Mr Vane's house overlooked Regent's Park, and formed the corner house

of a white terrace boasting Grecian pillars and a railed-in stretch of

grass in front of the windows. The rooms were large and handsome, and

of that severe, box-like outline which are the despair of the modern

upholsterer. The drawing-room boasted half a dozen windows, four in

front, and two at the side, and as regards furnishings was a curious

graft of modern art upon an Early Victoria stock. Logically the

combination was an anachronism; in effect it was charming and

harmonious, for the changes had been made with the utmost caution, in

consideration of the feelings of the head of the household.

Mr Vane's argument was that he preferred solid old-fashioned furniture

to modern gimcracks, and had no wish to conform to artistic fads, and

his daughters dutifully agreed, and--disobeyed! Their mode of procedure

was to withdraw one article at a time, and to wait until the parental

eye had become accustomed to the gap before venturing on a second

confiscation. On the rare occasions when the abduction was discovered,

it was easy to fall back upon the well-worn domestic justification, "Oh,

that's been gone a long time!" when, in justice to one's own power of

observation, the matter must be allowed to drop.

The eldest daughter of the household had married five years before the

date at which this narrative opens, and during that period had enjoyed

the happiness of a true and enduring devotion, and the troubles

inseparable from a constant financial struggle, ending with bankruptcy,

and a retreat from a tastefully furnished villa at Surbiton to a dreary

lodging in Oxford Terrace. Poor Edith had lost much of her beauty and

light-hearted gaiety as a result of anxiety and the constant care of two

delicate children; but never in the blackest moment of her trouble had

she wished herself unwed, or been willing to change places with any

woman who had not the felicity of being John Martin's wife.

Trouble had drawn Jack and herself more closely together; she was in

arms in a passion of indignation against that world which judged a man

by the standpoint of success or failure, and lay in readiness to heave

another stone at the fallen. At nightfall she watched for his coming to

judge of the day's doings by the expression of his face, before it lit

up with the dear welcoming smile. At sight of the weary lines, strength

came to her, as though she could move mountains on his behalf. As they

sat together on the horsehair sofa, his tired head resting on her

shoulder, the strain and the burden fell from them both, and they knew

themselves millionaires of blessings.




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