about her garden with a cigarette, and she had told Mrs Taverner, who had told Mrs Ames. The evidence was overwhelming.
âMr Pettit, I donât think any of us mind the smell of tobacco,â she said, âwhen it is out of doors, so pray have a cigarette. Harry will give you one. Ah! I forgot! Perhaps Mrs Altham does not like it.â
Mrs Altham hastened to correct that impression. At the same time she had a subtle and not quite comfortable sensethat Mrs Ames knew all about her and her cigarettes, which was exactly the impression which that lady sought to convey.
These tactics were all sound enough in their way, but a profounder knowledge of human nature would have led Mrs Ames not to press home her victory with so merciless a hand. In her determination to thwart Mrs Althamâs odious curiosity, she had let it be seen that she was thwarting it: she should not, for instance, have asked Parker if she knew of the Majorâs whereabouts, for it only served to emphasize the undoubted fact that Mrs Ames knew (that might be taken for granted) and that she knew that Parker did not, for otherwise she would surely not have asked her.
Consequently Mrs Altham (erroneously, as far as that went) came to the conclusion that the Major was lunching alone where his wife did not wish him to lunch alone. And in the next quarter of an hour, while they all sat on the verandah, she devoted the mind which her hostess so despised, to a rapid review of all houses of this description. Instantly almost, the wrong scent which she was following led her to the right quarry. She argued, erroneously, the existence of a pretty woman, and there was a pretty woman in Riseborough. It is hardly necessary to state that she made up her mind to call on that pretty woman without delay. She would be very much surprised if she did not find there an immense bunch of sweet peas and perhaps their donor.
Mrs Amesâ guests soon went their ways, Mr Pettit and his sister to the childrenâs service at three, the Althams on their detective mission, and she was left to herself, except in so far as Harry, asleep in a basket chair in the garden, can be considered companionship. She was not gifted with any very great acuteness of imagination, but this afternoon she found herself capable of conjuring up (indeed, she was incapableof not doing so) a certain amount of vague disquiet. Indeed, she tried to put it away, and refresh her mind with the remembrance of her thwarting Mrs Altham, but though her disquiet was but vague, and was concerned with things that had at present no real existence at all, whereas her victory over that inquisitive lady was fresh and recent, the disquiet somehow was of more pungent quality, and at last she faced it, instead of attempting any longer to poke it away out of sight.
Millie Evans was undeniably a good-looking woman, undeniably the Major had been considerably attracted last night by her. Undeniably also he had done a very strange thing in stopping to have his lunch there, when he knew perfectly well that there were people lunching with them at home for that important rite of eating up the remains of last nightâs dinner. Beyond doubt he had taken her this present of sweet peas, of which Mrs Altham had so obligingly informed her; beyond doubt, finally, she was herself ten years her husbandâs senior.
It has been said that Mrs Ames was not imaginative, but indeed, there seemed to be sufficient here, when it was all brought together, to occupy a very prosaic and literal mind. It was not as if these facts were all new to her: that disparity of age between herself and her husband had long lain dark and ominous, like a distant thundercloud on the horizon of her mind. Hitherto, it had been stationary there, not apparently coming any closer, and not giving any hint of the potential tempest which might lurk within it. But now it seemed to have moved a little up the sky, and (though this might be mere fancy on her part),
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