I
Strange, inconceivable as it may appear
to people of the great world and readers of newspapers,
Mr. Prohack, C.B., had never in his life before been
inside the Grand Babylon Hotel. Such may be the
narrow and mean existence forced by circumstances
upon secretly powerful servants of the Crown.
He arrived late, owing to the intricate preparations
of his wife and daughter for Charlie’s luncheon.
These two were unsuccessfully pretending not to be
nervous, and their nervousness reacted upon Mr. Prohack,
who perceived with disgust that his gay and mischievous
mood of the morning was slipping away from him despite
his efforts to retain it. He knew now definitely
that his health had taken the right turn, and yet
he could not prod the youthful Sissie as he had prodded
the youthful Mimi Winstock. Moreover Mimi was
a secret which would have to be divulged, and this
secret not only weighed heavy within him, but seemed
disturbingly to counterbalance the secrets that Charlie
was withholding.
On the present occasion he saw little
of the Grand Babylon, for as soon as he mentioned
his son’s name to the nonchalant official behind
the enquiry counter the official changed like lightning
into an obsequious courtier, and Charles’s family
was put in charge of a hovering attendant boy, who
escorted it in a lift and along a mile of corridors,
and Charlie’s family was kept waiting at a door
until the voice of Charlie permitted the boy to open
the door. A rather large parlour set with a table
for five; a magnificent view from the window of a huge
white-bricked wall and scores of chimney pots and electric
wires, and a moving grey sky above! Charlie,
too, was unsuccessfully pretending not to be nervous.
“Hullo, kid!” he greeted his sister.
“Hullo yourself,” responded Sissie.
They shook hands. (They very rarely
kissed. However, Charlie kissed his mother.
Even he would not have dared not to kiss her.)
“Mater,” said he, “let me introduce
you to Lady Massulam.”
Lady Massulam had been standing in
the window. She came forward with a pleasant,
restrained smile and made the acquaintance of Charlie’s
family; but she was not talkative. Her presence,
coming as a terrific surprise to the ladies of the
Prohack family, and as a fairly powerful surprise
to Mr. Prohack, completed the general constraint.
Mrs. Prohack indeed was somewhat intimidated by it.
Mrs. Prohack’s knowledge of Lady Massulam was
derived exclusively from The Daily Picture,
where her portrait was constantly appearing, on all
sorts of pretexts, and where she was described as
a leader of London society. Mr. Prohack knew of
her as a woman credited with great feats of war-work,
and also with a certain real talent for organisation;
further, he had heard that she had a gift for high
finance, and exercised it not without profit.
As she happened to be French by birth, no steady English
person was seriously upset by the fact that her matrimonial
career was obscure, and as she happened to be very
rich everybody raised sceptical eyebrows at the assertion
that her husband (a knight) was dead; for The Daily
Picture implanted daily in the minds of millions
of readers the grand truth that to the very rich nothing
can happen simply. The whole Daily Picture
world was aware that of late she had lived at the Grand
Babylon Hotel in permanence. That world would
not have recognised her from her published portraits,
which were more historical than actual. Although
conspicuously anti-Victorian she had a Victorian beauty
of the impressive kind; she had it still. Her
hair was of a dark lustrous brown and showed no grey.
In figure she was tall, and rather more than plump
and rather less than fat. Her perfect and perfectly
worn clothes proved that she knew just how to deal
with herself. She would look forty in a theatre,
fifty in a garden, and sixty to her maid at dawn.
This important person spoke, when
she did speak, with a scarcely perceptible French
accent in a fine clear voice. But she spoke little
and said practically nothing: which was a shock
to Marian Prohack, who had imagined that in the circles
graced by Lady Massulam conversation varied from badinage
to profundity and never halted. It was not that
Lady Massulam was tongue-tied, nor that she was impolite;
it was merely that with excellent calmness she did
not talk. If anybody handed her a subject, she
just dropped it; the floor around her was strewn with
subjects.
The lunch was dreadful, socially.
It might have been better if Charlie’s family
had not been tormented by the tremendous question:
what had Charlie to do with Lady Massulam? Already
Charlie’s situation was sufficient of a mystery,
without this arch-mystery being spread all over it.
And inexperienced Charlie was a poor host; as a host
he was positively pathetic, rivalling Lady Massulam
in taciturnity.
Sissie took to chaffing her brother,
and after a time Charlie said suddenly, with curtness:
“Have you dropped that silly dance-scheme of
yours, kid?”
Sissie was obliged to admit that she had.
“Then I tell you what you might
do. You might come and live here with me for
a bit. I want a hostess, you know.”
“I will,” said Sissie, straight.
No consultation of parents!
This brief episode overset Mrs. Prohack.
The lunch worsened, to such a point that Mr. Prohack
began to grow light-hearted, and chaffed Charlie in
his turn. He found material for chaff in the large
number of newly bought books that were lying about
the room. There was even the Encyclopædia
of Religion and Ethics in eleven volumes.
Queer possessions for a youth who at home had never
read aught but the periodical literature of automobilism!
Could this be the influence of Lady Massulam?
Then the telephone bell rang, and it was like a signal
of salvation. Charlie sprang at the instrument.
“For you,” he said, indicating Lady Massulam,
who rose.
“Oh!” said she. “It’s
Ozzie.”
“Who’s Ozzie?” Charlie demanded,
without thought.
“No doubt Oswald Morfey,” said Mr. Prohack,
scoring over his son.
“He wants to see me. May I ask him to come
up for coffee?”
“Oh! Do!” said Sissie, also without
thought. She then blushed.
Mr. Prohack thought suspiciously and apprehensively:
“I bet anything he’s found out that my
daughter is here.”
Ozzie transformed the final act of
the luncheon. An adept conversationalist, he
created conversationalists on every side. Mrs.
Prohack liked him at once. Sissie could not keep
her eyes off him. Charlie was impressed by him.
Lady Massulam treated him with the familiarity of
an intimate. Mr. Prohack alone was sinister in
attitude. Ozzie brought the great world into
the room with him. In his simpering voice he
was ready to discuss all the phenomena of the universe;
but after ten minutes Mr. Prohack noticed that the
fellow had one sole subject on his mind. Namely,
a theatrical first-night, fixed for that very evening;
a first-night of the highest eminence; one of Mr. Asprey
Chown’s first-nights, boomed by the marvellous
showmanship of Mr. Asprey Chown into a mighty event.
The competition for seats was prodigious, but of course
Lady Massulam had obtained her usual stall.
“What a pity we can’t go!” said
Sissie simply.
“Will you all come in my box?”
astonishingly replied Mr. Oswald Morfey, embracing
in his weak glance the entire Prohack family.
“The fellow came here on purpose
to fix this,” said Mr. Prohack to himself as
the matter was being effusively clinched.
“I must go,” said he aloud,
looking at his watch. “I have a very important
appointment.”
“But I wanted to have a word
with you, dad,” said Charlie, in quite a new
tone across the table.
“Possibly,” answered the
superior ironic father in Mr. Prohack, who besides
being sick of the luncheon party was determined that
nothing should interfere with his Median and Persian
programme. “Possibly. But that will
be for another time.”
“Well, to-night then,” said Charlie, dashed
somewhat.
“Perhaps,” said Mr. Prohack. Yet
he was burning to hear his son’s word.
II
However, Mr. Prohack did not succeed
in loosing himself from the embraces of the Grand
Babylon Hotel for another thirty minutes. He
offered to abandon the car, to abandon everything to
his wife and daughter, and to reach his next important
appointment by the common methods of conveyance employed
by common people; but the ladies would permit no such
thing; they announced their firm intention of personally
escorting him to his destination. The party seemed
to be unable to break up. There was a considerable
confabulation between Eve and Lady Massulam at the
entrance to the lift.
Mr. Prohack noticed anew that Eve’s
attitude to Lady Massulam was still a flattering one.
Indeed Eve showed that in her opinion the meeting with
so great a personage as Lady Massulam was not quite
an ordinary episode in her simple existence.
And Lady Massulam was now talking with a free flow
to Eve. As soon as the colloquy had closed and
Eve had at length joined her simmering husband in
the lift, Charlie must have a private chat with Lady
Massulam, apart, mysterious, concerning their affairs,
whatever their affairs might be! In spite of himself,
Mr. Prohack was impressed by the demeanour of the
young man and the mature blossom of womanhood to each
other. They exhibited a mutual trust; they understood
each other; they liked each other. She was more
than old enough to be his mamma, and yet as she talked
to him she somehow became a dignified girl. Mr.
Prohack was disturbed in a manner which he would never
have admitted,-how absurd to fancy that
Lady Massulam had in her impressive head a notion
of marrying the boy! Still, such unions had occurred!-but
he was pleasantly touched, too.
Then Oswald Morfey and Sissie made
another couple, very different, more animated, and
equally touching. Ozzie seemed to grow more likeable,
and less despicable, under the honest and frankly
ardent gaze of Miss Prohack; and Mr. Prohack was again
visited by a doubt whether the fellow was after all
the perfectly silly ass which he was reputed to be.
In the lift, Lady Massulam having
offered her final adieux, Ozzie opened up to Mrs.
Prohack the subject of an organisation called the United
League of all the Arts. Mr. Prohack would not
listen to this. He hated leagues, and especially
leagues of arts. He knew in the marrow of his
spine that they were preposterous; but Mrs. Prohack
and Sissie listened with unfeigned eagerness to the
wonderful tale of the future of the United League
of all the Arts. And when, emerging from the lift,
Mr. Prohack strolled impatiently on ahead, the three
stood calmly moveless to converse, until Mr. Prohack
had to stroll impatiently back again. As for
Charlie, he stood by himself; there was leisure for
the desired word with his father, but Mr. Prohack
had bluntly postponed that, and thus the leisure was
wasted.
Without consulting Mr. Prohack’s
wishes, Ozzie drew the ladies towards the great lounge,
and Mr. Prohack at a distance unwillingly after them.
In the lounge so abundantly enlarged and enriched since
the days of the celebrated Felix Babylon, the founder
of the hotel, post-lunch coffee was merging into afternoon
tea. The number of idle persons in the world,
and the number of busy persons who ministered to them,
and the number of artistic persons who played voluptuous
music to their idleness, struck Mr. Prohack as merely
prodigious. He had not dreamed that idleness on
so grandiose a scale flourished in the city which
to him had always been a city of hard work and limited
meal-hours. He saw that he had a great deal to
learn before he could hope to be as skilled in idleness
as the lowest of these experts in the lounge.
He tapped his foot warningly. No effect on his
women. He tapped more loudly, as the hatred of
being in a hurry took possession of him. Eve
looked round with a delightful placatory smile which
conjured an answering smile into the face of her husband.
He tried to be irritated after smiling,
and advancing said in a would-be fierce tone:
“If this lunch lasts much longer
I shall barely have time to dress for dinner.”
But the effort was a failure-so
complete that Sissie laughed at him.
He had expected that in the car his
women would relate to him the sayings and doings of
Ozzie Morfey in relation to the United League of all
the Arts. But they said not a syllable on the
matter. He knew they were hiding something formidable
from him. He might have put a question, but he
was too proud to do so. Further, he despised them
because they essayed to discuss Lady Massulam impartially,
as though she was just a plain body, or nobody at
all. A nauseating pretence on their part.
Crossing a street, the car was held
up by a procession of unemployed, with guardian policemen,
a band consisting chiefly of drums, and a number of
collarless powerful young men who shook white boxes
of coppers menacingly in the faces of passers-by.
“Instead of encouraging them,
the police ought to forbid these processions of unemployed,”
said Eve gravely. “They’re becoming
a perfect nuisance.”
“Why!” said Mr. Prohack,
“this car of yours is a procession of unemployed.”
This sardonic pleasantry pleased Mr.
Prohack as much as it displeased Mrs. Prohack.
It seemed to alleviate his various worries, and the
process of alleviation went further when he remembered
that, though he would be late for his important appointment,
he had really lost no time because Dr. Veiga had forbidden
him to keep this particular appointment earlier than
two full hours after a meal.
“Don’t take cold, darling,”
Eve urged with loving solicitude as he left the car
to enter the place of rendezvous. Sissie grinned
at him mockingly. They both knew that he had
never kept such an appointment before.
III
Solemnity, and hush, and antique menials
stiff with tradition, surrounded him. As soon
as he had paid the entrance fee and deposited all
his valuables in a drawer of which the key was formally
delivered to him, he was motioned through a turnstile
and requested to permit his boots to be removed.
He consented. White linens were then handed to
him.
“See here,” he said with
singular courage to the attendant. “I’ve
never been into one of these resorts before.
Where do I go?”
The attendant, who was a bare-footed
mild child dressed in the Moorish mode, reassuringly
charged himself with Mr. Prohack’s well-being,
and led the aspirant into a vast mosque with a roof
of domes and little glowing windows of coloured glass.
In the midst of the mosque was a pale green pool.
White figures reclined in alcoves, round the walls.
A fountain played-the only orchestra.
There was an eastern sound of hands clapped, and another
attendant glided across the carpeted warm floor.
Mr. Prohack understood that, in this immense seclusion,
when you desired no matter what you clapped your hands
and were served. A beautiful peace descended
upon him and enveloped him; and he thought: “This
is the most wonderful place in the world. I have
been waiting for this place for twenty years.”
He yielded without reserve to its
unique invitation. But some time elapsed before
he could recover from the unquestionable fact that
he was still within a quarter of a mile of Piccadilly
Circus.
From the explanations of the attendant
and from the precise orders which he had received
from Dr. Veiga regarding the right method of conduct
in a Turkish bath, Mr. Prohack, being a man of quick
mind, soon devised the order of the ceremonial suited
to his case, and began to put it into execution.
At first he found the ceremonial exacting. To
part from all his clothes and to parade through the
mosque in attire of which the principal items were
a towel and the key of his valuables (adorning his
wrist) was ever so slightly an ordeal to one of his
temperament and upbringing. To sit unsheltered
in blinding steam was not amusing, though it was exciting.
But the steam-chapel (as it might be called) of the
mosque was a delight compared to the second next chapel
further on, where the woodwork of the chairs was too
hot to touch and where a gigantic thermometer informed
Mr. Prohack that with only another fifty degrees of
heat he would have achieved boiling point.
He remembered that it was in this
chamber he must drink iced tonic water in quantity.
He clapped his streaming hands clammily, and a tall,
thin, old man whose whole life must have been lived
near boiling point, immediately brought the draught.
Short of the melting of the key of his valuables everything
possible happened in this extraordinary chamber.
But Mr. Prohack was determined to shrink from naught
in the pursuit of idleness.
And at length, after he had sat in
a less ardent chapel, and in still another chapel
been laid out on a marble slab as for an autopsy and,
defenceless, attacked for a quarter of an hour by a
prize-fighter, and had jumped desperately into the
ice-cold lake and been dragged out and smothered in
thick folds of linen, and finally reposed horizontal
in his original alcove,-then he was conscious
of an inward and profound conviction that true, perfect,
complete and supreme idleness had been attained.
He had no care in the world; he was cut off from the
world; he had no family; he existed beatifically and
individually in a sublime and satisfied egotism.
But, such is the insecurity of human
organisms and institutions, in less than two minutes
he grew aware of a strange sensation within him, which
sensation he ultimately diagnosed as hunger. To
clap his hands was the work of an instant. The
oncoming attendant recited a catalogue of the foods
at his disposal; and the phrase “welsh rarebit”
caught his attention. He must have a welsh rarebit;
he had not had a welsh rarebit since he was at school.
It magically arrived, on an oriental tray, set on
a low Moorish table.
Eating the most wonderful food of
his life and drinking tea, he looked about and saw
that two of the unoccupied sofas in his alcove were
strewn with garments; the owners of the garments had
doubtlessly arrived during his absence in the chapels
and were now in the chapels themselves. He lay
back; earthly phenomena lost their hard reality....
When he woke up the mosque was a pit
of darkness glimmering with sharp points of electric
light. He heard voices, the voices of two men
who occupied the neighbouring sofas. They were
discoursing to each other upon the difficulties of
getting good whiskey in Afghanistan and in Rio de
Janeiro respectively. From whiskey they passed
to even more interesting matters, and Mr. Prohack,
for the first time, began to learn how the other half
lives, to such an extent that he thought he had better
turn on the lamp over his head. Whereupon the
conversation on the neighbouring sofas curved off
to the English weather in late autumn.
Then Mr. Prohack noticed a deep snore.
He perceived that the snore originated in a considerable
figure that, wrapped in white and showing to the mosque
only a venerable head, was seated in one of the huge
armchairs which were placed near the entrance to every
alcove. It seemed to him that he recognised the
snore, and he was not mistaken, for he had twice before
heard it on Sunday afternoons at his chief club.
The head was the head of Sir Paul Spinner. Mr.
Prohack recalled that old Paul was a devotee of the
Turkish bath.
Now Mr. Prohack was exceedingly anxious
to have speech with old Paul, for he had heard very
interesting rumours of Paul’s activities.
He arose softly and approached the easy-chair and
surveyed Sir Paul, who in his then state looked less
like a high financier and more like something chipped
off the roof of a cathedral than anything that Mr.
Prohack had ever seen.
But Paul did not waken. A bather
plunged into the pool with a tremendous splash, but
Paul did not waken. And Mr. Prohack felt that
it would be contrary to the spirit of the ritual of
the mosque to waken him. But he decided that
if he waited all night he would wait until old Paul
regained consciousness.
At that moment an attendant asked
Mr. Prohack if he desired the attentions of the barber,
the chiropodist, or the manicurist. New vistas
opened out before Mr. Prohack. He said yes.
After the barber, he padded down the stairs from the
barber’s chapel (which was in the upper story
of the mosque), to observe if there was any change
in old Paul’s condition. Paul still slept.
Mr. Prohack did similarly after the chiropodist.
Paul still slept. Then again after the manicurist.
Paul still slept. Then a boyish attendant hurried
forward and in a very daring manner shook the monumental
Paul by the shoulder.
“You told me to wake you at
six, Sir Paul.” And Paul woke.
“How simple,” reflected
Mr. Prohack, “are the problems of existence when
they are tackled with decision! Here have I been
ineffectively trying to waken the fellow for the past
hour. But I forgot that he who wishes the end
must wish the means, and my regard for the ritual of
the mosque was absurd.”
He retired into the alcove to dress,
keeping a watchful eye upon old Paul. He felt
himself to be in the highest state of physical efficiency.
From head to foot he was beyond criticism. When
Mr. Prohack had got as far as his waistcoat Sir Paul
uprose ponderously from the easy-chair.
“Hi, Paul!”
The encounter between the two friends
was one of those affectionate and ecstatic affairs
that can only happen in a Turkish Bath.
“I’ve been trying to get
you on the ’phone half the day,” grunted
Paul Spinner, subsiding on to Mr. Prohack’s
sofa.
“I’ve been out all day.
Horribly busy,” said Mr. Prohack. “What’s
wrong? Anything wrong?”
“Oh, no! Only I thought
you’d like to know I’ve finished that deal.”
“I did hear some tall stories,
but not a word from you, old thing.” Mr.
Prohack tried to assume a tranquillity which he certainly
did not feel.
“Well, I never sing until I’m
out of the wood. But this time I’m out
sooner than I expected.”
“Any luck?”
“Yes. But I dictated a letter to you before
I came here.”
“I suppose you can’t remember what there
was in it.”
“I shall get the securities next week.”
“What securities?”
“Well, you’ll receive”-here
Paul dropped his voice-“three thousand
short of a quarter of a million in return for what
you put in, my boy.”
“Then I’m worth over two
hundred and fifty thousand pounds!” murmured
Mr. Prohack feebly. And he added, still more feebly:
“Something will have to be done about this soon.”
His heart was beating against his waistcoat like an
engine.