It was Thursday, and on Monday the building of the extension was to
begin.
On
Sunday afternoon a card was brought to Mrs. Black, as she was engaged in
gathering up the fragments of the boarders’ dinner in the basement. The card, black-edged, bore Mrs. Manstey’s name.
“One
of Mrs. Sampson’s boarders; wants to move, I suppose. Well, I can give her a
room next year in the extension. Dinah,” said Mrs. Black, “tell the lady I’ll
be upstairs in a minute.”
Mrs.
Black found Mrs. Manstey standing in the long parlor garnished with statuettes
and antimacassars; in that house she could not sit down.
Stooping
hurriedly to open the register, which let out a cloud of dust, Mrs. Black
advanced on her visitor.
“I’m
happy to meet you, Mrs. Manstey; take a seat, please,” the landlady remarked in
her prosperous voice, the voice of a woman who can afford to build extensions.
There was no help for it; Mrs. Manstey sat down.
“Is
there anything I can do for you, ma’am?” Mrs. Black continued. “My house is
full at present, but I am going to build an extension, and—”
“It
is about the extension that I wish to speak,” said Mrs. Manstey, suddenly. “I
am a poor woman, Mrs. Black, and I have never been a happy one. I shall have to
talk about myself first to—to make you understand.”
Mrs. Black, astonished but imperturbable, bowed at this
parenthesis.
“I
never had what I wanted,” Mrs. Manstey continued. “It was always one
disappointment after another. For years I wanted to live in the country. I
dreamed and dreamed about it; but we never could manage it. There was no sunny
window in our house, and so all my plants died. My daughter married years ago
and went away—besides, she never cared for the same things. Then my husband
died and I was left alone. That was seventeen years ago. I went to live at Mrs.
Sampson’s, and I have been there ever since. I have grown a little infirm, as
you see, and I don’t get out often; only on fine days, if I am feeling very
well. So you can understand my sitting a great deal in my window—the back
window on the third floor—”
“Well,
Mrs.
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