<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<p class="subhead">HOW THOSE GIRLS DO CHATTER OVER THEIR MUSIC! MRS. NIGHTINGALE'S
RESOLUTION. BUT, THE RISK! A HARD PART TO PLAY. THERE WAS ONLY MAMMA
FOR THE GIRL! THE GARDEN OF LONG AGO</p>
<p>Two parts in a sestet, played alone, may be a maddening torture to a
person whose musical imagination is not equal to supplying the other
four. Perhaps you have heard Haydn, Op. 1704, and rejoiced in the
logical consecutiveness of its fugues, the indisputableness of its
well-classified statements, the swift pertinence of the repartees of
the first violin to the second, the apt <i>résumé</i> and orderly
reorganization of their epigrammatic interchanges by the 'cello and
the double-bass, the steady typewritten report and summary of the
whole by the pianoforte, and the regretful exception to so many
points taken by the clarionet. If so, you have no doubt felt, as we
have, a sense of perfect satisfaction at faultless musical
structure, without having to surrender your soul unconditionally to
the passionate appeal of a Beethoven, or to split your musical
brains in conjectures about what Volkanikoffsky is driving at. You
will find at the end that you have passed an hour or so of tranquil
enjoyment, and are mighty content with yourself, the performers, and
every one else.</p>
<p>But if you only hear the two parts, played alone, and your mental
image of all the other parts is not strong enough to prevent your
hearing the two performers count the bars while the non-performers
don't do anything at all, you will probably go away and come back
presently, or go mad.</p>
<p>Nobody else was there when Sally and Lætitia Wilson were counting
four, and beginning too soon, and having to go back and begin all
over again, and missing a bar, and knocking down their music-stands
when they had to turn over quick. So nobody went mad. Mamma had gone
to an anti-vaccination meeting, and Athene had gone to stay over
Bank Holiday at Leighton Buzzard, and the boys had gone to skate,
and papa was in his study
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and didn't matter, and they had the
drawing-room to themselves. Oh dear, how very often they did count
four, to be sure!</p>
<p>Sally was <i>distraite</i>, and wasn't paying proper attention to the
music. Whenever a string had to be tightened by either, Sally
introduced foreign matter. Lætitia was firm and stern (she was
twenty-four, if you please!), and wouldn't respond. As thus, in a
tightening-up pause:</p>
<p>"I like him awfully, you know, Tishy. In fact, I love him. It's a
pleasure to hear him come into the house. Only—one's <i>mother</i>, you
know! It's the <i>oddity</i> of it!"</p>
<p>"Yes, dear. <i>Now</i>, are you ready?... It only clickets down because
you will <i>not</i> screw in; it's no use turning and leaving the key
sloppy...."</p>
<p>"I know, Tishy dear—teach your granny! There, I think that's right
now. But it <i>is</i> funny when it's one's mother, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"One—two—three—four! There—you didn't begin! Remember, you've
got to begin on the demisemiquaver at the end of the bar—only not
too staccato, remember—and allow for the pause. Now—one, two,
three, four, and you begin—in the <i>middle</i> of four—<i>not</i> the end.
Oh dear! Now once more...." etc.</p>
<p>You will at once see from this that Sally had lost no time in
finding a confidante for the fossil's communication.</p>
<p>An hour and a half of resolute practising makes you not at all sorry
for an oasis in the counting, which you inaugurate (or whatever you
do when it's an oasis) by smashing the top coal and making a great
blaze. And then you go ever so close, and can talk.</p>
<p>"Are you sure it isn't Colonel Lund's mistake? Old gentlemen get
very fanciful." Thus Miss Wilson. But it seems Sally hasn't much
doubt. Rather the other way round, if anything!</p>
<p>"I thought it might be, all the way to Norland Square. Then I
changed my mind coming up the hill. Of course, I don't know about
mamma till I ask her. But I expect the Major's right about Mr.
Fenwick."</p>
<p>"But how does <i>he</i> know? How do you know?"</p>
<p>"I don't know." Sally tastes the points of a holly-leaf with her
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span>
tongue-tip, discreetly, to see how sharp they are, and cogitates.
"At least," she continues, "I <i>do</i> know. He never takes his eyes off
mamma from the minute he comes into the house."</p>
<p>"Oh!"</p>
<p>"Besides—lots of things! Oh no; as far as that goes, I should say
<i>he</i> was spooney."</p>
<p>"I see. You're a vulgar child, all the same! But about your
mother—that's the point."</p>
<p>The vulgar child cogitates still more gravely.</p>
<p>"I should say <i>now</i>," she says, after thinking it over, "that—only
I never noticed it at the time, you know——"</p>
<p>"That what?"</p>
<p>"That mamma knows Mr. Fenwick is spooney, and looks up at times to
see that he's going on."</p>
<p>Lætitia seems to receive this idea with some hesitation or reserve.
"Looks up at times to see if he's going on?" she repeats
inquiringly.</p>
<p>"Yes, of course—like we should. Only I didn't say 'see if.' I said
'see that.' It makes all the difference."</p>
<p>Miss Wilson breaks into a laugh. "And there you are all the time
looking as if butter wouldn't melt in your mouth, and as grave as a
judge."</p>
<p>Sally has to acquiesce in being kissed by her friend at this point;
but she curls up a little as one who protests against being
patronised. "We-e-e-ell!" she says, lengthening out the word, "why
not? I don't see anything in <i>that</i>!"</p>
<p>"Oh no, dear—<i>that's</i> all right! Why shouldn't it be?"</p>
<p>But this isn't candid of Lætitia, whose speech and kiss had
certainly appeared to impute suppressed insight, or penetration, or
sly-pussness, or something of that sort to her young friend. But
with an implied claim to rights of insight, on her own account, from
seniority. Sally is <i>froissée</i> at this, but not beyond jerking the
topic into a new light.</p>
<p>"Of course, it's their being grown up that makes one stare so. If it
wasn't for that...." But this gives away her case, surrenders all
claim to her equality with Lætitia's twenty-four years. The
advantage is caught at meanly.</p>
<p>"That's only because you're a baby, dear. Wait till you're ten
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span>
years older, and thirty-eight won't seem so old. I suppose your
mother's about that?"</p>
<p>"Mother? Why, she's nearly thirty-nine!"</p>
<p>"And Mr. Fenwick?"</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>he's</i> forty-one. <i>Quite!</i> Because we talked it all over, and
made out they were over eighty between them."</p>
<p>"Who talked it over?"</p>
<p>"Why, him and her and me, of course. Last night."</p>
<p>"Who did you have, Sally dear?"</p>
<p>"Only ourselves, and Dr. Prosy and his Goody mother."</p>
<p>"I thought Mr. Fenwick——"</p>
<p>"I counted him in with us—mother and me and the Major."</p>
<p>"Oh, you counted him in?"</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't I count him in, if I like?"</p>
<p>"Why not? And you do like?" There is an appearance of irritating
sagacity about Sally's friend. "What did Dr. Vereker say, Sally
dear?"</p>
<p>"Doc-tor Vereker! Dr. Prosy. Prosy's not a referee—it was no
concern of his! Besides—they'd gone."</p>
<p>"Who'd gone?"</p>
<p>"Dr. Prosy and his old hen of a mother. Well, Tishy dear, she <i>is</i>
like that. Comes wobbling down on you as if you were a chicken! I
hope you don't think mother and I and Mr. Fenwick would talk about
how old we were added together, with old Goody Prosy in it!"</p>
<p>"Of course not, dear!"</p>
<p>"Oh, Tishy dear, how aggravating you are! Now do please don't be
penetrating. You know you're trying to get at something; and there's
nothing to get at. It was perfectly natural. Only, of course, we
should never dream of talking about how old before people and their
gossipy old mothers."</p>
<p>"Of course not, dear!"</p>
<p>"There, now! You're being imperturbable! I knew you would. But you
may say what you like—there really was nothing in it. Nothing
whatever that time! However, of course mother does like Mr. Fenwick
very much—everybody knows that."</p>
<p>Lætitia says time will show, and Sally says, "Show what?" For the
remark connects with nothing in the conversation. Its maker
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
does
not reply, but retires into the fastnesses of a higher philosophy,
unknown to the teens, but somehow attainable in the early twenties.
She comes down, however, to ask after Dr. Vereker. Sally has as good
as held her tongue about him. Have they quarrelled?</p>
<p>"My dear Tishy! The idea! A <i>perfect stranger</i>!"</p>
<p>"I thought you were such good friends."</p>
<p>"I've nothing against Dr. Vereker. But fancy quarrelling with him!
Like bosom friends. Kissing and making it up. What next!" Lætitia
seems to have discovered that Sally, subjected to a fixed amused
look, is sure to develop, and maintains one; and Sally follows on:</p>
<p>"One has to be on an intimate footing to fall out. Besides, people
shouldn't be hen's sons. Not if they expect that sort of thing!"</p>
<p>"Which sort?"</p>
<p>"You know perfectly well, Tishy dear! And they shouldn't be worthy,
either, people shouldn't. I'm not at all sure it isn't his
worthiness, just as much as his mother. I <i>could</i> swallow his
mother, if it came to that!"</p>
<p>Lætitia, without relaxing the magnetism of her look, is replacing a
defective string. But a stimulating word will keep Sally up to the
mark. It would be a pity she should die down, having got so far.</p>
<p>"Not at all sure <i>what</i> isn't his worthiness!"</p>
<p>"Now, Tishy dear, what nonsense! As if you didn't understand! You
may just as well be penetrating outright, if you're going to go on
like that. All I know is that, worthiness or no, if Dr. Vereker
expects I'm going to put him on a quarrelling footing, he's
mistaken, and the sooner he gives up the idea the better. I suppose
he'll be wanting me to cherish him next."</p>
<p>And then what does that irritating Lætitia Wilson do but say
suddenly, "I'm quite ready for the scherzo, dear, if you are." Just
as if Sally had been talking all this for her own private
satisfaction and amusement! And she knew perfectly well, Lætitia
did, that she had been eliciting, and that she meant to wait a day
or two, and begin again ever so far on, and make believe Sally had
said heaps of things. And Sally had really said nothing—<i>nothing</i>!</p>
<div>
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<p>However, Miss Wilson was certainly a very fine violin figure, and
really striking in long sostenuto notes, with a fine throat and
handsome fingers on her left hand with broad bones, and a handsome
wrist on her bowing-arm where it was wanted. Only now, of course,
she hadn't got her Egyptian bracelet that looked so well, and her
hair wasn't done in a coronet, but only just twisted up anyhow.
Besides, when it's a difficult scherzo and you take it quick, your
appearance of having the concentration of Bonaparte and Julius
Cæsar, and the alacrity of a wild cat, doesn't bring out your good
points. Give us an <i>andante maestoso</i> movement, or a <i>diminuendo
rallentando</i> that reaches the very climax and acme of slowness
itself just before the applause comes! It was rather as a meditation
in contrasts, though, that Sally thought thus to herself; for
detached musical jerks of diabolical rapidity, that have to be
snapped at with the punctuality of the mosquito slayer, don't show
your rounded lines to advantage, and make you clench your teeth and
glare horribly.</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>Our story is like the scherzo in one respect: it has to be given in
detached jerks—literary, not musical—and these jerks don't come at
any stated intervals at all. The music was bad enough—so Sally and
Lætitia thought—but the chronicle is more spasmodic still. However,
if you want to know its remaining particulars, you will have to
brace yourself up to tolerating an intermittent style. It is the
only one our means of collecting information admits of.</p>
<p>This little musical interlude, and the accidental chat of our two
young performers, gives us a kind of idea of what was the position
of things at Krakatoa Villa six months after Fenwick made his
singular reappearance in the life of Mrs. Nightingale. We shall rely
on your drawing all our inferences. There is only one belief of ours
we need to lay stress upon; it is that the lady's scheme to do all
she could to recapture and hold this man who had been her husband
was no mere slow suggestion of the course of events in that six
months, but a swift and decisive resolution—one that, if not
absolutely made at once, paused only in the making until she was
quite satisfied that the disappearance of Fenwick's past was an
accomplished fact. Once satisfied of that, he became to her simply
the man she had loved twenty years ago—the
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man who did not, could
not, forgive her what seemed so atrocious a wrong, but whom she
could forgive the unforgiveness of; and this all the more if she had
come to know of the ruinous effect her betrayal of him had had—must
have had—upon his after-life. He was this man—this very man—to
all appearance with a mysterious veil drawn, perhaps for ever, over
the terrible close of their brief linked life and its hideous
cause—over all that she would have asked and prayed should be
forgotten. If only this oblivion could be maintained!—that was her
fear. If it could, what task could be sweeter to her than to make
him such amends as lay in her power for the wrong she had done
him—how faultfully, who shall say? And if, in late old age, no dawn
of memory having gleamed in his ruined mind, she came to be able to
speak to him and tell him his own story—the tale of the wreck of
his early years—would not that almost, <i>almost</i>, carry with it a
kind of compensation for what she had undergone?</p>
<p>But her terror of seeing a return of memory now was a haunting
nightmare to her. She could only soothe and alleviate her anxiety by
suggesting efforts at recollection to Fenwick, and observing with
concealed satisfaction how utterly useless they all were. She felt
guilty at heart in being so happy at his ill-success, and had to
practise an excusable hypocrisy, an affectation of disappointment at
his repeated failures. On one particular occasion a shudder of
apprehension passed through her; she thought he had got a clue. If
he did, what was to prevent his following it up? She found it hard
to say to him how sorry she was this clue led to nothing, and to
forecast from it encouragement for the future. But she said to
herself after that, that she was a good actress, and had played her
part well. The part was a hard one.</p>
<p>For what came about was this. It chanced one evening, some three
months after the railway adventure, when Fenwick had become an
accepted and constant visitor at Krakatoa Villa, that as he took a
very late leave of Sally and her mother, the latter came out with
him into the always quiet road, while Sally ran back into the house
to direct a letter he was to post, but which had been forgotten for
the moment, just as he was departing.</p>
<p>They had talked a great deal, and with a closer familiarity than
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span>
ever before, of the problem of Fenwick's oblivion. Both ladies had
gone on the lines of suggesting clues, trying to recall to him the
things that <i>must</i> have been in his life as in others. How about his
parents? Well, he remembered that, as a fact, he had a father and
mother. It was <i>themselves</i> he could not recollect. How about his
schooldays? No, that was a blank. He could not even remember having
been flogged. Yet the idea of school was not unfamiliar; how,
otherwise, could he laugh as he did at the absurdity of forgetting
all about it, especially being flogged? But his brothers, his
sisters, how <i>could</i> he forget <i>them</i>? He <i>did</i>, although in their
case, as in that of his parents, he somehow knew that some definite
identities had existed that he had forgotten. But any effort to
recall any specific person came to nothing, or else he only
succeeded in reviving images manifestly confused with characters in
fiction or history. Then Sally, who was rather incredulous about
this complete vacuity of mind, had said to him: "But come now, Mr.
Fenwick, you don't mean to say you don't know if you ever had a
sweetheart?" And he had replied with a laugh: "My dear Miss Sally,
I'm sure I must have had plenty of sweethearts. Perhaps it's because
I had so many that I have forgotten them all—all—all! They are all
gone with the rest. I can do sums, and can speak French, but what
school I learned to keep accounts at I can't tell you; and as to
where I lived (as I must have done) among French people to speak
French, I can tell no more than Adam." And then he had become rather
reserved and silent till he got up to go, and they had not liked to
press him for more. The pained look they had often been distressed
to see came on his face, and he pressed his fingers on his eyelids
as though shutting out the present world might help him to recall
the past; then with a rough head-shake of his thick hair, like a big
dog, and a brushing of it about with both hands, as though he would
rouse this useless head of his to some sort of action, he put the
whole thing aside, and talked of other matters till he left the
house.</p>
<p>But when he and Mrs. Nightingale found themselves alone in the road,
enjoying the delicious west wind that meant before the morning to
become an equinoctial gale, and blow down chimney-pots and sink
ships, he turned to her and went back to what they had been talking
of. She could see the fine strong markings of his face
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in the
moonlight, the great jaw and firm lips, the handsome nose damaged by
a scar that lay true across the bridge of it, and looked white in
the gleam of the moon, the sad large eyelids and the grave eyes that
had retaken the look he had shaken off. She could note and measure
every change maturity had stamped upon him, and could see behind it
the boy that had come to meet her at the station at Umballa twenty
years before—had met her full of hope, met her to claim his reward
after the long delay through the hideous days of the pestilence, to
inaugurate the anticipated hours of happiness he had trembled to
dream of. And the worst of the cholera wards that had filled the
last months of his life with horror had held nothing for him so bad
as the tale she had to tell or conceal. She could see back upon it
as they stood there in the moonlight. Do not say she was not a
strong woman.</p>
<p>"Do you know, Mrs. Nightingale," Fenwick said, "it's always a night
of this sort that brings back one's youth? You know what I mean?"</p>
<p>"I think I understand what you mean, Mr. Fenwick. You mean if"—she
hesitated a moment—"if you <i>could</i> recollect."</p>
<p>He nodded a complete yes.</p>
<p>"Just that," said he. "I don't know if it's the millions of dry
leaves sweeping about, or the moon scudding so quick through the
clouds, or the smell of the Atlantic, or the bark coming off the
plane-trees, or the wind blowing the roads into smooth dust-drifts
and hard clear-ups you could eat your dinner off—I don't know what
it is, but something or another on a night of this sort does always
seem to bring old times back, when, as you say, they can be got back
on any terms." He half-laughed, not in earnest. She found something
to say, also not very much in earnest.</p>
<p>"Because we remember nights of the sort when we were small, and that
brings them back."</p>
<p>"Come, I say now, Mrs. Nightingale! As if we couldn't remember all
sorts of nights, and nothing comes back about them. It's this
particular sort of night does the job."</p>
<p>"Did you think you remembered something, Mr. Fenwick?" There was
anxiety in her voice, but no need to conceal it. It would as readily
pass muster for anxiety that he <i>should</i> have remembered something
as that he shouldn't.</p>
<div>
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<p>"I can hardly go so far as that. But that joke of your little
pussycat about the sweethearts got mixed with the smell of the wind
and the chrysanthemums and dahlias and sunflowers." He pressed his
fingers hard on his eyes again. "Do you know, there's pain in
it—worse than you'd think! The half-idea that comes is not painful
in itself—rather the contrary—but it gives my brain a twist at the
point at which I can recall no more. Yes, it's painful!"</p>
<p>"But there <i>was</i> a half-idea? Forgive me if it gives you pain, and
don't try. Only I'm not sure you ought not to try when the chance
comes, for your own sake."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't mind trying. This time it was something about a front
garden and a girl and a dog-cart." He had not taken his hands from
his eyes. Now he did so, brushing them on his hair and forehead as
before. "I get no nearer," said he.</p>
<p>"A front garden and a girl and a dog-cart," thus Miss Sally saucily,
coming out with the letter. "Did you have a very touching parting,
Mr. Fenwick? Now, mind you don't forget to post it. I wouldn't trust
you!" He took the letter from her, but seemed too <i>distrait</i> to
notice her little piece of levity; then, still speaking as if in
distress or pain, he said:</p>
<p>"It must have been some front garden, long ago. This one brought it
back—this and the leaves. Only there was nothing for the dog-cart."</p>
<p>"And only mamma for the girl"—thus Sally the irrepressible. And
then mamma laughed, but not Mr. Fenwick at all. Only Sally thought
her mother's laugh came hard, and said to herself, now she should
catch it for chaffing! However, she didn't catch it, although the
abruptness with which her mother said good-night and went back into
the house half confirmed her impression that she should.</p>
<p>On the contrary, when she followed her a few minutes later, having
accompanied Fenwick to near the road end, and scampered back to the
house, turning to throw Parthian good-nights after him, she found
her mother pale and thoughtful, and surely the lips and hands she
used to kiss her with were cold. She wasn't even sure that wasn't a
tear. Perhaps it was.</p>
<p>For mamma had had a bad ten minutes—scarcely a <i>mauvais quart
d'heure</i>—and even that short interim had given her time to
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span>
see
that this kind of thing would be incessant with her recovered
husband, granting that she could recover him. Only of that she felt
nearly secure—unaccountably, perhaps; certainly not warrantably.
But how to bear this kind of thing through a life?—that was the
question.</p>
<p>What was this kind of thing, this bad ten minutes, that had made her
tremble, and turn white, and glad to get away, and be alone a minute
before Sally came up jubilant? But oh, how glad, for all that, to
get at her daughter's lips to kiss!—only not too hard, so as to
suggest reflection and analysis.</p>
<p>What had upset Mrs. Nightingale was a counter-memory of twenty years
ago, a clear and full and vivid recollection of the garden and the
girl and the dog-cart. And then also there "had only been mamma for
the girl." But oh, the relation the lassie who said those words bore
to those past days, her place in the drama that filled them out!
Little wonder her mother's brain reeled.</p>
<p>She could see it all vividly now, all over again. A glorious night
like this; a dazzling full moon sailing in the blue beyond the
tumbled chaos of loose cloud so near the earth; the riot of the
wind-swept trees fighting to keep a shred of their old green on
their bareness, making new concessions to the blast, and beating
their stripped limbs together in their despair; the endless swirl of
leaves at liberty, free now at last to enjoy a short and merry life
before becoming food for worms. She could see the face she had just
parted from, but twenty years younger—the same bone-structure with
its unscarred youth upon it, only a lesser beard with a sunnier
tinge, but all the thickness of the hair. She could remember the
voices in the house, the farewells to the young man who was just
starting for India, and how she slipped down to say a last good-bye
on her own account, and felt grateful to that old Dean Ireson (the
only time in her life) for begging her mother (who, of course, was
the Rosalind Nightingale Fenwick spoke of in the train) on no
account to expose herself to the night-air. Why, she might have come
down, too, into the garden, and spoiled it all! And then she could
remember—oh, how well!—their last words in the windy garden, and
the horse in the dog-cart, fresh from his stall, and officiously
anxious to catch the train—as good as saying so, with flings and
stamps. And
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<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</SPAN></span>
how little she cared if the groom <i>did</i> hear him call
her Rosey, for that was his name for her.</p>
<p>"Now, Gerry, remember, I've made you <i>no</i> promises; but I'll play
fair. If I change my mind, I'll write and tell you. And you may
write to me."</p>
<p>"Every day?"</p>
<p>"Silly boy, be reasonable! Once a month! You'll see, you'll get
tired of it."</p>
<p>"Come, Rosey, I say! The idea!"</p>
<p>"Yes, you will! Now go! You'll lose the train."</p>
<p>"Oh, Rosey dearest!"</p>
<p>"Yes, what?—you'll lose the train."</p>
<p>"Oh, my dearest, I <i>can't</i>! Just think—I may never see you again!"</p>
<p>"You <i>must</i> go, Gerry dear! And there's that blockhead of a boy
outside there."</p>
<p>"Never mind him; he's nobody! Only one more.... Yes, <i>dearest love</i>,
I'm really going.... Good-bye! good-bye! God bless you!"</p>
<p>And then how she stood there with the memory of his lips dying on
hers, alone by the gate, in the wild wind, and heard the sharp
regular trot of the horse lessen on the hard road and die away, and
then the running of a train she thought was his, and how he would
surely miss it, and have to come back. And it <i>would</i> be nice just
to see him again! But he was gone, for all that, and he was a dear
good boy. And she recollected going to her bedroom to do up her
hair, which had all come down, and hiding her face on her pillow in
a big burst of tears.</p>
<p>Her mind harked back on all this as he himself, the same but
changed, stood there in the moonlight striving to recollect it all,
and mysteriously failing. But at least, he <i>did</i> fail, and that was
something. But oh, what a wrench it gave to life, thought, reason,
to all her heart and being, to have that unconscious chit cut in
with "only mamma for the girl!" What and whence was this little
malaprop? Her overwrought mind shut away this question—almost in
the asking it—with "Dearer to me, at least, than anything else in
this world, unless——" and then shut away the rest of the answer.</p>
<p>But she was glad to get at Sally, and feel her there, though she
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could not speak freely to her—nor, indeed, speak at all. And as
soon as the tension died down, she went back as to a source of peace
to the failure of his powers of memory, obvious, complete. All her
hopes lay in that. Where would they be if the whole past were
suddenly sprung on him? He <i>might</i> be ready to bury bygones, but——</p>
<p>She woke next day fairly at ease in her mind, but feeling as one
does after any near-run escape. And then it was she said to herself
that she was a good actress. But the part <i>was</i> hard to act.</p>
<hr class="minor" />
<p>The relations between Fenwick and the Nightingales, mother and
daughter, seem to us to have been acquiring cohesion at the time of
the foregoing interview. It is rather difficult to say why. But it
serves to pave the way to the state of things that Sally accepted as
the "spooneyness" of Fenwick, and her mother's observation of his
"going on," without the dimmest idea of the underlying motives of
the drama. Another three months, bringing us on to these
discriminations of Sally's, may also have brought about appearances
that justified them.</p>
<hr class="major" />
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