<h3><SPAN name="XXIV" id="XXIV"></SPAN>XXIV</h3>
<h3>All of Them</h3>
<p>The well-remembered hall and broad staircase swam before Alex' eyes as
she followed Barbara upstairs and heard them announced as:</p>
<p>"Mrs. McAllister—and Miss Clare!"</p>
<p>In a dream she entered the room, and was conscious of a dream-like
feeling of relief at its totally unfamiliar aspect. All the furniture
was different, and there was chintz instead of brocade, everywhere. She
would not have known it.</p>
<p>Then she saw, with growing bewilderment, that the room was full of
people.</p>
<p>"Alex?" said a soft, unknown voice.</p>
<p>Barbara hovered uneasily beside her, and Alex dimly heard her speaking
half-reassuringly and half-apologetically. But Violet Clare had taken
her hand, and was guiding her into the inner half of the room, which was
empty.</p>
<p>"Don't bother about the others for a minute—Barbara, go and look after
them, like a dear—let's make acquaintance in peace, Alex. Do you know
who I am?"</p>
<p>"Cedric's wife?"</p>
<p>"Yes, that's it." Then, as Barbara left them, Violet noiselessly stamped
her foot. "You poor dear! I don't believe she ever told you there was to
be a whole crowd of family here. That's just like poor, dear Barbara!
I'm sure she never had one atom of imagination in her life, now had she?
The idea of dragging you here the very day after you got back from such
a journey." The soft, fluent voice went on, giving her time to recover
herself, Alex hardly hearing what was said to her, but with a sensation
of adoring gratitude gradually invading her, for this warm, unhesitating
welcome and unquestioning sympathy.</p>
<p>She looked dumbly at her sister-in-law.</p>
<p>In Violet she saw the soft, generous contours and opulent prettiness of
which she had caught glimpses in the South. The numerous Marchesas who
had come to the convent parlour in Rome had had just such brown, liquid
eyes, with dark lashes throwing into relief an opaque ivory skin, just
such dazzling teeth and such ready, dimpling smiles, and had worn the
same wealth of falling laces at <i>d�collet�</i> throat and white, rounded
wrists. Violet was in white, with a single string of wonderful pearls
round her soft neck, and her brilliant brown hair was arranged in
elaborate waves, with occasional little escaping rings and tendrils.</p>
<p>Alex thought her beautiful, and wondered why Barbara had spoken in
deprecation of such sleepy, prosperous prettiness.</p>
<p>She noticed that Violet did not look at her with rather wondering
dismay, as her sister had done, and only once said:</p>
<p>"You do look tired, you poor darling! It's that hateful journey. I'm a
fearfully bad traveller myself. When we were married, Cedric wanted to
go to the south of France for our honeymoon, but I told him nothing
would induce me to risk being seasick, and he had to take me to Cornwall
instead. Cedric will be here in a minute, and we'll make him come and
talk to you quietly out here. You don't want to go in amongst all that
rabble, do you?"</p>
<p>"Who is there?" asked Alex faintly.</p>
<p>"Pam and the boys—that's my two brothers, you know, whom you needn't
bother about the very least bit in the world, and here's Archie," she
added, as the door opened again.</p>
<p>Alex would have known Archie in a moment, anywhere, he was so like their
mother. Even the first inflection of his voice, as he came towards
Violet, reminded her of Lady Isabel.</p>
<p>She had not seen him since his schooldays, and wondered if he would have
recognized her without Violet's ready explanation.</p>
<p>"Alex has come, Archie. That goose Barbara went and brought her here
without explaining that she's only just got back to England, and is
naturally tired to death. I'll leave you to talk, while I see what's
happened to Cedric."</p>
<p>"I say!" exclaimed Archie, and stood looking desperately embarrassed.
"How are you, Alex, old girl? We meet as strangers, what?"</p>
<p>"I should have known you anywhere, Archie. You're so like Barbara—so
like mother."</p>
<p>"They say Pam's exactly like what mother was. Have you seen her?"</p>
<p>"No, not yet. She—Violet—brought me in here."</p>
<p>"I say, she's a ripper, isn't she? Cedric didn't do badly for
himself—trust him. Wonder what the beggar'll be up to next? He's done
jolly well, all along the line—retrieved the family fortunes, what? It
only remains for me to wed an American, and Pamela to bring off her
South African millionaire. She's got one after her, did you know?"</p>
<p>He spoke with a certain boyish eagerness that was rather attractive, but
his rapid speech and restless manner made Alex wonder if he was nervous.</p>
<p>"Couldn't you ask Pamela to come to me here, so that I could see her
without all those people?"</p>
<p>"What people? It's only old Jack Temple, and Carol. Harmless as kittens,
what? But I'll get Pam for you in two twos. You watch."</p>
<p>He put his fingers into his mouth and emitted a peculiar low whistle on
two prolonged notes. The signal was instantly answered from the other
room, but quaveringly, as though the whistler were laughing.</p>
<p>Then in a minute she appeared, very slim and tall, in the opening
between the two rooms.</p>
<p>"I like your cheek, Archie!"</p>
<p>"I say, Pam, Alex is here."</p>
<p>"Oh, Alex!"</p>
<p>Pamela, too, looked and sounded rather embarrassed as she came forward
and laid a fresh, glowing cheek against her sister's.</p>
<p>"Barbara telephoned last night that you'd come, and seemed awfully
seedy," she said in a quick, confused way. "She ought to have made you
rest today."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, I'm all right," said Alex awkwardly. "How you've changed,
Pamela! I haven't seen you since you were at school."</p>
<p>Looking at her sister, she secretly rather wondered at what Barbara had
said of the girl's attractiveness.</p>
<p>Pamela's round face was glowing with health and colour, and she held
herself very upright, but Alex thought that her hair looked ugly,
plastered exaggeratedly low on her forehead, and she could not see the
resemblance to their mother of which Archie had spoken, except in the
fairness of colouring which Pamela shared with Barbara and with Archie
himself.</p>
<p>"You've changed, too, Alex. You look so frightfully thin, and you've
lost all your colour. Have you been ill?"</p>
<p>"No, I've not been ill. Only rather run down. I was ill before
Easter—perhaps that's it."</p>
<p>Alex was embarrassed too, a horrible feeling of failure and inadequacy
creeping over her, and seeming to hamper her in every word and movement.
Pamela's cold, rather wondering scrutiny made her feel terribly unsure
of herself. She had often known the sensation before—at school, in her
early days at the novitiate, again in Rome, and ever since her arrival
in England. It was the helpless insecurity of one utterly at variance
with her surroundings.</p>
<p>She was glad when Violet came back and said: "Here's Cedric. Go down to
lunch, children—we'll follow you."</p>
<p>Cedric's greeting to his sister was the most affectionate and the least
awkward that she had yet received. He kissed her warmly and said, "Well,
my dear I'm glad we've got you back in England again. You must come to
us, if Barbara will spare you."</p>
<p>"Oh, Cedric!"</p>
<p>She looked at him for a moment, emotionally shaken. That Cedric should
have grown into a man! She saw in a moment that he was very
good-looking, the best-looking of them all, with Sir Francis' pleasantly
serious expression and the merest shade of pomposity in his manner. Only
the blinking, short-sighted grey eyes behind his spectacles remained of
the solemn little brother she had known.</p>
<p>"Come down and have some lunch, dear. What possessed Barbara to bring
you here, if you didn't feel up to coming? We could have gone to
Hampstead. Violet says she's been most inconsiderate to you."</p>
<p>"Yes, <i>most</i>," said Violet herself placidly. "Dear Barbara is always so
unimaginative. Of course, it's fearfully trying for Alex, after being
away such ages, to have every one thrust upon her like this."</p>
<p>Alex felt a throb of gratitude.</p>
<p>"Barbara thought it had better all be got over at once," she said
timidly.</p>
<p>"That's just like her! Barbara is being completely ruined by that
parlour-maid of hers—Ada. I always think Ada is responsible for all
Barbara's worst inspirations. She rules her with a rod of iron. Shall
you hate coming down to lunch, Alex? Those riotous children will be off
directly, they're wild about the skating-rink at Olympia. Then we can
talk comfortably."</p>
<p>She put her hand caressingly through Alex' arm, as they went downstairs.
Alex felt that she could have worshipped her sister-in-law for her easy,
pitying tenderness.</p>
<p>The consciousness of it helped her all through the long meal, when the
noise of laughter and conversation bewildered her, after so many years
of convent refectories and silence, and her solitary dinners in Rome.</p>
<p>Violet had placed her between Cedric and Pamela, and the girl chattered
to her intermittently, without appearing to require any answer.</p>
<p>"Are you boys ready?" she cried, just as coffee was brought in. "We
can't wait for coffee—come on! My instructor will be engaged."</p>
<p>"How are you going, Pam?" asked Violet.</p>
<p>"Underground. It's the quickest."</p>
<p>"Oh, no, Pam. Take a taxi. Archie, you must!"</p>
<p>Between laughter and admonition, they were dispatched—Pamela, Archie
and the two Temple boys, all laughing and talking, and exchanging
allusions and references unintelligible to Alex.</p>
<p>The room seemed much quieter and darker when the hall-door had finally
slammed behind them. Alex looked round her.</p>
<p>At the head of his own table, Cedric sat reflective. Violet lounged,
smoking a cigarette and laughing, where Lady Isabel's place had always
been. Opposite Alex, Barbara, in her prim black, was leaning forward and
speaking:</p>
<p>"What's the attraction about this roller-skating? Pamela seems to do
nothing else, when she isn't dancing."</p>
<p>"Every one's doing it, my dear. I want to take it up myself, so as to
reduce my figure, but it's such an impossible place to get at. I've only
been to Olympia for the Military Tournaments. But Pam has a perfect
passion for getting about by the underground railway. Alex, isn't Pam a
refreshing person?"</p>
<p>Alex felt uncertain as to her meaning, and was startled at being
addressed. She knew that she coloured and looked confused.</p>
<p>"My dear," said Barbara impressively, "your nerves must simply have gone
to pieces. Imagine jumping like that when you're spoken to! Don't you
think she ought to do a rest-cure, Violet? There's a place in Belgrave
Street."</p>
<p>"No, no," said Violet's kind, soft voice. "She's coming to us. You must
let us have her, Barbara, for a good long visit. Mustn't she, Cedric?"</p>
<p>"Of course. You must have your old quarters upstairs, Alex."</p>
<p>The kindness nearly made her cry. She felt as might a child, expecting
to be scolded and punished, and unexpectedly met with smiles and
re-assurance.</p>
<p>"Come up and see Baby," said Violet. "She's such a little love, and I
want her to know her new auntie."</p>
<p>"Violet, we really must talk business some time," said Barbara,
hesitating. "There are plans to be settled, you know—what Alex is going
to do next."</p>
<p>"She's going to play with Rosemary next. Don't worry, dear—we can talk
plans any time. There's really no hurry."</p>
<p>Alex dimly surmised that the words, and the indolent, <i>d�gag�e</i> smile
accompanying them, might be characteristic of her new sister-in-law.</p>
<p>Violet took her upstairs.</p>
<p>"The nursery is just the same—we haven't changed a thing," she told
her.</p>
<p>Alex gave a cry of recognition at the top of the stairs. "Oh, the little
gate that fenced off the landing! It was put up when Cedric was a baby,
because he would run out and look through the balusters."</p>
<p>"Was it, really?" cried Violet delightedly. "Cedric didn't know that—he
told me that it had always been there. I shall love having you, Alex,
you'll be able to tell me such lots of things about Cedric, when he was
a little boy, that no one else knows. You see, there's so little
difference between him and Barbara, isn't there?"</p>
<p>"I am only three years older than Barbara."</p>
<p>"Then you're the same age—or a little older than I am. I am
twenty-nine—two whole years older than Cedric. Isn't it dreadful?"</p>
<p>She laughed gaily as she turned the handle of the nursery door.</p>
<p>"Baby, precious, where are you?"</p>
<p>Alex followed her into the big, sunny room.</p>
<p>A young nurse, in stiff white piqu�, sat sewing in the window, and a
starched, blue-ribboned baby, with disordered, sunny curls, crawled
about the floor at her feet.</p>
<p>When she saw her mother she began to run towards her, with outstretched
hands and inarticulate coos of pleasure.</p>
<p>"Come along, then, and see your new Auntie." Violet caught her up and
lifted her into her arms.</p>
<p>"Isn't she rather a love, Alex? Shall we look after her for a little
while, while Nurse goes downstairs?"</p>
<p>Alex nodded. She felt as though she hardly dared speak, for fear of
frightening the pretty little laughing child. Besides, the constriction
was tightening in her throat.</p>
<p>Violet sank down into a low chair, with Rosemary still in her arms.</p>
<p>"I'll stay with her, Nurse, if you like to go downstairs for
half-an-hour."</p>
<p>"Thank you, my lady."</p>
<p>"Sit down and let's be comfy, Alex. Isn't this much nicer than being
downstairs?"</p>
<p>Alex looked round the nursery. As Violet had said, it had not been
altered. On the mantelpiece she suddenly saw the big white clock,
supported by stout Dresden-china cherubs, that had been there ever since
she could remember. It was ticking in a sedate, unalterable way.</p>
<p>Something in the sight of the clock, utterly familiar, and yet forgotten
altogether during all her years away from Clevedon Square, suddenly
caught at Alex. She made an involuntary, choking sound, and to her own
dismay, sobs suddenly overpowered her.</p>
<p>"My poor dear!" said Violet compassionately. "Do cry—it'll do you good,
and Baby and I won't mind, or ever tell a soul, will we, my Rosemary? I
knew you'd feel much better when you'd had it out, and nobody will
disturb us here."</p>
<p>Alex had sunk on to the floor, and was leaning her head against Violet's
chair.</p>
<p>The soft, murmuring voice went on above her:</p>
<p>"I never heard of such a thing in my life as Barbara's bringing you here
today—she never explained when she telephoned that you hadn't been in
England for goodness knows how many years, let alone to this house. And,
of course, I thought she'd settled it all with you, till I saw your face
when she brought you into the drawing-room, all full of tiresome people,
and brothers and sisters you hadn't set eyes on for <i>years</i>. Then I
knew, of course, and I could have smacked her. You poor child!"</p>
<p>"No, no," sobbed Alex incoherently. "It's only just at first, and coming
back and finding them all so changed, and not knowing what I am going to
do."</p>
<p>"Do! Why, you're coming here. Cedric and Rosemary and I want you, and
Barbara doesn't deserve to keep you after the way she's begun. I'll
settle it all with her."</p>
<p>"Oh, how <i>kind</i> you are to me!" cried Alex.</p>
<p>Violet bent down and kissed her.</p>
<p>"Kind! Why, aren't I your sister, and Rosemary your one and only niece?
Look at her, Alex, and see if she's like any one. Cedric sometimes says
she's like your father."</p>
<p>"A little, perhaps. But she's very like you, I think."</p>
<p>"Oh, I never had those great, round, grey eyes! Those are Cedric's. And
perhaps yours—they're the same colour. Anyway, I believe she's really
very like what you must have been as a baby, Alex!"</p>
<p>It was evident that Violet was paying the highest compliment within her
power.</p>
<p>Alex put out her hand timidly to little Rosemary. She was not at all
shy, and seemed accustomed to being played with and admired, as she sat
on her mother's lap. Alex thought how pretty and happy she and Violet
looked together. She was emotionally too much worn-out, and had for too
many years felt herself to be completely and for ever outside the pale
of warm, human happiness, to feel any pang of envy.</p>
<p>Presently Violet reluctantly gave up Rosemary to the nurse again, and
said:</p>
<p>"I'm afraid we ought to go down. I don't like to leave Barbara any
longer. She never comes up here—hardly ever. Poor Barbara! I sometimes
think it's because she hasn't any babies of her own. Let's come down and
find her, Alex."</p>
<p>They found Barbara in the library, earnestly talking to Cedric, who was
leaning back, smoking and looking very much bored.</p>
<p>He sprang up when they entered, and from his relieved manner and from
Barbara's abrupt silence, Alex conjectured that they had been discussing
her own return.</p>
<p>She stood for a moment, forlorn and awkward, till Violet sank on to the
big red-leather sofa, and held out her hand in invitation to her.</p>
<p>"Give me a cigarette, Cedric. What have you and Barbara been
plotting—like two conspirators?"</p>
<p>Cedric laughed, looking at her with a sort of indulgent pride, but
Barbara said with determined rapidity:</p>
<p>"It's all very well, Violet, to laugh, but we've got to talk business.
After all, this unexpected step of Alex' has made a lot of difference.
One thought of her as absolutely settled—as father did, when he made
his will."</p>
<p>"You see, Alex," Cedric told his sister, "the share which should have
been yours was divided by father's will between Barbara and Pamela, and
there was no mention of you, except just for the fifty pounds a year
which my father thought would pay your actual living expenses in the
convent. He never thought of your coming away again."</p>
<p>"How could he, after all these years?" ejaculated Barbara.</p>
<p>"I know. But I couldn't have stayed on, Cedric, indeed I couldn't. I
know I ought to have found out sooner that I wasn't fitted for the
life—but if you knew what it's all been like—"</p>
<p>Her voice broke huskily, and despair overwhelmed her at the thought of
trying to explain what they would never understand.</p>
<p>"Poor little thing!" said Violet's compassionate voice. "Of course, you
couldn't stay on. They've nearly killed you, as it is—wretched people!"</p>
<p>"No—no. They were kind—"</p>
<p>"The point is, Alex," Barbara broke in, "that you've only got the
wretched fifty pounds a year. Of course, I'd be more than glad to let
you have what would naturally have been yours—but how on earth I'm to
manage it, I don't know. Cedric can tell you what a state poor Ralph
left his affairs in—you'd never believe how little I have to live on.
Of course, the money from father was a godsend, I don't deny it. But if
Cedric thinks it's justice to give it back to you—"</p>
<p>She looked terribly anxious, gazing at her brother.</p>
<p>"No, no, Barbara!" said Alex, horrified. "I don't want the money. Of
course, you must keep it—you and Pamela."</p>
<p>"That's all very well, my dear Alex," said Cedric sensibly, "but how do
you propose to live? You must look at it from a practical point of
view."</p>
<p>"Then you think—" broke from Barbara irrepressibly.</p>
<p>"No, my dear, I don't. One knows very well, as things are—as poor Ralph
left things—it would be almost out of the question to expect—"</p>
<p>He looked helplessly at his wife.</p>
<p>"Of course, dear," she said placidly. "But there's Pamela's share."</p>
<p>"Pamela will marry, of course. She's sure to marry, but until then—or
at least until she comes of age—I don't think—as her guardian—"</p>
<p>Cedric broke off, looking much harassed.</p>
<p>"If Pam married a rich man—which she probably will," said Violet, with
a low laugh.</p>
<p>"We can't take distant possibilities into consideration," Barbara
interposed sharply. "We're dealing with actual facts."</p>
<p>Alex looked from one to the other with bewilderment. She hardly
understood what they were all discussing. From the natural home of her
childhood and girlhood, where she had lived as unthinking of ways and
means as every other girl of her class and generation, she had passed
into the convent world, where all was communal, and the rights of the
individual a thing part shunned, part unknown. She could not, at first,
grasp that Cedric and Barbara and Violet, perhaps Pam and Archie, too,
were all wondering how she would be able to maintain herself on fifty
pounds a year.</p>
<p>"Of course," Barbara was saying, "Alex could come to me for a bit—I'd
love to have you, dear—but you saw for yourself what a tiny place mine
is—and there's only Ada. I don't quite know what she'd say to having
two people instead of one, I must say—"</p>
<p>"We want her, too," Violet exclaimed caressingly. "Let us have her for a
little while, Barbara,—while you're preparing Ada's mind for the
shock." She broke into her low, gurgling laugh again.</p>
<p>Barbara looked infinitely relieved.</p>
<p>"What do you think, Alex? It isn't that I wouldn't love to have you—but
there's no denying that ways and means <i>do</i> count, and in a tiny
household like mine, every item adds up."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Alex desperately, "I know what you must feel—the difficulty
of—of knowing what to do with me. It's always been like that, ever
since I was a little girl. I've made a failure of everything. Don't you
remember—Barbara, <i>you</i> must—old Nurse saying, 'Alex will never stick
to anything'? And I never have, I never shall. I can only make dreadful
muddles and failures, and upset you all. If only one could wreck one's
own life without interfering with other people's!"</p>
<p>There was a silence, which Alex, after her outburst, knew very well was
not one of comprehension. Then Cedric said gently:</p>
<p>"You mustn't let yourself exaggerate, my dear. We're very glad to have
you with us again, one only can't help wishing it had been rather
sooner. But there's no use in crying over spilt milk, and after all, as
Violet says, there's no hurry about anything. Come to us and have a good
long rest—you look as though you needed it—and get a little flesh on
your bones again. We can settle all the rest afterwards."</p>
<p>Alex saw Barbara looking at her with furtive eagerness. She turned to
her, with the utter dependence on another's judgment that had become
second nature to her.</p>
<p>"When shall I go?"</p>
<p>"My dear!" protested Barbara. "Of course, the longer you can stay with
me the better I shall be pleased. It's only that Ada—" She broke off at
the sound of Violet's irrepressible laugh.</p>
<p>"You must suit yourself absolutely, of course."</p>
<p>"Supposing you came to us at the end of the week?" Violet suggested.
"Say Saturday. Pamela is going away then to pay one or two visits—and I
shall have you all to myself."</p>
<p>Alex looked at her wonderingly.</p>
<p>It seemed to her incredible that Violet should actually want her, so
engrained was her sense of her own isolation of spirit. That terrible
isolation of those who have definitely, and for long past, lost all
self-confidence, and which can never be realized or penetrated by those
outside.</p>
<p>"That will be delightful," said Violet, seeming to take her acceptance
for granted.</p>
<p>Barbara got up, smoothing her skirt gently.</p>
<p>"We really ought to be going, Alex. I said we'd be in to tea, and it
takes such ages to get back."</p>
<p>Alex rose submissively. She marvelled at the assurance of Barbara, even
at the ease of her conventionally affectionate farewells.</p>
<p>"Well, good-bye, my dear. When are you coming out to the wilds to look
me up?"</p>
<p>Then, without giving her sister-in-law time to reply, she added gaily,
"You must ring me up and let me know, when you've a spare moment. You
know I'm always a fixture. What a blessing the telephone is!"</p>
<p>"Then we'll see you on Saturday, Alex," said her brother. "Good! Take
care of yourself, my dear." He looked after her with an expression of
concern, as the servant held open the door for her and Barbara and they
went into the street. Alex could not believe that this kindly, rather
pompous man was her younger brother.</p>
<p>"Cedric has grown very good-looking, but I didn't expect to see him
so—so <i>old</i>, somehow," she said.</p>
<p>Barbara laughed.</p>
<p>"Time hasn't stood still with any of us, you know. <i>I</i> think Violet
looks older than he does—she is, of course. She'll be a mountain in a
few years' time, if she doesn't take care."</p>
<p>"Oh, Barbara! I think she's so pretty—and sweet."</p>
<p>Barbara shrugged her shoulders very slightly.</p>
<p>"She and I have never made particularly violent friends, though I like
her, of course. Pamela adores her—and I must say she's been good to
Pam. But her kindness doesn't cost her anything. She's always been rich,
and had everything she wanted—she was the only girl, and her people
adored her, and now Cedric lets her do everything she likes. She spends
any amount of money—look at her clothes, and the way she has little
Rosemary always dressed in white."</p>
<p>"Rosemary is lovely. It's so extraordinary to think of Cedric's child!"</p>
<p>Barbara tightened her lips.</p>
<p>"She ought to have been a boy, of course. Cedric pretended not to care,
but it must have been a disappointment—and goodness only knows if
Violet will ever—"</p>
<p>She stopped, throwing a quick glance out of the corners of her eyes at
her sister.</p>
<p>Alex wondered why she did not finish her sentence, and what she had been
about to say.</p>
<p>The constraint in her intercourse with Barbara was becoming more and
more evident to her perceptions. It was clear that her sister did not
intend to ask any questions as to the crisis through which Alex had
passed, and when she had once ascertained that Alex had not "seen
anybody" whilst in Rome, she did not refer to that either.</p>
<p>Alex wondered if Barbara would tell her anything of Ralph and their
married life, but the reserve which had always been characteristic of
Barbara since her nursery days, had hardened sensibly, and it was
obvious that she wished neither to give nor to receive confidences.</p>
<p>She was quite ready, however, to discuss her brother Cedric and his
wife, or the prospects of Pamela and Archie, and Alex listened all the
evening to Barbara's incisive little clear tones delivering shrewd
comments and judgments. She again suggested that Alex should go to bed
early, saying as she kissed her good-night:</p>
<p>"It's quite delightful to have some one to talk to, for me. I generally
read or sew all the evening."</p>
<p>"It must be lonely for you, Barbara."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't mind quiet," she laughed, as though edging away from any
hint of emotional topic. "But, of course, it's nice to have some one for
a change. Good-night." She turned towards the door of the bedroom. "Oh,
Alex! there's just one thing—I know you'd rather I said it. If you
wouldn't mind, sometime—any time you think of it—just letting me have
the money for those clothes we bought for you today. The bills have come
in—I asked for them, as I don't have an account. I knew you'd rather be
reminded, knowing what pauper I am. I only wish I hadn't got to worry
you. Good-night, my dear. Sleep well."</p>
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