ethel and Milly were allowed to join the
Society, the possible results of the permission had not been
foreseen. Both Leonora and John had thought of the girls as modest
members of the chorus in an affair unmistakably and confessedly
amateur. Ethel had kept within the anticipation. But here was Milly
an actress, exploiting herself with unconstrained gestures and arch
glances and twirlings of her <SPAN name='Page159' id="Page159"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">159</span>short skirt, to a
crowded and miscellaneous audience. Leonora did not like it; her
susceptibilities were outraged. She blushed at this amazing public
contradiction of Milly's bringing-up. It seemed to her as if she
had never known the real Milly, and knew her now for the first
time. What would the other mothers think? What would all Hillport
think secretly, and say openly behind the backs of the Stanways?
The girl was as innocent as a fawn, she had the free grace of
extreme youth; no one could utter a word against her. But she was
rouged, her lips were painted, several times she had shown her
knees, and she seemed incapable of shyness. She was at home on the
stage, she faced a thousand people with a pert, a brazen attitude,
and said, 'Look at me; enjoy me, as I enjoy your fervent glances; I
am here to tickle your fancy.' Patience! She was no more Patience
than she was Sister Dora or a heroine of Charlotte Yonge's. She was
the eternal unashamed doll, who twists 'men' round her little
finger, and smiles on them, always with an instinct for
finance.</p>
<p>'Quite a score for Milly!' said a polite voice in Leonora's ear.
It was Mrs. Burgess, who sat in the next row.</p>
<p>'Do you think so?' Leonora replied, perceptibly reddening.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page160' id="Page160"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">160</span>'Oh, yes!' said Mrs. Burgess with smooth
insistence. 'And dear Ethel is very sweet in the chorus, too.'</p>
<p>Leonora tried to fix her thoughts on the grateful figure of
mild, nervous, passionate Ethel, the child of her deepest
affection.</p>
<p>She turned sharply. Arthur Twemlow was standing in the shadow of
the side-aisle near the door. She knew he was there before her eyes
saw him. He was evidently rather at a loss, unnoticed, and
irresolute. He caught sight of her and bowed. She said to herself
that she wished to be alone in her embarrassment, that she could
not bear to talk to any one; nevertheless, she raised her finger,
and beckoned to him, while striving hard to refrain from doing so.
He approached at once. 'He is not in America,' she reflected in
sudden agitation, 'He is here, actually here. In an instant we
shall speak.'</p>
<p>'I quite understood you had gone back to New York,' she said,
looking at him, as he stood in front of her, with the upward
feminine appealing gesture that men love.</p>
<p>'What!' he exclaimed. 'Without saying good-bye? No! And how are
you all? It seems just about a year since I saw you last.'</p>
<p>'All well, thanks,' she said, smiling. 'Won't you sit here? It's
John's seat, but he isn't coming.'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page161' id="Page161"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">161</span>'Then you are alone?' He seemed to apologise
for the rest of his sex.</p>
<p>She told him that Uncle Meshach was with her, and would return
directly. When he asked how the opera was going, and she learnt
that, being detained at Knype, he had not seen the first act, she
was relieved. He would make the discovery concerning Millicent
gradually, and by her side; it was better so, she
thought—less disconcerting. In a slight pause of their talk
she was startled to feel her heart beating like a hammer against
her corsage. Her eyes had brightened. She conversed rapidly,
pleased to be talking, pleased at his sympathetic responsiveness,
ignoring the audience, and also forgetting the uneasy
preoccupations of her recent solitude. The men returned from the
Tiger and elsewhere, all except Uncle Meshach. The lights were
lowered. The conductor's stick curtly demanded silence and
attention. She sank back in her seat.</p>
<p>'A peremptory conductor!' remarked Twemlow in a whisper.</p>
<p>'Yes,' she laughed. And this simple exchange of thought,
effected, as it were, surreptitiously in the gloom and contrary to
the rules, gave her a distinct sensation of joy.</p>
<p>Then began, in Bursley Town Hall, a scene <SPAN name='Page162' id="Page162"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">162</span>similar to the scenes
which have rendered famous the historic stages of European
capitals. The verve and personal charm of a young
<i>débutante</i> determined to triumph, and the enthusiasm
of an audience proudly conscious that it was making a reputation,
reacted upon and intensified each other to such a degree that the
atmosphere became electric, delirious, magical. Not a soul in the
auditorium or on the stage but what lived consummately during those
minutes—some creatively, like the conductor and Millicent;
some agonised with jealousy, like Florence Gardner and a few of the
chorus; one maternally in tumultuous distress of spirit; and the
great naïve mass yielding with rapture to a sensuous
spell.</p>
<p>The outstanding defect in the libretto of <i>Patience</i> is the
decentralisation of interest in the second act. The alert ones who
remembered that in that act the heroine has only one song, and
certain passages of dialogue not remarkable for dramatic force, had
predicted that Millicent would inevitably lose ground as the
evening advanced. They were, however, deceived. Her delivery of the
phrase 'I am miserable beyond description' brought the house down
by its coquettish artificiality; and the renowned ballad, 'Love is
a plaintive song,' established her unforgettably in the affections
of the audience. Her 'exit weep<SPAN name='Page163' id="Page163"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">163</span>ing' was a tremendous
stroke, though all knew that she meant them to see that these tears
were simply a delightful pretence. The opera came to a standstill
while she responded to an imperative call. She bowed, laughing, and
then, suddenly affecting to cry again, ran off, with the result
that she had to return.</p>
<p>'D——n it! She hasn't got much to learn, has she?'
the conductor murmured to the first violin, a professional from
Manchester.</p>
<p>But her greatest efforts she reserved for the difficult and
critical prose conversations which now alone remained to her, those
dialogues which seem merely to exist for the purpose of separating
the numbers allotted to all the other principals. It was as though,
during the entr'acte, surrounded by the paint-pots, the intrigues,
and the wild confusion of the dressing-room, Millicent had been
able to commune with herself, and to foresee and take arms against
the peril of an anti-climax. By sheer force, ingenuity, vivacity,
flippancy, and sauciness, she lifted her lines to the level, and
above the level, of the rest of the piece. She carried the audience
with her; she knew it; all her colleagues knew it, and if they
chafed they chafed in secret. The performance went better and
better as the end approached. The audience had long since ceased to
notice defects; only the <SPAN name='Page164' id="Page164"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">164</span>conductor, the
leader, and a few discerning members of the troupe were aware that
a catastrophe had been escaped by pure luck two minutes before the
descent of the curtains.</p>
<p>And at that descent the walls of the Town Hall, which had echoed
to political tirades, the solemn recitatives of oratorios, the
mercantile uproar of bazaars, the banal compliments of
prize-givings, the arid utterances of lecturers on science and art,
and the moans of sinners stricken with a sense of guilt at
religious revivals—those walls resounded to a gay and
frenzied ovation which is memorable in the town for its ungoverned
transports of approval. The Operatic Society as a whole was first
acclaimed, all the performers posing in rank on the stage. Then, as
the deafening applause showed no sign of diminution, the curtains
were drawn back instead of being raised again, and the principals,
beginning with the humblest, paraded in pairs in front of the
footlights. Milly and her fortunate cavalier came last. The
cavalier advanced two paces, took Milly's hand, signed to her to
cross over, and retired. The child was left solitary on the
stage—solitary, but unabashed, glowing with delight, and
smiling as pertly as ever. The leader of the orchestra stood up and
handed her a wreath, which she accepted like an oath of fealty; and
the wreath, hurriedly manu<SPAN name='Page165' id="Page165"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">165</span>factured by the
barmaid of the Tiger out of some cut flowers and the old laurel
tree in the Tiger yard, became, when Milly grasped it, a mysterious
and impressive symbol. Many persons in the audience wanted to cry
as they beheld this vision of the proud, confident, triumphant
child holding the wreath, while the fierce upward ray of the
footlights illuminated her small chin and her quivering nostrils.
She tripped off backwards, with a gesture of farewell. The applause
continued. Would she return? Not if the ferocious jealousies behind
could have paralysed her as she hesitated in the wings. But the
world was on her side that night; she responded again, she kissed
her hands to her world, and disappeared still kissing them; and the
evening was finished.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>'Well,' said Twemlow calmly, 'I guess you've got an actress in
the family.'</p>
<p>Leonora and he remained in their seats, waiting till the press
of people in the aisles should have thinned, and also, so far as
Leonora was concerned, to avoid the necessity of replying to
remarks about Milly. The atmosphere was still charged with
excitement, but Leonora observed that Arthur Twemlow did not share
it. Though he had applauded vigorously, there had been no trace of
emotional transport in his demeanour. <SPAN name='Page166' id="Page166"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">166</span>He spoke at once,
immediately the lights were turned up, giving her no chance to
collect herself.</p>
<p>'But do you think so?' she said. She remembered she had made the
same foolish reply to Mrs. Burgess. With Twemlow she wished to be
unconventional and sincere, but she could not succeed.</p>
<p>'Don't you?' He seemed to regard the situation as rather
amusing.</p>
<p>'You surely can't mean that she would <i>do</i> for the
stage?'</p>
<p>'Ask any one here whether she isn't born for it,' he
answered.</p>
<p>'This is only an amateurs' affair,' Leonora argued.</p>
<p>'And she's only an amateur. But she won't be an amateur
long.'</p>
<p>'But a girl like Milly can't be clever enough——'</p>
<p>'It depends on what you call clever. She's got the gift of
making the audience hug itself. You'll see.'</p>
<p>'See Milly on the stage?' Leonora asked uneasily. 'I hope
not.'</p>
<p>'Why, my dear lady? Isn't she built for it? Doesn't she enjoy
it? Isn't she at home there? What's the matter with the stage
anyhow?'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page167' id="Page167"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">167</span>'Her father would never hear of such a thing,'
said Leonora. Towards the close of the opera she had seen John, in
morning attire, propped against a side-wall and peering at the
stage and his daughter with a bewildered, bored, unsympathetic
air.</p>
<p>'Ah!' Twemlow ejaculated grimly.</p>
<p>A moment later, as he was putting her cloak over her shoulders,
he said in a different, kinder, more soothing tone: 'I guess I know
just how you feel.'</p>
<p>She looked at him, raising her eyebrows, and smiling with
melancholy amusement.</p>
<p>In the corridor, Stanway came hurrying up to them, obviously
excited.</p>
<p>'Oh, you're here, Nora!' he burst out. 'I've been hunting for
you everywhere. I've just been told that a messenger came for Uncle
Meshach a the interval to say that Aunt Hannah was ill. Do you know
anything about it?'</p>
<p>'No,' she said. 'Uncle only told me that aunt wasn't equal to
coming. I wondered where uncle had got to.'</p>
<p>'Well,' Stanway continued, 'you'd better go to Church Street at
once, and see after things.'</p>
<p>Leonora seemed to hesitate.</p>
<p>'As quick as you can,' he said with irritation and increasing
excitement. 'Don't waste a moment. <SPAN name='Page168' id="Page168"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">168</span>It may be serious.
I'll drive the girls home, and then I'll come and fetch you.'</p>
<p>'If Mrs. Stanway cares, I will walk down with her,' said Arthur
Twemlow.</p>
<p>'Yes, do, Twemlow, there's a good chap,' he welcomed the idea.
And with that he wafted them impulsively into the street.</p>
<p>Then Stanway stood waiting by his equipage for Ethel and Milly.
He spoke to no one, but examined the harness critically, and put
some curt question to Carpenter about the breeching. It was a
chilly night, and the glare of the lamps showed that Prince steamed
a little under his rug. Ten minutes elapsed before Ethel came.</p>
<p>'Here we are, father,' she said with pleasant satisfaction.
'Where's mother?'</p>
<p>'I should think so!' he returned. 'The horse taking cold, and me
waiting and waiting. Your mother's had to go to Aunt Hannah's.
What's become of Milly?' He was losing his temper.</p>
<p>Milly had to traverse the whole length of the corridor. The
Mayor heartily congratulated her. The middle-aged violinist from
Manchester spoke to her amiably as one public artist to another,
and the conductor, who was with him, told her, in an unusual and
indiscreet mood of candour, that she had simply made the show.
Others expressed <SPAN name='Page169' id="Page169"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">169</span>the same thought in more words. Near the
entrance stood Harry Burgess, patently expectant. He was flushed,
and looked handsomely dandiacal and rakish as he rolled a cigarette
in those quick fingers of his. He meant to explain to her that the
happy idea of the wreath was his own.</p>
<p>He accosted her unceremoniously, confidently, but she drew away,
with a magnificent touch of haughtiness.</p>
<p>'Good-night, Harry,' she said coldly, and passed on.</p>
<p>The rash and conceited boy had not divined, as he should have
done, that a prima donna is a prima donna, whether on the stage in
a brilliant costume, or traversing a dingy corridor in the plain
blue serge and simple hat of a manufacturer's daughter aged
eighteen. Offering no reply to her formal salutation, he remained
quite still for a moment, and then swaggered off to the Tiger.</p>
<p>'Look here, my girl,' said Stanway furiously to his youngest.
'Do you suppose we're going to wait for you all night? Jump
in.'</p>
<p>Milly's lips did not move, but she faced the rude blusterer with
a frigid, angry, insolent gaze. And her girlish eyes said: 'You've
got me under your thumb now, you horrid beast! But never mind! Long
after you are dead and buried and rotten, I shall be famous and
pretty <SPAN name='Page170' id="Page170"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">170</span>and rich, and if you are remembered it will
only be because you were my father. Do your worst, odious man; you
can't kill me!'</p>
<p>And all the way home the cruel, just, unmerciful thoughts of
insulted youth mingled with the generous and beautiful sensations
of her triumph.</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>'Nay, it's all over,' said Meshach when Twemlow and Leonora
entered.</p>
<p>'What!' Leonora exclaimed, glancing quickly at Arthur Twemlow as
if for support in a crisis.</p>
<p>'Doctor's gone but just this minute. Her's gotten over it.'</p>
<p>For a moment she had thought that Aunt Hannah was dead. John's
anxious excitement had communicated itself to her; she had imagined
the worst possibilities. Now the sensation of relief took her
unawares, and she was obliged to sit down suddenly.</p>
<p>In the little parlour wizened Meshach sat by the hob as he
always sat, warming one hand at the fire, and looking round
sideways at the tall visitors in their rich evening attire. Leonora
heard Twemlow say something about a heart attack, and the thick
hard veins on Aunt Hannah's wrist.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page171' id="Page171"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">171</span>'Ay!' Meshach went on, employing the old
dialect, a sign with him of unusual agitation. 'I brought Dr.
Hawley with me, he was at yon show. And when us got here Hannah was
lying on th' floor, just there, with her head on this 'ere
hearthrug. Susan, th' woman, told us as th' missis said she felt as
if she were falling down, and then down her falls. She was staring
hard at th' ceiling, with eyes fit to burst, and her face as white
as a sheet. Doctor lifts her up and puts her in a chair. Bless us!
How her did gasp! And her lips were blue. "Hannah!" I says. Her
heard but her couldna' answer. Her limbs were all of a tremble.
Then her sighed, and fetched up a long breath or two. "Where am I,
Meshach?" her says, "what's amiss?" Doctor told her for stick her
tongue out, and her could do that, and he put a candle to her eyes.
Her's in bed now. Susan's sitting with her.'</p>
<p>'I'll go up and see if I can do anything,' said Leonora,
rising.</p>
<p>'No,' Meshach stopped her. 'You'll happen excite her. Doctor
said her was to go to sleep, and he's to send in a soothing
draught. There's no danger—not now—not till next time.
Her mun take care, mun Hannah.'</p>
<p>'Then it is the heart?' Leonora asked.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page172' id="Page172"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">172</span>'Ay! It's the heart.'</p>
<p>Twemlow and Leonora sat silent, embarrassed in the little
parlour with its antimacassars, its stiff chairs, its high
mantelpiece, and the glass partition which seemed to swallow up
like a pit the rays from the hissing gas-jet over the table. The
image of the diminutive frail creature concealed upstairs obsessed
them, and Leonora felt guilty because she had been unwittingly
absorbed in the gaiety of the opera while Aunt Hannah was in such
danger.</p>
<p>'I doubt I munna' tap that again,' Meshach remarked with a short
dry plaintive laugh, pointing to the pewter platter on the
mantelpiece by means of which he was accustomed to summon his
sister when he wanted her.</p>
<p>The visitors looked at each other; Leonora's eyes were
moist.</p>
<p>'But isn't there anything I can do, uncle?' she demanded.</p>
<p>'I'll see if her's asleep. Sit thee still,' said Meshach, and he
crept out of the room, and up the creaking stair.</p>
<p>'Poor old fellow!' Twemlow murmured, glancing at his watch.</p>
<p>'What time is it?' she asked, for the sake of saying something.
'It's no use me staying.'</p>
<p>'Five to eleven. If I run off at once I can <SPAN name='Page173' id="Page173"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">173</span>catch the last
train. Good-night. Tell Mr. Myatt, will you?'</p>
<p>She took his hand with a feeling of intimacy.</p>
<p>It seemed to her that they had shared many emotions that
night.</p>
<p>'I'll let you out,' she suggested, and in the obscurity of the
narrow lobby they came into contact and shook hands again; she
could not at first find the upper latch of the door,</p>
<p>'I shall be seeing you all soon,' he said in a low voice, on the
step. She nodded and closed the door softly.</p>
<p>She thought how simple, agreeable, reliable, honest,
good-natured, and sympathetic he was.</p>
<p>'Her's sleeping like a babby,' Meshach stated, returning to the
parlour. He lighted his pipe, and through the smoke looked at
Leonora in her dark magnificent dress.</p>
<p>Then John arrived, pompous and elaborately calm; but he had
driven Prince to Hillport and back in twenty-five minutes. John
listened to the recital of events.</p>
<p>'You're sure there's no danger now?' He could disguise neither
his present relief nor his fear for the future.</p>
<p>'Thou'rt all right yet, nephew,' said Meshach with an ironic
inflection, as he gazed into the dying fire. 'Her may live another
ten year. <SPAN name='Page174' id="Page174"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">174</span>And I might flit to-morrow. Thou'rt too
anxious, my lad. Keep it down.'</p>
<p>John, deeply offended, made no reply.</p>
<p>'Why shouldn't I be anxious?' he exclaimed angrily as they drove
home. 'Whose fault is it if I am? Does he expect me not to be?'</p>
<hr class='long' />
<SPAN name='Page175' id="Page175"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">175</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_VII' id="CHAPTER_VII"></SPAN>
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