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Daisy
by
‘I’d shut the door in her face; I wonder how she can dare to come.’
‘It’s jolly awkward,’ said George. ‘Supposing father found out we’d kept back the letters?’
‘It was for his own good,’ said Mrs Griffith, angrily. ‘I’m not ashamed of what I’ve done, and I’ll tell him so to his face if he says anything to me.’
‘Well, it is awkward. You know what father is; if he saw her.’…
Mrs Griffith paused a moment.
‘You must go up and see her, George!’
‘Me!’ he cried in astonishment, a little in terror.
‘You must go as if you came from your father, to say we won’t have anything more to do with her and she’s not to write.’
VII
Next day George Griffith, on getting out of the station at Victoria, jumped on a Fulham ‘bus, taking his seat with the self-assertiveness of the countryman who intends to show the Londoners that he’s as good as they are. He was in some trepidation and his best clothes. He didn’t know what to say to Daisy, and his hands sweated uncomfortably. When he knocked at the door he wished she might be out–but that would only be postponing the ordeal.
‘Does Mrs Hogan live here?’
‘Yes. Who shall I say?’
‘Say a gentleman wants to see her.’
He followed quickly on the landlady’s heels and passed through the door the woman opened while she was giving the message. Daisy sprang to her feet with a cry.
‘George!’
She was very pale, her blue eyes dim and lifeless, with the lids heavy and red; she was in a dressing gown, her beautiful hair dishevelled, wound loosely into a knot at the back of her head. She had not half the beauty of her old self…. George, to affirm the superiority of virtue over vice, kept his hat on.
She looked at him with frightened eyes, then her lips quivered, and turning away her head she fell on a chair and burst into tears. George looked at her sternly. His indignation was greater than ever now that he saw her. His old jealousy made him exult at the change in her.
‘She’s got nothing much to boast about now,’ he said to himself, noting how ill she looked.
‘Oh, George!’… she began, sobbing; but he interrupted her.
‘I’ve come from father,’ he said, ‘and we don’t want to have anything more to do with you, and you’re not to write.’
‘Oh!’ She looked at him now with her eyes suddenly quite dry. They seemed to burn her in their sockets. ‘Did he send you here to tell me that?’
‘Yes; and you’re not to come down.’
She put her hand to her forehead, looking vacantly before her.
‘But what am I to do? I haven’t got any money; I’ve pawned everything.’
George looked at her silently; but he was horribly curious.
‘Why did he leave you?’ he said.
She made no answer; she looked before her as if she were going out of her mind.
‘Has he left you any money?’ asked George.
Then she started up, her cheeks flaming red.
‘I wouldn’t touch a halfpenny of his. I’d rather starve!’ she screamed.
George shrugged his shoulders.
‘Well, you understand?’ he said.
‘Oh, how can you! It’s all you and mother. You’ve always hated me. But I’ll pay you out, by God! I’ll pay you out. I know what you are, all of you–you and mother, and all the Blackstable people. You’re a set of damned hypocrites.’
‘Look here, Daisy! I’m not going to stand here and hear you talk like that of me and mother,’ he replied with dignity; ‘and as for the Blackstable people, you’re not fit to–to associate with them. And I can see where you learnt your language.’
Daisy burst into hysterical laughter. George became more angry–virtuously indignant.
‘Oh, you can laugh as much as you like! I know your repentance is a lot of damned humbug. You’ve always been a conceited little beast. And you’ve been stuck up and cocky because you thought yourself nice-looking, and because you were educated in Tercanbury. And no one was good enough for you in Blackstable. And I’m jolly glad that all this has happened to you; it serves you jolly well right. And if you dare to show yourself at Blackstable, we’ll send for the police.’