‘Of course you could. Really, it seems almost a duty to take her—doesn’t it?’
So the matter was settled, and Mumford ran off gaily to catch his train.
Three days later Miss Derrick arrived, bringing with her something like half-a-ton of luggage. She bounded up the doorsteps, and, meeting Mrs. Mumford in the hall, kissed her fervently.
‘I’ve got such heaps to tell you Mr. Higgins has given me twenty pounds to go on with—for myself; I mean; of course he’ll pay everything else. How delighted I am to be here! Please pay the cabman I’ve got no change.’
A few hours before this there had come a letter from Mrs. Higgins; better written and spelt than would have seemed likely.
‘Dear Mrs. Mumford,’ it ran, ‘L. is coming tomorrow morning, and I hope you won’t repent. There’s just one thing I meant to have said to you but forgot, so I’ll say it now. If it should happen that any gentleman of your acquaintance takes a fancy to L., and if it should come to anything, I’m sure both Mr. H. and me would be
CHAPTER II
‘Runnymede’ (so the Mumfords’ house was named) stood on its own little plot of ground in one of the tree- shadowed roads which persuade the inhabitants of Sutton that they live in the country. It was of red brick, and double-fronted, with a porch of wood and stucco; bay windows on one side of the entrance, and flat on the other, made a contrast pleasing to the suburban eye. The little front garden had a close fence of unpainted lath, a characteristic of the neighbourhood. At the back of the house lay a long, narrow lawn, bordered with flower-beds, and shaded at the far end by a fine horse-chestnut.
Emmeline talked much of the delightful proximity of the Downs; one would have imagined her taking long walks over the breezy uplands to Ban stead or Epsom, or yet further afield The fact was, she saw no more of the country than if she had lived at Brixton. Her windows looked only upon the surrounding houses and their garden foliage. Occasionally she walked along the asphalte pavement of the Brighton Road—a nursemaids’ promenade—as far as the stone which marks twelve miles from Westminster Bridge. Here, indeed, she breathed the air of the hills, but villas on either hand obstructed the view, and brought London much nearer than the measured distance. Like her friends and neighbours, Emmeline enjoyed Sutton because it was a most respectable little portion of the great town, set in a purer atmosphere. The country would have depressed her.
In this respect Miss Derrick proved a congenial companion. Louise made no pretence of rural inclinations, but had a great liking for tree-shadowed asphalte, for the results of elaborate horticulture, for the repose and the quiet of villadom.
‘I should like to have a house just like this,’ she declared, on her first evening at “Runnymede,” talking with her host and hostess out in the garden. ‘It’s quite big enough, unless, of course, you have a very large family, which must be rather a bore.’ She laughed ingenuously. ‘And one gets to town so easily. What do you pay for your season-ticket, Mr. Mumford? Oh, well! that isn’t much. I almost think I shall get one.’
‘Do you wish to go up very often, then?’ asked Emmeline, reflecting on her new responsibilities.
‘Oh! not every day, of course. But a season-ticket saves the bother each time, and you have a sort of feeling, you know, that you can be in town whenever you like.’
It had not hitherto been the Mumfords’ wont to dress for dinner, but this evening they did so, and obviously to Miss Derrick’s gratification. She herself appeared in a dress which altogether outshone that of her hostess. Afterwards, in private, she drew Emmeline’s attention to this garb, and frankly asked her opinion of it.
‘Very nice indeed,’ murmured the married lady, with a good-natured smile. ‘Perhaps a little—’
‘There, I know what you’re going to say. You think it’s too showy. Now I want you to tell me just what you think about everything—everything. I shan’t be offended. I’m not so silly. You know I’ve come here to learn all sorts of things. Tomorrow you shall go over all my dresses with me, and those you don’t like I’ll get rid of. I’ve never had anyone to tell me what’s nice and what isn’t. I want to be—oh, well, you know what I mean.’
‘But, my dear,’ said Emmeline, ‘there’s something I don’t quite understand. You say I’m to speak plainly, and so I will. How is it that you haven’t made friends long ago with the sort of people you wish to know? It isn’t as if you were in poor circumstances.’
‘How
‘My dear Miss Derrick—’ Emmeline began in protest, but was at once interrupted.
‘Oh! that isn’t what I want. You must call me Louise, or Lou, if you like, and just say what you really think. Yes, I see, I
Emmeline could not hide her amusement.
‘Well, that’s just it,’ went on the other frankly. ‘I
Mrs. Mumford began to read the girl’s character, and to understand how its complexity had shaped her life. She was still uneasy as to the impression this guest would make upon their friends, but on the whole it seemed probable that Louise would conscientiously submit herself to instruction, and do her very best to be “nice.”