Arnold sprang to his feet. It
was significant that, after his first surprise, he
spoke to Fenella with his head half turned towards
his companion, and an encouraging smile upon his lips.
“I had no idea that we were
coming here,” he said. “We should
not have thought of intruding. It was your chauffeur
who would not even allow us to ask a question.”
“He obeyed my orders,”
Fenella replied. “I meant it for a little
surprise for you. I thought that it would be pleasant
after your drive to have you call here and rest for
a short time. You must present me to your friend.”
Arnold murmured a word of introduction.
Ruth moved a little in her seat. She lifted herself
with her left hand, leaning upon her stick. Fenella’s
expression changed as though by magic. Her cool,
good-humored, but almost impertinent scrutiny suddenly
vanished. She moved to the side of the motor
car and held out both her hands.
“I am so glad to see you here,”
she declared. “I hope that you will like
some tea after your long ride. Perhaps you would
prefer Mr. Chetwode to help you out?”
“You are very kind,” Ruth
murmured. “I am sorry to be such a trouble
to everybody.”
Arnold lifted her bodily out of the
car and placed her on the edge of the lawn. Fenella,
a long parasol in her hand, was looking pleasantly
down at her guest.
“You will find it quite picturesque
here, I think,” she said. “It is
not really the river itself which comes to the end
of the lawn, but a little stream. It is so pretty,
though, and so quiet. I thought you would like
to have tea down there. But, my poor child,”
she exclaimed, “your hair is full of dust!
You must come to my room. It is on the ground
floor here. Mr. Chetwode and I together can help
you so far.”
They turned back toward the house
and passed into the cool white hall, the air of which
was fragrant with the perfume of geraniums and clematis.
On the threshold of Fenella’s room they were
alone for a moment. Fenella was summoning her
maid. Ruth clung nervously to Arnold. The
room into which they looked was like a fairy chamber,
full of laces and perfume and fine linen.
“Arnold,” she whispered,
“you are sure that you did not know about coming
here?”
“I swear that I had no idea,”
he answered. “I would not have thought
of bringing you without telling you first.”
Then Fenella returned and he was banished
into the garden. At the end of the lawn he found
Mr. Weatherley, half asleep in a wicker chair.
The latter was apparently maintaining his good spirits.
“Glad to see you, Chetwode,”
he said. “Sort of plot of my wife’s,
I think. Your young lady friend in the house?”
“Mrs. Weatherley was kind enough
to take her to her room,” Arnold replied.
“We have had a most delightful ride, and I suppose
it was dusty, although we never noticed it.”
Mr. Weatherley relit his cigar, which
had gone out while he dozed.
“Thought we’d like a little
country air ourselves for the week-end,” he
remarked. “Will you smoke?”
Arnold shook his head.
“Not just now, thank you, sir.
Is that the river through the trees there?”
Mr. Weatherley nodded.
“It’s about a hundred
yards down the stream,” he replied. “Bourne
End is the nearest station. The cottage belongs
to my brother-in-law Sabatini. I believe
he’s coming down later on. Any news at
the office yesterday morning?”
“There was nothing whatever
requiring your attention, sir,” Arnold said.
“There are a few letters which we have kept over
for to-morrow, but nothing of importance.”
Mr. Weatherley pursed his lips and
nodded. He asked a further question or two concerning
the business and then turned his head at the sound
of approaching footsteps. Ruth, looking very pale
and fragile, was leaning on the arm of a man-servant.
Fenella walked on the other side, her lace parasol
drooping over her shoulder, her head turned towards
Ruth’s, whose shyness she was doing her best
to melt. Mr. Weatherley rose hastily from his
chair.
“God bless my soul!” he
declared. “I didn’t know you
didn’t tell me ”
“Miss Lalonde has been a great
sufferer,” Arnold said. “She has been
obliged to spend a good deal of her time lying down.
For that reason, to-day has been such a pleasure to
her.”
He hurried forward and took the butler’s
place. Together they installed her in the most
comfortable chair. Mr. Weatherley came over and
shook hands with her.
“Pretty place, this, Miss Lalonde,
isn’t it?” he remarked. “It’s
a real nice change for business men like Mr. Chetwode
and myself to get down here for an hour or two’s
quiet.”
“It is wonderfully beautiful,”
she answered. “It is so long since I was
out of London that perhaps I appreciate it more, even,
than either of you.”
“What part of London do you
live in?” Fenella asked her.
“My uncle and I have rooms in
the same house as Mr. Chetwode,” she replied.
“It is in Adam Street, off the Strand.”
“Not much air there this hot
weather, I don’t suppose,” Mr. Weatherley
remarked.
“We are on the top floor,”
she replied, “and it is the end house, nearest
to the river. Still, one feels the change here.”
Tea was brought out by the butler,
assisted by a trim parlor-maid. Fenella presided.
The note of domesticity which her action involved
seemed to Arnold, for some reason or other, quaintly
incongruous. Arnold waited upon them, and Fenella
talked all the time to the pale, silent girl at her
side. Gradually Ruth overcame her shyness; it
was impossible not to feel grateful to this beautiful,
gracious woman who tried so hard to make her feel
at her ease. The time slipped by pleasantly enough.
Then Fenella rose to her feet.
“You must carry Miss Lalonde
and her chair down to the very edge of the lawn, where
she can see the river,” she told Arnold.
“Afterwards, I am going to take you to see my
little rose garden. I say mine, but it is really
my brother’s, only it was my idea when he first
took the place. Mr. Weatherley is going down to
the boat-builder’s to see some motor-launches horrible
things they are, but necessary if we stay here for
the summer. Would you like some books or magazines,
Miss Lalonde, or do you think you would care to come
with us if we helped you very carefully?”
Ruth shook her head.
“I should like to sit quite
close to the river,” she said shyly, “just
where you said, and close my eyes. You don’t
know how beautiful it is to get the roar of London
out of one’s ears, and be able to hear nothing
except these soft, summer sounds. It is like a
wonderful rest.”
They arranged her comfortably.
Mr. Weatherley returned to the house. Fenella
led the way through a little iron gate to a queer miniature
garden, a lawn brilliant with flower-beds, ending in
a pergola of roses. They passed underneath it
and all around them the soft, drooping blossoms filled
the whole air with fragrance. At the end was
the river and a wooden seat. She motioned to him
to sit by her side.
“You are not angry with me?”
she asked, a little timidly.
“Angry? Why should I be?”
he answered. “The afternoon has been delightful.
I can’t tell you how grateful I feel.”
“All the same,” she said,
“I think you know that I laid a plot to bring
you here because I was curious about this companion
of yours, for whose sake you refused my invitation.
However, you see I am penitent. Poor girl, how
can one help feeling sorry for her! You forgive
me?”
“I forgive you,” he answered.
She closed her parasol and leaned
back in her corner of the seat. She seemed to
be studying his expression.
“There is something different
about you this afternoon,” she said. “I
miss a look from your face, something in your tone
when you are talking to me.”
He shook his head.
“I am not conscious of any difference.”
She laughed softly, but she seemed, even then, a little
annoyed.
“You are not appreciating me,”
she declared. “Do you know that here, in
the wilderness, I have put on a Paquin muslin gown,
white shoes from Paris, white silk stockings of
which you can see at least two inches,” she
added, glancing downwards. “I have risked
my complexion by wearing no hat, so that you can see
my hair really at its best. I looked in the glass
before you came and even my vanity was satisfied.
Now I bring you away with me and find you a seat in
a bower of roses, and you look up into that elm tree
as though you were more anxious to find out where
the thrush was singing than to look at me.”
He laughed. Through the raillery
of her words he could detect a certain half-girlish
earnestness which seemed to him delightful.
“Try and remember,” he
said, “how wonderful a day like this must seem
to any one like myself, who has spent day after day
for many months in Tooley Street. I have been
sitting up on the hills, listening to the wind in
the trees. You can’t imagine the difference
when you’ve been used to hearing nothing but
the rumble of drays on their way to Bermondsey.”
She looked up at him.
“You know,” she declared,
“you are rather a mysterious person. I
cannot make up my mind that you are forced to live
the life you do.”
“You do not suppose,”
he replied, “that any sane person would choose
it? It is well enough now, thanks to you,”
he added, dropping his voice a little. “A
week ago, I was earning twenty-eight shillings a week,
checking invoices and copying letters an
errand boy’s work; pure, unadulterated drudgery,
working in a wretched atmosphere, without much hope
of advancement or anything else.”
“But even then you leave part
of my question unanswered,” she insisted.
“You were not born to this sort of thing?”
“I was not,” he admitted; “but what
does it matter?”
“You don’t care to tell
me your history?” she asked lazily. “Sometimes
I am curious about it.”
“If I refuse,” he answered,
“it may give you a false impression. I
will tell you a little, if I may. A few sentences
will be enough.”
“I should really like to hear,” she told
him.
“Very well, then,” he
replied. “My father was a clergyman, his
family was good. He and I lived almost alone.
He had an income and his stipend, but he was ambitious
for me, and, by some means or other, while I was away
he was led to invest all his money with one of these
wretched bucket-shop companies. A telegram fetched
me home unexpectedly just as I was entering for my
degree. I found my father seriously ill and almost
broken-hearted. I stayed with him, and in a fortnight
he died. There was just enough barely
enough to pay what he owed, and nothing
left of his small fortune. His brother, my uncle,
came down to the funeral, and I regret to say that
even then I quarreled with him. He made use of
language concerning my father and his folly which
I could not tolerate. My father was very simple
and very credulous and very honorable. He was
just the sort of man who becomes the prey of these
wretched circular-mongering sharks. What he did,
he did for my sake. My uncle spoke of him with
contempt, spoke as though he were charged with the
care of me through my father’s foolishness.
I am afraid I made no allowance for my uncle’s
peculiar temperament. The moment the funeral was
over, I turned him out of the house. I have no
other relatives. I came to London sooner than
remain down in the country and be found a position
out of charity, which is, I suppose, what would have
happened. I took a room and looked for work.
Naturally, I was glad to get anything. I used
to make about forty calls a day, till I called at
your husband’s office in Tooley Street and got
a situation.”
She nodded.
“I thought it was something
like that,” she remarked. “Supposing
I had not happened to discover you, I wonder how long
you would have gone on?”
“Not much longer,” he
admitted. “To tell you the truth, I should
have enlisted but for that poor little girl whom I
brought down with me this afternoon.”
His tone had softened. There
was the slightest trace of a frown upon her face as
she looked along the riverside.
“But tell me,” she asked,
“what is your connection with her?”
“One of sympathy and friendliness
only,” he answered. “I never saw
her till I took the cheapest room I could find at the
top of a gaunt house near the Strand. The rest
of the top floor is occupied by this girl and her
uncle. He is a socialist agitator, engaged on
one of the trades’ union papers, a
nervous, unbalanced creature, on fire with strange
ideas, the worst companion in the world
for any one. Sometimes he is away for days together.
Sometimes, when he is at home, he talks like a prophet,
half mad, half inspired, as though he were tugging
at the pillars which support the world. The girl
and he are alone as I am alone, and there is something
which brings people very close together when they
are in that state. I found her fallen upon the
landing one day and unable to reach her rooms, and
I carried her in and talked. Since then she looks
for me every evening, and we spend some part of the
time together.”
“Is she educated?”
“Excellently,” he answered.
“She was brought up in a convent after her parents’
death. She has read a marvellous collection of
books, and she is very quick-witted and appreciative.”
“But you,” she said, “are
no longer a waif. These things are passing for
you. You cannot carry with you to the new world
the things which belong to the old.”
“No prosperity should ever come
to me,” he declared, firmly, “in which
that child would not share to some extent. With
the first two hundred pounds I possess, if ever I
do possess such a sum,” he added, with a little
laugh, “I am going to send her to Vienna, to
the great hospital there.”
She shrugged her shoulders.
“Two hundred pounds is not a
large sum,” she remarked. “Would you
like me to lend it to you?”
He shook his head.
“She would not hear of it,”
he said. “In her way, she is very proud.”
“It may come of its own accord,”
she whispered, softly. “You may even have
an opportunity of earning it.”
“I am doing well enough just
now,” he remarked, “thanks to Mr. Weatherley,
but sums of money like that do not fall from the clouds.”
They were both silent. She seemed
to be listening to the murmur of the stream.
His head was lifted to the elm tree, from somewhere
among whose leafy recesses a bird was singing.
“One never knows,” she
said softly. “You yourself have seen and
heard of strange things happening within the last few
days.”
He came back to earth with a little start.
“It is true,” he confessed.
“There is life still,”
she continued, “throbbing sometimes in the dull
places, adventures which need only the strong arm and
the man’s courage. One might come to you,
and adventures do not go unrewarded.”
“You talk like your brother,” he remarked.
“Why not?” she replied.
“Andrea and I have much in common. Do you
know that sometimes you provoke me a little?”
“I?”
She nodded.
“You have so much the air of
a conqueror,” she said. “You look
as though you had courage and determination.
One could see that by your mouth. And yet you
are so much like the men of your nation, so stolid,
so certain to move along the narrow lines which convention
has drawn for you. Oh! if I could,” she
went on, leaning towards him and looking intently
into his face, “I would borrow the magic from
somewhere and mix a little in your wine, so that you
should drink and feel the desire for new things; so
that the world of Tooley Street should seem to you
as though it belonged to a place inhabited only by
inferior beings; so that you should feel new blood
in your veins, hot blood crying for adventures, a
new heart beating to a new music. I would like,
if I could, Arnold, to bring those things into your
life.”
He turned and looked at her.
Her face was within a few inches of his. She
was in earnest. The gleam in her eyes was half-provocative,
half a challenge. Arnold rose uneasily to his
feet.
“I must go back,” he said,
a little thickly. “I forgot that Ruth is
so shy. She will be frightened alone.”
He walked away down the pergola without
even waiting for her. It was very rude, but she
only leaned back in her chair and laughed. In
a way, it was a triumph!