5584 lines
288 KiB
Plaintext
5584 lines
288 KiB
Plaintext
Project Gutenberg Etext of The Unbearable Bassington, by "Saki"
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#2 in our series by "Saki" [H. H. Munro]
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The Unbearable Bassington
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by "Saki" [H. H. Munro]
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June, 1996 [Etext #555]
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Project Gutenberg Etext of The Unbearable Bassington, by "Saki"
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*END*THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.29.93*END*
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The Unbearable Bassington by H. H. Munro (Saki)
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Scanned and proofed by David Price
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ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
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The Unbearable Bassington
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CHAPTER I
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FRANCESCA BASSINGTON sat in the drawing-room of her house in Blue
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Street, W., regaling herself and her estimable brother Henry with
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China tea and small cress sandwiches. The meal was of that elegant
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proportion which, while ministering sympathetically to the desires
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of the moment, is happily reminiscent of a satisfactory luncheon
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and blessedly expectant of an elaborate dinner to come.
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In her younger days Francesca had been known as the beautiful Miss
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Greech; at forty, although much of the original beauty remained,
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she was just dear Francesca Bassington. No one would have dreamed
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of calling her sweet, but a good many people who scarcely knew her
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were punctilious about putting in the "dear."
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Her enemies, in their honester moments, would have admitted that
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she was svelte and knew how to dress, but they would have agreed
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with her friends in asserting that she had no soul. When one's
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friends and enemies agree on any particular point they are usually
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wrong. Francesca herself, if pressed in an unguarded moment to
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describe her soul, would probably have described her drawing-room.
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Not that she would have considered that the one had stamped the
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impress of its character on the other, so that close scrutiny might
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reveal its outstanding features, and even suggest its hidden
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places, but because she might have dimly recognised that her
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drawing-room was her soul.
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Francesca was one of those women towards whom Fate appears to have
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the best intentions and never to carry them into practice. With
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the advantages put at her disposal she might have been expected to
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command a more than average share of feminine happiness. So many
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of the things that make for fretfulness, disappointment and
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discouragement in a woman's life were removed from her path that
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she might well have been considered the fortunate Miss Greech, or
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later, lucky Francesca Bassington. And she was not of the perverse
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band of those who make a rock-garden of their souls by dragging
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into them all the stoney griefs and unclaimed troubles they can
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find lying around them. Francesca loved the smooth ways and
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pleasant places of life; she liked not merely to look on the bright
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side of things but to live there and stay there. And the fact that
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things had, at one time and another, gone badly with her and
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cheated her of some of her early illusions made her cling the
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closer to such good fortune as remained to her now that she seemed
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to have reached a calmer period of her life. To undiscriminating
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friends she appeared in the guise of a rather selfish woman, but it
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was merely the selfishness of one who had seen the happy and
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unhappy sides of life and wished to enjoy to the utmost what was
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left to her of the former. The vicissitudes of fortune had not
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soured her, but they had perhaps narrowed her in the sense of
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making her concentrate much of her sympathies on things that
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immediately pleased and amused her, or that recalled and
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perpetuated the pleasing and successful incidents of other days.
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And it was her drawing-room in particular that enshrined the
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memorials or tokens of past and present happiness.
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Into that comfortable quaint-shaped room of angles and bays and
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alcoves had sailed, as into a harbour, those precious personal
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possessions and trophies that had survived the buffetings and
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storms of a not very tranquil married life. Wherever her eyes
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might turn she saw the embodied results of her successes,
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economies, good luck, good management or good taste. The battle
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had more than once gone against her, but she had somehow always
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contrived to save her baggage train, and her complacent gaze could
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roam over object after object that represented the spoils of
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victory or the salvage of honourable defeat. The delicious bronze
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Fremiet on the mantelpiece had been the outcome of a Grand Prix
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sweepstake of many years ago; a group of Dresden figures of some
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considerable value had been bequeathed to her by a discreet
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admirer, who had added death to his other kindnesses; another group
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had been a self-bestowed present, purchased in blessed and unfading
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memory of a wonderful nine-days' bridge winnings at a country-house
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party. There were old Persian and Bokharan rugs and Worcester tea-
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services of glowing colour, and little treasures of antique silver
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that each enshrined a history or a memory in addition to its own
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intrinsic value. It amused her at times to think of the bygone
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craftsmen and artificers who had hammered and wrought and woven in
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far distant countries and ages, to produce the wonderful and
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beautiful things that had come, one way and another, into her
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possession. Workers in the studios of medieval Italian towns and
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of later Paris, in the bazaars of Baghdad and of Central Asia, in
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old-time English workshops and German factories, in all manner of
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queer hidden corners where craft secrets were jealously guarded,
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nameless unremembered men and men whose names were world-renowned
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and deathless.
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And above all her other treasures, dominating in her estimation
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every other object that the room contained, was the great Van der
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Meulen that had come from her father's home as part of her wedding
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dowry. It fitted exactly into the central wall panel above the
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narrow buhl cabinet, and filled exactly its right space in the
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composition and balance of the room. From wherever you sat it
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seemed to confront you as the dominating feature of its
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surroundings. There was a pleasing serenity about the great
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|
pompous battle scene with its solemn courtly warriors bestriding
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|
their heavily prancing steeds, grey or skewbald or dun, all gravely
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in earnest, and yet somehow conveying the impression that their
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campaigns were but vast serious picnics arranged in the grand
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manner. Francesca could not imagine the drawing-room without the
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crowning complement of the stately well-hung picture, just as she
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could not imagine herself in any other setting than this house in
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Blue Street with its crowded Pantheon of cherished household gods.
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And herein sprouted one of the thorns that obtruded through the
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rose-leaf damask of what might otherwise have been Francesca's
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peace of mind. One's happiness always lies in the future rather
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than in the past. With due deference to an esteemed lyrical
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|
authority one may safely say that a sorrow's crown of sorrow is
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anticipating unhappier things. The house in Blue Street had been
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left to her by her old friend Sophie Chetrof, but only until such
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time as her niece Emmeline Chetrof should marry, when it was to
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pass to her as a wedding present. Emmeline was now seventeen and
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passably good-looking, and four or five years were all that could
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|
be safely allotted to the span of her continued spinsterhood.
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Beyond that period lay chaos, the wrenching asunder of Francesca
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from the sheltering habitation that had grown to be her soul. It
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is true that in imagination she had built herself a bridge across
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the chasm, a bridge of a single span. The bridge in question was
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her schoolboy son Comus, now being educated somewhere in the
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southern counties, or rather one should say the bridge consisted of
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|
the possibility of his eventual marriage with Emmeline, in which
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|
case Francesca saw herself still reigning, a trifle squeezed and
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incommoded perhaps, but still reigning in the house in Blue Street.
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The Van der Meulen would still catch its requisite afternoon light
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|
in its place of honour, the Fremiet and the Dresden and Old
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Worcester would continue undisturbed in their accustomed niches.
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|
Emmeline could have the Japanese snuggery, where Francesca
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|
sometimes drank her after-dinner coffee, as a separate drawing-
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|
room, where she could put her own things. The details of the
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|
bridge structure had all been carefully thought out. Only - it was
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|
an unfortunate circumstance that Comus should have been the span on
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|
which everything balanced.
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Francesca's husband had insisted on giving the boy that strange
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Pagan name, and had not lived long enough to judge as to the
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|
appropriateness, or otherwise, of its significance. In seventeen
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|
years and some odd months Francesca had had ample opportunity for
|
|
forming an opinion concerning her son's characteristics. The
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|
spirit of mirthfulness which one associates with the name certainly
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|
ran riot in the boy, but it was a twisted wayward sort of mirth of
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|
which Francesca herself could seldom see the humorous side. In her
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brother Henry, who sat eating small cress sandwiches as solemnly as
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|
though they had been ordained in some immemorial Book of
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|
Observances, fate had been undisguisedly kind to her. He might so
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|
easily have married some pretty helpless little woman, and lived at
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|
Notting Hill Gate, and been the father of a long string of pale,
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|
clever useless children, who would have had birthdays and the sort
|
|
of illnesses that one is expected to send grapes to, and who would
|
|
have painted fatuous objects in a South Kensington manner as
|
|
Christmas offerings to an aunt whose cubic space for lumber was
|
|
limited. Instead of committing these unbrotherly actions, which
|
|
are so frequent in family life that they might almost be called
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|
brotherly, Henry had married a woman who had both money and a sense
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|
of repose, and their one child had the brilliant virtue of never
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saying anything which even its parents could consider worth
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|
repeating. Then he had gone into Parliament, possibly with the
|
|
idea of making his home life seem less dull; at any rate it
|
|
redeemed his career from insignificance, for no man whose death can
|
|
produce the item "another by-election" on the news posters can be
|
|
wholly a nonentity. Henry, in short, who might have been an
|
|
embarrassment and a handicap, had chosen rather to be a friend and
|
|
counsellor, at times even an emergency bank balance; Francesca on
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|
her part, with the partiality which a clever and lazily-inclined
|
|
woman often feels for a reliable fool, not only sought his counsel
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|
but frequently followed it. When convenient, moreover, she repaid
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his loans.
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Against this good service on the part of Fate in providing her with
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|
Henry for a brother, Francesca could well set the plaguy malice of
|
|
the destiny that had given her Comus for a son. The boy was one of
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|
those untameable young lords of misrule that frolic and chafe
|
|
themselves through nursery and preparatory and public-school days
|
|
with the utmost allowance of storm and dust and dislocation and the
|
|
least possible amount of collar-work, and come somehow with a laugh
|
|
through a series of catastrophes that has reduced everyone else
|
|
concerned to tears or Cassandra-like forebodings. Sometimes they
|
|
sober down in after-life and become uninteresting, forgetting that
|
|
they were ever lords of anything; sometimes Fate plays royally into
|
|
their hands, and they do great things in a spacious manner, and are
|
|
thanked by Parliaments and the Press and acclaimed by gala-day
|
|
crowds. But in most cases their tragedy begins when they leave
|
|
school and turn themselves loose in a world that has grown too
|
|
civilised and too crowded and too empty to have any place for them.
|
|
And they are very many.
|
|
|
|
Henry Greech had made an end of biting small sandwiches, and
|
|
settled down like a dust-storm refreshed, to discuss one of the
|
|
fashionably prevalent topics of the moment, the prevention of
|
|
destitution.
|
|
|
|
"It is a question that is only being nibbled at, smelt at, one
|
|
might say, at the present moment," he observed, "but it is one that
|
|
will have to engage our serious attention and consideration before
|
|
long. The first thing that we shall have to do is to get out of
|
|
the dilettante and academic way of approaching it. We must collect
|
|
and assimilate hard facts. It is a subject that ought to appeal to
|
|
all thinking minds, and yet, you know, I find it surprisingly
|
|
difficult to interest people in it."
|
|
|
|
Francesca made some monosyllabic response, a sort of sympathetic
|
|
grunt which was meant to indicate that she was, to a certain
|
|
extent, listening and appreciating. In reality she was reflecting
|
|
that Henry possibly found it difficult to interest people in any
|
|
topic that he enlarged on. His talents lay so thoroughly in the
|
|
direction of being uninteresting, that even as an eye-witness of
|
|
the massacre of St. Bartholomew he would probably have infused a
|
|
flavour of boredom into his descriptions of the event.
|
|
|
|
"I was speaking down in Leicestershire the other day on this
|
|
subject," continued Henry, "and I pointed out at some length a
|
|
thing that few people ever stop to consider - "
|
|
|
|
Francesca went over immediately but decorously to the majority that
|
|
will not stop to consider.
|
|
|
|
"Did you come across any of the Barnets when you were down there?"
|
|
she interrupted; "Eliza Barnet is rather taken up with all those
|
|
subjects."
|
|
|
|
In the propagandist movements of Sociology, as in other arenas of
|
|
life and struggle, the fiercest competition and rivalry is
|
|
frequently to be found between closely allied types and species.
|
|
Eliza Barnet shared many of Henry Greech's political and social
|
|
views, but she also shared his fondness for pointing things out at
|
|
some length; there had been occasions when she had extensively
|
|
occupied the strictly limited span allotted to the platform oratory
|
|
of a group of speakers of whom Henry Greech had been an impatient
|
|
unit. He might see eye to eye with her on the leading questions of
|
|
the day, but he persistently wore mental blinkers as far as her
|
|
estimable qualities were concerned, and the mention of her name was
|
|
a skilful lure drawn across the trail of his discourse; if
|
|
Francesca had to listen to his eloquence on any subject she much
|
|
preferred that it should be a disparagement of Eliza Barnet rather
|
|
than the prevention of destitution.
|
|
|
|
"I've no doubt she means well," said Henry, "but it would be a good
|
|
thing if she could be induced to keep her own personality a little
|
|
more in the background, and not to imagine that she is the
|
|
necessary mouthpiece of all the progressive thought in the
|
|
countryside. I fancy Canon Besomley must have had her in his mind
|
|
when he said that some people came into the world to shake empires
|
|
and others to move amendments."
|
|
|
|
Francesca laughed with genuine amusement.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose she is really wonderfully well up in all the subjects
|
|
she talks about," was her provocative comment.
|
|
|
|
Henry grew possibly conscious of the fact that he was being drawn
|
|
out on the subject of Eliza Barnet, and he presently turned on to a
|
|
more personal topic.
|
|
|
|
"From the general air of tranquillity about the house I presume
|
|
Comus has gone back to Thaleby," he observed.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Francesca, "he went back yesterday. Of course, I'm
|
|
very fond of him, but I bear the separation well. When he's here
|
|
it's rather like having a live volcano in the house, a volcano that
|
|
in its quietest moments asks incessant questions and uses strong
|
|
scent."
|
|
|
|
"It is only a temporary respite," said Henry; "in a year or two he
|
|
will be leaving school, and then what?"
|
|
|
|
Francesca closed her eyes with the air of one who seeks to shut out
|
|
a distressing vision. She was not fond of looking intimately at
|
|
the future in the presence of another person, especially when the
|
|
future was draped in doubtfully auspicious colours.
|
|
|
|
"And then what?" persisted Henry.
|
|
|
|
"Then I suppose he will be upon my hands."
|
|
|
|
"Exactly."
|
|
|
|
"Don't sit there looking judicial. I'm quite ready to listen to
|
|
suggestions if you've any to make."
|
|
|
|
"In the case of any ordinary boy," said Henry, "I might make lots
|
|
of suggestions as to the finding of suitable employment. From what
|
|
we know of Comus it would be rather a waste of time for either of
|
|
us to look for jobs which he wouldn't look at when we'd got them
|
|
for him."
|
|
|
|
"He must do something," said Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"I know he must; but he never will. At least, he'll never stick to
|
|
anything. The most hopeful thing to do with him will be to marry
|
|
him to an heiress. That would solve the financial side of his
|
|
problem. If he had unlimited money at his disposal, he might go
|
|
into the wilds somewhere and shoot big game. I never know what the
|
|
big game have done to deserve it, but they do help to deflect the
|
|
destructive energies of some of our social misfits."
|
|
|
|
Henry, who never killed anything larger or fiercer than a trout,
|
|
was scornfully superior on the subject of big game shooting.
|
|
|
|
Francesca brightened at the matrimonial suggestion. "I don't know
|
|
about an heiress," she said reflectively. "There's Emmeline
|
|
Chetrof of course. One could hardly call her an heiress, but she's
|
|
got a comfortable little income of her own and I suppose something
|
|
more will come to her from her grandmother. Then, of course, you
|
|
know this house goes to her when she marries."
|
|
|
|
"That would be very convenient," said Henry, probably following a
|
|
line of thought that his sister had trodden many hundreds of times
|
|
before him. "Do she and Comus hit it off at all well together?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, well enough in boy and girl fashion," said Francesca. "I must
|
|
arrange for them to see more of each other in future. By the way,
|
|
that little brother of hers that she dotes on, Lancelot, goes to
|
|
Thaleby this term. I'll write and tell Comus to be specially kind
|
|
to him; that will be a sure way to Emmeline's heart. Comus has
|
|
been made a prefect, you know. Heaven knows why."
|
|
|
|
"It can only be for prominence in games," sniffed Henry; "I think
|
|
we may safely leave work and conduct out of the question."
|
|
|
|
Comus was not a favourite with his uncle.
|
|
|
|
Francesca had turned to her writing cabinet and was hastily
|
|
scribbling a letter to her son in which the delicate health, timid
|
|
disposition and other inevitable attributes of the new boy were
|
|
brought to his notice, and commanded to his care. When she had
|
|
sealed and stamped the envelope Henry uttered a belated caution.
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps on the whole it would be wiser to say nothing about the
|
|
boy to Comus. He doesn't always respond to directions you know."
|
|
|
|
Francesca did know, and already was more than half of her brother's
|
|
opinion; but the woman who can sacrifice a clean unspoiled penny
|
|
stamp is probably yet unborn.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II
|
|
|
|
LANCELOT CHETROF stood at the end of a long bare passage,
|
|
restlessly consulting his watch and fervently wishing himself half
|
|
an hour older with a certain painful experience already registered
|
|
in the past; unfortunately it still belonged to the future, and
|
|
what was still more horrible, to the immediate future. Like many
|
|
boys new to a school he had cultivated an unhealthy passion for
|
|
obeying rules and requirements, and his zeal in this direction had
|
|
proved his undoing. In his hurry to be doing two or three
|
|
estimable things at once he had omitted to study the notice-board
|
|
in more than a perfunctory fashion and had thereby missed a
|
|
football practice specially ordained for newly-joined boys. His
|
|
fellow juniors of a term's longer standing had graphically
|
|
enlightened him as to the inevitable consequences of his lapse; the
|
|
dread which attaches to the unknown was, at any rate, deleted from
|
|
his approaching doom, though at the moment he felt scarcely
|
|
grateful for the knowledge placed at his disposal with such lavish
|
|
solicitude.
|
|
|
|
"You'll get six of the very best, over the back of a chair," said
|
|
one.
|
|
|
|
"They'll draw a chalk line across you, of course you know," said
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
"A chalk line?"
|
|
|
|
"Rather. So that every cut can be aimed exactly at the same spot.
|
|
It hurts much more that way."
|
|
|
|
Lancelot tried to nourish a wan hope that there might be an element
|
|
of exaggeration in this uncomfortably realistic description.
|
|
|
|
Meanwhile in the prefects' room at the other end of the passage,
|
|
Comus Bassington and a fellow prefect sat also waiting on time, but
|
|
in a mood of far more pleasurable expectancy. Comus was one of the
|
|
most junior of the prefect caste, but by no means the least well-
|
|
known, and outside the masters' common-room he enjoyed a certain
|
|
fitful popularity, or at any rate admiration. At football he was
|
|
too erratic to be a really brilliant player, but he tackled as if
|
|
the act of bringing his man headlong to the ground was in itself a
|
|
sensuous pleasure, and his weird swear-words whenever he got hurt
|
|
were eagerly treasured by those who were fortunate enough to hear
|
|
them. At athletics in general he was a showy performer, and
|
|
although new to the functions of a prefect he had already
|
|
established a reputation as an effective and artistic caner. In
|
|
appearance he exactly fitted his fanciful Pagan name. His large
|
|
green-grey eyes seemed for ever asparkle with goblin mischief and
|
|
the joy of revelry, and the curved lips might have been those of
|
|
some wickedly-laughing faun; one almost expected to see embryo
|
|
horns fretting the smoothness of his sleek dark hair. The chin was
|
|
firm, but one looked in vain for a redeeming touch of ill-temper in
|
|
the handsome, half-mocking, half-petulant face. With a strain of
|
|
sourness in him Comus might have been leavened into something
|
|
creative and masterful; fate had fashioned him with a certain
|
|
whimsical charm, and left him all unequipped for the greater
|
|
purposes of life. Perhaps no one would have called him a lovable
|
|
character, but in many respects he was adorable; in all respects he
|
|
was certainly damned.
|
|
|
|
Rutley, his companion of the moment, sat watching him and
|
|
wondering, from the depths of a very ordinary brain, whether he
|
|
liked or hated him; it was easy to do either.
|
|
|
|
"It's not really your turn to cane," he said.
|
|
|
|
"I know it's not," said Comus, fingering a very serviceable-looking
|
|
cane as lovingly as a pious violinist might handle his Strad. "I
|
|
gave Greyson some mint-chocolate to let me toss whether I caned or
|
|
him, and I won. He was rather decent over it and let me have half
|
|
the chocolate back."
|
|
|
|
The droll lightheartedness which won Comus Bassington such measure
|
|
of popularity as he enjoyed among his fellows did not materially
|
|
help to endear him to the succession of masters with whom he came
|
|
in contact during the course of his schooldays. He amused and
|
|
interested such of them as had the saving grace of humour at their
|
|
disposal, but if they sighed when he passed from their immediate
|
|
responsibility it was a sigh of relief rather than of regret. The
|
|
more enlightened and experienced of them realised that he was
|
|
something outside the scope of the things that they were called
|
|
upon to deal with. A man who has been trained to cope with storms,
|
|
to foresee their coming, and to minimise their consequences, may be
|
|
pardoned if he feels a certain reluctance to measure himself
|
|
against a tornado.
|
|
|
|
Men of more limited outlook and with a correspondingly larger
|
|
belief in their own powers were ready to tackle the tornado had
|
|
time permitted.
|
|
|
|
"I think I could tame young Bassington if I had your
|
|
opportunities," a form-master once remarked to a colleague whose
|
|
House had the embarrassing distinction of numbering Comus among its
|
|
inmates.
|
|
|
|
"Heaven forbid that I should try," replied the housemaster.
|
|
|
|
"But why?" asked the reformer.
|
|
|
|
"Because Nature hates any interference with her own arrangements,
|
|
and if you start in to tame the obviously untameable you are taking
|
|
a fearful responsibility on yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Nonsense; boys are Nature's raw material."
|
|
|
|
"Millions of boys are. There are just a few, and Bassington is one
|
|
of them, who are Nature's highly finished product when they are in
|
|
the schoolboy stage, and we, who are supposed to be moulding raw
|
|
material, are quite helpless when we come in contact with them."
|
|
|
|
"But what happens to them when they grow up?"
|
|
|
|
"They never do grow up," said the housemaster; "that is their
|
|
tragedy. Bassington will certainly never grow out of his present
|
|
stage."
|
|
|
|
"Now you are talking in the language of Peter Pan," said the form-
|
|
master.
|
|
|
|
"I am not thinking in the manner of Peter Pan," said the other.
|
|
"With all reverence for the author of that masterpiece I should say
|
|
he had a wonderful and tender insight into the child mind and knew
|
|
nothing whatever about boys. To make only one criticism on that
|
|
particular work, can you imagine a lot of British boys, or boys of
|
|
any country that one knows of, who would stay contentedly playing
|
|
children's games in an underground cave when there were wolves and
|
|
pirates and Red Indians to be had for the asking on the other side
|
|
of the trap door?"
|
|
|
|
The form-master laughed. "You evidently think that the 'Boy who
|
|
would not grow up' must have been written by a 'grown-up who could
|
|
never have been a boy.' Perhaps that is the meaning of the 'Never-
|
|
never Land.' I daresay you're right in your criticism, but I don't
|
|
agree with you about Bassington. He's a handful to deal with, as
|
|
anyone knows who has come in contact with him, but if one's hands
|
|
weren't full with a thousand and one other things I hold to my
|
|
opinion that he could be tamed."
|
|
|
|
And he went his way, having maintained a form-master's inalienable
|
|
privilege of being in the right.
|
|
|
|
* * * * *
|
|
|
|
In the prefects' room, Comus busied himself with the exact position
|
|
of a chair planted out in the middle of the floor.
|
|
|
|
"I think everything's ready," he said.
|
|
|
|
Rutley glanced at the clock with the air of a Roman elegant in the
|
|
Circus, languidly awaiting the introduction of an expected
|
|
Christian to an expectant tiger.
|
|
|
|
"The kid is due in two minutes," he said.
|
|
|
|
"He'd jolly well better not be late," said Comus.
|
|
|
|
Comus had gone through the mill of many scorching castigations in
|
|
his earlier school days, and was able to appreciate to the last
|
|
ounce the panic that must be now possessing his foredoomed victim,
|
|
probably at this moment hovering miserably outside the door. After
|
|
all, that was part of the fun of the thing, and most things have
|
|
their amusing side if one knows where to look for it.
|
|
|
|
There was a knock at the door, and Lancelot entered in response to
|
|
a hearty friendly summons to "come in."
|
|
|
|
"I've come to be caned," he said breathlessly; adding by way of
|
|
identification, "my name's Chetrof."
|
|
|
|
"That's quite bad enough in itself," said Comus, "but there is
|
|
probably worse to follow. You are evidently keeping something back
|
|
from us."
|
|
|
|
"I missed a footer practice," said Lancelot
|
|
|
|
"Six," said Comus briefly, picking up his cane.
|
|
|
|
"I didn't see the notice on the board," hazarded Lancelot as a
|
|
forlorn hope.
|
|
|
|
"We are always pleased to listen to excuses, and our charge is two
|
|
extra cuts. That will be eight. Get over."
|
|
|
|
And Comus indicated the chair that stood in sinister isolation in
|
|
the middle of the room. Never had an article of furniture seemed
|
|
more hateful in Lancelot's eyes. Comus could well remember the
|
|
time when a chair stuck in the middle of a room had seemed to him
|
|
the most horrible of manufactured things.
|
|
|
|
"Lend me a piece of chalk," he said to his brother prefect.
|
|
|
|
Lancelot ruefully recognised the truth of the chalk-line story.
|
|
|
|
Comus drew the desired line with an anxious exactitude which he
|
|
would have scorned to apply to a diagram of Euclid or a map of the
|
|
Russo-Persian frontier.
|
|
|
|
"Bend a little more forward," he said to the victim, "and much
|
|
tighter. Don't trouble to look pleasant, because I can't see your
|
|
face anyway. It may sound unorthodox to say so, but this is going
|
|
to hurt you much more than it will hurt me."
|
|
|
|
There was a carefully measured pause, and then Lancelot was made
|
|
vividly aware of what a good cane can be made to do in really
|
|
efficient hands. At the second cut he projected himself hurriedly
|
|
off the chair.
|
|
|
|
"Now I've lost count," said Comus; "we shall have to begin all over
|
|
again. Kindly get back into the same position. If you get down
|
|
again before I've finished Rutley will hold you over and you'll get
|
|
a dozen."
|
|
|
|
Lancelot got back on to the chair, and was re-arranged to the taste
|
|
of his executioner. He stayed there somehow or other while Comus
|
|
made eight accurate and agonisingly effective shots at the chalk
|
|
line.
|
|
|
|
"By the way," he said to his gasping and gulping victim when the
|
|
infliction was over, "you said Chetrof, didn't you? I believe I've
|
|
been asked to be kind to you. As a beginning you can clean out my
|
|
study this afternoon. Be awfully careful how you dust the old
|
|
china. If you break any don't come and tell me but just go and
|
|
drown yourself somewhere; it will save you from a worse fate."
|
|
|
|
"I don't know where your study is," said Lancelot between his
|
|
chokes.
|
|
|
|
"You'd better find it or I shall have to beat you, really hard this
|
|
time. Here, you'd better keep this chalk in your pocket, it's sure
|
|
to come in handy later on. Don't stop to thank me for all I've
|
|
done, it only embarrasses me."
|
|
|
|
As Comus hadn't got a study Lancelot spent a feverish half-hour in
|
|
looking for it, incidentally missing another footer practice.
|
|
|
|
"Everything is very jolly here," wrote Lancelot to his sister
|
|
Emmeline. "The prefects can give you an awful hot time if they
|
|
like, but most of them are rather decent. Some are Beasts.
|
|
Bassington is a prefect though only a junior one. He is the Limit
|
|
as Beasts go. At least I think so."
|
|
|
|
Schoolboy reticence went no further, but Emmeline filled in the
|
|
gaps for herself with the lavish splendour of feminine imagination.
|
|
Francesca's bridge went crashing into the abyss.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
|
|
ON the evening of a certain November day, two years after the
|
|
events heretofore chronicled, Francesca Bassington steered her way
|
|
through the crowd that filled the rooms of her friend Serena
|
|
Golackly, bestowing nods of vague recognition as she went, but with
|
|
eyes that were obviously intent on focussing one particular figure.
|
|
Parliament had pulled its energies together for an Autumn Session,
|
|
and both political Parties were fairly well represented in the
|
|
throng. Serena had a harmless way of inviting a number of more or
|
|
less public men and women to her house, and hoping that if you left
|
|
them together long enough they would constitute a SALON. In
|
|
pursuance of the same instinct she planted the flower borders at
|
|
her week-end cottage retreat in Surrey with a large mixture of
|
|
bulbs, and called the result a Dutch garden. Unfortunately, though
|
|
you may bring brilliant talkers into your home, you cannot always
|
|
make them talk brilliantly, or even talk at all; what is worse you
|
|
cannot restrict the output of those starling-voiced dullards who
|
|
seem to have, on all subjects, so much to say that was well worth
|
|
leaving unsaid. One group that Francesca passed was discussing a
|
|
Spanish painter, who was forty-three, and had painted thousands of
|
|
square yards of canvas in his time, but of whom no one in London
|
|
had heard till a few months ago; now the starling-voices seemed
|
|
determined that one should hear of very little else. Three women
|
|
knew how his name was pronounced, another always felt that she must
|
|
go into a forest and pray whenever she saw his pictures, another
|
|
had noticed that there were always pomegranates in his later
|
|
compositions, and a man with an indefensible collar knew what the
|
|
pomegranates "meant." "What I think so splendid about him," said a
|
|
stout lady in a loud challenging voice, "is the way he defies all
|
|
the conventions of art while retaining all that the conventions
|
|
stand for." "Ah, but have you noticed - " put in the man with the
|
|
atrocious collar, and Francesca pushed desperately on, wondering
|
|
dimly as she went, what people found so unsupportable in the
|
|
affliction of deafness. Her progress was impeded for a moment by a
|
|
couple engaged in earnest and voluble discussion of some
|
|
smouldering question of the day; a thin spectacled young man with
|
|
the receding forehead that so often denotes advanced opinions, was
|
|
talking to a spectacled young woman with a similar type of
|
|
forehead, and exceedingly untidy hair. It was her ambition in life
|
|
to be taken for a Russian girl-student, and she had spent weeks of
|
|
patient research in trying to find out exactly where you put the
|
|
tea-leaves in a samovar. She had once been introduced to a young
|
|
Jewess from Odessa, who had died of pneumonia the following week;
|
|
the experience, slight as it was, constituted the spectacled young
|
|
lady an authority on all things Russian in the eyes of her
|
|
immediate set.
|
|
|
|
"Talk is helpful, talk is needful," the young man was saying, "but
|
|
what we have got to do is to lift the subject out of the furrow of
|
|
indisciplined talk and place it on the threshing-floor of practical
|
|
discussion."
|
|
|
|
The young woman took advantage of the rhetorical full-stop to dash
|
|
in with the remark which was already marshalled on the tip of her
|
|
tongue.
|
|
|
|
"In emancipating the serfs of poverty we must be careful to avoid
|
|
the mistakes which Russian bureaucracy stumbled into when
|
|
liberating the serfs of the soil."
|
|
|
|
She paused in her turn for the sake of declamatory effect, but
|
|
recovered her breath quickly enough to start afresh on level terms
|
|
with the young man, who had jumped into the stride of his next
|
|
sentence.
|
|
|
|
"They got off to a good start that time," said Francesca to
|
|
herself; "I suppose it's the Prevention of Destitution they're
|
|
hammering at. What on earth would become of these dear good people
|
|
if anyone started a crusade for the prevention of mediocrity?"
|
|
|
|
Midway through one of the smaller rooms, still questing for an
|
|
elusive presence, she caught sight of someone that she knew, and
|
|
the shadow of a frown passed across her face. The object of her
|
|
faintly signalled displeasure was Courtenay Youghal, a political
|
|
spur-winner who seemed absurdly youthful to a generation that had
|
|
never heard of Pitt. It was Youghal's ambition - or perhaps his
|
|
hobby - to infuse into the greyness of modern political life some
|
|
of the colour of Disraelian dandyism, tempered with the correctness
|
|
of Anglo-Saxon taste, and supplemented by the flashes of wit that
|
|
were inherent from the Celtic strain in him. His success was only
|
|
a half-measure. The public missed in him that touch of blatancy
|
|
which it looks for in its rising public men; the decorative
|
|
smoothness of his chestnut-golden hair, and the lively sparkle of
|
|
his epigrams were counted to him for good, but the restrained
|
|
sumptuousness of his waistcoats and cravats were as wasted efforts.
|
|
If he had habitually smoked cigarettes in a pink coral mouthpiece,
|
|
or worn spats of Mackenzie tartan, the great heart of the voting-
|
|
man, and the gush of the paragraph-makers might have been
|
|
unreservedly his. The art of public life consists to a great
|
|
extent of knowing exactly where to stop and going a bit further.
|
|
|
|
It was not Youghal's lack of political sagacity that had brought
|
|
the momentary look of disapproval into Francesca's face. The fact
|
|
was that Comus, who had left off being a schoolboy and was now a
|
|
social problem, had lately enrolled himself among the young
|
|
politician's associates and admirers, and as the boy knew and cared
|
|
nothing about politics, and merely copied Youghal's waistcoats,
|
|
and, less successfully, his conversation, Francesca felt herself
|
|
justified in deploring the intimacy. To a woman who dressed well
|
|
on comparatively nothing a year it was an anxious experience to
|
|
have a son who dressed sumptuously on absolutely nothing.
|
|
|
|
The cloud that had passed over her face when she caught sight of
|
|
the offending Youghal was presently succeeded by a smile of
|
|
gratified achievement, as she encountered a bow of recognition and
|
|
welcome from a portly middle-aged gentleman, who seemed genuinely
|
|
anxious to include her in the rather meagre group that he had
|
|
gathered about him.
|
|
|
|
"We were just talking about my new charge," he observed genially,
|
|
including in the "we" his somewhat depressed-looking listeners, who
|
|
in all human probability had done none of the talking. "I was just
|
|
telling them, and you may be interested to hear this - "
|
|
|
|
Francesca, with Spartan stoicism, continued to wear an ingratiating
|
|
smile, though the character of the deaf adder that stoppeth her ear
|
|
and will not hearken, seemed to her at that moment a beautiful one.
|
|
|
|
Sir Julian Jull had been a member of a House of Commons
|
|
distinguished for its high standard of well-informed mediocrity,
|
|
and had harmonised so thoroughly with his surroundings that the
|
|
most attentive observer of Parliamentary proceedings could scarcely
|
|
have told even on which side of the House he sat. A baronetcy
|
|
bestowed on him by the Party in power had at least removed that
|
|
doubt; some weeks later he had been made Governor of some West
|
|
Indian dependency, whether as a reward for having accepted the
|
|
baronetcy, or as an application of a theory that West Indian
|
|
islands get the Governors they deserve, it would have been hard to
|
|
say. To Sir Julian the appointment was, doubtless, one of some
|
|
importance; during the span of his Governorship the island might
|
|
possibly be visited by a member of the Royal Family, or at the
|
|
least by an earthquake, and in either case his name would get into
|
|
the papers. To the public the matter was one of absolute
|
|
indifference; "who is he and where is it?" would have correctly
|
|
epitomised the sum total of general information on the personal and
|
|
geographical aspects of the case.
|
|
|
|
Francesca, however, from the moment she had heard of the likelihood
|
|
of the appointment, had taken a deep and lively interest in Sir
|
|
Julian. As a Member of Parliament he had not filled any very
|
|
pressing social want in her life, and on the rare occasions when
|
|
she took tea on the Terrace of the House she was wont to lapse into
|
|
rapt contemplation of St. Thomas's Hospital whenever she saw him
|
|
within bowing distance. But as Governor of an island he would, of
|
|
course, want a private secretary, and as a friend and colleague of
|
|
Henry Greech, to whom he was indebted for many little acts of
|
|
political support (they had once jointly drafted an amendment which
|
|
had been ruled out of order), what was more natural and proper than
|
|
that he should let his choice fall on Henry's nephew Comus? While
|
|
privately doubting whether the boy would make the sort of secretary
|
|
that any public man would esteem as a treasure, Henry was
|
|
thoroughly in agreement with Francesca as to the excellence and
|
|
desirability of an arrangement which would transplant that
|
|
troublesome' young animal from the too restricted and conspicuous
|
|
area that centres in the parish of St. James's to some misty corner
|
|
of the British dominion overseas. Brother and sister had conspired
|
|
to give an elaborate and at the same time cosy little luncheon to
|
|
Sir Julian on the very day that his appointment was officially
|
|
announced, and the question of the secretaryship had been mooted
|
|
and sedulously fostered as occasion permitted, until all that was
|
|
now needed to clinch the matter was a formal interview between His
|
|
Excellency and Comus. The boy had from the first shewn very little
|
|
gratification at the prospect of his deportation. To live on a
|
|
remote shark-girt island, as he expressed it, with the Jull family
|
|
as his chief social mainstay, and Sir Julian's conversation as a
|
|
daily item of his existence, did not inspire him with the same
|
|
degree of enthusiasm as was displayed by his mother and uncle, who,
|
|
after all, were not making the experiment. Even the necessity for
|
|
an entirely new outfit did not appeal to his imagination with the
|
|
force that might have been expected. But, however lukewarm his
|
|
adhesion to the project might be, Francesca and her brother were
|
|
clearly determined that no lack of deft persistence on their part
|
|
should endanger its success. It was for the purpose of reminding
|
|
Sir Julian of his promise to meet Comus at lunch on the following
|
|
day, and definitely settle the matter of the secretaryship that
|
|
Francesca was now enduring the ordeal of a long harangue on the
|
|
value of the West Indian group as an Imperial asset. Other
|
|
listeners dexterously detached themselves one by one, but
|
|
Francesca's patience outlasted even Sir Julian's flow of
|
|
commonplaces, and her devotion was duly rewarded by a renewed
|
|
acknowledgment of the lunch engagement and its purpose. She pushed
|
|
her way back through the throng of starling-voiced chatterers
|
|
fortified by a sense of well-earned victory. Dear Serena's absurd
|
|
SALONS served some good purpose after all.
|
|
|
|
Francesca was not an early riser and her breakfast was only just
|
|
beginning to mobilise on the breakfast-table next morning when a
|
|
copy of THE TIMES, sent by special messenger from her brother's
|
|
house, was brought up to her room. A heavy margin of blue
|
|
pencilling drew her attention to a prominently-printed letter which
|
|
bore the ironical heading: "Julian Jull, Proconsul." The matter of
|
|
the letter was a cruel dis-interment of some fatuous and forgotten
|
|
speeches made by Sir Julian to his constituents not many years ago,
|
|
in which the value of some of our Colonial possessions,
|
|
particularly certain West Indian islands, was decried in a medley
|
|
of pomposity, ignorance and amazingly cheap humour. The extracts
|
|
given sounded weak and foolish enough, taken by themselves, but the
|
|
writer of the letter had interlarded them with comments of his own,
|
|
which sparkled with an ironical brilliance that was Cervantes-like
|
|
in its polished cruelty. Remembering her ordeal of the previous
|
|
evening Francesca permitted herself a certain feeling of amusement
|
|
as she read the merciless stabs inflicted on the newly-appointed
|
|
Governor; then she came to the signature at the foot of the letter,
|
|
and the laughter died out of her eyes. "Comus Bassington" stared
|
|
at her from above a thick layer of blue pencil lines marked by
|
|
Henry Greech's shaking hand.
|
|
|
|
Comus could no more have devised such a letter than he could have
|
|
written an Episcopal charge to the clergy of any given diocese. It
|
|
was obviously the work of Courtenay Youghal, and Comus, for a
|
|
palpable purpose of his own, had wheedled him into foregoing for
|
|
once the pride of authorship in a clever piece of political
|
|
raillery, and letting his young friend stand sponsor instead. It
|
|
was a daring stroke, and there could be no question as to its
|
|
success; the secretaryship and the distant shark-girt island faded
|
|
away into the horizon of impossible things. Francesca, forgetting
|
|
the golden rule of strategy which enjoins a careful choosing of
|
|
ground and opportunity before entering on hostilities, made
|
|
straight for the bathroom door, behind which a lively din of
|
|
splashing betokened that Comus had at least begun his toilet.
|
|
|
|
"You wicked boy, what have you done?" she cried, reproachfully.
|
|
|
|
"Me washee," came a cheerful shout; "me washee from the neck all
|
|
the way down to the merrythought, and now washee down from the
|
|
merrythought to - "
|
|
|
|
"You have ruined your future. THE TIMES has printed that miserable
|
|
letter with your signature."
|
|
|
|
A loud squeal of joy came from the bath. "Oh, Mummy! Let me see!"
|
|
|
|
There were sounds as of a sprawling dripping body clambering
|
|
hastily out of the bath. Francesca fled. One cannot effectively
|
|
scold a moist nineteen-year old boy clad only in a bath-towel and a
|
|
cloud of steam.
|
|
|
|
Another messenger arrived before Francesca's breakfast was over.
|
|
This one brought a letter from Sir Julian Jull, excusing himself
|
|
from fulfilment of the luncheon engagement.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
|
|
FRANCESCA prided herself on being able to see things from other
|
|
people's points of view, which meant, as it usually does, that she
|
|
could see her own point of view from various aspects. As regards
|
|
Comus, whose doings and non-doings bulked largely in her thoughts
|
|
at the present moment, she had mapped out in her mind so clearly
|
|
what his outlook in life ought to be, that she was peculiarly
|
|
unfitted to understand the drift of his feelings or the impulses
|
|
that governed them. Fate had endowed her with a son; in limiting
|
|
the endowment to a solitary offspring Fate had certainly shown a
|
|
moderation which Francesca was perfectly willing to acknowledge and
|
|
be thankful for; but then, as she pointed out to a certain
|
|
complacent friend of hers who cheerfully sustained an endowment of
|
|
half-a-dozen male offsprings and a girl or two, her one child was
|
|
Comus. Moderation in numbers was more than counterbalanced in his
|
|
case by extravagance in characteristics.
|
|
|
|
Francesca mentally compared her son with hundreds of other young
|
|
men whom she saw around her, steadily, and no doubt happily,
|
|
engaged in the process of transforming themselves from nice boys
|
|
into useful citizens. Most of them had occupations, or were
|
|
industriously engaged in qualifying for such; in their leisure
|
|
moments they smoked reasonably-priced cigarettes, went to the
|
|
cheaper seats at music-halls, watched an occasional cricket match
|
|
at Lord's with apparent interest, saw most of the world's
|
|
spectacular events through the medium of the cinematograph, and
|
|
were wont to exchange at parting seemingly superfluous injunctions
|
|
to "be good." The whole of Bond Street and many of the tributary
|
|
thoroughfares of Piccadilly might have been swept off the face of
|
|
modern London without in any way interfering with the supply of
|
|
their daily wants. They were doubtless dull as acquaintances, but
|
|
as sons they would have been eminently restful. With a growing
|
|
sense of irritation Francesca compared these deserving young men
|
|
with her own intractable offspring, and wondered why Fate should
|
|
have singled her out to be the parent of such a vexatious variant
|
|
from a comfortable and desirable type. As far as remunerative
|
|
achievement was concerned, Comus copied the insouciance of the
|
|
field lily with a dangerous fidelity. Like his mother he looked
|
|
round with wistful irritation at the example afforded by
|
|
contemporary youth, but he concentrated his attention exclusively
|
|
on the richer circles of his acquaintance, young men who bought
|
|
cars and polo ponies as unconcernedly as he might purchase a
|
|
carnation for his buttonhole, and went for trips to Cairo or the
|
|
Tigris valley with less difficulty and finance-stretching than he
|
|
encountered in contriving a week-end at Brighton.
|
|
|
|
Gaiety and good-looks had carried Comus successfully and, on the
|
|
whole, pleasantly, through schooldays and a recurring succession of
|
|
holidays; the same desirable assets were still at his service to
|
|
advance him along his road, but it was a disconcerting experience
|
|
to find that they could not be relied on to go all distances at all
|
|
times. In an animal world, and a fiercely competitive animal world
|
|
at that, something more was needed than the decorative ABANDON of
|
|
the field lily, and it was just that something more which Comus
|
|
seemed unable or unwilling to provide on his own account; it was
|
|
just the lack of that something more which left him sulking with
|
|
Fate over the numerous breakdowns and stumbling-blocks that held
|
|
him up on what he expected to be a triumphal or, at any rate,
|
|
unimpeded progress.
|
|
|
|
Francesca was, in her own way, fonder of Comus than of anyone else
|
|
in the world, and if he had been browning his skin somewhere east
|
|
of Suez she would probably have kissed his photograph with genuine
|
|
fervour every night before going to bed; the appearance of a
|
|
cholera scare or rumour of native rising in the columns of her
|
|
daily news-sheet would have caused her a flutter of anxiety, and
|
|
she would have mentally likened herself to a Spartan mother
|
|
sacrificing her best-beloved on the altar of State necessities.
|
|
But with the best-beloved installed under her roof, occupying an
|
|
unreasonable amount of cubic space, and demanding daily sacrifices
|
|
instead of providing the raw material for one, her feelings were
|
|
tinged with irritation rather than affection. She might have
|
|
forgiven Comus generously for misdeeds of some gravity committed in
|
|
another continent, but she could never overlook the fact that out
|
|
of a dish of five plovers' eggs he was certain to take three. The
|
|
absent may be always wrong, but they are seldom in a position to be
|
|
inconsiderate.
|
|
|
|
Thus a wall of ice had grown up gradually between mother and son, a
|
|
barrier across which they could hold converse, but which gave a
|
|
wintry chill even to the sparkle of their lightest words. The boy
|
|
had the gift of being irresistibly amusing when he chose to exert
|
|
himself in that direction, and after a long series of moody or
|
|
jangling meal-sittings he would break forth into a torrential flow
|
|
of small talk, scandal and malicious anecdote, true or more
|
|
generally invented, to which Francesca listened with a relish and
|
|
appreciation, that was all the more flattering from being so
|
|
unwillingly bestowed.
|
|
|
|
"If you chose your friends from a rather more reputable set you
|
|
would be doubtless less amusing, but there would be compensating
|
|
advantages."
|
|
|
|
Francesca snapped the remark out at lunch one day when she had been
|
|
betrayed into a broader smile than she considered the circumstances
|
|
of her attitude towards Comus warranted.
|
|
|
|
"I'm going to move in quite decent society to-night," replied Comus
|
|
with a pleased chuckle; "I'm going to meet you and Uncle Henry and
|
|
heaps of nice dull God-fearing people at dinner."
|
|
|
|
Francesca gave a little gasp of surprise and annoyance.
|
|
|
|
"You don't mean to say Caroline has asked you to dinner to-night?"
|
|
she said; "and of course without telling me. How exceedingly like
|
|
her!"
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline Benaresq had reached that age when you can say and do
|
|
what you like in defiance of people's most sensitive feelings and
|
|
most cherished antipathies. Not that she had waited to attain her
|
|
present age before pursuing that line of conduct; she came of a
|
|
family whose individual members went through life, from the nursery
|
|
to the grave, with as much tact and consideration as a cactus-hedge
|
|
might show in going through a crowded bathing tent. It was a
|
|
compensating mercy that they disagreed rather more among themselves
|
|
than they did with the outside world; every known variety and shade
|
|
of religion and politics had been pressed into the family service
|
|
to avoid the possibility of any agreement on the larger essentials
|
|
of life, and such unlooked-for happenings as the Home Rule schism,
|
|
the Tariff-Reform upheaval and the Suffragette crusade were
|
|
thankfully seized on as furnishing occasion for further differences
|
|
and sub-divisions. Lady Caroline's favourite scheme of
|
|
entertaining was to bring jarring and antagonistic elements into
|
|
close contact and play them remorselessly one against the other.
|
|
"One gets much better results under those circumstances" she used
|
|
to observe, "than by asking people who wish to meet each other.
|
|
Few people talk as brilliantly to impress a friend as they do to
|
|
depress an enemy."
|
|
|
|
She admitted that her theory broke down rather badly if you applied
|
|
it to Parliamentary debates. At her own dinner table its success
|
|
was usually triumphantly vindicated.
|
|
|
|
"Who else is to be there?" Francesca asked, with some pardonable
|
|
misgiving.
|
|
|
|
"Courtenay Youghal. He'll probably sit next to you, so you'd
|
|
better think out a lot of annihilating remarks in readiness. And
|
|
Elaine de Frey."
|
|
|
|
"I don't think I've heard of her. Who is she?"
|
|
|
|
"Nobody in particular, but rather nice-looking in a solemn sort of
|
|
way, and almost indecently rich."
|
|
|
|
"Marry her" was the advice which sprang to Francesca's lips, but
|
|
she choked it back with a salted almond, having a rare perception
|
|
of the fact that words are sometimes given to us to defeat our
|
|
purposes.
|
|
|
|
"Caroline has probably marked her down for Toby or one of the
|
|
grand-nephews," she said, carelessly; "a little money would be
|
|
rather useful in that quarter, I imagine."
|
|
|
|
Comus tucked in his underlip with just the shade of pugnacity that
|
|
she wanted to see.
|
|
|
|
An advantageous marriage was so obviously the most sensible course
|
|
for him to embark on that she scarcely dared to hope that he would
|
|
seriously entertain it; yet there was just a chance that if he got
|
|
as far as the flirtation stage with an attractive (and attracted)
|
|
girl who was also an heiress, the sheer perversity of his nature
|
|
might carry him on to more definite courtship, if only from the
|
|
desire to thrust other more genuinely enamoured suitors into the
|
|
background. It was a forlorn hope; so forlorn that the idea even
|
|
crossed her mind of throwing herself on the mercy of her BETE
|
|
NOIRE, Courtenay Youghal, and trying to enlist the influence which
|
|
he seemed to possess over Comus for the purpose of furthering her
|
|
hurriedly conceived project. Anyhow, the dinner promised to be
|
|
more interesting than she had originally anticipated.
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline was a professed Socialist in politics, chiefly, it
|
|
was believed, because she was thus enabled to disagree with most of
|
|
the Liberals and Conservatives, and all the Socialists of the day.
|
|
She did not permit her Socialism, however, to penetrate below
|
|
stairs; her cook and butler had every encouragement to be
|
|
Individualists. Francesca, who was a keen and intelligent food
|
|
critic, harboured no misgivings as to her hostess's kitchen and
|
|
cellar departments; some of the human side-dishes at the feast gave
|
|
her more ground for uneasiness. Courtenay Youghal, for instance,
|
|
would probably be brilliantly silent; her brother Henry would
|
|
almost certainly be the reverse.
|
|
|
|
The dinner party was a large one and Francesca arrived late with
|
|
little time to take preliminary stock of the guests; a card with
|
|
the name, "Miss de Frey," immediately opposite her own place at the
|
|
other side of the table, indicated, however, the whereabouts of the
|
|
heiress. It was characteristic of Francesca that she first
|
|
carefully read the menu from end to end, and then indulged in an
|
|
equally careful though less open scrutiny of the girl who sat
|
|
opposite her, the girl who was nobody in particular, but whose
|
|
income was everything that could be desired. She was pretty in a
|
|
restrained nut-brown fashion, and had a look of grave reflective
|
|
calm that probably masked a speculative unsettled temperament. Her
|
|
pose, if one wished to be critical, was just a little too
|
|
elaborately careless. She wore some excellently set rubies with
|
|
that indefinable air of having more at home that is so difficult to
|
|
improvise. Francesca was distinctly pleased with her survey.
|
|
|
|
"You seem interested in your VIS-A-VIS," said Courtenay Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"I almost think I've seen her before," said Francesca; "her face
|
|
seems familiar to me."
|
|
|
|
"The narrow gallery at the Louvre; attributed to Leonardo da
|
|
Vinci," said Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"Of course," said Francesca, her feelings divided between
|
|
satisfaction at capturing an elusive impression and annoyance that
|
|
Youghal should have been her helper. A stronger tinge of annoyance
|
|
possessed her when she heard the voice of Henry Greech raised in
|
|
painful prominence at Lady Caroline's end of the table.
|
|
|
|
"I called on the Trudhams yesterday," he announced; "it was their
|
|
Silver Wedding, you know, at least the day before was. Such lots
|
|
of silver presents, quite a show. Of course there were a great
|
|
many duplicates, but still, very nice to have. I think they were
|
|
very pleased to get so many."
|
|
|
|
"We must not grudge them their show of presents after their twenty-
|
|
five years of married life," said Lady Caroline, gently; "it is the
|
|
silver lining to their cloud."
|
|
|
|
A third of the guests present were related to the Trudhams.
|
|
|
|
"Lady Caroline is beginning well," murmured Courtenay Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"I should hardly call twenty-five years of married life a cloud,"
|
|
said Henry Greech, lamely.
|
|
|
|
"Don't let's talk about married life," said a tall handsome woman,
|
|
who looked like some modern painter's conception of the goddess
|
|
Bellona; "it's my misfortune to write eternally about husbands and
|
|
wives and their variants. My public expects it of me. I do so
|
|
envy journalists who can write about plagues and strikes and
|
|
Anarchist plots, and other pleasing things, instead of being tied
|
|
down to one stale old topic."
|
|
|
|
"Who is that woman and what has she written?" Francesca asked
|
|
Youghal; she dimly remembered having seen her at one of Serena
|
|
Golackly's gatherings, surrounded by a little Court of admirers.
|
|
|
|
"I forget her name; she has a villa at San Remo or Mentone, or
|
|
somewhere where one does have villas, and plays an extraordinary
|
|
good game of bridge. Also she has the reputation, rather rare in
|
|
your sex, of being a wonderfully sound judge of wine."
|
|
|
|
"But what has she written?"
|
|
|
|
"Oh, several novels of the thinnish ice order. Her last one, 'The
|
|
Woman who wished it was Wednesday,' has been banned at all the
|
|
libraries. I expect you've read it."
|
|
|
|
"I don't see why you should think so," said Francesca, coldly.
|
|
|
|
"Only because Comus lent me your copy yesterday," said Youghal. He
|
|
threw back his handsome head and gave her a sidelong glance of
|
|
quizzical amusement. He knew that she hated his intimacy with
|
|
Comus, and he was secretly rather proud of his influence over the
|
|
boy, shallow and negative though he knew it to be. It had been, on
|
|
his part, an unsought intimacy, and it would probably fall to
|
|
pieces the moment he tried seriously to take up the ROLE of mentor.
|
|
The fact that Comus's mother openly disapproved of the friendship
|
|
gave it perhaps its chief interest in the young politician's eyes.
|
|
|
|
Francesca turned her attention to her brother's end of the table.
|
|
Henry Greech had willingly availed himself of the invitation to
|
|
leave the subject of married life, and had launched forthwith into
|
|
the equally well-worn theme of current politics. He was not a
|
|
person who was in much demand for public meetings, and the House
|
|
showed no great impatience to hear his views on the topics of the
|
|
moment; its impatience, indeed, was manifested rather in the
|
|
opposite direction. Hence he was prone to unburden himself of
|
|
accumulated political wisdom as occasion presented itself -
|
|
sometimes, indeed, to assume an occasion that was hardly visible to
|
|
the naked intelligence.
|
|
|
|
"Our opponents are engaged in a hopelessly uphill struggle, and
|
|
they know it," he chirruped, defiantly; "they've become possessed,
|
|
like the Gadarene swine, with a whole legion of - "
|
|
|
|
"Surely the Gadarene swine went downhill," put in Lady Caroline in
|
|
a gently enquiring voice.
|
|
|
|
Henry Greech hastily abandoned simile and fell back on platitude
|
|
and the safer kinds of fact.
|
|
|
|
Francesca did not regard her brother's views on statecraft either
|
|
in the light of gospel or revelation; as Comus once remarked, they
|
|
more usually suggested exodus. In the present instance she found
|
|
distraction in a renewed scrutiny of the girl opposite her, who
|
|
seemed to be only moderately interested in the conversational
|
|
efforts of the diners on either side of her. Comus who was looking
|
|
and talking his best, was sitting at the further end of the table,
|
|
and Francesca was quick to notice in which direction the girl's
|
|
glances were continually straying. Once or twice the eyes of the
|
|
young people met and a swift flush of pleasure and a half-smile
|
|
that spoke of good understanding came to the heiress's face. It
|
|
did not need the gift of the traditional intuition of her sex to
|
|
enable Francesca to guess that the girl with the desirable banking
|
|
account was already considerably attracted by the lively young
|
|
Pagan who had, when he cared to practise it, such an art of winning
|
|
admiration. For the first time for many, many months Francesca saw
|
|
her son's prospects in a rose-coloured setting, and she began,
|
|
unconsciously, to wonder exactly how much wealth was summed up in
|
|
the expressive label "almost indecently rich." A wife with a
|
|
really large fortune and a correspondingly big dower of character
|
|
and ambition, might, perhaps, succeed in turning Comus's latent
|
|
energies into a groove which would provide him, if not with a
|
|
career, at least with an occupation, and the young serious face
|
|
opposite looked as if its owner lacked neither character or
|
|
ambition. Francesca's speculations took a more personal turn. Out
|
|
of the well-filled coffers with which her imagination was toying,
|
|
an inconsiderable sum might eventually be devoted to the leasing,
|
|
or even perhaps the purchase of, the house in Blue Street when the
|
|
present convenient arrangement should have come to an end, and
|
|
Francesca and the Van der Meulen would not be obliged to seek fresh
|
|
quarters.
|
|
|
|
A woman's voice, talking in a discreet undertone on the other side
|
|
of Courtenay Youghal, broke in on her bridge-building.
|
|
|
|
"Tons of money and really very presentable. Just the wife for a
|
|
rising young politician. Go in and win her before she's snapped up
|
|
by some fortune hunter."
|
|
|
|
Youghal and his instructress in worldly wisdom were looking
|
|
straight across the table at the Leonardo da Vinci girl with the
|
|
grave reflective eyes and the over-emphasised air of repose.
|
|
Francesca felt a quick throb of anger against her match-making
|
|
neighbour; why, she asked herself, must some women, with no end or
|
|
purpose of their own to serve, except the sheer love of meddling in
|
|
the affairs of others, plunge their hands into plots and schemings
|
|
of this sort, in which the happiness of more than one person was
|
|
concerned? And more clearly than ever she realised how thoroughly
|
|
she detested Courtenay Youghal. She had disliked him as an evil
|
|
influence, setting before her son an example of showy ambition that
|
|
he was not in the least likely to follow, and providing him with a
|
|
model of extravagant dandyism that he was only too certain to copy.
|
|
In her heart she knew that Comus would have embarked just as surely
|
|
on his present course of idle self-indulgence if he had never known
|
|
of the existence of Youghal, but she chose to regard that young man
|
|
as her son's evil genius, and now he seemed likely to justify more
|
|
than ever the character she had fastened on to him. For once in
|
|
his life Comus appeared to have an idea of behaving sensibly and
|
|
making some use of his opportunities, and almost at the same moment
|
|
Courtenay Youghal arrived on the scene as a possible and very
|
|
dangerous rival. Against the good looks and fitful powers of
|
|
fascination that Comus could bring into the field, the young
|
|
politician could match half-a-dozen dazzling qualities which would
|
|
go far to recommend him in the eyes of a woman of the world, still
|
|
more in those of a young girl in search of an ideal. Good-looking
|
|
in his own way, if not on such showy lines as Comus, always well
|
|
turned-out, witty, self-confident without being bumptious, with a
|
|
conspicuous Parliamentary career alongside him, and heaven knew
|
|
what else in front of him, Courtenay Youghal certainly was not a
|
|
rival whose chances could be held very lightly. Francesca laughed
|
|
bitterly to herself as she remembered that a few hours ago she had
|
|
entertained the idea of begging for his good offices in helping on
|
|
Comus's wooing. One consolation, at least, she found for herself:
|
|
if Youghal really meant to step in and try and cut out his young
|
|
friend, the latter at any rate had snatched a useful start. Comus
|
|
had mentioned Miss de Frey at luncheon that day, casually and
|
|
dispassionately; if the subject of the dinner guests had not come
|
|
up he would probably not have mentioned her at all. But they were
|
|
obviously already very good friends. It was part and parcel of the
|
|
state of domestic tension at Blue Street that Francesca should only
|
|
have come to know of this highly interesting heiress by an
|
|
accidental sorting of guests at a dinner party.
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline's voice broke in on her reflections; it was a gentle
|
|
purring voice, that possessed an uncanny quality of being able to
|
|
make itself heard down the longest dinner table.
|
|
|
|
"The dear Archdeacon is getting so absent-minded. He read a list
|
|
of box-holders for the opera as the First Lesson the other Sunday,
|
|
instead of the families and lots of the tribes of Israel that
|
|
entered Canaan. Fortunately no one noticed the mistake."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
|
|
ON a conveniently secluded bench facing the Northern Pheasantry in
|
|
the Zoological Society's Gardens, Regent's Park, Courtenay Youghal
|
|
sat immersed in mature flirtation with a lady, who, though
|
|
certainly young in fact and appearance, was some four or five years
|
|
his senior. When he was a schoolboy of sixteen, Molly McQuade had
|
|
personally conducted him to the Zoo and stood him dinner afterwards
|
|
at Kettner's, and whenever the two of them happened to be in town
|
|
on the anniversary of that bygone festivity they religiously
|
|
repeated the programme in its entirety. Even the menu of the
|
|
dinner was adhered to as nearly as possible; the original selection
|
|
of food and wine that schoolboy exuberance, tempered by schoolboy
|
|
shyness, had pitched on those many years ago, confronted Youghal on
|
|
those occasions, as a drowning man's past life is said to rise up
|
|
and parade itself in his last moments of consciousness.
|
|
|
|
The flirtation which was thus perennially restored to its old-time
|
|
footing owed its longevity more to the enterprising solicitude of
|
|
Miss McQuade than to any conscious sentimental effort on the part
|
|
of Youghal himself. Molly McQuade was known to her neighbours in a
|
|
minor hunting shire as a hard-riding conventionally unconventional
|
|
type of young woman, who came naturally into the classification, "a
|
|
good sort." She was just sufficiently good-looking, sufficiently
|
|
reticent about her own illnesses, when she had any, and
|
|
sufficiently appreciative of her neighbours' gardens, children and
|
|
hunters to be generally popular. Most men liked her, and the
|
|
percentage of women who disliked her was not inconveniently high.
|
|
One of these days, it was assumed, she would marry a brewer or a
|
|
Master of Otter Hounds, and, after a brief interval, be known to
|
|
the world as the mother of a boy or two at Malvern or some similar
|
|
seat of learning. The romantic side of her nature was altogether
|
|
unguessed by the country-side.
|
|
|
|
Her romances were mostly in serial form and suffered perhaps in
|
|
fervour from their disconnected course what they gained in length
|
|
of days. Her affectionate interest in the several young men who
|
|
figured in her affairs of the heart was perfectly honest, and she
|
|
certainly made no attempt either to conceal their separate
|
|
existences, or to play them off one against the other. Neither
|
|
could it be said that she was a husband hunter; she had made up her
|
|
mind what sort of man she was likely to marry, and her forecast did
|
|
not differ very widely from that formed by her local acquaintances.
|
|
If her married life were eventually to turn out a failure, at least
|
|
she looked forward to it with very moderate expectations. Her love
|
|
affairs she put on a very different footing and apparently they
|
|
were the all-absorbing element in her life. She possessed the
|
|
happily constituted temperament which enables a man or woman to be
|
|
a "pluralist," and to observe the sage precaution of not putting
|
|
all one's eggs into one basket. Her demands were not exacting; she
|
|
required of her affinity that he should be young, good-looking, and
|
|
at least, moderately amusing; she would have preferred him to be
|
|
invariably faithful, but, with her own example before her, she was
|
|
prepared for the probability, bordering on certainty, that he would
|
|
be nothing of the sort. The philosophy of the "Garden of Kama" was
|
|
the compass by which she steered her barque and thus far, if she
|
|
had encountered some storms and buffeting, she had at least escaped
|
|
being either shipwrecked or becalmed.
|
|
|
|
Courtenay Youghal had not been designed by Nature to fulfil the
|
|
ROLE of an ardent or devoted lover, and he scrupulously respected
|
|
the limits which Nature had laid down. For Molly, however, he had
|
|
a certain responsive affection. She had always obviously admired
|
|
him, and at the same time she never beset him with crude flattery;
|
|
the principal reason why the flirtation had stood the test of so
|
|
many years was the fact that it only flared into active existence
|
|
at convenient intervals. In an age when the telephone has
|
|
undermined almost every fastness of human privacy, and the sanctity
|
|
of one's seclusion depends often on the ability for tactful
|
|
falsehood shown by a club pageboy, Youghal was duly appreciative of
|
|
the circumstance that his lady fair spent a large part of the year
|
|
pursuing foxes, in lieu of pursuing him. Also the honestly
|
|
admitted fact that, in her human hunting, she rode after more than
|
|
one quarry, made the inevitable break-up of the affair a matter to
|
|
which both could look forward without a sense of coming
|
|
embarrassment and recrimination. When the time for gathering ye
|
|
rosebuds should be over, neither of them could accuse the other of
|
|
having wrecked his or her entire life. At the most they would only
|
|
have disorganised a week-end.
|
|
|
|
On this particular afternoon, when old reminiscences had been gone
|
|
through, and the intervening gossip of past months duly recounted,
|
|
a lull in the conversation made itself rather obstinately felt.
|
|
Molly had already guessed that matters were about to slip into a
|
|
new phase; the affair had reached maturity long ago, and a new
|
|
phase must be in the nature of a wane.
|
|
|
|
"You're a clever brute," she said, suddenly, with an air of
|
|
affectionate regret; "I always knew you'd get on in the House, but
|
|
I hardly expected you to come to the front so soon."
|
|
|
|
"I'm coming to the front," admitted Youghal, judicially; "the
|
|
problem is, shall I be able to stay there. Unless something
|
|
happens in the financial line before long, I don't see how I'm to
|
|
stay in Parliament at all. Economy is out of the question. It
|
|
would open people's eyes, I fancy, if they knew how little I exist
|
|
on as it is. And I'm living so far beyond my income that we may
|
|
almost be said to be living apart."
|
|
|
|
"It will have to be a rich wife, I suppose," said Molly, slowly;
|
|
"that's the worst of success, it imposes so many conditions. I
|
|
rather knew, from something in your manner, that you were drifting
|
|
that way."
|
|
|
|
Youghal said nothing in the way of contradiction; he gazed
|
|
steadfastly at the aviary in front of him as though exotic
|
|
pheasants were for the moment the most absorbing study in the
|
|
world. As a matter of fact, his mind was centred on the image of
|
|
Elaine de Frey, with her clear untroubled eyes and her Leonardo da
|
|
Vinci air. He was wondering whether he was likely to fall into a
|
|
frame of mind concerning her which would be in the least like
|
|
falling in love.
|
|
|
|
"I shall mind horribly," continued Molly, after a pause, "but, of
|
|
course, I have always known that something of the sort would have
|
|
to happen one of these days. When a man goes into politics he
|
|
can't call his soul his own, and I suppose his heart becomes an
|
|
impersonal possession in the same way."
|
|
|
|
"Most people who know me would tell you that I haven't got a
|
|
heart," said Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"I've often felt inclined to agree with them," said Molly; "and
|
|
then, now and again, I think you have a heart tucked away
|
|
somewhere."
|
|
|
|
"I hope I have," said Youghal, "because I'm trying to break to you
|
|
the fact that I think I'm falling in love with somebody."
|
|
|
|
Molly McQuade turned sharply to look at her companion, who still
|
|
fixed his gaze on the pheasant run in front of him.
|
|
|
|
"Don't tell me you're losing your head over somebody useless,
|
|
someone without money," she said; "I don't think I could stand
|
|
that."
|
|
|
|
For the moment she feared that Courtenay's selfishness might have
|
|
taken an unexpected turn, in which ambition had given way to the
|
|
fancy of the hour; he might be going to sacrifice his Parliamentary
|
|
career for a life of stupid lounging in momentarily attractive
|
|
company. He quickly undeceived her.
|
|
|
|
"She's got heaps of money."
|
|
|
|
Molly gave a grunt of relief. Her affection for Courtenay had
|
|
produced the anxiety which underlay her first question; a natural
|
|
jealousy prompted the next one.
|
|
|
|
"Is she young and pretty and all that sort of thing, or is she just
|
|
a good sort with a sympathetic manner and nice eyes? As a rule
|
|
that's the kind that goes with a lot of money."
|
|
|
|
"Young and quite good-looking in her way, and a distinct style of
|
|
her own. Some people would call her beautiful. As a political
|
|
hostess I should think she'd be splendid. I imagine I'm rather in
|
|
love with her."
|
|
|
|
"And is she in love with you?"
|
|
|
|
Youghal threw back his head with the slight assertive movement that
|
|
Molly knew and liked.
|
|
|
|
"She's a girl who I fancy would let judgment influence her a lot.
|
|
And without being stupidly conceited, I think I may say she might
|
|
do worse than throw herself away on me. I'm young and quite good-
|
|
looking, and I'm making a name for myself in the House; she'll be
|
|
able to read all sorts of nice and horrid things about me in the
|
|
papers at breakfast-time. I can be brilliantly amusing at times,
|
|
and I understand the value of silence; there is no fear that I
|
|
shall ever degenerate into that fearsome thing - a cheerful
|
|
talkative husband. For a girl with money and social ambitions I
|
|
should think I was rather a good thing."
|
|
|
|
"You are certainly in love, Courtenay," said Molly, "but it's the
|
|
old love and not a new one. I'm rather glad. I should have hated
|
|
to have you head-over-heels in love with a pretty woman, even for a
|
|
short time. You'll be much happier as it is. And I'm going to put
|
|
all my feelings in the background, and tell you to go in and win.
|
|
You've got to marry a rich woman, and if she's nice and will make a
|
|
good hostess, so much the better for everybody. You'll be happier
|
|
in your married life than I shall be in mine, when it comes; you'll
|
|
have other interests to absorb you. I shall just have the garden
|
|
and dairy and nursery and lending library, as like as two peas to
|
|
all the gardens and dairies and nurseries for hundreds of miles
|
|
round. You won't care for your wife enough to be worried every
|
|
time she has a finger-ache, and you'll like her well enough to be
|
|
pleased to meet her sometimes at your own house. I shouldn't
|
|
wonder if you were quite happy. She will probably be miserable,
|
|
but any woman who married you would be."
|
|
|
|
There was a short pause; they were both staring at the pheasant
|
|
cages. Then Molly spoke again, with the swift nervous tone of a
|
|
general who is hurriedly altering the disposition of his forces for
|
|
a strategic retreat.
|
|
|
|
"When you are safely married and honey-mooned and all that sort of
|
|
thing, and have put your wife through her paces as a political
|
|
hostess, some time, when the House isn't sitting, you must come
|
|
down by yourself, and do a little hunting with us. Will you? It
|
|
won't be quite the same as old times, but it will be something to
|
|
look forward to when I'm reading the endless paragraphs about your
|
|
fashionable political wedding."
|
|
|
|
"You're looking forward pretty far," laughed Youghal; "the lady may
|
|
take your view as to the probable unhappiness of a future shared
|
|
with me, and I may have to content myself with penurious political
|
|
bachelorhood. Anyhow, the present is still with us. We dine at
|
|
Kettner's to-night, don't we?"
|
|
|
|
"Rather," said Molly, "though it will be more or less a throat-
|
|
lumpy feast as far as I am concerned. We shall have to drink to
|
|
the health of the future Mrs. Youghal. By the way, it's rather
|
|
characteristic of you that you haven't told me who she is, and of
|
|
me that I haven't asked. And now, like a dear boy, trot away and
|
|
leave me. I haven't got to say good-bye to you yet, but I'm going
|
|
to take a quiet farewell of the Pheasantry. We've had some jolly
|
|
good talks, you and I, sitting on this seat, haven't we? And I
|
|
know, as well as I know anything, that this is the last of them.
|
|
Eight o'clock to-night, as punctually as possible."
|
|
|
|
She watched his retreating figure with eyes that grew slowly misty;
|
|
he had been such a jolly comely boy-friend, and they had had such
|
|
good times together. The mist deepened on her lashes as she looked
|
|
round at the familiar rendezvous where they had so often kept tryst
|
|
since the day when they had first come there together, he a
|
|
schoolboy and she but lately out of her teens. For the moment she
|
|
felt herself in the thrall of a very real sorrow.
|
|
|
|
Then, with the admirable energy of one who is only in town for a
|
|
fleeting fortnight, she raced away to have tea with a world-faring
|
|
naval admirer at his club. Pluralism is a merciful narcotic.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI
|
|
|
|
ELAINE DE FREY sat at ease - at bodily ease - at any rate - in a
|
|
low wicker chair placed under the shade of a group of cedars in the
|
|
heart of a stately spacious garden that had almost made up its mind
|
|
to be a park. The shallow stone basin of an old fountain, on whose
|
|
wide ledge a leaden-moulded otter for ever preyed on a leaden
|
|
salmon, filled a conspicuous place in the immediate foreground.
|
|
Around its rim ran an inscription in Latin, warning mortal man that
|
|
time flows as swiftly as water and exhorting him to make the most
|
|
of his hours; after which piece of Jacobean moralising it set
|
|
itself shamelessly to beguile all who might pass that way into an
|
|
abandonment of contemplative repose. On all sides of it a stretch
|
|
of smooth turf spread away, broken up here and there by groups of
|
|
dwarfish chestnut and mulberry trees, whose leaves and branches
|
|
cast a laced pattern of shade beneath them. On one side the lawn
|
|
sloped gently down to a small lake, whereon floated a quartette of
|
|
swans, their movements suggestive of a certain mournful
|
|
listlessness, as though a weary dignity of caste held them back
|
|
from the joyous bustling life of the lesser waterfowl. Elaine
|
|
liked to imagine that they re-embodied the souls of unhappy boys
|
|
who had been forced by family interests to become high
|
|
ecclesiastical dignitaries and had grown prematurely Right
|
|
Reverend. A low stone balustrade fenced part of the shore of the
|
|
lake, making a miniature terrace above its level, and here roses
|
|
grew in a rich multitude. Other rose bushes, carefully pruned and
|
|
tended, formed little oases of colour and perfume amid the restful
|
|
green of the sward, and in the distance the eye caught the
|
|
variegated blaze of a many-hued hedge of rhododendron. With these
|
|
favoured exceptions flowers were hard to find in this well-ordered
|
|
garden; the misguided tyranny of staring geranium beds and be-
|
|
flowered archways leading to nowhere, so dear to the suburban
|
|
gardener, found no expression here. Magnificent Amherst pheasants,
|
|
whose plumage challenged and almost shamed the peacock on his own
|
|
ground, stepped to and fro over the emerald turf with the assured
|
|
self-conscious pride of reigning sultans. It was a garden where
|
|
summer seemed a part-proprietor rather than a hurried visitor.
|
|
|
|
By the side of Elaine's chair under the shadow of the cedars a
|
|
wicker table was set out with the paraphernalia of afternoon tea.
|
|
On some cushions at her feet reclined Courtenay Youghal, smoothly
|
|
preened and youthfully elegant, the personification of decorative
|
|
repose; equally decorative, but with the showy restlessness of a
|
|
dragonfly, Comus disported his flannelled person over a
|
|
considerable span of the available foreground.
|
|
|
|
The intimacy existing between the two young men had suffered no
|
|
immediate dislocation from the circumstance that they were tacitly
|
|
paying court to the same lady. It was an intimacy founded not in
|
|
the least on friendship or community of tastes and ideas, but owed
|
|
its existence to the fact that each was amused and interested by
|
|
the other. Youghal found Comus, for the time being at any rate,
|
|
just as amusing and interesting as a rival for Elaine's favour as
|
|
he had been in the ROLE of scapegrace boy-about-Town; Comus for his
|
|
part did not wish to lose touch with Youghal, who among other
|
|
attractions possessed the recommendation of being under the ban of
|
|
Comus's mother. She disapproved, it is true, of a great many of
|
|
her son's friends and associates, but this particular one was a
|
|
special and persistent source of irritation to her from the fact
|
|
that he figured prominently and more or less successfully in the
|
|
public life of the day. There was something peculiarly
|
|
exasperating in reading a brilliant and incisive attack on the
|
|
Government's rash handling of public expenditure delivered by a
|
|
young man who encouraged her son in every imaginable extravagance.
|
|
The actual extent of Youghal's influence over the boy was of the
|
|
slightest; Comus was quite capable of deriving encouragement to
|
|
rash outlay and frivolous conversation from an anchorite or an
|
|
East-end parson if he had been thrown into close companionship with
|
|
such an individual. Francesca, however, exercised a mother's
|
|
privilege in assuming her son's bachelor associates to be
|
|
industrious in labouring to achieve his undoing. Therefore the
|
|
young politician was a source of unconcealed annoyance to her, and
|
|
in the same degree as she expressed her disapproval of him Comus
|
|
was careful to maintain and parade the intimacy. Its existence, or
|
|
rather its continued existence, was one of the things that faintly
|
|
puzzled the young lady whose sought-for favour might have been
|
|
expected to furnish an occasion for its rapid dissolution.
|
|
|
|
With two suitors, one of whom at least she found markedly
|
|
attractive, courting her at the same moment, Elaine should have had
|
|
reasonable cause for being on good terms with the world, and with
|
|
herself in particular. Happiness was not, however, at this
|
|
auspicious moment, her dominant mood. The grave calm of her face
|
|
masked as usual a certain degree of grave perturbation. A
|
|
succession of well-meaning governesses and a plentiful supply of
|
|
moralising aunts on both sides of her family, had impressed on her
|
|
young mind the theoretical fact that wealth is a great
|
|
responsibility. The consciousness of her responsibility set her
|
|
continually wondering, not as to her own fitness to discharge her
|
|
"stewardship," but as to the motives and merits of people with whom
|
|
she came in contact. The knowledge that there was so much in the
|
|
world that she could buy, invited speculation as to how much there
|
|
was that was worth buying. Gradually she had come to regard her
|
|
mind as a sort of appeal court before whose secret sittings were
|
|
examined and judged the motives and actions, the motives
|
|
especially, of the world in general. In her schoolroom days she
|
|
had sat in conscientious judgment on the motives that guided or
|
|
misguided Charles and Cromwell and Monck, Wallenstein and
|
|
Savonarola. In her present stage she was equally occupied in
|
|
examining the political sincerity of the Secretary for Foreign
|
|
Affairs, the good-faith of a honey-tongued but possibly loyal-
|
|
hearted waiting-maid, and the disinterestedness of a whole circle
|
|
of indulgent and flattering acquaintances. Even more absorbing,
|
|
and in her eyes, more urgently necessary, was the task of
|
|
dissecting and appraising the characters of the two young men who
|
|
were favouring her with their attentions. And herein lay cause for
|
|
much thinking and some perturbation. Youghal, for example, might
|
|
have baffled a more experienced observer of human nature. Elaine
|
|
was too clever to confound his dandyism with foppishness or self-
|
|
advertisement. He admired his own toilet effect in a mirror from a
|
|
genuine sense of pleasure in a thing good to look upon, just as he
|
|
would feel a sensuous appreciation of the sight of a well-bred,
|
|
well-matched, well-turned-out pair of horses. Behind his careful
|
|
political flippancy and cynicism one might also detect a certain
|
|
careless sincerity, which would probably in the long run save him
|
|
from moderate success, and turn him into one of the brilliant
|
|
failures of his day. Beyond this it was difficult to form an exact
|
|
appreciation of Courtenay Youghal, and Elaine, who liked to have
|
|
her impressions distinctly labelled and pigeon-holed, was
|
|
perpetually scrutinising the outer surface of his characteristics
|
|
and utterances, like a baffled art critic vainly searching beneath
|
|
the varnish and scratches of a doubtfully assigned picture for an
|
|
enlightening signature. The young man added to her perplexities by
|
|
his deliberate policy of never trying to show himself in a
|
|
favourable light even when most anxious to impart a favourable
|
|
impression. He preferred that people should hunt for his good
|
|
qualities, and merely took very good care that as far as possible
|
|
they should never draw blank; even in the matter of selfishness,
|
|
which was the anchor-sheet of his existence, he contrived to be
|
|
noted, and justly noted, for doing remarkably unselfish things. As
|
|
a ruler he would have been reasonably popular; as a husband he
|
|
would probably be unendurable.
|
|
|
|
Comus was to a certain extent as great a mystification as Youghal,
|
|
but here Elaine was herself responsible for some of the perplexity
|
|
which enshrouded his character in her eyes. She had taken more
|
|
than a passing fancy for the boy - for the boy as he might be, that
|
|
was to say - and she was desperately unwilling to see him and
|
|
appraise him as he really was. Thus the mental court of appeal was
|
|
constantly engaged in examining witnesses as to character, most of
|
|
whom signally failed to give any testimony which would support the
|
|
favourable judgment which the tribunal was so anxious to arrive at.
|
|
A woman with wider experience of the world's ways and shortcomings
|
|
would probably have contented herself with an endeavour to find out
|
|
whether her liking for the boy out-weighed her dislike of his
|
|
characteristics; Elaine took her judgments too seriously to
|
|
approach the matter from such a simple and convenient standpoint.
|
|
The fact that she was much more than half in love with Comus made
|
|
it dreadfully important that she should discover him to have a
|
|
lovable soul, and Comus, it must be confessed, did little to help
|
|
forward the discovery.
|
|
|
|
"At any rate he is honest," she would observe to herself, after
|
|
some outspoken admission of unprincipled conduct on his part, and
|
|
then she would ruefully recall certain episodes in which he had
|
|
figured, from which honesty had been conspicuously absent. What
|
|
she tried to label honesty in his candour was probably only a
|
|
cynical defiance of the laws of right and wrong.
|
|
|
|
"You look more than usually thoughtful this afternoon," said Comus
|
|
to her, "as if you had invented this summer day and were trying to
|
|
think out improvements."
|
|
|
|
"If I had the power to create improvements anywhere I think I
|
|
should begin with you," retorted Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"I'm sure it's much better to leave me as I am," protested Comus;
|
|
"you're like a relative of mine up in Argyllshire, who spends his
|
|
time producing improved breeds of sheep and pigs and chickens. So
|
|
patronising and irritating to the Almighty I should think, to go
|
|
about putting superior finishing touches to Creation."
|
|
|
|
Elaine frowned, and then laughed, and finally gave a little sigh.
|
|
|
|
"It's not easy to talk sense to you," she said.
|
|
|
|
"Whatever else you take in hand," said Youghal, "you must never
|
|
improve this garden. It's what our idea of Heaven might be like if
|
|
the Jews hadn't invented one for us on totally different lines.
|
|
It's dreadful that we should accept them as the impresarios of our
|
|
religious dreamland instead of the Greeks."
|
|
|
|
"You are not very fond of the Jews," said Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"I've travelled and lived a good deal in Eastern Europe," said
|
|
Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"It seems largely a question of geography," said Elaine; "in
|
|
England no one really is anti-Semitic."
|
|
|
|
Youghal shook his head. "I know a great many Jews who are."
|
|
|
|
Servants had quietly, almost reverently, placed tea and its
|
|
accessories on the wicker table, and quietly receded from the
|
|
landscape. Elaine sat like a grave young goddess about to dispense
|
|
some mysterious potion to her devotees. Her mind was still sitting
|
|
in judgment on the Jewish question.
|
|
|
|
Comus scrambled to his feet.
|
|
|
|
"It's too hot for tea," he said; "I shall go and feed the swans."
|
|
|
|
And he walked off with a little silver basket-dish containing brown
|
|
bread-and-butter.
|
|
|
|
Elaine laughed quietly.
|
|
|
|
"It's so like Comus," she said, "to go off with our one dish of
|
|
bread-and-butter."
|
|
|
|
Youghal chuckled responsively. It was an undoubted opportunity for
|
|
him to put in some disparaging criticism of Comus, and Elaine sat
|
|
alert in readiness to judge the critic and reserve judgment on the
|
|
criticised.
|
|
|
|
"His selfishness is splendid but absolutely futile," said Youghal;
|
|
"now my selfishness is commonplace, but always thoroughly practical
|
|
and calculated. He will have great difficulty in getting the swans
|
|
to accept his offering, and he incurs the odium of reducing us to a
|
|
bread-and-butterless condition. Incidentally he will get very
|
|
hot."
|
|
|
|
Elaine again had the sense of being thoroughly baffled. If Youghal
|
|
had said anything unkind it was about himself.
|
|
|
|
"If my cousin Suzette had been here," she observed, with the shadow
|
|
of a malicious smile on her lips, "I believe she would have gone
|
|
into a flood of tears at the loss of her bread-and-butter, and
|
|
Comus would have figured ever after in her mind as something black
|
|
and destroying and hateful. In fact I don't really know why we
|
|
took our loss so unprotestingly."
|
|
|
|
"For two reasons," said Youghal; "you are rather fond of Comus.
|
|
And I - am not very fond of bread-and-butter."
|
|
|
|
The jesting remark brought a throb of pleasure to Elaine's heart.
|
|
She had known full well that she cared for Comus, but now that
|
|
Courtenay Youghal had openly proclaimed the fact as something
|
|
unchallenged and understood matters seemed placed at once on a more
|
|
advanced footing. The warm sunlit garden grew suddenly into a
|
|
Heaven that held the secret of eternal happiness. Youth and
|
|
comeliness would always walk here, under the low-boughed mulberry
|
|
trees, as unchanging as the leaden otter that for ever preyed on
|
|
the leaden salmon on the edge of the old fountain, and somehow the
|
|
lovers would always wear the aspect of herself and the boy who was
|
|
talking to the four white swans by the water steps. Youghal was
|
|
right; this was the real Heaven of one's dreams and longings,
|
|
immeasurably removed from that Rue de la Paix Paradise about which
|
|
one professed utterly insincere hankerings in places of public
|
|
worship. Elaine drank her tea in a happy silence; besides being a
|
|
brilliant talker Youghal understood the rarer art of being a non-
|
|
talker on occasion.
|
|
|
|
Comus came back across the grass swinging the empty basket-dish in
|
|
his hand.
|
|
|
|
"Swans were very pleased," he cried, gaily, "and said they hoped I
|
|
would keep the bread-and-butter dish as a souvenir of a happy tea-
|
|
party. I may really have it, mayn't I?" he continued in an anxious
|
|
voice; "it will do to keep studs and things in. You don't want
|
|
it."
|
|
|
|
"It's got the family crest on it," said Elaine. Some of the
|
|
happiness had died out of her eyes.
|
|
|
|
"I'll have that scratched off and my own put on," said Comus.
|
|
|
|
"It's been in the family for generations," protested Elaine, who
|
|
did not share Comus's view that because you were rich your lesser
|
|
possessions could have no value in your eyes.
|
|
|
|
"I want it dreadfully," said Comus, sulkily, "and you've heaps of
|
|
other things to put bread-and-butter in."
|
|
|
|
For the moment he was possessed by an overmastering desire to keep
|
|
the dish at all costs; a look of greedy determination dominated his
|
|
face, and he had not for an instant relaxed his grip of the coveted
|
|
object.
|
|
|
|
Elaine was genuinely angry by this time, and was busily telling
|
|
herself that it was absurd to be put out over such a trifle; at the
|
|
same moment a sense of justice was telling her that Comus was
|
|
displaying a good deal of rather shabby selfishness. And somehow
|
|
her chief anxiety at the moment was to keep Courtenay Youghal from
|
|
seeing that she was angry.
|
|
|
|
"I know you don't really want it, so I'm going to keep it,"
|
|
persisted Comus.
|
|
|
|
"It's too hot to argue," said Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"Happy mistress of your destinies," laughed Youghal; "you can suit
|
|
your disputations to the desired time and temperature. I have to
|
|
go and argue, or what is worse, listen to other people's arguments,
|
|
in a hot and doctored atmosphere suitable to an invalid lizard."
|
|
|
|
"You haven't got to argue about a bread-and-butter dish," said
|
|
Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"Chiefly about bread-and-butter," said Youghal; "our great
|
|
preoccupation is other people's bread-and-butter. They earn or
|
|
produce the material, but we busy ourselves with making rules how
|
|
it shall be cut up, and the size of the slices, and how much butter
|
|
shall go on how much bread. That is what is called legislation.
|
|
If we could only make rules as to how the bread-and-butter should
|
|
be digested we should be quite happy."
|
|
|
|
Elaine had been brought up to regard Parliaments as something to be
|
|
treated with cheerful solemnity, like illness or family re-unions.
|
|
Youghal's flippant disparagement of the career in which he was
|
|
involved did not, however, jar on her susceptibilities. She knew
|
|
him to be not only a lively and effective debater but an
|
|
industrious worker on committees. If he made light of his labours,
|
|
at least he afforded no one else a loophole for doing so. And
|
|
certainly, the Parliamentary atmosphere was not inviting on this
|
|
hot afternoon.
|
|
|
|
"When must you go?" she asked, sympathetically.
|
|
|
|
Youghal looked ruefully at his watch. Before he could answer, a
|
|
cheerful hoot came through the air, as of an owl joyously
|
|
challenging the sunlight with a foreboding of the coming night. He
|
|
sprang laughing to his feet.
|
|
|
|
"Listen! My summons back to my galley," he cried. "The Gods have
|
|
given me an hour in this enchanted garden, so I must not complain."
|
|
|
|
Then in a lower voice he almost whispered, "It's the Persian debate
|
|
to-night,"
|
|
|
|
It was the one hint he had given in the midst of his talking and
|
|
laughing that he was really keenly enthralled in the work that lay
|
|
before him. It was the one little intimate touch that gave Elaine
|
|
the knowledge that he cared for her opinion of his work.
|
|
|
|
Comus, who had emptied his cigarette-case, became suddenly
|
|
clamorous at the prospect of being temporarily stranded without a
|
|
smoke. Youghal took the last remaining cigarette from his own case
|
|
and gravely bisected it.
|
|
|
|
"Friendship could go no further," he observed, as he gave one-half
|
|
to the doubtfully appeased Comus, and lit the other himself.
|
|
|
|
"There are heaps more in the hall," said Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"It was only done for the Saint Martin of Tours effect," said
|
|
Youghal; "I hate smoking when I'm rushing through the air. Good-
|
|
bye."
|
|
|
|
The departing galley-slave stepped forth into the sunlight, radiant
|
|
and confident. A few minutes later Elaine could see glimpses of
|
|
his white car as it rushed past the rhododendron bushes. He woos
|
|
best who leaves first, particularly if he goes forth to battle or
|
|
the semblance of battle.
|
|
|
|
Somehow Elaine's garden of Eternal Youth had already become clouded
|
|
in its imagery. The girl-figure who walked in it was still
|
|
distinctly and unchangingly herself, but her companion was more
|
|
blurred and undefined, as a picture that has been superimposed on
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
Youghal sped townward well satisfied with himself. To-morrow, he
|
|
reflected, Elaine would read his speech in her morning paper, and
|
|
he knew in advance that it was not going to be one of his worst
|
|
efforts. He knew almost exactly where the punctuations of laughter
|
|
and applause would burst in, he knew that nimble fingers in the
|
|
Press Gallery would be taking down each gibe and argument as he
|
|
flung it at the impassive Minister confronting him, and that the
|
|
fair lady of his desire would be able to judge what manner of young
|
|
man this was who spent his afternoon in her garden, lazily chaffing
|
|
himself and his world.
|
|
|
|
And he further reflected, with an amused chuckle, that she would be
|
|
vividly reminded of Comus for days to come, when she took her
|
|
afternoon tea, and saw the bread-and-butter reposing in an
|
|
unaccustomed dish.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
TOWARDS four o'clock on a hot afternoon Francesca stepped out from
|
|
a shop entrance near the Piccadilly end of Bond Street and ran
|
|
almost into the arms of Merla Blathlington. The afternoon seemed
|
|
to get instantly hotter. Merla was one of those human flies that
|
|
buzz; in crowded streets, at bazaars and in warm weather, she
|
|
attained to the proportions of a human bluebottle. Lady Caroline
|
|
Benaresq had openly predicted that a special fly-paper was being
|
|
reserved for her accommodation in another world; others, however,
|
|
held the opinion that she would be miraculously multiplied in a
|
|
future state, and that four or more Merla Blathlingtons, according
|
|
to deserts, would be in perpetual and unremitting attendance on
|
|
each lost soul.
|
|
|
|
"Here we are," she cried, with a glad eager buzz, "popping in and
|
|
out of shops like rabbits; not that rabbits do pop in and out of
|
|
shops very extensively."
|
|
|
|
It was evidently one of her bluebottle days.
|
|
|
|
"Don't you love Bond Street?" she gabbled on. "There's something
|
|
so unusual and distinctive about it; no other street anywhere else
|
|
is quite like it. Don't you know those ikons and images and things
|
|
scattered up and down Europe, that are supposed to have been
|
|
painted or carved, as the case may be, by St. Luke or Zaccheus, or
|
|
somebody of that sort; I always like to think that some notable
|
|
person of those times designed Bond Street. St. Paul, perhaps. He
|
|
travelled about a lot."
|
|
|
|
"Not in Middlesex, though," said Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"One can't be sure," persisted Merla; "when one wanders about as
|
|
much as he did one gets mixed up and forgets where one HAS been. I
|
|
can never remember whether I've been to the Tyrol twice and St.
|
|
Moritz once, or the other way about; I always have to ask my maid.
|
|
And there's something about the name Bond that suggests St. Paul;
|
|
didn't he write a lot about the bond and the free?"
|
|
|
|
"I fancy he wrote in Hebrew or Greek," objected Francesca; "the
|
|
word wouldn't have the least resemblance."
|
|
|
|
"So dreadfully non-committal to go about pamphleteering in those
|
|
bizarre languages," complained Merla; "that's what makes all those
|
|
people so elusive. As soon as you try to pin them down to a
|
|
definite statement about anything you're told that some vitally
|
|
important word has fifteen other meanings in the original. I
|
|
wonder our Cabinet Ministers and politicians don't adopt a sort of
|
|
dog-Latin or Esperanto jargon to deliver their speeches in; what a
|
|
lot of subsequent explaining away would be saved. But to go back
|
|
to Bond Street - not that we've left it - "
|
|
|
|
"I'm afraid I must leave it now," said Francesca, preparing to turn
|
|
up Grafton Street; "Good-bye."
|
|
|
|
"Must you be going? Come and have tea somewhere. I know of a cosy
|
|
little place where one can talk undisturbed."
|
|
|
|
Francesca repressed a shudder and pleaded an urgent engagement.
|
|
|
|
"I know where you're going," said Merla, with the resentful buzz of
|
|
a bluebottle that finds itself thwarted by the cold unreasoning
|
|
resistance of a windowpane. "You're going to play bridge at Serena
|
|
Golackly's. She never asks me to her bridge parties."
|
|
|
|
Francesca shuddered openly this time; the prospect of having to
|
|
play bridge anywhere in the near neighbourhood of Merla's voice was
|
|
not one that could be contemplated with ordinary calmness.
|
|
|
|
"Good-bye," she said again firmly, and passed out of earshot; it
|
|
was rather like leaving the machinery section of an exhibition.
|
|
Merla's diagnosis of her destination had been a correct one;
|
|
Francesca made her way slowly through the hot streets in the
|
|
direction of Serena Golackly's house on the far side of Berkeley
|
|
Square. To the blessed certainty of finding a game of bridge, she
|
|
hopefully added the possibility of hearing some fragments of news
|
|
which might prove interesting and enlightening. And of
|
|
enlightenment on a particular subject, in which she was acutely and
|
|
personally interested, she stood in some need. Comus of late had
|
|
been provokingly reticent as to his movements and doings; partly,
|
|
perhaps, because it was his nature to be provoking, partly because
|
|
the daily bickerings over money matters were gradually choking
|
|
other forms of conversation. Francesca had seen him once or twice
|
|
in the Park in the desirable company of Elaine de Frey, and from
|
|
time to time she heard of the young people as having danced
|
|
together at various houses; on the other hand, she had seen and
|
|
heard quite as much evidence to connect the heiress's name with
|
|
that of Courtenay Youghal. Beyond this meagre and conflicting and
|
|
altogether tantalising information, her knowledge of the present
|
|
position of affairs did not go. If either of the young men was
|
|
seriously "making the running," it was probable that she would hear
|
|
some sly hint or open comment about it from one of Serena's gossip-
|
|
laden friends, without having to go out of her way to introduce the
|
|
subject and unduly disclose her own state of ignorance. And a game
|
|
of bridge, played for moderately high points, gave ample excuse for
|
|
convenient lapses into reticence; if questions took an
|
|
embarrassingly inquisitive turn, one could always find refuge in a
|
|
defensive spade.
|
|
|
|
The afternoon was too warm to make bridge a generally popular
|
|
diversion, and Serena's party was a comparatively small one. Only
|
|
one table was incomplete when Francesca made her appearance on the
|
|
scene; at it was seated Serena herself, confronted by Ada
|
|
Spelvexit, whom everyone was wont to explain as "one of the
|
|
Cheshire Spelvexits," as though any other variety would have been
|
|
intolerable. Ada Spelvexit was one of those naturally stagnant
|
|
souls who take infinite pleasure in what are called "movements."
|
|
"Most of the really great lessons I have learned have been taught
|
|
me by the Poor," was one of her favourite statements. The one
|
|
great lesson that the Poor in general would have liked to have
|
|
taught her, that their kitchens and sickrooms were not unreservedly
|
|
at her disposal as private lecture halls, she had never been able
|
|
to assimilate. She was ready to give them unlimited advice as to
|
|
how they should keep the wolf from their doors, but in return she
|
|
claimed and enforced for herself the penetrating powers of an east
|
|
wind or a dust storm. Her visits among her wealthier acquaintances
|
|
were equally extensive and enterprising, and hardly more welcome;
|
|
in country-house parties, while partaking to the fullest extent of
|
|
the hospitality offered her, she made a practice of unburdening
|
|
herself of homilies on the evils of leisure and luxury, which did
|
|
not particularly endear her to her fellow guests. Hostesses
|
|
regarded her philosophically as a form of social measles which
|
|
everyone had to have once.
|
|
|
|
The third prospective player, Francesca noted without any special
|
|
enthusiasm, was Lady Caroline Benaresq. Lady Caroline was far from
|
|
being a remarkably good bridge player, but she always managed to
|
|
domineer mercilessly over any table that was favoured with her
|
|
presence, and generally managed to win. A domineering player
|
|
usually inflicts the chief damage and demoralisation on his
|
|
partner; Lady Caroline's special achievement was to harass and
|
|
demoralise partner and opponents alike.
|
|
|
|
"Weak and weak," she announced in her gentle voice, as she cut her
|
|
hostess for a partner; "I suppose we had better play only five
|
|
shillings a hundred."
|
|
|
|
Francesca wondered at the old woman's moderate assessment of the
|
|
stake, knowing her fondness for highish play and her usual good
|
|
luck in card holding.
|
|
|
|
"I don't mind what we play," said Ada Spelvexit, with an incautious
|
|
parade of elegant indifference; as a matter of fact she was
|
|
inwardly relieved and rejoicing at the reasonable figure proposed
|
|
by Lady Caroline, and she would certainly have demurred if a higher
|
|
stake had been suggested. She was not as a rule a successful
|
|
player, and money lost at cards was always a poignant bereavement
|
|
to her.
|
|
|
|
"Then as you don't mind we'll make it ten shillings a hundred,"
|
|
said Lady Caroline, with the pleased chuckle of one who has spread
|
|
a net in the sight of a bird and disproved the vanity of the
|
|
proceeding.
|
|
|
|
It proved a tiresome ding-dong rubber, with the strength of the
|
|
cards slightly on Francesca's side, and the luck of the table going
|
|
mostly the other way. She was too keen a player not to feel a
|
|
certain absorption in the game once it had started, but she was
|
|
conscious to-day of a distracting interest that competed with the
|
|
momentary importance of leads and discards and declarations. The
|
|
little accumulations of talk that were unpent during the dealing of
|
|
the hands became as noteworthy to her alert attention as the play
|
|
of the hands themselves.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, quite a small party this afternoon," said Serena, in reply to
|
|
a seemingly casual remark on Francesca's part; "and two or three
|
|
non-players, which is unusual on a Wednesday. Canon Besomley was
|
|
here just before you came; you know, the big preaching man."
|
|
|
|
"I've been to hear him scold the human race once or twice," said
|
|
Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"A strong man with a wonderfully strong message," said Ada
|
|
Spelvexit, in an impressive and assertive tone.
|
|
|
|
"The sort of popular pulpiteer who spanks the vices of his age and
|
|
lunches with them afterwards," said Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
"Hardly a fair summary of the man and his work," protested Ada.
|
|
"I've been to hear him many times when I've been depressed or
|
|
discouraged, and I simply can't tell you the impression his words
|
|
leave - "
|
|
|
|
"At least you can tell us what you intend to make trumps," broke in
|
|
Lady Caroline, gently.
|
|
|
|
"Diamonds," pronounced Ada, after a rather flurried survey of her
|
|
hand.
|
|
|
|
"Doubled," said Lady Caroline, with increased gentleness, and a few
|
|
minutes later she was pencilling an addition of twenty-four to her
|
|
score.
|
|
|
|
"I stayed with his people down in Herefordshire last May," said
|
|
Ada, returning to the unfinished theme of the Canon; "such an
|
|
exquisite rural retreat, and so restful and healing to the nerves.
|
|
Real country scenery; apple blossom everywhere."
|
|
|
|
"Surely only on the apple trees," said Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
Ada Spelvexit gave up the attempt to reproduce the decorative
|
|
setting of the Canon's homelife, and fell back on the small but
|
|
practical consolation of scoring the odd trick in her opponent's
|
|
declaration of hearts.
|
|
|
|
"If you had led your highest club to start with, instead of the
|
|
nine, we should have saved the trick," remarked Lady Caroline to
|
|
her partner in a tone of coldly, gentle reproof; "it's no use, my
|
|
dear," she continued, as Serena flustered out a halting apology,
|
|
"no earthly use to attempt to play bridge at one table and try to
|
|
see and hear what's going on at two or three other tables."
|
|
|
|
"I can generally manage to attend to more than one thing at a
|
|
time," said Serena, rashly; "I think I must have a sort of double
|
|
brain."
|
|
|
|
"Much better to economise and have one really good one," observed
|
|
Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
"LA BELLE DAME SANS MERCI scoring a verbal trick or two as usual,"
|
|
said a player at another table in a discreet undertone.
|
|
|
|
"Did I tell you Sir Edward Roan is coming to my next big evening,"
|
|
said Serena, hurriedly, by way, perhaps, of restoring herself a
|
|
little in her own esteem.
|
|
|
|
"Poor dear, good Sir Edward. What have you made trumps?" asked
|
|
Lady Caroline, in one breath.
|
|
|
|
"Clubs," said Francesca; "and pray, why these adjectives of
|
|
commiseration?"
|
|
|
|
Francesca was a Ministerialist by family interest and allegiance,
|
|
and was inclined to take up the cudgels at the suggested
|
|
disparagement aimed at the Foreign Secretary.
|
|
|
|
"He amuses me so much," purred Lady Caroline. Her amusement was
|
|
usually of the sort that a sporting cat derives from watching the
|
|
Swedish exercises of a well-spent and carefully thought-out mouse.
|
|
|
|
"Really? He has been rather a brilliant success at the Foreign
|
|
Office, you know," said Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"He reminds one so of a circus elephant - infinitely more
|
|
intelligent than the people who direct him, but quite content to go
|
|
on putting his foot down or taking it up as may be required, quite
|
|
unconcerned whether he steps on a meringue or a hornet's nest in
|
|
the process of going where he's expected to go."
|
|
|
|
"How can you say such things?" protested Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"I can't," said Lady Caroline; "Courtenay Youghal said it in the
|
|
House last night. Didn't you read the debate? He was really
|
|
rather in form. I disagree entirely with his point of view, of
|
|
course, but some of the things he says have just enough truth
|
|
behind them to redeem them from being merely smart; for instance,
|
|
his summing up of the Government's attitude towards our
|
|
embarrassing Colonial Empire in the wistful phrase 'happy is the
|
|
country that has no geography.'"
|
|
|
|
"What an absurdly unjust thing to say," put in Francesca; "I
|
|
daresay some of our Party at some time have taken up that attitude,
|
|
but every one knows that Sir Edward is a sound Imperialist at
|
|
heart."
|
|
|
|
"Most politicians are something or other at heart, but no one would
|
|
be rash enough to insure a politician against heart failure.
|
|
Particularly when he happens to be in office."
|
|
|
|
"Anyhow, I don't see that the Opposition leaders would have acted
|
|
any differently in the present case," said Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"One should always speak guardedly of the Opposition leaders," said
|
|
Lady Caroline, in her gentlest voice; "one never knows what a turn
|
|
in the situation may do for them."
|
|
|
|
"You mean they may one day be at the head of affairs?" asked
|
|
Serena, briskly.
|
|
|
|
"I mean they may one day lead the Opposition. One never knows."
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline had just remembered that her hostess was on the
|
|
Opposition side in politics.
|
|
|
|
Francesca and her partner scored four tricks in clubs; the game
|
|
stood irresolutely at twenty-four all.
|
|
|
|
"If you had followed the excellent lyrical advice given to the Maid
|
|
of Athens and returned my heart we should have made two more tricks
|
|
and gone game," said Lady Caroline to her partner.
|
|
|
|
"Mr. Youghal seems pushing himself to the fore of late," remarked
|
|
Francesca, as Serena took up the cards to deal. Since the young
|
|
politician's name had been introduced into their conversation the
|
|
opportunity for turning the talk more directly on him and his
|
|
affairs was too good to be missed.
|
|
|
|
"I think he's got a career before him," said Serena; "the House
|
|
always fills when he's speaking, and that's a good sign. And then
|
|
he's young and got rather an attractive personality, which is
|
|
always something in the political world."
|
|
|
|
"His lack of money will handicap him, unless he can find himself a
|
|
rich wife or persuade someone to die and leave him a fat legacy,"
|
|
said Francesca; "since M.P.'s have become the recipients of a
|
|
salary rather more is expected and demanded of them in the
|
|
expenditure line than before."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, the House of Commons still remains rather at the opposite
|
|
pole to the Kingdom of Heaven as regards entrance qualifications,"
|
|
observed Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
"There ought to be no difficulty about Youghal picking up a girl
|
|
with money," said Serena; "with his prospects he would make an
|
|
excellent husband for any woman with social ambitions."
|
|
|
|
And she half sighed, as though she almost regretted that a previous
|
|
matrimonial arrangement precluded her from entering into the
|
|
competition on her own account.
|
|
|
|
Francesca, under an assumption of languid interest, was watching
|
|
Lady Caroline narrowly for some hint of suppressed knowledge of
|
|
Youghal's courtship of Miss de Frey.
|
|
|
|
"Whom are you marrying and giving in marriage?"
|
|
|
|
The question came from George St. Michael, who had strayed over
|
|
from a neighbouring table, attracted by the fragments of small-talk
|
|
that had reached his ears.
|
|
|
|
St. Michael was one of those dapper bird-like illusorily-active
|
|
men, who seem to have been in a certain stage of middle-age for as
|
|
long as human memory can recall them. A close-cut peaked beard
|
|
lent a certain dignity to his appearance - a loan which the rest of
|
|
his features and mannerisms were continually and successfully
|
|
repudiating. His profession, if he had one, was submerged in his
|
|
hobby, which consisted of being an advance-agent for small
|
|
happenings or possible happenings that were or seemed imminent in
|
|
the social world around him; he found a perpetual and unflagging
|
|
satisfaction in acquiring and retailing any stray items of gossip
|
|
or information, particularly of a matrimonial nature, that chanced
|
|
to come his way. Given the bare outline of an officially announced
|
|
engagement he would immediately fill it in with all manner of
|
|
details, true or, at any rate, probable, drawn from his own
|
|
imagination or from some equally exclusive source. The MORNING
|
|
POST might content itself with the mere statement of the
|
|
arrangement which would shortly take place, but it was St.
|
|
Michael's breathless little voice that proclaimed how the
|
|
contracting parties had originally met over a salmon-fishing
|
|
incident, why the Guards' Chapel would not be used, why her Aunt
|
|
Mary had at first opposed the match, how the question of the
|
|
children's religious upbringing had been compromised, etc., etc.,
|
|
to all whom it might interest and to many whom it might not.
|
|
Beyond his industriously-earned pre-eminence in this special branch
|
|
of intelligence, he was chiefly noteworthy for having a wife
|
|
reputed to be the tallest and thinnest woman in the Home Counties.
|
|
The two were sometimes seen together in Society, where they passed
|
|
under the collective name of St. Michael and All Angles.
|
|
|
|
"We are trying to find a rich wife for Courtenay Youghal," said
|
|
Serena, in answer to St. Michael's question.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, there I'm afraid you're a little late," he observed, glowing
|
|
with the importance of pending revelation; "I'm afraid you're a
|
|
little late," he repeated, watching the effect of his words as a
|
|
gardener might watch the development of a bed of carefully tended
|
|
asparagus. "I think the young gentleman has been before you and
|
|
already found himself a rich mate in prospect."
|
|
|
|
He lowered his voice as he spoke, not with a view to imparting
|
|
impressive mystery to his statement, but because there were other
|
|
table groups within hearing to whom he hoped presently to have the
|
|
privilege of re-disclosing his revelation.
|
|
|
|
"Do you mean - ?" began Serena.
|
|
|
|
"Miss de Frey," broke in St. Michael, hurriedly, fearful lest his
|
|
revelation should be forestalled, even in guesswork; "quite an
|
|
ideal choice, the very wife for a man who means to make his mark in
|
|
politics. Twenty-four thousand a year, with prospects of more to
|
|
come, and a charming place of her own not too far from town. Quite
|
|
the type of girl, too, who will make a good political hostess,
|
|
brains without being brainy, you know. Just the right thing. Of
|
|
course, it would be premature to make any definite announcement at
|
|
present - "
|
|
|
|
"It would hardly be premature for my partner to announce what she
|
|
means to make trumps," interrupted Lady Caroline, in a voice of
|
|
such sinister gentleness that St. Michael fled headlong back to his
|
|
own table.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, is it me? I beg your pardon. I leave it," said Serena.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you. No trumps," declared Lady Caroline. The hand was
|
|
successful, and the rubber ultimately fell to her with a
|
|
comfortable margin of honours. The same partners cut together
|
|
again, and this time the cards went distinctly against Francesca
|
|
and Ada Spelvexit, and a heavily piled-up score confronted them at
|
|
the close of the rubber. Francesca was conscious that a certain
|
|
amount of rather erratic play on her part had at least contributed
|
|
to the result. St. Michael's incursion into the conversation had
|
|
proved rather a powerful distraction to her ordinarily sound
|
|
bridge-craft.
|
|
|
|
Ada Spelvexit emptied her purse of several gold pieces and infused
|
|
a corresponding degree of superiority into her manner.
|
|
|
|
"I must be going now," she announced; "I'm dining early. I have to
|
|
give an address to some charwomen afterwards."
|
|
|
|
"Why?" asked Lady Caroline, with a disconcerting directness that
|
|
was one of her most formidable characteristics.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, well, I have some things to say to them that I daresay they
|
|
will like to hear," said Ada, with a thin laugh.
|
|
|
|
Her statement was received with a silence that betokened profound
|
|
unbelief in any such probability.
|
|
|
|
"I go about a good deal among working-class women," she added.
|
|
|
|
"No one has ever said it," observed Lady Caroline, "but how
|
|
painfully true it is that the poor have us always with them."
|
|
|
|
Ada Spelvexit hastened her departure; the marred impressiveness of
|
|
her retreat came as a culminating discomfiture on the top of her
|
|
ill-fortune at the card-table. Possibly, however, the
|
|
multiplication of her own annoyances enabled her to survey
|
|
charwomen's troubles with increased cheerfulness. None of them, at
|
|
any rate, had spent an afternoon with Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
Francesca cut in at another table and with better fortune attending
|
|
on her, succeeded in winning back most of her losses. A sense of
|
|
satisfaction was distinctly dominant as she took leave of her
|
|
hostess. St. Michael's gossip, or rather the manner in which it
|
|
had been received, had given her a clue to the real state of
|
|
affairs, which, however slender and conjectural, at least pointed
|
|
in the desired direction. At first she had been horribly afraid
|
|
lest she should be listening to a definite announcement which would
|
|
have been the death-blow to her hopes, but as the recitation went
|
|
on without any of those assured little minor details which St.
|
|
Michael so loved to supply, she had come to the conclusion that it
|
|
was merely a piece of intelligent guesswork. And if Lady Caroline
|
|
had really believed in the story of Elaine de Frey's virtual
|
|
engagement to Courtenay Youghal she would have taken a malicious
|
|
pleasure in encouraging St. Michael in his confidences, and in
|
|
watching Francesca's discomfiture under the recital. The irritated
|
|
manner in which she had cut short the discussion betrayed the fact,
|
|
that, as far as the old woman's information went, it was Comus and
|
|
not Courtenay Youghal who held the field. And in this particular
|
|
case Lady Caroline's information was likely to be nearer the truth
|
|
than St. Michael's confident gossip.
|
|
|
|
Francesca always gave a penny to the first crossing-sweeper or
|
|
match-seller she chanced across after a successful sitting at
|
|
bridge. This afternoon she had come out of the fray some fifteen
|
|
shillings to the bad, but she gave two pennies to a crossing-
|
|
sweeper at the north-west corner of Berkeley Square as a sort of
|
|
thank-offering to the Gods.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
|
|
|
IT was a fresh rain-repentant afternoon, following a morning that
|
|
had been sultry and torrentially wet by turns; the sort of
|
|
afternoon that impels people to talk graciously of the rain as
|
|
having done a lot of good, its chief merit in their eyes probably
|
|
having been its recognition of the art of moderation. Also it was
|
|
an afternoon that invited bodily activity after the convalescent
|
|
languor of the earlier part of the day. Elaine had instinctively
|
|
found her way into her riding-habit and sent an order down to the
|
|
stables - a blessed oasis that still smelt sweetly of horse and hay
|
|
and cleanliness in a world that reeked of petrol, and now she set
|
|
her mare at a smart pace through a succession of long-stretching
|
|
country lanes. She was due some time that afternoon at a garden-
|
|
party, but she rode with determination in an opposite direction.
|
|
In the first place neither Comus or Courtenay would be at the
|
|
party, which fact seemed to remove any valid reason that could be
|
|
thought of for inviting her attendance thereat; in the second place
|
|
about a hundred human beings would be gathered there, and human
|
|
gatherings were not her most crying need at the present moment.
|
|
Since her last encounter with her wooers, under the cedars in her
|
|
own garden, Elaine realised that she was either very happy or
|
|
cruelly unhappy, she could not quite determine which. She seemed
|
|
to have what she most wanted in the world lying at her feet, and
|
|
she was dreadfully uncertain in her more reflective moments whether
|
|
she really wanted to stretch out her hand and take it. It was all
|
|
very like some situation in an Arabian Nights tale or a story of
|
|
Pagan Hellas, and consequently the more puzzling and disconcerting
|
|
to a girl brought up on the methodical lines of Victorian
|
|
Christianity. Her appeal court was in permanent session these last
|
|
few days, but it gave no decisions, at least none that she would
|
|
listen to. And the ride on her fast light-stepping little mare,
|
|
alone and unattended, through the fresh-smelling leafy lanes into
|
|
unexplored country, seemed just what she wanted at the moment. The
|
|
mare made some small delicate pretence of being roadshy, not the
|
|
staring dolt-like kind of nervousness that shows itself in an
|
|
irritating hanging-back as each conspicuous wayside object presents
|
|
itself, but the nerve-flutter of an imaginative animal that merely
|
|
results in a quick whisk of the head and a swifter bound forward.
|
|
She might have paraphrased the mental attitude of the immortalised
|
|
Peter Bell into
|
|
|
|
A basket underneath a tree
|
|
A yellow tiger is to me,
|
|
If it is nothing more.
|
|
|
|
The more really alarming episodes of the road, the hoot and whir of
|
|
a passing motor-car or the loud vibrating hum of a wayside
|
|
threshing-machine, were treated with indifference.
|
|
|
|
On turning a corner out of a narrow coppice-bordered lane into a
|
|
wider road that sloped steadily upward in a long stretch of hill
|
|
Elaine saw, coming toward her at no great distance, a string of
|
|
yellow-painted vans, drawn for the most part by skewbald or
|
|
speckled horses. A certain rakish air about these oncoming road-
|
|
craft proclaimed them as belonging to a travelling wild-beast show,
|
|
decked out in the rich primitive colouring that one's taste in
|
|
childhood would have insisted on before it had been schooled in the
|
|
artistic value of dulness. It was an unlooked-for and distinctly
|
|
unwelcome encounter. The mare had already commenced a sixfold
|
|
scrutiny with nostrils, eyes and daintily-pricked ears; one ear
|
|
made hurried little backward movements to hear what Elaine was
|
|
saying about the eminent niceness and respectability of the
|
|
approaching caravan, but even Elaine felt that she would be unable
|
|
satisfactorily to explain the elephants and camels that would
|
|
certainly form part of the procession. To turn back would seem
|
|
rather craven, and the mare might take fright at the manoeuvre and
|
|
try to bolt; a gate standing ajar at the entrance to a farmyard
|
|
lane provided a convenient way out of the difficulty.
|
|
|
|
As Elaine pushed her way through she became aware of a man standing
|
|
just inside the lane, who made a movement forward to open the gate
|
|
for her.
|
|
|
|
"Thank you. I'm just getting out of the way of a wild-beast show,"
|
|
she explained; "my mare is tolerant of motors and traction-engines,
|
|
but I expect camels - hullo," she broke off, recognising the man as
|
|
an old acquaintance, "I heard you had taken rooms in a farmhouse
|
|
somewhere. Fancy meeting you in this way."
|
|
|
|
In the not very distant days of her little-girlhood, Tom Keriway
|
|
had been a man to be looked upon with a certain awe and envy;
|
|
indeed the glamour of his roving career would have fired the
|
|
imagination, and wistful desire to do likewise, of many young
|
|
Englishmen. It seemed to be the grown-up realisation of the games
|
|
played in dark rooms in winter fire-lit evenings, and the dreams
|
|
dreamed over favourite books of adventure. Making Vienna his
|
|
headquarters, almost his home, he had rambled where he listed
|
|
through the lands of the Near and Middle East as leisurely and
|
|
thoroughly as tamer souls might explore Paris. He had wandered
|
|
through Hungarian horse-fairs, hunted shy crafty beasts on lonely
|
|
Balkan hillsides, dropped himself pebble-wise into the stagnant
|
|
human pool of some Bulgarian monastery, threaded his way through
|
|
the strange racial mosaic of Salonika, listened with amused
|
|
politeness to the shallow ultra-modern opinions of a voluble editor
|
|
or lawyer in some wayside Russian town, or learned wisdom from a
|
|
chance tavern companion, one of the atoms of the busy ant-stream of
|
|
men and merchandise that moves untiringly round the shores of the
|
|
Black Sea. And far and wide as he might roam he always managed to
|
|
turn up at frequent intervals, at ball and supper and theatre, in
|
|
the gay Hauptstadt of the Habsburgs, haunting his favourite cafes
|
|
and wine-vaults, skimming through his favourite news-sheets,
|
|
greeting old acquaintances and friends, from ambassadors down to
|
|
cobblers in the social scale. He seldom talked of his travels, but
|
|
it might be said that his travels talked of him; there was an air
|
|
about him that a German diplomat once summed up in a phrase: "a man
|
|
that wolves have sniffed at."
|
|
|
|
And then two things happened, which he had not mapped out in his
|
|
route; a severe illness shook half the life and all the energy out
|
|
of him, and a heavy money loss brought him almost to the door of
|
|
destitution. With something, perhaps, of the impulse which drives
|
|
a stricken animal away from its kind, Tom Keriway left the haunts
|
|
where he had known so much happiness, and withdrew into the shelter
|
|
of a secluded farmhouse lodging; more than ever he became to Elaine
|
|
a hearsay personality. And now the chance meeting with the caravan
|
|
had flung her across the threshold of his retreat.
|
|
|
|
"What a charming little nook you've got hold of," she exclaimed
|
|
with instinctive politeness, and then looked searchingly round, and
|
|
discovered that she had spoken the truth; it really was charming.
|
|
The farmhouse had that intensely English look that one seldom sees
|
|
out of Normandy. Over the whole scene of rickyard, garden,
|
|
outbuildings, horsepond and orchard, brooded that air which seems
|
|
rightfully to belong to out-of-the-way farmyards, an air of wakeful
|
|
dreaminess which suggests that here, man and beast and bird have
|
|
got up so early that the rest of the world has never caught them up
|
|
and never will.
|
|
|
|
Elaine dismounted, and Keriway led the mare round to a little
|
|
paddock by the side of a great grey barn. At the end of the lane
|
|
they could see the show go past, a string of lumbering vans and
|
|
great striding beasts that seemed to link the vast silences of the
|
|
desert with the noises and sights and smells, the naphtha-flares
|
|
and advertisement hoardings and trampled orange-peel, of an endless
|
|
succession of towns.
|
|
|
|
"You had better let the caravan pass well on its way before you get
|
|
on the road again," said Keriway; "the smell of the beasts may make
|
|
your mare nervous and restive going home."
|
|
|
|
Then he called to a boy who was busy with a hoe among some
|
|
defiantly prosperous weeds, to fetch the lady a glass of milk and a
|
|
piece of currant loaf.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know when I've seen anything so utterly charming and
|
|
peaceful," said Elaine, propping herself on a seat that a pear-tree
|
|
had obligingly designed in the fantastic curve of its trunk.
|
|
|
|
"Charming, certainly," said Keriway, "but too full of the stress of
|
|
its own little life struggle to be peaceful. Since I have lived
|
|
here I've learnt, what I've always suspected, that a country
|
|
farmhouse, set away in a world of its own, is one of the most
|
|
wonderful studies of interwoven happenings and tragedies that can
|
|
be imagined. It is like the old chronicles of medieval Europe in
|
|
the days when there was a sort of ordered anarchy between feudal
|
|
lords and overlords, and burg-grafs, and mitred abbots, and prince-
|
|
bishops, robber barons and merchant guilds, and Electors and so
|
|
forth, all striving and contending and counter-plotting, and
|
|
interfering with each other under some vague code of loosely-
|
|
applied rules. Here one sees it reproduced under one's eyes, like
|
|
a musty page of black-letter come to life. Look at one little
|
|
section of it, the poultry-life on the farm. Villa poultry, dull
|
|
egg-machines, with records kept of how many ounces of food they
|
|
eat, and how many pennyworths of eggs they lay, give you no idea of
|
|
the wonder-life of these farm-birds; their feuds and jealousies,
|
|
and carefully maintained prerogatives, their unsparing tyrannies
|
|
and persecutions, their calculated courage and bravado or
|
|
sedulously hidden cowardice, it might all be some human chapter
|
|
from the annals of the old Rhineland or medieval Italy. And then,
|
|
outside their own bickering wars and hates, the grim enemies that
|
|
come up against them from the woodlands; the hawk that dashes among
|
|
the coops like a moss-trooper raiding the border, knowing well that
|
|
a charge of shot may tear him to bits at any moment. And the
|
|
stoat, a creeping slip of brown fur a few inches long, intently and
|
|
unstayably out for blood. And the hunger-taught master of craft,
|
|
the red fox, who has waited perhaps half the afternoon for his
|
|
chance while the fowls were dusting themselves under the hedge, and
|
|
just as they were turning supper-ward to the yard one has stopped a
|
|
moment to give her feathers a final shake and found death springing
|
|
upon her. Do you know," he continued, as Elaine fed herself and
|
|
the mare with morsels of currant-loaf, "I don't think any tragedy
|
|
in literature that I have ever come across impressed me so much as
|
|
the first one, that I spelled out slowly for myself in words of
|
|
three letters: the bad fox has got the red hen. There was
|
|
something so dramatically complete about it; the badness of the
|
|
fox, added to all the traditional guile of his race, seemed to
|
|
heighten the horror of the hen's fate, and there was such a
|
|
suggestion of masterful malice about the word 'got.' One felt that
|
|
a countryside in arms would not get that hen away from the bad fox.
|
|
They used to think me a slow dull reader for not getting on with my
|
|
lesson, but I used to sit and picture to myself the red hen, with
|
|
its wings beating helplessly, screeching in terrified protest, or
|
|
perhaps, if he had got it by the neck, with beak wide agape and
|
|
silent, and eyes staring, as it left the farm-yard for ever. I
|
|
have seen blood-spillings and down-crushings and abject defeat here
|
|
and there in my time, but the red hen has remained in my mind as
|
|
the type of helpless tragedy." He was silent for a moment as if he
|
|
were again musing over the three-letter drama that had so dwelt in
|
|
his childhood's imagination. "Tell me some of the things you have
|
|
seen in your time," was the request that was nearly on Elaine's
|
|
lips, but she hastily checked herself and substituted another.
|
|
|
|
"Tell me more about the farm, please."
|
|
|
|
And he told her of a whole world, or rather of several intermingled
|
|
worlds, set apart in this sleepy hollow in the hills, of beast lore
|
|
and wood lore and farm craft, at times touching almost the border
|
|
of witchcraft - passing lightly here, not with the probing
|
|
eagerness of those who know nothing, but with the averted glance of
|
|
those who fear to see too much. He told her of those things that
|
|
slept and those that prowled when the dusk fell, of strange hunting
|
|
cats, of the yard swine and the stalled cattle, of the farm folk
|
|
themselves, as curious and remote in their way, in their ideas and
|
|
fears and wants and tragedies, as the brutes and feathered stock
|
|
that they tended. It seemed to Elaine as if a musty store of old-
|
|
world children's books had been fetched down from some cobwebbed
|
|
lumber-room and brought to life. Sitting there in the little
|
|
paddock, grown thickly with tall weeds and rank grasses, and
|
|
shadowed by the weather-beaten old grey barn, listening to this
|
|
chronicle of wonderful things, half fanciful, half very real, she
|
|
could scarcely believe that a few miles away there was a garden-
|
|
party in full swing, with smart frocks and smart conversation,
|
|
fashionable refreshments and fashionable music, and a fevered
|
|
undercurrent of social strivings and snubbings. Did Vienna and the
|
|
Balkan Mountains and the Black Sea seem as remote and hard to
|
|
believe in, she wondered, to the man sitting by her side, who had
|
|
discovered or invented this wonderful fairyland? Was it a true and
|
|
merciful arrangement of fate and life that the things of the moment
|
|
thrust out the after-taste of the things that had been? Here was
|
|
one who had held much that was priceless in the hollow of his hand
|
|
and lost it all, and he was happy and absorbed and well-content
|
|
with the little wayside corner of the world into which he had
|
|
crept. And Elaine, who held so many desirable things in the hollow
|
|
of her hand, could not make up her mind to be even moderately
|
|
happy. She did not even know whether to take this hero of her
|
|
childhood down from his pedestal, or to place him on a higher one;
|
|
on the whole she was inclined to resent rather than approve the
|
|
idea that ill-health and misfortune could so completely subdue and
|
|
tame an erstwhile bold and roving spirit.
|
|
|
|
The mare was showing signs of delicately-hinted impatience; the
|
|
paddock, with its teasing insects and very indifferent grazing, had
|
|
not thrust out the image of her own comfortable well-foddered
|
|
loose-box. Elaine divested her habit of some remaining crumbs of
|
|
bun-loaf and jumped lightly on to her saddle. As she rode slowly
|
|
down the lane, with Keriway escorting her as far as its gate, she
|
|
looked round at what had seemed to her, a short while ago, just a
|
|
picturesque old farmstead, a place of bee-hives and hollyhocks and
|
|
gabled cart-sheds; now it was in her eyes a magic city, with an
|
|
under-current of reality beneath its magic.
|
|
|
|
"You are a person to be envied," she said to Keriway; "you have
|
|
created a fairyland, and you are living in it yourself."
|
|
|
|
"Envied?"
|
|
|
|
He shot the question out with sudden bitterness. She looked down
|
|
and saw the wistful misery that had come into his face.
|
|
|
|
"Once," he said to her, "in a German paper I read a short story
|
|
about a tame crippled crane that lived in the park of some small
|
|
town. I forget what happened in the story, but there was one line
|
|
that I shall always remember: 'it was lame, that is why it was
|
|
tame.'"
|
|
|
|
He had created a fairyland, but assuredly he was not living in it.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
|
|
IN the warmth of a late June morning the long shaded stretch of
|
|
raked earth, gravel-walk and rhododendron bush that is known
|
|
affectionately as the Row was alive with the monotonous movement
|
|
and alert stagnation appropriate to the time and place. The
|
|
seekers after health, the seekers after notoriety and recognition,
|
|
and the lovers of good exercise were all well represented on the
|
|
galloping ground; the gravel-walk and chairs and long seats held a
|
|
population whose varied instincts and motives would have baffled a
|
|
social catalogue-maker. The children, handled or in perambulators,
|
|
might be excused from instinct or motive; they were brought.
|
|
|
|
Pleasingly conspicuous among a bunch of indifferent riders pacing
|
|
along by the rails where the onlookers were thickest was Courtenay
|
|
Youghal, on his handsome plum-roan gelding Anne de Joyeuse. That
|
|
delicately stepping animal had taken a prize at Islington and
|
|
nearly taken the life of a stable-boy of whom he disapproved, but
|
|
his strongest claims to distinction were his good looks and his
|
|
high opinion of himself. Youghal evidently believed in thorough
|
|
accord between horse and rider.
|
|
|
|
"Please stop and talk to me," said a quiet beckoning voice from the
|
|
other side of the rails, and Youghal drew rein and greeted Lady
|
|
Veula Croot. Lady Veula had married into a family of commercial
|
|
solidity and enterprising political nonentity. She had a devoted
|
|
husband, some blonde teachable children, and a look of unutterable
|
|
weariness in her eyes. To see her standing at the top of an
|
|
expensively horticultured staircase receiving her husband's guests
|
|
was rather like watching an animal performing on a music-hall
|
|
stage.
|
|
|
|
One always tells oneself that the animal likes it, and one always
|
|
knows that it doesn't.
|
|
|
|
"Lady Veula is an ardent Free Trader, isn't she?" someone once
|
|
remarked to Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
"I wonder," said Lady Caroline, in her gently questioning voice; "a
|
|
woman whose dresses are made in Paris and whose marriage has been
|
|
made in Heaven might be equally biassed for and against free
|
|
imports."
|
|
|
|
Lady Veula looked at Youghal and his mount with slow critical
|
|
appraisement, and there was a note of blended raillery and
|
|
wistfulness in her voice.
|
|
|
|
"You two dear things, I should love to stroke you both, but I'm not
|
|
sure how Joyeuse would take it. So I'll stroke you down verbally
|
|
instead. I admired your attack on Sir Edward immensely, though of
|
|
course I don't agree with a word of it. Your description of him
|
|
building a hedge round the German cuckoo and hoping he was
|
|
isolating it was rather sweet. Seriously though, I regard him as
|
|
one of the pillars of the Administration."
|
|
|
|
"So do I," said Youghal; "the misfortune is that he is merely
|
|
propping up a canvas roof. It's just his regrettable solidity and
|
|
integrity that makes him so expensively dangerous. The average
|
|
Briton arrives at the same judgment about Roan's handling of
|
|
foreign affairs as Omar does of the Supreme Being in his dealings
|
|
with the world: He's a good fellow and 'twill all be well.'"
|
|
|
|
Lady Veula laughed lightly. "My Party is in power so I may
|
|
exercise the privilege of being optimistic. Who is that who bowed
|
|
to you?" she continued, as a dark young man with an inclination to
|
|
stoutness passed by them on foot; "I've seen him about a good deal
|
|
lately. He's been to one or two of my dances."
|
|
|
|
"Andrei Drakoloff," said Youghal; "he's just produced a play that
|
|
has had a big success in Moscow and is certain to be extremely
|
|
popular all over Russia. In the first three acts the heroine is
|
|
supposed to be dying of consumption; in the last act they find she
|
|
is really dying of cancer."
|
|
|
|
"Are the Russians really such a gloomy people?"
|
|
|
|
"Gloom-loving but not in the least gloomy. They merely take their
|
|
sadness pleasurably, just as we are accused of taking our pleasures
|
|
sadly. Have you noticed that dreadful Klopstock youth has been
|
|
pounding past us at shortening intervals. He'll come up and talk
|
|
if he half catches your eye."
|
|
|
|
"I only just know him. Isn't he at an agricultural college or
|
|
something of the sort?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, studying to be a gentleman farmer, he told me. I didn't ask
|
|
if both subjects were compulsory."
|
|
|
|
"You're really rather dreadful," said Lady Veula, trying to look as
|
|
if she thought so; "remember, we are all equal in the sight of
|
|
Heaven."
|
|
|
|
For a preacher of wholesome truths her voice rather lacked
|
|
conviction.
|
|
|
|
"If I and Ernest Klopstock are really equal in the sight of
|
|
Heaven," said Youghal, with intense complacency, "I should
|
|
recommend Heaven to consult an eye specialist."
|
|
|
|
There was a heavy spattering of loose earth, and a squelching of
|
|
saddle-leather, as the Klopstock youth lumbered up to the rails and
|
|
delivered himself of loud, cheerful greetings. Joyeuse laid his
|
|
ears well back as the ungainly bay cob and his appropriately
|
|
matched rider drew up beside him; his verdict was reflected and
|
|
endorsed by the cold stare of Youghal's eyes.
|
|
|
|
"I've been having a nailing fine time," recounted the newcomer with
|
|
clamorous enthusiasm; "I was over in Paris last month and had lots
|
|
of strawberries there, then I had a lot more in London, and now
|
|
I've been having a late crop of them in Herefordshire, so I've had
|
|
quite a lot this year." And he laughed as one who had deserved
|
|
well and received well of Fate.
|
|
|
|
"The charm of that story," said Youghal, "is that it can be told in
|
|
any drawing-room." And with a sweep of his wide-brimmed hat to
|
|
Lady Veula he turned the impatient Joyeuse into the moving stream
|
|
of horse and horsemen.
|
|
|
|
"That woman reminds me of some verse I've read and liked," thought
|
|
Youghal, as Joyeuse sprang into a light showy canter that gave full
|
|
recognition to the existence of observant human beings along the
|
|
side walk. "Ah, I have it."
|
|
|
|
And he quoted almost aloud, as one does in the exhilaration of a
|
|
canter:
|
|
|
|
"How much I loved that way you had
|
|
Of smiling most, when very sad,
|
|
A smile which carried tender hints
|
|
Of sun and spring,
|
|
And yet, more than all other thing,
|
|
Of weariness beyond all words."
|
|
|
|
And having satisfactorily fitted Lady Veula on to a quotation he
|
|
dismissed her from his mind. With the constancy of her sex she
|
|
thought about him, his good looks and his youth and his railing
|
|
tongue, till late in the afternoon.
|
|
|
|
While Youghal was putting Joyeuse through his paces under the elm
|
|
trees of the Row a little drama in which he was directly interested
|
|
was being played out not many hundred yards away. Elaine and Comus
|
|
were indulging themselves in two pennyworths of Park chair, drawn
|
|
aside just a little from the serried rows of sitters who were set
|
|
out like bedded plants over an acre or so of turf. Comus was, for
|
|
the moment, in a mood of pugnacious gaiety, disbursing a fund of
|
|
pointed criticism and unsparing anecdote concerning those of the
|
|
promenaders or loungers whom he knew personally or by sight.
|
|
Elaine was rather quieter than usual, and the grave serenity of the
|
|
Leonardo da Vinci portrait seemed intensified in her face this
|
|
morning. In his leisurely courtship Comus had relied almost
|
|
exclusively on his physical attraction and the fitful drollery of
|
|
his wit and high spirits, and these graces had gone far to make him
|
|
seem a very desirable and rather lovable thing in Elaine's eyes.
|
|
But he had left out of account the disfavour which he constantly
|
|
risked and sometimes incurred from his frank and undisguised
|
|
indifference to other people's interests and wishes, including, at
|
|
times, Elaine's. And the more that she felt that she liked him the
|
|
more she was irritated by his lack of consideration for her.
|
|
Without expecting that her every wish should become a law to him
|
|
she would at least have liked it to reach the formality of a Second
|
|
Reading. Another important factor he had also left out of his
|
|
reckoning, namely the presence on the scene of another suitor, who
|
|
also had youth and wit to recommend him, and who certainly did not
|
|
lack physical attractions. Comus, marching carelessly through
|
|
unknown country to effect what seemed already an assured victory,
|
|
made the mistake of disregarding the existence of an unbeaten army
|
|
on his flank.
|
|
|
|
To-day Elaine felt that, without having actually quarrelled, she
|
|
and Comus had drifted a little bit out of sympathy with one
|
|
another. The fault she knew was scarcely hers, in fact from the
|
|
most good-natured point of view it could hardly be denied that it
|
|
was almost entirely his. The incident of the silver dish had
|
|
lacked even the attraction of novelty; it had been one of a series,
|
|
all bearing a strong connecting likeness. There had been small
|
|
unrepaid loans which Elaine would not have grudged in themselves,
|
|
though the application for them brought a certain qualm of
|
|
distaste; with the perversity which seemed inseparable from his
|
|
doings, Comus had always flung away a portion of his borrowings in
|
|
some ostentatious piece of glaring and utterly profitless
|
|
extravagance, which outraged all the canons of her upbringing
|
|
without bringing him an atom of understandable satisfaction. Under
|
|
these repeated discouragements it was not surprising that some
|
|
small part of her affection should have slipped away, but she had
|
|
come to the Park that morning with an unconfessed expectation of
|
|
being gently wooed back to the mood of gracious forgetfulness that
|
|
she was only too eager to assume. It was almost worth while being
|
|
angry with Comus for the sake of experiencing the pleasure of being
|
|
coaxed into friendliness again with the charm which he knew so well
|
|
how to exert. It was delicious here under the trees on this
|
|
perfect June morning, and Elaine had the blessed assurance that
|
|
most of the women within range were envying her the companionship
|
|
of the handsome merry-hearted youth who sat by her side. With
|
|
special complacence she contemplated her cousin Suzette, who was
|
|
self-consciously but not very elatedly basking in the attentions of
|
|
her fiance, an earnest-looking young man who was superintendent of
|
|
a People's something-or-other on the south side of the river, and
|
|
whose clothes Comus had described as having been made in Southwark
|
|
rather than in anger.
|
|
|
|
Most of the pleasures in life must be paid for, and the chair-
|
|
ticket vendor in due time made his appearance in quest of pennies.
|
|
|
|
Comus paid him from out of a varied assortment of coins and then
|
|
balanced the remainder in the palm of his hand. Elaine felt a
|
|
sudden foreknowledge of something disagreeable about to happen and
|
|
a red spot deepened in her cheeks.
|
|
|
|
"Four shillings and fivepence and a half-penny," said Comus,
|
|
reflectively. "It's a ridiculous sum to last me for the next three
|
|
days, and I owe a card debt of over two pounds."
|
|
|
|
"Yes?" commented Elaine dryly and with an apparent lack of interest
|
|
in his exchequer statement. Surely, she was thinking hurriedly to
|
|
herself, he could not be foolish enough to broach the matter of
|
|
another loan.
|
|
|
|
"The card debt is rather a nuisance," pursued Comus, with
|
|
fatalistic persistency.
|
|
|
|
"You won seven pounds last week, didn't you?" asked Elaine; "don't
|
|
you put by any of your winnings to balance losses?"
|
|
|
|
"The four shillings and the fivepence and the halfpenny represent
|
|
the rearguard of the seven pounds," said Comus; "the rest have
|
|
fallen by the way. If I can pay the two pounds to-day I daresay I
|
|
shall win something more to go on with; I'm holding rather good
|
|
cards just now. But if I can't pay it of course I shan't show up
|
|
at the club. So you see the fix I am in."
|
|
|
|
Elaine took no notice of this indirect application. The Appeal
|
|
Court was assembling in haste to consider new evidence, and this
|
|
time there was the rapidity of sudden determination about its
|
|
movement.
|
|
|
|
The conversation strayed away from the fateful topic for a few
|
|
moments and then Comus brought it deliberately back to the danger
|
|
zone.
|
|
|
|
"It would be awfully nice if you would let me have a fiver for a
|
|
few days, Elaine," he said quickly; "if you don't I really don't
|
|
know what I shall do."
|
|
|
|
"If you are really bothered about your card debt I will send you
|
|
the two pounds by messenger boy early this afternoon." She spoke
|
|
quietly and with great decision. "And I shall not be at the
|
|
Connor's dance to-night," she continued; "it's too hot for dancing.
|
|
I'm going home now; please don't bother to accompany me, I
|
|
particularly wish to go alone."
|
|
|
|
Comus saw that he had overstepped the mark of her good nature.
|
|
Wisely he made no immediate attempt to force himself back into her
|
|
good graces. He would wait till her indignation had cooled.
|
|
|
|
His tactics would have been excellent if he had not forgotten that
|
|
unbeaten army on his flank.
|
|
|
|
Elaine de Frey had known very clearly what qualities she had wanted
|
|
in Comus, and she had known, against all efforts at self-deception,
|
|
that he fell far short of those qualities. She had been willing to
|
|
lower her standard of moral requirements in proportion as she was
|
|
fond of the boy, but there was a point beyond which she would not
|
|
go. He had hurt her pride besides alarming her sense of caution.
|
|
|
|
Suzette, on whom she felt a thoroughly justified tendency to look
|
|
down, had at any rate an attentive and considerate lover. Elaine
|
|
walked towards the Park gates feeling that in one essential Suzette
|
|
possessed something that had been denied to her, and at the gates
|
|
she met Joyeuse and his spruce young rider preparing to turn
|
|
homeward.
|
|
|
|
"Get rid of Joyeuse and come and take me out to lunch somewhere,"
|
|
demanded Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"How jolly," said Youghal. "Let's go to the Corridor Restaurant.
|
|
The head waiter there is an old Viennese friend of mine and looks
|
|
after me beautifully. I've never been there with a lady before,
|
|
and he's sure to ask me afterwards, in his fatherly way, if we're
|
|
engaged."
|
|
|
|
The lunch was a success in every way. There was just enough
|
|
orchestral effort to immerse the conversation without drowning it,
|
|
and Youghal was an attentive and inspired host. Through an open
|
|
doorway Elaine could see the cafe reading-room, with its imposing
|
|
array of NEUE FREIE PRESSE, BERLINER TAGEBLATT, and other exotic
|
|
newspapers hanging on the wall. She looked across at the young man
|
|
seated opposite her, who gave one the impression of having centred
|
|
the most serious efforts of his brain on his toilet and his food,
|
|
and recalled some of the flattering remarks that the press had
|
|
bestowed on his recent speeches.
|
|
|
|
"Doesn't it make you conceited, Courtenay," she asked, "to look at
|
|
all those foreign newspapers hanging there and know that most of
|
|
them have got paragraphs and articles about your Persian speech?"
|
|
|
|
Youghal laughed.
|
|
|
|
"There's always a chastening corrective in the thought that some of
|
|
them may have printed your portrait. When once you've seen your
|
|
features hurriedly reproduced in the MATIN, for instance, you feel
|
|
you would like to be a veiled Turkish woman for the rest of your
|
|
life."
|
|
|
|
And Youghal gazed long and lovingly at his reflection in the
|
|
nearest mirror, as an antidote against possible incitements to
|
|
humility in the portrait gallery of fame.
|
|
|
|
Elaine felt a certain soothed satisfaction in the fact that this
|
|
young man, whose knowledge of the Middle East was an embarrassment
|
|
to Ministers at question time and in debate, was showing himself
|
|
equally well-informed on the subject of her culinary likes and
|
|
dislikes. If Suzette could have been forced to attend as a witness
|
|
at a neighbouring table she would have felt even happier.
|
|
|
|
"Did the head waiter ask if we were engaged?" asked Elaine, when
|
|
Courtenay had settled the bill, and she had finished collecting her
|
|
sunshade and gloves and other impedimenta from the hands of
|
|
obsequious attendants.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Youghal, "and he seemed quite crestfallen when I had to
|
|
say 'no.'"
|
|
|
|
"It would be horrid to disappoint him when he's looked after us so
|
|
charmingly," said Elaine; "tell him that we are."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
|
|
THE Rutland Galleries were crowded, especially in the neighbourhood
|
|
of the tea-buffet, by a fashionable throng of art-patrons which had
|
|
gathered to inspect Mervyn Quentock's collection of Society
|
|
portraits. Quentock was a young artist whose abilities were just
|
|
receiving due recognition from the critics; that the recognition
|
|
was not overdue he owed largely to his perception of the fact that
|
|
if one hides one's talent under a bushel one must be careful to
|
|
point out to everyone the exact bushel under which it is hidden.
|
|
There are two manners of receiving recognition: one is to be
|
|
discovered so long after one's death that one's grandchildren have
|
|
to write to the papers to establish their relationship; the other
|
|
is to be discovered, like the infant Moses, at the very outset of
|
|
one's career. Mervyn Quentock had chosen the latter and happier
|
|
manner. In an age when many aspiring young men strive to advertise
|
|
their wares by imparting to them a freakish imbecility, Quentock
|
|
turned out work that was characterised by a pleasing delicate
|
|
restraint, but he contrived to herald his output with a certain
|
|
fanfare of personal eccentricity, thereby compelling an attention
|
|
which might otherwise have strayed past his studio. In appearance
|
|
he was the ordinary cleanly young Englishman, except, perhaps, that
|
|
his eyes rather suggested a library edition of the Arabian Nights;
|
|
his clothes matched his appearance and showed no taint of the
|
|
sartorial disorder by which the bourgeois of the garden-city and
|
|
the Latin Quarter anxiously seeks to proclaim his kinship with art
|
|
and thought. His eccentricity took the form of flying in the face
|
|
of some of the prevailing social currents of the day, but as a
|
|
reactionary, never as a reformer. He produced a gasp of admiring
|
|
astonishment in fashionable circles by refusing to paint actresses
|
|
- except, of course, those who had left the legitimate drama to
|
|
appear between the boards of Debrett. He absolutely declined to
|
|
execute portraits of Americans unless they hailed from certain
|
|
favoured States. His "water-colour-line," as a New York paper
|
|
phrased it, earned for him a crop of angry criticisms and a shoal
|
|
of Transatlantic commissions, and criticism and commissions were
|
|
the things that Quentock most wanted.
|
|
|
|
"Of course he is perfectly right," said Lady Caroline Benaresq,
|
|
calmly rescuing a piled-up plate of caviare sandwiches from the
|
|
neighbourhood of a trio of young ladies who had established
|
|
themselves hopefully within easy reach of it. "Art," she
|
|
continued, addressing herself to the Rev. Poltimore Vardon, "has
|
|
always been geographically exclusive. London may be more important
|
|
from most points of view than Venice, but the art of portrait
|
|
painting, which would never concern itself with a Lord Mayor,
|
|
simply grovels at the feet of the Doges. As a Socialist I'm bound
|
|
to recognise the right of Ealing to compare itself with Avignon,
|
|
but one cannot expect the Muses to put the two on a level."
|
|
|
|
"Exclusiveness," said the Reverend Poltimore, "has been the
|
|
salvation of Art, just as the lack of it is proving the downfall of
|
|
religion. My colleagues of the cloth go about zealously
|
|
proclaiming the fact that Christianity, in some form or other, is
|
|
attracting shoals of converts among all sorts of races and tribes,
|
|
that one had scarcely ever heard of, except in reviews of books of
|
|
travel that one never read. That sort of thing was all very well
|
|
when the world was more sparsely populated, but nowadays, when it
|
|
simply teems with human beings, no one is particularly impressed by
|
|
the fact that a few million, more or less, of converts, of a low
|
|
stage of mental development, have accepted the teachings of some
|
|
particular religion. It not only chills one's enthusiasm, it
|
|
positively shakes one's convictions when one hears that the things
|
|
one has been brought up to believe as true are being very
|
|
favourably spoken of by Buriats and Samoyeds and Kanakas."
|
|
|
|
The Rev. Poltimore Vardon had once seen a resemblance in himself to
|
|
Voltaire, and had lived alongside the comparison ever since.
|
|
|
|
"No modern cult or fashion," he continued, "would be favourably
|
|
influenced by considerations based on statistics; fancy adopting a
|
|
certain style of hat or cut of coat, because it was being largely
|
|
worn in Lancashire and the Midlands; fancy favouring a certain
|
|
brand of champagne because it was being extensively patronised in
|
|
German summer resorts. No wonder that religion is falling into
|
|
disuse in this country under such ill-directed methods."
|
|
|
|
"You can't prevent the heathen being converted if they choose to
|
|
be," said Lady Caroline; "this is an age of toleration."
|
|
|
|
"You could always deny it," said the Rev. Poltimore, "like the
|
|
Belgians do with regrettable occurrences in the Congo. But I would
|
|
go further than that. I would stimulate the waning enthusiasm for
|
|
Christianity in this country by labelling it as the exclusive
|
|
possession of a privileged few. If one could induce the Duchess of
|
|
Pelm, for instance, to assert that the Kingdom of Heaven, as far as
|
|
the British Isles are concerned, is strictly limited to herself,
|
|
two of the under-gardeners at Pelmby, and, possibly, but not
|
|
certainly, the Dean of Dunster, there would be an instant reshaping
|
|
of the popular attitude towards religious convictions and
|
|
observances. Once let the idea get about that the Christian Church
|
|
is rather more exclusive than the Lawn at Ascot, and you would have
|
|
a quickening of religious life such as this generation has never
|
|
witnessed. But as long as the clergy and the religious
|
|
organisations advertise their creed on the lines of 'Everybody
|
|
ought to believe in us: millions do,' one can expect nothing but
|
|
indifference and waning faith."
|
|
|
|
"Time is just as exclusive in its way as Art," said Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
"In what way?" said the Reverend Poltimore.
|
|
|
|
"Your pleasantries about religion would have sounded quite clever
|
|
and advanced in the early 'nineties. To-day they have a dreadfully
|
|
warmed-up flavour. That is the great delusion of you would-be
|
|
advanced satirists; you imagine you can sit down comfortably for a
|
|
couple of decades saying daring and startling things about the age
|
|
you live in, which, whatever other defects it may have, is
|
|
certainly not standing still. The whole of the Sherard Blaw school
|
|
of discursive drama suggests, to my mind, Early Victorian furniture
|
|
in a travelling circus. However, you will always have relays of
|
|
people from the suburbs to listen to the Mocking Bird of yesterday,
|
|
and sincerely imagine it is the harbinger of something new and
|
|
revolutionising."
|
|
|
|
"WOULD you mind passing that plate of sandwiches," asked one of the
|
|
trio of young ladies, emboldened by famine.
|
|
|
|
"With pleasure," said Lady Caroline, deftly passing her a nearly
|
|
empty plate of bread-and-butter.
|
|
|
|
"I meant the place of caviare sandwiches. So sorry to trouble
|
|
you," persisted the young lady
|
|
|
|
Her sorrow was misapplied; Lady Caroline had turned her attention
|
|
to a newcomer.
|
|
|
|
"A very interesting exhibition," Ada Spelvexit was saying;
|
|
"faultless technique, as far as I am a judge of technique, and
|
|
quite a master-touch in the way of poses. But have you noticed how
|
|
very animal his art is? He seems to shut out the soul from his
|
|
portraits. I nearly cried when I saw dear Winifred depicted simply
|
|
as a good-looking healthy blonde."
|
|
|
|
"I wish you had," said Lady Caroline; "the spectacle of a strong,
|
|
brave woman weeping at a private view in the Rutland Galleries
|
|
would have been so sensational. It would certainly have been
|
|
reproduced in the next Drury Lane drama. And I'm so unlucky; I
|
|
never see these sensational events. I was ill with appendicitis,
|
|
you know, when Lulu Braminguard dramatically forgave her husband,
|
|
after seventeen years of estrangement, during a State luncheon
|
|
party at Windsor. The old queen was furious about it. She said it
|
|
was so disrespectful to the cook to be thinking of such a thing at
|
|
such a time."
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline's recollections of things that hadn't happened at the
|
|
Court of Queen Victoria were notoriously vivid; it was the very
|
|
widespread fear that she might one day write a book of
|
|
reminiscences that made her so universally respected.
|
|
|
|
"As for his full-length picture of Lady Brickfield," continued Ada,
|
|
ignoring Lady Caroline's commentary as far as possible, "all the
|
|
expression seems to have been deliberately concentrated in the
|
|
feet; beautiful feet, no doubt, but still, hardly the most
|
|
distinctive part of a human being."
|
|
|
|
"To paint the right people at the wrong end may be an eccentricity,
|
|
but it is scarcely an indiscretion," pronounced Lady Caroline.
|
|
|
|
One of the portraits which attracted more than a passing flutter of
|
|
attention was a costume study of Francesca Bassington. Francesca
|
|
had secured some highly desirable patronage for the young artist,
|
|
and in return he had enriched her pantheon of personal possessions
|
|
with a clever piece of work into which he had thrown an unusual
|
|
amount of imaginative detail. He had painted her in a costume of
|
|
the great Louis's brightest period, seated in front of a tapestry
|
|
that was so prominent in the composition that it could scarcely be
|
|
said to form part of the background. Flowers and fruit, in exotic
|
|
profusion, were its dominant note; quinces, pomegranates, passion-
|
|
flowers, giant convolvulus, great mauve-pink roses, and grapes that
|
|
were already being pressed by gleeful cupids in a riotous Arcadian
|
|
vintage, stood out on its woven texture. The same note was struck
|
|
in the beflowered satin of the lady's kirtle, and in the
|
|
pomegranate pattern of the brocade that draped the couch on which
|
|
she was seated. The artist had called his picture "Recolte." And
|
|
after one had taken in all the details of fruit and flower and
|
|
foliage that earned the composition its name, one noted the
|
|
landscape that showed through a broad casement in the left-hand
|
|
corner. It was a landscape clutched in the grip of winter, naked,
|
|
bleak, black-frozen; a winter in which things died and knew no
|
|
rewakening. If the picture typified harvest, it was a harvest of
|
|
artificial growth.
|
|
|
|
"It leaves a great deal to the imagination, doesn't it?" said Ada
|
|
Spelvexit, who had edged away from the range of Lady Caroline's
|
|
tongue.
|
|
|
|
"At any rate one can tell who it's meant for," said Serena
|
|
Golackly.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, yes, it's a good likeness of dear Francesca," admitted Ada;
|
|
"of course, it flatters her."
|
|
|
|
"That, too, is a fault on the right side in portrait painting,"
|
|
said Serena; "after all, if posterity is going to stare at one for
|
|
centuries it's only kind and reasonable to be looking just a little
|
|
better than one's best."
|
|
|
|
"What a curiously unequal style the artist has," continued Ada,
|
|
almost as if she felt a personal grievance against him; "I was just
|
|
noticing what a lack of soul there was in most of his portraits.
|
|
Dear Winifred, you know, who speaks so beautifully and feelingly at
|
|
my gatherings for old women, he's made her look just an ordinary
|
|
dairy-maidish blonde; and Francesca, who is quite the most soulless
|
|
woman I've ever met, well, he's given her quite - "
|
|
|
|
"Hush," said Serena, "the Bassington boy is just behind you."
|
|
|
|
Comus stood looking at the portrait of his mother with the feeling
|
|
of one who comes suddenly across a once-familiar half-forgotten
|
|
acquaintance in unfamiliar surroundings. The likeness was
|
|
undoubtedly a good one, but the artist had caught an expression in
|
|
Francesca's eyes which few people had ever seen there. It was the
|
|
expression of a woman who had forgotten for one short moment to be
|
|
absorbed in the small cares and excitements of her life, the money
|
|
worries and little social plannings, and had found time to send a
|
|
look of half-wistful friendliness to some sympathetic companion.
|
|
Comus could recall that look, fitful and fleeting, in his mother's
|
|
eyes when she had been a few years younger, before her world had
|
|
grown to be such a committee-room of ways and means. Almost as a
|
|
re-discovery he remembered that she had once figured in his boyish
|
|
mind as a "rather good sort," more ready to see the laughable side
|
|
of a piece of mischief than to labour forth a reproof. That the
|
|
bygone feeling of good fellowship had been stamped out was, he
|
|
knew, probably in great part his own doing, and it was possible
|
|
that the old friendliness was still there under the surface of
|
|
things, ready to show itself again if he willed it, and friends
|
|
were becoming scarcer with him than enemies in these days. Looking
|
|
at the picture with its wistful hint of a long ago comradeship,
|
|
Comus made up his mind that he very much wanted things to be back
|
|
on their earlier footing, and to see again on his mother's face the
|
|
look that the artist had caught and perpetuated in its momentary
|
|
flitting. If the projected Elaine-marriage came off, and in spite
|
|
of recent maladroit behaviour on his part he still counted it an
|
|
assured thing, much of the immediate cause for estrangement between
|
|
himself and his mother would be removed, or at any rate, easily
|
|
removable. With the influence of Elaine's money behind him he
|
|
promised himself that he would find some occupation that would
|
|
remove from himself the reproach of being a waster and idler.
|
|
There were lots of careers, he told himself, that were open to a
|
|
man with solid financial backing and good connections. There might
|
|
yet be jolly times ahead, in which his mother would have her share
|
|
of the good things that were going, and carking thin-lipped Henry
|
|
Greech and other of Comus's detractors could take their sour looks
|
|
and words out of sight and hearing. Thus, staring at the picture
|
|
as though he were studying its every detail, and seeing really only
|
|
that wistful friendly smile, Comus made his plans and dispositions
|
|
for a battle that was already fought and lost.
|
|
|
|
The crowd grew thicker in the galleries, cheerfully enduring an
|
|
amount of overcrowding that would have been fiercely resented in a
|
|
railway carriage. Near the entrance Mervyn Quentock was talking to
|
|
a Serene Highness, a lady who led a life of obtrusive usefulness,
|
|
largely imposed on her by a good-natured inability to say "No."
|
|
"That woman creates a positive draught with the number of bazaars
|
|
she opens," a frivolously-spoken ex-Cabinet Minister had once
|
|
remarked. At the present moment she was being whimsically
|
|
apologetic.
|
|
|
|
"When I think of the legions of well-meaning young men and women to
|
|
whom I've given away prizes for proficiency in art-school
|
|
curriculum, I feel that I ought not to show my face inside a
|
|
picture gallery. I always imagine that my punishment in another
|
|
world will be perpetually sharpening pencils and cleaning palettes
|
|
for unending relays of misguided young people whom I deliberately
|
|
encouraged in their artistic delusions."
|
|
|
|
"Do you suppose we shall all get appropriate punishments in another
|
|
world for our sins in this?" asked Quentock.
|
|
|
|
"Not so much for our sins as for our indiscretions; they are the
|
|
things which do the most harm and cause the greatest trouble. I
|
|
feel certain that Christopher Columbus will undergo the endless
|
|
torment of being discovered by parties of American tourists. You
|
|
see I am quite old fashioned in my ideas about the terrors and
|
|
inconveniences of the next world. And now I must be running away;
|
|
I've got to open a Free Library somewhere. You know the sort of
|
|
thing that happens - one unveils a bust of Carlyle and makes a
|
|
speech about Ruskin, and then people come in their thousands and
|
|
read 'Rabid Ralph, or Should he have Bitten Her?' Don't forget,
|
|
please, I'm going to have the medallion with the fat cupid sitting
|
|
on a sundial. And just one thing more - perhaps I ought not to ask
|
|
you, but you have such nice kind eyes, you embolden one to make
|
|
daring requests, would you send me the recipe for those lovely
|
|
chestnut-and-chicken-liver sandwiches? I know the ingredients of
|
|
course, but it's the proportions that make such a difference - just
|
|
how much liver to how much chestnut, and what amount of red pepper
|
|
and other things. Thank you so much. I really am going now."
|
|
|
|
Staring round with a vague half-smile at everybody within nodding
|
|
distance, Her Serene Highness made one of her characteristic exits,
|
|
which Lady Caroline declared always reminded her of a scrambled egg
|
|
slipping off a piece of toast. At the entrance she stopped for a
|
|
moment to exchange a word or two with a young man who had just
|
|
arrived. From a corner where he was momentarily hemmed in by a
|
|
group of tea-consuming dowagers, Comus recognised the newcomer as
|
|
Courtenay Youghal, and began slowly to labour his way towards him.
|
|
Youghal was not at the moment the person whose society he most
|
|
craved for in the world, but there was at least the possibility
|
|
that he might provide an opportunity for a game of bridge, which
|
|
was the dominant desire of the moment. The young politician was
|
|
already surrounded by a group of friends and acquaintances, and was
|
|
evidently being made the recipient of a salvo of congratulation -
|
|
presumably on his recent performances in the Foreign Office debate,
|
|
Comus concluded. But Youghal himself seemed to be announcing the
|
|
event with which the congratulations were connected. Had some
|
|
dramatic catastrophe overtaken the Government, Comus wondered. And
|
|
then, as he pressed nearer, a chance word, the coupling of two
|
|
names, told him the news.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XI
|
|
|
|
AFTER the momentous lunch at the Corridor Restaurant Elaine had
|
|
returned to Manchester Square (where she was staying with one of
|
|
her numerous aunts) in a frame of mind that embraced a tangle of
|
|
competing emotions. In the first place she was conscious of a
|
|
dominant feeling of relief; in a moment of impetuosity, not wholly
|
|
uninfluenced by pique, she had settled the problem which hours of
|
|
hard thinking and serious heart-searching had brought no nearer to
|
|
solution, and, although she felt just a little inclined to be
|
|
scared at the headlong manner of her final decision, she had now
|
|
very little doubt in her own mind that the decision had been the
|
|
right one. In fact the wonder seemed rather that she should have
|
|
been so long in doubt as to which of her wooers really enjoyed her
|
|
honest approval. She had been in love, these many weeks past with
|
|
an imaginary Comus, but now that she had definitely walked out of
|
|
her dreamland she saw that nearly all the qualities that had
|
|
appealed to her on his behalf had been absent from, or only
|
|
fitfully present in, the character of the real Comus. And now that
|
|
she had installed Youghal in the first place of her affections he
|
|
had rapidly acquired in her eyes some of the qualities which ranked
|
|
highest in her estimation. Like the proverbial buyer she had the
|
|
happy feminine tendency of magnifying the worth of her possession
|
|
as soon as she had acquired it. And Courtenay Youghal gave Elaine
|
|
some justification for her sense of having chosen wisely. Above
|
|
all other things, selfish and cynical though he might appear at
|
|
times, he was unfailingly courteous and considerate towards her.
|
|
That was a circumstance which would always have carried weight with
|
|
her in judging any man; in this case its value was enormously
|
|
heightened by contrast with the behaviour of her other wooer. And
|
|
Youghal had in her eyes the advantage which the glamour of combat,
|
|
even the combat of words and wire-pulling, throws over the fighter.
|
|
He stood well in the forefront of a battle which however carefully
|
|
stage-managed, however honeycombed with personal insincerities and
|
|
overlaid with calculated mock-heroics, really meant something,
|
|
really counted for good or wrong in the nation's development and
|
|
the world's history. Shrewd parliamentary observers might have
|
|
warned her that Youghal would never stand much higher in the
|
|
political world than he did at present, as a brilliant Opposition
|
|
freelance, leading lively and rather meaningless forays against the
|
|
dull and rather purposeless foreign policy of a Government that was
|
|
scarcely either to be blamed for or congratulated on its handling
|
|
of foreign affairs. The young politician had not the strength of
|
|
character or convictions that keeps a man naturally in the
|
|
forefront of affairs and gives his counsels a sterling value, and
|
|
on the other hand his insincerity was not deep enough to allow him
|
|
to pose artificially and successfully as a leader of men and shaper
|
|
of movements. For the moment, however, his place in public life
|
|
was sufficiently marked out to give him a secure footing in that
|
|
world where people are counted individually and not in herds. The
|
|
woman whom he would make his wife would have the chance, too, if
|
|
she had the will and the skill, to become an individual who
|
|
counted.
|
|
|
|
There was balm to Elaine in this reflection, yet it did not wholly
|
|
suffice to drive out the feeling of pique which Comus had called
|
|
into being by his slighting view of her as a convenient cash supply
|
|
in moments of emergency. She found a certain satisfaction in
|
|
scrupulously observing her promise, made earlier on that eventful
|
|
day, and sent off a messenger with the stipulated loan. Then a
|
|
reaction of compunction set in, and she reminded herself that in
|
|
fairness she ought to write and tell her news in as friendly a
|
|
fashion as possible to her dismissed suitor before it burst upon
|
|
him from some other quarter. They had parted on more or less
|
|
quarrelling terms it was true, but neither of them had foreseen the
|
|
finality of the parting nor the permanence of the breach between
|
|
them; Comus might even now be thinking himself half-forgiven, and
|
|
the awakening would be rather cruel. The letter, however, did not
|
|
prove an easy one to write; not only did it present difficulties of
|
|
its own but it suffered from the competing urgency of a desire to
|
|
be doing something far pleasanter than writing explanatory and
|
|
valedictory phrases. Elaine was possessed with an unusual but
|
|
quite over-mastering hankering to visit her cousin Suzette
|
|
Brankley. They met but rarely at each other's houses and very
|
|
seldom anywhere else, and Elaine for her part was never conscious
|
|
of feeling that their opportunities for intercourse lacked anything
|
|
in the way of adequacy. Suzette accorded her just that touch of
|
|
patronage which a moderately well-off and immoderately dull girl
|
|
will usually try to mete out to an acquaintance who is known to be
|
|
wealthy and suspected of possessing brains. In return Elaine armed
|
|
herself with that particular brand of mock humility which can be so
|
|
terribly disconcerting if properly wielded. No quarrel of any
|
|
description stood between them and one could not legitimately have
|
|
described them as enemies, but they never disarmed in one another's
|
|
presence. A misfortune of any magnitude falling on one of them
|
|
would have been sincerely regretted by the other, but any minor
|
|
discomfiture would have produced a feeling very much akin to
|
|
satisfaction. Human nature knows millions of these inconsequent
|
|
little feuds, springing up and flourishing apart from any basis of
|
|
racial, political, religious or economic causes, as a hint perhaps
|
|
to crass unseeing altruists that enmity has its place and purpose
|
|
in the world as well as benevolence.
|
|
|
|
Elaine had not personally congratulated Suzette since the formal
|
|
announcement of her engagement to the young man with the
|
|
dissentient tailoring effects. The impulse to go and do so now,
|
|
overmastered her sense of what was due to Comus in the way of
|
|
explanation. The letter was still in its blank unwritten stage, an
|
|
unmarshalled sequence of sentences forming in her brain, when she
|
|
ordered her car and made a hurried but well-thought-out change into
|
|
her most sumptuously sober afternoon toilette. Suzette, she felt
|
|
tolerably sure, would still be in the costume that she had worn in
|
|
the Park that morning, a costume that aimed at elaboration of
|
|
detail, and was damned with overmuch success.
|
|
|
|
Suzette's mother welcomed her unexpected visitor with obvious
|
|
satisfaction. Her daughter's engagement, she explained, was not so
|
|
brilliant from the social point of view as a girl of Suzette's
|
|
attractions and advantages might have legitimately aspired to, but
|
|
Egbert was a thoroughly commendable and dependable young man, who
|
|
would very probably win his way before long to membership of the
|
|
County Council.
|
|
|
|
"From there, of course, the road would be open to him to higher
|
|
things."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Elaine, "he might become an alderman."
|
|
|
|
"Have you seen their photographs, taken together?" asked Mrs.
|
|
Brankley, abandoning the subject of Egbert's prospective career.
|
|
|
|
"No, do show me," said Elaine, with a flattering show of interest;
|
|
"I've never seen that sort of thing before. It used to be the
|
|
fashion once for engaged couples to be photographed together,
|
|
didn't it?"
|
|
|
|
"It's VERY much the fashion now," said Mrs. Brankley assertively,
|
|
but some of the complacency had filtered out of her voice. Suzette
|
|
came into the room, wearing the dress that she had worn in the Park
|
|
that morning.
|
|
|
|
"Of course, you've been hearing all about THE engagement from
|
|
mother," she cried, and then set to work conscientiously to cover
|
|
the same ground.
|
|
|
|
"We met at Grindelwald, you know. He always calls me his Ice
|
|
Maiden because we first got to know each other on the skating rink.
|
|
Quite romantic, wasn't it? Then we asked him to tea one day, and
|
|
we got to be quite friendly. Then he proposed."
|
|
|
|
"He wasn't the only one who was smitten with Suzette," Mrs.
|
|
Brankley hastened to put in, fearful lest Elaine might suppose that
|
|
Egbert had had things all his own way. "There was an American
|
|
millionaire who was quite taken with her, and a Polish count of a
|
|
very old family. I assure you I felt quite nervous at some of our
|
|
tea-parties."
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Brankley had given Grindelwald a sinister but rather alluring
|
|
reputation among a large circle of untravelled friends as a place
|
|
where the insolence of birth and wealth was held in precarious
|
|
check from breaking forth into scenes of savage violence.
|
|
|
|
"My marriage with Egbert will, of course, enlarge the sphere of my
|
|
life enormously," pursued Suzette.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Elaine; her eyes were rather remorselessly taking in
|
|
the details of her cousin's toilette. It is said that nothing is
|
|
sadder than victory except defeat. Suzette began to feel that the
|
|
tragedy of both was concentrated in the creation which had given
|
|
her such unalloyed gratification, till Elaine had come on the
|
|
scene.
|
|
|
|
"A woman can be so immensely helpful in the social way to a man who
|
|
is making a career for himself. And I'm so glad to find that we've
|
|
a great many ideas in common. We each made out a list of our idea
|
|
of the hundred best books, and quite a number of them were the
|
|
same."
|
|
|
|
"He looks bookish," said Elaine, with a critical glance at the
|
|
photograph.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, he's not at all a bookworm," said Suzette quickly, "though
|
|
he's tremendously well-read. He's quite the man of action."
|
|
|
|
"Does he hunt?" asked Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"No, he doesn't get much time or opportunity for riding."
|
|
|
|
"What a pity," commented Elaine; "I don't think I could marry a man
|
|
who wasn't fond of riding."
|
|
|
|
"Of course that's a matter of taste," said Suzette, stiffly;
|
|
"horsey men are not usually gifted with overmuch brains, are they?"
|
|
|
|
"There is as much difference between a horseman and a horsey man as
|
|
there is between a well-dressed man and a dressy one," said Elaine,
|
|
judicially; "and you may have noticed how seldom a dressy woman
|
|
really knows how to dress. As an old lady of my acquaintance
|
|
observed the other day, some people are born with a sense of how to
|
|
clothe themselves, others acquire it, others look as if their
|
|
clothes had been thrust upon them."
|
|
|
|
She gave Lady Caroline her due quotation marks, but the sudden
|
|
tactfulness with which she looked away from her cousin's frock was
|
|
entirely her own idea.
|
|
|
|
A young man entering the room at this moment caused a diversion
|
|
that was rather welcome to Suzette.
|
|
|
|
"Here comes Egbert," she announced, with an air of subdued triumph;
|
|
it was at least a satisfaction to be able to produce the captive of
|
|
her charms, alive and in good condition, on the scene. Elaine
|
|
might be as critical as she pleased, but a live lover outweighed
|
|
any number of well-dressed straight-riding cavaliers who existed
|
|
only as a distant vision of the delectable husband.
|
|
|
|
Egbert was one of those men who have no small talk, but possess an
|
|
inexhaustible supply of the larger variety. In whatever society he
|
|
happened to be, and particularly in the immediate neighbourhood of
|
|
an afternoon-tea table, with a limited audience of womenfolk, he
|
|
gave the impression of someone who was addressing a public meeting,
|
|
and would be happy to answer questions afterwards. A suggestion of
|
|
gas-lit mission-halls, wet umbrellas, and discreet applause seemed
|
|
to accompany him everywhere. He was an exponent, among other
|
|
things, of what he called New Thought, which seemed to lend itself
|
|
conveniently to the employment of a good deal of rather stale
|
|
phraseology. Probably in the course of some thirty odd years of
|
|
existence he had never been of any notable use to man, woman, child
|
|
or animal, but it was his firmly-announced intention to leave the
|
|
world a better, happier, purer place than he had found it; against
|
|
the danger of any relapse to earlier conditions after his
|
|
disappearance from the scene, he was, of course, powerless to
|
|
guard. 'Tis not in mortals to insure succession, and Egbert was
|
|
admittedly mortal.
|
|
|
|
Elaine found him immensely entertaining, and would certainly have
|
|
exerted herself to draw him out if such a proceeding had been at
|
|
all necessary. She listened to his conversation with the
|
|
complacent appreciation that one bestows on a stage tragedy, from
|
|
whose calamities one can escape at any moment by the simple process
|
|
of leaving one's seat. When at last he checked the flow of his
|
|
opinions by a hurried reference to his watch, and declared that he
|
|
must be moving on elsewhere, Elaine almost expected a vote of
|
|
thanks to be accorded him, or to be asked to signify herself in
|
|
favour of some resolution by holding up her hand.
|
|
|
|
When the young man had bidden the company a rapid business-like
|
|
farewell, tempered in Suzette's case by the exact degree of tender
|
|
intimacy that it would have been considered improper to omit or
|
|
overstep, Elaine turned to her expectant cousin with an air of
|
|
cordial congratulation.
|
|
|
|
"He is exactly the husband I should have chosen for you, Suzette."
|
|
|
|
For the second time that afternoon Suzette felt a sense of waning
|
|
enthusiasm for one of her possessions.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Brankley detected the note of ironical congratulation in her
|
|
visitor's verdict.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose she means he's not her idea of a husband, but, he's good
|
|
enough for Suzette," she observed to herself, with a snort that
|
|
expressed itself somewhere in the nostrils of the brain. Then with
|
|
a smiling air of heavy patronage she delivered herself of her one
|
|
idea of a damaging counter-stroke.
|
|
|
|
"And when are we to hear of your engagement, my dear?"
|
|
|
|
"Now," said Elaine quietly, but with electrical effect; "I came to
|
|
announce it to you but I wanted to hear all about Suzette first.
|
|
It will be formally announced in the papers in a day or two."
|
|
|
|
"But who is it? Is it the young man who was with you in the Park
|
|
this morning?" asked Suzette.
|
|
|
|
"Let me see, who was I with in the Park this morning? A very good-
|
|
looking dark boy? Oh no, not Comus Bassington. Someone you know
|
|
by name, anyway, and I expect you've seen his portrait in the
|
|
papers."
|
|
|
|
"A flying-man?" asked Mrs. Brankley.
|
|
|
|
"Courtenay Youghal," said Elaine.
|
|
|
|
Mrs. Brankley and Suzette had often rehearsed in the privacy of
|
|
their minds the occasion when Elaine should come to pay her
|
|
personal congratulations to her engaged cousin. It had never been
|
|
in the least like this.
|
|
|
|
On her return from her enjoyable afternoon visit Elaine found an
|
|
express messenger letter waiting for her. It was from Comus,
|
|
thanking her for her loan - and returning it.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose I ought never to have asked you for it," he wrote, "but
|
|
you are always so deliciously solemn about money matters that I
|
|
couldn't resist. Just heard the news of your engagement to
|
|
Courtenay. Congrats. to you both. I'm far too stoney broke to buy
|
|
you a wedding present so I'm going to give you back the bread-and-
|
|
butter dish. Luckily it still has your crest on it. I shall love
|
|
to think of you and Courtenay eating bread-and-butter out of it for
|
|
the rest of your lives."
|
|
|
|
That was all he had to say on the matter about which Elaine had
|
|
been preparing to write a long and kindly-expressed letter, closing
|
|
a rather momentous chapter in her life and his. There was not a
|
|
trace of regret or upbraiding in his note; he had walked out of
|
|
their mutual fairyland as abruptly as she had, and to all
|
|
appearances far more unconcernedly. Reading the letter again and
|
|
again Elaine could come to no decision as to whether this was
|
|
merely a courageous gibe at defeat, or whether it represented the
|
|
real value that Comus set on the thing that he had lost.
|
|
|
|
And she would never know. If Comus possessed one useless gift to
|
|
perfection it was the gift of laughing at Fate even when it had
|
|
struck him hardest. One day, perhaps, the laughter and mockery
|
|
would be silent on his lips, and Fate would have the advantage of
|
|
laughing last.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
|
|
|
A DOOR closed and Francesca Bassington sat alone in her well-
|
|
beloved drawing-room. The visitor who had been enjoying the
|
|
hospitality of her afternoon-tea table had just taken his
|
|
departure. The tete-a-tete had not been a pleasant one, at any
|
|
rate as far as Francesca was concerned, but at least it had brought
|
|
her the information for which she had been seeking. Her role of
|
|
looker-on from a tactful distance had necessarily left her much in
|
|
the dark concerning the progress of the all-important wooing, but
|
|
during the last few hours she had, on slender though significant
|
|
evidence, exchanged her complacent expectancy for a conviction that
|
|
something had gone wrong. She had spent the previous evening at
|
|
her brother's house, and had naturally seen nothing of Comus in
|
|
that uncongenial quarter; neither had he put in an appearance at
|
|
the breakfast table the following morning. She had met him in the
|
|
hall at eleven o'clock, and he had hurried past her, merely
|
|
imparting the information that he would not be in till dinner that
|
|
evening. He spoke in his sulkiest tone, and his face wore a look
|
|
of defeat, thinly masked by an air of defiance; it was not the
|
|
defiance of a man who is losing, but of one who has already lost.
|
|
|
|
Francesca's conviction that things had gone wrong between Comus and
|
|
Elaine de Frey grew in strength as the day wore on. She lunched at
|
|
a friend's house, but it was not a quarter where special social
|
|
information of any importance was likely to come early to hand.
|
|
Instead of the news she was hankering for, she had to listen to
|
|
trivial gossip and speculation on the flirtations and "cases" and
|
|
"affairs" of a string of acquaintances whose matrimonial projects
|
|
interested her about as much as the nesting arrangements of the
|
|
wildfowl in St. James's Park.
|
|
|
|
"Of course," said her hostess, with the duly impressive emphasis of
|
|
a privileged chronicler, "we've always regarded Claire as the
|
|
marrying one of the family, so when Emily came to us and said,
|
|
'I've got some news for you,' we all said, 'Claire's engaged!'
|
|
'Oh, no,' said Emily, 'it's not Claire this time, it's me.' So
|
|
then we had to guess who the lucky man was. 'It can't be Captain
|
|
Parminter,' we all said, 'because he's always been sweet on Joan.'
|
|
And then Emily said - "
|
|
|
|
The recording voice reeled off the catalogue of inane remarks with
|
|
a comfortable purring complacency that held out no hope of an early
|
|
abandoning of the topic. Francesca sat and wondered why the
|
|
innocent acceptance of a cutlet and a glass of indifferent claret
|
|
should lay one open to such unsparing punishment.
|
|
|
|
A stroll homeward through the Park after lunch brought no further
|
|
enlightenment on the subject that was uppermost in her mind; what
|
|
was worse, it brought her, without possibility of escape, within
|
|
hailing distance of Merla Blathington, who fastened on to her with
|
|
the enthusiasm of a lonely tsetse fly encountering an outpost of
|
|
civilisation.
|
|
|
|
"Just think," she buzzed inconsequently, "my sister in
|
|
Cambridgeshire has hatched out thirty-three White Orpington
|
|
chickens in her incubator!"
|
|
|
|
"What eggs did she put in it?" asked Francesca.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, some very special strain of White Orpington."
|
|
|
|
"Then I don't see anything remarkable in the result. If she had
|
|
put in crocodile's eggs and hatched out White Orpingtons, there
|
|
might have been something to write to COUNTRY LIFE about."
|
|
|
|
"What funny fascinating things these little green park-chairs are,"
|
|
said Merla, starting off on a fresh topic; "they always look so
|
|
quaint and knowing when they're stuck away in pairs by themselves
|
|
under the trees, as if they were having a heart-to-heart talk or
|
|
discussing a piece of very private scandal. If they could only
|
|
speak, what tragedies and comedies they could tell us of, what
|
|
flirtations and proposals."
|
|
|
|
"Let us be devoutly thankful that they can't," said Francesca, with
|
|
a shuddering recollection of the luncheon-table conversation.
|
|
|
|
"Of course, it would make one very careful what one said before
|
|
them - or above them rather," Merla rattled on, and then, to
|
|
Francesca's infinite relief, she espied another acquaintance
|
|
sitting in unprotected solitude, who promised to supply a more
|
|
durable audience than her present rapidly moving companion.
|
|
Francesca was free to return to her drawing-room in Blue Street to
|
|
await with such patience as she could command the coming of some
|
|
visitor who might be able to throw light on the subject that was
|
|
puzzling and disquieting her. The arrival of George St. Michael
|
|
boded bad news, but at any rate news, and she gave him an almost
|
|
cordial welcome.
|
|
|
|
"Well, you see I wasn't far wrong about Miss de Frey and Courtenay
|
|
Youghal, was I?" he chirruped, almost before he had seated himself.
|
|
Francesca was to be spared any further spinning-out of her period
|
|
of uncertainty. "Yes, it's officially given out," he went on, "and
|
|
it's to appear in the MORNING POST to-morrow. I heard it from
|
|
Colonel Deel this morning, and he had it direct from Youghal
|
|
himself. Yes, please, one lump; I'm not fashionable, you see." He
|
|
had made the same remark about the sugar in his tea with unfailing
|
|
regularity for at least thirty years. Fashions in sugar are
|
|
apparently stationary. "They say," he continued, hurriedly, "that
|
|
he proposed to her on the Terrace of the House, and a division bell
|
|
rang, and he had to hurry off before she had time to give her
|
|
answer, and when he got back she simply said, 'the Ayes have it.'"
|
|
St. Michael paused in his narrative to give an appreciative giggle.
|
|
|
|
"Just the sort of inanity that would go the rounds," remarked
|
|
Francesca, with the satisfaction of knowing that she was making the
|
|
criticism direct to the author and begetter of the inanity in
|
|
question. Now that the blow had fallen and she knew the full
|
|
extent of its weight, her feeling towards the bringer of bad news,
|
|
who sat complacently nibbling at her tea-cakes and scattering
|
|
crumbs of tiresome small-talk at her feet, was one of wholehearted
|
|
dislike. She could sympathise with, or at any rate understand, the
|
|
tendency of oriental despots to inflict death or ignominious
|
|
chastisement on messengers bearing tidings of misfortune and
|
|
defeat, and St. Michael, she perfectly well knew, was thoroughly
|
|
aware of the fact that her hopes and wishes had been centred on the
|
|
possibility of having Elaine for a daughter-in-law; every purring
|
|
remark that his mean little soul prompted him to contribute to the
|
|
conversation had an easily recognizable undercurrent of malice.
|
|
Fortunately for her powers of polite endurance, which had been put
|
|
to such searching and repeated tests that day, St. Michael had
|
|
planned out for himself a busy little time-table of afternoon
|
|
visits, at each of which his self-appointed task of forestalling
|
|
and embellishing the newspaper announcements of the Youghal-de Frey
|
|
engagement would be hurriedly but thoroughly performed.
|
|
|
|
"They'll be quite one of the best-looking and most interesting
|
|
couples of the Season, won't they?" he cried, by way of farewell.
|
|
The door closed and Francesca Bassington sat alone in her drawing-
|
|
room.
|
|
|
|
Before she could give way to the bitter luxury of reflection on the
|
|
downfall of her hopes, it was prudent to take precautionary
|
|
measures against unwelcome intrusion. Summoning the maid who had
|
|
just speeded the departing St. Michael, she gave the order: "I am
|
|
not at home this afternoon to Lady Caroline Benaresq." On second
|
|
thoughts she extended the taboo to all possible callers, and sent a
|
|
telephone message to catch Comus at his club, asking him to come
|
|
and see her as soon as he could manage before it was time to dress
|
|
for dinner. Then she sat down to think, and her thinking was
|
|
beyond the relief of tears.
|
|
|
|
She had built herself a castle of hopes, and it had not been a
|
|
castle in Spain, but a structure well on the probable side of the
|
|
Pyrenees. There had been a solid foundation on which to build.
|
|
Miss de Frey's fortune was an assured and unhampered one, her
|
|
liking for Comus had been an obvious fact; his courtship of her a
|
|
serious reality. The young people had been much together in
|
|
public, and their names had naturally been coupled in the match-
|
|
making gossip of the day. The only serious shadow cast over the
|
|
scene had been the persistent presence, in foreground or
|
|
background, of Courtenay Youghal. And now the shadow suddenly
|
|
stood forth as the reality, and the castle of hopes was a ruin, a
|
|
hideous mortification of dust and debris, with the skeleton
|
|
outlines of its chambers still standing to make mockery of its
|
|
discomfited architect. The daily anxiety about Comus and his
|
|
extravagant ways and intractable disposition had been gradually
|
|
lulled by the prospect of his making an advantageous marriage,
|
|
which would have transformed him from a ne'er-do-well and
|
|
adventurer into a wealthy idler. He might even have been moulded,
|
|
by the resourceful influence of an ambitious wife, into a man with
|
|
some definite purpose in life. The prospect had vanished with
|
|
cruel suddenness, and the anxieties were crowding back again, more
|
|
insistent than ever. The boy had had his one good chance in the
|
|
matrimonial market and missed it; if he were to transfer his
|
|
attentions to some other well-dowered girl he would be marked down
|
|
at once as a fortune-hunter, and that would constitute a heavy
|
|
handicap to the most plausible of wooers. His liking for Elaine
|
|
had evidently been genuine in its way, though perhaps it would have
|
|
been rash to read any deeper sentiment into it, but even with the
|
|
spur of his own inclination to assist him he had failed to win the
|
|
prize that had seemed so temptingly within his reach. And in the
|
|
dashing of his prospects, Francesca saw the threatening of her own.
|
|
The old anxiety as to her precarious tenure of her present quarters
|
|
put on again all its familiar terrors. One day, she foresaw, in
|
|
the horribly near future, George St. Michael would come pattering
|
|
up her stairs with the breathless intelligence that Emmeline
|
|
Chetrof was going to marry somebody or other in the Guards or the
|
|
Record Office as the case might be, and then there would be an
|
|
uprooting of her life from its home and haven in Blue Street and a
|
|
wandering forth to some cheap unhappy far-off dwelling, where the
|
|
stately Van der Meulen and its companion host of beautiful and
|
|
desirable things would be stuffed and stowed away in soulless
|
|
surroundings, like courtly emigres fallen on evil days. It was
|
|
unthinkable, but the trouble was that it had to be thought about.
|
|
And if Comus had played his cards well and transformed himself from
|
|
an encumbrance into a son with wealth at his command, the tragedy
|
|
which she saw looming in front of her might have been avoided or at
|
|
the worst whittled down to easily bearable proportions. With money
|
|
behind one, the problem of where to live approaches more nearly to
|
|
the simple question of where do you wish to live, and a rich
|
|
daughter-in-law would have surely seen to it that she did not have
|
|
to leave her square mile of Mecca and go out into the wilderness of
|
|
bricks and mortar. If the house in Blue Street could not have been
|
|
compounded for there were other desirable residences which would
|
|
have been capable of consoling Francesca for her lost Eden. And
|
|
now the detested Courtenay Youghal, with his mocking eyes and air
|
|
of youthful cynicism, had stepped in and overthrown those golden
|
|
hopes and plans whose non-fulfilment would make such a world of
|
|
change in her future. Assuredly she had reason to feel bitter
|
|
against that young man, and she was not disposed to take a very
|
|
lenient view of Comus's own mismanagement of the affair; her
|
|
greeting when he at last arrived, was not couched in a sympathetic
|
|
strain.
|
|
|
|
"So you have lost your chance with the heiress," she remarked
|
|
abruptly.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," said Comus, coolly; "Courtenay Youghal has added her to his
|
|
other successes."
|
|
|
|
"And you have added her to your other failures," pursued Francesca,
|
|
relentlessly; her temper had been tried that day beyond ordinary
|
|
limits.
|
|
|
|
"I thought you seemed getting along so well with her," she
|
|
continued, as Comus remained uncommunicative.
|
|
|
|
"We hit it off rather well together," said Comus, and added with
|
|
deliberate bluntness, "I suppose she got rather sick at my
|
|
borrowing money from her. She thought it was all I was after."
|
|
|
|
"You borrowed money from her!" said Francesca; "you were fool
|
|
enough to borrow money from a girl who was favourably disposed
|
|
towards you, and with Courtenay Youghal in the background waiting
|
|
to step in and oust you!"
|
|
|
|
Francesca's voice trembled with misery and rage. This great stroke
|
|
of good luck that had seemed about to fall into their laps had been
|
|
thrust aside by an act or series of acts of wanton paltry folly.
|
|
The good ship had been lost for the sake of the traditional
|
|
ha'porth of tar. Comus had paid some pressing tailor's or
|
|
tobacconist's bill with a loan unwillingly put at his disposal by
|
|
the girl he was courting, and had flung away his chances of
|
|
securing a wealthy and in every way desirable bride. Elaine de
|
|
Frey and her fortune might have been the making of Comus, but he
|
|
had hurried in as usual to effect his own undoing. Calmness did
|
|
not in this case come with reflection; the more Francesca thought
|
|
about the matter, the more exasperated she grew. Comus threw
|
|
himself down in a low chair and watched her without a trace of
|
|
embarrassment or concern at her mortification. He had come to her
|
|
feeling rather sorry for himself, and bitterly conscious of his
|
|
defeat, and she had met him with a taunt and without the least hint
|
|
of sympathy; he determined that she should be tantalised with the
|
|
knowledge of how small and stupid a thing had stood between the
|
|
realisation and ruin of her hopes for him.
|
|
|
|
"And to think she should be captured by Courtenay Youghal," said
|
|
Francesca, bitterly; "I've always deplored your intimacy with that
|
|
young man."
|
|
|
|
"It's hardly my intimacy with him that's made Elaine accept him,"
|
|
said Comus.
|
|
|
|
Francesca realised the futility of further upbraiding. Through the
|
|
tears of vexation that stood in her eyes, she looked across at the
|
|
handsome boy who sat opposite her, mocking at his own misfortune,
|
|
perversely indifferent to his folly, seemingly almost indifferent
|
|
to its consequences.
|
|
|
|
"Comus," she said quietly and wearily, "you are an exact reversal
|
|
of the legend of Pandora's Box. You have all the charm and
|
|
advantages that a boy could want to help him on in the world, and
|
|
behind it all there is the fatal damning gift of utter
|
|
hopelessness."
|
|
|
|
"I think," said Comus, "that is the best description that anyone
|
|
has ever given of me."
|
|
|
|
For the moment there was a flush of sympathy and something like
|
|
outspoken affection between mother and son. They seemed very much
|
|
alone in the world just now, and in the general overturn of hopes
|
|
and plans, there flickered a chance that each might stretch out a
|
|
hand to the other, and summon back to their lives an old dead love
|
|
that was the best and strongest feeling either of them had known.
|
|
But the sting of disappointment was too keen, and the flood of
|
|
resentment mounted too high on either side to allow the chance more
|
|
than a moment in which to flicker away into nothingness. The old
|
|
fatal topic of estrangement came to the fore, the question of
|
|
immediate ways and means, and mother and son faced themselves again
|
|
as antagonists on a well-disputed field.
|
|
|
|
"What is done is done," said Francesca, with a movement of tragic
|
|
impatience that belied the philosophy of her words; "there is
|
|
nothing to be gained by crying over spilt milk. There is the
|
|
present and the future to be thought about, though. One can't go
|
|
on indefinitely as a tenant-for-life in a fools' paradise." Then
|
|
she pulled herself together and proceeded to deliver an ultimatum
|
|
which the force of circumstances no longer permitted her to hold in
|
|
reserve.
|
|
|
|
"It's not much use talking to you about money, as I know from long
|
|
experience, but I can only tell you this, that in the middle of the
|
|
Season I'm already obliged to be thinking of leaving Town. And
|
|
you, I'm afraid, will have to be thinking of leaving England at
|
|
equally short notice. Henry told me the other day that he can get
|
|
you something out in West Africa. You've had your chance of doing
|
|
something better for yourself from the financial point of view, and
|
|
you've thrown it away for the sake of borrowing a little ready
|
|
money for your luxuries, so now you must take what you can get.
|
|
The pay won't be very good at first, but living is not dear out
|
|
there."
|
|
|
|
"West Africa," said Comus, reflectively; "it's a sort of modern
|
|
substitute for the old-fashioned OUBLIETTE, a convenient depository
|
|
for tiresome people. Dear Uncle Henry may talk lugubriously about
|
|
the burden of Empire, but he evidently recognises its uses as a
|
|
refuse consumer."
|
|
|
|
"My dear Comus, you are talking of the West Africa of yesterday.
|
|
While you have been wasting your time at school, and worse than
|
|
wasting your time in the West End, other people have been grappling
|
|
with the study of tropical diseases, and the West African coast
|
|
country is being rapidly transformed from a lethal chamber into a
|
|
sanatorium."
|
|
|
|
Comus laughed mockingly.
|
|
|
|
"What a beautiful bit of persuasive prose; it reminds one of the
|
|
Psalms and even more of a company prospectus. If you were honest
|
|
you'd confess that you lifted it straight out of a rubber or
|
|
railway promotion scheme. Seriously, mother, if I must grub about
|
|
for a living, why can't I do it in England? I could go into a
|
|
brewery for instance."
|
|
|
|
Francesca shook her head decisively; she could foresee the sort of
|
|
steady work Comus was likely to accomplish, with the lodestone of
|
|
Town and the minor attractions of race-meetings and similar
|
|
festivities always beckoning to him from a conveniently attainable
|
|
distance, but apart from that aspect of the case there was a
|
|
financial obstacle in the way of his obtaining any employment at
|
|
home.
|
|
|
|
"Breweries and all those sort of things necessitate money to start
|
|
with; one has to pay premiums or invest capital in the undertaking,
|
|
and so forth. And as we have no money available, and can scarcely
|
|
pay our debts as it is, it's no use thinking about it."
|
|
|
|
"Can't we sell something?" asked Comus.
|
|
|
|
He made no actual suggestion as to what should be sacrificed, but
|
|
he was looking straight at the Van der Meulen.
|
|
|
|
For a moment Francesca felt a stifling sensation of weakness, as
|
|
though her heart was going to stop beating. Then she sat forward
|
|
in her chair and spoke with energy, almost fierceness.
|
|
|
|
"When I am dead my things can be sold and dispersed. As long as I
|
|
am alive I prefer to keep them by me."
|
|
|
|
In her holy place, with all her treasured possessions around her,
|
|
this dreadful suggestion had been made. Some of her cherished
|
|
household gods, souvenirs and keepsakes from past days, would,
|
|
perhaps, not have fetched a very considerable sum in the auction-
|
|
room, others had a distinct value of their own, but to her they
|
|
were all precious. And the Van der Meulen, at which Comus had
|
|
looked with impious appraising eyes, was the most sacred of them
|
|
all. When Francesca had been away from her Town residence or had
|
|
been confined to her bedroom through illness, the great picture
|
|
with its stately solemn representation of a long-ago battle-scene,
|
|
painted to flatter the flattery-loving soul of a warrior-king who
|
|
was dignified even in his campaigns - this was the first thing she
|
|
visited on her return to Town or convalescence. If an alarm of
|
|
fire had been raised it would have been the first thing for whose
|
|
safety she would have troubled. And Comus had almost suggested
|
|
that it should be parted with, as one sold railway shares and other
|
|
soulless things.
|
|
|
|
Scolding, she had long ago realised, was a useless waste of time
|
|
and energy where Comus was concerned, but this evening she unloosed
|
|
her tongue for the mere relief that it gave to her surcharged
|
|
feelings. He sat listening without comment, though she purposely
|
|
let fall remarks that she hoped might sting him into self-defence
|
|
or protest. It was an unsparing indictment, the more damaging in
|
|
that it was so irrefutably true, the more tragic in that it came
|
|
from perhaps the one person in the world whose opinion he had ever
|
|
cared for. And he sat through it as silent and seemingly unmoved
|
|
as though she had been rehearsing a speech for some drawing-room
|
|
comedy. When she had had her say his method of retort was not the
|
|
soft answer that turneth away wrath but the inconsequent one that
|
|
shelves it.
|
|
|
|
"Let's go and dress for dinner."
|
|
|
|
The meal, like so many that Francesca and Comus had eaten in each
|
|
other's company of late, was a silent one. Now that the full
|
|
bearings of the disaster had been discussed in all its aspects
|
|
there was nothing more to be said. Any attempt at ignoring the
|
|
situation, and passing on to less controversial topics would have
|
|
been a mockery and pretence which neither of them would have
|
|
troubled to sustain. So the meal went forward with its dragged-out
|
|
dreary intimacy of two people who were separated by a gulf of
|
|
bitterness, and whose hearts were hard with resentment against one
|
|
another.
|
|
|
|
Francesca felt a sense of relief when she was able to give the maid
|
|
the order to serve her coffee upstairs. Comus had a sullen scowl
|
|
on his face, but he looked up as she rose to leave the room, and
|
|
gave his half-mocking little laugh.
|
|
|
|
"You needn't look so tragic," he said, "You're going to have your
|
|
own way. I'll go out to that West African hole."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
|
|
COMUS found his way to his seat in the stalls of the Straw Exchange
|
|
Theatre and turned to watch the stream of distinguished and
|
|
distinguishable people who made their appearance as a matter of
|
|
course at a First Night in the height of the Season. Pit and
|
|
gallery were already packed with a throng, tense, expectant and
|
|
alert, that waited for the rise of the curtain with the eager
|
|
patience of a terrier watching a dilatory human prepare for outdoor
|
|
exercises. Stalls and boxes filled slowly and hesitatingly with a
|
|
crowd whose component units seemed for the most part to recognise
|
|
the probability that they were quite as interesting as any play
|
|
they were likely to see. Those who bore no particular face-value
|
|
themselves derived a certain amount of social dignity from the near
|
|
neighbourhood of obvious notabilities; if one could not obtain
|
|
recognition oneself there was some vague pleasure in being able to
|
|
recognise notoriety at intimately close quarters.
|
|
|
|
"Who is that woman with the auburn hair and a rather effective
|
|
belligerent gleam in her eyes?" asked a man sitting just behind
|
|
Comus; "she looks as if she might have created the world in six
|
|
days and destroyed it on the seventh."
|
|
|
|
"I forget her name," said his neighbour; "she writes. She's the
|
|
author of that book, 'The Woman who wished it was Wednesday,' you
|
|
know. It used to be the convention that women writers should be
|
|
plain and dowdy; now we have gone to the other extreme and build
|
|
them on extravagantly decorative lines."
|
|
|
|
A buzz of recognition came from the front rows of the pit, together
|
|
with a craning of necks on the part of those in less favoured
|
|
seats. It heralded the arrival of Sherard Blaw, the dramatist who
|
|
had discovered himself, and who had given so ungrudgingly of his
|
|
discovery to the world. Lady Caroline, who was already directing
|
|
little conversational onslaughts from her box, gazed gently for a
|
|
moment at the new arrival, and then turned to the silver-haired
|
|
Archdeacon sitting beside her.
|
|
|
|
"They say the poor man is haunted by the fear that he will die
|
|
during a general election, and that his obituary notices will be
|
|
seriously curtailed by the space taken up by the election results.
|
|
The curse of our party system, from his point of view, is that it
|
|
takes up so much room in the press."
|
|
|
|
The Archdeacon smiled indulgently. As a man he was so exquisitely
|
|
worldly that he fully merited the name of the Heavenly Worldling
|
|
bestowed on him by an admiring duchess, and withal his texture was
|
|
shot with a pattern of such genuine saintliness that one felt that
|
|
whoever else might hold the keys of Paradise he, at least,
|
|
possessed a private latchkey to that abode.
|
|
|
|
"Is it not significant of the altered grouping of things," he
|
|
observed, "that the Church, as represented by me, sympathises with
|
|
the message of Sherard Blaw, while neither the man nor his message
|
|
find acceptance with unbelievers like you, Lady Caroline."
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline blinked her eyes. "My dear Archdeacon," she said,
|
|
"no one can be an unbeliever nowadays. The Christian Apologists
|
|
have left one nothing to disbelieve."
|
|
|
|
The Archdeacon rose with a delighted chuckle. "I must go and tell
|
|
that to De la Poulett," he said, indicating a clerical figure
|
|
sitting in the third row of the stalls; "he spends his life
|
|
explaining from his pulpit that the glory of Christianity consists
|
|
in the fact that though it is not true it has been found necessary
|
|
to invent it."
|
|
|
|
The door of the box opened and Courtenay Youghal entered, bringing
|
|
with him subtle suggestion of chaminade and an atmosphere of
|
|
political tension. The Government had fallen out of the good
|
|
graces of a section of its supporters, and those who were not in
|
|
the know were busy predicting a serious crisis over a forthcoming
|
|
division in the Committee stage of an important Bill. This was
|
|
Saturday night, and unless some successful cajolery were effected
|
|
between now and Monday afternoon, Ministers would be, seemingly, in
|
|
danger of defeat.
|
|
|
|
"Ah, here is Youghal," said the Archdeacon; "he will be able to
|
|
tell us what is going to happen in the next forty-eight hours. I
|
|
hear the Prime Minister says it is a matter of conscience, and they
|
|
will stand or fall by it."
|
|
|
|
His hopes and sympathies were notoriously on the Ministerial side.
|
|
|
|
Youghal greeted Lady Caroline and subsided gracefully into a chair
|
|
well in the front of the box. A buzz of recognition rippled slowly
|
|
across the house.
|
|
|
|
"For the Government to fall on a matter of conscience," he said,
|
|
"would be like a man cutting himself with a safety razor."
|
|
|
|
Lady Caroline purred a gentle approval.
|
|
|
|
"I'm afraid it's true, Archdeacon," she said.
|
|
|
|
No one can effectively defend a Government when it's been in office
|
|
several years. The Archdeacon took refuge in light skirmishing.
|
|
|
|
"I believe Lady Caroline sees the makings of a great Socialist
|
|
statesman in you, Youghal," he observed.
|
|
|
|
"Great Socialist statesmen aren't made, they're stillborn," replied
|
|
Youghal.
|
|
|
|
"What is the play about to-night?" asked a pale young woman who had
|
|
taken no part in the talk.
|
|
|
|
"I don't know," said Lady Caroline, "but I hope it's dull. If
|
|
there is any brilliant conversation in it I shall burst into
|
|
tears."
|
|
|
|
In the front row of the upper circle a woman with a restless
|
|
starling-voice was discussing the work of a temporarily fashionable
|
|
composer, chiefly in relation to her own emotions, which she seemed
|
|
to think might prove generally interesting to those around her.
|
|
|
|
"Whenever I hear his music I feel that I want to go up into a
|
|
mountain and pray. Can you understand that feeling?"
|
|
|
|
The girl to whom she was unburdening herself shook her head.
|
|
|
|
"You see, I've heard his music chiefly in Switzerland, and we were
|
|
up among the mountains all the time, so it wouldn't have made any
|
|
difference."
|
|
|
|
"In that case," said the woman, who seemed to have emergency
|
|
emotions to suit all geographical conditions, "I should have wanted
|
|
to be in a great silent plain by the side of a rushing river."
|
|
|
|
"What I think is so splendid about his music - " commenced another
|
|
starling-voice on the further side of the girl. Like sheep that
|
|
feed greedily before the coming of a storm the starling-voices
|
|
seemed impelled to extra effort by the knowledge of four imminent
|
|
intervals of acting during which they would be hushed into
|
|
constrained silence.
|
|
|
|
In the back row of the dress circle a late-comer, after a cursory
|
|
glance at the programme, had settled down into a comfortable
|
|
narrative, which was evidently the resumed thread of an unfinished
|
|
taxi-drive monologue.
|
|
|
|
"We all said 'it can't be Captain Parminter, because he's always
|
|
been sweet on Joan,' and then Emily said - "
|
|
|
|
The curtain went up, and Emily's contribution to the discussion had
|
|
to be held over till the entr'acte.
|
|
|
|
The play promised to be a success. The author, avoiding the
|
|
pitfall of brilliancy, had aimed at being interesting and as far as
|
|
possible, bearing in mind that his play was a comedy, he had
|
|
striven to be amusing. Above all he had remembered that in the
|
|
laws of stage proportions it is permissible and generally desirable
|
|
that the part should be greater than the whole; hence he had been
|
|
careful to give the leading lady such a clear and commanding lead
|
|
over the other characters of the play that it was impossible for
|
|
any of them ever to get on level terms with her. The action of the
|
|
piece was now and then delayed thereby, but the duration of its run
|
|
would be materially prolonged.
|
|
|
|
The curtain came down on the first act amid an encouraging
|
|
instalment of applause, and the audience turned its back on the
|
|
stage and began to take a renewed interest in itself. The
|
|
authoress of "The Woman who wished it was Wednesday" had swept like
|
|
a convalescent whirlwind, subdued but potentially tempestuous, into
|
|
Lady Caroline's box.
|
|
|
|
"I've just trodden with all my weight on the foot of an eminent
|
|
publisher as I was leaving my seat," she cried, with a peal of
|
|
delighted laughter. "He was such a dear about it; I said I hoped I
|
|
hadn't hurt him, and he said, 'I suppose you think, who drives hard
|
|
bargains should himself be hard.' Wasn't it pet-lamb of him?"
|
|
|
|
"I've never trodden on a pet lamb," said Lady Caroline, "so I've no
|
|
idea what its behaviour would be under the circumstances."
|
|
|
|
"Tell me," said the authoress, coming to the front of the box, the
|
|
better to survey the house, and perhaps also with a charitable
|
|
desire to make things easy for those who might pardonably wish to
|
|
survey her, "tell me, please, where is the girl sitting whom
|
|
Courtenay Youghal is engaged to?"
|
|
|
|
Elaine was pointed out to her, sitting in the fourth row of the
|
|
stalls, on the opposite side of the house to where Comus had his
|
|
seat. Once during the interval she had turned to give him a
|
|
friendly nod of recognition as he stood in one of the side
|
|
gangways, but he was absorbed at the moment in looking at himself
|
|
in the glass panel. The grave brown eyes and the mocking green-
|
|
grey ones had looked their last into each other's depths.
|
|
|
|
For Comus this first-night performance, with its brilliant
|
|
gathering of spectators, its groups and coteries of lively talkers,
|
|
even its counterfoil of dull chatterers, its pervading atmosphere
|
|
of stage and social movement, and its intruding undercurrent of
|
|
political flutter, all this composed a tragedy in which he was the
|
|
chief character. It was the life he knew and loved and basked in,
|
|
and it was the life he was leaving. It would go on reproducing
|
|
itself again and again, with its stage interest and social interest
|
|
and intruding outside interests, with the same lively chattering
|
|
crowd, the people who had done things being pointed out by people
|
|
who recognised them to people who didn't - it would all go on with
|
|
unflagging animation and sparkle and enjoyment, and for him it
|
|
would have stopped utterly. He would be in some unheard-of sun-
|
|
blistered wilderness, where natives and pariah dogs and raucous-
|
|
throated crows fringed round mockingly on one's loneliness, where
|
|
one rode for sweltering miles for the chance of meeting a collector
|
|
or police officer, with whom most likely on closer acquaintance one
|
|
had hardly two ideas in common, where female society was
|
|
represented at long intervals by some climate-withered woman
|
|
missionary or official's wife, where food and sickness and
|
|
veterinary lore became at last the three outstanding subjects on
|
|
which the mind settled or rather sank. That was the life he
|
|
foresaw and dreaded, and that was the life he was going to. For a
|
|
boy who went out to it from the dulness of some country rectory,
|
|
from a neighbourhood where a flower show and a cricket match formed
|
|
the social landmarks of the year, the feeling of exile might not be
|
|
very crushing, might indeed be lost in the sense of change and
|
|
adventure. But Comus had lived too thoroughly in the centre of
|
|
things to regard life in a backwater as anything else than
|
|
stagnation, and stagnation while one is young he justly regarded as
|
|
an offence against nature and reason, in keeping with the perverted
|
|
mockery that sends decrepit invalids touring painfully about the
|
|
world and shuts panthers up in narrow cages. He was being put
|
|
aside, as a wine is put aside, but to deteriorate instead of
|
|
gaining in the process, to lose the best time of his youth and
|
|
health and good looks in a world where youth and health and good
|
|
looks count for much and where time never returns lost possessions.
|
|
And thus, as the curtain swept down on the close of each act, Comus
|
|
felt a sense of depression and deprivation sweep down on himself;
|
|
bitterly he watched his last evening of social gaiety slipping away
|
|
to its end. In less than an hour it would be over; in a few
|
|
months' time it would be an unreal memory.
|
|
|
|
In the third interval, as he gazed round at the chattering house,
|
|
someone touched him on the arm. It was Lady Veula Croot.
|
|
|
|
"I suppose in a week's time you'll be on the high seas," she said.
|
|
"I'm coming to your farewell dinner, you know; your mother has just
|
|
asked me. I'm not going to talk the usual rot to you about how
|
|
much you will like it and so on. I sometimes think that one of the
|
|
advantages of Hell will be that no one will have the impertinence
|
|
to point out to you that you're really better off than you would be
|
|
anywhere else. What do you think of the play? Of course one can
|
|
foresee the end; she will come to her husband with the announcement
|
|
that their longed-for child is going to be born, and that will
|
|
smooth over everything. So conveniently effective, to wind up a
|
|
comedy with the commencement of someone else's tragedy. And every
|
|
one will go away saying 'I'm glad it had a happy ending.'"
|
|
|
|
Lady Veula moved back to her seat, with her pleasant smile on her
|
|
lips and the look of infinite weariness in her eyes.
|
|
|
|
The interval, the last interval, was drawing to a close and the
|
|
house began to turn with fidgetty attention towards the stage for
|
|
the unfolding of the final phase of the play. Francesca sat in
|
|
Serena Golackly's box listening to Colonel Springfield's story of
|
|
what happened to a pigeon-cote in his compound at Poona. Everyone
|
|
who knew the Colonel had to listen to that story a good many times,
|
|
but Lady Caroline had mitigated the boredom of the infliction, and
|
|
in fact invested it with a certain sporting interest, by offering a
|
|
prize to the person who heard it oftenest in the course of the
|
|
Season, the competitors being under an honourable understanding not
|
|
to lead up to the subject. Ada Spelvexit and a boy in the Foreign
|
|
Office were at present at the top of the list with five recitals
|
|
each to their score, but the former was suspected of doubtful
|
|
adherence to the rules and spirit of the competition.
|
|
|
|
"And there, dear lady," concluded the Colonel, "were the eleven
|
|
dead pigeons. What had become of the bandicoot no one ever knew."
|
|
|
|
Francesca thanked him for his story, and complacently inscribed the
|
|
figure 4 on the margin of her theatre programme. Almost at the
|
|
same moment she heard George St. Michael's voice pattering out a
|
|
breathless piece of intelligence for the edification of Serena
|
|
Golackly and anyone else who might care to listen. Francesca
|
|
galvanised into sudden attention.
|
|
|
|
"Emmeline Chetrof to a fellow in the Indian Forest Department.
|
|
He's got nothing but his pay and they can't be married for four or
|
|
five years; an absurdly long engagement, don't you think so? All
|
|
very well to wait seven years for a wife in patriarchal times, when
|
|
you probably had others to go on with, and you lived long enough to
|
|
celebrate your own tercentenary, but under modern conditions it
|
|
seems a foolish arrangement."
|
|
|
|
St. Michael spoke almost with a sense of grievance. A marriage
|
|
project that tied up all the small pleasant nuptial gossip-items
|
|
about bridesmaids and honeymoon and recalcitrant aunts and so
|
|
forth, for an indefinite number of years seemed scarcely decent in
|
|
his eyes, and there was little satisfaction or importance to be
|
|
derived from early and special knowledge of an event which loomed
|
|
as far distant as a Presidential Election or a change of Viceroy.
|
|
But to Francesca, who had listened with startled apprehension at
|
|
the mention of Emmeline Chetrof's name, the news came in a flood of
|
|
relief and thankfulness. Short of entering a nunnery and taking
|
|
celibate vows, Emmeline could hardly have behaved more conveniently
|
|
than in tying herself up to a lover whose circumstances made it
|
|
necessary to relegate marriage to the distant future. For four or
|
|
five years Francesca was assured of undisturbed possession of the
|
|
house in Blue Street, and after that period who knew what might
|
|
happen? The engagement might stretch on indefinitely, it might
|
|
even come to nothing under the weight of its accumulated years, as
|
|
sometimes happened with these protracted affairs. Emmeline might
|
|
lose her fancy for her absentee lover, and might never replace him
|
|
with another. A golden possibility of perpetual tenancy of her
|
|
present home began to float once more through Francesca's mind. As
|
|
long as Emmeline had been unbespoken in the marriage market there
|
|
had always been the haunting likelihood of seeing the dreaded
|
|
announcement, "a marriage has been arranged and will shortly take
|
|
place," in connection with her name. And now a marriage had been
|
|
arranged and would not shortly take place, might indeed never take
|
|
place. St. Michael's information was likely to be correct in this
|
|
instance; he would never have invented a piece of matrimonial
|
|
intelligence which gave such little scope for supplementary detail
|
|
of the kind he loved to supply. As Francesca turned to watch the
|
|
fourth act of the play, her mind was singing a paean of
|
|
thankfulness and exultation. It was as though some artificer sent
|
|
by the Gods had reinforced with a substantial cord the horsehair
|
|
thread that held up the sword of Damocles over her head. Her love
|
|
for her home, for her treasured household possessions, and her
|
|
pleasant social life was able to expand once more in present
|
|
security, and feed on future hope. She was still young enough to
|
|
count four or five years as a long time, and to-night she was
|
|
optimistic enough to prophesy smooth things of the future that lay
|
|
beyond that span. Of the fourth act, with its carefully held back
|
|
but obviously imminent reconciliation between the leading
|
|
characters, she took in but little, except that she vaguely
|
|
understood it to have a happy ending. As the lights went up she
|
|
looked round on the dispersing audience with a feeling of
|
|
friendliness uppermost in her mind; even the sight of Elaine de
|
|
Frey and Courtenay Youghal leaving the theatre together did not
|
|
inspire her with a tenth part of the annoyance that their entrance
|
|
had caused her. Serena's invitation to go on to the Savoy for
|
|
supper fitted in exactly with her mood of exhilaration. It would
|
|
be a fit and appropriate wind-up to an auspicious evening. The
|
|
cold chicken and modest brand of Chablis waiting for her at home
|
|
should give way to a banquet of more festive nature.
|
|
|
|
In the crush of the vestibule, friends and enemies, personal and
|
|
political, were jostled and locked together in the general effort
|
|
to rejoin temporarily estranged garments and secure the attendance
|
|
of elusive vehicles. Lady Caroline found herself at close quarters
|
|
with the estimable Henry Greech, and experienced some of the joy
|
|
which comes to the homeward wending sportsman when a chance shot
|
|
presents itself on which he may expend his remaining cartridges.
|
|
|
|
"So the Government is going to climb down, after all," she said,
|
|
with a provocative assumption of private information on the
|
|
subject.
|
|
|
|
"I assure you the Government will do nothing of the kind," replied
|
|
the Member of Parliament with befitting dignity; "the Prime
|
|
Minister told me last night that under no circumstances - "
|
|
|
|
"My dear Mr. Greech," said Lady Caroline, "we all know that Prime
|
|
Ministers are wedded to the truth, but like other wedded couples
|
|
they sometimes live apart."
|
|
|
|
For her, at any rate, the comedy had had a happy ending.
|
|
|
|
Comus made his way slowly and lingeringly from the stalls, so
|
|
slowly that the lights were already being turned down and great
|
|
shroud-like dust-cloths were being swaythed over the ornamental
|
|
gilt-work. The laughing, chattering, yawning throng had filtered
|
|
out of the vestibule, and was melting away in final groups from the
|
|
steps of the theatre. An impatient attendant gave him his coat and
|
|
locked up the cloak room. Comus stepped out under the portico; he
|
|
looked at the posters announcing the play, and in anticipation he
|
|
could see other posters announcing its 200th performance. Two
|
|
hundred performances; by that time the Straw Exchange Theatre would
|
|
be to him something so remote and unreal that it would hardly seem
|
|
to exist or to have ever existed except in his fancy. And to the
|
|
laughing chattering throng that would pass in under that portico to
|
|
the 200th performance, he would be, to those that had known him,
|
|
something equally remote and non-existent. "The good-looking
|
|
Bassington boy? Oh, dead, or rubber-growing or sheep-farming or
|
|
something of that sort."
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
|
|
THE farewell dinner which Francesca had hurriedly organised in
|
|
honour of her son's departure threatened from the outset to be a
|
|
doubtfully successful function. In the first place, as he observed
|
|
privately, there was very little of Comus and a good deal of
|
|
farewell in it. His own particular friends were unrepresented.
|
|
Courtenay Youghal was out of the question; and though Francesca
|
|
would have stretched a point and welcomed some of his other male
|
|
associates of whom she scarcely approved, he himself had been
|
|
opposed to including any of them in the invitations. On the other
|
|
hand, as Henry Greech had provided Comus with this job that he was
|
|
going out to, and was, moreover, finding part of the money for the
|
|
necessary outfit, Francesca had felt it her duty to ask him and his
|
|
wife to the dinner; the obtuseness that seems to cling to some
|
|
people like a garment throughout their life had caused Mr. Greech
|
|
to accept the invitation. When Comus heard of the circumstance he
|
|
laughed long and boisterously; his spirits, Francesca noted, seemed
|
|
to be rising fast as the hour for departure drew near.
|
|
|
|
The other guests included Serena Golackly and Lady Veula, the
|
|
latter having been asked on the inspiration of the moment at the
|
|
theatrical first-night. In the height of the Season it was not
|
|
easy to get together a goodly selection of guests at short notice,
|
|
and Francesca had gladly fallen in with Serena's suggestion of
|
|
bringing with her Stephen Thorle, who was alleged, in loose
|
|
feminine phrasing, to "know all about" tropical Africa. His
|
|
travels and experiences in those regions probably did not cover
|
|
much ground or stretch over any great length of time, but he was
|
|
one of those individuals who can describe a continent on the
|
|
strength of a few days' stay in a coast town as intimately and
|
|
dogmatically as a paleontologist will reconstruct an extinct mammal
|
|
from the evidence of a stray shin bone. He had the loud
|
|
penetrating voice and the prominent penetrating eyes of a man who
|
|
can do no listening in the ordinary way and whose eyes have to
|
|
perform the function of listening for him. His vanity did not
|
|
necessarily make him unbearable, unless one had to spend much time
|
|
in his society, and his need for a wide field of audience and
|
|
admiration was mercifully calculated to spread his operations over
|
|
a considerable human area. Moreover, his craving for attentive
|
|
listeners forced him to interest himself in a wonderful variety of
|
|
subjects on which he was able to discourse fluently and with a
|
|
certain semblance of special knowledge. Politics he avoided; the
|
|
ground was too well known, and there was a definite no to every
|
|
definite yes that could be put forward. Moreover, argument was not
|
|
congenial to his disposition, which preferred an unchallenged flow
|
|
of dissertation modified by occasional helpful questions which
|
|
formed the starting point for new offshoots of word-spinning. The
|
|
promotion of cottage industries, the prevention of juvenile street
|
|
trading, the extension of the Borstal prison system, the
|
|
furtherance of vague talkative religious movements the fostering of
|
|
inter-racial ENTENTES, all found in him a tireless exponent, a
|
|
fluent and entertaining, though perhaps not very convincing,
|
|
advocate. With the real motive power behind these various causes
|
|
he was not very closely identified; to the spade-workers who
|
|
carried on the actual labours of each particular movement he bore
|
|
the relation of a trowel-worker, delving superficially at the
|
|
surface, but able to devote a proportionately far greater amount of
|
|
time to the advertisement of his progress and achievements. Such
|
|
was Stephen Thorle, a governess in the nursery of Chelsea-bred
|
|
religions, a skilled window-dresser in the emporium of his own
|
|
personality, and needless to say, evanescently popular amid a wide
|
|
but shifting circle of acquaintances. He improved on the record of
|
|
a socially much-travelled individual whose experience has become
|
|
classical, and went to most of the best houses - twice.
|
|
|
|
His inclusion as a guest at this particular dinner-party was not a
|
|
very happy inspiration. He was inclined to patronise Comus, as
|
|
well as the African continent, and on even slighter acquaintance.
|
|
With the exception of Henry Greech, whose feelings towards his
|
|
nephew had been soured by many years of overt antagonism, there was
|
|
an uncomfortable feeling among those present that the topic of the
|
|
black-sheep export trade, as Comus would have himself expressed it,
|
|
was being given undue prominence in what should have been a festive
|
|
farewell banquet. And Comus, in whose honour the feast was given,
|
|
did not contribute much towards its success; though his spirits
|
|
seemed strung up to a high pitch his merriment was more the
|
|
merriment of a cynical and amused onlooker than of one who responds
|
|
to the gaiety of his companions. Sometimes he laughed quietly to
|
|
himself at some chance remark of a scarcely mirth-provoking nature,
|
|
and Lady Veula, watching him narrowly, came to the conclusion that
|
|
an element of fear was blended with his seemingly buoyant spirits.
|
|
Once or twice he caught her eye across the table, and a certain
|
|
sympathy seemed to grow up between them, as though they were both
|
|
consciously watching some lugubrious comedy that was being played
|
|
out before them.
|
|
|
|
An untoward little incident had marked the commencement of the
|
|
meal. A small still-life picture that hung over the sideboard had
|
|
snapped its cord and slid down with an alarming clatter on to the
|
|
crowded board beneath it. The picture itself was scarcely damaged,
|
|
but its fall had been accompanied by a tinkle of broken glass, and
|
|
it was found that a liqueur glass, one out of a set of seven that
|
|
would be impossible to match, had been shivered into fragments.
|
|
Francesca's almost motherly love for her possessions made her
|
|
peculiarly sensible to a feeling of annoyance and depression at the
|
|
accident, but she turned politely to listen to Mrs. Greech's
|
|
account of a misfortune in which four soup-plates were involved.
|
|
Mrs. Henry was not a brilliant conversationalist, and her flank was
|
|
speedily turned by Stephen Thorle, who recounted a slum experience
|
|
in which two entire families did all their feeding out of one
|
|
damaged soup-plate.
|
|
|
|
"The gratitude of those poor creatures when I presented them with a
|
|
set of table crockery apiece, the tears in their eyes and in their
|
|
voices when they thanked me, would be impossible to describe."
|
|
|
|
"Thank you all the same for describing it," said Comus.
|
|
|
|
The listening eyes went swiftly round the table to gather evidence
|
|
as to how this rather disconcerting remark had been received, but
|
|
Thorle's voice continued uninterruptedly to retail stories of East-
|
|
end gratitude, never failing to mention the particular deeds of
|
|
disinterested charity on his part which had evoked and justified
|
|
the gratitude. Mrs. Greech had to suppress the interesting sequel
|
|
to her broken-crockery narrative, to wit, how she subsequently
|
|
matched the shattered soup-plates at Harrod's. Like an imported
|
|
plant species that sometimes flourishes exceedingly, and makes
|
|
itself at home to the dwarfing and overshadowing of all native
|
|
species, Thorle dominated the dinner-party and thrust its original
|
|
purport somewhat into the background. Serena began to look
|
|
helplessly apologetic. It was altogether rather a relief when the
|
|
filling of champagne glasses gave Francesca an excuse for bringing
|
|
matters back to their intended footing.
|
|
|
|
"We must all drink a health," she said; "Comus, my own dear boy, a
|
|
safe and happy voyage to you, much prosperity in the life you are
|
|
going out to, and in due time a safe and happy return - "
|
|
|
|
Her hand gave an involuntary jerk in the act of raising the glass,
|
|
and the wine went streaming across the tablecloth in a froth of
|
|
yellow bubbles. It certainly was not turning out a comfortable or
|
|
auspicious dinner party.
|
|
|
|
"My dear mother," cried Comus, "you must have been drinking healths
|
|
all the afternoon to make your hand so unsteady."
|
|
|
|
He laughed gaily and with apparent carelessness, but again Lady
|
|
Veula caught the frightened note in his laughter. Mrs. Henry, with
|
|
practical sympathy, was telling Francesca two good ways for getting
|
|
wine stains out of tablecloths. The smaller economies of life were
|
|
an unnecessary branch of learning for Mrs. Greech, but she studied
|
|
them as carefully and conscientiously as a stay-at-home plain-
|
|
dwelling English child commits to memory the measurements and
|
|
altitudes of the world's principal mountain peaks. Some women of
|
|
her temperament and mentality know by heart the favourite colours,
|
|
flowers and hymn-tunes of all the members of the Royal Family; Mrs.
|
|
Greech would possibly have failed in an examination of that nature,
|
|
but she knew what to do with carrots that have been over-long in
|
|
storage.
|
|
|
|
Francesca did not renew her speech-making; a chill seemed to have
|
|
fallen over all efforts at festivity, and she contented herself
|
|
with refilling her glass and simply drinking to her boy's good
|
|
health. The others followed her example, and Comus drained his
|
|
glass with a brief "thank you all very much." The sense of
|
|
constraint which hung over the company was not, however, marked by
|
|
any uncomfortable pause in the conversation. Henry Greech was a
|
|
fluent thinker, of the kind that prefer to do their thinking aloud;
|
|
the silence that descended on him as a mantle in the House of
|
|
Commons was an official livery of which he divested himself as
|
|
thoroughly as possible in private life. He did not propose to sit
|
|
through dinner as a mere listener to Mr. Thorle's personal
|
|
narrative of philanthropic movements and experiences, and took the
|
|
first opportunity of launching himself into a flow of satirical
|
|
observations on current political affairs. Lady Veula was inured
|
|
to this sort of thing in her own home circle, and sat listening
|
|
with the stoical indifference with which an Esquimau might accept
|
|
the occurrence of one snowstorm the more, in the course of an
|
|
Arctic winter. Serena Golackly felt a certain relief at the fact
|
|
that her imported guest was not, after all, monopolising the
|
|
conversation. But the latter was too determined a personality to
|
|
allow himself to be thrust aside for many minutes by the talkative
|
|
M.P. Henry Greech paused for an instant to chuckle at one of his
|
|
own shafts of satire, and immediately Thorle's penetrating voice
|
|
swept across the table.
|
|
|
|
"Oh, you politicians!" he exclaimed, with pleasant superiority;
|
|
"you are always fighting about how things should be done, and the
|
|
consequence is you are never able to do anything. Would you like
|
|
me to tell you what a Unitarian horsedealer said to me at Brindisi
|
|
about politicians?"
|
|
|
|
A Unitarian horsedealer at Brindisi had all the allurement of the
|
|
unexpected. Henry Greech's witticisms at the expense of the Front
|
|
Opposition bench were destined to remain as unfinished as his
|
|
wife's history of the broken soup-plates. Thorle was primed with
|
|
an ample succession of stories and themes, chiefly concerning
|
|
poverty, thriftlessness, reclamation, reformed characters, and so
|
|
forth, which carried him in an almost uninterrupted sequence
|
|
through the remainder of the dinner.
|
|
|
|
"What I want to do is to make people think," he said, turning his
|
|
prominent eyes on to his hostess; "it's so hard to make people
|
|
think."
|
|
|
|
"At any rate you give them the opportunity," said Comus,
|
|
cryptically.
|
|
|
|
As the ladies rose to leave the table Comus crossed over to pick up
|
|
one of Lady Veula's gloves that had fallen to the floor.
|
|
|
|
"I did not know you kept a dog," said Lady Veula.
|
|
|
|
"We don't," said Comus, "there isn't one in the house."
|
|
|
|
"I could have sworn I saw one follow you across the hall this
|
|
evening," she said.
|
|
|
|
"A small black dog, something like a schipperke?" asked Comus in a
|
|
low voice.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, that was it."
|
|
|
|
"I saw it myself to-night; it ran from behind my chair just as I
|
|
was sitting down. Don't say anything to the others about it; it
|
|
would frighten my mother."
|
|
|
|
"Have you ever seen it before?" Lady Veula asked quickly.
|
|
|
|
"Once, when I was six years old. It followed my father
|
|
downstairs."
|
|
|
|
Lady Veula said nothing. She knew that Comus had lost his father
|
|
at the age of six.
|
|
|
|
In the drawing-room Serena made nervous excuses for her talkative
|
|
friend.
|
|
|
|
"Really, rather an interesting man, you know, and up to the eyes in
|
|
all sorts of movements. Just the sort of person to turn loose at a
|
|
drawing-room meeting, or to send down to a mission-hall in some
|
|
unheard-of neighbourhood. Given a sounding-board and a harmonium,
|
|
and a titled woman of some sort in the chair, and he'll be
|
|
perfectly happy; I must say I hadn't realised how overpowering he
|
|
might be at a small dinner-party."
|
|
|
|
"I should say he was a very good man," said Mrs. Greech; she had
|
|
forgiven the mutilation of her soup-plate story.
|
|
|
|
The party broke up early as most of the guests had other
|
|
engagements to keep. With a belated recognition of the farewell
|
|
nature of the occasion they made pleasant little good-bye remarks
|
|
to Comus, with the usual predictions of prosperity and
|
|
anticipations of an ultimate auspicious return. Even Henry Greech
|
|
sank his personal dislike of the boy for the moment, and made
|
|
hearty jocular allusions to a home-coming, which, in the elder
|
|
man's eyes, seemed possibly pleasantly remote. Lady Veula alone
|
|
made no reference to the future; she simply said, "Good-bye,
|
|
Comus," but her voice was the kindest of all and he responded with
|
|
a look of gratitude. The weariness in her eyes was more marked
|
|
than ever as she lay back against the cushions of her carriage.
|
|
|
|
"What a tragedy life is," she said, aloud to herself.
|
|
|
|
Serena and Stephen Thorle were the last to leave, and Francesca
|
|
stood alone for a moment at the head of the stairway watching Comus
|
|
laughing and chatting as he escorted the departing guests to the
|
|
door. The ice-wall was melting under the influence of coming
|
|
separation, and never had he looked more adorably handsome in her
|
|
eyes, never had his merry laugh and mischief-loving gaiety seemed
|
|
more infectious than on this night of his farewell banquet. She
|
|
was glad enough that he was going away from a life of idleness and
|
|
extravagance and temptation, but she began to suspect that she
|
|
would miss, for a little while at any rate, the high-spirited boy
|
|
who could be so attractive in his better moods. Her impulse, after
|
|
the guests had gone, was to call him to her and hold him once more
|
|
in her arms, and repeat her wishes for his happiness and good-luck
|
|
in the land he was going to, and her promise of his welcome back,
|
|
some not too distant day, to the land he was leaving. She wanted
|
|
to forget, and to make him forget, the months of irritable jangling
|
|
and sharp discussions, the months of cold aloofness and
|
|
indifference and to remember only that he was her own dear Comus as
|
|
in the days of yore, before he had grown from an unmanageable
|
|
pickle into a weariful problem. But she feared lest she should
|
|
break down, and she did not wish to cloud his light-hearted gaiety
|
|
on the very eve of his departure. She watched him for a moment as
|
|
he stood in the hall, settling his tie before a mirror, and then
|
|
went quietly back to her drawing-room. It had not been a very
|
|
successful dinner party, and the general effect it had left on her
|
|
was one of depression.
|
|
|
|
Comus, with a lively musical-comedy air on his lips, and a look of
|
|
wretchedness in his eyes, went out to visit the haunts that he was
|
|
leaving so soon.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
|
|
ELAINE YOUGHAL sat at lunch in the Speise Saal of one of Vienna's
|
|
costlier hotels. The double-headed eagle, with its "K.u.K."
|
|
legend, everywhere met the eye and announced the imperial favour in
|
|
which the establishment basked. Some several square yards of
|
|
yellow bunting, charged with the image of another double-headed
|
|
eagle, floating from the highest flag-staff above the building,
|
|
betrayed to the initiated the fact that a Russian Grand Duke was
|
|
concealed somewhere on the premises. Unannounced by heraldic
|
|
symbolism but unconcealable by reason of nature's own blazonry,
|
|
were several citizens and citizenesses of the great republic of the
|
|
Western world. One or two Cobdenite members of the British
|
|
Parliament engaged in the useful task of proving that the cost of
|
|
living in Vienna was on an exorbitant scale, flitted with
|
|
restrained importance through a land whose fatness they had come to
|
|
spy out; every fancied over-charge in their bills was welcome as
|
|
providing another nail in the coffin of their fiscal opponents. It
|
|
is the glory of democracies that they may be misled but never
|
|
driven. Here and there, like brave deeds in a dust-patterned
|
|
world, flashed and glittered the sumptuous uniforms of
|
|
representatives of the Austrian military caste. Also in evidence,
|
|
at discreet intervals, were stray units of the Semetic tribe that
|
|
nineteen centuries of European neglect had been unable to mislay.
|
|
|
|
Elaine sitting with Courtenay at an elaborately appointed luncheon
|
|
table, gay with high goblets of Bohemian glassware, was mistress of
|
|
three discoveries. First, to her disappointment, that if you
|
|
frequent the more expensive hotels of Europe you must be prepared
|
|
to find, in whatever country you may chance to be staying, a
|
|
depressing international likeness between them all. Secondly, to
|
|
her relief, that one is not expected to be sentimentally amorous
|
|
during a modern honeymoon. Thirdly, rather to her dismay, that
|
|
Courtenay Youghal did not necessarily expect her to be markedly
|
|
affectionate in private. Someone had described him, after their
|
|
marriage, as one of Nature's bachelors, and she began to see how
|
|
aptly the description fitted him.
|
|
|
|
"Will those Germans on our left never stop talking?" she asked, as
|
|
an undying flow of Teutonic small talk rattled and jangled across
|
|
the intervening stretch of carpet. "Not one of those three women
|
|
has ceased talking for an instant since we've been sitting here."
|
|
|
|
"They will presently, if only for a moment," said Courtenay; "when
|
|
the dish you have ordered comes in there will be a deathly silence
|
|
at the next table. No German can see a PLAT brought in for someone
|
|
else without being possessed with a great fear that it represents a
|
|
more toothsome morsel or a better money's worth than what he has
|
|
ordered for himself."
|
|
|
|
The exuberant Teutonic chatter was balanced on the other side of
|
|
the room by an even more penetrating conversation unflaggingly
|
|
maintained by a party of Americans, who were sitting in judgment on
|
|
the cuisine of the country they were passing through, and finding
|
|
few extenuating circumstances.
|
|
|
|
"What Mr. Lonkins wants is a real DEEP cherry pie," announced a
|
|
lady in a tone of dramatic and honest conviction.
|
|
|
|
"Why, yes, that is so," corroborated a gentleman who was apparently
|
|
the Mr. Lonkins in question; "a real DEEP cherry pie."
|
|
|
|
"We had the same trouble way back in Paris," proclaimed another
|
|
lady; "little Jerome and the girls don't want to eat any more CREME
|
|
RENVERSEE. I'd give anything if they could get some real cherry
|
|
pie."
|
|
|
|
"Real DEEP cherry pie," assented Mr. Lonkins.
|
|
|
|
"Way down in Ohio we used to have peach pie that was real good,"
|
|
said Mrs. Lonkins, turning on a tap of reminiscence that presently
|
|
flowed to a cascade. The subject of pies seemed to lend itself to
|
|
indefinite expansion.
|
|
|
|
"Do those people think of nothing but their food?" asked Elaine, as
|
|
the virtues of roasted mutton suddenly came to the fore and
|
|
received emphatic recognition, even the absent and youthful Jerome
|
|
being quoted in its favour.
|
|
|
|
"On the contrary," said Courtenay, "they are a widely-travelled
|
|
set, and the man has had a notably interesting career. It is a
|
|
form of home-sickness with them to discuss and lament the cookery
|
|
and foods that they've never had the leisure to stay at home and
|
|
digest. The Wandering Jew probably babbled unremittingly about
|
|
some breakfast dish that took so long to prepare that he had never
|
|
time to eat it."
|
|
|
|
A waiter deposited a dish of Wiener Nierenbraten in front of
|
|
Elaine. At the same moment a magic hush fell upon the three German
|
|
ladies at the adjoining table, and the flicker of a great fear
|
|
passed across their eyes. Then they burst forth again into
|
|
tumultuous chatter. Courtenay had proved a reliable prophet.
|
|
|
|
Almost at the same moment as the luncheon-dish appeared on the
|
|
scene, two ladies arrived at a neighbouring table, and bowed with
|
|
dignified cordiality to Elaine and Courtenay. They were two of the
|
|
more worldly and travelled of Elaine's extensive stock of aunts,
|
|
and they happened to be making a short stay at the same hotel as
|
|
the young couple. They were far too correct and rationally minded
|
|
to intrude themselves on their niece, but it was significant of
|
|
Elaine's altered view as to the sanctity of honeymoon life that she
|
|
secretly rather welcomed the presence of her two relatives in the
|
|
hotel, and had found time and occasion to give them more of her
|
|
society than she would have considered necessary or desirable a few
|
|
weeks ago. The younger of the two she rather liked, in a
|
|
restrained fashion, as one likes an unpretentious watering-place or
|
|
a restaurant that does not try to give one a musical education in
|
|
addition to one's dinner. One felt instinctively about her that
|
|
she would never wear rather more valuable diamonds than any other
|
|
woman in the room, and would never be the only person to be saved
|
|
in a steamboat disaster or hotel fire. As a child she might have
|
|
been perfectly well able to recite "On Linden when the sun was
|
|
low," but one felt certain that nothing ever induced her to do so.
|
|
The elder aunt, Mrs. Goldbrook, did not share her sister's
|
|
character as a human rest-cure; most people found her rather
|
|
disturbing, chiefly, perhaps, from her habit of asking unimportant
|
|
questions with enormous solemnity. Her manner of enquiring after a
|
|
trifling ailment gave one the impression that she was more
|
|
concerned with the fortunes of the malady than with oneself, and
|
|
when one got rid of a cold one felt that she almost expected to be
|
|
given its postal address. Probably her manner was merely the
|
|
defensive outwork of an innate shyness, but she was not a woman who
|
|
commanded confidences.
|
|
|
|
"A telephone call for Courtenay," commented the younger of the two
|
|
women as Youghal hurriedly flashed through the room; "the telephone
|
|
system seems to enter very largely into that young man's life."
|
|
|
|
"The telephone has robbed matrimony of most of its sting," said the
|
|
elder; "so much more discreet than pen and ink communications which
|
|
get read by the wrong people."
|
|
|
|
Elaine's aunts were conscientiously worldly; they were the natural
|
|
outcome of a stock that had been conscientiously straight-laced for
|
|
many generations.
|
|
|
|
Elaine had progressed to the pancake stage before Courtenay
|
|
returned.
|
|
|
|
"Sorry to be away so long," he said, "but I've arranged something
|
|
rather nice for to-night. There's rather a jolly masquerade ball
|
|
on. I've 'phoned about getting a costume for you and it's alright.
|
|
It will suit you beautifully, and I've got my harlequin dress with
|
|
me. Madame Kelnicort, excellent soul, is going to chaperone you,
|
|
and she'll take you back any time you like; I'm quite unreliable
|
|
when I get into fancy dress. I shall probably keep going till some
|
|
unearthly hour of the morning."
|
|
|
|
A masquerade ball in a strange city hardly represented Elaine's
|
|
idea of enjoyment. Carefully to disguise one's identity in a
|
|
neighbourhood where one was entirely unknown seemed to her rather
|
|
meaningless. With Courtenay, of course, it was different; he
|
|
seemed to have friends and acquaintances everywhere. However, the
|
|
matter had progressed to a point which would have made a refusal to
|
|
go seem rather ungracious. Elaine finished her pancake and began
|
|
to take a polite interest in her costume.
|
|
|
|
"What is your character?" asked Madame Kelnicort that evening, as
|
|
they uncloaked, preparatory to entering the already crowded ball-
|
|
room.
|
|
|
|
"I believe I'm supposed to represent Marjolaine de Montfort,
|
|
whoever she may have been," said Elaine. "Courtenay declares he
|
|
only wanted to marry me because I'm his ideal of her."
|
|
|
|
"But what a mistake to go as a character you know nothing about.
|
|
To enjoy a masquerade ball you ought to throw away your own self
|
|
and be the character you represent. Now Courtenay has been
|
|
Harlequin since half-way through dinner; I could see it dancing in
|
|
his eyes. At about six o'clock to-morrow morning he will fall
|
|
asleep and wake up a member of the British House of Parliament on
|
|
his honeymoon, but to-night he is unrestrainedly Harlequin."
|
|
|
|
Elaine stood in the ball-room surrounded by a laughing jostling
|
|
throng of pierrots, jockeys, Dresden-china shepherdesses, Roumanian
|
|
peasant-girls and all the lively make-believe creatures that form
|
|
the ingredients of a fancy-dress ball. As she stood watching them
|
|
she experienced a growing feeling of annoyance, chiefly with
|
|
herself. She was assisting, as the French say, at one of the
|
|
gayest scenes of Europe's gayest capital, and she was conscious of
|
|
being absolutely unaffected by the gaiety around her. The costumes
|
|
were certainly interesting to look at, and the music good to listen
|
|
to, and to that extent she was amused, but the ABANDON of the scene
|
|
made no appeal to her. It was like watching a game of which you
|
|
did not know the rules, and in the issue of which you were not
|
|
interested. Elaine began to wonder what was the earliest moment at
|
|
which she could drag Madame Kelnicort away from the revel without
|
|
being guilty of sheer cruelty. Then Courtenay wriggled out of the
|
|
crush and came towards her, a joyous laughing Courtenay, looking
|
|
younger and handsomer than she had ever seen him. She could
|
|
scarcely recognise in him to-night the rising young debater who
|
|
made embarrassing onslaughts on the Government's foreign policy
|
|
before a crowded House of Commons. He claimed her for the dance
|
|
that was just starting, and steered her dexterously into the heart
|
|
of the waltzing crowd.
|
|
|
|
"You look more like Marjolaine than I should have thought a mortal
|
|
woman of these days could look," he declared, "only Marjolaine did
|
|
smile sometimes. You have rather the air of wondering if you'd
|
|
left out enough tea for the servants' breakfast. Don't mind my
|
|
teasing; I love you to look like that, and besides, it makes a
|
|
splendid foil to my Harlequin - my selfishness coming to the fore
|
|
again, you see. But you really are to go home the moment you're
|
|
bored; the excellent Kelnicort gets heaps of dances throughout the
|
|
winter, so don't mind sacrificing her."
|
|
|
|
A little later in the evening Elaine found herself standing out a
|
|
dance with a grave young gentleman from the Russian Embassy.
|
|
|
|
"Monsieur Courtenay enjoys himself, doesn't he?" he observed, as
|
|
the youthful-looking harlequin flashed past them, looking like some
|
|
restless gorgeous-hued dragonfly; "why is it that the good God has
|
|
given your countrymen the boon of eternal youth? Some of your
|
|
countrywomen, too, but all of the men."
|
|
|
|
Elaine could think of many of her countrymen who were not and never
|
|
could have been youthful, but as far as Courtenay was concerned she
|
|
recognised the fitness of the remark. And the recognition carried
|
|
with it a sense of depression. Would he always remain youthful and
|
|
keen on gaiety and revelling while she grew staid and retiring?
|
|
She had thrust the lively intractable Comus out of her mind, as by
|
|
his perverseness he had thrust himself out of her heart, and she
|
|
had chosen the brilliant young man of affairs as her husband. He
|
|
had honestly let her see the selfish side of his character while he
|
|
was courting her, but she had been prepared to make due sacrifices
|
|
to the selfishness of a public man who had his career to consider
|
|
above all other things. Would she also have to make sacrifices to
|
|
the harlequin spirit which was now revealing itself as an
|
|
undercurrent in his nature? When one has inured oneself to the
|
|
idea of a particular form of victimisation it is disconcerting to
|
|
be confronted with another. Many a man who would patiently undergo
|
|
martyrdom for religion's sake would be furiously unwilling to be a
|
|
martyr to neuralgia.
|
|
|
|
"I think that is why you English love animals so much," pursued the
|
|
young diplomat; "you are such splendid animals yourselves. You are
|
|
lively because you want to be lively, not because people are
|
|
looking on at you. Monsieur Courtenay is certainly an animal. I
|
|
mean it as a high compliment."
|
|
|
|
"Am I an animal?" asked Elaine.
|
|
|
|
"I was going to say you are an angel," said the Russian, in some
|
|
embarrassment, "but I do not think that would do; angels and
|
|
animals would never get on together. To get on with animals you
|
|
must have a sense of humour, and I don't suppose angels have any
|
|
sense of humour; you see it would be no use to them as they never
|
|
hear any jokes."
|
|
|
|
"Perhaps," said Elaine, with a tinge of bitterness in her voice,
|
|
"perhaps I am a vegetable."
|
|
|
|
"I think you most remind me of a picture," said the Russian.
|
|
|
|
It was not the first time Elaine had heard the simile.
|
|
|
|
"I know," she said, "the Narrow Gallery at the Louvre; attributed
|
|
to Leonardo da Vinci."
|
|
|
|
Evidently the impression she made on people was solely one of
|
|
externals.
|
|
|
|
Was that how Courtenay regarded her? Was that to be her function
|
|
and place in life, a painted background, a decorative setting to
|
|
other people's triumphs and tragedies? Somehow to-night she had
|
|
the feeling that a general might have who brought imposing forces
|
|
into the field and could do nothing with them. She possessed youth
|
|
and good looks, considerable wealth, and had just made what would
|
|
be thought by most people a very satisfactory marriage. And
|
|
already she seemed to be standing aside as an onlooker where she
|
|
had expected herself to be taking a leading part.
|
|
|
|
"Does this sort of thing appeal to you?" she asked the young
|
|
Russian, nodding towards the gay scrimmage of masqueraders and
|
|
rather prepared to hear an amused negative."
|
|
|
|
"But yes, of course," he answered; "costume balls, fancy fairs,
|
|
cafe chantant, casino, anything that is not real life appeals to us
|
|
Russians. Real life with us is the sort of thing that Maxim Gorki
|
|
deals in. It interests us immensely, but we like to get away from
|
|
it sometimes."
|
|
|
|
Madame Kelnicort came up with another prospective partner, and
|
|
Elaine delivered her ukase: one more dance and then back to the
|
|
hotel. Without any special regret she made her retreat from the
|
|
revel which Courtenay was enjoying under the impression that it was
|
|
life and the young Russian under the firm conviction that it was
|
|
not.
|
|
|
|
Elaine breakfasted at her aunts' table the next morning at much her
|
|
usual hour. Courtenay was sleeping the sleep of a happy tired
|
|
animal. He had given instructions to be called at eleven o'clock,
|
|
from which time onward the NEUE FREIE PRESSE, the ZEIT, and his
|
|
toilet would occupy his attention till he appeared at the luncheon
|
|
table. There were not many people breakfasting when Elaine arrived
|
|
on the scene, but the room seemed to be fuller than it really was
|
|
by reason of a penetrating voice that was engaged in recounting how
|
|
far the standard of Viennese breakfast fare fell below the
|
|
expectations and desires of little Jerome and the girls.
|
|
|
|
"If ever little Jerome becomes President of the United States,"
|
|
said Elaine, "I shall be able to contribute quite an informing
|
|
article on his gastronomic likes and dislikes to the papers."
|
|
|
|
The aunts were discreetly inquisitive as to the previous evening's
|
|
entertainment.
|
|
|
|
"If Elaine would flirt mildly with somebody it would be such a good
|
|
thing," said Mrs. Goldbrook; "it would remind Courtenay that he's
|
|
not the only attractive young man in the world."
|
|
|
|
Elaine, however, did not gratify their hopes; she referred to the
|
|
ball with the detachment she would have shown in describing a
|
|
drawing-room show of cottage industries. It was not difficult to
|
|
discern in her description of the affair the confession that she
|
|
had been slightly bored. From Courtenay, later in the day, the
|
|
aunts received a much livelier impression of the festivities, from
|
|
which it was abundantly clear that he at any rate had managed to
|
|
amuse himself. Neither did it appear that his good opinion of his
|
|
own attractions had suffered any serious shock. He was distinctly
|
|
in a very good temper.
|
|
|
|
"The secret of enjoying a honeymoon," said Mrs. Goldbrook
|
|
afterwards to her sister, "is not to attempt too much."
|
|
|
|
"You mean - ?"
|
|
|
|
"Courtenay is content to try and keep one person amused and happy,
|
|
and he thoroughly succeeds."
|
|
|
|
"I certainly don't think Elaine is going to be very happy," said
|
|
her sister, "but at least Courtenay saved her from making the
|
|
greatest mistake she could have made - marrying that young
|
|
Bassington."
|
|
|
|
"He has also," said Mrs. Goldbrook, "helped her to make the next
|
|
biggest mistake of her life - marrying Courtenay Youghal.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
|
|
IT was late afternoon by the banks of a swiftly rushing river, a
|
|
river that gave back a haze of heat from its waters as though it
|
|
were some stagnant steaming lagoon, and yet seemed to be whirling
|
|
onward with the determination of a living thing, perpetually eager
|
|
and remorseless, leaping savagely at any obstacle that attempted to
|
|
stay its course; an unfriendly river, to whose waters you committed
|
|
yourself at your peril. Under the hot breathless shade of the
|
|
trees on its shore arose that acrid all-pervading smell that seems
|
|
to hang everywhere about the tropics, a smell as of some monstrous
|
|
musty still-room where herbs and spices have been crushed and
|
|
distilled and stored for hundreds of years, and where the windows
|
|
have seldom been opened. In the dazzling heat that still held
|
|
undisputed sway over the scene, insects and birds seemed
|
|
preposterously alive and active, flitting their gay colours through
|
|
the sunbeams, and crawling over the baked dust in the full swing
|
|
and pursuit of their several businesses; the flies engaged in
|
|
Heaven knows what, and the fly-catchers busy with the flies.
|
|
Beasts and humans showed no such indifference to the temperature;
|
|
the sun would have to slant yet further downward before the earth
|
|
would become a fit arena for their revived activities. In the
|
|
sheltered basement of a wayside rest-house a gang of native
|
|
hammock-bearers slept or chattered drowsily through the last hours
|
|
of the long mid-day halt; wide awake, yet almost motionless in the
|
|
thrall of a heavy lassitude, their European master sat alone in an
|
|
upper chamber, staring out through a narrow window-opening at the
|
|
native village, spreading away in thick clusters of huts girt
|
|
around with cultivated vegetation. It seemed a vast human ant-
|
|
hill, which would presently be astir with its teeming human life,
|
|
as though the Sun God in his last departing stride had roused it
|
|
with a careless kick. Even as Comus watched he could see the
|
|
beginnings of the evening's awakening. Women, squatting in front
|
|
of their huts, began to pound away at the rice or maize that would
|
|
form the evening meal, girls were collecting their water pots
|
|
preparatory to a walk down to the river, and enterprising goats
|
|
made tentative forays through gaps in the ill-kept fences of
|
|
neighbouring garden plots; their hurried retreats showed that here
|
|
at least someone was keeping alert and wakeful vigil. Behind a hut
|
|
perched on a steep hill-side, just opposite to the rest-house, two
|
|
boys were splitting wood with a certain languid industry; further
|
|
down the road a group of dogs were leisurely working themselves up
|
|
to quarrelling pitch. Here and there, bands of evil-looking pigs
|
|
roamed about, busy with foraging excursions that came unpleasantly
|
|
athwart the border-line of scavenging. And from the trees that
|
|
bounded and intersected the village rose the horrible, tireless,
|
|
spiteful-sounding squawking of the iron-throated crows.
|
|
|
|
Comus sat and watched it all with a sense of growing aching
|
|
depression. It was so utterly trivial to his eyes, so devoid of
|
|
interest, and yet it was so real, so serious, so implacable in its
|
|
continuity. The brain grew tired with the thought of its unceasing
|
|
reproduction. It had all gone on, as it was going on now, by the
|
|
side of the great rushing swirling river, this tilling and planting
|
|
and harvesting, marketing and store-keeping, feast-making and
|
|
fetish-worship and love-making, burying and giving in marriage,
|
|
child-bearing and child-rearing, all this had been going on, in the
|
|
shimmering, blistering heat and the warm nights, while he had been
|
|
a youngster at school, dimly recognising Africa as a division of
|
|
the earth's surface that it was advisable to have a certain nodding
|
|
acquaintance with.
|
|
|
|
It had been going on in all its trifling detail, all its serious
|
|
intensity, when his father and his grandfather in their day had
|
|
been little boys at school, it would go on just as intently as ever
|
|
long after Comus and his generation had passed away, just as the
|
|
shadows would lengthen and fade under the mulberry trees in that
|
|
far away English garden, round the old stone fountain where a
|
|
leaden otter for ever preyed on a leaden salmon.
|
|
|
|
Comus rose impatiently from his seat, and walked wearily across the
|
|
hut to another window-opening which commanded a broad view of the
|
|
river. There was something which fascinated and then depressed one
|
|
in its ceaseless hurrying onward sweep, its tons of water rushing
|
|
on for all time, as long as the face of the earth should remain
|
|
unchanged. On its further shore could be seen spread out at
|
|
intervals other teeming villages, with their cultivated plots and
|
|
pasture clearings, their moving dots which meant cattle and goats
|
|
and dogs and children. And far up its course, lost in the forest
|
|
growth that fringed its banks, were hidden away yet more villages,
|
|
human herding-grounds where men dwelt and worked and bartered,
|
|
squabbled and worshipped, sickened and perished, while the river
|
|
went by with its endless swirl and rush of gleaming waters. One
|
|
could well understand primitive early races making propitiatory
|
|
sacrifices to the spirit of a great river on whose shores they
|
|
dwelt. Time and the river were the two great forces that seemed to
|
|
matter here.
|
|
|
|
It was almost a relief to turn back to that other outlook and watch
|
|
the village life that was now beginning to wake in earnest. The
|
|
procession of water-fetchers had formed itself in a long chattering
|
|
line that stretched river-wards. Comus wondered how many tens of
|
|
thousands of times that procession had been formed since first the
|
|
village came into existence. They had been doing it while he was
|
|
playing in the cricket-fields at school, while he was spending
|
|
Christmas holidays in Paris, while he was going his careless round
|
|
of theatres, dances, suppers and card-parties, just as they were
|
|
doing it now; they would be doing it when there was no one alive
|
|
who remembered Comus Bassington. This thought recurred again and
|
|
again with painful persistence, a morbid growth arising in part
|
|
from his loneliness.
|
|
|
|
Staring dumbly out at the toiling sweltering human ant-hill Comus
|
|
marvelled how missionary enthusiasts could labour hopefully at the
|
|
work of transplanting their religion, with its homegrown accretions
|
|
of fatherly parochial benevolence, in this heat-blistered, fever-
|
|
scourged wilderness, where men lived like groundbait and died like
|
|
flies. Demons one might believe in, if one did not hold one's
|
|
imagination in healthy check, but a kindly all-managing God, never.
|
|
Somewhere in the west country of England Comus had an uncle who
|
|
lived in a rose-smothered rectory and taught a wholesome gentle-
|
|
hearted creed that expressed itself in the spirit of "Little lamb,
|
|
who made thee?" and faithfully reflected the beautiful homely
|
|
Christ-child sentiment of Saxon Europe. What a far away, unreal
|
|
fairy story it all seemed here in this West African land, where the
|
|
bodies of men were of as little account as the bubbles that floated
|
|
on the oily froth of the great flowing river, and where it required
|
|
a stretch of wild profitless imagination to credit them with
|
|
undying souls. In the life he had come from Comus had been
|
|
accustomed to think of individuals as definite masterful
|
|
personalities, making their several marks on the circumstances that
|
|
revolved around them; they did well or ill, or in most cases
|
|
indifferently, and were criticised, praised, blamed, thwarted or
|
|
tolerated, or given way to. In any case, humdrum or outstanding,
|
|
they had their spheres of importance, little or big. They
|
|
dominated a breakfast table or harassed a Government, according to
|
|
their capabilities or opportunities, or perhaps they merely had
|
|
irritating mannerisms. At any rate it seemed highly probable that
|
|
they had souls. Here a man simply made a unit in an unnumbered
|
|
population, an inconsequent dot in a loosely-compiled deathroll.
|
|
Even his own position as a white man exalted conspicuously above a
|
|
horde of black natives did not save Comus from the depressing sense
|
|
of nothingness which his first experience of fever had thrown over
|
|
him. He was a lost, soulless body in this great uncaring land; if
|
|
he died another would take his place, his few effects would be
|
|
inventoried and sent down to the coast, someone else would finish
|
|
off any tea or whisky that he left behind - that would be all.
|
|
|
|
It was nearly time to be starting towards the next halting place
|
|
where he would dine or at any rate eat something. But the
|
|
lassitude which the fever had bequeathed him made the tedium of
|
|
travelling through interminable forest-tracks a weariness to be
|
|
deferred as long as possible. The bearers were nothing loth to let
|
|
another half-hour or so slip by, and Comus dragged a battered
|
|
paper-covered novel from the pocket of his coat. It was a story
|
|
dealing with the elaborately tangled love affairs of a surpassingly
|
|
uninteresting couple, and even in his almost bookless state Comus
|
|
had not been able to plough his way through more than two-thirds of
|
|
its dull length; bound up with the cover, however, were some pages
|
|
of advertisement, and these the exile scanned with a hungry
|
|
intentness that the romance itself could never have commanded. The
|
|
name of a shop, of a street, the address of a restaurant, came to
|
|
him as a bitter reminder of the world he had lost, a world that ate
|
|
and drank and flirted, gambled and made merry, a world that debated
|
|
and intrigued and wire-pulled, fought or compromised political
|
|
battles - and recked nothing of its outcasts wandering through
|
|
forest paths and steamy swamps or lying in the grip of fever.
|
|
Comus read and re-read those few lines of advertisement, just as he
|
|
treasured a much-crumpled programme of a first-night performance at
|
|
the Straw Exchange Theatre; they seemed to make a little more real
|
|
the past that was already so shadowy and so utterly remote. For a
|
|
moment he could almost capture the sensation of being once again in
|
|
those haunts that he loved; then he looked round and pushed the
|
|
book wearily from him. The steaming heat, the forest, the rushing
|
|
river hemmed him in on all sides.
|
|
|
|
The two boys who had been splitting wood ceased from their labours
|
|
and straightened their backs; suddenly the smaller of the two gave
|
|
the other a resounding whack with a split lath that he still held
|
|
in his hand, and flew up the hillside with a scream of laughter and
|
|
simulated terror, the bigger lad following in hot pursuit. Up and
|
|
down the steep bush-grown slope they raced and twisted and dodged,
|
|
coming sometimes to close quarters in a hurricane of squeals and
|
|
smacks, rolling over and over like fighting kittens, and breaking
|
|
away again to start fresh provocation and fresh pursuit. Now and
|
|
again they would lie for a time panting in what seemed the last
|
|
stage of exhaustion, and then they would be off in another wild
|
|
scamper, their dusky bodies flitting through the bushes,
|
|
disappearing and reappearing with equal suddenness. Presently two
|
|
girls of their own age, who had returned from the water-fetching,
|
|
sprang out on them from ambush, and the four joined in one joyous
|
|
gambol that lit up the hillside with shrill echoes and glimpses of
|
|
flying limbs. Comus sat and watched, at first with an amused
|
|
interest, then with a returning flood of depression and heart-ache.
|
|
Those wild young human kittens represented the joy of life, he was
|
|
the outsider, the lonely alien, watching something in which he
|
|
could not join, a happiness in which he had no part or lot. He
|
|
would pass presently out of the village and his bearers' feet would
|
|
leave their indentations in the dust; that would be his most
|
|
permanent memorial in this little oasis of teeming life. And that
|
|
other life, in which he once moved with such confident sense of his
|
|
own necessary participation in it, how completely he had passed out
|
|
of it. Amid all its laughing throngs, its card parties and race-
|
|
meetings and country-house gatherings, he was just a mere name,
|
|
remembered or forgotten, Comus Bassington, the boy who went away.
|
|
He had loved himself very well and never troubled greatly whether
|
|
anyone else really loved him, and now he realised what he had made
|
|
of his life. And at the same time he knew that if his chance were
|
|
to come again he would throw it away just as surely, just as
|
|
perversely. Fate played with him with loaded dice; he would lose
|
|
always.
|
|
|
|
One person in the whole world had cared for him, for longer than he
|
|
could remember, cared for him perhaps more than he knew, cared for
|
|
him perhaps now. But a wall of ice had mounted up between him and
|
|
her, and across it there blew that cold-breath that chills or kills
|
|
affection.
|
|
|
|
The words of a well-known old song, the wistful cry of a lost
|
|
cause, rang with insistent mockery through his brain:
|
|
|
|
"Better loved you canna be,
|
|
Will ye ne'er come back again?"
|
|
|
|
If it was love that was to bring him back he must be an exile for
|
|
ever. His epitaph in the mouths of those that remembered him would
|
|
be, Comus Bassington, the boy who never came back.
|
|
|
|
And in his unutterable loneliness he bowed his head on his arms,
|
|
that he might not see the joyous scrambling frolic on yonder
|
|
hillside.
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
|
|
THE bleak rawness of a grey December day held sway over St. James's
|
|
Park, that sanctuary of lawn and tree and pool, into which the
|
|
bourgeois innovator has rushed ambitiously time and again, to find
|
|
that he must take the patent leather from off his feet, for the
|
|
ground on which he stands is hallowed ground.
|
|
|
|
In the lonely hour of early afternoon, when the workers had gone
|
|
back to their work, and the loiterers were scarcely yet gathered
|
|
again, Francesca Bassington made her way restlessly along the
|
|
stretches of gravelled walk that bordered the ornamental water.
|
|
The overmastering unhappiness that filled her heart and stifled her
|
|
thinking powers found answering echo in her surroundings. There is
|
|
a sorrow that lingers in old parks and gardens that the busy
|
|
streets have no leisure to keep by them; the dead must bury their
|
|
dead in Whitehall or the Place de la Concorde, but there are
|
|
quieter spots where they may still keep tryst with the living and
|
|
intrude the memory of their bygone selves on generations that have
|
|
almost forgotten them. Even in tourist-trampled Versailles the
|
|
desolation of a tragedy that cannot die haunts the terraces and
|
|
fountains like a bloodstain that will not wash out; in the Saxon
|
|
Garden at Warsaw there broods the memory of long-dead things,
|
|
coeval with the stately trees that shade its walks, and with the
|
|
carp that swim to-day in its ponds as they doubtless swam there
|
|
when "Lieber Augustin" was a living person and not as yet an
|
|
immortal couplet. And St. James's Park, with its lawns and walks
|
|
and waterfowl, harbours still its associations with a bygone order
|
|
of men and women, whose happiness and sadness are woven into its
|
|
history, dim and grey as they were once bright and glowing, like
|
|
the faded pattern worked into the fabric of an old tapestry. It
|
|
was here that Francesca had made her way when the intolerable
|
|
inaction of waiting had driven her forth from her home. She was
|
|
waiting for that worst news of all, the news which does not kill
|
|
hope, because there has been none to kill, but merely ends
|
|
suspense. An early message had said that Comus was ill, which
|
|
might have meant much or little; then there had come that morning a
|
|
cablegram which only meant one thing; in a few hours she would get
|
|
a final message, of which this was the preparatory forerunner. She
|
|
already knew as much as that awaited message would tell her. She
|
|
knew that she would never see Comus again, and she knew now that
|
|
she loved him beyond all things that the world could hold for her.
|
|
It was no sudden rush of pity or compunction that clouded her
|
|
judgment or gilded her recollection of him; she saw him as he was,
|
|
the beautiful, wayward, laughing boy, with his naughtiness, his
|
|
exasperating selfishness, his insurmountable folly and
|
|
perverseness, his cruelty that spared not even himself, and as he
|
|
was, as he always had been, she knew that he was the one thing that
|
|
the Fates had willed that she should love. She did not stop to
|
|
accuse or excuse herself for having sent him forth to what was to
|
|
prove his death. It was, doubtless, right and reasonable that he
|
|
should have gone out there, as hundreds of other men went out, in
|
|
pursuit of careers; the terrible thing was that he would never come
|
|
back. The old cruel hopelessness that had always chequered her
|
|
pride and pleasure in his good looks and high spirits and fitfully
|
|
charming ways had dealt her a last crushing blow; he was dying
|
|
somewhere thousands of miles away without hope of recovery, without
|
|
a word of love to comfort him, and without hope or shred of
|
|
consolation she was waiting to hear of the end. The end; that last
|
|
dreadful piece of news which would write "nevermore" across his
|
|
life and hers.
|
|
|
|
The lively bustle in the streets had been a torture that she could
|
|
not bear. It wanted but two days to Christmas and the gaiety of
|
|
the season, forced or genuine, rang out everywhere. Christmas
|
|
shopping, with its anxious solicitude or self-centred absorption,
|
|
overspread the West End and made the pavements scarcely passable at
|
|
certain favoured points. Proud parents, parcel-laden and
|
|
surrounded by escorts of their young people, compared notes with
|
|
one another on the looks and qualities of their offspring and
|
|
exchanged loud hurried confidences on the difficulty or success
|
|
which each had experienced in getting the right presents for one
|
|
and all. Shouted directions where to find this or that article at
|
|
its best mingled with salvos of Christmas good wishes. To
|
|
Francesca, making her way frantically through the carnival of
|
|
happiness with that lonely deathbed in her eyes, it had seemed a
|
|
callous mockery of her pain; could not people remember that there
|
|
were crucifixions as well as joyous birthdays in the world? Every
|
|
mother that she passed happy in the company of a fresh-looking
|
|
clean-limbed schoolboy son sent a fresh stab at her heart, and the
|
|
very shops had their bitter memories. There was the tea-shop where
|
|
he and she had often taken tea together, or, in the days of their
|
|
estrangement, sat with their separate friends at separate tables.
|
|
There were other shops where extravagantly-incurred bills had
|
|
furnished material for those frequently recurring scenes of
|
|
recrimination, and the Colonial outfitters, where, as he had
|
|
phrased it in whimsical mockery, he had bought grave-clothes for
|
|
his burying-alive. The "oubliette!" She remembered the bitter
|
|
petulant name he had flung at his destined exile. There at least
|
|
he had been harder on himself than the Fates were pleased to will;
|
|
never, as long as Francesca lived and had a brain that served her,
|
|
would she be able to forget. That narcotic would never be given to
|
|
her. Unrelenting, unsparing memory would be with her always to
|
|
remind her of those last days of tragedy. Already her mind was
|
|
dwelling on the details of that ghastly farewell dinner-party and
|
|
recalling one by one the incidents of ill-omen that had marked it;
|
|
how they had sat down seven to table and how one liqueur glass in
|
|
the set of seven had been shivered into fragments; how her glass
|
|
had slipped from her hand as she raised it to her lips to wish
|
|
Comus a safe return; and the strange, quiet hopelessness of Lady
|
|
Veula's "good-bye"; she remembered now how it had chilled and
|
|
frightened her at the moment.
|
|
|
|
The park was filling again with its floating population of
|
|
loiterers, and Francesca's footsteps began to take a homeward
|
|
direction. Something seemed to tell her that the message for which
|
|
she waited had arrived and was lying there on the hall table. Her
|
|
brother, who had announced his intention of visiting her early in
|
|
the afternoon would have gone by now; he knew nothing of this
|
|
morning's bad news - the instinct of a wounded animal to creep away
|
|
by itself had prompted her to keep her sorrow from him as long as
|
|
possible. His visit did not necessitate her presence; he was
|
|
bringing an Austrian friend, who was compiling a work on the
|
|
Franco-Flemish school of painting, to inspect the Van der Meulen,
|
|
which Henry Greech hoped might perhaps figure as an illustration in
|
|
the book. They were due to arrive shortly after lunch, and
|
|
Francesca had left a note of apology, pleading an urgent engagement
|
|
elsewhere. As she turned to make her way across the Mall into the
|
|
Green Park a gentle voice hailed her from a carriage that was just
|
|
drawing up by the sidewalk. Lady Caroline Benaresq had been
|
|
favouring the Victoria Memorial with a long unfriendly stare.
|
|
|
|
"In primitive days," she remarked, "I believe it was the fashion
|
|
for great chiefs and rulers to have large numbers of their
|
|
relatives and dependents killed and buried with them; in these more
|
|
enlightened times we have invented quite another way of making a
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great Sovereign universally regretted. My dear Francesca," she
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broke off suddenly, catching the misery that had settled in the
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other's eyes, "what is the matter? Have you had bad news from out
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there?"
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"I am waiting for very bad news," said Francesca, and Lady Caroline
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knew what had happened.
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"I wish I could say something; I can't." Lady Caroline spoke in a
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harsh, grunting voice that few people had ever heard her use.
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Francesca crossed the Mall and the carriage drove on.
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"Heaven help that poor woman," said Lady Caroline; which was, for
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her, startlingly like a prayer.
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As Francesca entered the hall she gave a quick look at the table;
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several packages, evidently an early batch of Christmas presents,
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were there, and two or three letters. On a salver by itself was
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the cablegram for which she had waited. A maid, who had evidently
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been on the lookout for her, brought her the salver. The servants
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were well aware of the dreadful thing that was happening, and there
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was pity on the girl's face and in her voice.
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"This came for you ten minutes ago, ma'am, and Mr. Greech has been
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here, ma'am, with another gentleman, and was sorry you weren't at
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home. Mr. Greech said he would call again in about half-an-hour."
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Francesca carried the cablegram unopened into the drawing-room and
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sat down for a moment to think. There was no need to read it yet,
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for she knew what she would find written there. For a few pitiful
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moments Comus would seem less hopelessly lost to her if she put off
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the reading of that last terrible message. She rose and crossed
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over to the windows and pulled down the blinds, shutting out the
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waning December day, and then reseated herself. Perhaps in the
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shadowy half-light her boy would come and sit with her again for
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awhile and let her look her last upon his loved face; she could
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never touch him again or hear his laughing, petulant voice, but
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surely she might look on her dead. And her starving eyes saw only
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the hateful soulless things of bronze and silver and porcelain that
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she had set up and worshipped as gods; look where she would they
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were there around her, the cold ruling deities of the home that
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held no place for her dead boy. He had moved in and out among
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them, the warm, living, breathing thing that had been hers to love,
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and she had turned her eyes from that youthful comely figure to
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adore a few feet of painted canvas, a musty relic of a long
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departed craftsman. And now he was gone from her sight, from her
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touch, from her hearing for ever, without even a thought to flash
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between them for all the dreary years that she should live, and
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these things of canvas and pigment and wrought metal would stay
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with her. They were her soul. And what shall it profit a man if
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he save his soul and slay his heart in torment?
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On a small table by her side was Mervyn Quentock's portrait of her
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- the prophetic symbol of her tragedy; the rich dead harvest of
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unreal things that had never known life, and the bleak thrall of
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black unending Winter, a Winter in which things died and knew no
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re-awakening.
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Francesca turned to the small envelope lying in her lap; very
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slowly she opened it and read the short message. Then she sat numb
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and silent for a long, long time, or perhaps only for minutes. The
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voice of Henry Greech in the hall, enquiring for her, called her to
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herself. Hurriedly she crushed the piece of paper out of sight; he
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would have to be told, of course, but just yet her pain seemed too
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dreadful to be laid bare. "Comus is dead" was a sentence beyond
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her power to speak.
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"I have bad news for you, Francesca, I'm sorry to say," Henry
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announced. Had he heard, too?
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"Henneberg has been here and looked at the picture," he continued,
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seating himself by her side, "and though he admired it immensely as
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a work of art he gave me a disagreeable surprise by assuring me
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that it's not a genuine Van der Meulen. It's a splendid copy, but
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still, unfortunately, only a copy."
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Henry paused and glanced at his sister to see how she had taken the
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unwelcome announcement. Even in the dim light he caught some of
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the anguish in her eyes.
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"My dear Francesca," he said soothingly, laying his hand
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affectionately on her arm, "I know that this must be a great
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disappointment to you, you've always set such store by this
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picture, but you mustn't take it too much to heart. These
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disagreeable discoveries come at times to most picture fanciers and
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|
owners. Why, about twenty per cent. of the alleged Old Masters in
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the Louvre are supposed to be wrongly attributed. And there are
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heaps of similar cases in this country. Lady Dovecourt was telling
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me the other day that they simply daren't have an expert in to
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examine the Van Dykes at Columbey for fear of unwelcome
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disclosures. And besides, your picture is such an excellent copy
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that it's by no means without a value of its own. You must get
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over the disappointment you naturally feel, and take a
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philosophical view of the matter. . . "
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Francesca sat in stricken silence, crushing the folded morsel of
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paper tightly in her hand and wondering if the thin, cheerful voice
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with its pitiless, ghastly mockery of consolation would never stop.
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End of the Project Gutenberg eText The Unbearable Bassington
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