The week after was one of the busiest weeks of their lives. Even when they went
to bed it was only their bodies that lay down and rested; their minds went on,
thinking things out, talking things over, wondering, deciding, trying to
remember where ...
Constantia lay like a statue, her hands by her sides, her feet just overlapping
each other, the sheet up to her chin. She stared at the ceiling.
"Do you think father would mind if we gave his top-hat to the porter?"
"The porter?" snapped Josephine. "Why ever the porter? What a very
extraordinary idea!"
"Because," said Constantia slowly, "he must often have to go to funerals. And I
noticed at - at the cemetery that he only had a bowler." She paused. "I
thought then how very much he'd appreciate a top-hat. We ought to give him a
present, too. He was always very nice to father."
"But," cried Josephine, flouncing on her pillow and staring across the dark at
Constantia, "father's head!" And suddenly, for one awful moment, she nearly
giggled. Not, of course, that she felt in the least like giggling. It must
have been habit. Years ago, when they had stayed awake at night talking, their
beds had simply heaved. And now the porter's head, disappearing, popped out,
like a candle, under father's hat ... The giggle mounted, mounted; she clenched
her hands; she fought it down; she frowned fiercely at the dark and said
"Remember" terribly sternly.
"Well, what else?" said Constantia. "I was thinking - it doesn't seem quite
sincere, in a way, to wear black out of doors and when we're fully dressed, and
then when we're at home--"
"But nobody sees us," said Josephine. She gave the bedclothes such a twitch
that both her feet became uncovered, and she had to creep up the pillows to get
them well under again.
"Kate does," said Constantia. "And the postman very well might."
Josephine thought of her dark-red slippers, which matched her dressing-gown, and
of Constantia's favourite indefinite green ones which went with hers. Black!
Two black dressing-gowns and two pairs of black woolly slippers, creeping off to
the bathroom like black cats.
"I don't think it's absolutely necessary," said she.
Silence. Then Constantia said, "We shall have to post the papers with the
notice in them to-morrow to catch the Ceylon mail ... How many letters have we
had up till now?"
Josephine had replied to them all, and twenty-three times when she came to "We
miss our dear father so much" she had broken down and had to use her
handkerchief, and on some of them even to soak up a very light-blue tear with an
edge of blotting-paper. Strange! She couldn't have put it on - but twenty-
three times. Even now, though, when she said over to herself sadly "We miss our
dear father so much," she could have cried if she'd wanted to.
"Have you got enough stamps?" came from Constantia.
"Oh, how can I tell?" said Josephine crossly. "What's the good of asking me
that now?"
"It can't be a mouse because there aren't any crumbs," said Josephine.
"But it doesn't know there aren't," said Constantia.
A spasm of pity squeezed her heart. Poor little thing! She wished she'd left a
tiny piece of biscuit on the dressing-table. It was awful to think of it not
finding anything. What would it do?
"I can't think how they manage to live at all," she said slowly.
Another thing which complicated matters was they had Nurse Andrews staying on
with them that week. It was their own fault; they had asked her. It was
Josephine's idea. On the morning - well, on the last morning, when the doctor
had gone, Josephine had said to Constantia, "Don't you think it would be rather
nice if we asked Nurse Andrews to stay on for a week as our guest?"
"I thought," went on Josephine quickly, "I should just say this afternoon, after
I've paid her, 'My sister and I would be very pleased, after all you've done for
us, Nurse Andrews, if you would stay on for a week as our guest.' I'd have to
put that in about being our guest in case--"
"Oh, but she could hardly expect to be paid!" cried Constantia.
Nurse Andrews had, of course, jumped at the idea. But it was a bother. It
meant they had to have regular sit-down meals at the proper times, whereas if
they'd been alone they could just have asked Kate if she wouldn't have minded
bringing them a tray wherever they were. And meal-times now that the strain was
over were rather a trial.
Nurse Andrews was simply fearful about butter. Really they couldn't help
feeling that about butter, at least, she took advantage of their kindness. And
she had that maddening habit of asking for just an inch more of bread to finish
what she had on her plate, and then, at the last mouthful, absent-mindedly - of
course it wasn't absent-mindedly - taking another helping. Josephine got very
red when this happened, and she fastened her small, bead-like eyes on the
tablecloth as if she saw a minute strange insect creeping through the web of it.
But Constantia's long, pale face lengthened and set, and she gazed away - away -
far over the desert, to where that line of camels unwound like a thread of wool
...
"When I was with Lady Tukes," said Nurse Andrews, "she had such a dainty little
contrayvance for the buttah. It was a silvah Cupid balanced on the - on the
bordah of a glass dish, holding a tayny fork. And when you wanted some buttah
you simply pressed his foot and he bent down and speared you a piece. It was
quite a gayme."
Josephine could hardly bear that. But "I think those things are very
extravagant" was all she said.
"But whey?" asked Nurse Andrews, beaming through her eyeglasses. "No one,
surely, would take more buttah than one wanted - would one?"
"Ring, Con," cried Josephine. She couldn't trust herself to reply.
And proud young Kate, the enchanted princess, came in to see what the old
tabbies wanted now. She snatched away their plates of mock something or other
and slapped down a white, terrified blancmange.
Kate knelt and burst open the sideboard, lifted the lid of the jam-pot, saw it
was empty, put it on the table, and stalked off.
"I'm afraid," said Nurse Andrews a moment later, "there isn't any."
"Oh, what a bother!" said Josephine. She bit her lip. "What had we better do?"
Constantia looked dubious. "We can't disturb Kate again," she said softly.
Nurse Andrews waited, smiling at them both. Her eyes wandered, spying at
everything behind her eyeglasses. Constantia in despair went back to her
camels. Josephine frowned heavily - concentrated. If it hadn't been for this
idiotic woman she and Con would, of course, have eaten their blancmange without.
Suddenly the idea came.
"I know," she said. "Marmalade. There's some marmalade in the sideboard. Get
it, Con."
"I hope," laughed Nurse Andrews - and her laugh was like a spoon tinkling
against a medicine-glass - "I hope it's not very bittah marmalayde."
But, after all, it was not long now, and then she'd be gone for good. And there
was no getting over the fact that she had been very kind to father. She had
nursed him day and night at the end. Indeed, both Constantia and Josephine felt
privately she had rather overdone the not leaving him at the very last. For
when they had gone in to say good-bye Nurse Andrews had sat beside his bed the
whole time, holding his wrist and pretending to look at her watch. It couldn't
have been necessary. It was so tactless, too. Supposing father had wanted to
say something - something private to them. Not that he had. Oh, far from it!
He lay there, purple, a dark, angry purple in the face, and never even looked at
them when they came in. Then, as they were standing there, wondering what to
do, he had suddenly opened one eye. Oh, what a difference it would have made,
what a difference to their memory of him, how much easier to tell people about
it, if he had only opened both! But no - one eye only. It glared at them a
moment and then ... went out.
"Thank you, Miss Pinner," said Mr. Farolles gratefully. He folded his coat-
tails and began to lower himself into father's arm-chair, but just as he touched
it he almost sprang up and slid into the next chair instead.
He coughed. Josephine clasped her hands; Constantia looked vague.
"I want you to feel, Miss Pinner," said Mr. Farolles, "and you, Miss Constantia,
that I'm trying to be helpful. I want to be helpful to you both, if you will
let me. These are the times," said Mr Farolles, very simply and earnestly,
"when God means us to be helpful to one another."
"Thank you very much, Mr. Farolles," said Josephine and Constantia.
"Not at all," said Mr. Farolles gently. He drew his kid gloves through his
fingers and leaned forward. "And if either of you would like a little
Communion, either or both of you, here and now, you have only to tell me. A
little Communion is often very help - a great comfort," he added tenderly.
But the idea of a little Communion terrified them. What! In the drawing-room
by themselves - with no - no altar or anything! The piano would be much too
high, thought Constantia, and Mr. Farolles could not possibly lean over it with
the chalice. And Kate would be sure to come bursting in and interrupt them,
thought Josephine. And supposing the bell rang in the middle? It might be
somebody important - about their mourning. Would they get up reverently and go
out, or would they have to wait ... in torture?
"Perhaps you will send round a note by your good Kate if you would care for it
later," said Mr. Farolles.
"I should like it to be quite simple," said Josephine firmly, "and not too
expensive. At the same time, I should like--"
"A good one that will last," thought dreamy Constantia, as if Josephine were
buying a nightgown. But, of course, Josephine didn't say that. "One suitable
to our father's position." She was very nervous.
"I'll run round to our good friend Mr. Knight," said Mr. Farolles soothingly.
"I will ask him to come and see you. I am sure you will find him very helpful
indeed."
Well, at any rate, all that part of it was over, though neither of them could
possibly believe that father was never coming back. Josephine had had a moment
of absolute terror at the cemetery, while the coffin was lowered, to think that
she and Constantia had done this thing without asking his permission. What
would father say when he found out? For he was bound to find out sooner or
later. He always did. "Buried. You two girls had me buried!" She heard his
stick thumping. Oh, what would they say? What possible excuse could they make?
It sounded such an appallingly heartless thing to do. Such a wicked advantage
to take of a person because he happened to be helpless at the moment. The other
people seemed to treat it all as a matter of course. They were strangers; they
couldn't be expected to understand that father was the very last person for such
a thing to happen to. No, the entire blame for it all would fall on her and
Constantia. And the expense, she thought, stepping into the tight-buttoned cab.
When she had to show him the bills. What would he say then?
She heard him absolutely roaring. "And do you expect me to pay for this
gimcrack excursion of yours?"
And Constantia, pale as a lemon in all that blackness, said in a frightened
whisper, "Done what, Jug?"
"Let them bu-bury father like that," said Josephine, breaking down and crying
into her new, queer-smelling mourning handkerchief.
"But what else could we have done?" asked Constantia wonderingly. "We couldn't
have kept him, Jug - we couldn't have kept him unburied. At any rate, not in a
flat that size."
Josephine blew her nose; the cab was dreadfully stuffy.
"I don't know," she said forlornly. "It is all so dreadful. I feel we ought to
have tried to, just for a time at least. To make perfectly sure. One thing's
certain" - and her tears sprang out again - "father will never forgive us for
this - never!"
Father would never forgive them. That was what they felt more than ever when,
two mornings later, they went into his room to go through his things. They had
discussed it quite calmly. It was even down on Josephine's list of things to be
done. "Go through father's things and settle about them." But that was a very
different matter from saying after breakfast:
It was dark in the hall. It had been a rule for years never to disturb father
in the morning, whatever happened. And now they were going to open the door
without knocking even ... Constantia's eyes were enormous at the idea; Josephine
felt weak in the knees.
"You - you go first," she gasped, pushing Constantia.
But Constantia said, as she always had said on those occasions, "No, Jug, that's
not fair. You're the eldest."
Josephine was just going to say - what at other times she wouldn't have owned to
for the world - what she kept for her very last weapon, "But you're the
tallest," when they noticed that the kitchen door was open, and there stood Kate
...
"Very stiff," said Josephine, grasping the doorhandle and doing her best to turn
it. As if anything ever deceived Kate!
It couldn't be helped. That girl was ... Then the door was shut behind them,
but - but they weren't in father's room at all. They might have suddenly walked
through the wall by mistake into a different flat altogether. Was the door just
behind them? They were too frightened to look. Josephine knew that if it was
it was holding itself tight shut; Constantia felt that, like the doors in
dreams, it hadn't any handle at all. It was the coldness which made it so
awful. Or the whiteness - which? Everything was covered. The blinds were
down, a cloth hung over the mirror, a sheet hid the bed; a huge fan of white
paper filled the fireplace. Constantia timidly put out her hand; she almost
expected a snowflake to fall. Josephine felt a queer tingling in her nose, as
if her nose was freezing. Then a cab klop-klopped over the cobbles below, and
the quiet seemed to shake into little pieces.
"I had better pull up a blind," said Josephine bravely.
"Yes, it might be a good idea," whispered Constantia.
They only gave the blind a touch, but it flew up and the cord flew after,
rolling round the blind-stick, and the little tassel tapped as if trying to get
free. That was too much for Constantia.
"Don't you think - don't you think we might put it off for another day?" she
whispered.
"Why?" snapped Josephine, feeling, as usual, much better now that she knew for
certain that Constantia was terrified. "It's got to be done. But I do wish you
wouldn't whisper, Con."
"I didn't know I was whispering," whispered Constantia.
"And why do you keep staring at the bed?" said Josephine, raising her voice
almost defiantly. "There's nothing on the bed."
"Oh, Jug, don't say so!" said poor Connie. "At any rate, not so loudly."
Josephine felt herself that she had gone too far. She took a wide swerve over
to the chest of drawers, put out her hand, but quickly drew it back again.
"Connie!" she gasped, and she wheeled round and leaned with her back against the
chest of drawers.
Josephine could only glare. She had the most extraordinary feeling that she had
just escaped something simply awful. But how could she explain to Constantia
that father was in the chest of drawers? He was in the top drawer with his
handkerchiefs and neckties, or in the next with his shirts and pyjamas, or in
the lowest of all with his suits. He was watching there, hidden away - just
behind the door-handle - ready to spring.
She pulled a funny old-fashioned face at Constantia, just as she used to in the
old days when she was going to cry.
"No, don't, Jug," whispered Constantia earnestly. "It's much better not to.
Don't let's open anything. At any rate, not for a long time."
"But - but it seems so weak," said Josephine, breaking down.
"But why not be weak for once, Jug?" argued Constantia, whispering quite
fiercely. "If it is weak." And her pale stare flew from the locked writing-
table - so safe - to the huge glittering wardrobe, and she began to breathe in a
queer, panting away. "Why shouldn't we be weak for once in our lives, Jug?
It's quite excusable. Let's be weak - be weak, Jug. It's much nicer to be weak
than to be strong."
And then she did one of those amazingly bold things that she'd done about twice
before in their lives: she marched over to the wardrobe, turned the key, and
took it out of the lock. Took it out of the lock and held it up to Josephine,
showing Josephine by her extraordinary smile that she knew what she'd done -
she'd risked deliberately father being in there among his overcoats.
If the huge wardrobe had lurched forward, had crashed down on Constantia,
Josephine wouldn't have been surprised. On the contrary, she would have thought
it the only suitable thing to happen. But nothing happened. Only the room
seemed quieter than ever, and the bigger flakes of cold air fell on Josephine's
shoulders and knees. She began to shiver.
"Come, Jug," said Constantia, still with that awful callous smile, and Josephine
followed just as she had that last time, when Constantia had pushed Benny into
the round pond.
But the strain told on them when they were back in the dining-room. They sat
down, very shaky, and looked at each other.
"I don't feel I can settle to anything," said Josephine, "until I've had
something. Do you think we could ask Kate for two cups of hot water?"
"I really don't see why we shouldn't," said Constantia carefully. She was quite
normal again. "I won't ring. I'll go to the kitchen door and ask her."
"Yes, do," said Josephine, sinking down into a chair. "Tell her, just two cups,
Con, nothing else - on a tray."
"She needn't even put the jug on, need she?" said Constantia, as though Kate
might very well complain if the jug had been there.
"Oh no, certainly not! The jug's not at all necessary. She can pour it direct
out of the kettle," cried Josephine, feeling that would be a labour-saving
indeed.
Their cold lips quivered at the greenish brims. Josephine curved her small red
hands round the cup; Constantia sat up and blew on the wavy steam, making it
flutter from one side to the other.
And though Benny hadn't been mentioned Constantia immediately looked as though
he had.
"He'll expect us to send him something of father's, of course. But it's so
difficult to know what to send to Ceylon."
"You mean things get unstuck so on the voyage," murmured Constantia.
"No, lost," said Josephine sharply. "You know there's no post. Only runners."
Both paused to watch a black man in white linen drawers running through the pale
fields for dear life, with a large brown-paper parcel in his hands. Josephine's
black man was tiny; he scurried along glistening like an ant. But there was
something blind and tireless about Constantia's tall, thin fellow, which made
him, she decided, a very unpleasant person indeed ... On the veranda, dressed
all in white and wearing a cork helmet, stood Benny. His right hand shook up
and down, as father's did when he was impatient. And behind him, not in the
least interested, sat Hilda, the unknown sister-in-law. She swung in a cane
rocker and flicked over the leaves of the "Tatler."
"I think his watch would be the most suitable present," said Josephine.
"But of course, I'd disguise it," said Josephine. "No one would know it was a
watch." She liked the idea of having to make a parcel such a curious shape that
no one could possibly guess what it was. She even thought for a moment of
hiding the watch in a narrow cardboard corset-box that she'd kept by her for a
long time, waiting for it to come in for something. It was such beautiful, firm
cardboard. But, no, it wouldn't be appropriate for this occasion. It had
lettering on it: "Medium Women's 28. Extra Firm Busks." It would be almost
too much of a surprise for Benny to open that and find father's watch inside.
"And of course it isn't as though it would be going - ticking, I mean," said
Constantia, who was still thinking of the native love of jewellery. "At least,"
she added, "it would be very strange if after all that time it was."
Josephine made no reply. She had flown off on one of her tangents. She had
suddenly thought of Cyril. Wasn't it more usual for the only grandson to have
the watch? And then dear Cyril was so appreciative, and a gold watch meant so
much to a young man. Benny, in all probability, had quite got out of the habit
of watches; men so seldom wore waistcoats in those hot climates. Whereas Cyril
in London wore them from year's end to year's end. And it would be so nice for
her and Constantia, when he came to tea, to know it was there. "I see you've
got on grandfather's watch, Cyril." It would be somehow so satisfactory.
Dear boy! What a blow his sweet, sympathetic little note had been! Of course
they quite understood; but it was most unfortunate.
"It would have been such a point, having him," said Josephine.
"And he would have enjoyed it so," said Constantia, not thinking what she was
saying.
However, as soon as he got back he was coming to tea with his aunties. Cyril to
tea was one of their rare treats.
"Now, Cyril, you mustn't be frightened of our cakes. Your Auntie Con and I
bought them at Buszard's this morning. We know what a man's appetite is. So
don't be ashamed of making a good tea."
Josephine cut recklessly into the rich dark cake that stood for her winter
gloves or the soling and heeling of Constantia's only respectable shoes. But
Cyril was most unmanlike in appetite.
"I say, Aunt Josephine, I simply can't. I've only just had lunch, you know."
"Oh, Cyril, that can't be true! It's after four," cried Josephine. Constantia
sat with her knife poised over the chocolate-roll.
"It is, all the same," said Cyril. "I had to meet a man at Victoria, and he
kept me hanging about till ... there was only time to get lunch and to come on
here. And he gave me - phew" - Cyril put his hand to his forehead - "a terrific
blow-out," he said.
It was disappointing - to-day of all days. But still he couldn't be expected to
know.
"But you'll have a meringue, won't you, Cyril?" said Aunt Josephine. "These
meringues were bought specially for you. Your dear father was so fond of them.
We were sure you are, too."
"I am, Aunt Josephine," cried Cyril ardently. "Do you mind if I take half to
begin with?"
"Not at all, dear boy; but we mustn't let you off with that."
"Is your dear father still so fond of meringues?" asked Auntie Con gently. She
winced faintly as she broke through the shell of hers.
"Well, I don't quite know, Auntie Con," said Cyril breezily.
Cyril put down his teacup. "Wait a bit," he cried. "Wait a bit, Aunt
Josephine. What am I thinking of?"
He looked up. They were beginning to brighten. Cyril slapped his knee.
"Of course," he said, "it was meringues. How could I have forgotten? Yes, Aunt
Josephine, you're perfectly right. Father's most frightfully keen on
meringues."
They didn't only beam. Aunt Josephine went scarlet with pleasure; Auntie Con
gave a deep, deep sigh.
"And now, Cyril, you must come and see father," said Josephine. "He knows you
were coming to-day."
"Right," said Cyril, very firmly and heartily. He got up from his chair;
suddenly he glanced at the clock.
"I say, Auntie Con, isn't your clock a bit slow? I've got to meet a man at - at
Paddington just after five. I'm afraid I shan't be able to stay very long with
grandfather."
"Oh, he won't expect you to stay very long!" said Aunt Josephine.
Constantia was still gazing at the clock. She couldn't make up her mind if it
was fast or slow. It was one or the other, she felt almost certain of that. At
any rate, it had been.
Cyril still lingered. "Aren't you coming along, Auntie Con?"
"Of course," said Josephine, "we shall all go. Come on, Con."
They knocked at the door, and Cyril followed his aunts into grandfather's hot,
sweetish room.
"Come on," said Grandfather Pinner. "Don't hang about. What is it? What've
you been up to?"
He was sitting in front of a roaring fire, clasping his stick. He had a thick
rug over his knees. On his lap there lay a beautiful pale yellow silk
handkerchief.
"It's Cyril, father," said Josephine shyly. And she took Cyril's hand and led
him forward.
"Good afternoon, grandfather," said Cyril, trying to take his hand out of Aunt
Josephine's. Grandfather Pinner shot his eyes at Cyril in the way he was famous
for. Where was Auntie Con? She stood on the other side of Aunt Josephine; her
long arms hung down in front of her; her hands were clasped. She never took her
eyes off grandfather.
"Well," said Grandfather Pinner, beginning to thump, "what have you got to tell
me?"
What had he, what had he got to tell him? Cyril felt himself smiling like a
perfect imbecile. The room was stifling, too.
But Aunt Josephine came to his rescue. She cried brightly, "Cyril says his
father is still very fond of meringues, father dear."
"Eh?" said Grandfather Pinner, curving his hand like a purple meringue-shell
over one ear.
Josephine repeated, "Cyril says his father is still very fond of meringues."
"Can't hear," said old Colonel Pinner. And he waved Josephine away with his
stick, then pointed with his stick to Cyril. "Tell me what she's trying to
say," he said.
(My God!) "Must I?" said Cyril, blushing and staring at Aunt Josephine.
"Do, dear," she smiled. "It will please him so much."
"Come on, out with it!" cried Colonel Pinner testily, beginning to thump again.
And Cyril leaned forward and yelled, "Father's still very fond of meringues."
At that Grandfather Pinner jumped as though he had been shot.
"Don't shout!" he cried. "What's the matter with the boy? Meringues! What
about 'em?"
"Oh, Aunt Josephine, must we go on?" groaned Cyril desperately.
"It's quite all right, dear boy," said Aunt Josephine, as though he and she were
at the dentist's together. "He'll understand in a minute." And she whispered
to Cyril, "He's getting a bit deaf, you know." Then she leaned forward and
really bawled at Grandfather Pinner, "Cyril only wanted to tell you, father
dear, that his father is still very fond of meringues."
Colonel Pinner heard that time, heard and brooded, looking Cyril up and down.
"What an esstrordinary thing!" said old Grandfather Pinner. "What an
esstrordinary thing to come all this way here to tell me!"
"Well, why didn't you say so immediately?" Josephine reproached her gently.
"How could you expect us to understand, Kate? There are a great many things in
this world you know, which are fried or boiled." And after such a display of
courage she said quite brightly to Constantia, "Which do you prefer, Con?"
"I think it might be nice to have it fried," said Constantia. "On the other
hand, of course, boiled fish is very nice. I think I prefer both equally well
... Unless you ... In that case--"
"I shall fry it," said Kate, and she bounced back, leaving their door open and
slamming the door of her kitchen.
Josephine gazed at Constantia; she raised her pale eyebrows until they rippled
away into her pale hair. She got up. She said in a very lofty, imposing way,
"Do you mind following me into the drawing-room, Constantia? I've got something
of great importance to discuss with you."
For it was always to the drawing-room they retired when they wanted to talk over
Kate.
Josephine closed the door meaningly. "Sit down, Constantia," she said, still
very grand. She might have been receiving Constantia for the first time. And
Con looked round vaguely for a chair, as though she felt indeed quite a
stranger.
"Now the question is," said Josephine, bending forward, "whether we shall keep
her or not."
"And this time," said Josephine firmly, "we must come to a definite decision."
Constantia looked for a moment as though she might begin going over all the
other times, but she pulled herself together and said, "Yes, Jug."
"You see, Con," explained Josephine, "everything is so changed now." Constantia
looked up quickly. "I mean," went on Josephine, "we're not dependent on Kate as
we were." And she blushed faintly. "There's not father to cook for."
"That is perfectly true," agreed Constantia. "Father certainly doesn't want any
cooking now, whatever else--"
Josephine broke in sharply, "You're not sleepy, are you, Con?"
"Well, concentrate more," said Josephine sharply, and she returned to the
subject. "What it comes to is, if we did" - and this she barely breathed,
glancing at the door - "give Kate notice" - she raised her voice again - "we
could manage our own food."
"Why not?" cried Constantia. She couldn't help smiling. The idea was so
exciting. She clasped her hands. "What should we live on, Jug?"
"Oh, eggs in various forms!" said Jug, lofty again. "And, besides, there are
all the cooked foods."
"But I've always heard," said Constantia, "they are considered so very
expensive."
"Not if one buys them in moderation," said Josephine. But she tore herself away
from this fascinating bypath and dragged Constantia after her.
"What we've got to decide now, however, is whether we really do trust Kate or
not."
Constantia leaned back. Her flat little laugh flew from her lips.
"Isn't it curious, Jug," said she, "that just on this one subject I've never
been able to quite make up my mind?"
She never had. The whole difficulty was to prove anything. How did one prove
things, how could one? Suppose Kate had stood in front of her and deliberately
made a face. Mightn't she very well have been in pain? Wasn't it impossible,
at any rate, to ask Kate if she was making a face at her? If Kate answered "No"
- and, of course, she would say "No" - what a position! How undignified! Then
again Constantia suspected, she was almost certain that Kate went to her chest
of drawers when she and Josephine were out, not to take things but to spy. Many
times she had come back to find her amethyst cross in the most unlikely places,
under her lace ties or on top of her evening Bertha. More than once she had
laid a trap for Kate. She had arranged things in a special order and then
called Josephine to witness.
But, oh dear, when she did go to look, she was as far off from a proof as ever!
If anything was displaced, it might so very well have happened as she closed the
drawer; a jolt might have done it so easily.
"You come, Jug, and decide. I really can't. It's too difficult."
But after a pause and a long glare Josephine would sigh, "Now you've put the
doubt into my mind, Con, I'm sure I can't tell myself."
"Well, we can't postpone it again," said Josephine. "If we postpone it this
time--"
But at that moment in the street below a barrel-organ struck up. Josephine and
Constantia sprang to their feet together.
"Run, Con," said Josephine. "Run quickly. There's sixpence on the--"
Then they remembered. It didn't matter. They would never have to stop the
organ-grinder again. Never again would she and Constantia be told to make that
monkey take his noise somewhere else. Never would sound that loud, strange
bellow when father thought they were not hurrying enough. The organ-grinder
might play there all day and the stick would not thump.
"It never will thump again, It never will thump again,
What was Constantia thinking? She had such a strange smile; she looked
different. She couldn't be going to cry.
"Jug, Jug," said Constantia softly, pressing her hands together. "Do you know
what day it is? It's Saturday. It's a week to-day, a whole week."
"A week since father died, A week since father died,"
cried the barrel-organ. And Josephine, too, forgot to be practical and
sensible; she smiled faintly, strangely. On the Indian carpet there fell a
square of sunlight, pale red; it came and went and came - and stayed, deepened -
until it shone almost golden.
"The sun's out," said Josephine, as though it really mattered.
A perfect fountain of bubbling notes shook from the barrel-organ, round, bright
notes, carelessly scattered.
Constantia lifted her big, cold hands as if to catch them, and then her hands
fell again. She walked over to the mantelpiece to her favourite Buddha. And
the stone and gilt image, whose smile always gave her such a queer feeling,
almost a pain and yet a pleasant pain, seemed to-day to be more than smiling.
He knew something; he had a secret. "I know something that you don't know,"
said her Buddha. Oh, what was it, what could it be? And yet she had always
felt there was ... something.
The sunlight pressed through the windows, thieved its way in, flashed its light
over the furniture and the photographs. Josephine watched it. When it came to
mother's photograph, the enlargement over the piano, it lingered as though
puzzled to find so little remained of mother, except the earrings shaped like
tiny pagodas and a black feather boa. Why did the photographs of dead people
always fade so? wondered Josephine. As soon as a person was dead their
photograph died too. But, of course, this one of mother was very old. It was
thirty-five years old. Josephine remembered standing on a chair and pointing
out that feather boa to Constantia and telling her that it was a snake that had
killed their mother in Ceylon ... Would everything have been different if mother
hadn't died? She didn't see why. Aunt Florence had lived with them until they
had left school, and they had moved three times and had their yearly holiday and
... and there'd been changes of servants, of course.
Some little sparrows, young sparrows they sounded, chirped on the window-ledge.
"Yeep - eyeep - yeep." But Josephine felt they were not sparrows, not on the
window-ledge. It was inside her, that queer little crying noise. "Yeep - eyeep
- yeep." Ah, what was it crying, so weak and forlorn?
If mother had lived, might they have married? But there had been nobody for
them to marry. There had been father's Anglo-Indian friends before he
quarrelled with them. But after that she and Constantia never met a single man
except clergymen. How did one meet men? Or even if they'd met them, how could
they have got to know men well enough to be more than strangers? One read of
people having adventures, being followed, and so on. But nobody had ever
followed Constantia and her. Oh yes, there had been one year at Eastbourne a
mysterious man at their boarding-house who had put a note on the jug of hot
water outside their bedroom door! But by the time Connie had found it the steam
had made the writing too faint to read; they couldn't even make out to which of
them it was addressed. And he had left next day. And that was all. The rest
had been looking after father, and at the same time keeping out of father's way.
But now? But now? The thieving sun touched Josephine gently. She lifted her
face. She was drawn over to the window by gentle beams ...
Until the barrel-organ stopped playing Constantia stayed before the Buddha,
wondering, but not as usual, not vaguely. This time her wonder was like
longing. She remembered the times she had come in here, crept out of bed in her
nightgown when the moon was full, and lain on the floor with her arms
outstretched, as though she was crucified. Why? The big, pale moon had made
her do it. The horrible dancing figures on the carved screen had leered at her
and she hadn't minded. She remembered too how, whenever they were at the
seaside, she had gone off by herself and got as close to the sea as she could,
and sung something, something she had made up, while she gazed all over that
restless water. There had been this other life, running out, bringing things
home in bags, getting things on approval, discussing them with Jug, and taking
them back to get more things on approval, and arranging father's trays and
trying not to annoy father. But it all seemed to have happened in a kind of
tunnel. It wasn't real. It was only when she came out of the tunnel into the
moonlight or by the sea or into a thunderstorm that she really felt herself.
What did it mean? What was it she was always wanting? What did it all lead to?
Now? Now?
She turned away from the Buddha with one of her vague gestures. She went over
to where Josephine was standing. She wanted to say something to Josephine,
something frightfully important, about - about the future and what ...