<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">On</span> a conveniently secluded bench
facing the Northern Pheasantry in the Zoological Society’s
Gardens, Regent’s Park, Courtenay Youghal sat immersed in
mature flirtation with a lady, who, though certainly young in
fact and appearance, was some four or five years his
senior. When he was a schoolboy of sixteen, Molly McQuade
had personally conducted him to the Zoo and stood him dinner
afterwards at Kettner’s, and whenever the two of them
happened to be in town on the anniversary of that bygone
festivity they religiously repeated the programme in its
entirety. Even the menu of the dinner was adhered to as
nearly as possible; the original selection of food and wine that
schoolboy exuberance, tempered by schoolboy shyness, had pitched
on those many years ago, confronted Youghal on those occasions,
as a drowning man’s past life is said to rise up and parade
itself in his last moments of consciousness.</p>
<p>The flirtation which was thus perennially restored to its
old-time footing owed its longevity more to the enterprising
solicitude of Miss McQuade than to any conscious sentimental
effort on the part of Youghal himself. Molly McQuade was
known to her neighbours in a minor hunting shire as a hard-riding
conventionally unconventional type of young woman, who came
naturally into the classification, “a good
sort.” She was just sufficiently good-looking,
sufficiently reticent about her own illnesses, when she had any,
and sufficiently appreciative of her neighbours’ gardens,
children and hunters to be generally popular. Most men
liked her, and the percentage of women who disliked her was not
inconveniently high. One of these days, it was assumed, she
would marry a brewer or a Master of Otter Hounds, and, after a
brief interval, be known to the world as the mother of a boy or
two at Malvern or some similar seat of learning. The
romantic side of her nature was altogether unguessed by the
countryside.</p>
<p>Her romances were mostly in serial form and suffered perhaps
in fervour from their disconnected course what they gained in
length of days. Her affectionate interest in the several
young men who figured in her affairs of the heart was perfectly
honest, and she certainly made no attempt either to conceal their
separate existences, or to play them off one against the
other. Neither could it be said that she was a husband
hunter; she had made up her mind what sort of man she was likely
to marry, and her forecast did not differ very widely from that
formed by her local acquaintances. If her married life were
eventually to turn out a failure, at least she looked forward to
it with very moderate expectations. Her love affairs she
put on a very different footing and apparently they were the
all-absorbing element in her life. She possessed the
happily constituted temperament which enables a man or woman to
be a “pluralist,” and to observe the sage precaution
of not putting all one’s eggs into one basket. Her
demands were not exacting; she required of her affinity that he
should be young, good-looking, and at least, moderately amusing;
she would have preferred him to be invariably faithful, but, with
her own example before her, she was prepared for the probability,
bordering on certainty, that he would be nothing of the
sort. The philosophy of the “Garden of Kama”
was the compass by which she steered her barque and thus far, if
she had encountered some storms and buffeting, she had at least
escaped being either shipwrecked or becalmed.</p>
<p>Courtenay Youghal had not been designed by Nature to fulfil
the <i>rôle</i> of an ardent or devoted lover, and he
scrupulously respected the limits which Nature had laid
down. For Molly, however, he had a certain responsive
affection. She had always obviously admired him, and at the
same time she never beset him with crude flattery; the principal
reason why the flirtation had stood the test of so many years was
the fact that it only flared into active existence at convenient
intervals. In an age when the telephone has undermined
almost every fastness of human privacy, and the sanctity of
one’s seclusion depends often on the ability for tactful
falsehood shown by a club pageboy, Youghal was duly appreciative
of the circumstance that his lady fair spent a large part of the
year pursuing foxes, in lieu of pursuing him. Also the
honestly admitted fact that, in her human hunting, she rode after
more than one quarry, made the inevitable break-up of the affair
a matter to which both could look forward without a sense of
coming embarrassment and recrimination. When the time for
gathering ye rosebuds should be over, neither of them could
accuse the other of having wrecked his or her entire life.
At the most they would only have disorganised a week-end.</p>
<p>On this particular afternoon, when old reminiscences had been
gone through, and the intervening gossip of past months duly
recounted, a lull in the conversation made itself rather
obstinately felt. Molly had already guessed that matters
were about to slip into a new phase; the affair had reached
maturity long ago, and a new phase must be in the nature of a
wane.</p>
<p>“You’re a clever brute,” she said, suddenly,
with an air of affectionate regret; “I always knew
you’d get on in the House, but I hardly expected you to
come to the front so soon.”</p>
<p>“I’m coming to the front,” admitted Youghal,
judicially; “the problem is, shall I be able to stay
there. Unless something happens in the financial line
before long, I don’t see how I’m to stay in
Parliament at all. Economy is out of the question. It
would open people’s eyes, I fancy, if they knew how little
I exist on as it is. And I’m living so far beyond my
income that we may almost be said to be living apart.”</p>
<p>“It will have to be a rich wife, I suppose,” said
Molly, slowly; “that’s the worst of success, it
imposes so many conditions. I rather knew, from something
in your manner, that you were drifting that way.”</p>
<p>Youghal said nothing in the way of contradiction; he gazed
steadfastly at the aviary in front of him as though exotic
pheasants were for the moment the most absorbing study in the
world. As a matter of fact, his mind was centred on the
image of Elaine de Frey, with her clear untroubled eyes and her
Leonardo da Vinci air. He was wondering whether he was
likely to fall into a frame of mind concerning her which would be
in the least like falling in love.</p>
<p>“I shall mind horribly,” continued Molly, after a
pause, “but, of course, I have always known that something
of the sort would have to happen one of these days. When a
man goes into politics he can’t call his soul his own, and
I suppose his heart becomes an impersonal possession in the same
way.”</p>
<p>“Most people who know me would tell you that I
haven’t got a heart,” said Youghal.</p>
<p>“I’ve often felt inclined to agree with
them,” said Molly; “and then, now and again, I think
you have a heart tucked away somewhere.”</p>
<p>“I hope I have,” said Youghal, “because
I’m trying to break to you the fact that I think I’m
falling in love with somebody.”</p>
<p>Molly McQuade turned sharply to look at her companion, who
still fixed his gaze on the pheasant run in front of him.</p>
<p>“Don’t tell me you’re losing your head over
somebody useless, someone without money,” she said;
“I don’t think I could stand that.”</p>
<p>For the moment she feared that Courtenay’s selfishness
might have taken an unexpected turn, in which ambition had given
way to the fancy of the hour; he might be going to sacrifice his
Parliamentary career for a life of stupid lounging in momentarily
attractive company. He quickly undeceived her.</p>
<p>“She’s got heaps of money.”</p>
<p>Molly gave a grunt of relief. Her affection for
Courtenay had produced the anxiety which underlay her first
question; a natural jealousy prompted the next one.</p>
<p>“Is she young and pretty and all that sort of thing, or
is she just a good sort with a sympathetic manner and nice
eyes? As a rule that’s the kind that goes with a lot
of money.”</p>
<p>“Young and quite good-looking in her way, and a distinct
style of her own. Some people would call her
beautiful. As a political hostess I should think
she’d be splendid. I imagine I’m rather in love
with her.”</p>
<p>“And is she in love with you?”</p>
<p>Youghal threw back his head with the slight assertive movement
that Molly knew and liked.</p>
<p>“She’s a girl who I fancy would let judgment
influence her a lot. And without being stupidly conceited,
I think I may say she might do worse than throw herself away on
me. I’m young and quite good-looking, and I’m
making a name for myself in the House; she’ll be able to
read all sorts of nice and horrid things about me in the papers
at breakfast-time. I can be brilliantly amusing at times,
and I understand the value of silence; there is no fear that I
shall ever degenerate into that fearsome thing—a cheerful
talkative husband. For a girl with money and social
ambitions I should think I was rather a good thing.”</p>
<p>“You are certainly in love, Courtenay,” said
Molly, “but it’s the old love and not a new
one. I’m rather glad. I should have hated to
have you head-over-heels in love with a pretty woman, even for a
short time. You’ll be much happier as it is.
And I’m going to put all my feelings in the background, and
tell you to go in and win. You’ve got to marry a rich
woman, and if she’s nice and will make a good hostess, so
much the better for everybody. You’ll be happier in
your married life than I shall be in mine, when it comes;
you’ll have other interests to absorb you. I shall
just have the garden and dairy and nursery and lending library,
as like as two peas to all the gardens and dairies and nurseries
for hundreds of miles round. You won’t care for your
wife enough to be worried every time she has a finger-ache, and
you’ll like her well enough to be pleased to meet her
sometimes at your own house. I shouldn’t wonder if
you were quite happy. She will probably be miserable, but
any woman who married you would be.”</p>
<p>There was a short pause; they were both staring at the
pheasant cages. Then Molly spoke again, with the swift
nervous tone of a general who is hurriedly altering the
disposition of his forces for a strategic retreat.</p>
<p>“When you are safely married and honey-mooned and all
that sort of thing, and have put your wife through her paces as a
political hostess, some time, when the House isn’t sitting,
you must come down by yourself, and do a little hunting with
us. Will you? It won’t be quite the same as old
times, but it will be something to look forward to when I’m
reading the endless paragraphs about your fashionable political
wedding.”</p>
<p>“You’re looking forward pretty far,” laughed
Youghal; “the lady may take your view as to the probable
unhappiness of a future shared with me, and I may have to content
myself with penurious political bachelorhood. Anyhow, the
present is still with us. We dine at Kettner’s
to-night, don’t we?”</p>
<p>“Rather,” said Molly, “though it will be
more or less a throat-lumpy feast as far as I am concerned.
We shall have to drink to the health of the future Mrs.
Youghal. By the way, it’s rather characteristic of
you that you haven’t told me who she is, and of me that I
haven’t asked. And now, like a dear boy, trot away
and leave me. I haven’t got to say good-bye to you
yet, but I’m going to take a quiet farewell of the
Pheasantry. We’ve had some jolly good talks, you and
I, sitting on this seat, haven’t we? And I know, as
well as I know anything, that this is the last of them.
Eight o’clock to-night, as punctually as
possible.”</p>
<p>She watched his retreating figure with eyes that grew slowly
misty; he had been such a jolly comely boy-friend, and they had
had such good times together. The mist deepened on her
lashes as she looked round at the familiar rendezvous where they
had so often kept tryst since the day when they had first come
there together, he a schoolboy and she but lately out of her
teens. For the moment she felt herself in the thrall of a
very real sorrow.</p>
<p>Then, with the admirable energy of one who is only in town for
a fleeting fortnight, she raced away to have tea with a
world-faring naval admirer at his club. Pluralism is a
merciful narcotic.</p>
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