“Are you comin’, mother?” repeated Isabella.
Mrs. Jellison grumbled, gibed at her, and made long leave-takings, while the daughter stood silent, waiting, and every now and then peering at Marcella, who had never seen her before.
“I don’ know where yur manners is,” said Mrs. Jellison sharply to her, as though she had been a child of ten, “that you don’t say good evenin’ to the young lady.”
Mrs. Westall curtsied low, and hoped she might be excused, as it had grown so dark. Her tone was smooth and servile, and Marcella disliked her as she shook hands with her.
The other old people, including Mrs. Brunt, departed a minute or two after the mother and daughter, and Marcella was left an instant with Mrs. Hurd.
“Oh, thank you, thank you kindly, miss,” said Mrs. Hurd, raising her apron to her eyes to staunch some irrepressible tears, as Marcella showed her the advertisement which it might possibly be worth Hurd’s while to answer. “He’ll try, you may be sure. But I can’t think as how anythink ’ull come ov it.”
And then suddenly, as though something unexplained had upset her self-control, the poor patient creature utterly broke down. Leaning against the bare shelves which held their few pots and pans, she threw her apron over her head and burst into the forlornest weeping. “I wish I was dead; I wish I was dead, an’ the chillen too!”
Marcella hung over her, one flame of passionate pity, comforting, soothing, promising help. Mrs. Hurd presently recovered enough to tell her that Hurd had gone off that morning before it was light to a farm near Thame, where it had been told him he might possibly find a job.
“But he’ll not find it, miss, he’ll not find it,” she said, twisting her hands in a sort of restless misery; “there’s nothing good happens to such as us. An’ he wor allus a one to work if he could get it.”
There was a sound outside. Mrs. Hurd flew to the door, and a short, deformed man, with a large head and red hair, stumbled in blindly, splashed with mud up to his waist, and evidently spent with long walking.
He stopped on the threshold, straining his eyes to see through the fire-lit gloom.
“It’s Miss Boyce, Jim,” said his wife. “Did you hear of anythink?”
“They’re turnin’ off hands instead of takin’ ov ’em on,” he said briefly, and fell into a chair by the grate.
He had hardly greeted Marcella, who had certainly looked to be greeted. Ever since her arrival in August, as she had told Aldous Raeburn, she had taken a warm interest in this man and his family. There was something about them which marked them out a bit from their fellows—whether it was the husband’s strange but not repulsive deformity, contrasted with the touch of plaintive grace in the wife, or the charm of the elfish children, with their tiny stick-like arms and legs, and the glancing wildness of their blue eyes, under the frizzle of red hair,