Chapter V
I
The book that Aunt Bella had brought her was called The Triumph Over Midian, and Aunt Bella said that if she was a good girl it would interest her. But it did not interest her. That was how she heard Aunt Bella and Mamma talking together.
Mamma’s foot was tapping on the footstool, which showed that she was annoyed.
“They’re coming tomorrow,” she said, “to look at that house at Ilford.”
“To live?” Aunt Bella said.
“To live,” Mamma said.
“And is Emilius going to allow it? What’s Victor thinking of, bringing her down here?”
“They want to be near Emilius. They think he’ll look after her.”
“It was Victor who would have her at home, and Victor might look after her himself. She was his favourite sister.”
“He doesn’t want to be too responsible. They think Emilius ought to take his share.”
Aunt Bella whispered something. And Mamma said, “Stuff and nonsense! No more than you or I. Only you never know what queer thing she’ll do next.”
Aunt Bella said, “She was always queer as long as I remember her.”
Mamma’s foot went tap, tap again.
“She’s been sending away things worse than ever. Dolls. Those naked ones.”
Aunt Bella gave herself a shake and said something that sounded like “Goo‑oo‑sh!” And then, “Going to be married?”
Mamma said, “Going to be married.”
And Aunt Bella said “T‑t‑t.”
They were talking about Aunt Charlotte.
Mamma went on: “She’s packed off all her clothes. Her new ones. Sent them to Matilda. Thinks she won’t have to wear them any more.”
“You mustn’t expect me to have Charlotte Olivier in my house,” Aunt Bella said. “If anybody came to call it would be most unpleasant.”
“I wouldn’t mind,” Mamma said, tap-tapping, “if it was only Charlotte. But there’s Lavvy and her Opinions.”
Aunt Bella said “Pfoo‑oof!” and waved her hands as if she were clearing the air.
“All I can say is,” Mamma said, “that if Lavvy Olivier brings her Opinions into this house Emilius and I will walk out of it.”
Tomorrow—they were coming tomorrow, Uncle Victor and Aunt Lavvy and Aunt Charlotte.
II
They were coming to lunch, and everybody was excited.
Mark and Dank were in their trousers and Eton jackets, and Roddy in his new black velvet suit. The drawing-room was dressed out in its green summer chintzes that shone and crackled with glaze. Mamma had moved the big Chinese bowl from the cabinet to the round mahogany table and filled it with white roses. You could see them again in the polish; blurred white faces swimming on the dark, wine-coloured pool. You held out your face to be washed in the clear, cool scent of the white roses.
When Mark opened the door a smell of roast chicken came up the kitchen stairs.
It was like Sunday, except that you were excited.
“Look at Papa,” Roddy whispered. “Papa’s excited.”
Papa had come home early from the office. He stood by the fireplace in the long tight frock-coat that made him look enormous. He had twirled back his moustache to show his rich red mouth. He had put something on his beard that smelt sweet. You noticed for the first time how the frizzed, red-brown mass sprang from a peak of silky golden hair under his pouting lower lip. He was letting himself gently up and down with the tips of his toes, and he was smiling, secretly, as if he had just thought of something that he couldn’t tell Mamma. Whenever he looked at Mamma she put her hand up to her hair and patted it.
Mamma had done her hair a new way. The brown plait stood up farther back on the edge of the sloping chignon. She wore her new lavender and white striped muslin. Lavender ribbon streamed from the pointed opening of her bodice. A black velvet ribbon was tied tight round her neck; a jet cross hung from it and a diamond star twinkled in the middle of the cross. She pushed out her mouth and drew it in again, like Roddy’s rabbit, and the tip of her nose trembled as if it knew all the time what Papa was thinking.
She was so soft and pretty that you could hardly bear it. Mark stood behind her chair and when Papa was not looking he kissed her. The behaviour of her mouth and nose gave you a delicious feeling that with Aunt Lavvy and Aunt Charlotte you wouldn’t have to be so very good.
The front door bell rang. Papa and Mamma looked at each other, as much as to say, “Now it’s going to begin.” And suddenly Mamma looked small and frightened. She took Mark’s hand.
“Emilius,” she said, “what am I to say to Lavinia?”
“You don’t say anything,” Papa said. “Mary can talk to Lavinia.”
Mary jumped up and down with excitement. She knew how it would be. In another minute Aunt Charlotte would come in, dressed in her black lace shawl and crinoline, and Aunt Lavvy would bring her Opinions. And something, something that you didn’t know, would happen.
III
Aunt Charlotte came in first with a tight, dancing run. You knew her by the long black curls on her shoulders. She was smiling as she smiled in the album. She bent her head as she bent it in the album, and her eyes looked up close under her black eyebrows and pointed at you. Pretty—pretty blue eyes, and something frightening that made you look at them. And something queer about her narrow jaw. It thrust itself forward, jerking up her smile.
No black lace shawl and no crinoline. Aunt Charlotte wore a blue and black striped satin dress, bunched up behind, and a little hat perched on the top of her chignon and tied underneath it with blue ribbons.
She had got in and was kissing everybody while Aunt Lavvy and Uncle Victor were fumbling with the hat stand in the hall.
Aunt Lavvy came next. A long grey face. Black bands of hair
