'Dear!
Everybody is ill now, I think,' said Mrs. Hale, with a little of the jealousy which one invalid is apt to feel of another.
'But it must be very sad to be ill in one of those little back streets.' (Her kindly nature prevailing, and the old Helstone habits of thought returning.)
'It's bad enough here.
What could you do for her, Margaret?
Mr. Thornton has sent me some of his old port wine since you went out.
Would a bottle of that do her good, think you?'
'No, mamma!
I don't believe they are very poor,—at least, they don't speak as if they were; and, at any rate, Bessy's illness is consumption—she won't want wine.
Perhaps, I might take her a little preserve, made of our dear Helstone fruit.
No! there's another family to whom I should like to give—Oh mamma, mamma! how am I to dress up in my finery, and go off and away to smart parties, after the sorrow I have seen to-day?' exclaimed Margaret, bursting the bounds she had preordained for herself before she came in, and telling her mother of what she had seen and heard at Higgins's cottage.
It distressed Mrs. Hale excessively.
It made her restlessly irritated till she could do something.
She directed Margaret to pack up a basket in the very drawing-room, to be sent there and then to the family; and was almost angry with her for saying, that it would not signify if it did not go till morning, as she knew Higgins had provided for their immediate wants, and she herself had left money with Bessy.
Mrs. Hale called her unfeeling for saying this; and never gave herself breathing-time till the basket was sent out of the house.
Then she said:
'After all, we may have been doing wrong.
It was only the last time Mr. Thornton was here that he said, those were no true friends who helped to prolong the struggle by assisting the turn outs.
And this Boucher-man was a turn-out, was he not?'
The question was referred to Mr. Hale by his wife, when he came up-stairs, fresh from giving a lesson to Mr. Thornton, which had ended in conversation, as was their wont.
Margaret did not care if their gifts had prolonged the strike; she did not think far enough for that, in her present excited state.
Mr. Hale listened, and tried to be as calm as a judge; he recalled all that had seemed so clear not half-an-hour before, as it came out of Mr. Thornton's lips; and then he made an unsatisfactory compromise.
His wife and daughter had not only done quite right in this instance, but he did not see for a moment how they could have done otherwise.
Nevertheless, as a general rule, it was very true what Mr. Thornton said, that as the strike, if prolonged, must end in the masters' bringing hands from a distance (if, indeed, the final result were not, as it had often been before, the invention of some machine which would diminish the need of hands at all), why, it was clear enough that the kindest thing was to refuse all help which might bolster them up in their folly.
But, as to this Boucher, he would go and see him the first thing in the morning, and try and find out what could be done for him.
Mr. Hale went the next morning, as he proposed.
He did not find Boucher at home, but he had a long talk with his wife; promised to ask for an Infirmary order for her; and, seeing the plenty provided by Mrs. Hale, and somewhat lavishly used by the children, who were masters down-stairs in their father's absence, he came back with a more consoling and cheerful account than Margaret had dared to hope for; indeed, what she had said the night before had prepared her father for so much worse a state of things that, by a reaction of his imagination, he described all as better than it really was.
'But I will go again, and see the man himself,' said Mr. Hale.
'I hardly know as yet how to compare one of these houses with our Helstone cottages.
I see furniture here which our labourers would never have thought of buying, and food commonly used which they would consider luxuries; yet for these very families there seems no other resource, now that their weekly wages are stopped, but the pawn-shop.
One had need to learn a different language, and measure by a different standard, up here in Milton.'
Bessy, too, was rather better this day.
Still she was so weak that she seemed to have entirely forgotten her wish to see Margaret dressed—if, indeed, that had not been the feverish desire of a half-delirious state.
Margaret could not help comparing this strange dressing of hers, to go where she did not care to be—her heart heavy with various anxieties—with the old, merry, girlish toilettes that she and Edith had performed scarcely more than a year ago.
Her only pleasure now in decking herself out was in thinking that her mother would take delight in seeing her dressed.
She blushed when Dixon, throwing the drawing-room door open, made an appeal for admiration.
'Miss Hale looks well, ma'am,—doesn't she?
Mrs. Shaw's coral couldn't have come in better.
It just gives the right touch of colour, ma'am.
Otherwise, Miss Margaret, you would have been too pale.'
Margaret's black hair was too thick to be plaited; it needed rather to be twisted round and round, and have its fine silkiness compressed into massive coils, that encircled her head like a crown, and then were gathered into a large spiral knot behind.
She kept its weight together by two large coral pins, like small arrows for length.
Her white silk sleeves were looped up with strings of the same material, and on her neck, just below the base of her curved and milk-white throat, there lay heavy coral beads.
'Oh, Margaret! how I should like to be going with you to one of the old Barrington assemblies,—taking you as Lady Beresford used to take me.'
Margaret kissed her mother for this little burst of maternal vanity; but she could hardly smile at it, she felt so much out of spirits.
'I would rather stay at home with you,—much rather, mamma.'
'Nonsense, darling!
Be sure you notice the dinner well.
I shall like to hear how they manage these things in Milton. Particularly the second course, dear.
Look what they have instead of game.'