Constance stood at the large, many-paned window in the parlour. She was
stouter. Although always plump, her figure had been comely, with a neat,
well-marked waist. But now the shapeliness had gone; the waist-line no longer
existed, and there were no more crinolines to create it artificially. An
observer not under the charm of her face might have been excused for calling her
fat and lumpy. The face, grave, kind, and expectant, with its radiant, fresh
cheeks, and the rounded softness of its curves, atoned for the figure. She was
nearly twenty-nine years of age.
It was late in October. In Wedgwood Street, next to Boulton Terrace, all the
little brown houses had been pulled down to make room for a palatial covered
market, whose foundations were then being dug. This destruction exposed a vast
area of sky to the north-east. A great dark cloud with an untidy edge rose
massively out of the depths and curtained off the tender blue of approaching
dusk; while in the west, behind Constance, the sun was setting in calm and
gorgeous melancholy on the Thursday hush of the town. It was one of those
afternoons which gather up all the sadness of the moving earth and transform it
into beauty.
Samuel Povey turned the corner from Wedgwood Street, and crossed King Street
obliquely to the front-door, which Constance opened. He seemed tired and
anxious.
Constance dived into the recesses of the perambulator and extricated from its
cocoon the centre of the universe, and scrutinized him with quiet passion, and
then rushed with him into the house, though not a drop of rain had yet
fallen.
"Precious!" exclaimed Amy, in ecstasy, her young virginal eyes following him
till he disappeared. Then she wheeled away the perambulator, which now had no
more value nor interest than an egg-shell. It was necessary to take it right
round to the Brougham Street yard entrance, past the front of the closed
shop.
Constance sat down on the horsehair sofa and hugged and kissed her prize
before removing his bonnet.
"Here's Daddy!" she said to him, as if imparting strange and rapturous
tidings. "Here's Daddy come back from hanging up his coat in the passage! Daddy
rubbing his hands!" And then, with a swift transition of voice and features: "Do
look at him, Sam!"
Samuel, preoccupied, stooped forward. "Oh, you little scoundrel! Oh, you
little scoundrel!" he greeted the baby, advancing his finger towards the baby's
nose.
The baby, who had hitherto maintained a passive indifference to external
phenomena, lifted elbows and toes, blew bubbles from his tiny mouth, and stared
at the finger with the most ravishing, roguish smile, as though saying: "I know
that great sticking-out limb, and there is a joke about it which no one but me
can see, and which is my secret joy that you shall never share."
"Tea ready?" Samuel asked, resuming his gravity and his ordinary pose.
"You must give the girl time to take her things off," said Constance. "We'll
have the table drawn, away from the fire, and baby can lie on his shawl on the
hearthrug while we're having tea." Then to the baby, in rapture: "And play with
his toys; all his nice, nice toys!"
"You know Miss Insull is staying for tea?"
Constance, her head bent over the baby, who formed a white patch on her
comfortable brown frock, nodded without speaking.
Samuel Povey, walking to and fro, began to enter into details of his hasty
journey to Axe. Old Mrs. Baines, having beheld her grandson, was preparing to
quit this world. Never again would she exclaim, in her brusque tone of genial
ruthlessness: 'Fiddlesticks!' The situation was very difficult and distressing,
for Constance could not leave her baby, and she would not, until the last
urgency, run the risks of a journey with him to Axe. He was being weaned. In any
case Constance could not have undertaken the nursing of her mother. A nurse had
to be found. Mr. Povey had discovered one in the person of Mrs. Gilchrist, the
second wife of a farmer at Malpas in Cheshire, whose first wife had been a
sister of the late John Baines. All the credit of Mrs. Gilchrist was due to
Samuel Povey. Mrs. Baines fretted seriously about Sophia, who had given no sign
of life for a very long time. Mr. Povey went to Manchester and ascertained
definitely from the relatives of Scales that nothing was known of the pair. He
did not go to Manchester especially on this errand. About once in three weeks,
on Tuesdays, he had to visit the Manchester warehouses; but the tracking of
Scales's relative cost him so much trouble and time that, curiously, he came to
believe that he had gone to Manchester one Tuesday for no other end. Although he
was very busy indeed in the shop, he flew over to Axe and back whenever he
possibly could, to the neglect of his affairs. He was glad to do all that was in
his power; even if he had not done it graciously his sensitive, tyrannic
conscience would have forced him to do it. But nevertheless he felt rather
virtuous, and worry and fatigue and loss of sleep intensified this sense of
virtue.
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