Life and Death of Harriett Frean by May Sinclair (reading women TXT) đź“•
She saw her all the time while Connie was telling her the secret. Shewanted to get up and go to her. Connie knew what it meant when youstiffened suddenly and made yourself tall and cold and silent. The coldsilence would frighten her and she would go away. Then, Harriett thought,she could get back to her mother and Longfellow.
Every afternoon, through the hours before her father came home, she sat inthe cool, green-lighted drawing-room reading Evangeline aloud toher mother. When they came to the beautiful places they looked at eachother and smiled.
She passed through her fourteenth year sedately,
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married Robin and been happy and been right?
“I don’t care. If it was to be done again to-morrow I’d do it.”
But the beauty of that unique act no longer appeared to her as it once
was, uplifting, consoling, incorruptible.
The years passed. They went with an incredible rapidity, and Harriett was
now fifty.
The feeling of insecurity had grown on her. It had something to do with
Mona, with Maggie and Maggie’s baby. She had no clear illumination, only a
mournful acquiescence in her own futility, an almost physical sense of
shrinkage, the crumbling away, bit by bit, of her beautiful and honorable
self, dying with the objects of its three profound affections: her father,
her mother, Robin. Gradually the image of the middle-aged Robin had
effaced his youth.
She read more and more novels from the circulating libraries, of a kind
demanding less and less effort of attention. And always her inability to
concentrate appeared to her as a just demand for clarity: “The man has no
business to write so that I can’t understand him.”
She laid in a weekly stock of opinions from The Spectator, and by
this means contrived a semblance of intellectual life.
She was appeased more and more by the rhythm of the seasons, of the weeks,
of day and night, by the first coming up of the pink and wine-brown velvet
primulas, by the pungent, burnt smell of her morning coffee, the smell of
a midday stew, of hot cakes baking for tea time; by the lighting of the
lamp, the lighting of autumn fires, the round of her visits. She waited
with a strained, expectant desire for the moment when it would be time to
see Lizzie or Sarah or Connie Pennefather again.
Seeing them was a habit she couldn’t get over. But it no longer gave her
keen pleasure. She told herself that her three friends were deteriorating
in their middle age. Lizzie’s sharp face darted malice; her tongue was
whipcord; she knew where to flick; the small gleam of her eyes, the snap
of her nutcracker jaws irritated Harriett. Sarah was slow; slow. She took
no care of her face and figure. As Lizzie put it, Sarah’s appearance was
an outrage on her contemporaries. “She makes us feel so old.”
And Connie—the very rucking of Connie’s coat about her broad hips
irritated Harriett. She had a way of staring over her fat cheeks at
Harriett’s old suits, mistaking them for new ones, and saying the same
exasperating thing. “You’re lucky to be able to afford it. I
can’t.”
Harriett’s irritation mounted up and up.
And one day she quarreled with Connie.
Connie had been telling one of her stories; leaning a little sideways, her
skirt stretched tight between her fat, parted knees, the broad roll of her
smile sliding greasily. She had “grown out of it” in her young womanhood,
and now in her middle age she had come back to it again. She was just like
her father.
“Connie, how can you be so coarse?”
“I beg pardon. I forgot you were always better than everybody else.”
“I’m not better than everybody else. I’ve only been brought up better than
some people. My father would have died rather than have told a story like
that.”
“I suppose that’s a dig at my parents.”
“I never said anything about your parents.”
“I know the things you think about my father.”
“Well—I daresay he thinks things about me.”
“He thinks you were always an incurable old maid, my dear.”
“Did he think my father was an old maid?”
“I never heard him say one unkind word about your father.”
“I should hope not, indeed.”
“Unkind things were said. Not by him. Though he might have been
forgiven–-”
“I don’t know what you mean. But all my father’s creditors were paid in
full. You know that.”
“I didn’t know it.”
“You know it now. Was your father one of them?”
“No. It was as bad for him as if he had been, though.”
“How do you make that out?”
“Well, my dear, if he hadn’t taken your father’s advice he might have been
a rich man now instead of a poor one…. He invested all his money as he
told him.”
“In my father’s things?”
“In things he was interested in. And he lost it.”
“It shows how he must have trusted him.”
“He wasn’t the only one who was ruined by his trust.”
Harriett blinked. Her mind swerved from the blow. “I think you must be
mistaken,” she said.
“I’m less likely to be mistaken than you, my dear, though he was
your father.”
Harriett sat up, straight and stiff. “Well, your father’s alive,
and he’s dead.”
“I don’t see what that has to do with it.”
“Don’t you? If it had happened the other way about, your father wouldn’t
have died.”
Connie stared stupidly at Harriett, not taking it in. Presently she got up
and left her. She moved clumsily, her broad hips shaking.
Harriett put on her hat and went round to Lizzie and Sarah in turn. They
would know whether it were true or not. They would know whether Mr.
Hancock had been ruined by his own fault or Papa’s.
Sarah was sorry. She picked up a fold of her skirt and crumpled it in her
fingers, and said over and over again, “She oughtn’t to have told you.”
But she didn’t say it wasn’t true. Neither did Lizzie, though her tongue
was a whip for Connie.
“Because you can’t stand her dirty stories she goes and tells you this. It
shows what Connie is.”
It showed her father as he was, too. Not wise. Not wise all the time.
Courageous, always, loving danger, intolerant of security, wild under all
his quietness and gentleness, taking madder and madder risks, playing his
game with an awful, cool recklessness. Then letting other people in;
ruining Mr. Hancock, the little man he used to laugh at. And it had killed
him. He hadn’t been sorry for Mamma, because he knew she was glad the mad
game was over; but he had thought and thought about him, the little dirty
man, until he had died of thinking.
XIIINew people had come to the house next door. Harriett saw a pretty girl
going in and out. She had not called; she was not going to call. Their cat
came over the garden wall and bit off the blades of the irises. When he
sat down on the mignonette Harriett sent a note round by Maggie: “Miss
Frean presents her compliments to the lady next door and would be glad if
she would restrain her cat.”
Five minutes later the pretty girl appeared with the cat in her arms.
“I’ve brought Mimi,” she said. “I want you to see what a darling he is.”
Mimi, a Persian, all orange on the top and snow white underneath, climbed
her breast to hang flattened out against her shoulder, long, the great
plume of his tail fanning her. She swung round to show the innocence of
his amber eyes and the pink arch of his mouth supporting his pink nose.
“I want you to see my mignonette,” said Harriett. They stood together by
the crushed ring where Mimi had made his bed.
The pretty girl said she was sorry. “But, you see, we can’t
restrain him. I don’t know what’s to be done…. Unless you kept a cat
yourself; then you won’t mind.”
“But,” Harriett said, “I don’t like cats.”
“Oh, why not?”
Harriett knew why. A cat was a compromise, a substitute, a subterfuge. Her
pride couldn’t stoop. She was afraid of Mimi, of his enchanting play, and
the soft white fur of his stomach. Maggie’s baby. So she said, “Because
they destroy the beds. And they kill birds.”
The pretty girl’s chin burrowed in Mimi’s neck. “You won’t throw
stones at him?” she said.
“No, I wouldn’t hurt him…. What did you say his name was?”
“Mimi.”
Harriett softened. She remembered. “When I was a little girl I had a cat
called Mimi. White Angora. Very handsome. And your name is–-”
“Brailsford. I’m Dorothy.”
Next time, when Mimi jumped on the lupins and broke them down, Dorothy
came again and said she was sorry. And she stayed to tea. Harriett
revealed herself.
“My father was Hilton Frean.” She had noticed for the last fifteen years
that people showed no interest when she told them that. They even stared
as though she had said something that had no sense in it. Dorothy said,
“How nice.”
“Nice?”
“I mean it must have been nice to have him for your father…. You don’t
mind my coming into your garden last thing to catch Mimi?”
Harriett felt a sudden yearning for Dorothy. She saw a pleasure, a
happiness, in her coming. She wasn’t going to call, but she sent little
notes in to Dorothy asking her to come to tea.
Dorothy declined.
But every evening, towards bedtime, she came into the garden to catch
Mimi. Through the window Harriett could hear her calling: “Mimi! Mimi!”
She could see her in her white frock, moving about, hovering, ready to
pounce as Mimi dashed from the bushes. She thought: “She walks into my
garden as if it was her own. But she won’t make a friend of me. She’s
young, and I’m old.”
She had a piece of wire netting put up along the wall to keep Mimi out.
“That’s the end of it,” she said. She could never think of the young girl
without a pang of sadness and resentment.
Fifty-five. Sixty.
In her sixty-second year Harriett had her first bad illness.
It was so like Sarah Barmby. Sarah got influenza and regarded it as a
common cold and gave it to Harriett who regarded it as a common cold and
got pleurisy.
When the pain was over she enjoyed her illness, the peace and rest of
lying there, supported by the bed, holding out her lean arms to be washed
by Maggie; closing her eyes in bliss while Maggie combed and brushed and
plaited her fine gray hair. She liked having the same food at the same
hours. She would look up, smiling weakly, when Maggie came at bedtime with
the little tray. “What have you brought me now, Maggie?”
“Benger’s Food, ma’am.”
She wanted it to be always Benger’s Food at bedtime. She lived by habit,
by the punctual fulfillment of her expectation. She loved the doctor’s
visits at twelve o’clock, his air of brooding absorption in her case, his
consultations with Maggie, the seriousness and sanctity he attached to the
humblest details of her existence.
Above all she loved the comfort and protection of Maggie, the sight of
Maggie’s broad, tender face as it bent over her, the feeling of Maggie’s
strong arms as they supported her, the hovering pressure of the firm,
broad body in the clean white apron and the cap. Her eyes rested on it
with affection; she found shelter in Maggie as she had found it in her
mother.
One day she said, “Why did you come to me, Maggie? Couldn’t you have found
a better place?”
“There was many wanted me. But I came to you, ma’am, because you seemed to
sort of need me most. I dearly love looking after people. Old ladies and
children. And gentlemen, if
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