Moth and Rust; Together with Geoffrey's Wife and The Pitfall
nned against t
und
sed the hall, and she crept noiselessly upstairs towards her own room. She felt as if she were quite unable to bear so soon again the strain of that s
not we
ersation, streaked with nervous laughter, of a young man. Anne saw at a glance that he must be Janet's brother, and she insti
ing, and inserted suddenly into the Easthope drawing-room, in Janet's proximity, he changed like a chameleon, and appeared dilapidated, in spite of being over-dressed, irretrievably second-rate, and unwholesome-looking. He was so like
Trefusis, possibly mindful of Anne's appeal, had evidently asked her future daughter-in-law to pour out tea for her. And
tea-table, vaguely aware that something was
relaxed as
pleasure in her grave face. She gave the impressio
e into the world willing to serve, and she did not mind whom she served. She did gracefully, even gaily, the things that others did not think worth while. This was, of course,
gh of relief. George said: "Hi, Ponto! How are ye?" and
did not like cream, and then, while she swallowed a cu
nstraint and a galvanized familiarity. Anne loved horses, but she did not talk of them to Fred
elf as plainly as a craving for alcohol on the
ed against the Government for its refusal to buy thousands of hypothetical Kaffir ponies, and as he posted Anne in the private workings of the mind of her cousin, the Prime Minister. Fred had even hea
on his homeward way. "Woman of the world. Knows her way about. And how she holds hers
y Va
rri
-n
talks. She reads the papers, takes an interest in politics. That's what a man likes. You do the same.
Fred; w
an whether he lives in a large house or a small one, and the real snobs are the people who think different.
brother's reasoning, which, until to-day, had appeared to
ant you to be rude, but you let her know that she is the d
clever
proudly. "And I've brought some dollars with me for th
es
it down. Get this Lady Varney or Mrs Brand to recommend the s
Are you s
voice became hoarse, "get Brand to wait a bit. He has my I O U, and he has waited once, but he warned me he would not again. He said it was against his rules; as if rules matter between gentlemen. He's as hard as nails. The I O U falls due
face was so white and set. "But why don't you take my two thousand and pay him back? I said you co
to light a cigarette. He knew that that two thousand, Janet's little fortune, existed
fuse a pretty woman anything. I can't. You ask Brand-as if it was to plea
to be hers. She did not think of that as she looked up at the long lines of stone-mullioned windows. She th
a mistake which many gentle, commonplace souls make, who go through life disillusioned as to the sincerity of certain other attractive, brilliant creatures with whom they have come in momentary contact, to whom they can give nothing, but from whom they have received a generous measure of delicate sympathy and kindness, which they mistook for the prelude of friendship; a friendship which neve
elf liked Anne, and, being a simple soul, she said to
ve felt that there was not marked encouragement in the
of her welcome. Every one was
diaphanous white garment, the like of which Janet had never seen. It was held at the neck by a pale green ribbon, cunningly drawn through lace insert
t as to whether her presence was urgently needed vanished. Anne must have been ex
travelled t
rst moment it was summoned, could not disguise the fatigue
said Janet. "I wish yo
g devotion in them, and also a certai
cordially. "That is
?" said Janet, sitting down nevertheless,
, closing the book, but keeping
your book
asmu
wrote
er Gr
says that Mr Smith does not approve of her books; they have such a low tone. I th
le
upon Anne, "I should like to read the books you read, and
s face, and she looked down embar
Janet. "Not beginning at the beginning,
not care for it any m
y read like Mr Smi
N
n't poetry. Is
es
about love, but now I think
took up the book, and slowly opened it. Janet
oked at her own far more beautiful but slightly tanned han
moment, and the
heard he was a dweller in the sheltered gardens, which were not for me. Nevertheless he went with me. I never stopped for him, or turned aside out of my path to seek him, for I had met his counterfeit when I was
bow through his hand. I was one with the snowdrop and with the thunderstorm. And we went together upon the sea, swiftly up its hurrying mountains, swiftly down into its rushing valleys. And
e crowd. And, last of all, he showed me myself, wit
faith, and hope, and intuition, and service. I even gave him truth. I put my hands under his
ess and smote it. And in the anguish
ar, without the human veil between me and it. And it was the Face of God. And I saw that Love and God are one, and that, because of His exceeding glory, He had been constr
ed, as the face of one who, in patient endurance, has long rowed against the stream, and who at last lets the benign, constraining current take her w
d what it means, because I was not sure whether
e voice. It seemed to recall her from a great distance. She had f
tively. "It means something the same as the sermon did this mor
was a
little, "perhaps it does. I had not thought of it in t
ht to put re
-y
I had an idea that you and I should feel the same about"-she hesitated-"ab
d Anne, in the tone of one who g
topic, and looking at her with tender confidence,
all
, except two lines that
love me
me all i
t recovered her
"It's all in all. And then I am afraid that
God more because
at work upon the suggestion, as you hear a cof
elow her breath, "I thank God all the time for se
d with sudden tea
said, laying her hand on Janet's. It
closed slowly
am not his equal. I knew that in a way from the first, but I see it more and mo
oes not take fa
not often angry, but if I am I stay angry. I don't alter. I was once angry with Fred for a year. I've thought a great deal about that since I've cared for George. And sometimes I fa
know Mr
ys she learnt it when she went out so mu
dee
usis against me. I don't think she would mind if I told lies and had a bad temper, and could
but Anne made no sign as it was driven in. She considered a moment, and then said, as if she had decided to risk something: "You are r
Janet, who might be reckoned on
nd leaned back
n getting her slow barge heavily under way, "you would have
them," said Anne, "and that wo
l me of anythi
self in the least-but it would be b
u would like me to
. We do not know eac
ought I t
call me 'L
ed Mr Thornton, our member. Fred sold him a hunter. And she is sometimes c
linger on the subject, "it would please Mrs Tre
at her advise
in getting well into the middle. But I saw I ought to try, and not to hesitate near the door, because, you see, it obliges old ladies, and people l
n very slow, but then she's a married woman, and she says she likes to give people time to realise her. I
ed, and ro
ivialities. But remember always that they are trivial. The only thing that is of any real imp
kissed her. And then suddenly, why she knew not, Janet discovered
emembered that she had intended to consult Anne as to the advisab
stion of her hair. Fred had said she would never look up to date till she cut a fringe. George had opined that her hair looked very nic
she saw Janet was still wavering. And she even offered to help Janet with her trousseau, to take her to Vernon, her own tailor, and to her own hatter and dress-maker. Jane
hankfulness, this offer was grateful
had offered to help her with her trousseau. Did Lady Var-Anne know Mrs Macalpine Brand? She went ou
le Mrs Brand, who had made bare-faced but fruitless attempts to scrape ac
working with Mrs Forrester. She had an excellent head for
cko
Mrs Forrester's charity most g
shall be staying with her all this next fortnight.
lf a second befor
lpine Brand never took advantage of it. Even at that moment as they spoke of her, she was ab
ace, in its halo of happiness, was as Janet nodded to her through the