any line between the brows, knowing it was her duty
to remain as nice as she could to look at, so as not
to spoil the pleasure of people round about her.
Then saying to herself firmly, “I do not, I
will not want any tea—but I shall be
glad of dinner!” she rose and opened her cane
trunk. Though she knew exactly where they were,
she was some time finding the pincers, because there
were so many interesting things above them, each raising
a different train of thought. A pair of field-glasses,
the very latest—the man had said—for
darling Derek; they would be so useful to keep his
mind from thinking about things that it was no good
thinking about. And for dear Flora (how wonderful
that she could write poetry—poetry!) a
really splendid, and perfectly new, little pill.
She herself had already taken two, and they had suited
her to perfection. For darling Felix a new kind
of eau de cologne, made in Worcester, because that
was the only scent he would use. For her pet
Nedda, a piece of ‘point de Venise’ that
she really could not be selfish enough to keep any
longer, especially as she was particularly fond of
it. For Alan, a new kind of tin-opener that
the dear boy would like enormously; he was so nice
and practical. For Sheila, such a nice new novel
by Mr. and Mrs. Whirlingham—a bright, wholesome
tale, with such a good description of quite a new
country in it—the dear child was so clever,
it would be a change for her. Then, actually
resting on the pincers, she came on her pass-book,
recently made up, containing little or no balance,
just enough to get darling John that bag like hers
with the new clasp, which would be so handy for his
papers when he went travelling. And having reached
the pincers, she took them in her hand, and sat down
again to be quite quiet a moment, with her still-dark
eyelashes resting on her ivory cheeks and her lips
pressed to a colorless line; for her head swam from
stooping over. In repose, with three flies circling
above her fine gray hair, she might have served a
sculptor for a study of the stoic spirit. Then,
going to the bag, her compressed lips twitching, her
gray eyes piercing into its clasp with a kind of distrustful
optimism, she lifted the pincers and tweaked it hard.
If the atmosphere of that dinner, to which all six
from Hampstead came, was less disturbed than John
anticipated, it was due to his sense of hospitality,
and to every one’s feeling that controversy would
puzzle and distress Granny. That there were
things about which people differed, Frances Freeland
well knew, but that they should so differ as to make
them forget to smile and have good manners would not
have seemed right to her at all. And of this,
in her presence, they were all conscious; so that
when they had reached the asparagus there was hardly
anything left that could by any possibility be talked
about. And this—for fear of seeming
awkward—they at once proceeded to discuss,
Flora remarking that London was very full. John
agreed.