I hear it is to run right back to the end of the
yard. How she can afford to build an extension in these hard times I don’t see;
but she always was crazy about building. She used to keep a boarding-house in Seventeenth Street, and she nearly ruined herself then by
sticking out bow-windows and what not; I should have thought that would have
cured her of building, but I guess it’s a disease, like drink. Anyhow, the work
is to begin on Monday.”
Mrs.
Manstey had grown pale. She always spoke slowly, so the landlady did not heed
the long pause which followed. At last Mrs. Manstey said: “Do you know how high
the extension will be?”
“That’s
the most absurd part of it. The extension is to be built right up to the roof
of the main building; now, did you ever?”
Mrs.
Manstey paused again. “Won’t it be a great annoyance to you, Mrs. Sampson?” she
asked.
“I
should say it would. But there’s no help for it; if people have got a mind to
build extensions there’s no law to prevent ’em, that
I’m aware of.” Mrs. Manstey, knowing this, was silent. “There is no help for
it,” Mrs. Sampson repeated, “but if I am
a church member, I wouldn’t be so sorry if it ruined Eliza Black. Well,
good-day, Mrs. Manstey; I’m glad to find you so comfortable.”
So
comfortable—so comfortable! Left to herself the old
woman turned once more to the window. How lovely the view was that day! The
blue sky with its round clouds shed a brightness over
everything; the ailanthus had put on a tinge of yellow-green, the hyacinths
were budding, the magnolia flowers looked more than ever like rosettes carved
in alabaster. Soon the wistaria would bloom, then the horse-chestnut; but not
for her. Between her eyes and them a barrier of brick and mortar would swiftly
rise; presently even the spire would disappear, and all her radiant world be
blotted out. Mrs. Manstey sent away untouched the dinner-tray brought to her
that evening. She lingered in the window until the windy sunset died in
bat-colored dusk; then, going to bed, she lay sleepless all night.
Early
the next day she was up and at the window. It was raining, but even through the
slanting gray gauze the scene had its charm—and then the rain was so good for
the trees. She had noticed the day before that the ailanthus was growing dusty.
“Of
course I might move,” said Mrs. Manstey aloud, and turning from the window she
looked about her room. She might move, of course; so might she be flayed alive;
but she was not likely to survive either operation. The room, though far less
important to her happiness than the view, was as much a part of her existence.
She had lived in it seventeen years. She knew every stain on the wall-paper,
every rent in the carpet; the light fell in a certain way on her engravings,
her books had grown shabby on their shelves, her bulbs and ivy were used to
their window and knew which way to lean to the sun. “We are all too old to
move,” she said.
That
afternoon it cleared. Wet and radiant the blue reappeared through torn rags of
cloud; the ailanthus sparkled; the earth in the flower-borders looked rich and
warm.
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