The Clayhanger Trilogy: Clayhanger, Hilda Lessways & These Twain (Complete Edition). Bennett Arnold

The Clayhanger Trilogy: Clayhanger, Hilda Lessways & These Twain (Complete Edition) - Bennett Arnold


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yer tongue, lad!” said Darius, as stiffly as he could. But Darius, having been unprepared, was intimidated. Darius vaguely comprehended that a new and disturbing factor had come into his life. “Make a less row!” he went on more strongly. “D’ye want all th’ street to hear ye?”

      “I won’t make a less row. You make as much noise as you want, and I’ll make as much noise as I want!” Edwin cried louder and louder. And then in bitter scorn, “Thief, indeed!”

      “I never called ye a—”

      “Let me come out!” Edwin shouted. They were very close together. Darius saw that his son’s face was all drawn. Edwin snatched his hat off its hook, pushed violently past his father and, sticking his hands deep in his pockets, strode into the street.

      Three.

      In four minutes he was hammering on the front door of the new house. Maggie opened, in alarm. Edwin did not see how alarmed she was by his appearance.

      “What—”

      “Father thinks I’ve been stealing his damned money!” Edwin snapped, in a breaking voice. The statement was not quite accurate, but it suited his boiling anger to put it in the present tense instead of in the past. He hesitated an instant in the hall, throwing a look behind at Maggie, who stood entranced with her hand on the latch of the open door. Then he bounded upstairs, and shut himself in his room with a tremendous bang that shook the house. He wanted to cry, but he would not.

      Nobody disturbed him till about two o’clock, when Maggie knocked at the door, and opened it, without entering.

      “Edwin, I’ve kept your dinner hot.”

      “No, thanks.” He was standing with his legs wide apart on the hearth rug.

      “Father’s had his dinner and gone.”

      “No, thanks.”

      She closed the door again.

      Chapter 16.

      The Sequel.

      Table of Contents

      “I say, Edwin,” Maggie called through the door.

      “Well, come in, come in,” he replied gruffly. And as he spoke he sped from the window, where he was drumming on the pane, to the hearthrug, so that he should have the air of not having moved since Maggie’s previous visit. He knew not why he made this manoeuvre, unless it was that he thought vaguely that Maggie’s impression of the seriousness of the crisis might thereby be intensified.

      She stood in the doorway, evidently placatory and sympathetic, and behind her stood Mrs Nixon, in a condition of great mental turmoil.

      “I think you’d better come and have your tea,” said Maggie firmly, and yet gently. She was soft and stout, and incapable of asserting herself with dignity; but she was his elder, and there were moments when an unusual, scarce-perceptible quality in her voice would demand from him a particular attention.

      He shook his head, and looked sternly at his watch, in the manner of one who could be adamant. He was astonished to see that the hour was a quarter past six.

      “Where is he?” he asked.

      “Father? He’s had his tea and gone back to the shop. Come along.”

      “I must wash myself first,” said Edwin gloomily. He did not wish to yield, but he was undeniably very hungry indeed.

      Mrs Nixon could not leave him alone at tea, worrying him with offers of specialities to tempt him. He wondered who had told the old thing about the affair. Then he reflected that she had probably heard his outburst when he entered the house. Possibly the pert, nice niece also had heard it. Maggie remained sewing at the bow-window of the dining-room while he ate a plenteous tea.

      “Father said I could tell you that you could pay yourself an extra half-crown a week wages from next Saturday,” said Maggie suddenly, when she saw he had finished. It was always Edwin who paid wages in the Clayhanger establishment.

      He was extremely startled by this news, with all that it implied of surrender and of pacific intentions. But he endeavoured to hide what he felt, and only snorted.

      “He’s been talking, then? What did he say?”

      “Oh! Not much! He told me I could tell you if I liked.”

      “It would have looked better of him, if he’d told me himself,” said Edwin, determined to be ruthless. Maggie offered no response.

      Two.

      After about a quarter of an hour he went into the garden, and kicked stones in front of him. He could not classify his thoughts. He considered himself to be perfectly tranquillised now, but he was mistaken. As he idled in the beautiful August twilight near the garden-front of the house, catching faintly the conversation of Mrs Nixon and her niece as it floated through the open window of the kitchen, round the corner, together with quiet soothing sounds of washing-up, he heard a sudden noise in the garden-porch, and turned swiftly. His father stood there. Both of them were off guard. Their eyes met.

      “Had your tea?” Darius asked, in an unnatural tone.

      “Yes,” said Edwin.

      Darius, having saved his face, hurried into the house, and Edwin moved down the garden, with heart sensibly beating. The encounter renewed his agitation.

      And at the corner of the garden, over the hedge, which had been repaired, Janet entrapped him. She seemed to have sprung out of the ground. He could not avoid greeting her, and in order to do so he had to dominate himself by force. She was in white. She appeared always to wear white on fine summer days. Her smile was exquisitely benignant.

      “So you’re installed?” she began.

      They talked of the removal, she asking questions and commenting, and he giving brief replies.

      “I’m all alone to-night,” she said, in a pause, “except for Alicia. Father and mother and the boys are gone to a fete at Longshaw.”

      “And Miss Lessways?” he inquired self-consciously.

      “Oh! She’s gone,” said Janet. “She’s gone back to London. Went yesterday.”

      “Rather sudden, isn’t it?”

      “Well, she had to go.”

      “Does she live in London?” Edwin asked, with an air of indifference.

      “She does just now.”

      “I only ask because I thought from something she said she came from Turnhill way.”

      “Her people do,” said Janet. “Yes, you may say she’s a Turnhill girl.”

      “She seems very fond of poetry,” said Edwin.

      “You’ve noticed it!” Janet’s face illuminated the dark. “You should hear her recite!”

      “Recites, does she?”

      “You’d have heard her that night you were here. But when she knew you were coming, she made us all promise not to ask her.”

      “Really!” said Edwin. “But why? She didn’t know me. She’d never seen me.”

      “Oh! She might have just seen you in the street. In fact I believe she had. But that wasn’t the reason,” Janet laughed. “It was just that you were a stranger. She’s very sensitive, you know.”

      “Ye-es,” he admitted.

      Three.

      He


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