<h2><span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>T</span><span class='sc'>HE</span> tastes of Alexis Triona were not such as to
lead him into extravagant living on the fruits of
his literary success. To quality of food he was
indifferent; wine he neither understood nor cared for;
in the use of other forms of alcohol he was abstemious;
unlike most men bred in Russia he smoked moderately,
preferring the cigarettes he rolled himself from Virginia
tobacco to the more expensive Turkish or Egyptian
brands. His attire was simple. He would rather walk
than be driven; and he regarded his back-bedroom at
the top of the Vanloo Hotel as a luxurious habitation.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He had broken away from the easeful life at Medlow
because, as he explained to Blaise Olifant, it frightened
him.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m up against nothing here,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re up against your novel,” replied Olifant. “A
man’s work is always his fiercest enemy.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Triona would not accept the proposition. He and his
novel were one and indivisible. Together they must
fight against something—he knew not what. Perhaps,
fight against time and opportunity. They wanted the
tense, stolen half-hours which he and his other book had
enjoyed. Would Olifant think him ungrateful if he
picked up and went on his mission to Helsingfors?</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My dear fellow,” said Olifant, “the man who resents
a friend developing his own personality in his own way
doesn’t deserve to have a friend.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s like you to say that,” cried Triona. “I shall always
remember. When I get back I shall let you know.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>So Alexis Triona vanished from a uninspiring Medlow,
and two months afterwards gave Olifant his address at
the Vanloo Hotel. Olifant, tired by a long spell of close
work, went up for an idle week in London.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Come back and carry on as before,” he suggested.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Triona ran his fingers through his brown hair and
held out his hand.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No. The wise man never tries to repeat a past pleasure.
As a wise old Russian friend of mine used to say—never
relight a cigar.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>So after a few days of pleasant companionship in the
soberer delights of town, Blaise Olifant returned to Medlow
and Triona remained in his little back room in the
Vanloo Hotel.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>One night, a week or so after his visit to Olivia Gale,
he threw down his pen, read over the last sheet that he
had written, and, with a gesture of impatience, tore it
up. Suddenly he discovered that he could not breathe
in the stuffy bedroom. He drew back the curtains and
opened the window and looked out on myriad chimney-pots
and a full moon shining on them from a windless
sky. The bright air filled his lungs. Desire for wider
spaces beneath the moon shook him like a touch of claustrophobia.
He thrust on the coat which he had discarded,
seized a hat, and, switching off the light, hurried from the
room. He went out into the streets, noiseless save for
the rare, swift motors that flashed by like ghosts fleeing
terrified from some earthly doom.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He walked and walked until he suddenly realized that
he had emerged from Whitehall and faced the moonlight
beauty of the Houses of Parliament standing in majestic
challenge against the sky, and the Abbey sleeping in its
centuries of dreams.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Away across the Square, by Broad Sanctuary, was the
opening of a great thoroughfare, and, as his eyes sought
it, he confessed to himself the subconscious impulse that
had led him thither. Yet was it not a cheat of a subconscious
impulse? Had he not gone out from the hotel
in Kensington with a definite purpose? As he crossed to
Broad Sanctuary and the entrance to Victoria Street, he
argued it out with himself. Anyhow, it was the most
fool of fool-errands. But yet—he shrugged his shoulders
and laughed. To what errand could a fool’s errand
be comparable? Only to that of one pixy-led. He
laughed at the thought of his disquisition to Olivia on
the Will-o’-the-Wisp. In the rare instances of the follower
of Faith had he not proclaimed its guidance to the
Land of Promise?</p>
<p class='pindent'>Three days before he had seen her. He had been impelled
by an irresistible desire to see her. To call on her
without shadow of excuse was impossible. To telephone
or write an invitation to lunch was an act unsuggested by
his limited social experience. Taking his chance that
she should emerge between eleven and twelve, he strolled
up and down the pavement, so that at last when fate
favoured him and he advanced to meet her, they greeted
each other with a smiling air of surprise. They explained
their respective objectives. She was for buying a patent
coffee machine at the Army and Navy Stores, he for
catching an undesirable train at Victoria Station. A
threatening morning suddenly became a rainy noon. He
turned back with her and they fled together and just
reached the Stores in time to escape from the full fury of
the downpour. There he bent his mind on coffee machines.
His masculine ignorance of the whole art of
coffee-making, a flannel bag in a jug being his primitive
conception, moved her to light-hearted mirth. The purchase
made, the order given, they wandered idly through
the great establishment. They were prisoners, the outside
world being weltering deluge. For once in his lifetime,
thought Triona, the elements warred on his side.
A wringing machine, before which he paused in wonderment
at its possible use, and an eager description on
the part of the salesman, put Olivia on the track of a
game into which he entered with devoted fervour. Let
them suppose they were going to furnish a house. Oh!
a great big palace of a house. In imagination they bought
innumerable things, furnishing the mansion chiefly with
hammocks and marquees and garden chairs and lawn-mowers
and grand pianos and egg-whisks. Her heart,
that morning, attuned to laughter, brought colour into
her cheeks and brightness into her eyes. To the young
man’s ear she seemed to have an adorable gift of phrase.
She invested a rolling-pin with a humorous individuality.
She touched a tray of doughnuts with her fancy and
turned them into sacramental bread of Momus, exquisite
Divinity of Mirth. She was so free, so graceful,
so intimate, so irresistible. He followed her, a young man
bemused. What he contributed to the game he scarcely
knew. He was only conscious of her charm and her whipping
of his wit. They stumbled into the department of
men’s haberdashery. His brain conceived a daring idea.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ve been trying for weeks,” said he, “to make up my
mind to buy a tie.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia glanced swiftly round and sped to a counter.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ties, please.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What kind?” asked the salesman.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Ordinary silk—sailor-knot. Show me all you’ve got.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Before his entranced eyes she selected half a dozen,
with a taste which the artist within him knew was impeccable.
He presented the bill bearing her number at the
cashier’s pigeon hole, and returning took the neat packet
from the salesman with the air of one receiving a decoration
from royalty. They made their way to the exit.
She said:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid we’ve been criminally frivolous.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If such happiness is a crime I’d willingly swing for it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He noted a quick, uncomprehending question in her
glance and the colour mounted into his pale cheeks.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My English idiom is not yet perfect,” he said. “I
ought not to have used that expression.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia laughed at his discomfiture.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s generally used by dreadful people who threaten to
do one another in. But the metaphor’s thrilling, all the
same.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The rain had ceased. After a few moments the mackintoshed
commissionaire secured a taxi. Triona accompanied
her to the door. She thrust out a frank hand.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Au revoir. It has been delightful to find you so
human.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She drove off. He stood, with a smile on his lips,
watching the vehicle disappear in the traffic. Her farewell
was characteristic. What could one expect of her
but the unexpected?</p>
<p class='pindent'>That was three days ago. The image of her unconsciously
alluring yet frank to disconcertment, spiritually
feminine yet materially impatient of sex; the image of her
in the three separate settings—the dark-eyed princess in
fur and flame beneath the electric light of the theatre
portico; the slim girl in simple blouse and skirt who, over
the pretty teacups, held so nice a balance between Olifant
and himself; the gay playmate of a rainy hour, in her
fawn costume (he still felt the thrill of the friendly touch
of her fawn-coloured gloved hands on his sleeve)—the
composite image and vision of her had filled his sleeping
and waking thoughts to the destruction of his peace of
mind and the dislocation of his work.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Thus, on this warm night of spring, he stood, the most
foolishly romantical of mortals, at the entrance to Victoria
Street, and with a shrug of his shoulders proceeded
on his errand of mute troubadour. Perhaps the day of
rapture might come when he would tell her how he stood
in the watches of the night and gazed up at what he
had to imagine was her window on the fifth floor of the
undistinguished barrack that was her home. It was
poetic, fantastic, Russian, at any rate. It would also
mark the end of his excursion; it was a fair tramp back
to South Kensington.</p>
<p class='pindent'>An unheeded taxi-cab whizzed past him as he walked;
but a few seconds later, the faint sound of splintering
glass and then the scrunch of brakes suddenly applied
awoke him from his smiling meditations. The cab
stopped, sharply outlined in the clear moonlight. The
driver leaped from his seat and flung open the door. A
woman sprang out, followed by a man. Both were in
evening dress. Voices rose at once in altercation. Triona,
suspecting an accident, quickened his pace instinctively
into a run and joined the group.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What’s up?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But as the instinctive words passed his lips he became
amazedly conscious of Olivia standing there, quivering,
as white as the white dress and cloak she wore, her
eyes ablaze. She flashed on him a half-hysterical recognition
and clutched his arm.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He drew himself up to his slim height and looked first
at the taxi driver and then at the heavy, swarthy man in
evening dress, and then at her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What’s the matter? Tell me,” he rapped out.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“This man tried to insult me,” she gasped.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia never knew how it happened: it happened like
some instantaneous visitation of God. The lithe young
figure suddenly shot forward and the heavy man rolled
yards away on the pavement.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Serve him damn well right,” said the driver; “but
where do I come in with my window broken?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, you shall be paid, you shall be paid,” cried Olivia.
“Pay him, Mr. Triona, and let us go.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Triona glanced up and down the street. “No, this
gentleman’s going to pay,” he said quietly and advanced
to the heavy man who had scrambled to unsteady feet.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Just you settle up with that cabman, quick, do you
hear, or I’ll knock you down again. I could knock you
down sixty times an hour. And so help me, God, if a
copper comes in sight I’ll murder you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“All right, all right,” said the man hurriedly. “I don’t
want a scandal for the lady’s sake.” He turned to the
taxi man. “How much do you want?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“With the damage it’ll be a matter of ten pound.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The swarthy man in evening dress fished out his note-case.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Here you are, you blackmailing thief.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“None of your back-chat, or I’ll finish off what this
gentleman has begun,” said the taxi man, pocketing the
money.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Until he saw summary justice accomplished, Triona
stood in the lee of the houses, his arm stretched protectingly
in front of Olivia. Then he drew her
away.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll see the lady home. It’s only a few steps.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Right, sir. Good night, sir,” said the taxi man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They moved on. Immediately in the silence of the
night came the crisp exchange of words.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll give you a pound to take me to Porchester Terrace.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And I’d give a pound to see you walk there,” said
the driver, already in his seat.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He threw in the clutch and with a cheery “Good night”
passed the extravagantly encountered pair.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“They say miracles don’t happen, but one has happened
now,” said Olivia breathlessly. “If you hadn’t
come out of space——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do tell me something about it,” he asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But don’t you know?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You said that profit-merchant had insulted you and
that was enough for me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh, my God! I’m so ashamed!” she cried, with a
wild, pretty gesture of her hands. “What will you think
of me?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Mad words rushed through his brain, but before they
found utterance he gripped himself. He had, once more,
his hands on the controls.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What I think of you, Miss Gale, it would be wiser not
to say. I should like to hear what has occurred. But,
pardon me,” he said abruptly, noticing her curious, uneven
step, and glancing down instinctively at her feet,
“what has become of your shoe?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My slipper—why, of course——” She halted, suddenly
aware of the loss. “I must have left it in the cab.
I stuck up my foot and reached for it and broke the window
with the heel. I also think I hit him in the face.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It seems as though he was down and out before I
came up,” said Triona.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If you hadn’t I don’t [know] how I should have carried on,”
she confessed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They walked down the wide, empty street. The moon
shone high above them, the girl in her elegance, the man in
his loose grey flannels and soft felt hat, an incongruous
couple, save for their common air of alert youth. And
while they walked she rapidly told her story. She had
been to Percy’s with the usual crowd, Lydia Dawlish her
nominal chaperone. The man, Edwin Mavenna, a city
friend of Sydney Rooke, whom she had met a half a dozen
times, had offered to drive her home in his waiting taxi.
Tired, dependent for transport on Rooke and Lydia, who
desired a further hour of the night club’s dismal
jocundity, and angry with Bobby Quinton, who seemed
to think that her ear had no other function than to listen
to tales of sentimenti-financial woe, she had accepted.
Half-way home she had begun to regret; three-quarters
of the way she had been frightened. As they turned into
Victoria Street she had managed to free her arm and wield
the victorious slipper.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ll never go to that abominable place again as long as
I live,” she cried.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I should, if I were you,” he said quietly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’d go once or twice, at any rate. To show yourself
independent of it. To prove to yourself that you’re not
frightened of it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But I am frightened of it. On the outside it’s as
respectable as Medlow Parish Church on Sunday. But
below the surface there’s all sorts of hideousness—and
I’m frightened.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re not,” said he. “Things may startle you,
infuriate you, put you off your equilibrium; but they
don’t frighten you. They didn’t this evening. I’ve seen
too many people frightened in my time not to know.
You’re not that sort.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They had reached the door of the Mansions. She
smiled at him, her gaiety returning.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re as comforting and consoling a Knight Errant
as one could wish to meet. The damsel in distress is
greatly beholden to you. But how the—whatever
you like—you managed to time the rescue is beyond my
comprehension.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The stars guided me,” he replied, with an upward
sweep of the hand. “Mortals have striven to comprehend
them for thousands of years—but without success. I
started out to wander about this great city—I often do
for hours—I’m a born wanderer—with the vagabond’s
aimlessness and trust in chance, or in the stars—and this
time the stars brought me where it was decreed that I
should be.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>While he was speaking she had opened the door with
her latchkey and now stood, shimmering white in the
gloom of the entrance. She held out her hand.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid I’ve been too much occupied in trying not
to seem frightened and silly to thank you decently for
what you’ve done. But I am grateful. You don’t know
how grateful. I’ll have to tell you some other time.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“To-morrow?” he asked eagerly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She hesitated for a moment. “Yes, to-morrow,” she
replied softly. “I shall be in all day. Goodnight.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>After the swift handshake the door closed on the enraptured
young man, and the hard, characterless street,
down which he seemed to dance, became transformed
into a moonlit glade of fairyland.</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was four o’clock in the morning when he entered his
back-bedroom at the Vanloo Hotel. But he did not sleep.
He had no desire for sleep—youth resenting the veil
drawn across a consciousness so exquisitely alive. Sleep,
when the stars in their courses were fighting for him?
Impossible, preposterous! Let him rather live, again
and again, over the night’s crowded adventure. Every
detail of it set his pulses throbbing. The mere glorious
first recognition of her was the thrill of a lifetime.
He constructed and reconstructed the immortal picture.
The moonlit, silent street, its high, decorous
buildings marked by the feeble gas lamps melting into
an indeterminate vanishing point. The clear-cut scene.
The taxi-cab. The three human figures. The stunted
driver. The massive, dark man, in silk hat which reflected
the moonlight, in black overcoat thrown open,
revealing a patch of white shirt and waistcoat; the
slender, quivering, white form draped in white fur, white
gossamer, white what-not, crowned with dark glory of
eyes and hair. The masculine in him exulted in his
physical strength and skill—in the clean, straight, elementary
yet scientific left-hander that got the hulking
swine between the eyes and sent him reeling and sprawling
and asking for no more punishment. And then—oh,
it was a great thing to command, to impose his
will. To walk in triumph off with the wonderful lady of
his dreams. To feel, as she thanked him, that here was
something definite that he had done for her, something
with a touch of the romantic, the heroic, which, in its
trivial way, justified belief in the incidents of his adventurous
career which he had so modestly, yet so vividly
described in the book that had brought him fame.</p>
<p class='pindent'>On this point of justification he was peculiarly sensitive.
Various Englishmen, soldiers sent out on secret missions
to the fringes of the areas of his activities, had questioned
many of his statements, both in the book and in
descriptive articles which he had written for newspapers
and other periodicals, and asked for proofs. And he had
replied, most cogently, that the sphere of the Russian
Secret Service in which he was employed was, of necessity,
beyond the ken of the secret service of any other Power
in Europe, and that official proofs were lost in the social
and political disintegration of Russia. One man, a great
man, speaking with unquestionable authority, silenced
the horde of cavillers as far as events prior to 1917 were
concerned. But there were still some who barked annoyingly
at his heels. Proofs, of course, he had none to give.
How can a man give proofs when he is cast up, practically
naked, on the coast of England? He must be believed or
not. And it was the haunting terror of this sensitive boy
of genius, whose face and eyes bore the ineffaceable marks
of suffering, that he should lose the credit which he had
gained.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At all hazards he must allow no doubts to arise in the
mind of Olivia. To fight them down he would do all
manner of extravagant things. He regretted the pusillanimous
tameness of his late opponent. If the man had
only picked himself up and given battle! If only there
had been half a dozen abductors or insulters instead of
one! His spirits (at seven o’clock) sank at the logical
conclusion that the conventional conditions of post-war
civilized life afforded a meagre probability of the recurrence
of such another opportunity. He had the temperament
of those whose hunger is only whetted by triumph,
to whom attainment only gives vision of new heights.
When, after tossing sleepless in his bed, he rose and
dressed at nine, he had decided that, in knocking down a
mere mass of unresisting flesh, he had played a part
almost inglorious, such as any stay-at-home <span class='it'>embusqué</span>
could have played. By not one jot or tittle did his act
advance the credibility of his story. And on his story
alone could he found his hopes of finding favour in her
marvellous eyes. Of the touch of genius that inspired
his literary work he thought little. At this stage of his
career he was filled with an incredulous wonder at his
possession of a knack which converted a page of scribble
into a cheque upon a bank. His writing meant money.
Not money, wealth, on the grand scale; but money to
keep him as a modest gentleman on the social grade to
which he had attained, and to save him from the detested
livery of the chauffeur. The story which he was telling
in the new book was but a means to this end. The
story which he had told was life itself. Nay, now it was
more: it was love itself; it was a girl who was more than
life.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He called at the Victoria Street flat at twelve o’clock.
The austere Myra looked on him disapprovingly. Tea-time
was the visiting time for stray young men, and even
then she conveyed to them the impression that she let
them in on sufferance.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What name?” she asked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Triona.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Miss Gale is in, sir,” she admitted grudgingly, having
received explicit orders from Olivia, “but she is dressing
and I don’t know whether she can see you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Will you tell Miss Gale that I am entirely at her service,
and if it’s inconvenient for her to see me now I’ll
call later.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Myra left him standing in the little vestibule and gave
the message to Olivia, who, fully dressed, was polishing
her nails in her bedroom.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re the most impossible woman on earth,” Olivia
declared, turning on her. “Is that the way you
would treat a man who had delivered you from a
dragon?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t hold with men and I don’t hold with dragons,”
replied Myra unmoved. “The next time you’ll be wanting
me to fall over a dragon who has delivered you from
a man!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia scarcely listened to the retort. She flew out and
carried the waiting Triona into the sitting-room.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m so sorry. My maid’s a terror. She bites and
doesn’t bark. But I guarantee her non-venomous. How
good of you to come so early.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I was anxious,” said Triona.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“About what?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Last night must have been a shock.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course it was,” she laughed; “but not enough to
keep me all day long in fainting fits with doctors and
smelling-bottles.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I hope you slept all right.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” she replied frankly. “That I didn’t do. The
adventure was a bit too exciting. Besides——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Besides what?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It came into my head to make up my moral balance
sheet. Figures of arithmetic always send me to sleep;
but figures of—well, of that kind of thing, don’t you
know—keep me broad awake.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia’s dark, eager face was of the kind that shows the
traces of fatigue in faint shadows under the eyes. He
swiftly noted them and cried out:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re dead tired. It’s damnable.” He rose, suddenly
angry. “You ought to go to bed at once. Your
maid was right. I had no business to come at this hour
and disturb you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If you hadn’t come,” said Olivia, inwardly glowing at
the tribute paid by the indignant youth, “I should have
imagined that you looked on last night’s affair as a trumpery
incident in the day’s work and went to bed and forgot
all about it.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s impossible,” said he. “I, too, haven’t slept a
wink.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She met and held his eyes longer than she, or anyone
else, had held them. Then, half angrily, she felt her
cheeks grow hot and red.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“For you, who have faced death a hundred times, last
night, as I’ve just said, must be even dull. What was
it to the night when you—you know—the sentry—when
you were unarmed and you fought with him and you
killed him with his own bayonet?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He snapped his fingers and smiled. “That was unimportant.
Whether I lived or died didn’t matter to anybody.
It didn’t matter much to me. It was sheer
animal instinct. But last night it was you. And that
makes a universe of difference.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia rose, and, with a “You’re not smoking,” offered
him a box of cigarettes.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” she said, when he had lighted it, with fingers
trembling ever so slightly as they held the match, “I suppose
a woman does make a difference. We’re always in
the way, somehow. Women and children first. Why
they don’t throw us overboard at once and let the really
useful people save themselves, I could never make out.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>His air of dismay was that of a devotee listening to a
saint blaspheme. Her laughter rippled, music to his ears.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you know what I should like to do? Get out of
London for a few hours and fill my lungs with air. Richmond
Park, for instance.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I, too.” He sighed. “If only I had a car!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“There are such things as motor-buses.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He sprang to delighted feet. His divinity on a bus top!
It was like the Paphian goddess condescending from her
dove-drawn chariot to the joggle of a four-wheeler cab.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Would you really go on one?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She would. She would start forthwith. The time
only to put on a hat. She left him to his heart-beats of
happiness, presently to re-appear, hatted, gloved, and
smiling.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re quite sure you would like to come? Your
work?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My work needs the open air as much as I do,” said
he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They went forth, boy and girl on a jaunt, and side by
side on the top of the omnibus they gave themselves up
to the laughter of the pure sunshine. At Richmond they
lunched, for youth must be fed, and afterwards went
through the streets of the old town, and stood on the
bridge watching the exquisite curve of the river embosomed
in the very newest of new greenery, and let its
loveliness sink into their hearts. Then they wandered
deep into the Park and found a tree from beneath which
they could see the deer browsing in the shade; and there
they sat, happy in their freedom and isolation. What
they said, most of the time, was no great matter. Of
the two, perhaps she talked the more; for he had said:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am so tired of talking about myself. I have been
obliged to, so that it has become a professional habit.
And what there is to be known about me, you know.
But you—you who have lived such a different life from
mine—I know so little of you. In fact, I’ve known nothing
of English women such as you. You’re a mystery.
Tell me about yourself.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>So she had begun:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, I was born—I shan’t tell you the year—of poor
but honest parents——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>And then, led on by his eager sympathy and his intimate
knowledge of her home, she had abandoned the jesting
note and talked simply and frankly of her secluded
and eventless life. With feminine guile, and with last
night’s newborn mistrust of men, she set a little trap.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Did you ever go into my mother’s room?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t think so. Perhaps that was the one—the
best bedroom—which Olifant always kept locked.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She felt ashamed of her unworthy suspicion; glad at
the loyal keeping of a promise, to the extent of not allowing
a visitor even a peep inside the forbidden chamber.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I think Blaise Olifant is one of the finest types England
breeds,” she said warmly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>There was a touch of jealous fear in his swift glance;
but he replied with equal warmth:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You needn’t tell me that. Brave, modest, of sensitive
honour—Ah! A man with a mind so cultivated that he
seems to know nothing until you talk with him, and then
you find that he knows everything. I love him.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad to hear you say that.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why? Do you admire him so much?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It isn’t that,” she parried. “It’s on your account.
One man’s generous praise of another does one’s heart
good.” She threw out her arms as though to embrace
the rolling park of infinite sward and majestic trees. “I
love big things,” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Whereupon Alexis Triona thanked his stars for having
led him along the true path.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Who can say that, in after years, these twain, when
they shall have grown old and have gone through whatever
furnaces Fate—either personal destiny or the Fate
of Social Institutions—may prepare for them, will not
retain imperishable memories of the idyll of that sweet
spring day? There they sat, youth spiritually communing
with youth; the girl urged by feminine instinct to
love him for the dangers he had passed; the young man
aflame with her beauty, her charm, her dryad elusiveness.
Here, for him, was yet another aspect of her, free,
unseizable in the woodland setting. And for her, another
aspect of him, the simple, clean-cut Englishman, divested
of vague and disquieting Russian citizenship, the perfect
companion, responsive to every chord struck by the spirit
of the magic afternoon. In the years to come, who can
say that they will not remember this sweet and delicate
adventure of their souls creeping forth in trembling
reconnaissance one of the other? Perhaps it will be a
more precious memory to the woman than to the man.
Men do not lay things up in lavender as women do.</p>
<p class='pindent'>If he had spoken, declared his passion in lover’s set
terms, perhaps her heart might have been caught by the
glamour of it all, and she might have surrendered to his
kisses, and they might have journeyed back to London
in a state of unreprehensible yet commonplace beatitude.
And the memory would possibly have been marked by a
white stone rising stark in an airless distance. But he
did not speak, held back by a rare reverence of her maidenhood
and her perfect trust; and in her heart flowered
gratitude for his sensitiveness to environment. So easy
for a maladroit touch to mar the perfection of an exquisite
hour of blue mist and mystery. So, again, who
knows but that in the years to come the memory will be
marked by a fragrance, a shimmer of leaves, a haze over
green sward, incorporated impalpably with the dear
ghost of an immortal day?</p>
<p class='pindent'>They returned on the top of the omnibus, rather late,
and on the way they spoke little. Now and then he
glanced sideways at her and met her eyes and caught her
smile, and felt content. At the terminus of the omnibus
route, in the raging, busy precincts of the stations of
Victoria, they alighted. He walked with her to her door
in Victoria Street.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Your words have been singing in my ears,” said he:
“ ‘I love big things.’ To me, to-day has seemed a big
thing.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And I’ve loved it,” she replied.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“True?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“True.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She sped up to her room somewhat dazed, conscious of
need to keep her balance. So much had happened in the
last four-and-twenty hours. The shudder of the night
had still horrified her flesh when she drew the young man
out into the wide daylight and the open air; and now it
had passed away, as though it had never been, and a new
quivering of youth, taking its place, ran like laughter
through her bodily frame and her heart and her mind.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“H’m. Your outing seems to have done you good,”
said the impassive Myra, letting her in.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My first day’s escape from a fœtid prison,” she said.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I suppose you know what you’re talking about,” said
Myra.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia laughed and threw her arm round Myra’s lean
shoulders.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Of course I do.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“He ain’t much to look at.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia, flushing, turned on her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I never knew a more abominable woman.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Then you’re lucky,” retorted Myra, and faded away
into her kitchen.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Olivia, mirthful, uplifted, danced, as it were, into the
sitting-room and began to pull off her gloves. Suddenly
her glance fell on a letter lying on her writing table. She
frowned slightly as she opened it, and as she read the
frown grew deeper. It was from Bobby Quinton. What
his dearest of dear ladies would think of him he left on
the joint knees of the gods and of his dearest lady—but—but
the wolves were at his heels. He had thrown
them all that he possessed—fur coat, watch and chain,
diamond studs, and, having gulped them all, they were
still in fierce pursuit. In a fortnight would he have
ample funds to satisfy them. But now he was at bay.
He apologized for the mixture of metaphor. But still,
there he was <span class='it'>aux abois</span>. Fifty pounds, just for a fortnight.
Could the dearest of dear ladies see her way——-?</p>
<p class='pindent'>She went to her desk and wrote out a cheque which
she enclosed in an envelope. To save her soul alive she
could not have written Bobby Quinton an accompanying
line.</p>
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