Lady Connie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Lady Connie.

Lady Connie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 449 pages of information about Lady Connie.
a boy; and my people were small squires under the shelter of the Risboroughs before your father sold the property and settled abroad.  I was brought up with all your people—­your Aunt Marcia, and your Aunt Winifred, and all the rest of them.  I saw your mother once in Rome—­and loved her, like everybody else.  But—­as probably you know—­your Aunt Winifred—­who was keeping house for your father—­gathered up her silly skirts, and departed when your father announced his engagement.  Then she and your Aunt Marcia settled together in an old prim Georgian house, about five miles from the Fallodens; and there they have been ever since.  And now they are tremendously excited about you!”

“About me?” said Constance, astonished.  “I don’t know them.  They never write to me.  They never wrote to father!”

Mrs. Mulholland smiled.

“All the same you will have a letter from them soon.  And of course you remember your father’s married sister, Lady Langmoor?”

“No, I never even saw her.  But she did sometimes write to father.”

“Yes, she was not quite such a fool as the others.  Well, she will certainly descend on you.  She’ll want you for some balls—­for a drawing-room—­and that kind of thing.  I warn you!”

The girl’s face showed her restive.

“Why should she want me?—­when she never wanted me before—­or any of us?”

“Ah, that’s her affair!  But it is your other aunts who delight me.  Your Aunt Marcia, when I first knew her, was in an ascetic phase.  People called it miserliness—­but it wasn’t; it was only a moral hatred of waste—­in anything.  We envied her abominably, when I was a girl in my early teens, much bothered with dressing, because she had invented a garment—­the only one of any kind that she wore under her dress.  She called it a ’Unipantaloonicoat’—­you can imagine why!  It included stockings.  It was thin in summer and thick in winter.  There was only one putting on—­pouf!—­and then the dress.  I thought it a splendid idea, but my mother wouldn’t let me copy it.  Your Aunt Winifred had just the opposite mania—­of piling on clothes—­because she said there were ‘always draughts.’  If one petticoat fastened at the back, there must be another over that which fastened at the front—­and another at the side—­and so on, ad infinitum.  But then, alack!—­they suddenly dropped all their absurdities, and became quite ordinary people.  Aunt Winifred took to religion; she befriends all the clergy for miles round.  She is the mother of Mother Church.  And Aunt Marcia, after having starved herself of clothes for years and collected nothing more agreeable than snails, now wears silks and satins, and gossips and goes out to tea, and collects blue china like anybody else.  I connect it with the advent of a certain General who after all went off solitary to Malta, and died there.  Poor Marcia!  But you will certainly have to go and stay there.”

“I don’t know!” said Constance, her delicate mouth setting rather stiffly.

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Project Gutenberg
Lady Connie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.