At half-past four o’clock Minnie and Chatty went down to tea. They were to the minute, and their mother heard them with a half smile. It was always time enough for her to smooth her hair and her collar, and take a new handkerchief from her drawer, when she heard the sisters close their door. She went downstairs after them, in her gown covered with crape, with her snowy cap, which gave dignity to her appearance. Her widow’s dress was very becoming to her, as it is to so many people. She had a pretty complexion, pure red and white, though the colour was perhaps a little broken, and not so smooth as a girl’s; and her eyes were brown and bright. Notwithstanding the weeks of watching she had gone through, the strain of everything that had passed, she made little show of her trouble. Her eye was not dim, nor her natural force abated. The girls were dull in complexion and aspect, but their mother was not so. As she came into the room there came with her a brightness, a sense of living, which was inappropriate to the hour and the place.
“Where is Theo?” she asked.
“He is coming in presently; at least, I called to him as he went out, and told him tea was ready, and he said he would be in presently,” Chatty replied.
“I wish he would have stayed, if it had even been in the grounds, today,” said Minnie. “It will look so strange to see him walking about as if nothing had happened.”
“He has been very good; he has conformed to all our little rules,” said the mother, with a sigh.
“Little rules, mamma? Don’t you think it of importance, then, that every respect—”
“My dear,” said Mrs. Warrender, “I am tired of hearing of every respect. Theo was always respectful and affectionate. I would not misconstrue him even if it should prove that he has taken a walk.”
“On the day of dear papa’s funeral!” cried Minnie, with a voice unmoved.
Mrs. Warrender turned away without any reply; partly because the tears sprang into her eyes at the matter-of-fact statement, and partly because her patience was exhausted.
“Have you settled, mamma, what he is going to do?” said Chatty.
“It is not for me to decide. He is twenty-one; he is his own master. You have not,” Mrs. Warrender said, “taken time to think yet of the change in our circumstances. Theo is now master here. Everything is his to do as he pleases.”
“Everything!” said the girls in chorus, opening their eyes.
“I mean, of course, everything but what is yours and what is mine. You know your father’s will. He has been very just, very kind, as he always was.” She paused a little, and then went on: “But your brother, as you know, is now the master here. We must understand what his wishes are before we can settle on anything.”
“Why shouldn’t we go on as we always have done?” said Minnie. “Theo is too young to marry; besides, it would not be decent for a time, even if he wanted to, which I am sure he does not. I don’t see why he should make any change. There is nowhere we can be so well as at home.”
“Oh, nowhere!” said Chatty.
Their mother sat and looked at them, with a dull throb in her heart. They had sentiment and right on their side, and nature too. Everybody would agree that for a bereaved family there was no place so good as home—the house in which they were born and where they had lived all their life. She looked at them blankly, feeling how unnatural, how almost wicked, was the longing in her own mind to get away, to escape into some place where she could take large breaths and feel a wide sky over her. But how was she to say it, how even to conclude what she had been saying, feeling how inharmonious it was with everything around?
“Still,” she said meekly, “I am of Mr. Longstaffe’s opinion that everything should be fully understood between us from the first. If we all went on just the same, it might be very painful to Theo, when the time came for him to marry (not now; of course there is no question of that now), to feel that he could not do so without turning his mother and sisters out-of-doors.”
“Why should he marry, so long as he has us? It is not as if he had nobody, and wanted someone to make him a home. What would he do with the house if we were to leave it? Would he let it? I don’t believe he could let it. It would set everybody talking. Why should he turn his mother and sisters out-of-doors? Oh, I never thought of anything so dreadful!” cried Minnie and Chatty, one uttering one exclamation, and another the other. They were very literal, and in the minds of both the grievance was at once taken for granted. “Oh, I never could have thought such a thing of Theo—our own brother, and younger than we are!”
The mother had made two or three ineffectual attempts to stem the tide of indignation. “Theo is thinking of nothing of the kind,” she said at last, when they were out of breath. “I only say that he must not feel he has but that alternative when the time comes, when he may wish—when it may be expedient—No, no, he has never thought of such a thing. I only say it for the sake of the future, to forestall after-complications.”
“Oh, I wish you wouldn’t frighten one, mamma! I thought you had heard about some girl he had picked up at Oxford, or something. I thought we should have to turn out, to leave the Warren—which would break my heart.”
“And mine too—and mine too!” cried Chatty.
“Where we