Mrs. Warren's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 472 pages of information about Mrs. Warren's Daughter.

Mrs. Warren's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 472 pages of information about Mrs. Warren's Daughter.

Well:  she died and was buried, and her four children, ranging from nine to sixteen, sobbed very much and mourned for darling Mummie without the slightest suspicion ("’twas better so,” she had always thought) that Dad had poisoned her wells of happiness ever since he took up with that minx at Cambridge in the very year in which long-legged Claribel was born.  A few months after the poor lady was consigned (under a really lovely cenotaph designed by her husband) to Ware Churchyard—­no, it was to Ware cemetery; Dad introduced them all to a very sprightly and good-looking widow, Mrs. Claridge, who had also been bereaved years ago and left with two perfect ducks of children, four and five years old, to whom Claribel took instinctively (the elder ones sniffed a little, disliking “kids").

Then about Christmas time, 1906, Dad told them that Mrs. Claridge was going to make him happy by coming to tend his motherless children; was going to be his wife.  Francis, the eldest, stomped about the garden at Ware and swore he would go back to Rugby during the holidays; Elspeth, the gaunt girl of fourteen and Agnes, a dreamy and endearing child, cried themselves to sleep in each other’s arms.  Claribel, however, quite approved.  And whether they liked it or not, in January, 1907, the marriage took place—­at the Registrar’s—­and Beryl came to live for a short time at Ware, bringing ducksome Margery and adorable Podge.  In less than a month Beryl had won over all her step-children, except Francis, who held out till Easter, but was reduced to allegiance by the hampers she sent to him at Rugby—­; in three months they had all moved to a much sweller house on the Chelsea Embankment.  Father—­Beryl voted “Dad” a little lower-middle class—­Father had somehow become connected with some great business establishment of which Mother was the head.  Together they were making pots of money.  Francis would go to Sandhurst, Elspeth to a finishing school in Paris (her ambition), and the others would spend the fine months of the year rollicking with Margery and Podge on the Sussex coast.

In 1907, also, they became aware that their new mother was not alone in the world.  A stately lady whose eyes seemed once to have done a deal of weeping (they were destined alas! to do much more, for three of her gallant, handsome sons were killed in the War, and that finally killed the poor old Dean of Thetford), who wore a graceful Spanish mantilla of black lace when in draughty places, came to see them after they had moved to Garden Corner on the Chelsea Embankment.  She turned out to be the mother of Mrs. Beryl and was quite inclined to be their grandmother as well as Margery’s and Podge’s.  But her husband the Dean was—­it appeared—­too great an invalid to come up to town.

The second Mrs. Storrington, who was a woman of boundless energy, could work all day with secretaries, and could dance all night, gave brilliant parties in the season at her large Chelsea house.  But she never invited to them Mr. David Vavasour Williams, that rising young barrister who had become so famous as a pleader of the causes of friendless women.

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Mrs. Warren's Daughter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.