The Independence of Claire | Page 3

Mrs George de Horne Vaizey
ten pounds a year."
Mrs Gifford laughed, and shrugged her graceful shoulders. She
appeared to find the proposal supremely ridiculous, yet when people
were without money, the only sane course seemed to be to take what
one could get. Claire felt that she had not yet mastered the situation.
There must be something behind which she had still to grasp.
"Well, never mind the school for a moment, mother dear. Tell me what
you thought of doing. You must have had some plan in your head all
these years while the money was dwindling away. Tell me your scheme,
then we can compare the two and see which is better."
Mrs Gifford bent her head over the table, and scribbled aimlessly with a
pen in which there was no ink. She made no answer in words, yet as

she waited the blood flamed suddenly over Claire's face, for it seemed
to her that she divined what was in her mother's mind. "I expected that
you would marry. I have done my best to educate you and give you a
happy youth. I expected that you would accept your first good offer,
and look after me!"
That was what a French mother would naturally say to her daughter;
that was what Claire Gifford believed that her own mother was saying
to her at that moment, and the accusation brought little of the revolt
which an English girl would have experienced. Claire had been
educated at a Parisian boarding school, and during the last three years
had associated almost entirely with French-speaking Andrees and
Maries and Celestes, who took for granted that their husbands should
be chosen for them by their parents. Claire had assisted at betrothal
feasts, and played demoiselle d'honneur at subsequent weddings, and
had witnessed an astonishing degree of happiness as an outcome of
these business-like unions. At this moment she felt no anger against her
own mother for having tried to follow a similar course. Her prevailing
sensation was annoyance with herself for having been so difficult to
lead.
"It must be my English blood. Somehow, when it came to the point, I
never could. But Mr Judge is different from most men. He is so good
and generous and unmercenary. He'd be kind to mother, and let her live
with us, and make no fuss. He is as charming to her as he is to me. Oh,
dear, I am selfish! I am a wretch! It isn't as if I were in love with
anyone else. I'm not. Perhaps I never shall be. I'll never have the chance
if I live in lodgings and spend my life teaching irregular verbs. Why
can't I be sensible and French, and marry him and live happily ever
after? Pauvre petite mere! Why can't I think of her?"
Suddenly Claire swooped down upon her mother's drooping figure,
wrapped her in loving arms, and swung her gently to and fro. She was a
tall, strikingly graceful girl, with a face less regularly beautiful than her
mother's, but infinitely more piquant and attractive. She was more
plump and rounded than the modern English girl, and her complexion
less pink and white, but she was very neat and dainty and smart,

possessed deep-set, heavily-lashed grey eyes, red lips which curled
mischievously upward at the corner, and a pair of dimples on her soft
left cheek.
The dimples were in full play at this moment; the large one was just on
the level with the upward curl of the lips, the smaller one nestled close
to its side. In repose they were almost unnoticed, but at the slightest
lighting of expression, at the first dawn of a smile, they danced into
sight and became the most noticeable feature of her face. Claire without
her dimples would have been another and far less fascinating
personality.
"Mother darling, forgive me! Kiss me, cherie--don't look sad! I have
had a good time, and we'll have a good time yet, if it is in my power to
get it for you. Cheer up! Things won't be as bad as you fear. We won't
allow them to be bad. ... How much does the horrid old bank say that
we owe? Three hundred francs. I can pay it out of my own little savings.
Does it mean literally that there is nothing more, nothing at all--not a
single sou?"
"Oh no. I have some shares. They have been worthless for years, but
just lately they have gone up. I was asking Mr Judge about them
yesterday. He says I might get between two and three hundred pounds.
They were worth a thousand, years ago."
Claire brightened with the quick relief of youth. Two or three hundred
English pounds were a considerable improvement on a debit account.
With two or three hundred pounds
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