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Giant’s Bread


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      ‘What’s the matter?’ said Nina.

      ‘Mummy says,’ said Vernon, ‘that no nice woman would ever smoke. She said so to Miss Robbins.’

      ‘Oh, well!’ said Nina. She puffed out a cloud of smoke. ‘I expect she was quite right. I’m not a nice woman, you see, Vernon.’

      Vernon looked at her, vaguely distressed.

      ‘I think you’re very pretty,’ he said rather shyly.

      ‘That’s not the same thing,’ Nina’s smile widened. ‘Come here, Vernon.’

      He came obediently. Nina put her hands on his shoulders and looked him over quizzically. He submitted patiently. He never minded being touched by Aunt Nina. Her hands were light—not clutching like his mother’s.

      ‘Yes,’ said Nina. ‘You’re a Deyre—very much so. Rough luck on Myra, but there it is.’

      ‘What does that mean?’ said Vernon.

      ‘It means that you’re like your father’s family and not like your mother’s—worse luck for you.’

      ‘Why worse luck for me?’

      ‘Because the Deyres, Vernon, are neither happy nor successful. And they can’t make good.’

      What funny things Aunt Nina said! She said them half laughingly, so perhaps she didn’t mean them. And yet somehow—there was something in them that, though he didn’t understand, made him afraid.

      ‘Would it be better,’ he said suddenly, ‘to be like Uncle Sydney?’

      ‘Much better. Much better.’

      Vernon considered.

      ‘But then,’ he said slowly, ‘if I was like Uncle Sydney—’

      He stopped, trying to get his thoughts into words.

      ‘Yes, well?’

      ‘If I was Uncle Sydney, I should have to live at Larch Hurst—and not here.’

      Larch Hurst was a stoutly built red brick villa near Birmingham where Vernon had once been taken to stay with Uncle Sydney and Aunt Carrie. It had three acres of superb pleasure grounds, a rose garden, a pergola, a goldfish tank, and two excellently fitted bathrooms.

      ‘And wouldn’t you like that?’ asked Nina, still watching him.

      ‘No!’ said Vernon. A great sigh broke from him, heaving his small chest. ‘I want to live here—always, always, always!’

      Soon after this, something queer happened about Aunt Nina. His mother began to speak of her and his father managed to hush her down with a sideways glance at himself. He only carried away a couple of phrases: ‘It’s that poor child I’m so sorry for. You’ve only got to look at Nina to see she’s a bad lot and always will be.’

      The poor child, Vernon knew, was his cousin Josephine whom he had never seen, but to whom he sent presents at Christmas and duly received them in return. He wondered why Josephine was ‘poor’ and why his mother was sorry for her, and also why Aunt Nina was a bad lot—whatever that meant. He asked Miss Robbins, who got very pink and told him he mustn’t talk about ‘things like that’. Things like what? Vernon wondered.

      However, he didn’t think much more about it, till four months later, when the matter was mentioned once more. This time no one noticed Vernon’s presence—feelings were running too high for that. His mother and father were in the middle of a vehement discussion. His mother, as usual, was vociferous, excited. His father was very quiet.

      ‘Disgraceful!’ Myra was saying. ‘Within three months of running away with one man to go off with another. It shows her up in her true light. I always knew what she was like. Men, men, men, nothing but men!’

      ‘You’re welcome to any opinion you choose, Myra. That’s not the point. I knew perfectly how it would strike you.’

      ‘And anyone else too, I should think! I can’t understand you, Walter. You call yourself an old family and all that—’

      ‘We are an old family,’ he put in quietly.

      ‘I should have thought you’d have minded a bit about the honour of your name. She’s disgraced it—and if you were a real man you’d cast her off utterly as she deserves.’

      ‘Traditional scene from the melodrama, in fact.’

      ‘You always sneer and laugh! Morals mean nothing to you—absolutely nothing.’

      ‘At the minute, as I’ve been trying to make you understand, it’s not a question of morals. It’s a question of my sister being destitute. I must go out to Monte Carlo and see what can be done. I should have thought anyone in their senses would see that.’

      ‘Thank you. You’re not very polite, are you? And whose fault is it she’s destitute, I should like to know? She had a good husband—’

      ‘No—not that.’

      ‘At any rate, he married her.’

      It was his father who flushed this time. He said, in a very low voice:

      ‘I can’t understand you, Myra. You’re a good woman—a kind, honourable, upright woman—and yet you can demean yourself to make a nasty mean taunt like that.’

      ‘That’s right! Abuse me! I’m used to it. You don’t mind what you say to me.’

      ‘That’s not true. I try to be as courteous as I can.’

      ‘Yes. And that’s partly why I hate you—you never do say right out. Always polite and sneering—your tongue in your cheek. All this keeping up appearances—why should one, I should like to know? Why should I care if everyone in the house knows what I feel?’

      ‘I’ve no doubt they do—thanks to the carrying power of your voice.’

      ‘There you are—sneering again. At any rate I’ve enjoyed telling you what I think of your precious sister. Running away with one man, going off with a second—and why can’t the second man keep her, I should like to know? Or is he tired of her already?’

      ‘I’ve already told you, but you didn’t listen. He’s threatened with galloping consumption—has had to throw up his job. He’s no private means.’

      ‘Ah! Nina brought her pigs to a bad market that time.’

      ‘There’s one thing about Nina—she’s never been actuated by motives of gain. She’s a fool—a damned fool or she wouldn’t have got herself into this mess. But it’s always her affections that run away with her common sense. It’s the deuce of a tangle. She won’t touch a penny from Fred. Anstey wants to make her an allowance—she won’t hear of it. And mind you, I agree with her. There are things one can’t do. But I’ve certainly got to go and see to things. I’m sorry if it annoys you, but there it is.’

      ‘You never do anything I want! You hate me! You do this on purpose to make me miserable. But there’s one thing. You don’t bring this precious sister of yours under this roof while I’m here. I’m not accustomed to meeting that kind of woman. You understand?’

      ‘You make your meaning almost offensively clear.’

      ‘If you bring her here, I go back to Birmingham.’

      There was a faint flicker in Walter Deyre’s eyes, and suddenly Vernon realized something that his mother did not. He had understood very little of the actual words of the conversation though he had grasped the essentials. Aunt Nina was ill or unhappy somewhere and Mummy was angry about it. She had said that if Aunt Nina came to Abbots Puissants, she would go back to Uncle Sydney at Birmingham. She had meant that as a threat—but Vernon knew that his father would be very pleased if she did go back to Birmingham. He knew it quite certainly and uncomprehendingly. It was like some of Miss Robbins’ punishments like not speaking