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The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER VI

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The Last Chronicle of Barset

CHAPTER VI

GRACE CRAW­LEY

It has al­ready been said that Grace Craw­ley was at this time liv­ing with the two Miss Pret­ty­mans, who kept a girls’ school at Sil­ver­bridge. Two more be­nig­nant ladies than the Miss Pret­ty­mans nev­er presid­ed over such an es­tab­lish­ment. The younger was fat, and fresh, and fair, and seemed to be al­ways run­ning over with the milk of hu­man kind­ness. The oth­er was very thin and very small, and some­what af­flict­ed with bad health–was weak, too, in the eyes, and sub­ject to rack­ing headaches, so that it was con­sid­ered gen­er­al­ly that she was un­able to take much ac­tive part in the ed­uca­tion of the pupils. But it was con­sid­ered as gen­er­al­ly that she did all the think­ing, that she knew more than any oth­er wom­an in Barset­shire, and that all the Pret­ty­man schemes for ed­uca­tion em­anat­ed from her mind. It was said, too, by those who knew them best, that her sis­ter’s good-​na­ture was as noth­ing to hers; that she was the most char­ita­ble, the most lov­ing, and the most con­sci­en­tious of school-​mis­tress­es. This was Miss Annabel­la Pret­ty­man, the el­der; and per­haps it may be in­ferred that some por­tion of her great char­ac­ter for virtue may have been due to the fact that no­body ev­er saw her out of her own house. She could not even go to church, be­cause the open air brought on neu­ral­gia. She was there­fore per­haps tak­en to be mag­nif­icent, part­ly be­cause she was un­known. Miss Anne Pret­ty­man, the younger, went about fre­quent­ly to tea-​par­ties–would go, in­deed, to any par­ty to which she might be in­vit­ed; and was known to have a pleas­ant taste for pound­cake and sweet­meats. Be­ing seen so much in the out­er world, she be­came com­mon, and her char­ac­ter did not stand so high as did that of her sis­ter. Some peo­ple were ill-​na­tured enough to say that she want­ed to mar­ry Mr Winthrop; but of what maid­en la­dy that goes out in the world are not such sto­ries told? And all such sto­ries in Sil­ver­bridge were told with spe­cial ref­er­ence to Mr Winthrop.

Miss Craw­ley, at present, lived with the Miss Pret­ty­mans, and as­sist­ed them in the school. This ar­range­ment had been go­ing on for the last twelve months, since the time in which Grace would have left the school in the nat­ural course of things. There had been no bar­gain made, and no in­ten­tion that Grace should stay. She had been in­vit­ed to fill the place of an ab­sent su­per­in­ten­dent, first, for one month, then for an­oth­er, and then for two more months; and when the as­sis­tant came back, the Miss Pret­ty­mans thought there were rea­sons why Grace should be asked to re­main a lit­tle longer. But they took great care to let the fash­ion­able world of Sil­ver­bridge know that Grace Craw­ley was a vis­itor with them, and not a teach­er. ‘We pay her no salary, or any­thing of that kind,’ said Miss Ann Pret­ty­man; a state­ment, how­ev­er, which was by no means true, for dur­ing those last four months the reg­ular stipend had been paid to her; and twice since then, Miss Annabel­la Pret­ty­man, who man­aged all the mon­ey mat­ters, had called Grace in­to her lit­tle room, and had made a lit­tle speech, and had put a lit­tle bit of pa­per in­to her hand. ‘I know I ought not to take it,’ Grace had said to her friend Anne. ‘If I was not here, there would be no one in my place.’ ‘Non­sense, my dear,’ Anne Pret­ty­man had said; ‘it is the great­est com­fort to us in the world. And you should make your­self nice, you know, for his sake. All the gen­tle­men like it.’ Then Grace had been very an­gry, and had sworn that she would give the mon­ey back again. Nev­er­the­less, I think she did make her­self as nice as she knew how to do. And from all this it may be seen that the Miss Pret­ty­mans had hith­er­to quite ap­proved of Ma­jor Grant­ly’s at­ten­tions.

But when this ter­ri­ble af­fair came on about the cheque which had been lost and found and traced to Mr Craw­ley’s hands, Miss Anne Pret­ty­man said noth­ing fur­ther to Grace Craw­ley about Ma­jor Grant­ly. It was not that she thought that Mr Craw­ley was guilty, but she knew enough of the world to be aware that sus­pi­cion of such guilt might com­pel such a man as Ma­jor Grant­ly to change his mind. ‘If he had on­ly popped,’ Anne said to her sis­ter,’ it would have been all right. He would nev­er have gone back from his word.’ ‘My dear,’ said Annabel­la, ‘I wish you would not talk about pop­ping. It is a ter­ri­ble word.’ ‘I shouldn’t, to any­one ex­cept you,’ said Anne.

There had come to Sil­ver­bridge some few months since, on a vis­it to Mrs Walk­er, a young la­dy from Alling­ton, in the neigh­bour­ing coun­ty, be­tween whom and Grace Craw­ley there had grown up from cir­cum­stances a warm friend­ship. Grace had a cousin in Lon­don–a clerk high up and well-​to-​do in a pub­lic of­fice, a nephew of her moth­er’s–and this cousin was, and for years had been, vi­olent­ly smit­ten in love for this young la­dy. But the young la­dy’s tale had been sad, and though she ac­knowl­edged feel­ings of the most af­fec­tion­ate friend­ship for the cousin, she could not bring her­self to ac­knowl­edge more. Grace Craw­ley had met the young la­dy at Sil­ver­bridge, and words had been spo­ken about the cousin; and though the young la­dy from Alling­ton was some years old­er than Grace, there had grown up to be a friend­ship, and, as is not un­com­mon be­tween young ladies, there had been an agree­ment that they would cor­re­spond. The name of the la­dy was Miss Lily Dale, and the name of the well-​to-​do cousin was Mr John Eames.

At the present mo­ment Miss Dale was at home with her moth­er at Alling­ton, and Grace Craw­ley in her ter­ri­ble sor­row wrote to her friend, pour­ing out her whole heart. As Grace’s let­ter and Miss Dale’s an­swer will as­sist us in our sto­ry, I will ven­ture to give them both.

‘SIL­VER­BRIDGE,–De­cem­ber, 186-

‘DEAR­EST LILY, ‘I hard­ly know how to tell you what has hap­pened, it is so very ter­ri­ble. But per­haps you will have heard it al­ready, as ev­ery­body is talk­ing about it here. It has got in­to the news­pa­pers, and there­fore it can­not be kept se­cret. Not that I should keep any­thing from you; on­ly this is so very dread­ful that I hard­ly know how to write it. Some­body says–a Mr Soames, I be­lieve it is–that pa­pa has tak­en some mon­ey that does not be­long to him, and he is to be brought be­fore the mag­is­trates and tried. Of course pa­pa has done noth­ing wrong. I do think he would be the last man in the world to take a pen­ny that did not be­long to him. You know how poor he is; what a life he has had! But I think he would al­most soon­er see mam­ma starv­ing;–I am sure he would rather be starved him­self, then even bor­row a shilling which he could not pay. To sup­pose that he would take mon­ey’

(she had tried to write the word ’steal’ but she could not bring her pen to form the let­ters)

‘is mon­strous. But, some­how, the cir­cum­stances have been made to look bad against him, and they say that he must come over here to the mag­is­trates. I of­ten think that of all men in the world pa­pa is the most un­for­tu­nate. Ev­ery­thing seems to go against him, and yet he is so good! Poor mam­ma has been over here, and she is dis­tract­ed. I nev­er saw her so wretched be­fore. She has been to your friend Mr Walk­er, and came to me af­ter­wards for a minute. Mr Walk­er has got some­thing to do with it, though mam­ma says she thinks he is quite friend­ly to pa­pa. I won­der whether you could find out, through Mr Walk­er, what he thinks about it. Of course, mam­ma knows that pa­pa has done noth­ing wrong; but she says that the whole thing is so mys­te­ri­ous, and that she does not know how to ac­count for the mon­ey. Pa­pa, you know, is not like oth­er peo­ple. He for­gets things; and is al­ways think­ing, think­ing, think­ing of his great mis­for­tunes. Poor pa­pa! My heart bleeds so when I re­mem­ber all his sor­rows, that I hate my­self for think­ing about my­self.

‘When mam­ma left me–and it was then I first knew that pa­pa would re­al­ly have to be tried–I went to Miss Annabel­la, and told her that I would go home. She asked me why, and I said I would not dis­grace her house by stay­ing in it. She got up and took me in her arms, and there came a tear out of both her dear old eyes, and she said that if any­thing evil came to pa­pa–which she would not be­lieve, as she knew him to be a good man–there should be a home in her house not on­ly for me, but for mam­ma and Jane. Isn’t she a won­der­ful wom­an? When I think of her, I some­times think that she must be an an­gel al­ready. Then she be­came very se­ri­ous–for just be­fore, through her tears she had tried to smile–and she told me to re­mem­ber that all peo­ple could not be like her, who had no­body to look to but her­self and her sis­ter; and that at present I must task my­self not to think of that which I had been think­ing of be­fore. She did not men­tion any­body’s name, but of course I un­der­stood very well what she meant; and I sup­pose she is right. I said noth­ing in an­swer to her, for I could not speak. She was hold­ing my hand, and I took hers up and kissed it, to show her, if I could, that I knew that she was right; but I could not have spo­ken about it for all the world. It was not ten days since that she her­self, with all her pru­dence, told me that she thought I ought to make up my mind what an­swer I would give him. And then I did not say any­thing; but of course she knew. And af­ter that Miss Anne spoke quite freely about it, so that I had to beg her to be silent even be­fore the girls. You know how im­pru­dent she is. But it is all over now. Of course Miss Annabel­la is right. He has got a great many peo­ple to think of; his fa­ther and moth­er, and his dar­ling lit­tle Edith, whom he brought here twice, and left her with us once for two days, so that she got to know me quite well; and I took such a love for her, that I could not bear to part with her. But I think some­times that all our fam­ily are born to be un­for­tu­nate, and then I tell my­self that I will nev­er hope for any­thing again.

‘Pray write to me soon. I feel as though noth­ing on earth could com­fort me, and yet I shall like to have your let­ter. Dear, dear Lily, I am not even yet so wretched but what I shall re­joice to be told good news of you. If it on­ly could be as John wish­es it! And why should it not? It seems to me that no­body has a right or a rea­son to by un­hap­py ex­cept us. Good-​bye, dear­est Lily. ‘Your af­fec­tion­ate friend, ‘GRACE CRAW­LEY’

‘P.S.–I think I have made up my mind that I will go back to Hog­gle­stock at once if the mag­is­trates de­cide against pa­pa. I think I should be do­ing the school harm if I were to stay here.’

The an­swer to this let­ter did not reach Miss Craw­ley till af­ter the mag­is­trate’s hear­ing on the Thurs­day, but it will be bet­ter for our sto­ry that it should be giv­en here than post­poned un­til the re­sult of that meet­ing shall have been told. Miss Dale’s an­swer was as fol­lows:-

‘ALLING­TON,–De­cem­ber, 186- ‘DEAR GRACE, ‘Your let­ter has made me very un­hap­py. If it can at all com­fort you to know that mam­ma and I sym­pa­thise with you al­to­geth­er, in that you may at any rate be sure. But in such trou­bles noth­ing will give com­fort. They must be borne, till the fire of mis­for­tune burns it­self out.

‘I had heard about the af­fair a day or two be­fore I got your note. Our cler­gy­man, Mr Boyce, told us of it. Of course we all know that the charge must be al­to­geth­er un­found­ed, and mam­ma says that the truth will be sure to show it­self at last. But that con­vic­tion does not cure the evil, and I can well un­der­stand that your fa­ther should suf­fer grievous­ly; and I pity your moth­er quite as much as I do him.

‘As for Ma­jor Grant­ly, if he be such a man as I took him to be from the lit­tle I saw of him, all this would make no dif­fer­ence to him. I am sure that it ought to make none. Whether it should not make a dif­fer­ence in you is an­oth­er ques­tion. I think it should; and I think your an­swer to him should be that you could not even con­sid­er any such propo­si­tion while your fa­ther was in so great trou­ble. I am so much old­er than you, and seem to have so much ex­pe­ri­ence, that I do not scru­ple, as you will see, to come down up­on you with all the weight of my wis­dom.

‘About that oth­er sub­ject I had rather say noth­ing. I have known your cousin all my life al­most; and I re­gard no one more kind­ly than I do him. When I think of my friends, he is al­ways the one of the dear­est. But when one thinks of go­ing be­yond friend­ship, even if one tries to do so, there are so many bar­ri­ers!

‘Your af­fec­tion­ate friend, ‘LILY DALE

‘Mam­ma bids me say that she would be de­light­ed to have you here when­ev­er it might suit you to come; and I add to this mes­sage my en­treaty that you will come at once. You say that you think you ought to leave Miss Pret­ty­man’s for a while. I can well un­der­stand your feel­ing; but as your sis­ter is with your moth­er, sure­ly you had bet­ter come to us–I mean quite at once. I will not scru­ple to tell you what mam­ma says, be­cause I know your good sense. She says that as the in­ter­est of the school may pos­si­bly be con­cerned, and as you have no reg­ular en­gage­ment, she thinks you ought to leave Sil­ver­bridge; but she says that it will be bet­ter that you come to us than that you should go home. If you went home, peo­ple might say that had left in some sort of dis­grace. Come to us, and when all this is put right, then you go back to Sil­ver­bridge; and then, if a cer­tain per­son speaks again, you can make a dif­fer­ent an­swer. Mam­ma quite un­der­stands that you are to come; so you have on­ly to ask your own mam­ma, and come at once.’

This let­ter, the read­er will un­der­stand, did not reach Grace Craw­ley till af­ter the all-​im­por­tant Thurs­day; but be­fore that day had come round, Grace had told Miss Pret­ty­man–had told both the Miss Pret­ty­mans–that she was re­solved to leave them. She had done this with­out con­sult­ing her moth­er, driv­en to it by var­ious mo­tives. She knew her fa­ther’s con­duct was be­ing dis­cussed by the girls at school, and that things were said of him which it could not but be for the dis­ad­van­tage of Miss Pret­ty­man that any­one should say of a teach­er in the es­tab­lish­ment. She felt, too, that she could not hold up her head in Sil­ver­bridge in these days, as it would be­come her to do if she re­tained her po­si­tion. She did strug­gle gal­lant­ly, and suc­ceed­ed much more near­ly than she was her­self aware. She was all but able to car­ry her­self as though no ter­ri­ble ac­cu­sa­tion was be­ing made against her fa­ther. Of the strug­gle, how­ev­er, she was not her­self the less con­scious, and she told her­self that on that ac­count al­so she must go. And then she must go be­cause of Ma­jor Grant­ly. Whether he was mind­ed to come and speak to her that one oth­er need­ed word, or whether he was not so mind­ed, it would be bet­ter that she should be away from Sil­ver­bridge. If he spoke it she could on­ly an­swer him by the neg­ative; she should leave her­self the pow­er of think­ing that his si­lence had been caused by her ab­sence, and not by his cold­ness or in­dif­fer­ence.

She asked, there­fore, for an in­ter­view with Miss Pret­ty­man, and was shown in­to the el­der sis­ter’s room, at eleven o’clock on the Tues­day morn­ing. The el­der Miss Pret­ty­man nev­er came in­to the school her­self till twelve, but was in the habit of hav­ing in­ter­views with the young ladies–which were some­times very aw­ful in their na­ture–for the two pre­vi­ous hours. Dur­ing these in­ter­views an im­mense amount of busi­ness was done, and the for­tunes in life of some girls were said to have been made or marred; as when, for in­stance, Miss Crimp­ton had been ad­vised to stay at home with her un­cle in Eng­land, in­stead of go­ing out with her sis­ters to In­dia, both of which sis­ters were mar­ried with­in three months of their land­ing in Bom­bay. The way in which she gave her coun­sel on such oc­ca­sions was very ef­fi­ca­cious. No one knew bet­ter than Miss Pret­ty­man that a cock can crow most ef­fec­tive­ly in his own farm­yard, and there­fore all crow­ing in­tend­ed to be ef­fec­tive was done by her with­in the shrine of her own pe­cu­liar room.

‘Well, my dear, what is it?’ she said to Grace. ‘Sit in the arm-​chair, my dear, and we can then talk com­fort­ably.’ The teach­ers, when they were clos­et­ed with Miss Pret­ty­man, were al­ways asked to sit in the arm-​chair, where­as a small, straight-​backed, un­easy chair was kept for the use of the young ladies. And there was, too, a stool of re­pen­tance, out against the wall, very un­com­fort­able in­deed for young ladies who had not be­haved them­selves so pret­ti­ly as young ladies gen­er­al­ly do.

Grace seat­ed her­self, and then be­gan her speech very quick­ly. ‘Miss Pret­ty­man,’ she said, ‘I have made up my mind that I will go home, if you please.’

‘And why should you go home, Grace? Did I not tell you that you should have a home here?’ Miss Pret­ty­man had weak eyes, and was very small, and had nev­er pos­sessed any claim to be called good-​look­ing. And she as­sumed noth­ing of the ma­jes­ti­cal awe from any adorn­ment or stud­ied am­pli­fi­ca­tion of the out­ward wom­an by means of im­pres­sive trap­pings. The pos­ses­sor of an un­ob­ser­vant eye might have called her a mean-​look­ing, lit­tle old wom­an. And cer­tain­ly there would have been noth­ing aw­ful in her to any­one who came across her oth­er­wise than as a la­dy hav­ing au­thor­ity in her own school. But with­in her own precincts, she did know how to sur­round her­self with a dig­ni­ty which all felt who ap­proached her there. Grace Craw­ley, as she heard the sim­ple ques­tion which Miss Pret­ty­man had asked, un­con­scious­ly ac­knowl­edged the strength of the wom­an’s man­ner. She al­ready stood re­buked for hav­ing pro­posed a plan so un­gra­cious, so un­nec­es­sary, and so un­wise.

‘I think I ought to be with mam­ma at present,’ said Grace.

‘You moth­er has her sis­ter with her.’

‘Yes, Miss Pret­ty­man, Jane is there.’

‘If there is no oth­er rea­son, I can­not think that that can be held to be a rea­son now. Of course your moth­er would like to have you al­ways; un­less you should be mar­ried–but then there are rea­sons why this should not be so.’

‘Of course there are.’

‘I do not think–that is, if I know all that there is to be known–I do not think, I say, that there can be any good ground for your leav­ing us now–just now.’

Then Grace sat silent for a mo­ment, gath­er­ing her courage, and col­lect­ing her words; and af­ter that she spoke. ‘It is be­cause of pa­pa, and be­cause of this charge–’

‘But, Grace–’

‘I know what you are go­ing to say, Miss Pret­ty­man;–that is, I think I know.’

‘If you hear me, you may be sure that you know.’

‘But I want you to hear me for one mo­ment first. I beg your par­don, Miss Pret­ty­man; I do in­deed, but I want to say this be­fore you go on. I must go home, and I know I ought. We are all dis­graced, and I won’t stop here to dis­grace the school. I know pa­pa has done noth­ing wrong; but nev­er­the­less we are dis­graced. The po­lice are to bring him in here on Thurs­day, and ev­ery­body in Sil­ver­bridge will know it. It can­not be right that I should be here teach­ing in the school, while it is all go­ing on;–and I won’t. And, Miss Pret­ty­man, I couldn’t do it, in­deed I couldn’t. I can’t bring my­self to think of any­thing I am do­ing. In­deed I can’t; and then, Miss Pret­ty­man, there are oth­er rea­sons.’ By the time that she had pro­ceed­ed thus far, Grace Craw­ley’s words were near­ly choked by her tears.

‘And what are the oth­er rea­sons, Grace?’

‘I don’t know,’ said Grace, strug­gling to speak through her tears.

‘But I know,’ said Miss Pret­ty­man. ‘I know them all. I know all your rea­sons, and I tell you that in my opin­ion you ought to re­main where you are, and not go away. The very rea­sons which to you are rea­sons for your go­ing, to me are rea­sons for your re­main­ing here.’

‘I can’t re­main. I am de­ter­mined to go. I don’t mind you and Miss Anne, but I can’t bear to have the girls look­ing at me–and the ser­vants.’

Then Miss Pret­ty­man paused awhile, think­ing of what words of wis­dom would be most ap­pro­pri­ate in the present con­junc­ture. But words of wis­dom did not seem to come eas­ily to her, hav­ing for the mo­ment been ban­ished by a ten­der­ness of heart. ‘Come here, my love,’ she said at last. ‘Come here, Grace.’ Slow­ly Grace got up from her seat and came round, and stood by Miss Pret­ty­man’s el­bow. Miss Pret­ty­man pushed her chair a lit­tle back, and pushed her­self a lit­tle for­ward, and stretch­ing out one hand, placed her arm round Grace’s waist, and with the oth­er took hold of Grace’s hand, and thus drew her down and kissed the girl’s fore­head and lips. And then Grace found her­self kneel­ing at her friend’s feet. ‘Grace,’ she said, ‘do you not know that I love you? Do you not know that I love you dear­ly?’ In an­swer to this Grace kissed the with­ered hand she held in hers, while the warm tears trick­led up­on Miss Pret­ty­man’s knuck­les. ‘I love you as though you were my own,’ ex­claimed the schoolmistress; ‘and will you not trust me, that I know what is best for you?’

‘I must go home,’ said Grace.

‘Of course you shall, if you think it right at last; but let us talk of it. No one in the house, you know, has the slight­est sus­pi­cion that your fa­ther has done any­thing that is in the least dis­hon­ourable.’

‘I know that you have not.’

‘No, nor has Anne.’ Miss Pret­ty­man said this as though no one in that house be­yond her­self and her sis­ter had a right to have any opin­ion on any sub­ject.

‘I know that,’ said Grace.

‘Well, my dear. If we think so–’

‘But the ser­vant, Miss Pret­ty­man?’

‘If any ser­vant in this house says a word to of­fend you, I’ll–I’ll–’

‘They don’t say any­thing, Miss Pret­ty­man, but they look. In­deed, I’d bet­ter go home. In­deed I had!’

‘Do not you think your moth­er has cares enough up­on her, and bur­den enough, with­out an­oth­er mouth to feed, and an­oth­er head to shel­ter? You haven’t thought of that, Grace.’

‘Yes, I have.’

‘And for the work, whilst you are not quite well you shall not be trou­bled with teach­ing. I have some old pa­pers that want copy­ing and set­tlings, and you shall sit here and do that just for an em­ploy­ment. Anne knows that I’ve long want­ed to have it done, and I’ll tell her that you have kind­ly promised to do it for me.’

‘No; no; no,’ said Grace; ‘I must go home.’ She was still kneel­ing at Miss Pret­ty­man’s knee, and still hold­ing Miss Pret­ty­man’s hand. And then, at that mo­ment, there came a tap on the door, gen­tle but yet not hum­ble, a tap which ac­knowl­edged, on the part of the tap­per, the suprema­cy in that room of the la­dy who was sit­ting there, but which still claimed ad­mit­tance al­most as a right. The tap was well known by both of them to be the tap of Miss Anne. Grace im­me­di­ate­ly jumped up, and Miss Pret­ty­man set­tled her­self in her chair with a mo­tion which al­most seemed to in­di­cate some feel­ing of shame as to her late po­si­tion.

‘I sup­pose I may come in?’ said Miss Anne, open­ing the door and in­sert­ing her head.

‘Yes, you may come in–if you have any­thing to say,’ said Miss Pret­ty­man, with an air which seemed to be in­tend­ed to as­sert her suprema­cy. But, in truth, she was sim­ply col­lect­ing the wis­dom and dig­ni­ty which had been some­what dis­si­pat­ed by her ten­der­ness.

‘I did not know that Grace Craw­ley was here,’ said Miss Anne.

‘Grace Craw­ley is here,’ said Miss Pret­ty­man.

‘What is the mat­ter, Grace?’ said Miss Anne, see­ing her tears.

‘Nev­er mind now,’ said Miss Pret­ty­man.

‘Poor dear, I’m sure I’m sor­ry as though she were my own sis­ter,’ said Anne. ‘But, Annabel­la, I want to speak to you es­pe­cial­ly.’

‘To me, in pri­vate?’

‘Yes, to you; in pri­vate, if Grace won’t mind?’

Then Grace pre­pared to go. But as she was go­ing, Miss Anne, up­on whose brow a heavy bur­den of thought was ly­ing, stopped her sud­den­ly. ‘Grace, my dear,’ she said, ‘go up­stairs to your room, will you?–not across the hall to the school.’

‘And why shouldn’t she go to the school?’ said Miss Pret­ty­man.

Miss Anne paused for a mo­ment, and then an­swered–un­will­ing­ly, as though driv­en to make a re­ply which she knew to be in­dis­creet. ‘Be­cause there is some­body in the hall.’

‘Go to your room, dear,’ said Miss Pret­ty­man. And Grace went to her room, nev­er turn­ing an eye down to­wards the hall. ‘Who is it?’ said Miss Pret­ty­man.

‘Ma­jor Grant­ly is here, ask­ing to see you,’ said Miss Anne.