<h2><SPAN name="page193"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>FATE</h2>
<p>Rex Dillot was nearly twenty-four, almost good-looking and
quite penniless. His mother was supposed to make him some
sort of an allowance out of what her creditors allowed her, and
Rex occasionally strayed into the ranks of those who earn fitful
salaries as secretaries or companions to people who are unable to
cope unaided with their correspondence or their leisure.
For a few months he had been assistant editor and business
manager of a paper devoted to fancy mice, but the devotion had
been all on one side, and the paper disappeared with a certain
abruptness from club reading-rooms and other haunts where it had
made a gratuitous appearance. Still, Rex lived with some
air of comfort and well-being, as one can live if one is born
with a genius for that sort of thing, and a kindly Providence
usually arranged that his week-end invitations coincided with the
dates on which his one white dinner-waistcoat was in a
laundry-returned condition of dazzling cleanness. He played
most games badly, and was shrewd enough to recognise the fact,
but he had developed a marvellously accurate judgement in
estimating the play and chances of other people, whether in a
golf match, billiard handicap, or croquet tournament. By
dint of parading his opinion of such and such a player’s
superiority with a sufficient degree of youthful assertiveness he
usually succeeded in provoking a wager at liberal odds, and he
looked to his week-end winnings to carry him through the
financial embarrassments of his mid-week existence. The
trouble was, as he confided to Clovis Sangrail, that he never had
enough available or even prospective cash at his command to
enable him to fix the wager at a figure really worth winning.</p>
<p>“Some day,” he said, “I shall come across a
really safe thing, a bet that simply can’t go astray, and
then I shall put it up for all I’m worth, or rather for a
good deal more than I’m worth if you sold me up to the last
button.”</p>
<p>“It would be awkward if it didn’t happen to come
off,” said Clovis.</p>
<p>“It would be more than awkward,” said Rex;
“it would be a tragedy. All the same, it would be
extremely amusing to bring it off. Fancy awaking in the
morning with about three hundred pounds standing to one’s
credit. I should go and clear out my hostess’s
pigeon-loft before breakfast out of sheer good-temper.”</p>
<p>“Your hostess of the moment mightn’t have a
pigeon-loft,” said Clovis.</p>
<p>“I always choose hostesses that have,” said Rex;
“a pigeon-loft is indicative of a careless, extravagant,
genial disposition, such as I like to see around me. People
who strew corn broadcast for a lot of feathered inanities that
just sit about cooing and giving each other the glad eye in a
Louis Quatorze manner are pretty certain to do you
well.”</p>
<p>“Young Strinnit is coming down this afternoon,”
said Clovis reflectively; “I dare say you won’t find
it difficult to get him to back himself at billiards. He
plays a pretty useful game, but he’s not quite as good as
he fancies he is.”</p>
<p>“I know one member of the party who can walk round
him,” said Rex softly, an alert look coming into his eyes;
“that cadaverous-looking Major who arrived last
night. I’ve seen him play at St. Moritz. If I
could get Strinnit to lay odds on himself against the Major the
money would be safe in my pocket. This looks like the good
thing I’ve been watching and praying for.”</p>
<p>“Don’t be rash,” counselled Clovis,
“Strinnit may play up to his self-imagined form once in a
blue moon.”</p>
<p>“I intend to be rash,” said Rex quietly, and the
look on his face corroborated his words.</p>
<p>“Are you all going to flock to the billiard-room?”
asked Teresa Thundleford, after dinner, with an air of some
disapproval and a good deal of annoyance. “I
can’t see what particular amusement you find in watching
two men prodding little ivory balls about on a table.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well,” said her hostess, “it’s a
way of passing the time, you know.”</p>
<p>“A very poor way, to my mind,” said Mrs.
Thundleford; “now I was going to have shown all of you the
photographs I took in Venice last summer.”</p>
<p>“You showed them to us last night,” said Mrs.
Cuvering hastily.</p>
<p>“Those were the ones I took in Florence. These are
quite a different lot.”</p>
<p>“Oh, well, some time to-morrow we can look at
them. You can leave them down in the drawing-room, and then
every one can have a look.”</p>
<p>“I should prefer to show them when you are all gathered
together, as I have quite a lot of explanatory remarks to make,
about Venetian art and architecture, on the same lines as my
remarks last night on the Florentine galleries. Also, there
are some verses of mine that I should like to read you, on the
rebuilding of the Campanile. But, of course, if you all
prefer to watch Major Latton and Mr. Strinnit knocking balls
about on a table—”</p>
<p>“They are both supposed to be first-rate players,”
said the hostess.</p>
<p>“I have yet to learn that my verses and my art
<i>causerie</i> are of second-rate quality,” said Mrs.
Thundleford with acerbity. “However, as you all seem
bent on watching a silly game, there’s no more to be
said. I shall go upstairs and finish some writing.
Later on, perhaps, I will come down and join you.”</p>
<p>To one, at least, of the onlookers the game was anything but
silly. It was absorbing, exciting, exasperating,
nerve-stretching, and finally it grew to be tragic. The
Major with the St. Moritz reputation was playing a long way below
his form, young Strinnit was playing slightly above his, and had
all the luck of the game as well. From the very start the
balls seemed possessed by a demon of contrariness; they trundled
about complacently for one player, they would go nowhere for the
other.</p>
<p>“A hundred and seventy, seventy-four,” sang out
the youth who was marking. In a game of two hundred and
fifty up it was an enormous lead to hold. Clovis watched
the flush of excitement die away from Dillot’s face, and a
hard white look take its place.</p>
<p>“How much have you go on?” whispered Clovis.
The other whispered the sum through dry, shaking lips. It
was more than he or any one connected with him could pay; he had
done what he had said he would do. He had been rash.</p>
<p>“Two hundred and six, ninety-eight.”</p>
<p>Rex heard a clock strike ten somewhere in the hall, then
another somewhere else, and another, and another; the house
seemed full of striking clocks. Then in the distance the
stable clock chimed in. In another hour they would all be
striking eleven, and he would be listening to them as a disgraced
outcast, unable to pay, even in part, the wager he had
challenged.</p>
<p>“Two hundred and eighteen, a hundred and
three.” The game was as good as over. Rex was
as good as done for. He longed desperately for the ceiling
to fall in, for the house to catch fire, for anything to happen
that would put an end to that horrible rolling to and fro of red
and white ivory that was jostling him nearer and nearer to his
doom.</p>
<p>“Two hundred and twenty-eight, a hundred and
seven.”</p>
<p>Rex opened his cigarette-case; it was empty. That at
least gave him a pretext to slip away from the room for the
purpose of refilling it; he would spare himself the drawn-out
torture of watching that hopeless game played out to the bitter
end. He backed away from the circle of absorbed watchers
and made his way up a short stairway to a long, silent corridor
of bedrooms, each with a guests’ name written in a little
square on the door. In the hush that reigned in this part
of the house he could still hear the hateful click-click of the
balls; if he waited for a few minutes longer he would hear the
little outbreak of clapping and buzz of congratulation that would
hail Strinnit’s victory. On the alert tension of his
nerves there broke another sound, the aggressive, wrath-inducing
breathing of one who sleeps in heavy after-dinner slumber.
The sound came from a room just at his elbow; the card on the
door bore the announcement “Mrs. Thundleford.”
The door was just slightly ajar; Rex pushed it open an inch or
two more and looked in. The august Teresa had fallen asleep
over an illustrated guide to Florentine art-galleries; at her
side, somewhat dangerously near the edge of the table, was a
reading-lamp. If Fate had been decently kind to him,
thought Rex, bitterly, that lamp would have been knocked over by
the sleeper and would have given them something to think of
besides billiard matches.</p>
<p>There are occasions when one must take one’s Fate in
one’s hands. Rex took the lamp in his.</p>
<p>“Two hundred and thirty-seven, one hundred and
fifteen.” Strinnit was at the table, and the balls
lay in good position for him; he had a choice of two fairly easy
shots, a choice which he was never to decide. A sudden
hurricane of shrieks and a rush of stumbling feet sent every one
flocking to the door. The Dillot boy crashed into the room,
carrying in his arms the vociferous and somewhat dishevelled
Teresa Thundleford; her clothing was certainly not a mass of
flames, as the more excitable members of the party afterwards
declared, but the edge of her skirt and part of the table-cover
in which she had been hastily wrapped were alight in a
flickering, half-hearted manner. Rex flung his struggling
burden on the billiard table, and for one breathless minute the
work of beating out the sparks with rugs and cushions and playing
on them with soda-water syphons engrossed the energies of the
entire company.</p>
<p>“It was lucky I was passing when it happened,”
panted Rex; “some one had better see to the room, I think
the carpet is alight.”</p>
<p>As a matter of fact the promptitude and energy of the rescuer
had prevented any great damage being done, either to the victim
or her surroundings. The billiard table had suffered most,
and had to be laid up for repairs; perhaps it was not the best
place to have chosen for the scene of salvage operations; but
then, as Clovis remarked, when one is rushing about with a
blazing woman in one’s arms one can’t stop to think
out exactly where one is going to put her.</p>
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