It was true enough that the home-coming had been a shock to Joan; why, it is impossible to say. She had known so many similar incidents; servants had left abruptly before, especially of late years, so that familiarity should have softened the effect produced by her arrival at Leaside. But a condition of spirit, a degree of physical elation or fatigue, perhaps a mere passing mood, will sometimes predispose the mind to receive impressions disproportionately deep to their importance, and this was what had happened in Joan's case. She had felt suddenly overwhelmed by the hopelessness of it all, and as the days passed her fighting spirit weakened. It was not that she longed any less to get away with Elizabeth, but rather that the atmosphere of the house sapped her initiative as never before. All the fine, brave plans for the future, that had seemed so accessible with Elizabeth in London, became nebulous and difficult to seize. The worries that flourished like brambles around Mrs. Ogden closed in around Joan too, seeming almost insurmountable when viewed in the perspective of Leaside.
Milly watched her sister curiously: "You look like the morning after the night before! What's the matter, Joan?"
"Nothing," said Joan irritably. "Do let me alone!"
"Your jaunt with Elizabeth doesn't seem to have cheered you up much."
"Oh, I'm all right."
"Are you really going to Cambridge, do you think, after all?"
"Will you shut up, Milly! I've told you a hundred times I don't know."
Milly laughed provokingly, but the laugh brought on a paroxysm of coughing; and she gasped, clinging to a chair.
Joan eyed her with resentment. Milly's cough made her unaccountably angry sometimes; it had begun to take on abnormal proportions, to loom as a menace. Her tense nerves throbbed painfully now whenever she heard it.
"Oh, do stop coughing!" she said, and her voice sounded exasperated.