<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
<h4>RONNIE FACES THE UPAS</h4>
<p>Ronnie had walked from his wife's sitting-room, along the corridor and
into the studio, in a state of stunned stupefaction.</p>
<p>He carried his 'cello in one hand, its case and bow, which he had picked
up in the hall, in the other; but he had for the moment completely
forgotten the Infant.</p>
<p>He leaned it against a chair, laid down the case, closed the studio
door; then walked to the fireplace.</p>
<p>He stood looking at the great crackling logs, and into the glowing heart
of the fire beneath them.</p>
<p>"Utterly, preposterously, altogether, selfish," he repeated slowly.
"That is what my wife considers me; that is as I appear to Helen.
Utterly—preposterously—altogether—<SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN>selfish. She is so lovely—she is
so perfect! I—I have longed for her so! But <i>I</i> am utterly,
preposterously, altogether, selfish!"</p>
<p>He put his arms upon the mantel-piece and dropped his head upon them. He
felt a queer contraction in his throat, a stinging beneath his eyelids,
such as he had not experienced since the days of childish mortifications
and sorrows. But the instinctive manliness of him, held back the actual
tears. He was debarred, even in solitude, from that form of relief.</p>
<p>Presently he lifted his head, took out his pocket-book, and wrote down
the words, spelling each with a capital letter.</p>
<p>He looked long at them; then suddenly exclaimed: "U, P, A, S! Why, it is
the Upas tree; the deadly, mysterious, poisonous Upas tree! I found it
in the jungle. I felt ill the night I camped beneath it. I have never
felt quite well since. The nightmares began on that night; and the
nightmares have followed me home. This is the worst of all. Helen calls
me the Upas tree—the <SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN>poisoner of her content. Utterly, preposterously,
altogether, selfish!"</p>
<p>He turned on the electric lights, and walked up and down the room, with
desperate, restless tread.</p>
<p>"Poisoning all it touches," he said. "Blasting the life of all who pass
beneath its deadly foliage—U,P,A,S—Upas."</p>
<p>He paused before the great mirror, gazing at his own reflection.</p>
<p>He put his face quite close to the glass, staring into his burning eyes.</p>
<p>Then he struck at the reflection with his clenched fist. "Upas tree!" he
snarled. "Take that, and be damned!"</p>
<p>He had hurt his knuckles. He walked back to the fire, rubbing them
carefully with his left hand.</p>
<p>"Poor old chap," he said. "It <i>is</i> hard lines! You meant well; but all
the while you were a Upas tree. '<i>I, Helen, take thee, Upas, to be my
wedded husband</i>.' Poor lovely Helen! What a bargain!"</p>
<p>He sat down in a deep basket-chair, lighted <SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN>a cigarette, pushed another
chair into position, exactly in front of him, with his foot; then
filling it, one by one, with friends of his own and Helen's, held
conversation with them.</p>
<p>"Quite right, my dear Mrs. Dalmain! You need not now confine yourself to
<i>looking</i> your disapproval; you can <i>say</i> exactly what you think. You
see, Helen herself has told me the worst truth of all. I am a Upas tree.
She sums me up thus: U, P, A, S! You can hardly beat that, Mrs. Dalmain.
In fact, you look distressed. I can see that your kind heart is sorry
for me. Helen said you were a wonderful person to turn to in trouble.
There is no one in the world quite like you. Well, now's your chance to
prove it; for surely nobody ever came to you in more desperate trouble.
If you wish to be really kind and comforting, talk to me of my wife. Say
how sweet and lovely she is. Say that her arms are tender, her eyes
gentle and kind. I am the thirsty traveller in the desert, who sights
pure water, hastens eagerly forward, and finds—a mirage! But a deadly
stream <SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN>flows from the roots of the Upas—Hullo! Here comes Aubrey
Treherne. Look out, Mrs. Dalmain! He owes you a grudge. Hey, presto!
Vanish from the chair, or Helen's cousin will lean over, with a bleeding
face, threatening to kill you with both hands!...</p>
<p>"Good-evening, Cousin Aubrey. How is your lip to-night? You mustn't kiss
Helen again, until that lip is well. Helen will be ashamed of you for
not being able to put fuel into a stove without knocking your lip. Fie,
man! Poor happy Ronnie, going home to show his wife his 'cello, believed
you. But the Upas tree knows! You can't deceive the Upas tree, you liar!
You may as well tell Helen that you wounded your lip on a branch of her
Upas tree....</p>
<p>"Hullo, Dick! Come in, and welcome! Sit down, old boy. I want to ask you
something. Hist! Listen! That motor, which hooted in the park a moment
ago, contained a policeman—so it is essential we should know whether
there is any by-law in Leipzig <SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN>against men, as trees, walking. Because
you weren't walking about with a man, you know, but with a Upas tree.
When in doubt, ask—my wife! It would have made a sensational paragraph
in the papers: 'Arrest of a Upas tree, in the streets of Leipzig!' Worse
than 'Arrest of the Infant of Prague.' ... Why! Where is the Infant?"</p>
<p>He turned and saw his 'cello, where he had placed it, leaning against a
chair.</p>
<p>He rose, took it up, and walked over to the piano.</p>
<p>"A, D, G, C. 'Allowable delights grow commonplace!' What did the fiend
mean? C, G, D, A. 'Courage gains desired aims.' That's better! We aimed
pretty straight at his lying mouth."</p>
<p>He opened the piano, struck the notes, and tuned the 'cello exactly as
he had seen Aubrey do.</p>
<p>At the first sound of the strings his mood changed. All bitterness
passed out of his face. A look of youth and hope dawned in it.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN>He carried the 'cello back to the circle of chairs. He placed it where
it had stood before; then lay back in his own seat smiling dreamily at
the empty chair opposite.</p>
<p>"Helen," he said, "darling, I don't really play the piano, I only strum.
But there is one instrument, above all others, which I have always
longed to play. I have it now. I own the 'cello I have always loved and
longed for; the 'cello on which I used to play a hundred years ago. Now
I am going to play to you; and you will forget everything in this world,
my wife, excepting that I love you."</p>
<p>He drew the Infant between his knees; then realised at once that his
chair was too low.</p>
<p>Rising, he went over to a corner where, against the wall, stood a
beautiful old chair which he and Helen had brought back, the winter
before, from Italy. Its arms and feet of walnut wood, were carved into
lions' heads and paws. Its back bore, in a medallion, the Florentine
<i>fleur-de-lis</i>. The high padded <SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN>seat was of embossed gold, on crimson
leather.</p>
<p>Ronnie placed this queer old chair in the centre of the room, facing the
great mirror.</p>
<p>Then he clicked off the electric lights, stirred the fire, and threw on
a couple of fresh logs.</p>
<p>The flames shot up, illumining the room.</p>
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