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"Yes, _you_ have."
"And haven't I taken trouble in teaching you your duties? You are getting on very nicely; and if you stay with me a little longer, I shall be able to recommend you as competent."
But this servant said what all other servants had said to Mrs. Marsden.
Susan had no fault to find with her mistress.
"I should be comfortable, if it wasn't for _him_. But I've never been comfortable with him."
And then she went back to her starting point.
"I'd rather go 'ome. I must ask mother's advice--and tell father too. I don't believe father would wish it 'ushed up."
However, Mrs. Marsden finally succeeded. By bedtime Susan was pacified.
"Yes, I'll stay, ma'am. I'd like to stay with you--but may I sleep in Em'ly's room?"
"Of course you may."
Next morning no one came to call Mrs. Marsden; no fires were lighted; no breakfast was being prepared. Both the servants had gone. In the night cook had persuaded the girl to change her mind.
A letter from cook, conspicuously displayed on the dining-room mantelpiece, explained matters.
"_Dear Madame_,--
"We are sorry to leave you but feel we cannot stay in this house. I have advised Susan to go to her Home and she has gone there.
"Yours respectfully, "MISS EMILY HOWARD."
Mrs. Marsden went to her husband's room, woke him, and repeated the substance of Miss Howard's note.
He was dreadful to see, in the cold morning light--unshaven, white and puffy; sitting up in bed, biting his coa.r.s.e fingers, and looking at her with cowardly blood-shot eyes.
"Where is her home?"
Mrs. Marsden said that Susan's parents lived somewhere on the other side of Linkfield.
"Twelve miles away! She's gone out by train. She has got there by now.
What are we to do?"
"I scarcely know."
"Let me think a minute.... Yes, look here. Get hold of old Prentice--He's a man of the world. He'll help you. He'll be able to shut them up."
And with terrified haste he gave her his directions. She was to run to Mr. Prentice's private house, and catch him before he started for his office. Then she was to run to Cartwright's garage and hire a motor-car for the day; and then she and Mr. Prentice were to go scouring out into the country, to silence Susan and all her relatives.
"Tell Prentice to take plenty of money with him. And don't forget--ask for Cartwright's open car. It's faster. And don't waste a minute--don't wait for breakfast or anything--and don't let Prentice wait either."
In an hour she and her old friend were spinning along the Linkfield road in the hired motor-car. The east wind cut their faces, dirt sprinkled their arms, gloomy thoughts filled their minds.
This, then, was her Monday's task--to begin Sunday's toil, on a larger scale, all over again.
With some difficulty they found the cottage for which they were seeking.
Susan's mother opened the door in response to prolonged tappings. Susan had safely reached home.
"Oh, come inside," said the mother; and she pretended to shed tears. "Oh dear, oh dear. Who could of believed such a thing 'appening?"
"Nothing has happened," said Mr. Prentice, confidently and jovially; "except that your daughter has left her situation without warning, and we want to know what she means by it."
"Oh, she's told me everything," said the mother, dolefully shaking her head. "Everything."
"There was nothing to tell," said Mr. Prentice; "beyond the fact that she has behaved in a very stupid manner. Where is she?"
The mother indicated a door behind her. "Poor dear, she's so exhausted, I've been trying to persuade her to eat a morsel of something."
Mr. Prentice lifted a latch, opened the inner door, and disclosed the humble home-picture--Susan, with her mouth full of bacon and bread, stretching a hearty hand towards the metal tea-pot.
"Ah, thank goodness," said the mother, "she _'as_ bin able to pick a bit. Don't be afraid, Susan--you're 'ome now, along of your own mother and father;" and she addressed Mrs. Marsden. "'Er father 'as 'eard everything, too."
Mr. Prentice was laughing gaily.
"Well done, Susan. Don't be afraid of another slice of bacon. Don't be afraid of a fourth cup of tea."
"No, sir," said Susan shyly.
"Where _is_ her father?" asked Mr. Prentice. "I'd like to have a few words with him."
But father, having heard his daughter's tale, had started on a long journey with an empty waggon. He would return with it full of manure any time this afternoon. And going, and loading, and returning, he would be thinking over everything, and deciding what he and Susan should next do.
Mr. Prentice, considering that even a hired motor-car ought to be able to overtake a manure waggon though empty, started in pursuit of father; and Mrs. Marsden was left to conduct the pacific negotiations at the cottage.
It was a long and weary day, full of small difficulties--father, when recovered, not a free man, unable to talk, compelled to attend to his master's business; mother unable to express any opinion without previous discussion with father; empty fruitless hours slowly dragging away; meals at a public-house; a walk with Susan;--then darkness, and father talking to Mr. Prentice in the parlour; and, finally, mother and Mrs.
Marsden summoned from the kitchen to a.s.sist at ratification of peace proposals.
It was late at night when Mrs. Marsden got back to St. Saviour's Court.
Her husband had not been out all day. He was sitting by the dining-room fire, with his slippered feet on the fender, and a nearly emptied whisky bottle on the corner of the table near his elbow.
"Well?" He looked round anxiously and apprehensively.
"It is over. There will be no trouble--not even a scandal."
She was blue with cold; her hands were numbed, and hung limply at her sides; her voice had become husky.
"Bravo! Well done!" He stood up, and stretched and straightened himself, as if throwing off the heavy load that had kept him crouched and bent in the armchair. "Excellent! I knew you'd do it all right;" and he drew a deep breath, and then began to chuckle. "And, by Jove, old girl, I'm grateful to you.... Look here. Have you had your grub? Don't you want some supper?"
"No."