“Arnold!”
I waved my left hand.
“Don’t disturb me for
a few minutes, Allan, there’s a good chap,”
I begged. “I’m hard at it.”
“Found your plot, then, eh?”
“I’ve got a start, anyhow!
Give me half an hour. I only want to set the
thing going.”
Mabane grunted, and took up his brush.
For once I was thankful that we were alone. At
last I saw my way. After weeks of ineffective
scribbling a glimpse of the real thing had come to
me.
The stiffness had gone from my brain
and fingers. My pen flew over the paper.
The joy of creation sang once more in my heart, tingled
in all my pulses. We worked together and in silence
for an hour or more. Then, with a little sigh
of satisfaction, I leaned back in my chair.
“The story goes, then?” Mabane remarked.
“Yes, it goes,” I assented,
my eyes fixed absently upon the loose sheets of manuscript
strewn all over my desk. Already I was finding
it hard to tear my thoughts away from it.
There was a short silence. Then
Mabane, who had been filling his pipe, came over to
my side.
“You heard from the convent this morning, Arnold?”
“Yes! The letter is here. Read it!”
Mabane shook his head.
“I can’t read French,” he said.
“They want her back again,”
I told him, thoughtfully. “The woman appears
to be honest enough. She admits that they have
no absolute claim they do not even know
her parentage. They have been paid, she says,
regularly and well for the child’s education,
and if she is now without a home they would like her
to go back to them. She thinks it possible that
Major Delahaye’s relatives, or the people for
whom he acted, might continue the payments, but they
are willing to take their risk of that. The long
and short of it is, that they want her back again.”
“As a pupil still?” Mabane asked.
“They would train her for a
teacher. In that case she would have to serve
a sort of novitiate. She would practically become
a nun.”
Mabane withdrew his pipe from his
mouth, and looked thoughtfully into the bowl of it.
“I never had a sister,”
he said, “and I really know nothing whatever
about children. But does it occur to you, Arnold,
that this young lady seems particularly
adapted for a convent?”
“I believe,” I said firmly,
“that it would be misery for her.”
Mabane walked over to his canvas and came back again.
“What about Delahaye?” he asked.
“He is still unconscious at the hospital,”
I answered.
Mabane hesitated.
“I do not wish to seem intrusive,
Arnold,” he said, “but I can’t help
remembering that a certain lady with whom you were
very friendly once married a Delahaye!”
I nodded.
“I should have told you, in
any case,” I said. “This is the man Major
Sir William Delahaye, whom Eileen Marigold married.”
“Then surely you recognized him in the restaurant?”
“I never met him,” I answered.
“This marriage was arranged very quickly, as
you know, and I was abroad when it took place.
I called on Lady Delahaye twice, but I did not meet
her husband on either occasion.”
Mabane fingered the loose sheets of my manuscript
idly.
“Your story, Arnold,”
he said, “is having a tragic birth. Will
Delahaye really die, do you think?”
“The doctors are not very hopeful,”
I told him. “The wound itself is not mortal,
but the shock seems to have affected him seriously.
He is not a young man, and he has lived hard all his
days.”
“If he dies,” Mabane said
thoughtfully, “your friend Grooten, I think
you said he called himself, will have to disappear
altogether. In that case I suppose we shall
be compelled to send the child back to the convent?”
“Unless ”
“Unless what?”
“Unless we provide for her ourselves,”
I answered boldly.
Mabane smoked furiously for a few
moments. His hands were thrust deep down in his
trousers pockets. He looked fixedly out of the
window.
“Arnold,” he said abruptly, “do
you believe in presentiments?”
“It depends whether they affect
me favourably or the reverse,” I answered carelessly.
“You Scotchmen are all so superstitious.”
“You may call it superstition,”
Mabane continued. “Everything of the sort
which an ignorant man cannot understand he calls superstition.
But if you like, I will tell you something which is
surely going to happen. I will tell you what
I have seen.”
I leaned forward in my chair, and
looked curiously into Allan’s face. His
hard, somewhat commonplace features seemed touched
for the moment by some transfiguring fire. His
keen, blue-grey eyes were as soft and luminous as
a girl’s. He had actually the appearance
of a man who sees a little way beyond the border.
Even then I could not take him seriously.
“Speak, Sir Prophet!”
I exclaimed, with a little laugh. “Let my
eyes also be touched with fire. Let me see what
you see.”
Mabane showed no sign of annoyance.
He looked at me composedly.
“Do not be a fool, Arnold,”
he said. “You may believe or disbelieve,
but some day you will know that the things which I
have in my mind are true.”
I think that I was a little bewildered.
I realized now what at first I had been inclined to
doubt that Mabane was wholly in earnest.
Unconsciously my attitude towards him changed.
It is hard to mock a man who believes in himself.
“Go ahead, then, Allan,”
I said quietly. “Remember that you have
told me nothing yet.”
Mabane turned towards me. He
spoke slowly. His face was serious almost
solemn.
“The man Delahaye will never
claim the child,” he said. “I think
that he will die. The man who shot him has gone we
shall not hear of him again, not for many years, if
at all. He has gone like a stone dropped into
a bottomless tarn. We shall not send the child
back to the convent. She will remain here.”
He paused, as though expecting me
to speak. I shrugged my shoulders.
“Come,” I said, “I
shall not quarrel with your prophecy so far, Allan.
The introduction of a feminine element here seems a
little incongruous, but after all she is very young.”
Mabane unclasped his arms, and looked
thoughtfully around the room. Already there was
a change since a few days ago. The ornaments and
furniture were free from dust. There were two
great bowls of flowers upon the table, some studies
which had hung upon the wall were replaced with others
of a more sedate character. The atmosphere of
the place was different. Wild untidiness had
given place to some semblance of order. There
was an attempt everywhere at repression. Mabane
knocked the ashes from his pipe.
“For five years,” he said
abstractedly, “you and I and Arthur have lived
here together. Are you satisfied with those five
years? Think!”
I looked from my desk out of the window,
over the housetops up into the sunshine, and I too
was grave. Satisfied! Is anyone short of
a fool ever satisfied?
“No! I am not,” I admitted, a little
bitterly.
“Tell me what you think of these
five years, Arnold. Tell me the truth,”
Mabane persisted. “Let me know if your thoughts
are the same as mine.”
“Drift,” I answered.
“We have worked a little, and thought a little but
our feet have been on the earth a great deal oftener
than our heads have touched the clouds.”
“Drift,” Mabane repeated.
“It is a true word. We have gained a little
experience of the wrong sort: we have learnt how
to adapt our poor little gifts to the whim of the
moment. Such as our talent has been, we have
made a servant of it to minister to our physical necessities.
We have lived little lives, Arnold very
little lives.”
“Go on,” I murmured. “This
at least is truth!”
Mabane paused. He looked at his pipe, but he
did not relight it.
“There is a change coming,”
he said, slowly. “We are going to drift
no longer. We are going to be drawn into the
maelstrom of life. What it may mean for you and
for me and for the boy, I do not know. It will
change us it must change our work.
I shall paint no more guesses at realism after
someone else; and you will write no more of princesses,
or pull the strings of tinsel-decked puppets, so that
they may dance their way through the pages of your
gaily-dressed novels. And an end has come to
these things, Arnold. No, I am not raving, nor
is this a jest. Wait!”
“You speak,” I told him,
“like a seer. Since when was it given to
you to read the future so glibly, my friend?”
Mabane looked at me with grave eyes.
There was no shadow of levity in his manner.
“I am not a superstitious man,
Arnold,” he said, “but I come, after all,
of hill-folk, and I believe that there are times when
one can feel and see the shadow of coming things.
My grandfather knew the day of his death, and spoke
of it; my father made his will before he set foot on
the steamer which went to the bottom on a calm day
between Dover and Ostend. Nothing of this sort
has ever come to me before. You yourself have
called me too hard-headed, too material for an artist.
So I have always thought myself until to-day.
To-day I feel differently.”
“Is it this child, then, who
is to open the gates of the world to us?” I
asked.
“Remember,” Mabane answered,
“that before many months have passed she will
be a woman.”
I moved in my chair a little uneasily.
“I wonder,” I said, half
to myself, “whether I did well to bring her
here!”
Mabane laughed shortly.
“It was not you who brought her,” he declared.
“She was sent.”
“Sent?”
“Aye, these things are not of
our choosing, Arnold. There is something behind
which drives the great wheels. You can call it
Fate or God, according to your philosophy. It
is there all the time, the one eternal force.”
I looked at Mabane steadfastly. He did not flinch.
“Psychologically, my dear Allan,”
I said, “you appear to be in a very interesting
state just now.”
Mabane shrugged his shoulders.
He crossed the room for some tobacco, and began to
refill his pipe.
“Well,” he said, “I
have finished. To-morrow, I suppose, I shall want
to kick myself for having said as much as I have.
Listen! Here they come.”
Isobel came into the room, followed
by Arthur in a leather jacket and breeches. Her
cheeks were pink, her eyes danced with excitement.
She threw off her tam-o’-shanter, and stood
deftly re-arranging for a moment her wind-tossed hair.
“Glorious!” she exclaimed.
“Oh, it has been glorious! Mr. Arthur, how
can I thank you? I have never enjoyed myself so
much in my life. If the Sister Superior could
only have seen me and the girls!”
“Motoring, I presume,”
Mabane remarked, “is amongst the pleasures denied
to the young ladies of the convent?”
She laughed gaily.
“Pleasures! Why, there
are no pleasures for those poor girls. One may
not even smile, and as for games, even they are not
permitted. I think that it is shameful to make
such a purgatory of a place. One may not, one
could not, be happy there. It is not allowed.”
She caught the look which flashed
from Mabane to me, and turned instantly around.
“Oh, Monsieur Arnold,”
she cried breathlessly, “you do not think I
shall not have to return there?”
“Not likely!” Arthur interposed
with vigour. “By Jove! if anyone shut you
up there again I’d come and fetch you out.”
She threw a quick glance of gratitude
towards him, but her eyes returned almost immediately
to mine. She waited anxiously for me to speak.
“If we can possibly prevent
it,” I said slowly, “you shall never return
there. I do not think that it is at all the proper
place for you. But you must remember that we
are, after all, people of no authority. Someone
might come forward to-morrow with a legal right to
claim you, and we should be helpless.”
Slowly the colour died away from her
cheeks. Her eyes became preternaturally bright
and anxious.
“There is no one,” she
faltered, “except that man. He called himself
my guardian.”
“Had you seen him before he
came to the convent and fetched you away?” I
asked.
“Only once,” she answered.
“He came to St. Argueil about a year ago.
I hated him then. I have hated him ever since.
I think that if all men were like that I would be
content to stay in the convent all my life.”
“You don’t remember the
circumstances under which he took you there, I suppose?”
Mabane asked thoughtfully.
She shook her head.
“I do not remember being taken
there at all,” she answered. “I think
that I was not more than four or five years old.”
“And all the time no one else
has been to see you or written to you?” I asked.
“No one!”
She smothered a little sob as she
answered me. It was as though my questions and
Mabane’s, although I had asked them gently enough,
had suddenly brought home to her a fuller sense of
her complete loneliness. Her eyes were full of
tears. She held herself proudly, and she fought
hard for her self-control. Arthur glanced indignantly
at both of us. He had the wit, however, to remain
silent.
“There are just one or two more
questions, Isobel,” I said, “which I must
ask you some time or other.”
“Now, please, then,” she begged.
“Did Major Delahaye ever mention his wife to
you?”
“Never.”
“You did not even know, then,
when you arrived in London where he was taking you?”
“I knew nothing,” she
admitted. “He behaved very strangely, and
I was miserable every moment of the time I was with
him. I understood that I was to have a companion
and live in London.”
I felt my blood run cold for a moment.
I did not dare to look at Mabane.
“I do not think,” I said,
“that you need fear anything more from Major
Delahaye, even if he should recover.”
“You mean ?” she cried breathlessly.
“We should never give you up to him,”
I declared firmly.
“Thank God!” she murmured.
“Mr. Arnold,” she added, looking at me
eagerly, “I can paint and sing and play the piano.
Can’t people earn money sometimes by doing these
things? I would work oh, I am not afraid
to work. Couldn’t I stay here for a little
while?”
“Of course you can,” I
assured her. “And there is no need at all
for you to think about earning money yet. It
is not that which troubles us at all. It is the
fact that we have no legal claim upon you, and people
may come forward at any moment who have.”
Arthur glanced towards her triumphantly.
“What did I tell you?” he exclaimed.
She looked timidly across at Mabane.
“The other gentleman won’t mind?”
she asked timidly.
Mabane smiled at her, and his smile
was a revelation even to us who knew him so well.
“My dear young lady,”
he said, “you will be more than welcome.
I have just been telling Arnold that your coming will
make the world a different place for us.”
The girl’s smile was illumining.
It seemed to include us all. She held out both
her hands. Mabane seized one and bent over it
with the air of a courtier. The other was offered
to me. Arthur was content to beam upon us all
from the background. At that precise moment came
a tap at the door. Mrs. Burdett brought in a
telegram.
I tore it open, and hastily reading
it, passed it on to Mabane. He hesitated for
a moment, and then turned gravely to Isobel.
“Major Delahaye will not trouble
you any more,” he said. “He died in
the hospital an hour ago.”