The Old Wives' Tale by Arnold Bennett (thriller books to read .TXT) đ
- Author: Arnold Bennett
- Performer: -
Book online «The Old Wives' Tale by Arnold Bennett (thriller books to read .TXT) đ». Author Arnold Bennett
âSophia,â she said, in a changed and solemn voice, fronting her daughter, and holding away from her apron those floured, ringed hands, âI donât know what has come over you. Truly I donât! Your father and I are prepared to put up with a certain amount, but the line must be drawn. The fact is, weâve spoilt you, and instead of getting better as you grow up, youâre getting worse. Now let me hear no more of this, please. I wish you would imitate your sister a little more. Of course if you wonât do your share in the shop, no one can make you. If you choose to be an idler about the house, we shall have to endure it. We can only advise you for your own good. But as for this âŠâ She stopped, and let silence speak, and then finished: âLet me hear no more of it.â
It was a powerful and impressive speech, enunciated clearly in such a tone as Mrs. Baines had not employed since dismissing a young lady assistant five years ago for light conduct.
âBut, motherââ
A commotion of pails resounded at the top of the stone steps. It was Maggie in descent from the bedrooms. Now, the Baines family passed its life in doing its best to keep its affairs to itself, the assumption being that Maggie and all the shop-staff (Mr. Povey possibly excepted) were obsessed by a ravening appetite for that which did not concern them. Therefore the voices of the Baineses always died away, or fell to a hushed, mysterious whisper, whenever the foot of the eavesdropper was heard.
Mrs. Baines put a floured finger to her double chin. âThat will do,â said she, with finality.
Maggie appeared, and Sophia, with a brusque precipitation of herself, vanished upstairs.
II
âNow, really, Mr. Povey, this is not like you,â said Mrs. Baines, who, on her way into the shop, had discovered the Indispensable in the cutting-out room.
It is true that the cutting-out room was almost Mr. Poveyâs sanctum, whither he retired from time to time to cut out suits of clothes and odd garments for the tailoring department. It is true that the tailoring department flourished with orders, employing several tailors who crossed legs in their own homes, and that appointments were continually being made with customers for trying-on in that room. But these considerations did not affect Mrs. Bainesâs attitude of disapproval.
âIâm just cutting out that suit for the minister,â said Mr. Povey.
The Reverend Mr. Murley, superintendent of the Wesleyan Methodist circuit, called on Mr. Baines every week. On a recent visit Mr. Baines had remarked that the parsonâs coat was ageing into green, and had commanded that a new suit should be built and presented to Mr. Murley. Mr. Murley, who had a genuine mediaeval passion for souls, and who spent his money and health freely in gratifying the passion, had accepted the offer strictly on behalf of Christ, and had carefully explained to Mr. Povey Christâs use for multifarious pockets.
âI see you are,â said Mrs. Baines tartly. âBut thatâs no reason why you should be without a coatâand in this cold room too. You with toothache!â
The fact was that Mr. Povey always doffed his coat when cutting out. Instead of a coat he wore a tape-measure.
âMy tooth doesnât hurt me,â said he, sheepishly, dropping the great scissors and picking up a cake of chalk.
âFiddlesticks!â said Mrs. Baines.
This exclamation shocked Mr. Povey. It was not unknown on the lips of Mrs. Baines, but she usually reserved it for members of her own sex. Mr. Povey could not recall that she had ever applied it to any statement of his. âWhatâs the matter with the woman?â he thought. The redness of her face did not help him to answer the question, for her face was always red after the operations of Friday in the kitchen.
âYou men are all alike,â Mrs. Baines continued. âThe very thought of the dentistâs cures you. Why donât you go in at once to Mr. Critchlow and have it outâlike a man?â
Mr. Critchlow extracted teeth, and his shop sign said âBone-setter and chemist.â But Mr. Povey had his views.
âI make no account of Mr. Critchlow as a dentist,â said he.
âThen for goodnessâ sake go up to Oulsnamâs.â
âWhen? I canât very well go now, and tomorrow is Saturday.â
âWhy canât you go now?â
âWell, of course, I COULD go now,â he admitted.
âLet me advise you to go, then, and donât come back with that tooth in your head. I shall be having you laid up next. Show some pluck, do!â
âOh! pluckâ!â he protested, hurt.
At that moment Constance came down the passage singing.
âConstance, my pet!â Mrs. Baines called.
âYes, mother.â She put her head into the room. âOh!â Mr. Povey was assuming his coat.
âMr. Povey is going to the dentistâs.â
âYes, Iâm going at once,â Mr. Povey confirmed.
âOh! Iâm so GLAD!â Constance exclaimed. Her face expressed a pure sympathy, uncomplicated by critical sentiments. Mr. Povey rapidly bathed in that sympathy, and then decided that he must show himself a man of oak and iron.
âItâs always best to get these things done with,â said he, with stern detachment. âIâll just slip my overcoat on.â
âHere it is,â said Constance, quickly. Mr. Poveyâs overcoat and hat were hung on a hook immediately outside the room, in the passage. She gave him the overcoat, anxious to be of service.
âI didnât call you in here to be Mr. Poveyâs valet,â said Mrs. Baines to herself with mild grimness; and aloud: âI canât stay in the shop long, Constance, but you can be there, canât you, till Mr. Povey comes back? And if anything happens run upstairs and tell me.â
âYes, mother,â Constance eagerly consented. She hesitated and then turned to obey at once.
âI want to speak to you first, my pet,â Mrs. Baines stopped her. And her tone was peculiar, charged with import, confidential, and therefore very flattering to Constance.
âI think Iâll go out by the side-door,â said Mr. Povey. âItâll be nearer.â
This was truth. He would save about ten yards, in two miles, by going out through the side-door instead of through the shop. Who could have guessed that he was ashamed to be seen going to the dentistâs, afraid lest, if he went through the shop, Mrs. Baines might follow him and utter some remark prejudicial to his dignity before the assistants? (Mrs. Baines could have guessed, and did.)
âYou wonât want that tape-measure,â said Mrs. Baines, dryly, as Mr. Povey dragged open the side-door. The ends of the forgotten tape-measure were dangling beneath coat and overcoat.
âOh!â Mr. Povey scowled at his forgetfulness.
âIâll put it in its place,â said Constance, offering to receive the tape-measure.
âThank you,â said Mr. Povey, gravely. âI donât suppose theyâll be long over my bit of a job,â he added, with a difficult, miserable smile.
Then he went off down King Street, with an exterior of gay briskness and dignified joy in the fine May morning. But there was no May morning in his cowardly human heart.
âHi! Povey!â cried a voice from the Square.
But Mr. Povey disregarded all appeals. He had put his hand to the plough, and he would not look back.
âHi! Povey!â
Useless!
Mrs. Baines and Constance were both at the door. A middle-aged man was crossing the road from Boulton Terrace, the lofty erection of new shops which the envious rest of the Square had decided to call âshowy.â He waved a hand to Mrs. Baines, who kept the door open.
âItâs Dr. Harrop,â she said to Constance. âI shouldnât be surprised if that babyâs come at last, and he wanted to tell Mr. Povey.â
Constance blushed, full of pride. Mrs. Povey, wife of âour Mr. Poveyâsâ renowned cousin, the high-class confectioner and baker in Boulton Terrace, was a frequent subject of discussion in the Baines family,, but this was absolutely the first time that Mrs. Baines had acknowledged, in presence of Constance, the marked and growing change which had characterized Mrs. Poveyâs condition during recent months. Such frankness on the part of her mother, coming after the decision about leaving school, proved indeed that Constance had ceased to be a mere girl.
âGood morning, doctor.â
The doctor, who carried a little bag and wore riding-breeches (he was the last doctor in Bursley to abandon the saddle for the dog-cart), saluted and straightened his high, black stock.
âMorning! Morning, missy! Well, itâs a boy.â
âWhat? Yonder?â asked Mrs. Baines, indicating the confectionerâs.
Dr. Harrop nodded. âI wanted to inform him,â said he, jerking his shoulder in the direction of the swaggering coward.
âWhat did I tell you, Constance?â said Mrs. Baines, turning to her daughter.
Constanceâs confusion was equal to her pleasure. The alert doctor had halted at the foot of the two steps, and with one hand in the pocket of his âfull-fallâ breeches, he gazed up, smiling out of little eyes, at the ample matron and the slender virgin.
âYes,â he said. âBeen up most of thâ night. Difficult! Difficult!â
âItâs all RIGHT, I hope?â
âOh yes. Fine child! Fine child! But he put his mother to some trouble, for all that. Nothing fresh?â This time he lifted his eyes to indicate Mr. Bainesâs bedroom.
âNo,â said Mrs. Baines, with a different expression.
âKeeps cheerful?â
âYes.â
âGood! A very good morning to you.â
He strode off towards his house, which was lower down the street.
âI hope sheâll turn over a new leaf now,â observed Mrs. Baines to Constance as she closed the door. Constance knew that her mother was referring to the confectionerâs wife; she gathered that the hope was slight in the extreme.
âWhat did you want to speak to me about, mother?â she asked, as a way out of her delicious confusion.
âShut that door,â Mrs. Baines replied, pointing to the door which led to the passage; and while Constance obeyed, Mrs. Baines herself shut the staircase-door. She then said, in a low, guarded voiceâ
âWhatâs all this about Sophia wanting to be a school-teacher?â
âWanting to be a school-teacher?â Constance repeated, in tones of amazement.
âYes. Hasnât she said anything to you?â
âNot a word!â
âWell, I never! She wants to keep on with Miss Chetwynd and be a teacher.â Mrs. Baines had half a mind to add that Sophia had mentioned London. But she restrained herself. There are some things which one cannot bring oneâs self to say. She added, âInstead of going into the shop!â
âI never heard of such a thing!â Constance murmured brokenly, in the excess of her astonishment. She was rolling up Mr. Poveyâs tape-measure.
âNeither did I!â said Mrs. Baines.
âAnd shall you let her, mother?â
âNeither your father nor I would ever dream of it!â Mrs. Baines replied, with calm and yet terrible decision. âI only mentioned it to you because I thought Sophia would have told you something.â
âNo, mother!â
As Constance put Mr. Poveyâs tape-measure neatly away in its drawer under the cutting-out counter, she thought how serious life wasâwhat with babies and Sophias. She was very proud of her motherâs confidence in her; this simple pride filled her ardent breast with a most agreeable commotion. And she wanted to help everybody, to show in some way how much she sympathized with and loved everybody. Even the madness of Sophia did not weaken her longing to comfort Sophia.
III
That afternoon there was a search for Sophia, whom no one had seen since dinner. She was discovered by her mother, sitting alone and unoccupied in the drawingroom. The circumstance was in itself sufficiently peculiar, for on weekdays the drawingroom was never used, even by the girls during their holidays, except for the purpose of playing the piano. However, Mrs. Baines offered no
Comments (0)