People of the Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about People of the Whirlpool.

People of the Whirlpool eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 286 pages of information about People of the Whirlpool.

Mrs. Bradford had pondered over it silently until, the day when I went to see her and chanced to mention Sylvia Latham’s name, its identity flashed upon her; and when gropingly she came to associate this name with something that troubled Horace, obliterating self and mother jealousy, she tucked the bit of linen underneath his pillow, with an undefined idea, knowing nothing, in the hope that it might comfort him.  And so it did; for even when he learned the manner of its coming, he put it in his letter case as a reminder not to despair but wait.

* * * * *

When a week had passed and the matter of the divorce had been well aired, discussed, and was no longer a novelty to her neighbours on the Bluffs, Mrs. Latham’s plan of soon closing her cottage and transferring the servants to Newport, with the exception of the stable men and a couple of caretakers, was announced, as she was going abroad for the baths.  The same day Lavinia Dorman received an urgent note from Sylvia, asking her “when and where she could see her alone, if, as she thought likely, she did not feel inclined to come to the house.”  The tone of the brief note showed that Sylvia felt the whole matter to be a keen disgrace that not only compromised herself but her friends.

Of course Miss Lavinia went, and would have gone even if she had to combat Mrs. Latham, for whom she asked courteously at the door; but that lady, for some reason, did not choose to appear and run the gantlet, and sent an elaborate message about a sick headache by the now somewhat crestfallen Perkins.  Presently Sylvia slipped into the morning room, and crouching by Miss Lavinia, buried her face in her friend’s lap, the tension at last giving way, and it was some time before she grew quiet enough to talk coherently, and tell her plan, which is this:  she wishes Miss Lavinia to take the Alton cottage (which is furnished) at the foot of the Bluffs, for the rest of the season, and live there with her.  Then as soon as Mrs. Latham has gone, and the poor girl has steadied herself, her father, to whom she has already written, will come, and what she will do in the autumn will be arranged.  Everything is as yet vague; but one thing she has decided for herself—­under no circumstances will she again live with her mother, and she is now staying quietly in the house and taking her meals in her room, in order to give the scandalmongers and gossips as little material as possible.

Lavinia Dorman, who readily consented to do as she asked, says that Sylvia is brave and heartbroken at the same time, that all her girlish spontaneity has gone, and she is like a statue.

I am so sorry to have Miss Lavinia go, even a few hundred yards down the road, it has seemed so good to have an older woman in the house to whom I can say, “Would you, or wouldn’t you?” Martin is also quite upset, and has stopped writing and begun fumbling and pulling the reference books about again; but Miss Lavinia says that she is not going to give up the afternoon reading, for she thinks the history is a work of importance not to be slighted, and that Sylvia will doubtless take up her own reading and practising after a time; that while she herself has willingly consented to chaperon her, she does not intend to give up her own freedom, nor would it be good for Sylvia if she did.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
People of the Whirlpool from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.