“But Priscilla—”
“Oh, Priscilla! Of course we know what Priscilla says. Priscilla has been writing to me about it in the most sensible manner in the world; but what does it all come to? If you are ashamed of taking assistance from me, I don’t know who is to do anything for anybody. You are comfortable here?”
“Very comfortable; only Priscilla feels—”
“Priscilla is a tyrant, mother; and a very stern one. Just make up your mind to stay here till Christmas. If I tell you that I can afford it, surely that ought to be enough.” Then Dorothy entered the room, and Hugh appealed to her. Dorothy had come to Nuncombe only on the day before, and had not been consulted on the subject. She had been told that the Clock House was to be abandoned, and had been taken down to inspect the cottage in which old Soames had lived;—but her opinion had not been asked. Priscilla had quite made up her mind, and why should she ask an opinion of anyone? But now Dorothy’s opinion was demanded. “It’s what I call the rhodomontade of independence,” said Hugh.
“I suppose it is very expensive,” suggested Dorothy.
“The house must be paid for,” said Hugh;—“and if I say that I’ve got the money, is not that enough? A miserable, dirty little place, where you’ll catch your death of lumbago, mother.”
“Of course it’s not a comfortable house,” said Mrs. Stanbury—who, of herself, was not at all indifferent to the comforts of her present residence.
“And it is very dirty,” said Dorothy.
“The nastiest place I ever saw in my life. Come, mother; if I say that I can afford it, ought not that to be enough for you? If you think you can’t trust me, there’s an end of everything, you know.” And Hugh, as he thus expressed himself, assumed an air of injured virtue.
Mrs. Stanbury had very nearly yielded, when Priscilla came in among them. It was impossible not to continue the conversation, though Hugh would much have preferred to have forced an assent from his mother before he opened his mouth on the subject to his sister. “My mother agrees with me,” said he abruptly, “and so does Dolly, that it will be absurd to move away from this house at present.”
“Mamma!” exclaimed Priscilla.
“I don’t think I said that, Hugh,” murmured Dorothy, softly.
“I’m sure I don’t want anything for myself,” said Mrs. Stanbury.
“It’s I that want it,” said Hugh. “And I think that I’ve a right to have my wishes respected, so far as that goes.”
“My dear Hugh,” said Priscilla, “the cottage is already taken, and we shall certainly go into it. I spoke to Mrs. Crocket yesterday about a cart for moving the things. I’m sure mamma agrees with me. What possible business can people have to live in such a house as this with about twenty-four shillings a week for everything? I won’t do it. And as the thing is settled, it is only making trouble to disturb it.”
“I suppose, Priscilla,” said Hugh, “you’ll do as your mother chooses?”
“Mamma chooses to go. She has told me so already.”
“You have talked her into it.”
“We had better go, Hugh,” said Mrs. Stanbury. “I’m sure we had better go.”
“Of course we shall go,” said Priscilla. “Hugh is very kind and very generous, but he is only giving trouble for nothing about this. Had we not better go down to breakfast?”
And so Priscilla carried the day. They went down to breakfast, and during the meal Hugh would speak to nobody. When the gloomy meal was over he took his pipe and walked out to the cottage. It was an untidy-looking, rickety place, small and desolate, with a pretension about it of the lowest order, a pretension that was evidently ashamed of itself. There was a porch. And the one sitting-room had what the late Mr. Soames had always called his bow window. But the porch looked as though it were tumbling down, and the bow window looked as though it were tumbling out. The parlour and the bedroom over it had been papered;—but the paper was torn and soiled, and in sundry places was hanging loose. There was a miserable little room called a kitchen to the right as you entered the door, in which the grate was worn out, and behind this was a shed with a copper. In the garden there remained the stumps and stalks of Mr. Soames’s cabbages, and there were weeds in plenty, and a damp hole among some elder bushes called an arbour. It was named Laburnum Cottage, from a shrub that grew at the end of the house. Hugh Stanbury shuddered as he stood smoking among the cabbage-stalks. How could a man ask such a girl as Nora Rowley to be his wife, whose mother lived in a place like this? While he was still standing in the garden, and thinking of Priscilla’s obstinacy and his own ten guineas a week, and the sort of life which he lived in London—where he dined usually at his club, and denied himself nothing in the way of pipes, beer, and beefsteaks, he heard a step behind him, and turning round, saw his elder sister.
“Hugh,” she said, “you must not be angry with me.”
“But I am angry with you.”
“I know you are; but you are unjust. I am doing what I am sure is right.”
“I never saw such a beastly hole as this in all my life.”
“I don’t think it beastly at all. You’ll find that I’ll make it nice. Whatever we want here you shall give us. You are not to think that I am too proud to take anything at your hands. It is not that.”
“It’s very like it.”
“I have never refused anything that is reasonable, but it is quite unreasonable that we should go on living in such a place as that, as though we had three or four hundred a year of our own. If mamma got used to
