Read Parents and Children Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âIt is your own affair,' said Regan.
âThank Lady Sullivan, Ridley,' said Hope.
âI do so indeed,' said Ridley, âfor the freedom of action implied in the words.'
âEleanor goes from our home, and shall go when and how she wishes,' said Sir Jesse.
âThe condition of a honeymoon seems to be our taking it at once,' went on Ridley, in a more ordinary and open manner. âAnd I confess to a natural reluctance to forgo one.'
âWell, there is not much gained by putting it off,' said Regan.
âI think there is not, Grandma,' said Luce.
âYou would not like to have me for a little longer?' said Eleanor.
âWe are depending on your assurance that we shall not lose you,' said Daniel.
âI suppose no one makes a success of the transitional time.'
âWe are not criticizing you, Mother dear,' said Luce.
âI had better yield to the general opinion,' said Eleanor, with a touch of bitterness.
âI hope your own is not an exception,' said Ridley.
âIs it any wonder that I did not see what was coming on us?' said Daniel, in a low tone.
âI shall never prove that I saw it,' said Graham. âIt seemed that speaking of it would establish it. Luce did not say a word.'
âSomehow I could not, Graham.'
âWe cannot yield to our instinct to rescue our mother,' said Daniel.
âIt does not seem that she would give you much trouble,' said Isabel.
âHush, boys, hush. Not before the children,' said Luce.
âWell, shall we put the marriage in a fortnight?' said Sir Jesse, trying to help his daughter-in-law.
âI am afraid I must press for it earlier, even in a matter of days,' said Ridley. âBut I thank you, Sir Jesse, for generously furthering my cause. I wish I could rid myself of the idea that I am carrying off my bride.'
âWhy does one dislike the term, bride, as applied to one's mother?' said Luce.
âThere are several reasons, and none of them can be mentioned,' said Graham.
âNot before the children,' said Venice.
âWe seem to be giving rise to a good deal of confidential discussion, Eleanor,' said Ridley.
âAre you going to be married as soon as on Friday?' said James, in a high voice.
âI thank you, James,' said Ridley, âfor putting into words what I did not dare to myself.'
âWill you just go into the church and come out again, married?'
âI thank you again, James.'
âAnd then Mother will be Mrs Ridley Cranmer?'
âI thank you once more, my boy.'
âSo you have thought out all the steps,' said Regan, in a cool tone.
âI fear that I stand exposed,' said Ridley.
âShall we all come to the church?' said Venice.
âNo, dear child,' said Eleanor. âYou will say good-bye to me
here, and I shall come to see you on the day I come back from my honeymoon.'
âAnd then you will come every day,' said James.
âIn this atmosphere of reconciliation I will take my leave,' said Ridley. âI must betake myself to the duties that beset my remaining hours.'
âI will come to the door with you,' said Eleanor.
Regan gave her a swift look.
âIt is strange that we resent Mother's treating Ridley as she treated Father,' said Luce.
âSurely it is not,' said Daniel.
âShe does not do so,' said Isabel.
âThat is true,' said Graham.
âHow you all suppress your personal feeling!' said Hope. âIt is wonderful when you have so much. I somehow feel ashamed of Ridley, and yet he is only doing what your father did, and that must be a great and good thing, I suppose. I wonder if your mother knows her place in my life. I have only just found it out myself. Luce is too young to want me for a friend, and your grandmother would not be able to bear one.'
âYou come nearer to it than anyone, Airs Cranmer,' said Luce. âGrandma does not shrink into herself or take the defensive when she hears your approach.'
âNo, dear, but is that the test of real friendship? I feel it is generous of you to welcome Ridley. And it is a sensible idea to keep him in a house apart. I wonder I never thought of it. They say it is never too late to mend, but in this case it is. Your mother will be one of those people who really have two homes.'
âI wonder whom they will lose next. Their grandfather or me?' said Regan.
âThe loss of your son has not killed you, Lady Sullivan. We must face facts,' said Hope.
Regan was laughing as Eleanor returned to the room.
âWhat is the jest?' said the latter.
âIt was not one, Mother,' said Luce, âand as far as it was, it would not gain by repeating.'
âWhat was it, my dear, nevertheless?'
âIt was about Grandma's dying.'
âNot dying, dear,' said Hope.
âI warned you not to have it revealed, Mother.'
âBut that is such a terrible solution,' said Graham.
âIt is odd that old people think so little of their death,' said Regan.
âThey make a good many false claims, in that case,' said Isabel.
âThey would look foolish, if they forgot it,' said her grandmother. âOther people never separate them from it.'
âI think they feel stoic and heroic when they talk of it,' said Graham.
âSo it is true that human motives are mixed,' said Hope.
âI warned you not to have it revealed, Mother.'
âI must apply myself to my duties for the next days,' said Eleanor. âThere are things to be done for the children, before I leave them, I must take them into the town on Thursday, to get them some things that Hatton wants for them.'
âDon't they want them for themselves?' said Hope. âI thought the child was father of the man.'
âI don't know how these duties get put off.'
âYou had every excuse, Mother,' said Luce.
âWho is going into the town?' said James, in a casual manner.
âYou and Honor and Gavin,' said his mother. âNevill can do with what is handed down.'
âI should think he can,' said Hope. âI wonder it does not overwhelm him.'
âThat means a holiday for James,' said Eleanor, sighing. âAnd I suppose the wedding day does too.'
âI shall have to say good-bye to you,' said James, going on quickly to the next words. âYou won't mind living in the little house, will you?'
âNo, not at all. It will be my own.'
âThat will be a change for the better,' said Regan, in an almost cordial manner.
âWhat is the matter, Gavin?' said Eleanor, as she returned to the house with her children. âWhy are you staying in the carriage? You seem in such an odd mood.'
Gavin got out and walked up the steps without a word.
âWhat is wrong with him, Honor?'
âHe wanted you to stop and listen to him in the street. And now he wants to go back again.'
âHe must know he can't do that. We are later than we ought to be already. Grandma is waiting for us. It is tiresome of him to make my last day so difficult.'
James frolicked up the steps in the manner of a different and easier boy, and Honor followed in a neutral manner.
âWhy do people speak to each other, if other people don't listen?' said Gavin, without looking back.
âI heard what you said,' said his mother. âYou remember that I answered. But you must know you made a mistake.'
âI know that I saw him,' said Gavin. âAll my life I shall know.'
âChildren do fancy they see things, when they have them in their minds. Going where Father sometimes took you, reminded you of him, and you thought you saw him. That was all.'
âI wasn't reminded of him; I wasn't thinking about him. I haven't thought much about him for some time.'
âHonor, can't you persuade him that he must be wrong?'
âHe really thinks he saw him. You can't persuade a person then.'
âWell, run upstairs and try to forget it.'
âI shan't ever forget it,' said Gavin, going heavily from stair to stair. âI shall remember it every minute. I shan't ever remember other things.'
âHonor, tell Hatton what he thinks, and ask her to explain to him.'
âI shall tell her,' said Gavin.
âPerhaps you had better say nothing about it,' said Eleanor.
âI shall tell her,' repeated Gavin.
âNo, you had better not, my boy. Do you hear what I say?'
âIf I didn't hear, I couldn't answer.'
Eleanor sighed and went her way, prevented from pressing the point by the thought that it was her last day with her children.
Gavin went to the nursery.
âI saw Father,' he said.
âNo, you are making a mistake,' said Hatton.
Gavin sat down to take off his boots, and wasted no further word.
âYou have fancied it,' said Hatton, looking at his face, while Mullet, also observing it, came to his aid.
Gavin leaned back and accepted the latter's ministrations without attention to herself.
âPoor Gavin is not well,' said Nevill, glancing at his brother.
âHe really thinks he saw him,' said Honor, to Hatton.
âOf course he does, or he would not say so.'
âHe does do that sometimes,' said Nevill, in shocked condemnation of his brother's practices.
âIt is easy to imagine things,' said Mullet, falling into the error of judging other people by herself. âWhen he has had his dinner, he will see how it was. When we are hungry, our minds are out of our control.'
âI wasn't hungry,' said Gavin. âWe had things to eat at a shop. I am not hungry now.'
âDid he tell the mistress about it?' said Mullet to Honor.
âYes.'
âAnd what did she say?'
âSomething like what you and Hatton have said.'
âDid she mind his saying it?'
âYes, I think she did rather.'
Gavin took no notice when his plate was set before him, but presently took up his knife and fork, to forestall the inevitable pressure. As he ate, his colour returned, and he went through the meal with his normal appetite. When his sister talked, he answered with his usual directness, and he followed the others down to dessert, as though neither expecting nor desiring anything else. Nevill ran into the room and spoke at once.
âMother will be gone tomorrow,' he said, and rapidly corrected his tone. âPoor Mother will be gone away very soon.'
âThey like the constant holidays,' said Eleanor, with a smile and a sigh.
âIt was a chance to give Miss Pilbeam a day to herself,' said Luce.
âI thought we need hardly trouble,' said Eleanor. âNevill had his lessons alone.'
âJust him and Miss Pilbeam,' said the latter.
âIt was not worth Miss Pilbeam's while to come for half-an-hour,' said Luce.
âHe had an hour,' said Nevill. âThen Hatton came for him.'
âI should like to die,' said Gavin, looking round the table.
âWhy would you?' said Regan and Graham at once.
âBecause as long as you are alive, things can happen that you don't like. Even if you couldn't bear them, they would happen.'
âA good description of life,' said Isabel.
âIt is too one-sided,' said Eleanor. âAnd in your case it would be absurd. No children could be more fortunate.'
âWe haven't any father,' said Honor. âSo they could be.'
âWe could have one, if we liked,' said Gavin.
âDoes he mean Ridley?' said Luce.
âHe thinks he saw Father today,' said Honor.
âI did see him,' said her brother. âIn the town, when we were there with Mother.'
âIt is a fancy he has had,' said Eleanor.
Gavin's face did not change.
âWhat makes you think so, my boy?' said Sir Jesse. âWhy did you not speak to him?'
âGrandpa, don't press it,' said Luce, in a low tone. âIt is not a matter to push to its logical conclusion.'
âHe didn't want me to,' said Gavin. âHe didn't want us even to see him.'
âI should think that is very likely true,' said Eleanor, gently. âSo he would like you just to forget it. And that is what we will do.'
âDid you know he was there?' said Gavin, meeting her eyes.
âOf course she didn't,' said Honor. âOr she wouldn't be going to marry Mr Ridley.'
âThen she won't be able to forget it. She says things that are not true.'
âSo that is what you think of me,' said Eleanor.
âHe will think of Mother always when she is gone away,' said Nevill.
âI seem to have chosen the right course,' said Eleanor. âPeople have no trouble in adapting themselves to it.'
âI don't think I could ever come to a decision,' said Graham. âI hope my life will not afford much power of choice.'
âI should say the hope is grounded,' said Sir Jesse.
âYou are not going to live far away,' said James, to his mother.
âNo, of course not, my boy. I could not bear to do that.'
âI should think you could,' said Gavin.
âMy dear, I have just said I could not,' said Eleanor, in a tone of speaking to a much older person. âYou must let people give their own account of themselves. You can't know as much about them as they do.'
âYou can think you do. You can be sure.'
âThen you should remind yourself that you are likely to be wrong.'
âI never remind myself of things. If I don't think they are true, why should I?'
âIt is an office we do tend to reserve for other people,' said Isabel.
âWhy does this luncheon feel like an anniversary?' said Graham.
âIt is my last luncheon as a member of the household,' said Eleanor. âI think I shall try to forget it.'
âYou do forget things,' said Gavin.