Hollander, you are there. You come and go without a sound.â
Hollander just smiled and inclined his head, and resumed the occupation he had left.
âHow much have you heard of this matter? I suppose you know the whole?â
âIt is chiefly snatches that reach me, maâam,â said Hollander, not denying that he was receptive to these.
âWe donât want it gossiped about behind the scenes.â
Hollanderâs smile deepened. âNo maâam. If gossip is in question, I am hardly the person to be cited.â
âRemember not to mention it. Or have you already done so?â
âNo, maâam, unless an incidental word may have passed my lips,â said Hollander, in a tone so incidental that it was hardly articulate.
âIt will be all round the neighbourhood. But nothing could prevent it. There are things that canât remain a secret.â
âYes, maâam. It will not be the word to be applied.â
âWe need not be conscious about it. There is nothing to be ashamed of.â
âNo, indeed, maâam, that feeling is not on your side. The slur of being supplanted should rest on the person who causes it.â
âWe have no grievance. People can do as they will with their own.â
âYes, maâam, it seems to be the case. But the word is hardly a misnomer.â
âShall we be much poorer?â said Osbert. âDid Uncle contribute much to the household?â
Hollander continued his movements, but his eyes were still.
âWe will talk about all of it presently,â said Jocasta, using a weary tone.
Hollander turned as if at dismissal, left the room and closed the door.
âHollander has had a treat,â said Osbert. âA thing that canât be said of anyone else.â
âIt does seem that Miss Heriot may waive her claim,â said Jocasta. âI feel I should in her place.â
âWhy must we have places of our own?â said Erica. âWe should do so well in other peopleâs, so much better than they do themselves.â
âThere is no reason in her inheriting anything. She can regard nothing as hers.â
âPeople do regard what they inherit as theirs. That is the meaning of inheritance.â
âAs she did not accept your uncle, she has no moral claim.â
âPerhaps she knew she would have it anyhow,â said Amy, âand so didnât have to accept him.â
âYou asked what your uncle gave to the household, Osbert,â said Jocasta, disregarding her grand-daughter. âI could hardly enlighten you and Hollander together. He gave nothing but the cost of his support. His interest lay in harbouring what he had; and I understood him and laid no hand on it. He was in his way such a very good son. It means that Miss Heriot inherits more, and we have less than would otherwise be the case. But we shall not be actually poorer. There will be no difference.â
âI may come in to finish the table, maâam?â said Hollander, in a tone between question and statement, acting on the latter assumption.
âYes, come in. We have no secrets from you. Indeed, I think from anyone. Perhaps there are no such things.â
âWell, maâam, this occurrence would hardly be among them.â
âIt is a surprise and shock. But it doesnât bear on the real trouble.â
âNo, maâam,â said Hollander, in sympathy. âNot on the knowledge that after all his feeling was not yours.â
âNo, I could not think that. I meant the trouble of his death.â
âYes, maâam, but the heart knoweth. And other words ensue.â
âMoney is an accidental thing. And we must not grudge Miss Heriot what he wished her to have.â
âNo, maâam? I am inclined to do so for you. And in some people the feeling may partake of pity which has an unwelcome flavour.â
âSome of it will be sympathy, and we shall be grateful
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