He looked round the table with his tired, angry eyes. Jack Martin sat

with bent head and lips pressed tightly together, repressing himself for

his wife's sake. Edith struggled against tears. Agnes served the salad

dressing and grunted approval. Margot, usually so pert and ready of

retort, stared at the cloth with a frown of strained distress. Only

Ronald faced him with steady eyes.

"That is not true, father, and you know it yourself!"

"I know nothing, it appears! That's just what I say. Why don't you

undertake my education? You never show me your work; you take the

advice of a child like Margot, and leave me out in the cold, and then

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expect me to have faith enough to believe you a genius without a word of

proof. You want to become known to the public? Very well, bring down

some of that precious poetry and read it aloud to us now! You can't say

then that I haven't given you a chance!"

It was a frightful prospect! The criticism of the family is always an

ordeal to the budding author, and the moment was painfully unpropitious.

It would have been as easy for a bird to sing in the presence of the

fowler. Ronald turned white to the lips, but his reply came as

unwavering as the last.

"Do you think you would care to hear even the finest poetry in the world

read aloud to-night? Mine is very far from the best. I will read it to

you if you wish, but you must give me a happier opportunity."

Agnes laughed shortly.

"Shilly-shally! I can't understand what opportunity you want. If it's

good, it can't be spoilt by being read one day instead of another; if

it's bad, it won't be improved by waiting. This is cherry-pie, and

there is some tipsy cake. Edith, which will you have?"

Edith would have neither. She was still trembling with wounded

indignation against her father for that cruel hit at her husband. She

sat pale and silent, vowing never to enter the house again until Jack's

fortunes were restored; never to accept another penny from her father's

hands. She was comparatively little interested in the discussion about

poetry. Ron was a dear boy; she would be sorry if he were disappointed,

but Jack was her life, and Jack was working for bread!

If she had followed the moment's impulse, she would have risen and left

the room, and though better counsel prevailed, she could not control the

spice of temper which made the cherry-pie abhorrent.

Jack, as a man, saw no reason why he should deny himself the mitigations

of the situation; he helped himself to cream and sifted sugar with

leisurely satisfaction, and sensibly softened in spirit. After all,

there was a measure of truth in what the old man said, and his bark was

worse than his bite. If his own boy, Pat, took it into his head to go

off on some scatter-brain prank when he came of age, it would be a big

trouble, or if later on he came a cropper in business-- Jack waited for

a convenient pause, and then deftly turned the conversation to politics,

and by the time that cheese was on the table, he and his father-in-law

were discussing the mysteries of the last Education Bill with the

satisfaction of men who hold similar views on the inanities of the

opposite party. Later on they bade each other a friendly good-night;

but Edith went straight from the bedroom to the street, and clung

tightly to her husband's arm as they walked along the pavement opposite

the Park, enjoying the quiet before entering the busy streets.




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