The last evening at Harley is one
of the things I shall not want to recall. Augustus
got drunk yes, it is almost too dreadful
to write even. I had not realized up to this
that gentlemen (of course I do not mean that word
literally, as applied to Augustus, but I mean people
with money and a respectable position) I
never realized that they got drunk. I thought
it was only common men in the street.
It struck me he was making a great
noise at dinner, but as he was sitting on the same
side of the table as I was I could not see. When
the men joined us afterwards it came upon me as a thunder-clap.
His face was a deep heliotrope, and he walked unsteadily not
really lurching about, but rather as if the furniture
was in the way.
One or two of the men seemed very
much amused, especially when he went and pushed himself
into the sofa where Lady Grenellen was sitting and
threw his arm along the back behind her head.
I felt frozen. I could not have risen from my
chair for a few moments. She, however, did not
seem to mind at all; she merely laughed continuously
behind her fan, the men helping her to ridicule Augustus.
For me it was an hour of deep humiliation.
It required all my self-control to go on talking to
Babykins as if nothing had happened.
The Duke came over and joined us.
He drew a low chair and sat down so that I could not
see the hilarious sofa-party.
I have not the least idea what he
said or what any of us said. The guffaws of laughter
in Augustus’s thick voice was all I was conscious
of.
Sir Antony Thornhirst, who had stopped
to speak to Lady Tilchester by the billiard-room door,
now came over to us. He stood by me for a moment,
then crossed to Lady Grenellen.
“They are wanting you to play
bridge in the blue drawing-room,” he said.
She rose quite reluctantly, still
overcome with mirth. Augustus tried to get up,
too, but stumbled back into the sofa.
Then, with infinite tact, my kinsman
attracted his attention, said some thrilling thing
about the war, and, as Lady Grenellen moved off and
Augustus made another ineffectual attempt to rise and
follow her, Sir Antony sat down in her vacant place
and for half an hour conversed with my husband.
Oh, I force myself to write the words “my husband.”
It is to keep the hideous fact in remembrance, otherwise
I might let myself express aloud the loathing and
contempt I feel for him.
Sir Antony had never before taken
the least notice of him beyond the most casual politeness,
and now, from the scraps of conversation that my preternaturally
sharpened ears could catch, he seemed to be trying
his best to interest and retain Augustus beside him.
Gradually the whole company dispersed into the different
drawing-rooms as usual, and I followed the rest to
look at the bridge.
As I was passing the sofa, where the
two men were sitting, Augustus seized hold of my dress.
“Don’t look so damned
haughty, little woman,” he hiccoughed. “Er I’m
all right give me a kiss ”
“As I was going to tell you,”
interrupted Sir Antony, “I heard for a fact
that the rest of the Tilchester Yeomanry that have
escaped so long are going to volunteer to go out,
after all.”
Augustus dropped my dress. His
face got paler. This information seemed to sober
him for an instant, and in that blessed interval I
got away and into the blue drawing-room. Lady
Tilchester was not playing bridge, and she sat down
in the window-seat beside me. It was a lovely
night, and the windows were wide open.
She is the most delightful companion.
I am beginning to know her a little and to realize
how much there is to know.
To-night she was more than usually
fascinating. It seemed as if she wished to make
me forget everything but the pleasure in our conversation.
She has a vast knowledge of books, and has even read
all the French classics that grandmamma loved.
We talked of many things, and, among them, gardens.
She told me that I must make a new garden at Ledstone,
and I would find it an immense interest; and she spoke
so kindly of Mrs. Gurrage, and said how charitable
she was and good-hearted, and then delicately, and
as if it had no bearing upon the Gurrage case, hinted
that in these days money was the only thing needed
to make an agreeable society for one’s self,
and that in the future I must have plenty of amusement.
Insensibly my heart became lightened.
She talked to me of grandmamma, too,
and drew me into telling her things about our past.
She was interested in grandmamma’s strange bringing-up
of me, so different, she said, to the English girls
of the present day.
“And is it that, I wonder, which
has turned you into almost as great a cynic as Antony
Thornhirst? He is the greatest I know.”
“But can one be a cynic if one
has so kind a heart?” I asked.
She looked at me quickly with a strange look.
“How have you discovered that
so soon? Most people would not credit him with
having any heart at all,” she said. “You
know with all his immense prestige and popularity
people are a little afraid of him. I think one
would sum up the impression of Antony as a man who
never in all his life has been, or will be, called
‘Tony.’”
Her voice was retrospecting.
“You have known him very long?” I questioned.
“Ever since I married, fourteen
years ago. I remember I saw him first at my wedding.
He and Tilchester had, of course, been old friends,
always living so near each other. We are exactly
the same age thirty-four, both of us.
Growing old, you see!” She laughed softly, then
she continued:
“Antony was never like other
men exactly. He is original, and extraordinarily
well read only casually one would never
guess it. He wastes his life rather, though.
I wish he would go into Parliament. He has a
habit of rushing off on long travels. Some years
ago he went off suddenly and was away for ages and
ages about five years, I think. Then
he stayed at Dane Mount for a while, and then, when
the war first began, he went out there, and has only
been home a year.”
“He never speaks of himself
nor what he does, I notice.”
“No; that is just his charm.
I should like you to see Dane Mount. It is far
nicer than this, and he has wonderful taste. It
is the most comfortable house I know. He has
delightful parties there when the shooting begins.”
“It would interest me to see
it, because grandpapa came from there,” I said.
“Of course, you are cousins,
in a way. You don’t know how interested
Antony was in you that night after the Tilchester Yeomanry
ball. He came and sat in my sitting-room and
talked to me about you, and then it was he put two
and two together and discovered you were related.
I had heard that evening about your grandmother and
you living at the cottage, and was able to give him
some information. I don’t think he realized
when you met that you were connected, did he?”
“No, not at all.”
“A friend of mine and I were
sitting by the fire, having said good-night to the
rest of the party do you remember what a
cold May night it was? Antony came in and joined
us. We all had admired you so. I recollect
this is one of the things he said: ’I met
an eighteenth-century marquise to-night.’”
“Yes, he called me that.”
“He is so very hard to please.
The ordinary women, like Babykins and Cordelia Grenellen,
don’t understand his subtle wit. They are
generally in love with him, though. Cordelia was
madly éprise last autumn; but he is as indifferent
as possible, and does not trouble himself about any
of them. He is reported to have said once that
it had taken him five years to degrade himself sufficiently
to be able to enjoy the society of modern women.
He is a wonderful cynic!”
“The Duke gave me to understand
that no man of the world was ever without some affair,”
I said.
“Well, I suppose it is true
more or less, but Antony is always the person who
holds the cheek, hardly even complacently generally
with perfect indifference. I have never known
him, for years, put himself out an inch for any woman.”
I don’t know why, but this conversation
interested me deeply.
Just then some one came and joined
us at the window, and Lady Tilchester had to rise
and talk with her other guests; but before she moved
off she put her hand on my arm and said, as if she
had only then remembered it:
“Oh, the housekeeper let me
know just now that some soot had fallen in your chimney.
I do hope you won’t mind sleeping in a tiny bedroom
off mine, just for to-night. We were so afraid
the smell would keep you awake. Your maid has
moved your things.”
Dear and kind lady! I will never
forget your goodness to me nor cease to love you.
It was pouring rain as we drove home next day.
Augustus and I only met as we were
ready to get into the carriage. I had breakfasted
in my room.
His face was the color of putty, and
he had that look in his eyes which, I remember, long
ago I used to say appeared as if he had not had enough
sleep. His expression was sulky and morose, and
I was thankful when at last we started.
The guests were catching all sorts
of trains. There were casual good-byes.
Lady Tilchester was not down, and no one occupied
themselves much with any one.
Lady Grenellen left just before us.
She did not take the least notice of me, but she talked
in a caressing way to Augustus, and I heard him say:
“Now, you won’t forget!
It is a bargain!” in the most empresse
voice, as he pulled his head out of the carriage-window.
For the first mile or two of our journey
neither of us spoke. Augustus lit a cigarette
and smoked in a nervous way, and kept opening and
shutting the window.
Then he swore at me. I will not
say the words he used, but the sentence ended with
a demand why I sat there looking like a “stuck
pig.”
I told him quietly that if he spoke
to me like that I would not reply at all.
He got very angry and said he would
have none of that nonsense; that I seemed to forget
that I was his wife, and that he could do as he pleased
with me.
“No, you cannot,” I said.
“I will not be spoken to like that.”
“You’ll be spoken to just
as I jolly well please,” was his refined reply.
“Sitting there like a white wax doll, and giving
yourself the airs of a duchess!”
I did not answer.
“A deaf and dumb doll, too,” he said,
with an oath.
He then asked where I had been all
night, and what I had meant by daring to stay away
from him.
I remained perfectly silent, which,
I fear, was infinitely provoking, but I could not
stoop to bandy words with him.
He began to bluster, and loaded me
with every coarse abuse and a tremendous justification
of himself and his behavior of the night before.
I had not mentioned the subject or accused him of anything,
but he assured me he had not been the least drunk and
that my haughtiness was enough to drive any man mad.
When at least ten minutes of this
torrent had spent itself a little, I said the whole
subject was so disagreeable to me and discreditable
to him that he had better not talk of it and I would
try and forget it.
Grandmamma often told me how her grandfather,
the husband of Ambrosine Eustasie, had refused to
fight with a man of low birth who had insulted him,
but had sent one of his valets to throw the creature
into the street, because in those days a gentleman
only crossed swords with his equals. I now understood
his feelings. I could not quarrel with Augustus,
the whole situation was so impossible.
I tried to tell myself that it did
not in the least matter what he said and did.
Then, as he continued abusing me, I repeated a bit
of Beranger to myself, and so grew unconscious, at
last, of the words he was saying.
Silence came eventually, and then,
after a while, in quite a humble voice, Augustus said:
“I say, little woman er you
won’t tell the mater er will
you?”
Something touched me in his face his
common, unpleasant face. The bluster was gone
and there was a piteousness in it. I felt a slight
lump in my throat.
“Oh no; do not fear,” I said.
Then he called me an angel and kissed
me many times, and that was the worst of all.
Oh! When the year is up, will
the “monotonous complacency” have set
in?