A dramatic moment was about to arrive
in the joint career of Stephen Cheswardine and Vera
his wife. The motor-car stood by the side of the
pavement of the Strand, Torquay, that resort of southern
wealth and fashion. The chauffeur, Felix, had
gone into the automobile shop to procure petrol.
Mr Cheswardine looking longer than ever in his long
coat, was pacing the busy footpath. Mrs Cheswardine,
her beauty obscured behind a flowing brown veil, was
lolling in the tonneau, very pleased to be in the
tonneau, very pleased to be observed by all Torquay
in the tonneau, very satisfied with her husband, and
with the Napier car, and especially with Felix, now
buying petrol. Suddenly Mrs Cheswardine perceived
that next door but one to the automobile shop was
a milliner’s. She sat up and gazed.
According to a card in the window an ‘after-season
sale’ was in progress that June day at the milliner’s.
There were two rows of hats in the window, each hat
plainly ticketed. Mrs Cheswardine descended from
the car, crossed the pavement, and gave to the window
the whole of her attention.
She sniffed at most of the hats.
But one of them, of green straw, with a large curving
green wing on either side of the crown, and a few odd
bits of fluffiness here and there, pleased her.
It was Parisian. She had been to Paris-once.
An ‘after-season’ sale at a little shop
in Torquay would not, perhaps, seem the most likely
place in the world to obtain a chic hat; it is, moreover,
a notorious fact that really chic hats cannot be got
for less than three pounds, and this hat was marked
ten shillings. Nevertheless, hats are most mysterious
things. Their quality of being chic is more often
the fruit of chance than of design, particularly in
England. You never know when nor where you may
light on a good hat. Vera considered that she
had lighted on one.
‘They’re probably duck’s
feathers dyed,’ she said to herself. ’But
it’s a darling of a hat and it will suit me
to a T.’
As for the price, when once you have
taken the ticket off a hat the secret of its price
is gone forever. Many a hat less smart than this
hat has been marked in Bond Street at ten guineas instead
of ten shillings. Hats are like oil-paintings-they
are worth what people will give for them.
So Vera approached her husband, and
said, with an enchanting, innocent smile-
‘Lend me half-a-sovereign, will you, doggie?’
She called him doggie in those days
because he was a sort of dog-man, a sort of St Bernard,
shaggy and big, with faithful eyes; and he enjoyed
being called doggie.
But on this occasion he was not to
be bewitched by the enchanting innocence of the smile
nor by the endearing epithet. He refused to relax
his features.
‘You aren’t going to buy
another hat, are you?’ he asked sternly, challengingly.
The smile disappeared from her face,
and she pulled her slim young self together.
‘Yes,’ she replied harshly.
The battle was definitely engaged.
You may inquire why a man financially capable of hiring
a 20-24 h.p. Napier car, with a French chauffeur
named Felix, for a week or more, should grudge his
wife ten shillings for a hat. Well, you are to
comprehend that it was not a question of ten shillings,
it was a question of principle. Vera already
had eighteen hats, and it had been clearly understood
between them that no more money should be spent on
attire for quite a long time. Vera was entirely
in the wrong. She knew it, and he knew it.
But she wanted just that hat.
And they were on their honeymoon,
you know: which enormously intensified the poignancy
of the drama. They had been married only six
days; in three days more they were to return to the
Five Towns, where Stephen was solidly established
as an earthenware manufacturer. You who have
been through them are aware what ticklish things honeymoons
are, and how much depends on the tactfulness of the
more tactful of the two parties. Stephen, thirteen
years older than Vera, was the more tactful of the
two parties. He had married a beautiful and elegant
woman, with vast unexploited capacities for love in
her heart. But he had married a capricious woman,
and he knew it. So far he had yielded to her
caprices, as well became him; but in the depths
of his masculine mind he had his own private notion
as to the identity of the person who should ultimately
be master in their house, and he had decided only the
previous night that when the next moment for being
firm arrived, firm he would be.
And now the moment was upon him.
It was their eyes that fought, silently, bitterly.
There is a great deal of bitterness in true love.
Stephen perceived the affair broadly,
in all its aspects. He was older and much more
experienced than Vera, and therefore he was responsible
for the domestic peace, and for her happiness, and
for his own, and for appearances, and for various
other things. He perceived the moral degradation
which would be involved in an open quarrel during the
honeymoon. He perceived the difficulties of a
battle in the street, in such a select and prim street
as the Strand, Torquay, where the very backbone of
England’s respectability goes shopping.
He perceived Vera’s vast ignorance of life.
He perceived her charm, and her naughtiness, and all
her defects. And he perceived, further, that,
this being the first conflict of their married existence,
it was of the highest importance that he should emerge
from it the victor. To allow Vera to triumph
would gravely menace their future tranquillity and
multiply the difficulties which her adorable capriciousness
would surely cause. He could not afford to let
her win. It was his duty, not merely to himself
but to her, to conquer. But, on the other hand,
he had never fully tested her powers of sheer obstinacy,
her willingness to sacrifice everything for the satisfaction
of a whim; and he feared these powers. He had
a dim suspicion that Vera was one of that innumerable
class of charming persons who are perfectly delicious
and perfectly sweet so long as they have precisely
their own way-and no longer.
Vera perceived only two things.
She perceived the hat-although her back
was turned towards it-and she perceived
the half-sovereign-although it was hidden
in Stephen’s pocket.
‘But, my dear,’ Stephen protested, ‘you
know-’
‘Will you lend me half-a-sovereign?’
Vera repeated, in a glacial tone. The madness
of a desired hat had seized her. She was a changed
Vera. She was not a loving woman, not a duteous
young wife, nor a reasoning creature. She was
an embodied instinct for hats.
‘It was most distinctly agreed,’
Stephen murmured, restraining his anger.
Just then Felix came out of the shop,
followed by a procession of three men bearing cans
of petrol. If Stephen was Napoleon and Vera Wellington,
Felix was the Blucher of this deplorable altercation.
Impossible to have a row-yes, a row-with
your wife in the presence of your chauffeur, with
his French ideas of chivalry.
‘Will you lend me half-a-sovereign?’
Vera reiterated, in the same glacial tone, not caring
twopence for the presence of Felix.
And Stephen, by means of an interminable
silver chain, drew his sovereign-case from the profundity
of his hip-pocket; it was like drawing a bucket out
of a well. And he gave Vera half-a-sovereign;
and that was like knotting the rope for his own
execution.
And while Felix and his three men
poured gallons and gallons of petrol into a hole under
the cushions of the tonneau, Stephen swallowed his
wrath on the pavement, and Vera remained hidden in
the shop. And the men were paid and went off,
and Felix took his seat ready to start. And then
Vera came out of the hat place, and the new green hat
was on her head, and the old one in a bag in her pretty
hands.
‘What do you think of my new
hat, Felix?’ she smiled to the favoured chauffeur;
‘I hope it pleases you.’
Felix said that it did.
In these days, chauffeurs are a great
race and a privileged. They have usurped the
position formerly held by military officers. Women
fawn on them, take fancies to them, and spoil them.
They can do no wrong in the eyes of the sex.
Vera had taken a fancy to Felix. Perhaps it was
because he had been in a cavalry regiment; perhaps
it was merely the curve of his moustache. Who
knows? And Felix treated her as only a Frenchman
can treat a pretty woman, with a sort of daring humility,
with worship-in short, with true Gallic
appreciation. Vera much enjoyed Gallic appreciation.
It ravished her to think that she was the light of
poor Felix’s existence, an unattainable star
for him. Of course, Stephen didn’t mind.
That is to say, he didn’t really mind.
The car rushed off in the direction of Exeter, homewards.
That day, by means of Felix’s
expert illegal driving, they got as far as Bath; and
there were no breakdowns. The domestic atmosphere
in the tonneau was slightly disturbed at the beginning
of the run, but it soon improved. Indeed, after
lunch Stephen grew positively bright and gay.
At tea, which they took just outside Bristol, he actually
went so far as to praise the hat. He said that
it was a very becoming hat, and also that it was well
worth the money. In a word, he signified to Vera
that their first battle had been fought and that Vera
had won, and that he meant to make the best of it
and accept the situation.
Vera was naturally charmed, and when
she was charmed she was charming. She said to
herself that she had always known that she could manage
a man. The recipe for managing a man was firmness
coupled with charm. But there must be no half
measures, no hesitations. She had conquered.
She saw her future life stretching out before her
like a beautiful vista. And Stephen was to be
her slave, and she would have nothing to do but to
give rein to her caprices, and charm Stephen when
he happened to deserve it.
But the next morning the hat had vanished
out of the bedroom of the exclusive hotel at Bath.
Vera could not believe that it had vanished; but it
had. It was not in the hat-box, nor on the couch,
nor under the couch, nor perched on a knob of the
bedstead, nor in any of the spots where it ought to
have been. When she realized that as a fact it
had vanished she was cross, and on inquiring from
Stephen what trick he had played with her hat, she
succeeded in conveying to Stephen that she was cross.
Stephen was still in bed, comatose. The tone of
his reply startled her.
‘Look here, child,’ he
said, or rather snapped-he had never been
snappish before-’since you took the
confounded thing off last evening I haven’t
seen it and I haven’t touched it, and I don’t
know where it is.’
‘But you must-’
‘I gave in to you about the
hat,’ Stephen continued to snap, ’though
I knew I was a fool to do so, and I consider I behaved
pretty pleasantly over it too. But I don’t
want any more scenes. If you’ve lost it,
that’s not my fault.’
Such speeches took Vera very much
aback. And she, too, in her turn, now saw the
dangers of a quarrel, and in this second altercation
it was Stephen who won. He said he would not
even mention the disappearance of the hat to the hotel
manager. He was sure it must be in one of Vera’s
trunks. And in the end Vera performed that day’s
trip in another hat.
They reached the Five Towns much earlier
than they had anticipated-before lunch
on the ninth day, whereas the new servants in their
new house at Bursley were only expecting them for dinner.
So Stephen had the agreeable idea of stopping the
car in front of the new Hotel Metropole at Hanbridge
and lunching there. Precisely opposite this new
and luxurious caravanserai (as they love to call it
in the Five Towns) is the imposing garage and agency
where Stephen had hired the Napier car. Felix
said he would lunch hurriedly in order to transact
certain business at the garage before taking them on
to Bursley. After lunch, however, Vera caught
him transacting business with a chambermaid in a corridor.
Shocking though the revelation is, it needs to be
said that Felix was kissing the chambermaid. The
blow to Mrs Cheswardine was severe. She had imagined
that Felix spent all his time in gazing up to her
as an unattainable star.
She spoke to Stephen about it, in
the accents of disillusion. ‘What?’
cried Stephen. ’Don’t you know?
They’re engaged to be married. Her name
is Mary Callear. She used to be parlourmaid
at Uncle John’s at Oldcastle. But hotels
pay higher wages.’
Felix engaged to a parlourmaid!
Felix, who had always seemed to Vera a gentleman in
disguise! Yes, it was indeed a blow!
But balm awaited Vera at her new home
in Bursley. A parcel, obviously containing a
cardboard box, had arrived for Stephen. He opened
it, and the lost hat was inside it. Stephen read
a note, and explained that the hotel people at Bath
had found it and forwarded it. He began to praise
the hat anew. He made Vera put it on instantly,
and seemed delighted. So much so that Vera went
out to the porch to say good-bye to Felix in a most
forgiving frame of mind. She forgave Felix for
being engaged to the chambermaid.
And there was the chambermaid walking
up the drive, quite calmly! Felix, also quite
calmly, asked Vera to excuse him, and told the chambermaid
to get into the car and sit beside him. He then
informed Vera that he had to go with the car immediately
to Oldcastle, and was taking Miss Callear with
him for the run, this being Miss Callear’s weekly
afternoon off. Miss Callear had come to Bursley
in the electric tram.
Vera shook with swift anger; not at
Felix’s information, but the patent fact that
Mary Callear was wearing a hat which was the exact
replica of the hat on Vera’s own head.
And Mary Callear was seated like a duchess in
the car, while Vera stood on the gravel. And two
of Vera’s new servants were there to see that
Vera was wearing a hat precisely equivalent to the
hat of a chambermaid!
She went abruptly into the house and
sought for Stephen-as with a sword.
But Stephen was not discoverable. She ran to her
elegant new bedroom and shut herself in. She
understood the plot. She had plenty of wit.
Stephen had concerted it with Felix. In spite
of Stephen’s allegations of innocence, the hat
had been sent somewhere-probably to Brunt’s
at Hanbridge-to be copied at express speed,
and Stephen had presented the copy to Felix, in order
that Felix might present it to Mary Callear the
chambermaid, and the meeting in the front garden had
been deliberately arranged by that odious male, Stephen.
Truly, she had not believed Stephen capable of such
duplicity and cruelty.
She removed the hat, gazed at it,
and then tore it to pieces and scattered the pieces
on the carpet.
An hour later Stephen crept into the
bedroom and beheld the fragments, and smiled.
‘Stephen,’ she exclaimed,
‘you’re a horrid, cruel brute.’
’I know I am,’ said Stephen. ‘You
ought to have found that out long since.’
‘I won’t love you any
more. It’s all over,’ she sobbed.
But he just kissed her.