The Grey Wig: Stories and Novelettes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Grey Wig.

The Grey Wig: Stories and Novelettes eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Grey Wig.

“Amusing yourself!” He looked aghast.

“What else?  I am alone—­I have nothing better in the world to do.”

“Does it amuse you?” He was flushed now, even the marble mantel-piece ruddied by the flame.  “I wish it amused me.”

Now it was Eileen’s turn to gasp.  “Then why do you listen?”

“I don’t listen—­I bury myself as far away as I can.”

“So I have understood.  Then what are you thanking me for?”

“For what you are doing for—.” his hesitation was barely perceptible—­“my mother.”

“Oh!” Eileen looked blank.  “I thought you meant for my music.”

His face showed vast relief.  “Oh, you were talking of your music!  Of course, of course, how stupid of me!  That is what has drawn me from my hole, like a rat to the Pied Piper, and I do thank you most sincerely.  But being drawn, what I most wished to thank the Piper for was—­”

“Your mother pays the Piper for that,” she broke in.

He smiled but tossed his head.  “Money! what is that?”

“It is more than I deserve for mere companionship—­pleasant drives and theatres.”

He did not accept her delicate reticence.

“But you have altered her wonderfully!” he cried.

“Oh, I have not,” she cried, doubly startled.  “It’s just nothing that I have done—­nothing.”  Then she felt her modesty had put her foot in a bog-hole.  Unseeingly he helped her out.

“It is most kind of you to put it like that.  But I see it in every movement, every word.  She imitates you unconsciously—­I became curious to see so excellent a model, though I had resolved not to meet you.  No, no, please, don’t misunderstand.”

“I don’t,” she said mischievously.  “You have now given me three reasons for seeing me.  You need give me none for not seeing me.”

“But you must understand,” he said, colouring again, “how painful all this has been for me—­”

“Not seeing me?” she interpolated innocently.

“The—­the whole thing,” he stammered.

“Yes, parents are tiresome,” she said sympathetically.

He came nearer the music-stool.

“Are they not?  They came down every year for the Eights.”

“Is that at Oxford?”

“Yes.”

She was silent; her thumb flicked at a note on the keyboard behind her.

“But that’s not what I mind in them most—­”

She wondered at the rapidity with which his shyness was passing into effusiveness.  But then was she not the “Mother-Confessor”?  Had not even her favourite nuns told her things about their early lives, even when there was no moral to be pointed?  “They’re very good-hearted,” she murmured apologetically.  “I’m often companion—­in charity expeditions.”

“It’s easy to be good-hearted when you don’t know what to do with your money.  This place is full of such people.  But I look in vain for the diviner impulse.”

Eileen wondered if he were a Dissenter.  But then “the place was full of such people.”

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The Grey Wig: Stories and Novelettes from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.