<h3>NOCTURNE AT THE MAJESTIC</h3>
<h4>I</h4>
<p>In the daily strenuous life of a great hotel there are periods
during which its bewildering activities slacken, and the vast
organism seems to be under the influence of an opiate. Such a
period recurs after dinner when the guests are preoccupied by the
mysterious processes of digestion in the drawing-rooms or
smoking-rooms or in the stalls of a theatre. On the evening of this
nocturne the well-known circular entrance-hall of the Majestic,
with its tessellated pavement, its malachite pillars, its Persian
rugs, its lounges, and its renowned stuffed bears at the foot of
the grand stairway, was for the moment deserted, save by the head
hall-porter and the head night-porter and the girl in the bureau.
It was a quarter to nine, and the head hall-porter was abdicating
his <SPAN name='Page258' id="Page258"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">258</span> pagoda to the head night-porter, and telling
him the necessary secrets of the day. These two lords, before whom
the motley panorama of human existence was continually being
enrolled, held a portentous confabulation night and morning. They
had no illusions; they knew life. Shakespeare himself might have
listened to them with advantage.</p>
<p>The girl in the bureau, like a beautiful and languishing animal
in its cage, leaned against her window, and looked between two
pillars at the magnificent lords. She was too far off to catch
their talk, and, indeed, she watched them absently in a reverie
induced by the sweet melancholy of the summer twilight, by the
torpidity of the hour, and by the prospect of the next day, which
was her day off. The liveried functionaries ignored her, probably
scorned her as a mere pretty little morsel. Nevertheless, she was
the centre of energy, not they. If money were payable, she was the
person to receive it; if a customer wanted a room, she would choose
it; and the lords had to call her 'miss.' The immense and splendid
hotel pulsed round this simple heart hidden under a white blouse.
Especially in summer, <SPAN name='Page259' id="Page259"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">259</span> her presence and the
presence of her companions in the bureau (but to-night she was
alone) ministered to the satisfaction of male guests, whose cruel
but profoundly human instincts found pleasure in the fact that, no
matter when they came in from their wanderings, the pretty captives
were always there in the bureau, smiling welcome, puzzling stupid
little brains and puckering pale brows over enormous ledgers,
twittering borrowed facetiousness from rosy mouths, and smoothing
out seductive toilettes with long thin hands that were made for
ring and bracelet and rudder-lines, and not a bit for the pen and
the ruler.</p>
<p>The pretty little thing despised of the functionaries
corresponded almost exactly in appearance to the typical bureau
girl. She was moderately tall; she had a good slim figure, all
pleasant curves, flaxen hair and plenty of it, and a dainty, rather
expressionless face; the ears and mouth were very small, the eyes
large and blue, the nose so-so, the cheeks and forehead of an equal
ivory pallor, the chin trifling, with a crease under the lower lip
and a rich convexity springing out from below the crease. The
extremities of the full lips were <SPAN name='Page260' id="Page260"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">260</span> nearly always drawn
up in a smile, mechanical, but infallibly attractive. The hair was
of an orthodox frizziness. You would have said she was a nice,
kind, good-natured girl, flirtatious but correct, well adapted to
adorn a dogcart on Sundays.</p>
<p>This was Nina, foolish Nina, aged twenty-one. In her reverie the
entire Hôtel Majestic weighed on her; she had a more than
adequate sense of her own solitary importance in the bureau, and
stirring obscurely beneath that consciousness were the deep
ineradicable longings of a poor pretty girl for heaps of money,
endless luxury of finery and chocolates, and sentimental silken
dalliance.</p>
<p>Suddenly a stranger entered the hall. His advent seemed to wake
the place out of the trance into which it had fallen. The nocturne
had begun. Nina straightened herself and intensified her eternal
smile. The two porters became military, and smiled with a special
and peculiar urbanity. Several lesser but still lordly
functionaries appeared among the pillars; a page-boy emerged by
magic from the region of the chimney-piece like Mephistopheles in
Faust's study; and some guests of both sexes <SPAN name='Page261' id="Page261"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">261</span> strolled chattering
across the tessellated pavement as they passed from one wing of the
hotel to the other.</p>
<p>'How do, Tom?' said the stranger, grasping the hand of the head
hall-porter, and nodding to the head night-porter.</p>
<p>His voice showed that he was an American, and his demeanour that
he was one of those experienced, wealthy, and kindly travellers who
know the Christian names of all the hall-porters in the world, and
have the trick of securing their intimacy and fealty. He wore a
blue suit and a light gray wideawake, and his fine moustache was
grizzled. In his left hand he carried a brown bag.</p>
<p>'Nicely, thank you, sir,' Tom replied. 'How are you, sir?'</p>
<p>'Oh, about six and six.'</p>
<p>Whereupon both porters laughed heartily.</p>
<p>Tom escorted him to the bureau, and tried to relieve him of his
bag. Inferior lords escorted Tom.</p>
<p>'I guess I'll keep the grip,' said the stranger. 'Mr. Pank will
be around with some more baggage pretty soon. We've expressed the
rest on to the steamer. Well, my dear,' he went <SPAN name='Page262' id="Page262"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">262</span> on, turning to
Nina, 'you're a fresh face here.'</p>
<p>He looked her steadily in the eyes.</p>
<p>'Yes, I am,' she said, conquered instantly.</p>
<p>Radiant and triumphant, the man brought good-humour into every
face, like some wonderful combination of the sun and the
sea-breeze.</p>
<p>'Give me two bedrooms and a parlour, please,' he commanded.</p>
<p>'First floor?' asked Nina prettily.</p>
<p>'First floor! Well—I should say! <i>And</i> on the Strand,
my dear.'</p>
<p>She bent over her ledgers, blushing.</p>
<p>'Send someone to the 'phone, Tom, and let 'em put me on to the
Regency, will you?' said the stranger.</p>
<p>'Yes, sir. Samuels, go and ring up the Regency
Theatre—quick!'</p>
<p>Swift departure of a lord.</p>
<p>'And ask Alphonse to come up to my bedroom in ten minutes from
now,' the stranger proceeded to Tom. 'I shall want a dandy supper
for fourteen at a quarter after eleven.'</p>
<p>'Yes, sir. No dinner, sir?'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page263' id="Page263"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">263</span> 'No; we dined on the Pullman. Well, my dear,
figured it out yet?'</p>
<p>'Numbers 102, 120, and 107,' said Nina.</p>
<p>'Keys 102, 120, and 107,' said Tom.</p>
<p>Swift departure of another lord to the pagoda.</p>
<p>'How much?' demanded the stranger.</p>
<p>'The bedrooms are twenty-five shillings, and the sitting-room
two guineas.'</p>
<p>'I guess Mr. Pank won't mind that. Hullo, Pank, you're here! I'm
through. Your number's 102 or 120, which you fancy. Just going to
the 'phone a minute, and then I'll join you upstairs.'</p>
<p>Mr. Pank was a younger man, possessing a thin, astute,
intellectual face. He walked into the hall with noticeable
deliberation. His travelling costume was faultless, but from
beneath his straw hat his black hair sprouted in a somewhat
peculiar fashion over his broad forehead. He smiled lazily and
shrewdly, and without a word disappeared into a lift. Two large
portmanteaus accompanied him.</p>
<p>Presently the elder stranger could be heard battling with the
obstinate idiosyncrasies of a London telephone.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page264' id="Page264"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">264</span> 'You haven't registered,' Nina called to him
in her tremulous, delicate, captivating voice, as he came out of
the telephone-box.</p>
<p>He advanced to sign, and, taking a pen and leaning on the front
of the bureau, wrote in the visitor's book, in a careful, legible
hand: 'Lionel Belmont, New York.' Having thus written, and still
resting on the right elbow, he raised his right hand a little and
waved the pen like a delicious menace at Nina.</p>
<p>'Mr. Pank hasn't registered, either,' he said slowly, with a
charming affectation of solemnity, as though accusing Mr. Pank of
some appalling crime.</p>
<p>Nina laughed timidly as she pushed his room-ticket across the
page of the big book. She thought that Mr. Lionel Belmont was
perfectly delightful.</p>
<p>'No,' he hasn't,' she said, trying also to be arch; 'but he
must.'</p>
<p>At that moment she happened to glance at the right hand of Mr.
Belmont. In the brilliance of the electric light she could see the
fair skin of the wrist and forearm within the whiteness of his
shirt-sleeve. She stared at what she saw, every muscle tense.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page265' id="Page265"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">265</span> 'I guess you can round up Mr. Pank yourself,
my dear, later on,' said Lionel Belmont, and turned quickly away,
intent on the next thing.</p>
<p>He did not notice that her large eyes had grown larger and her
pale face paler. In another moment the hall was deserted again. Mr.
Belmont had ascended in the lift, Tom had gone to his rest, and the
head night-porter was concealed in the pagoda. Nina sank down
limply on her stool, her nostrils twitching; she feared she was
about to faint, but this final calamity did not occur. She had,
nevertheless, experienced the greatest shock of her brief life, and
the way of it was thus.</p>
<h4>II</h4>
<p>Nina Malpas was born amid the embers of one of those fiery
conjugal dramas which occur with romantic frequency in the
provincial towns of the northern Midlands, where industrial
conditions are such as to foster an independent spirit among women
of the lower class generally, and where by long tradition
'character' is allowed to exploit itself more <SPAN name='Page266' id="Page266"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">266</span> freely than in the
southern parts of our island. Lemuel Malpas was a dashing young
commercial traveller, with what is known as 'an agreeable address,'
in Bursley, one of the Five Towns, Staffordshire. On the strength
of his dash he wooed and married the daughter of an hotel-keeper in
the neighbouring town of Hanbridge. Six months after the
wedding—in other words, at the most dangerous period of the
connubial career—Mrs. Malpas's father died, and Mrs. Malpas
became the absolute mistress of eight thousand pounds.
Lemuel<SPAN name='FNanchor_1_1' id="FNanchor_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href='#Footnote_1_1'><sup>[1]</sup></SPAN> had carefully foreseen this
windfall, and wished to use the money in enterprises of the
earthenware trade. Mrs. Malpas, pretty and vivacious, with a
self-conceit hardened by the adulation of saloon-bars, very
decidedly thought otherwise. Her motto was, 'What's yours is mine,
but what's mine's my own.' The difference was accentuated. Long
mutual resistances were followed by reconciliations, which grew
more and more transitory, and at length both recognised that the
union, not founded on genuine affection, had been a mistake.</p>
<div class='footnote'>
<p><SPAN name='Footnote_1_1' id="Footnote_1_1"></SPAN><SPAN href='#FNanchor_1_1'>[1]</SPAN> This name is pronounced with the accent on
the first syllable in the Five Towns.</p>
</div>
<SPAN name='Page267' id="Page267"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">267</span>
<p>'Keep your d——d brass!' Lemuel exclaimed one
morning, and he went off on a journey and forgot to come back. A
curious letter dated from Liverpool wished his wife happiness, and
informed her that, since she was well provided for, he had no
scruples about leaving her. Mrs. Malpas was startled at first, but
she soon perceived that what Lemuel had done was exactly what the
brilliant and enterprising Lemuel might have been expected to do.
She jerked up her doll's head, and ejaculated, 'So much the
better!'</p>
<p>A few weeks later she sold the furniture and took rooms in
Scarborough, where, amid pleasurable surroundings, she determined
to lead the joyous life of a grass-widow, free of all cares. Then,
to her astonishment and disgust, Nina was born. She had not
bargained for Nina. She found herself in the tiresome position of a
mother whose explanations of her child lack plausibility. One
lodging-housekeeper to whom she hazarded the statement that Lemuel
was in Australia had saucily replied: 'I thought maybe it was the
North Pole he was gone to!'</p>
<p>This decided Mrs. Malpas. She returned <SPAN name='Page268' id="Page268"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">268</span> suddenly to the Five
Towns, where at least her reputation was secure. Only a week
previously Lemuel had learnt indirectly that she had left their
native district. He determined thenceforward to forget her
completely. Mrs. Malpas's prettiness was of the fleeting sort.
After Nina's birth she began to get stout and coarse, and the
nostalgia of the saloon-bar, the coffee-room, and the sanded
portico overtook her. The Tiger at Bursley was for sale, a
respectable commercial hotel, the best in the town. She purchased
it, wines, omnibus connection, and all, and developed into the
typical landlady in black silk and gold rings.</p>
<p>In the Tiger Nina was brought up. She was a pretty child from
her earliest years, and received the caresses of all as a matter of
course. She went to a good school, studied the piano, and learnt
dancing, and at sixteen did her hair up. She did as she was told
without fuss, being apparently of a lethargic temperament; she had
all the money and all the clothes that her heart could desire; she
was happy, and in a quiet way she deemed herself a rather
considerable item in the world. When she was eighteen her mother
died miserably of cancer, <SPAN name='Page269' id="Page269"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">269</span> and it was
discovered that the liabilities of Mrs. Malpas's estate exceeded
its assets—and the Tiger mortgaged up to its value! The
creditors were not angry; they attributed the state of affairs to
illness and the absence of male control, and good-humouredly
accepted what they could get. None the less, Nina, the child of
luxury and sloth, had to start life with several hundreds of pounds
less than nothing. Of her father all trace had been long since
lost. A place was found for her, and for over two years she saw the
world from the office of a famous hotel in Doncaster. Her lethargy,
and an invaluable gift of adapting herself to circumstances, saved
her from any acute unhappiness in the Yorkshire town. Instinctively
she ceased to remember the Tiger and past splendours. (Equally, if
she had married a Duke instead of becoming a book-keeper, she would
have ceased to remember the Tiger and past humility.) Then by good
or ill fortune she had the offer of a situation at the Hôtel
Majestic, Strand, London. The Majestic and the sights thereof woke
up the sleeping soul.</p>
<p>Before her death Mrs. Malpas had told Nina many things about the
vanished Lemuel; <SPAN name='Page270' id="Page270"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">270</span> among others, the curious detail that he had
two small moles—one hairless, the other hirsute—close
together on the under side of his right wrist. Nina had seen
precisely such marks of identification on the right wrist of Mr.
Lionel Belmont.</p>
<p>She was convinced that Lionel Belmont was her father. There
could not be two men in the world so stamped by nature. She
perceived that in changing his name he had chosen Lionel because of
its similarity to Lemuel. She felt certain, too, that she had
noticed vestiges of the Five Towns accent beneath his Americanisms.
But apart from these reasons, she knew by a superrational instinct
that Lionel Belmont was her father; it was not the call of blood,
but the positiveness of a woman asserting that a thing is so
because she is sure it is so.</p>
<h4>III</h4>
<p>Nina was not of an imaginative disposition. The romance of this
extraordinary encounter made no appeal to her. She was the sort of
girl that constantly reads novelettes, and yet always, with
fatigued scorn, refers to them as <SPAN name='Page271' id="Page271"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">271</span> 'silly.' Stupid
little Nina was intensely practical at heart, and it was the
practical side of her father's reappearance that engaged her
birdlike mind. She did not stop to reflect that truth is stranger
than fiction. Her tiny heart was not agitated by any ecstatic
ponderings upon the wonder and mystery of fate. She did not feel
strangely drawn towards Lionel Belmont, nor did she feel that he
supplied a something which had always been wanting to her.</p>
<p>On the other hand, her pride—and Nina was very
proud—found much satisfaction in the fact that her father,
having turned up, was so fine, handsome, dashing, good-humoured,
and wealthy. It was well, and excellently well, and delicious, to
have a father like that. The possession of such a father opened up
vistas of a future so enticing and glorious that her present career
became instantly loathsome to her.</p>
<p>It suddenly seemed impossible that she could have tolerated the
existence of a hotel clerk for a single week. Her eyes were opened,
and she saw, as many women have seen, that luxury was an absolute
necessity to her. All her ideas soared with the magic swiftness of
the bean-stalk. <SPAN name='Page272' id="Page272"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">272</span> And at the same time she was terribly afraid,
unaccountably afraid, to confront Mr. Belmont and tell him that she
was his Nina; he was entirely unaware that he had a Nina.</p>
<p>'I'm your daughter! I know by your moles!'</p>
<p>She whispered the words in her tiny heart, and felt sure that
she could never find courage to say them aloud to that great and
important man. The announcement would be too monstrous, incredible,
and absurd. People would laugh. He would laugh. And Nina could
stand anything better than being laughed at. Even supposing she
proved to him his paternity—she thought of the horridness of
going to lawyers' offices—he might decline to recognise her.
Or he might throw her fifty pounds a year, as one throws sixpence
to an importunate crossing-sweeper, to be rid of her. The United
States existed in her mind chiefly as a country of
highly-remarkable divorce laws, and she thought that Mr. Belmont
might have married again. A fashionable and arrogant Mrs. Belmont,
and a dazzling Miss Belmont, aged possibly eighteen, might arrive,
both of them <SPAN name='Page273' id="Page273"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">273</span> steeped in all conceivable luxury, at any
moment. Where would Nina be then, with her
two-and-eleven-pence-halfpenny blouse from Glave's?...</p>
<p>Mr. Belmont, accompanied by Alphonse, the head-waiter in the
<i>salle à manger</i>, descended in the lift and crossed the
hall to the portico, where he stood talking for a few seconds. Mr.
Belmont turned, and, as he conversed with Alphonse, gazed absently
in the direction of the bureau. He looked straight through the
pretty captive. After all, despite his superficial heartiness, she
could be nothing to him—so rich, assertive, and truly
important. A hansom was called for him, and he departed; she
observed that he was in evening dress now.</p>
<p>No! Her cause was just; but it was too startling—that was
what was the matter with it.</p>
<p>Then she told herself she would write to Lionel Belmont. She
would write a letter that night.</p>
<p>At nine-thirty she was off duty. She went upstairs to her perch
in the roof, and sat on her bed for over two hours. Then she came
<SPAN name='Page274' id="Page274"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">274</span>
down again to the bureau with some bluish note-paper and envelopes
in her hand, and, in response to the surprised question of the
pink-frocked colleague who had taken her place, she explained that
she wanted to write a letter.</p>
<p>'You do look that bad, Miss Malpas,' said the other girl, who
made a speciality of compassion.</p>
<p>'Do I?' said Nina.</p>
<p>'Yes, you do. What have you got <i>on, now</i>, my poor
dear?'</p>
<p>'What's that to you? I'll thank you to mind your own business,
Miss Bella Perkins.'</p>
<p>Usually Nina was not soon ruffled; but that night all her nerves
were exasperated and exceedingly sensitive.</p>
<p>'Oh!' said the girl. 'What price the Duchess of Doncaster? And I
was just going to wish you a nice day to-morrow for your holiday,
too.'</p>
<p>Nina seated herself at the table to write the letter. An
electric light burned directly over her frizzy head. She wrote a
weak but legible and regular back-hand. She hated writing letters,
partly because she was dubious about <SPAN name='Page275' id="Page275"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">275</span> her spelling, and
partly because of an obscure but irrepressible suspicion that her
letters were of necessity silly. She pondered for a long time, and
then wrote: 'Dear Mr. Belmont,—I venture——' She
made a new start: 'Dear Sir,—I hope you will not think
me——' And a third attempt: 'My dear
Father——' No! it was preposterous. It could no more be
written than it could be said.</p>
<p>The situation was too much for simple Nina.</p>
<p>Suddenly the grand circular hall of the Majestic was filled with
a clamour at once charming and fantastic. There was chattering of
musical, gay American voices, pattering of elegant feet on the
tessellated pavement, the unique incomparable sound of the
<i>frou-frou</i> of many frocks; and above all this the rich tones
of Mr. Lionel Belmont. Nina looked up and saw her radiant father
the centre of a group of girls all young, all beautiful, all
stylish, all with picture hats, all self-possessed, all sparkling,
doubtless the recipients of the dandy supper.</p>
<p>Oh, how insignificant and homicidal Nina felt!</p>
<p>'Thirteen of you!' exclaimed Lionel Belmont, <SPAN name='Page276' id="Page276"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">276</span> pulling his
superb moustache. 'Two to a hansom. I guess I'll want six and a
half hansoms, boy.'</p>
<p>There was an explosion of delicious laughter, and the page-boy
grinned, ran off, and began whistling in the portico like a vexed
locomotive. The thirteen fair, shepherded by Lionel Belmont, passed
out into the murmurous summer night of the Strand. Cab after cab
drove up, and Nina saw that her father, after filling each cab,
paid each cabman. In three minutes the dream-like scene was over.
Mr. Belmont re-entered the hotel, winked humorously at the occupant
of the pagoda, ignored the bureau, and departed to his rooms.</p>
<p>Nina ripped her inchoate letters into small pieces, and, with a
tart good-night to Miss Bella Perkins, who was closing her ledgers,
the hour being close upon twelve-thirty, she passed sedately,
stiffly, as though in performance of some vestal's ritual, up the
grand staircase. Turning to the right at the first landing, she
traversed a long corridor which was no part of the route to her
cubicle on the ninth floor. This corridor was lighted by glowing
sparks, which hung on yellow cords from the central <SPAN name=
'Page277' id="Page277"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">277</span> line of
the ceiling; underfoot was a heavy but narrow crimson patterned
carpet with a strip of polished oak parquet on either side of it.
Exactly along the central line of the carpet Nina tripped,
languorously, like an automaton, and exactly over her head
glittered the line of electric sparks. The corridor and the journey
seemed to be interminable, and Nina on some inscrutable and mystic
errand. At length she moved aside from the religious line, went
into a service cabinet, and emerged with a small bunch of
pass-keys. No. 107 was Lionel Belmont's sitting-room; No. 102, his
bedroom, was opposite to 107. No. 108, another sitting-room, was,
as Nina knew, unoccupied. She noiselessly let herself into No. 108,
closed the door, and stood still. After a minute she switched on
the light. These two rooms, Nos. 108 and 107, had once
communicated, but, as space grew precious with the growing success
of the Majestic, they had been finally separated, and the door
between them locked and masked by furniture. By reason of the door,
Nina could hear Lionel Belmont moving to and fro in No. 107. She
listened a long time. Then, involuntarily, she yawned with
fatigue.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page278' id="Page278"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">278</span> 'How silly of me to be here!' she thought.
'What good will this do me?'</p>
<p>She extinguished the light and opened the door to leave. At the
same instant the door of No. 107, three feet off, opened. She drew
back with a start of horror. Suppose she had collided with her
father on the landing! Timorously she peeped out, and saw Lionel
Belmont, in his shirt-sleeves, disappear round the corner.</p>
<p>'He is going to talk with his friend Mr. Pank,' Nina thought,
knowing that No. 120 lay at some little distance round that
corner.</p>
<p>Mr. Belmont had left the door of No. 107 slightly ajar. An
unseen and terrifying force compelled Nina to venture into the
corridor, and then to push the door of No. 107 wide open. The same
force, not at all herself, quite beyond herself, seemed to impel
her by the shoulders into the room. As she stood unmistakably
within her father's private sitting-room, scared, breathing
rapidly, inquisitive, she said to herself:</p>
<p>'I shall hear him coming back, and I can run out before he turns
the corner of the corridor.' And she kept her little pink ears
alert.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page279' id="Page279"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">279</span> She looked about the softly brilliant room,
such an extravagant triumph of luxurious comfort as twenty years
ago would have aroused comment even in Mayfair; but there were
scores of similar rooms in the Majestic. No one thought twice of
them. Her father's dress-coat was thrown arrogantly over a Louis
Quatorze chair, and this careless flinging of the expensive shining
coat across the gilded chair somehow gave Nina a more intimate
appreciation of her father's grandeur and of the great and glorious
life he led. She longed to recline indolently in a priceless
tea-gown on the couch by the fireplace and issue orders.... She
approached the writing-table, littered with papers, documents, in
scores and hundreds. To the left was the brown bag. It was locked,
and very heavy, she thought. To the right was a pile of telegrams.
She picked up one, and read:</p>
<div class='blockquote'>
<p>'<i>Pank, Grand Hotel, Birmingham. Why not burgle hotel?
Simplest most effective plan and solves all
difficulties.</i>—BELMONT.'</p>
</div>
<p>She read it twice, crunched it in her left hand, and picked up
another one:</p>
<SPAN name='Page280' id="Page280"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">280</span>
<div class='blockquote'>
<p>'<i>Pank, Adelphi Hotel, Liverpool. Your objection absurd. See
safe in bureau at Majestic. Quite easy. Scene with girl second
evening</i>.—BELMONT.'</p>
</div>
<p>The thing flashed blindingly upon her. Her father and Mr. Pank
belonged to the swell mob of which she had heard and seen so much
at Doncaster. She at once became the excessively knowing and
suspicious hotel employé, to whom every stranger is a rogue
until he has proved the contrary. Had she lived through three St.
Leger weeks for nothing? At the hotel at Doncaster, what they
didn't know about thieves and sharpers was not knowledge. The
landlord kept a loaded revolver in his desk there during the week.
And she herself had been provided with a whistle which she was to
blow at the slightest sign of a row; she had blown it once, and
seven policemen had appeared within thirty seconds. The landlord
used to tell tales of masterly and huge scoundrelism that would
make Charles Peace turn in his grave. And the landlord had ever
insisted that no one, no one at all, could always distinguish with
certainty between a real gent and a swell-mobsman.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page281' id="Page281"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">281</span> So her father and Mr. Pank had deceived
everyone in the hotel except herself, and they meant to rob the
safe in the bureau to-morrow night. Of course Mr. Lionel Belmont
was a villain, or he would not have deserted her poor dear mother;
it was annoying, but indubitable.... Even now he was maturing his
plans round the corner with that Mr. Pank.... Burglars always went
about in shirt-sleeves.... The brown bag contained the
tools....</p>
<p>The shock was frightful, disastrous, tragic; but it had solved
the situation by destroying it. Practically, Nina no longer had a
father. He had existed for about four hours as a magnificent
reality, full of possibilities; he now ceased to be
recognisable.</p>
<p>She was about to pick up a third telegram when a slight noise
caused her to turn swiftly; she had forgotten to keep her little
pink ears alert. Her father stood in the doorway. He was certainly
the victim of some extraordinary emotion; his face worked; he
seemed at a loss what to do or say; he seemed pained, confused,
even astounded. Simple, foolish Nina had upset the balance of his
equations.</p>
<p>Then he resumed his self-control and came <SPAN name='Page282' id="Page282"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">282</span> forward into the
room with a smile intended to be airy. Meanwhile Nina had not
moved. One is inclined to pity the artless and defenceless girl in
this midnight duel of wits with a shrewd, resourceful, and
unscrupulous man of the world. But one's pity should not be
lavished on an undeserving object. Though Nina trembled, she was
mistress of herself. She knew just where she was, and just how to
behave. She was as impregnable as Gibraltar.</p>
<p>'Well,' said Mr. Lionel Belmont, genially gazing at her pose,
'you do put snap into it, any way.'</p>
<p>'Into what?' she was about to inquire, but prudently she held
her tongue. Drawing, herself up with the gesture of an offended and
unapproachable queen, the little thing sailed past him, close past
her own father, and so out of the room.</p>
<p>'Say!' she heard him remark: 'let's straighten this thing out,
eh?'</p>
<p>But she heroically ignored him, thinking the while that, with
all his sins, he was attractive enough. She still held the first
telegram in her long, thin fingers.</p>
<p>So ended the nocturne.</p>
<SPAN name='Page283' id="Page283"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">283</span>
<h4>IV</h4>
<p>At five o'clock the next morning Nina's trifling nose was
pressed against the windowpane of her cubicle. In the enormous
slate roof of the Majestic are three rows of round windows, like
port-holes. Out of the highest one, at the extremity of the left
wing, Nina looked. From thence she could see five other vast
hotels, and the yard of Charing Cross Station, with three
night-cabs drawn up to the kerb, and a red van of W.H. Smith and
Son disappearing into the station. The Strand was quite empty. It
was a strange world of sleep and grayness and disillusion. Within a
couple of hundred yards or so of her thousands of people lay
asleep, and they would all soon wake into the disillusion, and the
Strand would wake, and the first omnibus of all the omnibuses would
come along....</p>
<p>Never had simple Nina felt so sad and weary. She was determined
to give up her father. She was bound to tell the manager of her
discovery, for Nina was an honest servant, and she was piqued in
her honesty. No one should know that Lionel Belmont was her
father.... <SPAN name='Page284' id="Page284"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">284</span> She saw before her the task of forgetting him
and forgetting the rich dreams of which he had been the origin. She
was once more a book-keeper with no prospects.</p>
<p>At eight she saw the manager in the managerial room. Mr. Reuben
was a young Jew, aged about thirty-four, with a cold but
indestructibly polite manner. He was a great man, and knew it; he
had almost invented the Majestic.</p>
<p>She told him her news; it was impossible for foolish Nina to
conceal her righteousness and her sense of her importance.</p>
<p>'Whom did you say, Miss Malpas?' asked Mr. Reuben.</p>
<p>'Mr. Lionel Belmont—at least, that's what he calls
himself.'</p>
<p>'Calls himself, Miss Malpas?'</p>
<p>'Here's one of the telegrams.'</p>
<p>Mr. Reuben read it, looked at little Nina, and smiled; he never
laughed.</p>
<p>'Is it possible, Miss Malpas,' said he, 'that you don't know who
Mr. Belmont and Mr. Pank are?' And then, as she shook her head, he
continued in his impassive, precise way: 'Mr. Belmont is one of the
principal theatrical <SPAN name='Page285' id="Page285"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">285</span> managers in the
United States. Mr. Pank is one of the principal playwrights in the
United States. Mr. Pank's melodrama 'Nebraska' is now being played
at the Regency by Mr. Belmont's own American company. Another of
Mr. Belmont's companies starts shortly for a tour in the provinces
with the musical comedy 'The Dolmenico Doll.' I believe that Mr.
Pank and Mr. Belmont are now writing a new melodrama, and as they
have both been travelling, but not together, I expect that these
telegrams relate to that melodrama. Did you suppose that
safe-burglars wire their plans to each other like this?' He waved
the telegram with a gesture of fatigue.</p>
<p>Silly, ruined Nina made no answer.</p>
<p>'Do you ever read the papers—the <i>Telegraph</i> or the
<i>Mail</i>, Miss Malpas?'</p>
<p>'N-no, sir.'</p>
<p>'You ought to, then you wouldn't be so ignorant and silly. A
hotel-clerk can't know too much. And, by-the-way, what were you
doing in Mr. Belmont's room last night, when you found these
wonderful telegrams?'</p>
<p>'I went there—I went there—to——'</p>
<p>'Don't cry, please, it won't help you. You <SPAN name='Page286' id="Page286"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">286</span> must leave here
to-day. You've been here three weeks, I think. I'll tell Mr. Smith
to pay you your month's wages. You don't know enough for the
Majestic, Miss Malpas. Or perhaps you know too much. I'm sorry. I
had thought you would suit us. Keep straight, that's all I have to
say to you. Go back to Doncaster, or wherever it is you came from.
Leave before five o'clock. That will do.'</p>
<p>With a godlike air, Mr. Reuben swung round his office-chair and
faced his desk. He tried not to perceive that there was a
mysterious quality about this case which he had not quite
understood. Nina tripped piteously out.</p>
<p>In the whole of London Nina had one acquaintance, and an hour or
so later, after drinking some tea, she set forth to visit this
acquaintance. The weight of her own foolishness, fatuity,
silliness, and ignorance was heavy upon her. And, moreover, she had
been told that Mr. Lionel Belmont had already departed back to
America, his luggage being marked for the American Transport
Line.</p>
<p>She was primly walking, the superlative of the miserable, past
the façade of the hotel, <SPAN name='Page287' id="Page287"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">287</span> when someone sprang
out of a cab and spoke to her. And it was Mr. Lionel Belmont.</p>
<p>'Get right into this hansom, Miss Malpas,' he said kindly, 'and
I guess we'll talk it out.'</p>
<p>'Talk what out?' she thought.</p>
<p>But she got in.</p>
<p>'Marble Arch, and go up Regent Street, and don't hurry,' said
Mr. Belmont to the cabman.</p>
<p>'How did he know my name?' she asked herself.</p>
<p>'A hansom's the most private place in London,' he said after a
pause.</p>
<p>It certainly did seem to her very cosy and private, and her
nearness to one of the principal theatrical managers in America was
almost startling. Her white frock, with the black velvet
decorations, touched his gray suit.</p>
<p>'Now,' he said, 'I do wish you'd tell me why you were in my
parlour last night. Honest.'</p>
<p>'What for?' she parried, to gain time.</p>
<p>Should she begin to disclose her identity?</p>
<p>'Because—well, because—oh, look here, <SPAN name=
'Page288' id="Page288"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">288</span> my
girl, I want to be on very peculiar terms with you. I want to
straighten out everything. You'll be sort of struck, but I'll be
bound to tell you I'm your father. Now, don't faint or
anything.'</p>
<p>'Oh, I knew that!' she gasped. 'I saw the moles on your wrist
when your were registering—mother told me about them. Oh, if
I had only known you knew!'</p>
<p>They looked at one another.</p>
<p>'It was only the day before yesterday I found out I possessed
such a thing as a daughter. I had a kind of fancy to go around to
the old spot. This notion of me having a daughter struck me
considerable, and I concluded to trace her and size her up at
once.' Nina was bound to smile. 'So your poor mother's been dead
three years?'</p>
<p>'Yes,' said Nina.</p>
<p>'Ah! don't let us talk about that. I feel I can't say just the
right thing.... And so you knew me by those pips.' He pulled up his
right sleeve. 'Was that why you came up to my parlour?'</p>
<p>Nina nodded, and Lionel Belmont sighed with relief.</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page289' id="Page289"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">289</span> 'Why didn't you tell me at once, my dear, who
you where?'</p>
<p>'I didn't dare,' she smiled; 'I was afraid. I thought you
wouldn't——'</p>
<p>'Listen,' he said; 'I've wanted someone like you for years,
years, and years. I've got no one to look after——'</p>
<p>'Then why didn't <i>you</i> tell <i>me</i> at once who you
were?' she questioned with adorable pertness.</p>
<p>'Oh!' he laughed; 'how could I—plump like that? When I saw
you first, in the bureau, the stricken image of your mother at your
age, I was nearly down. But I came up all right, didn't I, my dear?
I acted it out well, didn't I?'</p>
<hr class='short' />
<p>The hansom was rolling through Hyde Park, and the sunshiny hour
was eleven in June. Nina looked forth on the gay and brilliant
scene: rhododendrons, duchesses, horses, dandies—the
incomparable wealth and splendour of the capital. She took a long
breath, and began to be happy for the rest of her life. She felt
that, despite her plain <SPAN name='Page290' id="Page290"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">290</span> frock, she was in
this picture. Her father had told her that his income was rising on
a hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year, and he would thank her
to spend it. Her father had told her, when she had confessed the
scene with Mr. Reuben and what led to it, that she had grit, and
that the mistake was excusable, and that a girl as pretty as she
was didn't want to be as fly as Mr. Reuben had said. Her father had
told her that he was proud of her, and he had not been so rude as
to laugh at her blunder.</p>
<p>She felt that she was about to enter upon the true and only
vocation of a dainty little morsel—namely, to spend money
earned by other people. She thought less homicidally now of the
thirteen chorus-girls of the previous night.</p>
<p>'Say,' said her father, 'I sail this afternoon for New York,
Nina.'</p>
<p>'They said you'd gone, at the hotel.'</p>
<p>'Only my baggage. The <i>Minnehaha</i> clears at five. I guess I
want you to come along too. On the voyage we'll get acquainted, and
tell each other things.'</p>
<p>'Suppose I say I won't?'</p>
<p><SPAN name='Page291' id="Page291"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">291</span> She spoke despotically, as the pampered
darling should.</p>
<p>'Then I'll wait for the next boat. But it'll be awkward.'</p>
<p>'Then I'll come. But I've got no things.'</p>
<p>He pushed up the trap-door.</p>
<p>Driver, Bond Street. And get on to yourself, for goodness' sake!
Hurry!'</p>
<p>'You told me not to hurry,' grumbled the cabby.</p>
<p>'And now I tell you to hustle. See?'</p>
<p>'Shall you want me to call myself Belmont?' Nina asked.</p>
<p>'I chose it because it was a fine ten-horse-power name twenty
years ago,' said her father; and she murmured that she liked the
name very much.</p>
<p>As Lionel Belmont the Magnificent paid the cabman, and Nina
walked across the pavement into one of the most famous repositories
of expensive frippery in the world, she thrilled with the
profoundest pleasure her tiny soul was capable of. Foolish, simple
Nina had achieved the <i>nec plus ultra</i> of her languorous
dreams.</p>
<hr class='long' />
<SPAN name='Page295' id="Page295"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">295</span>
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