Short Fiction Arthur Machen (best free ebook reader for android .txt) đ
- Author: Arthur Machen
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âWhat do they do with themselves all the evening? They have from five to ten, havenât they?â
âYes; five, or sometimes half-past, when the water wonât boil. Well, I believe they go for walks usually. Once or twice he has taken her to the City Temple, and the Sunday before last they walked up and down Oxford Street, and then sat in the Park. But it seems that last Sunday they went to tea with his mother at Putney. I should like to tell the old woman what I really think of her.â
âWhy? What happened? Was she nasty to the girl?â
âNo; thatâs just it. Before this, she has been very unpleasant on several occasions. When the young man first took Alice to see herâ âthat was in Marchâ âthe girl came away crying; she told me so herself. Indeed, she said she never wanted to see old Mrs. Murry again; and I told Alice that, if she had not exaggerated things, I could hardly blame her for feeling like that.â
âWhy? What did she cry for?â
âWell, it seems that the old ladyâ âshe lives in quite a small cottage in some Putney back streetâ âwas so stately that she would hardly speak. She had borrowed a little girl from some neighbourâs family, and had managed to dress her up to imitate a servant, and Alice said nothing could be sillier than to see that mite opening the door, with her black dress and her white cap and apron, and she hardly able to turn the handle, as Alice said. George (thatâs the young manâs name) had told Alice that it was a little bit of a house; but he said the kitchen was comfortable, though very plain and old-fashioned. But, instead of going straight to the back, and sitting by a big fire on the old settle that they had brought up from the country, that child asked for their names (did you ever hear such nonsense?) and showed them into a little poky parlour, where old Mrs. Murry was sitting âlike a duchess,â by a fireplace full of coloured paper, and the room as cold as ice. And she was so grand that she would hardly speak to Alice.â
âThat must have been very unpleasant.â
âOh, the poor girl had a dreadful time. She began with: âVery pleased to make your acquaintance, Miss Dill. I know so very few persons in service.â Alice imitates her mincing way of talking, but I canât do it. And then she went on to talk about her family, how they had farmed their own land for five hundred yearsâ âsuch stuff! George had told Alice all about it: they had had an old cottage with a good strip of garden and two fields somewhere in Essex, and that old woman talked almost as if they had been country gentry, and boasted about the Rector, Dr. Somebody, coming to see them so often, and of Squire Somebody Else always looking them up, as if they didnât visit them out of kindness. Alice told me it was as much as she could do to keep from laughing in Mrs. Murryâs face, her young man having told her all about the place, and how small it was, and how the Squire had been so kind about buying it when old Murry died and George was a little boy, and his mother not able to keep things going. However, that silly old woman âlaid it on thick,â as you say, and the young man got more and more uncomfortable, especially when she went on to speak about marrying in oneâs own class, and how unhappy she had known young men to be who had married beneath them, giving some very pointed looks at Alice as she talked. And then such an amusing thing happened: Alice had noticed George looking about him in a puzzled sort of way, as if he couldnât make out something or other, and at last he burst out and asked his mother if she had been buying up the neighboursâ ornaments, as he remembered the two green cut-glass vases on the mantelpiece at Mrs. Ellisâs, and the wax flowers at Miss Turveyâs. He was going on, but his mother scowled at him, and upset some books, which he had to pick up; but Alice quite understood she had been borrowing things from her neighbours, just as she had borrowed the little girl, so as to look grander. And then they had teaâ âwater bewitched, Alice calls itâ âand very thin bread and butter, and rubbishy foreign pastry from the Swiss shop in the High Streetâ âall sour froth and rancid fat, Alice declares. And then Mrs. Murry began boasting again about her family, and snubbing Alice and talking at her, till the girl came away quite furious, and very unhappy, too. I donât wonder at it, do you?â
âIt doesnât sound very enjoyable, certainly,â said Darnell, looking dreamily at his wife. He had not been attending very carefully to the subject-matter of her story, but he loved to hear a voice that was incantation in his ears, tones that summoned before him the vision of a magic world.
âAnd has the young manâs mother always been like this?â he said after a long pause, desiring that the music should continue.
âAlways, till quite lately, till last Sunday in fact. Of course Alice spoke to George Murry at once, and said, like a sensible girl, that she didnât think it ever answered for a married couple to live with the manâs mother, âespecially,â she went on, âas I can see your mother hasnât taken much of a fancy to me.â He told her, in the usual style, it was only his motherâs way, that she didnât really mean anything, and so on; but Alice kept away for a long time, and rather hinted, I think, that it might come to having to choose between her and his mother. And so affairs went on all through the spring and summer, and then, just before
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