<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p>A fair-bearded, red-faced, blue-eyed, grinning giant got out of
the train and catching sight of us ran up and laid a couple of
great sun-glazed hands on my shoulders.</p>
<p>"Hullo! hullo! hullo!" he shouted, and gripping Adrian in his
turn, shouted it again. He made such an uproar that people stuck
wondering heads out of the carriage windows. Then he thrust himself
between us, linked our arms in his and made us charge with him down
the quiet country platform. A porter followed with his
suit-case.</p>
<p>"Why didn't you tell me that the Man of Fame was with you?"</p>
<p>"I thought I'd give you a pleasant surprise," said I.</p>
<p>"I met Robson of the Embassy in Constantinople—you
remember Robson of Pembroke—fussy little
cock-sparrow—he'd just come from England and was full of it.
You seem to have got 'em in the neck. Bully! Bully!"</p>
<p>Adrian took advantage of the narrow width of the exit to release
himself and I, who went on with Jaffery, looking back, saw him rub
himself ruefully, as though he had been mauled by a bear.</p>
<p>"And how's everybody?" Jaffery's voice reverberated through the
subway. "Barbara and the fairy grasshopper? I'm longing to see 'em.
That's the pull of being free. You can adopt other fellows' wives
and families. I'm coming home now to my adopted wife and daughter.
How are they?"</p>
<p>I answered explicitly. He boomed on till we reached the station
yard, where his eye fell upon a familiar object.</p>
<p>"What?" cried he. "Have you still got the Chinese Puffhard?"</p>
<p>The vehicle thus disrespectfully alluded to was an ancient,
ancient car, the pride of many a year ago, which sentiment
(together with the impossibility of finding a purchaser) would not
allow me to sell. It had been a splendid thing in those far-off
days. It kept me in health. It made me walk miles and miles along
unknown and unfrequented roads. In the aggregate I must have spent
months of my life doing physical culture exercises underneath it.
You got into it at the back; it was about ten feet high, and you
started it at the side by a handle in its midriff. But I loved it.
It still went, if treated kindly. Barbara loathed it and insulted
it, so that with her as passenger, it sulked and refused to go. But
Susan's adoration surpassed even mine. Its demoniac groans and
rattles and convulsive quakings appealed to her unspoiled sense of
adventure.</p>
<p>"Barbara has gone away with the Daimler," said I, "and as I
don't keep a fleet of cars, I had to choose between this and the
donkey-cart. Get in and don't be so fastidious—unless you're
afraid—"</p>
<p>He took no account of my sarcasm. His face fell. He made no
attempt to enter the car.</p>
<p>"Barbara gone away?"</p>
<p>I burst out laughing. His disappointment at not being welcomed
by Barbara at Northlands was so genuine and so childishly
unconcealed.</p>
<p>"She'll be back in time for lunch. She had to run up to town on
business. She sent you her love and Susie will do the honours."</p>
<p>His face brightened. "That's all right. But you gave me a shock.
Northlands without Barbara—" He shook his head.</p>
<p>We drove off. The Chinese Puffhard excelled herself, and though
she choked asthmatically did not really stop once until we were
half way up the drive, when I abandoned her to the gardeners, who
later on harnessed the donkey to her and pulled her into the
motor-house. We dismounted, however, in the drive. A tiny figure in
a blue smock came scuttling over the sloping lawn. The next thing I
saw was the small blue patch somewhere in the upland region of
Jaffery's beard. Then boomed forth from him idiotic exclamations
which are not worth chronicling, accompanied by a duet of bass and
treble laughter. Then he set her astride of his bull neck and
pitched his soft felt hat to Adrian to hold.</p>
<p>"Hang on to my hair. It won't hurt," he commanded.</p>
<p>She obeyed literally, clawing two handfuls of his thick reddish
shock in her tiny grasp, and Jaffery lumbered along like an
elephant with a robin on his head, unconscious of her weight. We
mounted to the terrace in front of the house and having established
my guests in easy chairs, I went indoors to order such drink as
would be refreshing on a sultry August noon. When I returned I
found Jaffery, with Susan on his knee, questioning Adrian, after
the manner of a primitive savage, on the subject of "The Diamond
Gate," and Adrian, delighted at the opportunity, dazzling our
simple-minded friend with publisher's statistics.</p>
<p>"And you're writing another? Deep down in another?" asked
Jaffery. "Do you know, Susie, Uncle Adrian has just got to take a
pen and jab it into a piece of paper, and—tchick!—up
comes a golden sovereign every time he does it."</p>
<p>Susan turned her serene gaze on Adrian. "Do it now," she
commanded.</p>
<p>"I haven't got a pen," said he.</p>
<p>"I'll fetch you one from Daddy's study," she said, sliding from
Jaffery's knee.</p>
<p>Both Jaffery and Adrian looked scared. I, who was not the father
of a feminine thing of seven years old for nothing, interposed, I
think, rather tactfully.</p>
<p>"Uncle Adrian can only do it with a great gold pen, and poor old
daddy hasn't got one."</p>
<p>"I call that silly," replied my daughter. "Uncle Jaffery, have
you got one?"</p>
<p>"No," said he, "You have to be born, like Uncle Adrian, with a
golden pen in your mouth."</p>
<p>The lucky advent of the Archangel Gabriel, with a grin on his
face and a doll in his mouth—the Archangel Gabriel, commonly
known as Gabs, and so termed on account of his archi-angelic
disposition, a hideous mongrel with a white patch over one eye and
a brown patch over the other, with the nose of a collie and the
legs of a Great Dane and the tail of a fox-terrier, whose
mongreldom, however, Adrian repudiated by the bold assertion that
he was a Zanzibar bloodhound—the lucky advent of this
pampered and over-affectionate quadruped directed Susan's mind from
the somewhat difficult conversation. She ran off, forthwith, to the
rescue or her doll; but later (I heard) her nurse was sore put to
it to explain the mystery of the golden pen.</p>
<p>"So much for Adrian. I'm tired of the auriferous person," said
I, waving a hand. "What about yourself? What about the dynamic
widow?"</p>
<p>"Oh, damn the dynamic widow," he replied, corrugating his serene
and sunburnt forehead. "I've come down here to forget her. I'll
tell you about her later." Then he grinned, in his silly, familiar
way, showing two rows of astonishingly white, strong teeth, between
the hair on lip and chin.</p>
<p>"Well," said I, "at any rate give some account of yourself. What
were you doing in Albania, for instance?"</p>
<p>"Prospecting," said he.</p>
<p>"In what—gold, coal, iron?"</p>
<p>"War," said he. "There's going to be a hell of a bust-up one of
these days—and one of these days very soon—in the
Balkans. From Scutari to Salonica to Rodosto, the whole blooming
triangle—it's going to be a battlefield. The war
correspondent who goes out there not knowing his ground will be a
silly ass. The slim statesman like me won't. See? So poor old
Prescott—you must know Prescott of Reuter's?—anyhow
that was the chap—poor old Prescott and I went out exploring.
When he pegged out with enteric I hadn't finished, so I dumped his
widow down at Cettinje where I have some pals, and started out
again on my own. That's all."</p>
<p>He filled another pint tumbler with the iced liquid (one always
had to provide largely for Jaffery's needs) and poured it down his
throat.</p>
<p>"I don't call that a very picturesque account of your
adventures," said Adrian.</p>
<p>Jaffery grinned. "I'll tell you all sorts of funny things, if
you'll give me time," said he, wiping his lips with a vast red and
white handkerchief about the size of a ship's Union Jack.</p>
<p>But we did not give him time; we plied him with questions and
for the next hour he entertained us pleasantly with stories of his
wanderings. He had a Rabelaisian way of laughing over must of his
experiences, even those which had a touch of the gruesome, and the
laughter got into his speech, so that many amusing episodes were
told in the roars of a hilarious lion.</p>
<p>Presently the familiar sound of the horn announced the return of
Barbara. We sprang to our feet and descended to meet the car at the
front porch. Jaffery, grinning with delight, opened the door,
appeared to lift a radiant Barbara out of the car like a parcel and
almost hugged her. And there they stood holding on to each other's
hands and smiling into each other's faces and saying how well they
looked, regardless of the fact that they were blocking the way for
Doria, who remained in the car, I had to move them on with the
reminder that they had the whole week-end for their effusions.
Adrian helped Doria to alight, and to Doria then, for the first
time, was presented Jaffery Chayne. Jaffery blinked at her oddly as
he held her little gloved fingers in his enormous hand. And,
indeed, I could excuse him; for she was a very striking object to
come suddenly into the immediate range of a man's vision, with her
chiffon and her slenderness, and her black hat beneath which her
great eyes shone from the startling, nervous, ivory-white face.</p>
<p>She smiled on him graciously. "I'm so glad to meet you." Then
after a fraction of a second came the explanation. "I've heard so
much of you."</p>
<p>He murmured something into his beard. Meeting his childlike gaze
of admiration, she turned away and put her arm round Barbara's
waist. The ladies went indoors to take off their things,
accompanied by Adrian, who wanted a lover's word with Doria on the
way. Jaffery followed her with his eyes until she had disappeared
at the corner of the hall-stairs. Then he took me by the arm and
led me up towards the terrace.</p>
<p>"Who is that singularly beautiful girl?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Doria Jornicroft," said I.</p>
<p>"She's the most astonishing thing I've ever seen in my
life."</p>
<p>"I wouldn't find her too astonishing, if I were you," said I
with a laugh, "because there might be complications. She's engaged
to Adrian."</p>
<p>He dropped my arm. "Do you mean—she's going to marry
him?"</p>
<p>"Next month," said I.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm damned," said Jaffery. I asked him why. He did not
enlighten me. "Isn't he a lucky devil?" he asked, instead. "The
most pestilentially lucky devil under the sun. But why the deuce
didn't you tell me before?"</p>
<p>"You expressed such a distaste for female women that we thought
we would give you as long a respite as possible."</p>
<p>"That's all very well," he grumbled. "But if I had known that
Adrian's fiancée was knocking around I'd have lumped her in
my heart with Barbara and Susie."</p>
<p>"You're not prevented from doing that now," said I.</p>
<p>His brow cleared. "True, sonny." He broke into a guffaw. "Fancy
old Adrian getting married!"</p>
<p>"I see nothing funny in it," said I. "Lots of people get
married. I'm married."</p>
<p>"Oh, you—you were born to be married," he said
crushingly.</p>
<p>"And so are you," I retorted.</p>
<p>"I? I tie myself to the stay-strings of a flip of a thing in
petticoats, whom I should have to swear to love, honour and
obey—?"</p>
<p>"My good fellow," I interrupted, "it is the woman who swears
obedience."</p>
<p>"And the man practises it. Ho! Ho! Ho!"</p>
<p>His laughter (at this very poor repartee) so resounded that the
adventitious cow, in the field some hundred yards away, lifted her
tail in the air and scampered away, in terror.</p>
<p>"And as to the stay-strings, to continue your delicate metaphor,
you can always cut them when you like."</p>
<p>"Yes. And then there's the devil to pay. She shows you the ends
and makes you believe they're dripping blood and tears. Don't I
know 'em? They're the same from Cape Horn to Alaska, from Dublin to
Rio."</p>
<p>He bellowed forth his invective. He had no quarrel with marriage
as an institution. It was most useful and salutary—apparently
because it provided him, Jaffery, with comfortable conditions
wherein to exist. The multitude of harmless, necessary males (like
myself) were doomed to it. But there was a race of Chosen Ones, to
which he belonged, whose untamable and omni-concupiscent essence
kept them outside the dull conjugal pale. For such as him, nineteen
hundred women at once, scattered within the regions of the seven
circumferential seas. He loved them all. Woman as woman was the joy
of the earth. It was only the silly spectrum of civilisation that
broke Woman up into primary colours—black, yellow, brunette,
blonde—he damned civilisation.</p>
<p>"To listen to you," said I, when he paused for breath, "one
would think you were a devil of a fellow."</p>
<p>"I am," he declared. "I'm a Universalist. At any rate in theory,
or rather in the conviction of what best suits myself. I'm one of
those men who are born to be free, who've got to fill their lungs
with air, who must get out into the wilds if they're to
live—God! I'd sooner be snowed up on a battlefield than smirk
at a damned afternoon tea-party any day in the week! If I want a
woman, I like to take her by her hair and swing her up behind me on
the saddle and ride away with her—"</p>
<p>"Lord! That's lovely," said I. "How often have you done it?"</p>
<p>"I've never done that exactly, you silly ass," said he. "But
that's my attitude, my philosophy. You see how impossible it would
be for me to tie myself for life to the stay-strings of one flip of
a thing in petticoats."</p>
<p>"You're a blessed innocent," said I.</p>
<p>Adrian sauntering through the French window of my library joined
us on the terrace. Jaffery, forgetful of his attitude, his
philosophy, caught him by the shoulders and shook him in
pain-dealing exuberance. Old Adrian was going to be married. He
wished him joy. Yet it was no use his wishing him joy because he
already had it—it was assured. That exquisite wonder of a
girl. Adrian was a lucky devil, a pestilentially lucky devil. He,
Jaffery, had fallen in love with her on sight. . . .</p>
<p>"And if I hadn't told him that Miss Jornicroft was engaged to
you," said I, "he would have taken her by the hair of her head and
swung her up behind him on the saddle and ridden away with her.
It's a little way Jaffery has."</p>
<p>In spite of sunburn, freckles and pervading hairiness of face,
Jaffery grew red.</p>
<p>"Shut up, you silly fool!" said he, like the overgrown schoolboy
that he was.</p>
<p>And I shut up—not because he commanded, but because
Barbara, like spring in deep summer, and Doria, like night at
noontide, appeared on the terrace.</p>
<p>Soon afterwards lunch was announced. By common conspiracy
Jaffery and Susan upset the table arrangements, insisting that they
should sit next each other. He helped the child to impossible
viands, much to my wife's dismay, and told her apocalyptic stories
of Bulgaria, somewhat to her puzzledom, but wholly to her delight.
But when he proposed to fill her silver mug (which he, as
godfather, had given her on her baptism) with the liquefied dream
of Paradise that Barbara, <i>sola mortalium</i>, can prepare,
consisting of hock and champagne and fruits and cucumber and borage
and a blend of liqueurs whose subtlety transcends human thought,
Barbara's Medusa glare petrified him into a living statue, the
crystal jug of joy poised in his hand.</p>
<p>"Why mayn't I have some, mummy?"</p>
<p>"Because Uncle Jaff's your godfather," said I. "And your
mother's hock-cup is a sinful lust of the flesh. Spare the child
and fill up your own glass."</p>
<p>"Don't you know," said Barbara, "that this is Berkshire, not the
Balkans? We don't intoxicate infants here to make a summer
holiday!"</p>
<p>At this rebuke he exchanged winks with my daughter, and refusing
a handed dish of cutlets asked to be allowed to help himself to
some cold beef on the sideboard. The butler's assistance he
declined. No Christian butler could carve for Jaffery Chayne. After
a longish absence he returned to the table with half the joint on
his plate. Susan regarded it wide-eyed.</p>
<p>"Uncle Jaff, are you going to eat all that?" she asked in an
audible whisper.</p>
<p>"Yes, and you too," he roared, "and mummy and daddy and Uncle
Adrian, if I don't get enough to eat!"</p>
<p>"And Aunt Doria?"</p>
<p>Again he reddened—but he turned to Doria and bowed.</p>
<p>"In my quality of ogre only—a <i>bonne bouche</i>," said
he.</p>
<p>It was said very charmingly, and we laughed. Of course Susan
began the inevitable question, but Barbara hurriedly notified some
dereliction with regard to gravy, and my small daughter was, so to
speak, hustled out of the conversation. Jaffery by way of apology
for his Gargantuan appetite discoursed on the privations of travel
in uncivilised lands. A lump of sour butter for lunch and a sardine
and a hazelnut for dinner. We were to fancy the infinite
accumulation of hunger-pangs. And as he devoured cold beef and
talked, Doria watched him with the somewhat aloof interest of one
who stands daintily outside the railed enclosure of a new kind of
hippopotamus.</p>
<p>The meal over we sought the deep shade of the terrace which
faces due east. Jaffery, in his barbaric fashion, took Doria by the
elbow and swept her far away from the wistaria arbour beneath which
the remaining three of us were gathered, and when he fondly thought
he was out of earshot, he set her beside him on the low parapet. My
wife, with the responsibilities of all the Chancelleries of Europe
knitted in her brow, discussed wedding preparations with Adrian. I,
to whom the quality of the bath towels wherewith Adrian and his
wife were to dry themselves and that of the sheets between which
their housemaid was to lie, were matters of black and awful
indifference, gave my more worthily applied attention to one of a
new brand of cigars, a corona corona, that had its merits but
lacked an indefinable soul-satisfying aroma; and I was on the
pleasurable and elusive point of critical formulation, when
Jaffery's voice, booming down the terrace, knocked the
discriminating nicety out of my head. I lazily shifted my position
and watched the pair.</p>
<p>"You're subtle and psychological and introspective and analytic
and all that," Jaffery was saying—his light word about an
ogre at lunch was not a bad one; sitting side by side on the low
parapet they looked like a vast red-bearded ogre and a feminine
black-haired elf—she had taken off her hat—engaged in a
conversation in which the elf looked very much on the
defensive—"and you're always tracking down motives to their
roots, and you're not contented, like me, with the jolly face of
things—"</p>
<p>"For an accurate diagnosis," I reflected, "of an individual
woman's nature, the blatant universalist has his points."</p>
<p>"Whereas, I, you see," he continued, "just buzz about life like
a dunderheaded old bumble-bee. I'm always busting myself up against
glass panes, not seeing, as you would, the open window a few inches
off. Do you see what I'm driving at?"</p>
<p>Apparently she didn't; for while she was speaking, he threw away
his corona corona—a dream of a cigar for nine hundred and
ninety-nine men out of a thousand (I glanced at Adrian who had
religiously preserved two inches of ash on his)—and hauled
out pipe and tobacco-pouch. I could not hear what she said. When
she had finished, he edged a span nearer.</p>
<p>"What I want you to understand," said he, "is that I'm a simple
sort of savage. I can't follow all these intricate henry Jamesian
complications of feeling. I've had in my life"—he stuck pouch
and pipe on the stone beside him—"I've had in my life just a
few men I've loved—I don't count women—men—men
I've cared for, God knows why. Do you know why one cares for
people?"</p>
<p>She smiled, shrugged her shoulders and shook her head.</p>
<p>"The latest was poor Prescott—he has just pegged
out—you'll hear soon enough about Prescott. There was Tom
Castleton—has Adrian told you about Castleton—?"</p>
<p>Again she shook her head.</p>
<p>"He will—of course—a wonder of a fellow—up
with us at Cambridge. He's dead. There only remains Hilary, our
host, and Adrian."</p>
<p>As far as I could gather—for she spoke in the ordinary
tones of civilised womanhood, whereas Jaffery, under the impression
that he was whispering confidentially, bellowed like an honest
bull—as far as I could gather, she said:</p>
<p>"You must have met hundreds of men more sympathetic to you than
Mr. Freeth and Adrian."</p>
<p>"I haven't," he cried. "That's the funny devil of it. I haven't.
If I was struck a helpless paralytic with not a cent and no
prospect of earning a cent, I know I could come to those two and
say, 'Keep me for the rest of my life'—and they would do
it"</p>
<p>"And would you do the same for either of them?"</p>
<p>Jaffery rose and stuffed his hands in his jacket pockets and
towered over her.</p>
<p>"I'd do it for them and their wives and their children and their
children's children."</p>
<p>He sat down again in confusion at having been led into
hyperbole. But he took her shoulders in his huge but kindly hands,
somewhat to her alarm—for, in her world, she was not
accustomed to gigantic males laying unceremonious hold of
her—</p>
<p>"All I wanted to convey to you, my dear girl, is this—that
if Adrian's wife won't look on me as a true friend, I'm ready to go
away and cut my throat"</p>
<p>Doria smiled at him with pretty civility and assured him of her
willingness to admit him into her inner circle of friends;
whereupon he caught up his pouch and pipe and lumbered down the
terrace towards us, shouting out his news.</p>
<p>"I've fixed it up with Doria"—he turned his head—"I
can call you Doria, can't I?" She nodded permission—what else
could she do? "We're going to be friends. And I say, Barbara,
they'll want a wedding-present. What shall I give 'em? What would
you like?"</p>
<p>The latter question was levelled direct at Doria, who had
followed demurely in his footsteps. But it was not answered; for
from the drawing-room there emerged Franklin, the butler, who
marched up straight to Jaffery.</p>
<p>"A lady to see you, sir"</p>
<p>"A lady? Good God! What kind of a lady?"</p>
<p>He stared at Franklin, in dismay.</p>
<p>"She came in a taxi, sir. The driver mistook the way, and put
her down at the back entrance. She would not give her name."</p>
<p>"Tall, rather handsome, dressed in black?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
<p>"Lord Almighty!" cried Jaffery, including us all in the sweep of
a desperate gaze. "It's Liosha! I thought I had given her the
slip."</p>
<p>Barbara rose, and confronted him. "And pray who is Liosha?"</p>
<p>Adrian hugged his knee and laughed:</p>
<p>"The dynamic widow," said he.</p>
<p>"I'll go and see what in thunder she wants," said Jaffery.</p>
<p>But Barbara's eyes twinkled. "You'll do nothing of the sort. She
has no business to come running after you like this. She must be
taught manners. Franklin, will you show the lady out here?"</p>
<p>She drew herself up to her full height of five feet nothing,
thereby demonstrating the obvious fact that she was mistress in her
own house.</p>
<p>Presently Franklin reappeared.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Prescott," said he.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />