“Clothes, ma’am?” repeated Fritzing, straightening himself to stare at her.
“Those things you bought for me in Gerstein—they’re delicious, they’re curiosities, but they’re not clothes. I mean always to keep them. I’ll have them put in a glass case, and they shall always be near me when we’re happy again.”
“Happy again, ma’am?”
“Settled again, I mean,” quickly amended Priscilla.
She dusted in silence for a little, and began to put the books she had dusted in the shelves. “I’d better write to Paris,” she said presently.
Fritzing jumped. “Paris, ma’am?”
“They’ve got my measurements. This dress can’t stand much more. It’s the one I’ve worn all the time. The soaking it got yesterday was very bad for it. You don’t see such things, but if you did you’d probably get a tremendous shock.”
“Ma’am, if you write to Paris you must give your own name, which of course is impossible. They will send nothing to an unknown customer in England called Neumann-Schultz.”
“Oh but we’d send the money with the order. That’s quite easy, isn’t it?”
“Perfectly easy,” said Fritzing in an oddly exasperated voice; at once adding, still more snappily, “Might I request your Grand Ducal Highness to have the goodness not to put my AEschylus—a most valuable edition—head downwards on the shelf? It is a manner of treating books often to be observed in housemaids and similar ignorants. But you, ma’am, have been trained by me I trust in other and more reverent ways of handling what is left to us of the mighty spirits of the past.”
“I’m sorry,” said Priscilla, hastily turning the AEschylus right side up again; and by launching forth into a long and extremely bitter dissertation on the various ways persons of no intellectual conscience have of ill-treating books, he got rid of some of his agitation and fixed her attention for the time on questions less fraught with complications than clothes from Paris.
About half-past two they were still sitting over the eggs and bread and butter that Priscilla ordered three times a day and that Fritzing ate with unquestioning obedience, when the Shuttleworth victoria stopped in front of the cottage and Lady Shuttleworth got out. Fritzing, polite man, hastened to meet her, pushing aside the footman and offering his arm. She looked at him vaguely, and asked if his niece were at home.
“Certainly,” said Fritzing, leading her into Priscilla’s parlour. “Shall I inquire if she will receive you?”
“Do,” said Lady Shuttleworth, taking no apparent notice of the odd wording of this question. “Tussie isn’t well,” she said the moment Priscilla appeared, fixing her eyes on her face but looking as though she hardly saw her, as though she saw past her, through her, to something beyond, while she said a lesson learned by rote.
“Isn’t he? Oh I’m sorry,” said Priscilla.
“He caught cold last Sunday at your treat. He oughtn’t to have run those races with the boys. He can’t—stand—much.”