Mrs. Day's Daughters
Wrong At
e had decided that she should be driven in the carriage, her mother beside her, to some flooded and frozen meadows, three miles out of the town, where many of the young people who had danced last night had arranged to go
iage and asked for the ladies' health after the fatigue of the dance, and descanted on their own freedom, or otherwise, from weariness. Deleah, her face the colour of a wild rose, her loose dark hair curling crisply in the frosty air, shouted greetings to her mother as she flew past, a little erect, graceful figure keeping her elegant poise with the ease of the young and fearle
Bessie said, who knew that her mother was
o, my dear? I h
ought, for a girl not yet 'out,' she was ver
put it into hi
n! Without my even so much as hinting he
't here to-
d not skate he promised to push me in a chair on the ice. W
arrivals; and Reggie Fo
silence." No doubt he thought, after all, it would be better to
, if I were you, my dear. Wait unti
o do something to arrang
ot usual
onsense of that sort? Usual or not usual
dmitted that her father ha
sense to do it; and to get the w
he meal which families of the upper middle classes then took instead of dinner at the dinner hour. A comfortable, informal meal at which a big silver tea-tray and great silver tea-urn and heavily embossed tea-services, took a prominent part; where rolls and patties and huge hams and much-decorated tongues were present; a
im. Such a mood was not altogether unusual with him; when it was understood among them that something had gone wrong at the office and that it was safest to leave him alone. But Bessie, whose characteristic it was n
mama. Do
a cautioning glance in the di
beneath the table. "Mama, why ar
es or commands of her offspring. "Have you seen anything
r a moment with angry eyes. "No!" he thundered. "But I h
olour left her face. Her father turned to her as
hen, scowling upon daughter and wife, he gulped down a cup
behind him, Bessi
onsternation. "What's up now?" they as
give way so. You really must summon u
at the spectacle, watched her sister. "Whatever happened I would not cry before every one like that," she said to herself. Bernard, the elder boy, who lived in a chronic state of quarrelling with Bessie, openly gigg
eater force of will than directness of aim, at Bernard's face. "You beast!" she choked. "Mama, Bernard's laughing
-Bessie was so ridiculou
hand to the angrily sobb
," she said, looking back
ou should k
want some more tea, mother. I won't have this her soppin
the mother said, and closed the d
s by Bernard! I won't be
should go back, and
and watched the girl mounting slowly to her room, crying audibly, childish
look at me in such
ings have gone wrong at the office. Go to your room till your tears are d
ved best in the house. It was here the children learned their lessons for school, the ladies worked, Franky played. It was spacious and cheerful, and held nothing that rough usage would spoil. Al
f the fire, and sat, looking huddled and uncomfortable, his feet
m?" his wife asked. "Aren't you
going to church with his family, he went to a club in the town where whist and three-card
boots, William: aren't
ot going t
ven's n
lub's seen th
eferred her husband out of her presence rather than in it-her children would not have whispered such a disloyalty; yet if he was going to pass his evenings in
unpleasantness ove
er of the mantelpiece. "What the devil did you send me
you, W
f the lying repor
liam
gaged. Now did you or did you not lead me to believe i
onl
ead me to
if you will
to be true-only you stuck to it. You were so d-d s
t remember I advi
to ask for it? I acted on information whi
out? W
r had a civil word to fling at me in all his life. But for your infernal, silly cackle I'd as soon have gone to the devil as to him. If I'd only
herto, seated herself in the chair by the chimney corner, and looked at her husband's blunt profile as h
children to think a
rancis have said
ghter. That such an engagement would never receive his sanction. That he was not aware his 'young brother'-he's always stickin
d protestingly upon her husband's name. "I h
bout my house. That he had danced half the ni
And then,
p to cease. I beg you not to invite m
aid t
him!
prise and dismay. She stared breathlessly upon her husband
huge shoulders. "W
hat you sa
know if he stood on his head or his heels
at swearing would
ld improve them? It's what I wan
! Oh, poor,
short-necked head fell upon his breast,
ittering with its rings laid upon the black
ly she advised. "It can't make matters any
o the club? D'you think I'm like a
; and then she left him. Her mind was full of Bessie
the heart to tell her," she said t