I don't know that he has
any...interests!'
He didn't appear to have any furniture, so how could he have the
other things? She wished Miss Wanostrocht would leave off using the
word 'appear'. It was irritating...and infectious. Could the lady not
make a direct statement? But then, no one ever made clear statements,
and this no doubt appeared to that anaemic spinster a singularly
tenebrous affair.
As for clear statements...If there had ever been any in precisely
this tenebrous mess she, Valentine, would know how she stood with that
man's wife. For it was part of the preposterous way in which she
herself and all her friends behaved that they never made clear
statements--except for Edith Ethel who had the nature of a female
costermonger and could not tell the truth, though she could be clear
enough. But even Edith Ethel had never hitherto said anything about the
way the wife in this case treated the husband. She had given Valentine
very clearly to understand that she 'sided' with the wife--but she had
never gone as far as to say that the wife was a good wife. If
she--Valentine--could only know that.
Miss Wanostrocht was asking:
'When you say "Me", do you mean that you would propose to look after
that man yourself? I trust not.'
...Because, obviously, if she were a good wife, she, Valentine,
couldn't butt in...not generously. As her father's and still more her
mother's daughter...On the face of it you would say that a wife who was
always striding along the palings of the Row, or the paths of other
resorts of the fashionable could not be a good--a domestic--wife for a
Statistician. On the other hand he was a pretty smart man, Governing
class, county family and the rest of it--so he might like his wife to
figure in Society: he might even exact it. He was quite capable of
that. Why, for all she knew, the wife might be a retiring, shy person
whom he thrust out into the hard world. It was not likely: but it was
as possible as anything else.
Miss Wanostrocht was asking:
'Aren't there Institutions...Military Sanatoria...for cases
precisely like that of this Captain Tietjens? It appears to be the war
that has broken him down, not merely evil living.'
'It's precisely,' Valentine said, 'because of that that one should
want...shouldn't one...Because it's because of the War...'
The sentence would not finish itself.
Miss Wanostrocht said:
'I thought...It has been represented to me...that you were a
Pacifist. Of an extreme type!'
It had given Valentine a turn--like the breaking out of sweat in a
case of fever--to hear the name, coldly: 'Captain Tietjens,' for it was
like a release. She had been irrationally determined that hers should
not be the first tongue to utter that name.
And apparently from her tone Miss Wanostrocht was prepared to detest
that Captain Tietjens. Perhaps she detested him already.
She was beginning to say:
'If one is an extreme Pacifist because one cannot bear to think of
the sufferings of men, isn't that a precise reason why one should wish
that a poor devil, all broken up...'
But Miss Wanostrocht had begun one of her own long sentences. Their
voices went on together, like trains dragging along
ballast--disagreeably, Miss Wanstrocht's organ, however, won out with
the words:
'...behaved very badly indeed.'
Valentine said hotly:
'You ought not to believe anything of the sort--on the strength of
anything said by a woman like Lady Mac-master.'
Miss Wanostrocht appeared to have been brought to a complete stop:
she leaned forward in her chair; her mouth was a little open. And
Valentine said: 'Thank Goodness!' to herself.
She had to have a moment to herself to digest what had the air of
being new evidence of the baseness of Edith Ethel; she felt herself to
be infuriated in regions of her own being that she hardly knew. That
seemed to her to be a littleness in herself. She had not thought that
she had been at little as that. It ought not to matter what people said
of you. She was perfectly accustomed to think of Edith Ehel as telling
whole crowds of people very bad things about her, Valentine Wannop. But
there was about this a recklessness that was hardly believable. To tell
an unknown person, encountered by chance on the telephone, derogatory
facts about a third party who might be expected to come to the
telephone herself in a minute or two--and, not only that--who must in
all probability hear what had been said very soon after, from the first
listener...That was surely a recklessness of evil-speaking that almost
outpassed sanity...Or else it betrayed a contempt for her, Valentine
Wannop, and what she could do in the way of reprisals that was
extremely hard to bear!
She said suddenly to Miss Wanostrocht:
'Look here! Are you speaking to me as a friend to my father's
daughter or as a Headmistress to a Physical Instructor?'
A certain amount of blood came into the lady's pinkish features. She
had certainly been ruffled when Valentine had permitted her voice to
sound so long alongside her own; for, although Valentine knew next to
nothing about the Head's likes or dislikes she had once or twice before
seen her evince marked distaste on being interrupted in one of her
formal sentences.
Miss Wanostrocht said with a certain coldness:
'I'm speaking at present...I'm allowing myself the liberty--as a
much older woman--in the capacity of a friend of your father. I have
been, in short, trying to recall to you all that you owe to yourself as
being an example of his training!'
Involuntarily Valentine's lips formed themselves for a low whistle
of incredulity. She said to herself:
'By Jove! I am in the middle of a nasty affair...This is a sort of
professional cross-examination.'
'I am in a way glad,' the lady was now continuing, 'that you take
that line...I mean of defending Mrs Tietjens with such heat against
Lady Macmaster. Lady Macmaster appears to dislike Mrs Tietjens, but I
am bound to say that she appears to be in the right of it. I mean of
her dislike. Lady Macmaster is a serious personality, and even on her
public record Mrs Tietjens appears to be very much the reverse. No
doubt you wish to be loyal to your...friends, but...'
'We appear,' Valentine said, 'to be getting into an extraordinary
muddle.'
She added:
'I haven't, as you seem to think, been defending Mrs Tietjens.
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