AFTERaweekMrs。Laphamreturned,leavingIrenealoneattheoldhomesteadinVermont。"She’scomfortablethere——ascomfortableasshecanbeanywheres,Iguess,"shesaidtoherhusbandastheydrovetogetherfromthestation,wherehehadmetherinobediencetohertelegraphicsummons。
"Shekeepsherselfbusyhelpingaboutthehouse;
andshegoesroundamongstthehandsintheirhouses。
There’ssickness,andyouknowhowhelpfulsheiswherethere’ssickness。Shedon’tcomplainany。Idon’tknowasI’veheardawordoutofhermouthsincewelefthome;
butI’mafraidit’llwearonher,Silas。"
"Youdon’tlookoverandabovewellyourself,Persis,"
saidherhusbandkindly。
"Oh,don’ttalkaboutme。WhatIwanttoknowiswhetheryoucan’tgetthetimetorunoffwithhersomewhere。
IwrotetoyouaboutDubuque。She’llworkherselfdown,I’mafraid;andTHENIdon’tknowasshe’llbeoverit。
Butifshecouldgooff,andbeamused——seenewpeople————"
"IcouldMAKEthetime,"saidLapham,"ifIhadto。
But,asithappens,I’vegottogooutWestonbusiness,——I’lltellyouaboutit,——andI’lltakeIrenealong。"
"Good!"saidhiswife。"That’saboutthebestthingI’veheardyet。Whereyougoing?"
"OutDubuqueway。"
"AnythingthematterwithBill’sfolks?"
"No。It’sbusiness。"
"How’sPen?"
"Iguesssheain’tmuchbetterthanIrene。"
"Hebeenaboutany?"
"Yes。ButIcan’tseeasithelpsmattersmuch。"
"Tchk!"Mrs。Laphamfellbackagainstthecarriagecushions。
"Ideclare,toseeherwillingtotakethemanthatweallthoughtwantedhersister!Ican’tmakeitseemright。"
"It’sright,"saidLaphamstoutly;"butIguesssheain’twilling;Iwishshewas。Buttheredon’tseemtobeanywayoutofthething,anywhere。It’saperfectsnarl。
ButIdon’twantyoushouldbeanywaysha’shwithPen。"
Mrs。Laphamanswerednothing;butwhenshemetPenelopeshegavethegirl’swanfaceasharplook,andbegantowhimperonherneck。
Penelope’stearswereallspent。"Well,mother,"shesaid,"youcomebackalmostascheerfulasyouwentaway。
Ineedn’taskif’Rene’singoodspirits。Weallseemtobeoverflowingwiththem。Isupposethisisonewayofcongratulatingme。Mrs。Coreyhasn’tbeenroundtodoityet。"
"Areyou——areyouengagedtohim,Pen?"gaspedhermother。
"Judgingbymyfeelings,Ishouldsaynot。Ifeelasifitwasalastwillandtestament。Butyou’dbetteraskhimwhenhecomes。"
"Ican’tbeartolookathim。"
"Iguesshe’susedtothat。Hedon’tseemtoexpecttobelookedat。Well!we’realljustwherewestarted。
Iwonderhowlongitwillkeepup。"
Mrs。Laphamreportedtoherhusbandwhenhecamehomeatnight——hehadlefthisbusinesstogoandmeether,andthen,afteradesolatedinneratthehouse,hadreturnedtotheofficeagain——thatPenelopewasfullyasbadasIrene。"Andshedon’tknowhowtoworkitoff。
Irenekeepsdoing;butPenjustsitsinherroomandmopes。
Shedon’tevenread。Iwentupthisafternoontoscoldheraboutthestatethehousewasin——youcanseethatIrene’sawaybytheperfectmess;butwhenIsawherthroughthecrackofthedoorIhadn’ttheheart。
Shesattherewithherhandsinherlap,juststaring。
And,mygoodness!sheJUMPEDsowhenshesawme;
andthenshefellback,andbegantolaugh,andsaidshe,’Ithoughtitwasmyghost,mother!’IfeltasifIshouldgiveway。"
Laphamlistenedjadedly,andansweredfarfromthepoint。
"IguessI’vegottostartoutthereprettysoon,Persis。"
"Howsoon?"
"Well,to—morrowmorning。"
Mrs。Laphamsatsilent。Then,"Allright,"shesaid。
"I’llgetyouready。"
"IshallrunuptoLaphamforIrene,andthenI’llpushonthroughCanada。Icangetthereaboutasquick。"
"Isitanythingyoucantellmeabout,Silas?"
"Yes,"saidLapham。"Butit’salongstory,andI
guessyou’vegotyourhandsprettyfullasitis。
I’vebeenthrowinggoodmoneyafterbad,——theusualway,——
andnowI’vegottoseeifIcansavethepieces。"
AfteramomentMrs。Laphamasked,"Isit——Rogers?"
"It’sRogers。"
"Ididn’twantyoushouldgetinanydeeperwithhim。"
"No。Youdidn’twantIshouldpresshimeither;andI
hadtodooneortheother。AndsoIgotindeeper。"
"Silas,"saidhiswife,"I’mafraidImadeyou!"
"It’sallright,Persis,asfarforthasthatgoes。
Iwasgladtomakeitupwithhim——Ijumpedatthechance。
IguessRogerssawthathehadasoftthinginme,andhe’sworkeditforallitwasworth。Butit’llallcomeoutrightintheend。"
Laphamsaidthisasifhedidnotcaretotalkanymoreaboutit。Headdedcasually,"PrettyneareverybodybutthefellowsthatoweMEseemtoexpectmetodoacashbusiness,allofasudden。"
"Doyoumeanthatyou’vegotpaymentstomake,andthatpeoplearenotpayingYOU?"
Laphamwincedalittle。"Somethinglikethat,"hesaid,andhelightedacigar。"ButwhenItellyouit’sallright,Imeanit,Persis。Iain’tgoingtoletthegrassgrowundermyfeet,though,——especiallywhileRogersdigsthegroundawayfromtheroots。"
"Whatareyougoingtodo?"
"Ifithastocometothat,I’mgoingtosqueezehim。"
Lapham’scountenancelightedupwithgreaterjoythanhadyetvisiteditsincethedaytheyhaddrivenouttoBrookline。
"MiltonK。Rogersisarascal,ifyouwanttoknow;
orelseallthesignsfail。ButIguesshe’llfindhe’sgothiscome—uppance。"Laphamshuthislipssothattheshort,reddish—greybeardstuckstraightoutonthem。
"What’shedone?"
"What’shedone?Well,now,I’lltellyouwhathe’sdone,Persis,sinceyouthinkRogersissuchasaint,andthatI
usedhimsobadlyingettinghimoutofthebusiness。
He’sbeendabblingineverysortoffoolthingyoucanlayyourtongueto,——wild—catstocks,patent—rights,landspeculations,oilclaims,——tillhe’srunthroughabouteverything。
ButhedidhaveabigmillingpropertyoutonthelineoftheP。Y。&X。,——saw—millsandgrist—millsandlands,——andforthelasteightyearshe’sbeendoingaland—officebusinesswith’em——businessthatwouldhavemadeanybodyelserich。Butyoucan’tmakeMiltonK。Rogersrich,anymorethanyoucanfatahide—boundcolt。Itain’tinhim。He’drunthroughVanderbilt,JayGould,andTomScottrolledintooneinlessthansixmonths,givehimachance,andcomeoutandwanttoborrowmoneyofyou。Well,hewon’tborrowanymoremoneyofME;
andifhethinksIdon’tknowasmuchaboutthatmillingpropertyashedoeshe’smistaken。I’vetakenhismills,butIguessI’vegottheinsidetrack;Bill’skeptmeposted;
andnowI’mgoingouttheretoseehowIcanunload;
andIshan’tmindagreatdealifRogersisundertheloadwhenit’soffonce。"
"Idon’tunderstandyou,Silas。"
"Why,it’sjustthis。TheGreatLacustrine&PolarRailroadhasleasedtheP。Y。&X。forninety—nineyears,——boughtit,practically,——andit’sgoingtobuildcar—worksrightbythosemills,anditmaywantthem。
AndMiltonK。Rogersknewitwhenheturned’eminonme。"
"Well,iftheroadwantsthem,don’tthatmakethemillsvaluable?Youcangetwhatyouaskforthem!"
"CanI?"TheP。Y。&X。istheonlyroadthatrunswithinfiftymilesofthemills,andyoucan’tgetafootoflumbernorapoundofflourtomarketanyotherway。
AslongashehadalittlelocalroadliketheP。Y。&
X。todealwith,Rogerscouldmanage;butwhenitcometoabigthroughlineliketheG。L。&P。,hecouldn’tstandanychanceatall。Ifsucharoadasthattookafancytohismills,doyouthinkitwouldpaywhatheasked?No,sir!Hewouldtakewhattheroadoffered,orelsetheroadwouldtellhimtocarryhisflourandlumbertomarkethimself。"
"AnddoyousupposeheknewtheG。L。&P。wantedthemillswhenheturnedtheminonyou?"askedMrs。Laphamaghast,andfallinghelplesslyintohisalphabeticalparlance。
TheColonellaughedscoffingly。"Well,whenMiltonK。Rogersdon’tknowwhichsidehisbread’sbutteredon!I
don’tunderstand,"headdedthoughtfully,"howhe’salwayslettingitfallonthebutteredside。Butsuchamanasthatissuretohaveascrewlooseinhimsomewhere。"
Mrs。Laphamsatdiscomfited。Allthatshecouldsaywas,"Well,IwantyoushouldaskyourselfwhetherRogerswouldeverhavegonewrong,orgotintothesewaysofhis,ifithadn’tbeenforyourforcinghimoutofthebusinesswhenyoudid。Iwantyoushouldthinkwhetheryou’renotresponsibleforeverythinghe’sdonesince。"
"Yougoandgetthatbagofmineready,"saidLaphamsullenly。
"IguessIcantakecareofmyself。AndMiltonK。Rogerstoo,"
headded。
ThateveningCoreyspentthetimeafterdinnerinhisownroom,withrestlessexcursionstothelibrary,wherehismothersatwithhisfatherandsisters,andshowednosignsofleavingthem。Atlast,incomingdown,heencounteredheronthestairs,goingup。Theybothstoppedconsciously。
"Iwouldliketospeakwithyou,mother。Ihavebeenwaitingtoseeyoualone。"
"Cometomyroom,"shesaid。
"IhaveafeelingthatyouknowwhatIwanttosay,"
hebeganthere。
Shelookedupathimwherehestoodbythechimney—piece,andtriedtoputacheerfulnoteintoherquestioning"Yes?"
"Yes;andIhaveafeelingthatyouwon’tlikeit——thatyouwon’tapproveofit。Iwishyoudid——Iwishyoucould!"
"I’musedtolikingandapprovingeverythingyoudo,Tom。
IfIdon’tlikethisatonce,Ishalltrytolikeit——youknowthat——foryoursake,whateveritis。"
"I’dbetterbeshort,"hesaid,withaquicksigh。
"It’saboutMissLapham。"Hehastenedtoadd,"Ihopeitisn’tsurprisingtoyou。I’dhavetoldyoubefore,ifIcould。"
"No,itisn’tsurprising。Iwasafraid——Isuspectedsomethingofthekind。"
Theywerebothsilentinapainfulsilence。
"Well,mother?"heaskedatlast。
"Ifit’ssomethingyou’vequitemadeupmindto————"
"Itis!"
"Andifyou’vealreadyspokentoher————"
"Ihadtodothatfirst,ofcourse。"
"Therewouldbenouseofmysayinganything,evenifI
dislikedit。"
"Youdodislikeit!"
"No——no!Ican’tsaythat。OfcourseIshouldhavepreferreditifyouhadchosensomenicegirlamongthosethatyouhadbeenbroughtupwith——somefriendorassociateofyoursisters,whosepeoplewehadknown————"
"Yes,Iunderstandthat,andIcanassureyouthatI
haven’tbeenindifferenttoyourfeelings。Ihavetriedtoconsiderthemfromthefirst,anditkeptmehesitatinginawaythatI’mashamedtothinkof;foritwasn’tquiterighttowards——others。Butyourfeelingsandmysisters’
havebeeninmymind,andifIcouldn’tyieldtowhatI
supposedtheymustbe,entirely————"
Evensogoodasonandbrotherasthis,whenitcametohisloveaffair,appearedtothinkthathehadyieldedmuchinconsideringthefeelingsofhisfamilyatall。
Hismotherhastenedtocomforthim。"Iknow——Iknow。
I’veseenforsometimethatthismighthappen,Tom,andI
havepreparedmyselfforit。Ihavetalkeditoverwithyourfather,andwebothagreedfromthebeginningthatyouwerenottobehamperedbyourfeeling。
Still——itisasurprise。Itmustbe。"
"Iknowit。Icanunderstandyourfeeling。ButI’msurethatit’sonethatwilllastonlywhileyoudon’tknowherwell。"
"Oh,I’msureofthat,Tom。I’msurethatweshallallbefondofher,——foryoursakeatfirst,even——andI
hopeshe’lllikeus。"
"Iamquitecertainofthat,"saidCorey,withthatconfidencewhichexperiencedoesnotalwaysconfirminsuchcases。
"Andyourtakingitasyoudoliftsatremendousloadoffme。"
Buthesighedsoheavily,andlookedsotroubled,thathismothersaid,"Well,now,youmustn’tthinkofthatanymore。Wewishwhatisforyourhappiness,myson,andwewillgladlyreconcileourselvestoanythingthatmighthavebeendisagreeable。Isupposeweneedn’tspeakofthefamily。Wemustboththinkalikeaboutthem。
Theyhavetheir——drawbacks,buttheyarethoroughlygoodpeople,andIsatisfiedmyselftheothernightthattheywerenottobedreaded。"Sherose,andputherarmroundhisneck。
"AndIwishyoujoy,Tom!Ifshe’shalfasgoodasyouare,youwillbothbeveryhappy。"Shewasgoingtokisshim,butsomethinginhislooksstoppedher——anabsence,atrouble,whichbrokeoutinhiswords。
"Imusttellyou,mother!There’sbeenacomplication——
amistake——that’sablightonmeyet,andthatitsometimesseemsasifwecouldn’tescapefrom。Iwonderifyoucanhelpus!TheyallthoughtImeant——theothersister。"
"OTom!ButhowCOULDthey?"
"Idon’tknow。Itseemedsoglaringlyplain——Iwasashamedofmakingitsooutrightfromthebeginning。
Buttheydid。Evenshedid,herself!"
"Butwherecouldtheyhavethoughtyoureyeswere——yourtaste?Itwouldn’tbesurprisingifanyoneweretakenwiththatwonderfulbeauty;andI’msureshe’sgoodtoo。
ButI’mastonishedatthem!Tothinkyoucouldpreferthatlittle,black,oddcreature,withherjokingand————"
"MOTHER!"criedtheyoungman,turningaghastlyfaceofwarninguponher。
"Whatdoyoumean,Tom?"
"Didyou——did——didyouthinksotoo——thatitwasIRENE
Imeant?"
"Why,ofcourse!"
Hestaredatherhopelessly。
"Omyson!"shesaid,forallcommentonthesituation。
"Don’treproachme,mother!Icouldn’tstandit。"
"No。Ididn’tmeantodothat。Buthow——HOWcouldithappen?"
"Idon’tknow。Whenshefirsttoldmethattheyhadunderstooditso,Ilaughed——almost——itwassofarfromme。
Butnowwhenyouseemtohavehadthesameidea——Didyouallthinkso?"
"Yes。"
Theyremainedlookingateachother。ThenMrs。Coreybegan:"Itdidpassthroughmymindonce——thatdayIwenttocalluponthem——thatitmightnotbeaswethought;
butIknewsolittleof——of————"
"Penelope,"Coreymechanicallysupplied。
"Isthathername?——Iforgot——thatIonlythoughtofyouinrelationtoherlongenoughtorejecttheidea;anditwasnaturalafterourseeingsomethingoftheotheronelastyear,thatImightsupposeyouhadformedsome——attachment————"
"Yes;that’swhattheythoughttoo。ButIneverthoughtofherasanythingbutaprettychild。Iwasciviltoherbecauseyouwishedit;andwhenImetherhereagain,IonlytriedtoseehersothatIcouldtalkwithherabouthersister。"
"Youneedn’tdefendyourselftoME,Tom,"saidhismother,proudtosayittohiminhistrouble。"It’saterriblebusinessforthem,poorthings,"sheadded。"Idon’tknowhowtheycouldgetoverit。But,ofcourse,sensiblepeoplemustsee————"
"Theyhaven’tgotoverit。Atleastshehasn’t。Sinceit’shappened,there’sbeennothingthathasn’tmademeprouderandfonderofher!AtfirstIWAScharmedwithher——myfancywastaken;shedelightedme——Idon’tknowhow;butshewassimplythemostfascinatingpersonIeversaw。NowIneverthinkofthat。
Ionlythinkhowgoodsheis——howpatientsheiswithme,andhowunsparingsheisofherself。Ifshewereconcernedalone——ifIwerenotconcernedtoo——itwouldsoonend。
She’sneverhadathoughtforanythingbuthersister’sfeelingandminefromthebeginning。Igothere,——IknowthatIoughtn’t,butIcan’thelpit,——andshesuffersit,andtriesnottoletmeseethatsheissufferingit。
Thereneverwasanyonelikeher——sobrave,sotrue,sonoble。Iwon’tgiveherup——Ican’t。ButitbreaksmyheartwhensheaccusesherselfofwhatwasallMYdoing。
Wespendourtimetryingtoreasonoutofit,butwealwayscomebacktoitatlast,andIhavetohearhermorbidlyblamingherself。Oh!"
DoubtlessMrs。Coreyimaginedsomereliefstothissuffering,somequalificationsofthissublimityinagirlshehaddislikedsodistinctly;butshesawnoneinherson’sbehaviour,andshegavehimherfurthersympathy。
ShetriedtopraisePenelope,andsaidthatitwasnottobeexpectedthatshecouldreconcileherselfatoncetoeverything。"Ishouldn’thavelikeditinherifshehad。Buttimewillbringitallright。
Andifshereallycaresforyou————"
"Iextortedthatfromher。"
"Well,then,youmustlookatitinthebestlightyoucan。
Thereisnoblameanywhere,andthemortificationandpainissomethingthatmustbeliveddown。That’sall。
Anddon’tletwhatIsaidgrieveyou,Tom。YouknowI
scarcelyknewher,andI——Ishallbesuretolikeanyoneyoulike,afterall。"
"Yes,Iknow,"saidtheyoungmandrearily。"Willyoutellfather?"
"Ifyouwish。"
"Hemustknow。AndIcouldn’tstandanymoreofthis,justyet——anymoremistake。"
"Iwilltellhim,"saidMrs。Corey;anditwasnaturallythenextthingforawomanwhodweltsomuchondecenciestopropose:"Wemustgotocallonher——
yoursistersandI。Theyhaveneverseenhereven;
andshemustn’tbeallowedtothinkwe’reindifferenttoher,especiallyunderthecircumstances。"
"Ohno!Don’tgo——notyet,"criedCorey,withaninstinctiveperceptionthatnothingcouldbeworseforhim。
"Wemustwait——wemustbepatient。I’mafraiditwouldbepainfultohernow。"
Heturnedawaywithoutspeakingfurther;andhismother’seyesfollowedhimwistfullytothedoor。Thereweresomequestionsthatshewouldhavelikedtoaskhim;
butshehadtocontentherselfwithtryingtoanswerthemwhenherhusbandputthemtoher。
TherewasthiscomfortforheralwaysinBromfieldCorey,thatheneverwasmuchsurprisedatanything,howevershockingorpainful。Hisstandpointinregardtomostmatterswasthatofthesympathetichumoristwhowouldbegladtohavethevictimofcircumstancelaughwithhim,butwasnottoomuchvexedwhenthevictimcouldnot。
Helaughednowwhenhiswife,withcarefulpreparation,gotthefactsofhisson’spredicamentfullyunderhiseye。
"Really,Bromfield,"shesaid,"Idon’tseehowyoucanlaugh。Doyouseeanywayoutofit?"
"Itseemstomethatthewayhasbeenfoundalready。
Tomhastoldhislovetotherightone,andthewrongoneknowsit。Timewilldotherest。"
"IfIhadsolowanopinionofthemallasthat,itwouldmakemeveryunhappy。It’sshockingtothinkofit。"
"Itisuponthetheoryofladiesandallyoungpeople,"
saidherhusband,withashrug,feelinghiswaytothematchesonthemantel,andthendroppingthemwithasign,asifrecollectingthathemustnotsmokethere。
"I’venodoubtTomfeelshimselfanawfulsinner。
Butapparentlyhe’sresignedtohissin;heisn’tgoingtogiveherup。"
"I’mgladtosay,forthesakeofhumannature,thatSHE
isn’tresigned——littleasIlikeher,"criedMrs。Corey。
Herhusbandshruggedagain。"Oh,theremustn’tbeanyindecenthaste。Shewillinstinctivelyobservetheproprieties。
Butcome,now,Anna!youmustn’tpretendtomehere,inthesanctuaryofhome,thatpracticallythehumanaffectionsdon’treconcilethemselvestoanysituationthatthehumansentimentscondemn。Supposethewrongsisterhaddied:wouldtherightonehavehadanyscrupleinmarryingTom,aftertheyhadboth’waitedapropertime,’
asthephraseis?"
"Bromfield,you’reshocking!"
"Notmoreshockingthanreality。Youmayregardthisasasecondmarriage。"Helookedatherwithtwinklingeyes,fullofthetriumphthespectatorofhisspeciesfeelsinsignalexhibitionsofhumannature。"Dependuponit,therightsisterwillbereconciled;thewrongonewillbeconsoled;andallwillgomerryasamarriagebell——asecondmarriagebell。Why,it’squitelikearomance!"
Herehelaughedoutrightagain。
"Well,"sighedthewife,"Icouldalmostwishtherightone,asyoucallher,wouldrejectTom,Idislikehersomuch。"
"Ah,nowyou’retalkingbusiness,Anna,"saidherhusband,withhishandsspreadbehindthebackheturnedcomfortablytothefire。"ThewholeLaphamtribeisdistastefultome。
AsIdon’thappentohaveseenourdaughter—in—lawelect,Ihavestillthehope——whichyou’redisposedtoforbidme——thatshemaynotbequitesounacceptableastheothers。"
"Doyoureallyfeelso,Bromfield?"anxiouslyinquiredhiswife。
"Yes——IthinkIdo;"andhesatdown,andstretchedouthislonglegstowardthefire。
"Butit’sveryinconsistentofyoutoopposethematternow,whenyou’veshownsomuchindifferenceuptothistime。
You’vetoldme,allalong,thatitwasofnousetoopposeit。"
"SoIhave。Iwasconvincedofthatatthebeginning,ormyreasonwas。YouknowverywellthatIamequaltoanytrial,anysacrifice,dayafterto—morrow;
butwhenitcomesto—dayit’sanotherthing。Aslongasthiscrisisdecentlykeptitsdistance,Icouldlookatitwithanimpartialeye;butnowthatitseemsathand,Ifindthat,whilemyreasonisstillacquiescent,mynervesaredisposedto——excusethephrase——kick。Iaskmyself,whathaveIdonenothingfor,allmylife,andlivedasagentlemanshould,upontheearningsofsomebodyelse,inthepossessionofeverypolitetasteandfeelingthatadornsleisure,ifI’mtocometothisatlast?AndIfindnosatisfactoryanswer。IsaytomyselfthatI
mightaswellhaveyieldedtothepressureallroundme,andgonetowork,asTomhas。
Mrs。Coreylookedathimforlornly,diviningthecoreofrealrepugnancethatexistedinhisself—satire。
"Iassureyou,mydear,"hecontinued,"thattherecollectionofwhatIsufferedfromtheLaphamsatthatdinnerofyoursisananguishstill。Itwasn’ttheirbehaviour,——theybehavedwellenough——orillenough;buttheirconversationwasterrible。Mrs。Lapham’srangewasstrictlydomestic;
andwhentheColonelgotmeinthelibrary,hepouredmineralpaintalloverme,tillIcouldhavebeensafelywarrantednottocrackorscaleinanyclimate。
Isupposeweshallhavetoseeagooddealofthem。
TheywillprobablycomehereeverySundaynighttotea。
It’saperspectivewithoutavanishing—point。"
"Itmaynotbesobad,afterall,"saidhiswife;andshesuggestedforhisconsolationthatheknewverylittleabouttheLaphamsyet。
Heassentedtothefact。"Iknowverylittleaboutthem,andaboutmyotherfellow—beings。IdaresaythatI
shouldliketheLaphamsbetterifIknewthembetter。
Butinanycase,Iresignmyself。AndwemustkeepinviewthefactthatthisismainlyTom’saffair,andifhisaffectionshaveregulatedittohissatisfaction,wemustbecontent。"
"Ohyes,"sighedMrs。Corey。"Andperhapsitwon’tturnoutsobadly。It’sagreatcomforttoknowthatyoufeeljustasIdoaboutit。"
"Ido,"saidherhusband,"andmoretoo。"
ItwassheandherdaughterswhowouldbechieflyannoyedbytheLaphamconnection;sheknewthat。
Butshehadtobegintobeartheburdenbyhelpingherhusbandtobearhislightshareofit。Toseehimsodepresseddismayedher,andshemightwellhavereproachedhimmoresharplythanshedidforshowingsomuchindifference,whenshewassoanxious,atfirst。
Butthatwouldnothaveservedanygoodendnow。
Sheevenansweredhimpatientlywhenheaskedher,"WhatdidyousaytoTomwhenhetoldyouitwastheotherone?"
"WhatcouldIsay?Icoulddonothing,buttrytotakebackwhatIhadsaidagainsther。"
"Yes,youhadquiteenoughtodo,Isuppose。
It’sanawkwardbusiness。Ifithadbeentheprettyone,herbeautywouldhavebeenourexcuse。Buttheplainone——whatdoyousupposeattractedhiminher?"
Mrs。Coreysighedatthefutilityofthequestion。
"PerhapsIdidherinjustice。Ionlysawherafewmoments。
PerhapsIgotafalseimpression。Idon’tthinkshe’slackinginsense,andthat’sagreatthing。