Volume Ii Part 23 (1/2)

”It was most touching to see her with all those children about her, trying to be cheerful and composed; and looking so lovely in her melancholy mourning dress.”

”I presume she wears c.r.a.pe? Ah! There's no more extravagant wear. She might have one dress trimmed with c.r.a.pe for occasions; but her ordinary everyday frocks ought to be of plain black stuff. Hemst.i.tched muslin collars and cuffs, perhaps,” added Mrs. Dormer-Smith, relenting at the image of uncompromising ugliness she had herself conjured up. ”But they can be made at home, and need not cost much. Has she any lodgers?”

”No, not yet. But there has been very little time. And it is difficult, she says, to find suitable persons.”

”Yes, that is precisely the kind of thing one would expect her to say.

That is the speech of a thoroughly unpractical person.”

”The fact is,” burst out May hotly, ”it is unpractical to be poor! It is unpractical to be left a widow, with five children, and only a miserable pittance to keep them on!”

It was intolerable to hear Aunt Pauline sitting in judgment on this poor lady, of whom she really knew nothing whatever save her misfortunes. And May was greatly astonished at the glib way in which her aunt, usually so prosaically matter-of-fact, discoursed about Mrs. Bransby, putting in visionary details with a lavish fancy. The girl had yet to learn that the most narrow and commonplace minds are capable of wild exaggeration within their own sphere, and that to be unimaginative is no guarantee for truthfulness of perception.

Mrs. Dormer-Smith, whatever her defects might be, possessed almost perfect gentleness of temper. She merely said softly, ”May, May, when will you understand that nothing can be worse form than that habit of raving about people? You are so dreadfully emphatic!”

”I don't care a straw about what you call 'good form'! I prefer good substance,” answered May, still in a glow of indignation.

”My dear child, what does this woman matter to you?”

”Matter! She is my friend. She has always been kind to me; and even if she were not my friend, I would defend her against unfair accusations.”

Mrs. Dormer-Smith was silent for a few minutes. Then she said, in her slow, somewhat m.u.f.fled tones, ”May, you compel me to say what I would rather leave unsaid. Mrs. Bransby is not the kind of person your uncle and I wish you to a.s.sociate with. I do not a.s.sert that there has been anything positively wrong in her conduct. Now oblige me by listening quietly! If you start up in that melodramatic way, you will bring on one of my nervous headaches. I was merely going to remark that a woman so handsome as I am told she is, and so very much younger than her husband, ought, in the most ordinary view of what is _convenable_, to avoid anything like--like seeking to attract men's admiration, and that sort of thing. But instead of that, Mrs. Bransby carried on a very flagrant flirtation during her husband's lifetime with a young man considerably her junior. It was noticed, of course, and commented on. If she was so led away by foolish vanity when she had a sensible husband to guide her, what will it be now that she is left to her own devices?”

May stood staring at her aunt like one suddenly awakened out of sleep.

”This is all false,” she said, after a moment; ”false, and very cruel.

Who told you such things, Aunt Pauline?”

”I decline to tell you, May. Some one who has had the means of knowing what went on in this Bransby household, and some one whose judgment I can trust. It must suffice to a.s.sure you that I am quite certain of my facts.” And, strange, as it may seem, Mrs. Dormer-Smith really thought she was certain of them.

May turned away contemptuously. ”Mrs. Bransby is really very much to blame,” she said. ”It is bad enough to be poor and unprotected, but to be the most beautiful woman in all her circle of acquaintance as well, is not to be forgiven!”

Then May left her aunt's presence, and betook herself to her own room, where she locked the door and burst out crying. These calumnies were bewildering. She sat on the side of her bed for more than an hour, in a drooping posture, depressed and miserable. As she thought over her aunt's words, the belief flashed into her mind that Mrs. Dormer-Smith's informant must have been Constance Hadlow. She did not suspect Constance of having deliberately invented stories to the poor widow's discredit; but she did think that Constance had repeated them, and that they had lost none of their venom in her repet.i.tion. It chanced that on that very morning her aunt had spoken of a letter just received from Miss Hadlow; and May knew very well the sort of gossip which made up the staple of that correspondence. Not for one moment did her suspicions point to Theodore. The idea that he could have originated odious insinuations against his father's wife was inconceivable to her. But Conny----She had observed latterly a tendency in Conny to bitterness and detraction when speaking of Mrs. Bransby. Was she jealous? And why? When they talked of Mrs. Bransby's flirtations with a man younger than herself, whom did they allude to?

All at once May drew herself sharply into an upright att.i.tude, while a burning flush covered her face and throat. She dashed away some stray tears with her handkerchief, and exclaimed, speaking out loud in her excitement, ”I will not _think_ of such mean, malicious, despicable folly! I will turn my mind away from it. It is shameful even to be conscious of anything so base-minded!”

CHAPTER XV.

Two days after May's interview with Mrs. Bransby, Owen's weekly letter arrived. In it he informed her of the unexpected postponement of his return; and he mentioned having written this news to Mrs. Bransby in answer to a letter from her appealing to him for help and advice. But he did not expend many words on the Bransby family. He had to keep May minutely informed of his own doings, and of his prospects, so far as he could judge of them. And whatsoever time and s.p.a.ce remained at his disposal when this was accomplished was devoted to a theme which touched him more nearly than the fortunes of gentle Louisa Bransby--although his regard for her was very real. Owen was deeply in love, and wrote love-letters. And that species of composition does not deal with circ.u.mstantial and connected narrative--at any rate, about third persons.

But although Owen did not return to England at the end of December, Mr.

Bragg did. He appeared one day in Mrs. Dormer-Smith's drawing-room, when he was received by that lady with marked graciousness, and by May with a changing colour and shy eagerness which he might have been excused for misinterpreting.

Mrs. Dormer-Smith was delighted. May's behaviour appeared to her to be just what it ought to be. Uncle Frederick, too, who happened to be at home--for Mr. Bragg called at so unfas.h.i.+onably an early hour that the master of the house had not yet gone out to his club--had reason to be gratified. He took the opportunity of consulting Mr. Bragg as to a little investment he purposed making. And Mr. Bragg, while dissuading him from that particular investment, spontaneously offered to put his money into ”a good thing” for him.

”I make it a rule not to advise people in general about such matters,”

said Mr. Bragg. ”The responsibility's too great; not to mention that if it once, what you might call got wind that I did give such advice, I should have my time took up altogether with other people's business. And I don't see the force of that.”

”Of course not! Most inconsiderate!” murmured Mr. Dormer-Smith.

”But I reserve the right to make exceptions now and then,” continued Mr.