And so it came about that just as
the reunited Twists, mother, son and daughter, were
sitting in the drawing-room, a little tired after a
long afternoon of affection, waiting for seven o’clock
to strike and, with the striking, Amanda the head
maid to appear and announce supper, but waiting with
lassitude, for they had not yet recovered from an elaborate
welcoming dinner, the Twinklers, in the lovely twilight
of a golden day, were hastening up the winding road
from the station towards them. Silent, and a
little exhausted, the unconscious Twists sat in their
drawing-room, a place of marble and antimacassars,
while these light figures, their shoes white with
the dust of a country-side that had had no rain for
weeks, sped every moment nearer.
The road wound gently upwards through
fields and woods, through quiet, delicious evening
country, and there was one little star twinkling encouragingly
at the twins from over where they supposed Clark would
be. At the station there had been neither porter
nor conveyance, nor indeed anybody or anything at
all except themselves, their luggage, and a thin,
kind man who represented authority. Clark is two
miles away from its station, and all the way to it
is uninhabited. Just at the station are a cluster
of those hasty buildings America flings down in out-of-the-way
places till she shall have leisure to make a splendid
city; but the road immediately curved away from these
up into solitude and the evening sky.
“You can’t miss it,”
encouraged the station-master. “Keep right
along after your noses till they knock up against
Mrs. Twist’s front gate. I’ll look
after the menagerie—” thus did he
describe the Twinkler luggage. “Guess Mrs.
Twist’ll be sending for it as soon as you get
there. Guess she forgot you. Guess she’s
shaken up by young Mr. Twist’s arriving this
very day. I wouldn’t have forgotten you.
No, not for a dozen young Mr. Twists,” he added
gallantly.
“Why do you call him young Mr.
Twist,” inquired Anna-Felicitas, “when
he isn’t? He must be at least thirty or
forty or fifty.”
“You see, we know him quite
well,” said Anna-Rose proudly, as they walked
off. “He’s a great friend of
ours.”
“You don’t say,”
said the station-master, who was chewing gum; and as
the twins had not yet seen this being done they concluded
he had been interrupted in the middle of a meal by
the arrival of the train.
“Now mind,” he called
after them, “you do whatever the road does.
Give yourselves up to it, and however much it winds
about stick to it. You’ll meet other roads,
but don’t you take any notice of them.”
Freed from their luggage, and for
a moment from all care, the twins went up the hill.
It was the nicest thing in the world to be going to
see their friend again in quite a few minutes.
They had, ever since the collapse of the Sack arrangements,
been missing him very much. As they hurried on
through the scented woods, past quiet fields, between
yellow-leaved hedges, the evening sky growing duskier
and the beckoning star lighter, they remembered Mr.
Twist’s extraordinary kindness, his devoted
and unfailing care, with the warmest feelings of gratitude
and affection. Even Anna-Felicitas felt warm.
How often had he rearranged her head when it was hopelessly
rolling about; how often had he fed her when she felt
better enough to be hungry. Anna-Felicitas was
very hungry. She still thought highly of pride
and independence, but now considered their proper
place was after a good meal. And Anna-Rose, with
all the shameless cheerfulness of one who for a little
has got rid of her pride and is feeling very much
more comfortable in consequence remarked that one
mustn’t overdo independence.
“Let’s hurry,” said
Anna-Felicitas. “I’m so dreadfully
hungry. I do so terribly want supper. And
I’m sure it’s supper-time, and the Twists
will have finished and we mightn’t get any.”
“As though Mr. Twist wouldn’t
see to that!” exclaimed Anna-Rose, proud and
confident.
But she did begin to run, for she
too was very hungry, and they raced the rest of the
way; which is why they arrived on the Twist doorstep
panting, and couldn’t at first answer Amanda
the head maid’s surprised and ungarnished inquiry
as to what they wanted, when she opened the door and
found them there.
“We want Mr. Twist,” said
Anna-Rose, as soon as she could speak.
Amanda eyed them. “You
from the village?” she asked, thinking perhaps
they might be a deputation of elder school children
sent to recite welcoming poems to Mr. Twist on his
safe return from the seat of war. Yet she knew
all the school children and everybody else in Clark,
and none of them were these.
“No—from the station,” panted
Anna-Rose.
“We didn’t see any village,” panted
Anna-Felicitas.
“We want Mr. Twist please,” said Anna-Rose
struggling with her breath.
Amanda eyed them. “Having supper,”
she said curtly.
“Fortunate creature,”
gasped Anna-Felicitas, “I hope he isn’t
eating it all.”
“Will you announce us please?”
said Anna-Rose putting on her dignity. “The
Miss Twinklers.”
“The who?” said Amanda.
“The Miss Twinklers,”
said Anna-Rose, putting on still more dignity, for
there was that in Amanda’s manner which roused
the Junker in her.
“Can’t disturb him at supper,” said
Amanda briefly.
“I assure you,” said Anna-Felicitas,
with the earnestness of conviction, “that he’ll
like it. I think I can undertake to promise he’ll
show no resentment whatever.”
Amanda half shut the door.
“We’ll come in please,”
said Anna-Rose, inserting herself into what was left
of the opening. “Will you kindly bear in
mind that we’re totally unaccustomed to the
doorstep?”
Amanda, doubtful, but unpractised
in such a situation, permitted herself, in spite of
having as she well knew the whole of free and equal
America behind her, to be cowed. Well, perhaps
not cowed, but taken aback. It was the long words
and the awful politeness that did it. She wasn’t
used to beautiful long words like that, except on Sundays
when the clergyman read the prayers in church, and
she wasn’t used to politeness. That so
much of it should come out of objects so young rendered
Amanda temporarily dumb.
She wavered with the door. Instantly
Anna-Rose slipped through it; instantly Anna-Felicitas
followed her.
“Kindly tell your master the
Miss Twinklers have arrived,” said Anna-Rose,
looking every inch a Junker. There weren’t
many inches of Anna-Rose, but every one of them at
that moment, faced by Amanda’s want of discipline,
was sheer Junker.
Amanda, who had never met a Junker
in her happy democratic life, was stirred into bristling
emotion by the word master. She was about to
fling the insult of it from her by an impetuous and
ill-considered assertion that if he was her master
she was his mistress and so there now, when the bell
which had rung once already since they had been standing
parleying rang again and more impatiently, and the
dining-room door opened and a head appeared.
The twins didn’t know that it was Edith’s
head, but it was.
“Amanda—” began
Edith, in the appealing voice that was the nearest
she ever dared get to rebuke without Amanda giving
notice; but she stopped on seeing what, in the dusk
of the hall, looked like a crowd. “Oh—”
said Edith, taken aback. “Oh—”
And was for withdrawing her head and shutting the
door.
But the twins advanced towards her
and the stream of light shining behind her and the
agreeable smell streaming past her, with outstretched
hands.
“How do you do,” they
both said cordially. “Don’t go away
again.”
Edith, feeling that here was something
to protect her quietly feeding mother from, came rather
hastily through the door and held it to behind her,
while her unresponsive and surprised hand was taken
and shaken even as Mr. Sack’s had been.
“We’ve come to see Mr. Twist,” said
Anna-Rose.
“He’s our friend,” said Anna-Felicitas.
“He’s our best friend,” said Anna-Rose.
“Is he in there?” asked
Anna-Felicitas, appreciatively moving her nose, a
particularly delicate instrument, round among the various
really heavenly smells that were issuing from the
dining-room and sorting them out and guessing what
they probably represented, the while water rushed
into her mouth.
The sound of a chair being hastily
pushed back was heard and Mr. Twist suddenly appeared
in the doorway.
“What is it, Edward?” a voice inside said.
Mr. Twist was a pale man, whose skin
under no circumstances changed colour except in his
ears. These turned red when he was stirred, and
they were red now, and seemed translucent with the
bright light behind him shining through them.
The twins flew to him. It was
wonderful how much pleased they were to see him again.
It was as if for years they had been separated from
their dearest friend. The few hours since the
night before had been enough to turn their friendship
and esteem for him into a warm proprietary affection.
They felt that Mr. Twist belonged to them. Even
Anna-Felicitas felt it, and her eyes as she beheld
him were bright with pleasure.
“Oh there you are,” cried
Anna-Rose darting forward, gladness in her voice,
and catching hold of his arm.
“We’ve come,” said
Anna-Felicitas, beaming and catching hold of his other
arm.
“We got into difficulties,” said Anna-Rose.
“We got into them at once,” said Anna-Felicitas.
“They weren’t our difficulties—”
“They were the Sacks’—”
“But they reacted on us—”
“And so here we are.”
“Who is it, Edward?” asked the voice inside.
“Mrs. Sack ran away yesterday from Mr. Sack,”
went on Anna-Rose eagerly.
“Mr. Sack was still quite warm
and moist from it when we got there,” said Anna-Felicitas.
“Aunt Alice said we weren’t
ever to stay in a house where they did that,”
said Anna-Rose.
“Where there wasn’t a lady,” said
Anna-Felicitas
“So when we saw that she wasn’t
there because she’d gone, we turned straight
round to you,” said Anna. Rose.
“Like flowers turning to the
sun,” said Anna-Felicitas, even in that moment
of excitement not without complacency at her own aptness.
“And left our things at the
station,” Anna-Rose rushed on.
“And ran practically the whole
way,” said Anna-Felicitas, “because of
perhaps being late for supper and you’re having
eaten it all, and we so dreadfully hungry—”
“Who is it, Edward?” again
called the voice inside, louder and more insistently.
Mr. Twist didn’t answer.
He was quickly turning over the situation in his mind.
He had not mentioned the twins to
his mother, which would have been natural, seeing
how very few hours he had of reunion with her, if she
hadn’t happened to have questioned him particularly
as to his fellow-passengers on the boat. Her
questions had been confined to the first-class passengers,
and he had said, truthfully, that he had hardly spoken
to one of them, and not at all to any of the women.
Mrs. Twist had been relieved, for
she lived in dread of Edward’s becoming, as
she put it to herself, entangled with ladies.
Sin would be bad enough—for Mrs. Twist
was obliged reluctantly to know that even with ladies
it is possible to sin—but marriage for Edward
would be even worse, because it lasted longer.
Sin, terrible though it was, had at least this to
be said for it, that it could be repented of and done
with, and repentance after all was a creditable activity;
but there was no repenting of marriage with any credit.
It was a holy thing, and you don’t repent of
holy things,—at least, you oughtn’t
to. If, as ill-advised young men so often would,
Edward wanted as years went on to marry in spite of
his already having an affectionate and sympathetic
home with feminine society in it, then it seemed to
Mrs. Twist most important, most vital to the future
comfort of the family, that it should be someone she
had chosen herself. She had observed him from
infancy, and knew much better than he what was needed
for his happiness; and she also knew, if there must
be a wife, what was needed for the happiness of his
mother and sister. She had not thought to inquire
about the second-class passengers, for it never occurred
to her that a son of hers could drift out of his natural
first-class sphere into the slums of a ship, and Mr.
Twist had seen no reason for hurrying the Twinklers
into her mental range. Not during those first
hours, anyhow. There would be plenty of hours,
and he felt that sufficient unto the day would be the
Twinklers thereof.
But the part that was really making
his ears red was that he had said nothing about the
evening with the twins in New York. When his mother
asked with the fondness of the occasion what had detained
him, he said as many another honest man, pressed by
the searching affection of relations, has said before
him, that it was business. Now it appeared that
he would have to go into the dining-room and say, “No.
It wasn’t business. It was these.”
His ears glowed just to think of it.
He hated to lie. Specially he hated to have lied,—at
the moment, one plunged in spurred by sudden necessity,
and then was left sorrowfully contemplating one’s
degradation. His own desire was always to be candid;
but his mother, he well knew, could not bear the pains
candour gave her. She had been so terribly hurt,
so grievously wounded when, fresh from praying,—for
before he went to Harvard he used to pray—he
had on one or two occasions for a few minutes endeavoured
not to lie to her that sheer fright at the effect
of his unfiliality made him apologize and beg her
to forget it and forgive him. Now she was going
to be still more wounded by his having lied.
The meticulous tortuousness of family
life struck Mr. Twist with a sudden great impatience.
After that large life over there in France, to come
back to this dreary petticoat lying, this feeling one’s
way about among tender places …
“Who is it, Edward?” called
the voice inside for the third time.
“There’s someone in there
seems quite particularly to want to know who we are,”
said Anna-Felicitas. “Why not tell her?”
“I expect it’s your mother,”
said Anna-Rose, feeling the full satisfaction of having
got to a house from which the lady hadn’t run
anywhere.
“It is,” said Mr. Twist briefly.
“Edith!” called the voice, much more peremptorily.
Edith started and half went in, but
hesitated and quite stayed out. She was gazing
at the Twinklers with the same kind eyes her brother
had, but without the disfiguring spectacles.
Astonishment and perplexity and anxiety were mixed
with the kindness. Amanda also gazed; and if the
twins hadn’t been so sure of their welcome, even
they might gradually have begun to perceive that it
wasn’t exactly open-armed.
“Edith—Edward—Amanda,”
called the voice, this time with unmistakable anger.
For one more moment Mr. Twist stood
uncertain, looking down at the happy confident faces
turned up to him exactly, as Anna-Felicitas had just
said, like flowers turning to the sun. Visions
of France flashed before him, visions of what he had
known, what he had just come back from. His friends
over there, the gay courage, the helpfulness, the ready,
uninquiring affection, the breadth of outlook, the
quick friendliness, the careless assumption that one
was decent, that one’s intentions were good,—why
shouldn’t he pull some of the splendid stuff
into his poor, lame little home? Why should he
let himself drop back from heights like those to the
old ridiculous timidities, the miserable habit of avoiding
the truth? Rebellion, hope, determination, seized
Mr. Twist. His eyes shone behind his spectacles.
His ears were two red flags of revolution. He
gripped hold of the twins, one under each arm.
“You come right in,” he
said, louder than he had ever spoken in his life.
“Edith, see these girls? They’re the
two Annas. Their other name is Twinkler, but
Anna’ll see you through. They want supper,
and they want beds, and they want affection, and they’re
going to get it all. So hustle with the food,
and send the Cadillac for their baggage, and fix up
things for them as comfortably as you know how.
And as for Mrs. Sack,” he said, looking first
at one twin and then at the other, “if it hadn’t
been for her running away from her worthless husband—I’m
convinced that fellow Sack is worthless—you
might never have come here at all. So you see,”
he finished, laughing at Anna-Rose, “how good
comes out of evil.”
And with the sound of these words
preceding him he pushed open the dining-room door
and marched them in.