Consequences & The War-Workers. E. M. Delafield

Consequences & The War-Workers - E. M. Delafield


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car, like this, every day. It somehow makes me howl with laughter."

      She gave a faint, embittered snigger, and Miss Henderson and Mrs. Potter exchanged glances.

      "I hear the car now," said Mrs. Bullivant. "She'll be cold. I'll get another cup, and give her some tea before she goes over to the office. I do hope she's got Miss Vivian's authority for me to find a new servant."

      They heard her outside in the hall, making inquiry, and Grace's voice answering in tones of congratulation.

      "Yes, it's quite all right. I asked Miss Vivian most particularly, and told her what a lot of work there was, and she said, Get some one as soon as you could. I came here before going to the office so as to tell you at once."

      "Well, that was nice of you, dear, and now you shall have a nice cup of hot tea before you go out again. Just a minute."

      "I'll fetch it, Mrs. Bullivant. Don't you bother."

      "It's all right, dear, only a cup and saucer wanted; the rest is all ready."

      In a few minutes Grace came into the sitting-room carefully carrying the cup and saucer.

      When she saw Miss Delmege she said in a pleased way: "Oh, I'm so glad you're better. Miss Vivian asked after you. She was up herself this afternoon, and looking much better."

      "And how's her father?"

      "They are much happier about him since he recovered consciousness. He can talk almost quite well, and Dr. Prince is quite satisfied about him. And they've got a nurse at last. You know, they couldn't get one for love or money; none of the London places had any to spare."

      "I should have thought they could get one from one of the Questerham hospitals."

      "I think Lady Vivian meant to, if everything else failed, but Miss Vivian didn't think it a very good plan; she was afraid the hospitals couldn't spare any one, I suppose, and, anyhow, most of the people there are only V.A.D.'s."

      "And is there any hope of seeing her back at the office?" asked Mrs. Potter, rather faintly.

      "I don't know," replied Grace thoughtfully. "You see, poor Sir Piers may remain at this stage indefinitely, or may have another stroke any time. They don't really know...."

      "And Miss Vivian goes on with the work just the same!" ejaculated Miss Henderson. "She really is a marvel."

      "I'm sure she'd come to the office if it wasn't for poor Lady Vivian," said Miss Delmege. "But I know her mother depends on her altogether. I don't suppose she could leave her, not as things are now."

      Miss Delmege's assumption of an intimate and superior knowledge of the ménage at Plessing was received in silence. Miss Henderson, indeed, glancing sharply at Grace, saw the merest quiver of surprise pass across her face at the assertion; but reflected charitably that, after all, Delmege had had a pretty sharp go of flu, and probably wasn't feeling up to the mark yet. Her mis-statements, however irritating, had better be left unchallenged.

      "Do you ever see anything of Lady Vivian when you're at Plessing?" Miss Delmege inquired benevolently of Grace, but the benevolence faded from her expression when Miss Jones replied, with more enthusiasm than usual in her voice, that she always had lunch with Lady Vivian, and sometimes went round the garden with her before going up to Miss Vivian's room for the afternoon's work.

      "Dear me! I shouldn't have thought she'd have much time for going round the garden. But she's not thoroughgoing, like Miss Vivian is, of course. It's quite a different sort of nature, I fancy. Strange, too, being mother and daughter."

      Miss Henderson decided rapidly within herself that, influenza or no, Delmege was making herself unbearable.

      "You're getting tired with sitting up, aren't you, dear?" she inquired crisply.

      There was a moment's silence, and then Miss Delmege said in pinched accents: "Who is it you're referring to, dear? Me, by any chance?"

      Grace knew the state of tension to which those aloof and refined tones were the prelude, and exclaimed hurriedly that she must go.

      She did not want to hear Miss Henderson and Miss Delmege having "words," or to listen while Miss Delmege talked with genteel familiarity of Sir Piers and Lady Vivian.

      Pulling on her thick uniform coat, she went out, and slowly crossed the street.

      She was thinking of Lady Vivian, who had roused in her an enthusiasm which she could never feel for Char, and who had talked to her so frankly and warmly, as though to a contemporary, that afternoon in the garden at Plessing. For all her quality of matter-of-factness, there was a certain humble-mindedness about Miss Jones, which made it a matter of surprise to her when she found herself on the borders of friendship with the woman whom she thought so courageous and so lovable.

      She hoped that Miss Vivian would require her to go out to Plessing every day for a long while; then reflected that the privilege rightly belonged to Miss Delmege, who would certainly avail herself of it at the earliest possible moment.

      She knew, and calmly accepted, that Miss Delmege's services would certainly be preferred to her own by the Director of the Midland Supply Depôt; but she did not think that Lady Vivian proffered her liking or her confidence lightly, and felt a certain placid security that their unofficial intercourse would somehow or other continue. Then, with characteristic thoroughness, she dismissed the question from her mind and went into the office and to her work.

      That evening Grace went to the Canteen. Only Miss Marsh, Miss Anthony, and Miss Henderson accompanied her.

      "We shall have to work like blacks to make up for the absentees," groaned Tony.

      "Never mind; it isn't quite so cold tonight. Isn't the moon nice?"

      "Lovely. Just the night for Zeppelins."

      Miss Henderson spoke from the pessimism of approaching influenza, but it happened that she was right. The first air raid over Questerham took place that night.

      The work was rapidly lessening towards eleven o'clock, when Captain Trevellyan came into the hall. He stood for an instant gazing round him reflectively, then said to Grace: "Who is in command here?"

      "Mrs. Willoughby, when Miss Vivian isn't here."

      "I see, thank you."

      Looking very doubtful, he sought Lesbia, who was preparing to discard her overall and to take her departure with the Pekinese.

      "Johnnie! How too sweet of you to turn up just in time to see me home! My Lewis hates my going back alone in the dark; we've very nearly quarrelled over it already."

      "The fact is," said Trevellyan, wondering if Mrs. Willoughby were the sort of person to have hysterics, "that there's been a telephone warning to say an air-raid is on, just over Staningham. They're heading this way, so we may hear a gun or two, you know; some of our machines are in pursuit."

      He gazed anxiously at Lesbia, whom he characteristically supposed to be about either to burst into tears or to threaten a fainting fit.

      The ideas of Captain Trevellyan were perhaps not much more advanced than those of Lady Vivian's secretary.

      But Mrs. Willoughby discounted his solicitude, at least on one score, in a moment.

      "Zepps!" she screamed excitedly. "How too thrilling! Can I possibly get on to the roof, I wonder? I've never seen one yet."

      "Stop!" said the astonished Trevellyan. "You don't realize. They'll be over here in a few minutes, and our machines may be firing at them, besides the guns on the hill; there'll be shrapnel falling."

      Mrs. Willoughby tore off her overall and snatched up Puff.

      "I must, must see it all!" she declared wildly. "Have you got a pair of field-glasses?"

      Trevellyan restrained her forcibly from dashing to the door.

      "Mrs. Willoughby, we've got to consider that there are a number of people here, and that they are all in a certain amount of danger—not so much from bombs, though


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