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Authors: Susan Barrie

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BOOK: The Marriage Wheel
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She had taken possession of a very comfortable double bedroom, while Rosaleen was digging herself in to the other principal room of the hotel. Her cases —and she seemed to have brought everything with her—were unpacked and the contents scattered about the room, and Electra herself, in a ravishing house-gown that she had picked up during the January sales at a very select West End boutique, was ensconced comfortably in a chair with her feet on another, while an electric fire helped to dissipate the chill of the spring evening, and smoking a cigarette in a long jade holder.

She looked entrancingly attractive and as fresh as a daisy after her journey, and delighted to be where she was.


Darling, it

s such an adorable village, and the landlord of this hotel has gone out of his way to make us comfortable. I

ve told him, of course, that we shall be moving into your cottage in a few days, but for the time being we

ve got nothing to complain of where we are.

Frederica gaped at her. For several seconds she found it difficult to know what to say to her mother. Then the words came with a rush.


But, Mother, I haven

t even
seen
the cottage yet, and for all I know there just won

t be room for the three of us. And Mr. Lestrode wasn

t at all happy about engaging me ... a woman! And as a matter of fact I wasn

t going to stay ... I wasn

t going to be allowed to stay!


Oh, come now, darling,

Electra protested, beaming at her complacently,

we all know you

re a wonderful driver, and Mr. Rawlinson—Robert as I always called him!—impressed upon me the fact that Mr. Lestrode is a charming man, and even if you didn

t suit as a chauffeuse he

d find you something else to do. Robert refused to let me believe otherwise
...
and that

s why we came! I paid that awful woman in the basement who owns the flat two weeks

rent instead of one, I was so glad to get away, and just packed up our things and called a taxi.


And what,

Frederica enquired a trifle hollowly,

will you use for money? To settle the bill here, I mean!

Electra continued to be completely complacent.

I do wish you didn

t allow money to become an obsession with you, Frederica,

she rebuked her gently.

It

s a vulgar commodity, anyway. But if you must know how I come to be temporarily in funds I borrowed a little something from Robert, and I also sold one or two pieces of my jewellery. You remember that diamond scarf brooch my Great-Aunt Ursula gave to me
...
? And the necklace of garnets and the ruby ring dear old Aunt Catherine left to you in her will? Well, I disposed of those
...
most advantageously as it turned out, because I happened to know the man in the jewellers quite well—

But Frederica was staring at her in horror.

You borrowed money from—from Mr. Rawlinson?

she demanded in a slightly cracked voice.


Yes, darling, but not very much.

She dismissed the amount with a wave of her hand.

And I didn

t feel at all bad about it because he was such a very close friend at one time, and as a matter of fact I didn

t have to ask him for a loan. He offered it!


I don

t believe it,

Frederica declared in a very flat voice this time.

And if it

s true then I wonder you weren

t insulted!

Electra

s ripe lips curved with amusement, and her delightful dark eyes gleamed with it.


You poor sweet!

she exclaimed.

As if anyone is ever insulted when someone offers to write out a cheque. And I shall pay it back, of course,

she vowed.

I shall make it my business to pay it back as quickly as possible.


How?

Frederica enquired.

Her mother began to look petulant.


Darling, I have my allowance, small though it is, and that horrid brother of your father

s insists on keeping it. But it is my allowance, and when you

re not working we do manage to subsist on it.

The door opened and Rosaleen came in, fresh from a bath and already dressed for the evening. Disapprove of her though she often did, Frederica also took a kind of delight in her sister

s appearance, and tonight she was looking at her best, and obviously wearing a new dress—one Frederica, at any rate, hadn

t seen before. It was a slim little black number that made her skin look entrancingly fair; and with it she wore a row of pearls that would have fetched quite a large sum if they had been offered for sale, fragile gold shoes that matched the gold embroidery on the hem of the dress, and a plain gold slave bracelet that had been her last birthday present from her godmother, a woman who could afford such presents.


Why are you all dressed up like that?

Frederica asked, once admiration for her sister had been replaced with dismay.


To give the landlord a treat.

Rosaleen dimpled at her, and her dark blue eyes shone wickedly, gaily.

As well as any other man who happens to be staying at the Black Bull at the moment
...
although I must say that so far I haven

t glimpsed anyone really promising-looking. However, one can never tell, and sometimes they book in late, for dinner and just one night. This could be one of those nights,

and her little teeth gleamed.

Frederica hardly knew how to answer her, and her mother spoke critically.


You look so hot, darling, and rather shiny—as if you

ve been lying under a car. Have you?

Frederica shook her head.


No, not yet. I

ve hardly handled the cars as yet.


Cars?

Rosaleen spoke up eagerly.

How many?


Two—a Daimler and a Bentley.

This time it was Rosaleen who looked critical.

A pity,

she remarked.

I would have thought your boss, since he

s obviously pretty rich and apparently still quite young, would have had a Porsche or a Mercedes tucked away in one of his garages. By the way, how big and attractive is Farthing Hall?


Fairly big, and extremely attractive.


Are you going to like working there?


I don

t know.


When are we going to see the cottage?


I don

t know. Tomorrow, perhaps. Yes; I expect tomorrow.

She rose, feeling suddenly very tired as if she had done a really gruelling day

s work, and as deflated as a burst tyre. Her mother and sister always had the effect of making her feel just a little unable to cope
...
and tonight they made her feel not only unable to cope but rather acutely alarmed. They had installed themselves at the inn on borrowed money, and neither of them had the least idea that their conduct was outrageous. It was bad enough for a girl to have to take up a job that many people regarded as a man

s job, and to satisfy a new employer. But to have to inflict her family on him as well, and know perfectly well that Electra was capable, if the need arose, of asking him for an advance of salary on behalf of her daughter
...

Well, the very thought of that made Frederica

s knees feel weak.


I must go now,

she said, making for the door. Vaguely she wondered whether it would be a good
thing
if she took Lucille into her confidence and asked her for her advice before all three of them became too involved.

I don

t know what my duties will be tomorrow, but I

ll telephone you some time during the morning and let you know how soon I can get hold of the keys of the cottage. Even if I don

t have time to look over it with you I

m sure you and Ros will be able to decide whether it

s really habitable, and how well our own bits and pieces will fit in there.

She need not have worried. Mrs. Wells and Rosaleen had acquired the keys of the cottage and were being shown over it by the gardener—released temporarily from his duties for the purpose—while Frederica was working on the Bentley as her first chore of the day after breakfast, and giving it a brilliant shine with a mixture of elbow grease and special car polish that earned her a word of approval from her employer when he strolled round to the garage block.


You

re doing well,

he said, eyes glued to the car and ignoring her.

So long as you remember that this is a daily routine and must never be skipped.


I will, sir,

Frederica promised earnestly. She pushed back a strand of her hair from her heated face, and hoped she wasn

t perspiring noticeably, for even the light make-up she wore would suffer if she was.

Humphrey Lestrode

s eyebrows lifted themselves quizzically as he condescended to notice her.


You sound very dedicated,

he observed.

Are you really so fond of cars that you choose to work with them in preference to banging a typewriter, or some simple operation like that?


I like cars,

she replied briefly. And she added,

I can

t type.


And you fancy yourself taking part in the Monte Carlo Rally one of these days.


It

s possible.

He smiled in a way that kept her neatly to size.

I wouldn

t if I were you,

he advised.

You don

t appear to me to be very robust, and you wouldn

t have enough stamina.


Have you never heard of mind over matter?

she enquired, while she gave the bonnet of the car an extra rub.

He smiled almost contemptuously.


I have. But I

m a practical man. I

d advise you to be a practical young woman.

He glanced at his watch.


By the way, I understand that your family turned up at the Bull yesterday, lock, stock and barrel, and the gardener is at this moment showing them over the cottage that seems likely to become your home. You

d better run off and join them. It

s the old lodge-keeper

s cottage at the entrance to the drive, and in pretty poor shape, I understand. But perhaps we can do something about that.

Frederica wiped her hands on an oily rag.


Thank you, sir.

Lestrode frowned.


I

ve told you I don

t want to be referred to as

sir

. You can call me Mr. Lestrode, but not sir.


Very well, Mr. Lestrode.

He glanced at his watch again.


I want to be taken in to Greater Corsham at twelve o

clock. I

m lunching with a friend at the George, and you can get yourself a snack at a cafe while you wait for me.
U
ntil then you

re free
...
but remember, twelve o

clock!


Yes, Mr. Lestrode.

She found Electra studying the walls of the living
-
room at the cottage, and declaring that if they were to live in the place
something
would have to be done to render it less primitive. It wasn

t so much that it was in a bad state of repair, but the present colour schemes were atrocious, and of course there was neither a refrigerator nor a washing-machine in the kitchen.


I can dispense with a washing-machine, but I simply can

t dispense with a fridge,

she avowed.

We can always send the sheets to the laundry, but I refuse to keep the butter in one of those horrible little outdoor safes that remind me of outdoor sanitation. She looked peevishly at her youngest daughter.

Where is Mr. Lestrode, and how soon are we going to see him? I would have thought he would have come down here and welcomed us as he

s your employer.

Frederica simply asked

Why?

and waited for the answer.

Rosaleen supplied it
...
Rosaleen in a new spring suit of fine blue wool—a blue that did the most amazing things for her eyes.


I thought he was a gentleman, not a snob,

she answered almost viciously.

Mr. Rawlinson said he was absolutely certain he would understand our position and treat us accordingly, but he hasn

t even been on the telephone at the Bull to Mummy.


Don

t worry, dear,

Mrs. Wells reassured her in the same faintly waspish voice, and looking quite spectacularly elegant in navy blue linen with white accessories.

I shall telephone him myself later today. I shall put the position to him
...
and of course I shall ask for a few improvements for this place, and if possible a slight increase in Frederica

s salary. It isn

t enough ... it isn

t nearly enough when she has to lie about under cars and makes me feel slightly uncomfortable by confronting me at this hour of the day with a shiny face and absolutely no make-up, to say nothing of marks of oil on that new primrose blouse I bought you only a few weeks
ago—


But, Mother,

Frederica protested,

I can always wear an overall—


So you can, and so you should,

a voice addressed her through the open window.

Overalls are a hall mark of efficiency, and we

ll certainly have to procure you some without delay.

He was staring very hard at Electra, who was staring back at him with—for once—a wild rush of colour staining her alabaster skin.

Good morning, Mrs. Wells!
...
It is Mrs. Wells, isn

t it?

She gave him her hand through the window. Almost girlishly she confessed:


Yes, I

m Electra Wells!

Rosaleen, who had been inspecting the kitchen and deploring its lack of amenities, suddenly appeared in the living-room doorway—and after hesitating as if slightly stunned for a full half minute Lestrode proved his agility by leaping over the sill of the window and bowing almost theatrically in front of her.


And this—this must be the younger Miss Wells?


Actually,

Rosaleen told him, dimpling deliciously,

I

m two years older than Frederica, but nobody ever guesses it. You see,

she added,

I

ve never been out to work, and she has—since she was sixteen, as a matter of fact.

Humphrey Lestrode was plainly very much impressed by this naive statement.


That explains a good deal,

he said.

Your sister takes to sheer hard work like a duck takes to water; but you—you, my dear,

admiring her very openly with his eyes,

could hardly be expected to perform manual tasks. If you

ll forgive me for saying so I simply can

t imagine you doing anything more strenuous than gather strawberries for tea ... in an enchanting, old-fashioned poke-bonnet!

She dropped him a laughing curtsy.


Even that might prove a little too strenuous if the sun was on the hot side.

BOOK: The Marriage Wheel
13.39Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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