Read A Family and a Fortune Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âYour father will think of that. It will be to his advantage. Oh, I must not let myself grow bitter. People are ennobled by suffering and that was not the speech of an ennobled man. And I thought of my advantage when my turn came. That came as a shock to people; I like to remember that it did. I was not a person who could be trusted to think of himself; they actually hardly expected it. If I had not become engaged, my true self would never have emerged. And now I shall never be thought the same of again. But I suppose nobody would be, whose true self had emerged.'
âIs Father's self made manifest now?' said Aubrey.
âYes, it is, and we see that it is even worse than mine.'
Justine rose and shook out her skirt with a movement of discarding the traces of some pursuit.
âPeople's weaker side is not necessarily their truer self,' she said, in a tone which ended the talk and enabled her uncle to leave the room.
A silence followed his going.
âAre men allowed to marry someone else as soon as they like after their wives are dead?' said Aubrey.
âHow many weeks is it?' said Mark.
âI do not know. We will not say,' said his sister. âIt can do no good.'
âIt may have been the emotion of that time which prepared the way for the other.'
âIt may have been. It may not. We do not know.'
âIs it often like that?' said Aubrey.
Justine sat down and drew him to her lap, and as he edged away to save her his weight, suddenly raised her hands to her head and burst into a flood of tears. Her brothers looked on in silence. Aubrey put his knee on the edge of her chair and stared before him.
âWell, that is over,' she said, lifting her face. âI had to let myself go at first. If I had not, it would only have been bottled up and broken out at some inopportune time. Witness my passages with Aunt Matty. Well, I have betrayed my feelings once and am in no danger of doing it a second time. I can feel that Uncle will be able to face his life, and that I shall be able to face seeing him do it.'
âShall we all be able to, or must we all cry?' said Aubrey, who was himself taking the latter course.
âWell, women look into the depths more than men. But you need not fear that I shall reveal myself again.'
âShall we all follow Justine's example?' said Aubrey, glancing at his brothers to see if they had done so.
âUncle did a difficult thing well,' said Mark.
âI wondered when he was going to stop doing it,' said Clement.
âClement! Ah well, it is your feeling that makes you say it,' said Justine.
âJustine helped him to stop,' said Mark. âI wonder what would have happened if she had not.'
âHe would have managed for himself. I had no real fear. I only wanted to spare him all I could.'
âIt seems that we have been blind,' said Clement.
âHave we?' said his sister. âDid we see anything? Did we foresee it? Shall we ever know?'
âOf course we shall,' said Mark. âWe know now that we have had a shock.'
âIt seems that there must have been signs, even that there were. Well, then, so it was.'
âI wonder what the scene was like between Uncle and Father,' said Clement.
âWe need not wonder. We know that it was an exhibition of dignity and openness on the one side and generosity and courage on the other.'
âMiss Sloane was there,' said Aubrey. âI saw them all go into the library together.'
âAnd what quality did she contribute?' said Mark. âBut there was surely no need of any more.'
âI wonder which of them one's heart aches for the most,' said Justine.
âFor Uncle. Mine only aches for him.'
âI don't know. If I know Father, he has his share of the suffering.'
âI think it is clear that we did not entirely know him. And Uncle is reaping the reward.'
âYes, yes, that in a way,' said Justine, putting her hands round her knee and looking before her, âThat, indeed. And yet there is something so stimulating in the thought of Uncle's course. It is such a tonic sadness. One wonders if such things are ever not worth while.'
âNot for Uncle, I am afraid. The benefit is for other people.'
âDo you know, I don't know?' said Justine, beginning again to gaze before her but checking herself. âWell, I must go and pursue the trivial round. Even such things as these bring duties in their wake. Miss Sloane will be staying to dinner, and I suppose Aunt Matty must come to preside at this further involvement of her fortunes with ours.'
âIs that the best thing?' said Mark.
âYes, my dear,' said Justine, simply. âIt saves Uncle the most. He gets it all over in one fell swoop and has his path clear. Let him go to bed tonight feeling that his hard time is behind, that he has finished with heroism and has only to look forward in his old way to the happiness of others.'
âFinished with heroism!'
âWell, begun it then, begun the real part. Begun to serve his sentence, even if it is for life. That is not so foreign to Uncle. We are not on his level. We can trust him to go further than we could.'
âAnd fare worse, it seems.'
âAnd fare as he may,' said Justine with a sigh. âNow we have to take our thoughts from him and think of Father.' âA less elevating subject.'
âNo, no, Mark. We will not cross our proper bounds. Though Father is changing his life and ours, we are none the less his children.'
âWill Aunt Matty be any relation of Father's now?' said Aubrey. âIt was because of Mother that he was her brother.'
âOh, what a muddle and mix-up it all is! Well, we must leave the future. We have no right to mould or mar it. Aunt Matty is Mother's sister and has a right in our home. And she is also Miss Sloane's friend. It is strange that I do not feel inclined to say Maria now. But I daresay that is littleness and perhaps, if I knew, self-righteousness. She has brought this happiness into Father's life, and we must not forget it, though we have counted the cost. Let me see bright faces now. It is due to Father and to her, yes, and to Uncle too, that we should show a pleasant front to those who are managing their lives in their own way.'
âCertainly not ours,' said Mark.
âThe whole point is the feeling between Father and Miss Sloane,' said Clement. âIt is best for things to happen according to the truth underneath.'
âWe can't help resenting the truth; that is the trouble,' said his sister. âWe shall have to hide our feelings, and we shall not be the only people doing that. It is surprising how little we are in control of our minds. I found myself wishing that Mother were here, to help us out of the muddle which has come through her death.'
âWell, she is not, and Father has to make his life without her. And he would be a more tragic figure alone than Uncle, if only for the reason that he would be lonely and Uncle will not.'
âNot on the surface. We shall all see to that. But there is such a thing as being alone in a crowd. And perhaps we had some feeling that Father ought to be lonely at this time. Well, if we had, we had; I don't know what it says for us. Now will you walk across to Aunt Matty, and break the news cheerfully, gently - oh, how you please, and come back and tell me if she is coming tonight? To see her friend taking her sister's place may be a thing she can face, and it may not. Only she can know. Dear, dear, I don't see how things are to straighten out.'
âI believe that you are a contributing cause of all this,' said Mark to Clement as they set off. âIt was your idea that Uncle should stay away to serve Aunt Matty. That is how things had the chance to turn themselves over. They could hardly have done it otherwise.'
âIt was a good thing they had it, with all this working underneath. It would not have done for the future to go on without any root in the truth.'
âHave you had any base thoughts in your mind?'
âWhat do you mean?'
âHave you begun to think of having your money?'
âOh, that. Uncle said something about it.'
âHe said the one significant thing.'
âI suppose I shall come to it: I see you have done so.'
âI was wondering if my mind were baser than anyone else's. I see it is baser than yours.'
âOh, all our minds are alike,' said Clement. âEveryone is base in a way.'
Dudley came across the grass behind them, raising his voice.
âAre you going to see your aunt? Then I will come with you and get the last piece of my ordeal over. I have shown you how a person should bear himself under a reverse, and now I will give the same lesson to Matty. We do seem to feel that she needs lessons, though I begin to see that her failings are not so bad as such things go.'
Matty's voice came to their ears, raised and almost strident.
âOf course I should not be treated like this. You seem to
be devoid of any knowledge of civilized life. Here have I been sitting alone all day, imagining everything, anxious about everyone, yearning for some word or sign! And here I am left as if I were nothing and nobody, and had nothing to do with the people who are the nearest in my life. I have lost my sister, but her children are my charge, and the woman who is to take her place is my friend. I am deeply involved in all of it and it is torment to be kept apart.'
âI only said that they must have had a shock, and may not have thought of sending anyone down.'
âThen don't say it; don't dare to say it. Sending anyone down! As if I were some pensioner to be cast a scrap, instead of what I am, the woman who stands to my sister's children in the place of a mother! You have never felt or had any affection, or you could not say such things.'
Miss Griffin looked at the window, opening her eyes to prevent any other change in them, and Matty broke off, touched her hair, laid her hands on her flushed cheeks, and leaned towards the door.
âCome in, whoever you are, and find a poor, wrought-up woman, tired of knowing nothing, tired of being alone. You have come to put an end to that. I am not quite forgotten. And do I see three dear faces? I am not forgotten indeed. But I have been feeling quite a neglected, sad person, and I am not going to sympathize with anyone. I have used up that feeling on myself. I know how the day was to go; I had my place behind the scenes; and I am just going to congratulate two of you on keeping your uncle. I know that I am striking the right note there.'
The three men greeted the women, Mark guessing nothing of the scene, Clement part of it, Dudley the whole.
âWell, so I am to hear what has happened, all of it from the beginning. You tell me, Dudley. You are too interested in the whole panorama of life to be biased by your own little share. You know that I use the word, little, in its relation to your mind, not to mine. So tell me about it, and when it is all to take place, and what you will do with your wealth, now that it has come back into your hands. You won't think there is anything I do not want to hear. I
include all human experience in my range. You and I are at one there.'
âI think you have got me over my first moment better than anyone,' said Dudley, reminded of Blanche by her sister and catching the deeper strain in Matty's nature. âI can really pretend that I feel no embarrassment. We ought not to feel any when we have done nothing wrong, but there are so many wrong things people do without feeling it, and so few they can have done to them. And being rejected in favour of a brother is not one of those. People will say that I am behaving well, but that I shall keep the most for myself by doing so, and how wise I am. They said it thirty-one years ago, and I remember it as if it were yesterday, and now it is happening again today. And you just said that my wealth had come back into my hands. And that is one of those words which we carry with us. I have never heard anyone say one of those before.'
Matty flashed her eyes over his face and touched the chair at her side.
âNow you and I have to suffer the same sort of thing. I feel that my sister's place will be filled, and that I have not quite the same reason for being here as I had, and not quite the same claim on her family. And people will say the things of me, as you say they will of you.'
âDo you really think they will? I like someone else to have things said, but I expect we can depend on people.'
âMiss Griffin, suppose you run away and find something to do,' said Matty, in such a light and expressionless tone that she might almost not have spoken.
Miss Griffin, whose eyes had been fastened on the scene, withdrew them and went to the door, with her face fallen and a step slow enough to cover her obedience to a command. Matty turned to her nephews.
âWell, you thought that you were to have a new aunt, and you are to have a new - what can we say? Well, we can't say it, can we? You and I can't. So we will just say that you are only to have one aunt after all. We do not want to cloud other people's happiness, and we will not; we shall be able to steer our way; we will keep to the strait
and narrow path. But now we have made our resolve, we will get what we can out of it for ourselves. Let us have our gossip. That is much less than other people are getting, and if we do not grudge them their big share, they must not grudge us our little one. So when did you see the first hint of change, the cloud no bigger than a man's hand?'
âWe saw no cloud until it broke,' said Mark.
âLet me get my word in at once,' said Dudley, âor I shall feel more awkward. It is best to take the bull by the horns. That is a good figure: it shows that we are talking of a terrible thing. Well, the cloud fell on me, sudden and complete, and I lifted my head and went forward. I told people myself; I went through my strange task, shirking nothing, and adding my own note with what was surely the most heroic touch of all. I am sure you would not dare to pity me. If you would, I must just face the hardest part.'
âWell, you know, I do not feel that about pity. I often feel that I deserve it and do not get my share. People so soon forget to give it.'