The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

The Old Wives' Tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 811 pages of information about The Old Wives' Tale.

But for Charles Critchlow she happened to be an illusion.  He had cast eyes on her and had seen youth, innocence, virginity.  During eight years the moth Charles had flitted round the lamp of her brilliance, and was now singed past escape.  He might treat her with what casualness he chose; he might ignore her in public; he might talk brutally about women; he might leave her to wonder dully what he meant, for months at a stretch:  but there emerged indisputable from the sum of his conduct the fact that he wanted her.  He desired her; she charmed him; she was something ornamental and luxurious for which he was ready to pay—­and to commit follies.  He had been a widower since before she was born; to him she was a slip of a girl.  All is relative in this world.  As for her, she was too indifferent to refuse him.  Why refuse him?  Oysters do not refuse.

“I’m sure I congratulate you both,” Constance breathed, realizing the import of Mr. Critchlow’s laconic words.  “I’m sure I hope you’ll be happy.”

“That’ll be all right,” said Mr. Critchlow.

“Thank you, Mrs. Povey,” said Maria Insull.

Nobody seemed to know what to say next.  “It’s rather sudden,” was on Constance’s tongue, but did not achieve utterance, being patently absurd.

“Ah!” exclaimed Mr. Critchlow, as though himself contemplating anew the situation.

Miss Insull gave the dog a final pat.

“So that’s settled,” said Mr. Critchlow.  “Now, missis, ye want to give up this shop, don’t ye?”

“I’m not so sure about that,” Constance answered uneasily.

“Don’t tell me!” he protested.  “Of course ye want to give up the shop.”

“I’ve lived here all my life,” said Constance.

“Ye’ve not lived in th’ shop all ye’re life.  I said th’ shop. 
Listen here!” he continued.  “I’ve got a proposal to make to you. 
You can keep on the house, and I’ll take the shop off ye’re hands. 
Now?” He looked at her inquiringly.

Constance was taken aback by the brusqueness of the suggestion, which, moreover, she did not understand.

“But how—­” she faltered.

“Come here,” said Mr. Critchlow, impatiently, and he moved towards the house-door of the shop, behind the till.

“Come where?  What do you want?” Constance demanded in a maze.

“Here!” said Mr. Critchlow, with increasing impatience.  “Follow me, will ye?”

Constance obeyed.  Miss Insull sidled after Constance, and the dog after Miss Insull.  Mr. Critchlow went through the doorway and down the corridor, past the cutting-out room to his right.  The corridor then turned at a right-angle to the left and ended at the parlour door, the kitchen steps being to the left.

Mr. Critchlow stopped short of the kitchen steps, and extended his arms, touching the walls on either side.

“Here!” he said, tapping the walls with his bony knuckles.  “Here!  Suppose I brick ye this up, and th’ same upstairs between th’ showroom and th’ bedroom passage, ye’ve got your house to yourself.  Ye say ye’ve lived here all your life.  Well, what’s to prevent ye finishing up here?  The fact is,” he added, “it would only be making into two houses again what was two houses to start with, afore your time, missis.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Old Wives' Tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.