been equal, nor even to a time when the wish to be equal had made them happier in other ways. I couldnât say a word. I had just picked up the notion that equality is good from some bookâprobably from poetry, or you. Anyhow, itâs been knocked into pieces, and, like all people who are really strong, Mr. Wilcox did it without hurting me. On the other hand, I laugh at them for catching hay fever. We live like fighting-cocks, and Charles takes us out every day in the motorâa tomb with trees in it, a hermitâs house, a wonderful road that was made by the Kings of Merciaâtennisâa cricket matchâbridgeâand at night we squeeze up in this lovely house. The whole clanâs here nowâitâs like a rabbit warren. Evie is a dear. They want me to stop over SundayâI suppose it wonât matter if I do. Marvellous weather and the viewâs marvellousâviews westward to the high ground. Thank you for your letter. Burn this.
Your affectionate
HELEN
Â
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HOWARDS END,
Sunday.
Dearest, dearest Meg,âI do not know what you will say: Paul and I are in loveâthe younger son who only came here Wednesday.
Chapter II
Margaret glanced at her sisterâs note and pushed it over the breakfast-table to her aunt. There was a momentâs hush, and then the flood-gates opened.
âI can tell you nothing, Aunt Juley. I know no more than you do. We metâwe only met the father and mother abroad last spring. I know so little that I didnât even know their sonâs name. Itâs all soââ She waved her hand and laughed a little.
âIn that case it is far too sudden.â
âWho knows, Aunt Juley, who knows?â
âBut, Margaret dear, I mean we mustnât be unpractical now that weâve come to facts. It is too sudden, surely.â
âWho knows!â
âBut Margaret dearââ
âIâll go for her other letters,â said Margaret. âNo, I wonât, Iâll finish my breakfast. In fact, I havenât them. We met the Wilcoxes on an awful expedition that we made from Heidelberg to Speyer. Helen and I had got it into our heads that there was a grand old cathedral at Speyerâthe Archbishop of Speyer was one of the seven electorsâyou knowââSpeyer, Maintz, and Köln.â Those three sees once commanded the Rhine Valley and got it the name of Priest Street.â
âI still feel quite uneasy about this business, Margaret.â
âThe train crossed by a bridge of boats, and at first sight it looked quite fine. But oh, in five minutes we had seen the whole thing. The cathedral had been ruined, absolutely ruined, by restoration; not an inch left of the original structure. We wasted a whole day, and came across the Wilcoxes as we were eating our sandwiches in the public gardens. They too, poor things, had been taken inâthey were actually stopping at Speyerâand they rather liked Helen insisting that they must fly with us to Heidelberg. As a matter of fact, they did come on next day. We all took some drives together. They knew us well enough to ask Helen to come and see themâat least, I was asked too, but Tibbyâs illness prevented me, so last Monday she went alone. Thatâs all. You know as much as I do now. Itâs a young man out of the unknown. She was to have come back Saturday, but put off till Monday, perhaps on account ofâI donât know.â
She broke off, and listened to the sounds of a London morning. Their house was in Wickham Place, and fairly quiet, for a lofty promontory of buildings separated it from the main thoroughfare. One had the sense of a backwater, or rather of an estuary, whose waters flowed in from the invisible sea, and ebbed into a profound silence while the waves without were still beating. Though the promontory consisted of flatsâexpensive, with cavernous entrance halls, full of concierges and palmsâit fulfilled