Read A Family and a Fortune Online
Authors: Ivy Compton-Burnett
âWell, we may as well be numerically accurate,' said Mr Penrose, not pretending to appreciate any further difference. âCome, Aubrey, we must be setting out. I suppose, Mr Gaveston - I suppose this modification of your affairs will not affect your plans for Aubrey's education?'
âNo, no, not at all. As far as I can see, not at all.'
âOh, no, Mr Penrose, not in the least,' said Justine. âThere is no difference in Aubrey's prospects.'
âThank you, Miss Gaveston, thank you. You do not mind my asking? It is best to be clear on such a matter.'
âPoor little Mr Penrose, he went quite pale,' said Justine. âIt would be sad if our rise in fortune should spell disadvantage for him.'
âLet us talk of something else,' said Dudley. âWe have had enough of me and my affairs. Of course I don't mean that. I am so worried about the confusion in people's minds. Mr Penrose has thoroughly upset me. You don't think he has any influence on Aubrey?'
âNone,' said Mark.
âOh, I am sure he has,' said Blanche, who had half heard.
âWell, that would be rather much to expect,' said Justine, âthat a tutor should be accepted as an influence by a pupil. But dear Uncle! I don't think I have seen you so much engaged with your own experience in all my life.'
âThere, wealth has already ruined me. And I have not got wealth. I must be in the stage where I only have its disadvantages. I have heard of that. Do you think that people will think more of me or less?'
âMore of you,' said Clement.
âYes, well, I think we can hardly expect them not to do that in a way,' said Blanche.
âSo they have not thought as much of me as they could?'
âI am sure they have in one sense, in any sense that matters.'
âLittle Mother, you are coming out very nicely on this occasion,' said Justine. âWe could not have a better lead. And the occasion is something of a test.'
Blanche gave her daughter a rather absent smile, put her needle into her work, and rose and went to the window.
âFather and Matty, Edgar! I thought I caught a glimpse of them. Coming up the drive! Both of them and on foot! It must have taken them half an hour. What can it be?'
âI will go out and help them to come in,' said Justine.
âWhat can Justine do?' said Clement. âCarry them in, in her strong young arms?'
âIt would be a useful piece of work,' said Mark. âThey can hardly be fit to take another step.'
âOh, I am not at all ashamed of being strong!' called his sister. âI have no wish to be the other thing. It would seem to me a very odd ambition. I like to be a good specimen physically, as well as in every other way.'
âI think we might all like that,' said Edgar, smiling and at once changing his tone. âIf arms are needed we all have them.'
âI will go,' said Dudley. âI must keep my simple ways. I must not let myself become different. That sounds as if I have admired myself, and in a way I have.'
âNow, Grandpa dear, come in,' said Justine, keeping her eyes on Oliver as if to see that he followed her direction. âWe will have you established in a minute. Don't have any misgiving.'
âThank you, my dear, you take it all off me; I have none.'
âWell, dear ones all,' said Matty, pausing in the door as if she could go no further, âso here is a great occasion. I am come to share it with you, to rejoice in your joy. I could not remain in my little house and feel that so much had come - so much more had come to you in your big one, without coming to add my sympathy to all you have. For your happiness is mine. It shall be. And I shall have plenty if I can find it like that. And it is a lesson I have learnt, one that has come my way. And it isn't a hard lesson, to rejoice in the good of those so dear.'
âMy dear, nothing has come to us. It is to Dudley,' said Blanche, emerging from her sister's embrace.
âYes, and there is a difference, isn't there?' said Matty in an arch manner. âAnd we are all to see it? Well, we can't, and that is flat, as the boys would say. And that is a great compliment to him and to you.'
âWhen do we say it,' said Mark.
âYou can take that view too readily, Aunt Matty. Of course there is a difference,' said Justine.
âBut Justine ought to sympathize with Aunt Matty in the idea,' said Aubrey.
âOf course, yes, of course,' said Matty, looking at Dudley.
âAnd you will let them say so? Well, I will not, I promise you. I will guard your reputation, I who know you almost as a brother. My sister's brother must be partly mine, as Blanche and I have always shared our good things. Now let me get to a chair and have my share of the news.'
âHow did you hear?' said Clement.
âWell, well, little birds flit about the chairs of people who are tied to them. And it would be rather a sad thing if they did not, as they would be the last to hear so much, when it seems that they ought to be the first. So the news came, I won't say how.'
âI will do so,' said her father. âIt came through a tradesman's lad, who comes to our house after yours, or who comes to it on the way to yours and today chose to come again on his way back.'
âSo Jellamy was the bird,' said Mark.
âWell, anyhow we heard,' said his aunt. âBut I should have liked to hear it from one of you, coming running down to tell me.'
âWe should have been down in a few minutes,' said Justine.
âWould you, dear? But the minutes passed and nobody came. And so we came up to hear for ourselves.'
âA bold step for anyone tied to a chair,' muttered Clement.
âAnd came on foot!' said Blanche. âWhatever made you do that?'
âWell, dear, what were we to do?' said her sister, laughing and glancing at Edgar.
âYou could have waited a little while.'
âWell, it is true that the occupation palled,' said Oliver.
âI expect Miss Griffin was very interested,' said Justine.
âWell, now, let us settle down to hear the story,' said Matty, in a tone of leaving a just annoyance, smoothing her dress in preparation for listening. âThe full news of this happy quarter of a million. Let us hear it all from the first.'
âMy dear, it is not as much as that. It is not a quarter as much; it is about a fifth as much,' said Blanche. âIt is barely a fifth. It is about a twentieth of a million.'
âIs it, dear? I am afraid they do not convey much to me, these differences between these very large sums. They have no bearing upon life as I know it.'
âBut it is just as well to be accurate.'
âWell, you have been so, dear. So now tell me all about it. The exact sum makes no difference.'
âOf course it does. The one is precisely four times the other.'
âWell, but we don't have to think of proportions, after people have everything that they can have,' said Matty, giving a glance round the room, as if this appeared to her to be already the case.
âBut you can't have everything you can have, from a moderate fortune belonging to somebody else.'
âOh well, dear, moderate. Your life has altered you more than I thought. Altered your attitude: of course you yourself are always my old Blanche. But a quarter of a million or some other proportion of one! We were not brought up to differentiate between such things. And belonging to somebody else! Dudley and I know better.'
âIt is not a quarter of a million or some proportion of one. I said it was barely a twentieth,' said Blanche, her voice unsteady.
âYou might say that fifty pounds is a proportion of one,' said Mark.
âI had better go and lie down,' said Dudley. âI may feel better when I get my head on the pillow.'
âI don't care which it is,' said Justine. âA simple life for me.'
âYes, and for me too, dear,' said her aunt. âI always feel that in my heart.'
âAnd keep it in your heart then,' said her father.
âWell, let me hear all about it,' said Matty, tapping her knee. âI have asked more times than I can count.'
âCalculation does not seem to be Aunt Matty's point,' said Mark.
âI want to hear the beginning, the middle, and the end. Not the exact sum; I won't press that; but the romance of it from the first. That would be a small thing to deny
your invalid, who is dependent on you for the interest of her life.'
âOh, how is Miss Sloane this morning?' said Justine, reminded of her aunt's other interests.
âThat is another question, dear. Thank you, she is well and rested. And now for my own answer.'
âMy godfather died and left no heir. That is the romance,' said Dudley.
âLeft no heir!' said Matty, with a roguish look. âHe has left an heir indeed, and very much we all rejoice with him. There is the romance in truth.'
âThat very old fellow,' said Oliver, âwho lived not far from us?'
âYes, dear Grandpa, he was ninety-six,' said Justine, smoothing Oliver's sleeve in tender recognition of an age that was approaching this.
âHe must have seen a lot,' said Oliver, making his own comparison.
âI remember him,' said Matty. âEdgar and Dudley were staying at his house when Edgar and Blanche first met. I don't know why you object to the word romance. It all seems to me to fit together in quite a romantic way. So now tell me all about it. When you heard, what you heard, how you heard. How you felt and what you said. You must know all the things I want to be told.'
âThey must by now,' said Oliver. âI agree.'
âWe heard at breakfast this morning. Mother and Father had heard from Uncle last night,' said Justine, in a running tone with a faint sigh in it. âIt is only an hour or two ago. And what did we feel? I declare it already eludes me.'
âThat is really not fair on Aunt Matty,' said Mark.
âThen I heard nearly as soon as you,' said Matty, turning her eyes from her niece and nephew. âBut my feelings do not play such tricks on me; no, they were too strong and eager for you for that. But I want to know how Dudley felt when the truth broke upon him. That is the main issue of the story.'
âWe heard last night, Edgar and I,' said Blanche. âEdgar and Dudley sat up late, and when I came down to scold
them, I was met by this piece of news. I told them it was quite a tonic. I slept so well after hearing it.'
Matty loked at her sister and simply turned to other people.
âBut what did you feel, Dudley? That is the main point.'
âUncle, gratify Aunt Matty's curiosity,' said Justine. âShe has every right to feel it.'
âWell, dear, more than a right, I think, and curiosity is an odd word. It is natural and sympathetic to feel an interest in an important change for a friend. It would not even be quite affectionate not to feel it.'
âNo, no, Aunt Matty, you are all on the safe side. So now, Uncle.'
âI heard a few days ago and kept the matter in my heart.'
âAh, that shows how deep it went.'
âOh no, does it? If I had known that, I would have brought it out. I thought it showed that I did not attach enough importance to it, even to mention it. I meant it to be showing that.'
âAh, we know what that kind of indifference means. Keeping the matter in your heart, indeed! And at last it got too big even for your big heart' - Matty gave Dudley a smile - âand you revealed it to your second self, to Edgar. And didn't you have the tiniest feeling of interest? Not the least spark of excitement?'
âI had all the natural feelings. Shock, delight, excitement; compunction at having so much; worry lest I should be thought to have more than I had, though I did not know then how much reason there would be. Pleasure in what I could do for people; fear lest they should take it all for granted, or think I was conferring favours, and it does seem unlikely that they should avoid both. And then I told it all to Edgar, and the matter assumed its just proportions - you will remember that the sum is a twentieth of a million - and I went to bed feeling that my little affairs had a small place in the general scheme, and that it would all be the same a hundred years hence; which is not true, but it was right for me to feel it. And now I ought to say that that is the longest
speech I have ever made, but I never know how people can be sure of that.'
âThere, Aunt Matty, there is a proper effort,' said Justine.
Matty's swift frown crossed her face.
âYou don't any of you seem to feel quite what I should have expected.'
âWell, no, child, I am rather of your mind,' said Oliver.
âWe have not inherited anything,' said Blanche. âIt is Dudley who has had the good fortune,.'
âA good fortune in two senses. And what do the two young men feel, whose prospects are now so different?'
âThey are nothing of the kind,' said Blanche, with both her voice and her needle rising into the air. âThis had nothing to do with them, and they are not giving a thought to it, except to rejoice in their uncle's happiness.'
âI am not as bad as that,' said Dudley. âHappiness depends on deeper things. Love in a cottage is the most important kind of love; no other kind is talked about so much. I can only hope to be allowed to share what I have with other people, and of course I shall feel that the generosity is theirs.'
âI am sure you will,' said Matty. âAnd now what about the unchanged positions of the two young men? Was I right or wrong in saying what I did?'
âYou were wrong in saying it,' said her father. âIt was not a thing to say.'
âWell, was I wrong - incorrect in thinking it?'
âYour sister says that you were, her brother-in-law that you were not. You must decide.'
âWell, I decide that it was a true and natural thing to think, and therefore to say. And most heartily do I rejoice with them in the truth of it.'
âClement and I have all we need,' said Mark. âWe should have no right or reason to ask for more.'