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Old Wives’ Tale, The
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART IV
Arnold Bennett
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       _ The next evening Cyril sat at the tea-table in the parlour with
       his mother and his aunt. To Constance his presence there had
       something of the miraculous in it. He had come, after all! Sophia
       was in a rich robe, and for ornament wore an old silver-gilt neck-
       chain, which was clasped at the throat, and fell in double to her
       waist, where it was caught in her belt. This chain interested
       Cyril. He referred to it once or twice, and then he said: "Just
       let me have a LOOK at that chain," and put out his hand; and
       Sophia leaned forward so that he could handle it. His fingers
       played with it thus for some seconds; the picture strikingly
       affected Constance. At length he dropped it, and said: "H'm!"
       After a pause he said: "Louis Sixteenth, eh?" and Sophia said:
       "They told me so. But it's nothing; it only cost thirty francs,
       you know." And Cyril took her up sharply:
       "What does that matter?" Then after another pause he asked: "How
       often do you break a link of it?"
       "Oh, often," she said. "It's always getting shorter."
       And he murmured mysteriously: "H'm!"
       He was still mysterious, withdrawn within himself extraordinarily
       uninterested in his physical surroundings. But that evening he
       talked more than he usually did. He was benevolent, and showed a
       particular benevolence towards his mother, apparently exerting
       himself to answer her questions with fullness and heartiness, as
       though admitting frankly her right to be curious. He praised the
       tea; he seemed to notice what he was eating. He took Spot on his
       knee, and gazed in admiration at Fossette.
       "By Jove!" he said, "that's a dog, that is! ... All the same. ...
       " And he burst out laughing.
       "I won't have Fossette laughed at," Sophia warned him.
       "No, seriously," he said, in his quality of an amateur of dogs;
       "she is very fine." Even then he could not help adding: "What you
       can see of her!"
       Whereupon Sophia shook her head, deprecating such wit. Sophia was
       very lenient towards him. Her leniency could be perceived in her
       eyes, which followed his movements all the time. "Do you think he
       is like me, Constance?" she asked.
       "I wish I was half as good-looking," said Cyril, quickly; and
       Constance said:
       "As a baby he was very like you. He was a handsome baby. He wasn't
       at all like you when he was at school. These last few years he's
       begun to be like you again. He's very much changed since he left
       school; he was rather heavy and clumsy then."
       "Heavy and clumsy!" exclaimed Sophia. "Well, I should never have
       believed it!"
       "Oh, but he was!" Constance insisted.
       "Now, mater," said Cyril, "it's a pity you don't want that cake
       cutting into. I think I could have eaten a bit of that cake. But
       of course if it's only for show ...!"
       Constance sprang up, seizing a knife.
       "You shouldn't tease your mother," Sophia told him. "He doesn't
       really want any, Constance; he's regularly stuffed himself."
       And Cyril agreed, "No, no, mater, don't cut it; I really couldn't.
       I was only gassing."
       But Constance could never clearly see through humour of that sort.
       She cut three slices of cake, and she held the plate towards
       Cyril.
       "I tell you I really couldn't!" he protested.
       "Come!" she said obstinately. "I'm waiting! How much longer must I
       hold this plate?"
       And he had to take a slice. So had Sophia. When she was roused,
       they both of them had to yield to Constance.
       With the dogs, and the splendour of the tea-table under the gas,
       and the distinction of Sophia and Cyril, and the conversation,
       which on the whole was gay and free, rising at times to jolly
       garrulity, the scene in her parlour ought surely to have satisfied
       Constance utterly. She ought to have been quite happy, as her
       sciatica had raised the siege for a space. But she was not quite
       happy. The circumstances of Cyril's arrival had disturbed her;
       they had in fact wounded her, though she would scarcely admit the
       wound. In the morning she had received a brief letter from Cyril
       to say that he had not been able to come, and vaguely promising,
       or half-promising, to run down at a later date. That letter had
       the cardinal defects of all Cyril's relations with his mother; it
       was casual, and it was not candid. It gave no hint of the nature
       of the obstacle which had prevented him from coming. Cyril had
       always been too secretive. She was gravely depressed by the
       letter, which she did not show to Sophia, because it impaired her
       dignity as a mother, and displayed her son in a bad light. Then
       about eleven o'clock a telegram had come for Sophia.
       "That's all right," Sophia had said, on reading it. "He'll be here
       this evening!" And she had handed over the telegram, which read--
       "Very well. Will come same train to-day."
       And Constance learned that when Sophia had rushed out just before
       tea on the previous evening, it was to telegraph to Cyril.
       "What did you say to him?" Constance asked.
       "Oh!" said Sophia, with a careless air, "I told him I thought he
       ought to come. After all, you're more important than any business,
       Constance! And I don't like him behaving like that. I was
       determined he should come!"
       Sophia had tossed her proud head.
       Constance had pretended to be pleased and grateful. But the
       existence of a wound was incontestable. Sophia, then, could do
       more with Cyril than she could! Sophia had only met him once, and
       could simply twist him round her little finger. He would never
       have done so much for his mother. A fine sort of an obstacle it
       must have been, if a single telegram from Sophia could overcome it
       ...! And Sophia, too, was secretive. She had gone out and had
       telegraphed, and had not breathed a word until she got the reply,
       sixteen hours later. She was secretive, and Cyril was secretive.
       They resembled one another. They had taken to one another. But
       Sophia was a curious mixture. When Constance had asked her if she
       should go to the station again to meet Cyril, she had replied
       scornfully: "No, indeed! I've done going to meet Cyril. People who
       don't arrive must not expect to be met."
       When Cyril drove up to the door, Sophia had been in attendance.
       She hurried down the steps. "Don't say anything about my
       telegram," she had rapidly whispered to Cyril; there was no time
       for further explanation. Constance was at the top of the steps.
       Constance had not heard the whisper, but she had seen it; and she
       saw a guilty, puzzled look on Cyril's face, afterwards an
       ineffectively concealed conspiratorial look on both their faces.
       They had 'something between them,' from which she, the mother, was
       shut out! Was it not natural that she should be wounded? She was
       far too proud to mention the telegrams. And as neither Cyril nor
       Sophia mentioned them, the circumstances leading to Cyril's change
       of plan were not referred to at all, which was very curious. Then
       Cyril was more sociable than he had ever been; he was different,
       under his aunt's gaze. Certainly he treated his mother
       faultlessly. But Constance said to herself: "It is because she is
       here that he is so specially nice to me."
       When tea was finished and they were going upstairs to the drawing-
       room, she asked him, with her eye on the 'Stag at Eve' engraving:
       "Well, is it a success?"
       "What?" His eye followed hers. "Oh, you've changed it! What did
       you do that for, mater?"
       "You said it would be better like that," she reminded him.
       "Did I?" He seemed genuinely surprised. "I don't remember. I
       believe it is better, though," he added. "It might be even better
       still if you turned it the other way up."
       He pulled a face to Sophia, and screwed up his shoulders, as if to
       indicate: "I've done it, this time!"
       "How? The other way up?" Constance queried. Then as she
       comprehended that he was teasing her, she said: "Get away with
       you!" and pretended to box his ears. "You were fond enough of that
       picture at one time!" she said ironically.
       "Yes, I was, mater," he submissively agreed. "There's no getting
       over that." And he pressed her cheeks between his hands and kissed
       her.
       In the drawing-room he smoked cigarettes and played the piano--
       waltzes of his own composition. Constance and Sophia did not
       entirely comprehend those waltzes. But they agreed that all were
       wonderful and that one was very pretty indeed. (It soothed
       Constance that Sophia's opinion coincided with hers.) He said that
       that waltz was the worst of the lot. When he had finished with the
       piano, Constance informed him about Amy. "Oh! She told me," he
       said, "when she brought me my water. I didn't mention it because I
       thought it would be rather a sore subject." Beneath the casualness
       of his tone there lurked a certain curiosity, a willingness to
       hear details. He heard them.
       At five minutes to ten, when Constance had yawned, he threw a bomb
       among them on the hearthrug.
       "Well," he said, "I've got an appointment with Matthew at the
       Conservative Club at ten o'clock. I must go. Don't wait up for
       me."
       Both women protested, Sophia the more vivaciously. It was Sophia
       now who was wounded.
       "It's business," he said, defending himself. "He's going away
       early to-morrow, and it's my only chance." And as Constance did
       not brighten he went on: "Business has to be attended to. You
       mustn't think I've got nothing to do but enjoy myself."
       No hint of the nature of the business! He never explained. As to
       business, Constance knew only that she allowed him three hundred a
       year, and paid his local tailor. The sum had at first seemed to
       her enormous, but she had grown accustomed to it.
       "I should have preferred you to see Mr. Peel-Swynnerton here,"
       said Constance. "You could have had a room to yourselves. I do not
       like you going out at ten o'clock at night to a club."
       "Well, good night, mater," he said, getting up. "See you to-
       morrow. I shall take the key out of the door. It's true my pocket
       will never be the same again."
       Sophia saw Constance into bed, and provided her with two hot-water
       bottles against sciatica. They did not talk much. _
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Preface
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 1. The Square - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 2. The Tooth - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 1
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 2
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 3
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 4
Book 1. Mrs. Baines - Chapter 3. A Battle - Part 5
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER IV - ELEPHANT - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER V - THE TRAVELLER - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART III
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VI - ESCAPADE - PART IV
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART I
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART II
BOOK I MRS. BAINES - CHAPTER VII - A DEFEAT - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER I - REVOLUTION - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER II - CHRISTMAS AND THE FUTURE - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER III - CYRIL - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER III - CYRIL - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER IV - CRIME - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART IV
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER V - ANOTHER CRIME - PART V
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VI - THE WIDOW - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VII - BRICKS AND MORTAR - PART III
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART I
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART II
BOOK II CONSTANCE - CHAPTER VIII - THE PROUDEST MOTHER - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER I - THE ELOPEMENT - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER I - THE ELOPEMENT - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER II - SUPPER - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER II - SUPPER - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER III - AN AMBITION SATISFIED - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS FOR GERALD - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER V - FEVER - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART III
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART IV
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VI - THE SIEGE - PART V
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART I
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART II
BOOK III SOPHIA - CHAPTER VII - SUCCESS - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER I - FRENSHAM'S - PART V
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER II THE MEETING - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART V
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER III TOWARDS HOTEL LIFE - PART VI
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER IV END OF SOPHIA - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART I
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART II
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART III
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART IV
BOOK IV WHAT LIFE IS - CHAPTER V - END OF CONSTANCE - PART V