pencil to mark down what you like. The prices are fabulous- quite
plain dresses cost around twenty-five pounds. My black suit will be
thirty-five- more, really, because everything is in guineas, not
pounds. At first I had a frightened sort of feeling at so much being
spent but now it seems almost natural.
I believe my whole trousseau is to cost up to a thousand pounds- and
that will not mean very many things, really, not at the prices we are paying.
But things like fur coats and jewelry will come after I am married.
I already have my engagement ring, of course, a square emerald.
Lovely.
I expect you will wish I would describe everything we have bought but I haven't the time and I also feel embarrassed at having so much when you have so little. But you are to have a most beautiful bridesmaid's
frock- you are to come up to be fitted for it--and I think the
ready-made clothes I am wearing now can be altered for you, once I get my trousseau. And when I am married we will shop like mad for you.
Here is some news that will interest you specially. We dined with the Fox-Cottons and saw Stephen's photographs and, my dear, he looks like all the Greek gods rolled into one. Leda is sure he could get a job
on the pictures, quite seriously. I said it was a scream to think of
him acting and she got quite annoyed. You had better look after your
property. I'm joking- don't do anything silly. I intend to find
someone really exciting for you.
I don't like the Fox-Cottons much. Aubrey makes an awful fuss of
Topaz--he has taken her out several times. She is a conspicuous
person.
She knew some of the manaquins at a dress-show-I could have died. And she knew the photographers at a first-night we went to. Macmorris was there--he looks like a very pale monkey. He wants to paint her again.
Her clothes seem wildly eccentric now we are with well-dressed
people--it's funny to think I used quite to envy them.
I thought of you yesterday. I was out by myself and I went into that
shop where the furs were stored--the clothes there look stodgy after
the ones I've been seeing but they do have nice gloves and things. I
saw the branch of white coral you lost your heart to, and wondered if I could buy it for you but it is only for display. Then I thought I
would buy you a bottle of the scent you said smelt like bluebells but the price is ruinous and I hadn't enough with me--the only pocket-money I have is what Topaz doles out and she is being remarkably cautious
with the beaver coat money, though strictly speaking it is yours and
mine. Mrs.
Cotton spends the earth on me, of course, but hasn't offered anything for me to spend myself--perhaps she thinks it wouldn't be tactful, but it would.
Oh, darling, do you remember how we stood watching the woman buying a whole dozen pairs of silk stockings and you said we were like cats
making longing noises for birds? I think it was that moment I decided I would do anything, anything, to stop being so horribly poor.
It was that night we met the Cottons again. Do you believe one can
make things happen? I do. I had the same sort of desperate feeling
the night I wished on the angel--and look what that did! He is an
angel, all right, not a devil. It's so wonderful that I can be in love with Simon as well as everything else.
Darling Cassandra, I promise you shall never make any more longing cat noises once I am a married woman. And there are other things besides
clothes that I can help you with, you know. I have been wondering if
you would like to go to college (did you know Thomas is to go to
Oxford?) Personally, I think it would be dreary but you might enjoy it as you are so intelligent. My marriage is going to help us all, you
know--even Father. Being away from him has made me more tolerant of
him. Both Simon and Mrs.
Cotton say he really was a great writer. Anyway, it doesn't matter any more that he can't earn any money. Give him my love--and to Thomas and Stephen. I will send them all postcards. This letter is private to
you, of course.
I do wish you were here- I miss you at least a hundred times a day.
I felt so sad being in that shop without you. I shall go back and get you that scent when I have extracted more money from Topaz --it's
called "Midsummer Eve" and you shall have it in time for your goings-on on Belmotte.
Heavens, I'm using pages and pages of Mrs.
Cotton's elegant notepaper, but it feels a bit like talking to you. I meant to tell you all about the theatres but I mustn't start now--it's later than I thought and I have to dress for dinner.
Love and please write often to your Rose.
P.s. I have a bathroom all to myself and there are clean peach-colored towels every single day. Whenever I feel lonely, I go and sit in there till I cheer up.
That is the first letter I ever had from her, as we haven't been
separated since we were very small, when Rose had scarlet fever. It
doesn't sound quite like her, somehow--for one thing, it is much more affectionate; I don't think she has ever called me "darling" before.
Perhaps it is because she is missing me. I do call it a sign of a
beautiful nature if a girl who is in love and surrounded by all that
splendour is lonely for her sister.
Fancy thirty-five guineas for a suit! That is thirty-six pounds
fifteen shillings; I do think shops are artful to price things in
guineas.
I didn't know clothes could cost so much--at that rate, Rose is right when she says a thousand pounds won't buy so very many;
not when you think of all the hats and shoes and underclothes. I had
imagined Rose having dozens and dozens of dresses--you can get such
beauties for two or three pounds each; but perhaps it gives you a
glorious, valuable feeling to wear little black suits of fabulous
price--like wearing real jewelry. Rose and I always felt superb when
we wore our little real old chains with the seed-pearl hearts.
We howled like anything when they had to be sold.
A thousand pounds for clothes--when one thinks how long poor people
could live on it! When one thinks how long we could live on it, for
that matter! Oddly, I have never thought of us as poor people--I mean, I have never been terribly sorry for us, as for the unemployed or
beggars; though really we have been rather worse off, being
unemployable and with no one to beg from.
I don't believe I could look a beggar in the face if my trousseau had cost a thousand pounds ...... Oh, come, Mrs.
Cotton wouldn't give the thousand pounds to beggars if she didn't spend it on Rose, so Rose might as well have it. And I shall certainly be
delighted to accept clothes from Rose. I ought to be ashamed--being
glad the riches won't be on my conscience, while only too willing to
have them on my back.
I meant to copy in a letter from Topaz but it is pinned up in the
kitchen, most of it being instructions for cooking--about which I am
more ignorant than I had realized. We used to manage quite well when
she was away sitting for artists, because in those days we lived mostly on bread, vegetables and eggs; but now that we can afford some meat or even chickens, I keep coming to grief. I scrubbed some rather
dirty-looking chops with soap which proved very lingering, and I did
not take certain things out of a chicken that I ought to have done.
Even keeping the house clean is more complicated than I expected - I
have always helped with it, of course, but never organized it.
I am realizing more and more how hard Topaz worked.
Her letter looks as if it had been written with a stick- she always
uses a very thick, orange quill pen. There are six spelling mistakes.
After the helpful cooking hints, she mentions the theatre first-night they went to and says the play was not "significant" --a word she has just taken up. Aubrey Fox-Cotton's architecture is significant, but
Leda Fox-Cotton's photographs are not--Topaz doubts their ultimate
motivation. Ultimate with two like's.
Dear Topaz! Her letter is exactly like her--three quarters practical
kindness and one quarter spoof. I hope the spoof means she is feeling happier; there has been less and less of it since she has been
worrying about Father.
It must be months since she played her lute or communed with nature.
She finishes by saying she will come home instantly if Father shows
signs of missing her. Unfortunately, he doesn't; and he is far less
irritable than when she was here--though not conversational.
We only see each other at meals; the rest of the day he either walks or shuts himself in the gatehouse (when he leaves it, he now locks the
door and takes the key). I regret to say that he is re-reading Miss
Marcy's entire stock of detective novels.
And he has spent one day in London. While he was gone I told myself it was absurd the way we had all been hypnotized by him not to ask
questions, so when he came back I said cheerfully: "How was the British Museum ?"
"Oh, I haven't been there," he answered, quite pleasantly.
"Today I went to was He broke off, suddenly staring at me as if I were some dangerous animal he had only just noticed;
then he walked out of the room. I longed to call after him: "Father, really! Are you going queer in the head?" But it struck me that if a man is going queer in the head, he is the last person to mention it