<h2><SPAN name="page49"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>LOUIS</h2>
<p>“It would be jolly to spend Easter in Vienna this
year,” said Strudwarden, “and look up some of my old
friends there. It’s about the jolliest place I know
of to be at for Easter—”</p>
<p>“I thought we had made up our minds to spend Easter at
Brighton,” interrupted Lena Strudwarden, with an air of
aggrieved surprise.</p>
<p>“You mean that you had made up your mind that we should
spend Easter there,” said her husband; “we spent last
Easter there, and Whitsuntide as well, and the year before that
we were at Worthing, and Brighton again before that. I
think it would be just as well to have a real change of scene
while we are about it.”</p>
<p>“The journey to Vienna would be very expensive,”
said Lena.</p>
<p>“You are not often concerned about economy,” said
Strudwarden, “and in any case the trip of Vienna
won’t cost a bit more than the rather meaningless luncheon
parties we usually give to quite meaningless acquaintances at
Brighton. To escape from all that set would be a holiday in
itself.”</p>
<p>Strudwarden spoke feelingly; Lena Strudwarden maintained an
equally feeling silence on that particular subject. The set
that she gathered round her at Brighton and other South Coast
resorts was composed of individuals who might be dull and
meaningless in themselves, but who understood the art of
flattering Mrs. Strudwarden. She had no intention of
foregoing their society and their homage and flinging herself
among unappreciative strangers in a foreign capital.</p>
<p>“You must go to Vienna alone if you are bent on
going,” she said; “I couldn’t leave Louis
behind, and a dog is always a fearful nuisance in a foreign
hotel, besides all the fuss and separation of the quarantine
restrictions when one comes back. Louis would die if he was
parted from me for even a week. You don’t know what
that would mean to me.”</p>
<p>Lena stooped down and kissed the nose of the diminutive brown
Pomeranian that lay, snug and irresponsive, beneath a shawl on
her lap.</p>
<p>“Look here,” said Strudwarden, “this eternal
Louis business is getting to be a ridiculous nuisance.
Nothing can be done, no plans can be made, without some veto
connected with that animal’s whims or convenience being
imposed. If you were a priest in attendance on some African
fetish you couldn’t set up a more elaborate code of
restrictions. I believe you’d ask the Government to
put off a General Election if you thought it would interfere with
Louis’s comfort in any way.”</p>
<p>By way of answer to this tirade Mrs. Strudwarden stooped down
again and kissed the irresponsive brown nose. It was the
action of a woman with a beautifully meek nature, who would,
however, send the whole world to the stake sooner than yield an
inch where she knew herself to be in the right.</p>
<p>“It isn’t as if you were in the least bit fond of
animals,” went on Strudwarden, with growing irritation;
“when we are down at Kerryfield you won’t stir a step
to take the house dogs out, even if they’re dying for a
run, and I don’t think you’ve been in the stables
twice in your life. You laugh at what you call the fuss
that’s being made over the extermination of plumage birds,
and you are quite indignant with me if I interfere on behalf of
an ill-treated, over-driven animal on the road. And yet you
insist on every one’s plans being made subservient to the
convenience of that stupid little morsel of fur and
selfishness.”</p>
<p>“You are prejudiced against my little Louis,” said
Lena, with a world of tender regret in her voice.</p>
<p>“I’ve never had the chance of being anything else
but prejudiced against him,” said Strudwarden; “I
know what a jolly responsive companion a doggie can be, but
I’ve never been allowed to put a finger near Louis.
You say he snaps at any one except you and your maid, and you
snatched him away from old Lady Peterby the other day, when she
wanted to pet him, for fear he would bury his teeth in her.
All that I ever see of him is the top of his unhealthy-looking
little nose, peeping out from his basket or from your muff, and I
occasionally hear his wheezy little bark when you take him for a
walk up and down the corridor. You can’t expect one
to get extravagantly fond of a dog of that sort. One might
as well work up an affection for the cuckoo in a
cuckoo-clock.”</p>
<p>“He loves me,” said Lena, rising from the table,
and bearing the shawl-swathed Louis in her arms. “He
loves only me, and perhaps that is why I love him so much in
return. I don’t care what you say against him, I am
not going to be separated from him. If you insist on going
to Vienna you must go alone, as far as I am concerned. I
think it would be much more sensible if you were to come to
Brighton with Louis and me, but of course you must please
yourself.”</p>
<p>“You must get rid of that dog,” said
Strudwarden’s sister when Lena had left the room; “it
must be helped to some sudden and merciful end. Lena is
merely making use of it as an instrument for getting her own way
on dozens of occasions when she would otherwise be obliged to
yield gracefully to your wishes or to the general
convenience. I am convinced that she doesn’t care a
brass button about the animal itself. When her friends are
buzzing round her at Brighton or anywhere else and the dog would
be in the way, it has to spend whole days alone with the maid,
but if you want Lena to go with you anywhere where she
doesn’t want to go instantly she trots out the excuse that
she couldn’t be separated from her dog. Have you ever
come into a room unobserved and heard Lena talking to her beloved
pet? I never have. I believe she only fusses over it
when there’s some one present to notice her.”</p>
<p>“I don’t mind admitting,” said Strudwarden,
“that I’ve dwelt more than once lately on the
possibility of some fatal accident putting an end to
Louis’s existence. It’s not very easy, though,
to arrange a fatality for a creature that spends most of its time
in a muff or asleep in a toy kennel. I don’t think
poison would be any good; it’s obviously horribly over-fed,
for I’ve seen Lena offer it dainties at table sometimes,
but it never seems to eat them.”</p>
<p>“Lena will be away at church on Wednesday
morning,” said Elsie Strudwarden reflectively; “she
can’t take Louis with her there, and she is going on to the
Dellings for lunch. That will give you several hours in
which to carry out your purpose. The maid will be flirting
with the chauffeur most of the time, and, anyhow, I can manage to
keep her out of the way on some pretext or other.”</p>
<p>“That leaves the field clear,” said Strudwarden,
“but unfortunately my brain is equally a blank as far as
any lethal project is concerned. The little beast is so
monstrously inactive; I can’t pretend that it leapt into
the bath and drowned itself, or that it took on the
butcher’s mastiff in unequal combat and got chewed
up. In what possible guise could death come to a confirmed
basket-dweller? It would be too suspicious if we invented a
Suffragette raid and pretended that they invaded Lena’s
boudoir and threw a brick at him. We should have to do a
lot of other damage as well, which would be rather a nuisance,
and the servants would think it odd that they had seen nothing of
the invaders.”</p>
<p>“I have an idea,” said Elsie; “get a box
with an air-tight lid, and bore a small hole in it, just big
enough to let in an indiarubber tube. Pop Louis, kennel and
all, into the box, shut it down, and put the other end of the
tube over the gas-bracket. There you have a perfect lethal
chamber. You can stand the kennel at the open window
afterwards, to get rid of the smell of gas, and all that Lena
will find when she comes home late in the afternoon will be a
placidly defunct Louis.”</p>
<p>“Novels have been written about women like you,”
said Strudwarden; “you have a perfectly criminal
mind. Let’s come and look for a box.”</p>
<p>Two mornings later the conspirators stood gazing guiltily at a
stout square box, connected with the gas-bracket by a length of
indiarubber tubing.</p>
<p>“Not a sound,” said Elsie; “he never
stirred; it must have been quite painless. All the same I
feel rather horrid now it’s done.”</p>
<p>“The ghastly part has to come,” said Strudwarden,
turning off the gas. “We’ll lift the lid
slowly, and let the gas out by degrees. Swing the door to
and fro to send a draught through the room.”</p>
<p>Some minutes later, when the fumes had rushed off, he stooped
down and lifted out the little kennel with its grim burden.
Elsie gave an exclamation of terror. Louis sat at the door
of his dwelling, head erect and ears pricked, as coldly and
defiantly inert as when they had put him into his execution
chamber. Strudwarden dropped the kennel with a jerk, and
stared for a long moment at the miracle-dog; then he went into a
peal of chattering laughter.</p>
<p>It was certainly a wonderful imitation of a truculent-looking
toy Pomeranian, and the apparatus that gave forth a wheezy bark
when you pressed it had materially helped the imposition that
Lena, and Lena’s maid, had foisted on the household.
For a woman who disliked animals, but liked getting her own way
under a halo of unselfishness, Mrs. Strudwarden had managed
rather well.</p>
<p>“Louis is dead,” was the curt information that
greeted Lena on her return from her luncheon party.</p>
<p>“Louis <i>dead</i>!” she exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Yes, he flew at the butcher-boy and bit him, and he bit
me, too, when I tried to get him off, so I had to have him
destroyed. You warned me that he snapped, but you
didn’t tell me that he was downright dangerous. I
shall have to pay the boy something heavy by way of compensation,
so you will have to go without those buckles that you wanted to
have for Easter; also I shall have to go to Vienna to consult Dr.
Schroeder, who is a specialist on dog-bites, and you will have to
come too. I have sent what remains of Louis to Rowland Ward
to be stuffed; that will be my Easter gift to you instead of the
buckles. For Heaven’s sake, Lena, weep, if you really
feel it so much; anything would be better than standing there
staring as if you thought I had lost my reason.”</p>
<p>Lena Strudwarden did not weep, but her attempt at laughing was
an unmistakable failure.</p>
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