Part 37 (2/2)

Lady Isabel sighed again, but her face wore a touched, softened look, and she said resignedly, ”So long as you cheer up, and don't vex your father by seeming doleful and uninterested in things.... Of course, girls now-a-days do take up good works and slummin' and all that sort of thing--but not till they are older than you are, darling, and then it's generally because they haven't married--at least,” added Lady Isabel hurriedly, ”people are sure to say it is that.”

”I don't mind if they do,” said Alex proudly, her mind full of Mother Gertrude's story.

”Well, I suppose you must do as you like--girls do, now-a-days.”

Alex almost instinctively uttered the cry that, with successive generations, has pa.s.sed from appeal to rebellion, then to a.s.sertion, and from the defiance of that a.s.sertion to a calm statement of facts. ”_It is my life._ Can't I live my own life?”

”A woman who doesn't marry and who has eccentric tastes doesn't have much of a life. I could never bear thinking of it for any of you.”

Alex was rather startled at the sadness in her mother's voice.

”But, mother, why? Lots of girls don't marry, and just live at home.”

”As long as there is a home. But things alter, Alex. Your father and I, in the nature of things, can't go on livin' for ever, and then this house goes to Cedric. There is no country place, as you know--your great-grandfather sold everything he could lay his hands on, and we none of us have ever had enough ready money to think of buyin' even a small place in the country.”

”But I thought we were quite rich.”

Lady Isabel flushed delicately.

”We are not exactly poor, but such money as there is mostly came from my father, and there will not be much after my death,” she confessed. ”Most of it will be money tied up for Archie, poor little boy, because he is the younger son, and your grandfather thought that was the proper way to arrange it. It was all settled when you were quite little children--in fact, before Pamela was born or thought of--and your father naturally wanted all he could hope to leave to go to Cedric, so that he might be able to live on here, whatever happened.”

”But what about Barbara and me? Wasn't it rather unfair to want the boys to have everything?”

”Your father said, 'The girls will marry, of course.' There will be a certain sum for each of you on your wedding-day, but there's no question of either of you being able to afford to remain unmarried, and live decently. You won't have enough to make it possible,” said Lady Isabel very simply.

”But one of us might want to marry a very poor man.”

”A man in your own rank of life, my dear child, could hardly propose to you unless he had enough to support you. Of course, we don't wish either of you to feel that you must marry for money, ever, but at the same time I think you ought to be warned. Girls very often go gaily on, thinkin'

it will be time enough to settle later, and then something happens, and they find they have no money of their own, and perhaps no home left. For a few years, perhaps, it's possible to go on paying visits, and staying with other people, but it's never very pleasant to feel one has no alternative, and the sort of environment where a man looks for his wife is in her own sheltered home,” said Lady Isabel with emphasis.

Alex felt rather dismayed, though less so than she would have done before her intimacy at the convent had given her glimpses of another possible standard.

She paid one more visit to Mother Gertrude before leaving London.

This time she was kept waiting for a while in the parlour, so that she began to wish that she had not told Holland to call for her in an hour's time. She never dared stay any longer, partly from a vague impression that Mother Gertrude had a good deal to do, and partly from a very distinct certainty that Lady Isabel always noted the length of her visits to the convent, no less than their frequency.

She looked round the ugly room rather disconsolately and fingered the books on the table. They seemed very uninteresting, and were mostly in French. One slim volume, more attractively bound than the others, drew her attention for a moment, and she turned idly to the t.i.tle-page.

”Notre Mere Fondatrice Esquisse de piete filiale.”

Alex smiled at the wording, which she read in the imperfect literal translation of an indifferent French scholar, and turned to the next leaf.

Two photographs facing one another were reproduced on either page.

The first portrait was of a young woman standing by a table in a stiffly artificial att.i.tude, with enormously wide skirts billowing round her, decked with elaborate, and, to Alex' eyes meaningless, tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs of some dark, narrow ribbon that might have been velvet. She wore long, dangling ear-rings, and her abundant plaits of dark hair were gathered into the nape of her neck, confined by a coa.r.s.e-fibred net. The face, turned over one shoulder, was heavy rather than handsome, with strongly marked features and big, sombre, dark eyes.

It was with a little thrill approaching to awe that Alex recognized her again on the next page in the veil and habit of the Order.

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