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The Piano-Tuner
by
“Yes,” said George. “You’re perfectly right. It’s much better to avoid politics. But what did I say at luncheon?”
“Ruth was there.”
“She was. Very charming she looked. I’m proud to be her uncle.”
“I have the charge of her education, and the formation of her moral character, and I considered what you said to be most unwise. Praise is nearly always bad, and it is specially injudicious to praise a child’s beauty to her face.”
“Oh, that’s it, is it? Well, Ruth ain’t exactly a child, you know. She’s eighteen.”
“Only just eighteen, and I’m not sure that that does not make it worse. I’ve always been careful to guard against anything of the kind. I do not wish my niece to grow up vain and self-conscious.”
“Oh, she’s all right,” said George feebly.
“Far from it. She is wilful, and there is nothing I hate so much as wilfulness. I must have my own way, and I cannot be opposed in my views by you or by Ruth. Also, it is quite untrue that she is beautiful. She is nice-looking enough, but her mouth is certainly a little too large, and she has permitted the sun to ruin her complexion–in spite of my advice. I must request you, George, to abstain from saying anything of the kind again.”
George refused an invitation to inspect a new fowl-run, and said that he preferred to sit and think over things. Amongst other thoughts, it occurred to him that his niece did not in all probability have much of a time. Where he sat, he could hear faintly the sound of the piano in the drawing-room. It was obviously something of Grieg’s, and appallingly difficult. He was glad that he had not got to play it, and was merely an audience. He had chosen the better part. After all, Ruth had her music to occupy her, and she played tennis with the Vicarage girls, and what else could she want? He was just dropping off to sleep when the cessation of the music roused him again. A moment later his niece stood before him.
She was a tall girl, and carried herself well. Most people would have agreed with her uncle’s estimation of her looks. She wore no hat, and her face was certainly slightly tanned.
“Uncle George,” she said, “I want you to do something.”
“Not tennis,” said George sleepily. “Nothing violent. After tea, perhaps, when it’s cooler.”
“That’s not it at all. Now listen. When you’re at the House, you have tea on the Terrace sometimes, don’t you?”
“Sometimes. Whisky-and-soda sometimes. What do you want?”
“You can ask people to come and have tea on the Terrace, can’t you? Well, you’ve got to ask me. Next Tuesday, please. And you’ve got to persuade Aunt Jane to let me go, too.”
“I’m not so sure about that,” said George. “I’ve just been getting into a row about you. I’m not at all sure that I’m not a bad influence, and that any proposal of mine would not be vetoed.”
“You can do it all right,” said the girl decisively, “if you go the right way about it. Say that it’s historical. I mean that your silly old House of Commons is historical. It would have a great educational value for me. You could show me where Chatham stood when he made his last grand speech, and fell down in the middle of it.”
“That happened to be in another place, to wit, the House of Lords.”
“It’s all the same. And rub it in a bit about Burke–she’s keen on Burke. Keep up a good strong educational line, and Aunt Jane will be glad to let me go.”
“Very well. I’ll do what I can. Next Tuesday at four o’clock. Tell me what time your train gets to Euston, and I’ll meet it.”
Ruth looked away from him, and appeared to be addressing one of the pillars of the veranda. “I don’t think you need meet it. In fact, I’d rather you didn’t. I know my way about London very well. You just wait at the House of Commons. And if I’m not there by a quarter past four, don’t worry. It will only mean that I’ve changed my mind and gone somewhere else.”