AN UNEXPECTED OPENING
Ventimore made his way to Cottesmore
Gardens that evening in a highly inconsistent, not
to say chaotic, state of mind. The thought that
he would presently see Sylvia again made his blood
course quicker, while he was fully determined to say
no more to her than civility demanded.
At one moment he was blessing Professor
Futvoye for his happy thought in making use of him;
at another he was bitterly recognising that it would
have been better for his peace of mind if he had been
left alone. Sylvia and her mother had no desire
to see more of him; if they had, they would have asked
him to come before this. No doubt they would tolerate
him now for the Professor’s sake; but who would
not rather be ignored than tolerated?
The more often he saw Sylvia the more
she would make his heart ache with vain longing whereas
he was getting almost reconciled to her indifference;
he would very soon be cured if he didn’t see
her.
Why should he see her?
He need not go in at all. He had merely to leave
the catalogue with his compliments, and the Professor
would learn all he wanted to know.
On second thoughts he must go in if
only to return the bank-note. But he would ask
to see the Professor in private. Most probably
he would not be invited to join his wife and daughter,
but if he were, he could make some excuse. They
might think it a little odd a little discourteous,
perhaps; but they would be too relieved to care much
about that.
When he got to Cottesmore Gardens,
and was actually at the door of the Futvoyes’
house, one of the neatest and demurest in that retired
and irreproachable quarter, he began to feel a craven
hope that the Professor might be out, in which case
he need only leave the catalogue and write a letter
when he got home, reporting his non-success at the
sale, and returning the note.
And, as it happened, the Professor
was out, and Horace was not so glad as he thought
he should be. The maid told him that the ladies
were in the drawing-room, and seemed to take it for
granted that he was coming in, so he had himself announced.
He would not stay long just long enough
to explain his business there, and make it clear that
he had no wish to force his acquaintance upon them.
He found Mrs. Futvoye in the farther part of the pretty
double drawing-room, writing letters, and Sylvia,
more dazzlingly fair than ever in some sort of gauzy
black frock with a heliotrope sash and a bunch of
Parma violets on her breast, was comfortably established
with a book in the front room, and seemed surprised,
if not resentful, at having to disturb herself.
“I must apologise,” he
began, with an involuntary stiffness, “for calling
at this very unceremonious time; but the fact is, the
Professor ”
“I know all about it,”
interrupted Mrs. Futvoye, brusquely, while her shrewd,
light-grey eyes took him in with a cool stare that
was humorously observant without being aggressive.
“We heard how shamefully my husband abused your
good-nature. Really, it was too bad of him to
ask a busy man like you to put aside his work and
go and spend a whole day at that stupid auction!”
“Oh, I’d nothing particular
to do. I can’t call myself a busy man unfortunately,”
said Horace, with that frankness which scorns to conceal
what other people know perfectly well already.
“Ah, well, it’s very nice
of you to make light of it; but he ought not to have
done it after so short an acquaintance,
too. And to make it worse, he has had to go out
unexpectedly this evening, but he’ll be back
before very long if you don’t mind waiting.”
“There’s really no need
to wait,” said Horace, “because this catalogue
will tell him everything, and, as the particular things
he wanted went for much more than he thought, I wasn’t
able to get any of them.”
“I’m sure I’m very
glad of it,” said Mrs. Futvoye, “for his
study is crammed with odds and ends as it is, and
I don’t want the whole house to look like a
museum or an antiquity shop. I’d all the
trouble in the world to persuade him that a great
gaudy gilded mummy-case was not quite the thing for
a drawing-room. But, please sit down, Mr. Ventimore.”
“Thanks,” stammered Horace,
“but but I mustn’t stay.
If you will tell the Professor how sorry I was to
miss him, and and give him back this note
which he left with me to cover any deposit, I I
won’t interrupt you any longer.”
He was, as a rule, imperturbable in
most social emergencies, but just now he was seized
with a wild desire to escape, which, to his infinite
mortification, made him behave like a shy schoolboy.
“Nonsense!” said Mrs.
Futvoye; “I am sure my husband would be most
annoyed if we didn’t keep you till he came.”
“I really ought to go,” he declared, wistfully
enough.
“We mustn’t tease Mr.
Ventimore to stay, mother, when he so evidently wants
to go,” said Sylvia, cruelly.
“Well, I won’t detain
you at least, not long. I wonder if
you would mind posting a letter for me as you pass
the pillar-box? I’ve almost finished it,
and it ought to go to-night, and my maid Jessie has
such a bad cold I really don’t like sending
her out with it.”
It would have been impossible to refuse
to stay after that even if he had wished.
It would only be for a few minutes. Sylvia might
spare him that much of her time. He should not
trouble her again. So Mrs. Futvoye went back
to her bureau, and Sylvia and he were practically alone.
She had taken a seat not far from
his, and made a few constrained remarks, obviously
out of sheer civility. He returned mechanical
replies, with a dreary wonder whether this could really
be the girl who had talked to him with such charming
friendliness and confidence only a few weeks ago in
Normandy.
And the worst of it was, she was looking
more bewitching than ever; her slim arms gleaming
through the black lace of her sleeves, and the gold
threads in her soft masses of chestnut hair sparkling
in the light of the shaded lamp behind her. The
slight contraction of her eyebrows and the mutinous
downward curve of her mouth seemed expressive of boredom.
“What a dreadfully long time
mamma is over that letter!” she said at last.
“I think I’d better go and hurry her up.”
“Please don’t unless
you are particularly anxious to get rid of me.”
“I thought you seemed particularly
anxious to escape,” she said coldly. “And,
as a family, we have certainly taken up quite enough
of your time for one day.”
“That is not the way you used
to talk at St. Luc!” he said.
“At St. Luc? Perhaps not.
But in London everything is so different, you see.”
“Very different.”
“When one meets people abroad
who who seem at all inclined to be sociable,”
she continued, “one is so apt to think them pleasanter
than they really are. Then one meets them again,
and and wonders what one ever saw to like
in them. And it’s no use pretending one
feels the same, because they generally understand
sooner or later. Don’t you find that?”
“I do, indeed,” he said,
wincing, “though I don’t know what I’ve
done to deserve that you should tell me so!”
“Oh, I was not blaming you.
You have been most angelic. I can’t think
how papa could have expected you to take all that trouble
for him still, you did, though you must
have simply hated it.”
“But, good heavens! don’t
you know I should be only too delighted to be of the
least service to him or to any of you?”
“You looked anything but delighted
when you came in just now; you looked as if your one
idea was to get it over as soon as you could.
You know perfectly well you’re longing now for
mother to finish her letter and set you free.
Do you really think I can’t see that?”
“If all that is true, or partly
true,” said Horace, “can’t you guess
why?”
“I guessed how it was when you
called here first that afternoon. Mamma had asked
you to, and you thought you might as well be civil;
perhaps you really did think it would be pleasant
to see us again but it wasn’t the
same thing. Oh, I saw it in your face directly you
became conventional and distant and horrid, and it
made me horrid too; and you went away determined that
you wouldn’t see any more of us than you could
help. That’s why I was so furious when I
heard that papa had been to see you, and with such
an object.”
All this was so near the truth, and
yet missed it with such perverse ingenuity, that Horace
felt bound to put himself right.
“Perhaps I ought to leave things
as they are,” he said, “but I can’t.
It’s no earthly use, I know; but may I tell you
why it really was painful to me to meet you again?
I thought you were changed, that you wished
to forget, and wished me to forget only
I can’t that we had been friends
for a short time. And though I never blamed you it
was natural enough it hit me pretty hard so
hard that I didn’t feel anxious to repeat the
experience.”
“Did it hit you hard?”
said Sylvia, softly. “Perhaps I minded too,
just a very little. However,” she added,
with a sudden smile, that made two enchanting dimples
in her cheeks, “it only shows how much more sensible
it is to have things out. Now perhaps you won’t
persist in keeping away from us?”
“I believe,” said Horace,
gloomily, still determined not to let any direct avowal
pass his lips, “it would be best that I should
keep away.”
Her half-closed eyes shone through
their long lashes; the violets on her breast rose
and fell. “I don’t think I understand,”
she said, in a tone that was both hurt and offended.
There is a pleasure in yielding to
some temptations that more than compensates for the
pain of any previous resistance. Come what might,
he was not going to be misunderstood any longer.
“If I must tell you,”
he said, “I’ve fallen desperately, hopelessly,
in love with you. Now you know the reason.”
“It doesn’t seem a very
good reason for wanting to go away and never see me
again. Does it?”
“Not when I’ve no right to speak to you
of love?”
“But you’ve done that!”
“I know,” he said penitently;
“I couldn’t help it. But I never meant
to. It slipped out. I quite understand how
hopeless it is.”
“Of course, if you are so sure
as all that, you are quite right not to try.”
“Sylvia! You can’t
mean that that you do care, after all?”
“Didn’t you really see?”
she said, with a low, happy laugh. “How
stupid of you! And how dear!”
He caught her hand, which she allowed
to rest contentedly in his. “Oh, Sylvia!
Then you do you do! But, my God, what
a selfish brute I am! For we can’t marry.
It may be years before I can ask you to come to me.
You father and mother wouldn’t hear of your
being engaged to me.”
“Need they hear of it just yet, Horace?”
“Yes, they must. I should
feel a cur if I didn’t tell your mother, at
all events.”
“Then you shan’t feel
a cur, for we’ll go and tell her together.”
And Sylvia rose and went into the farther room, and
put her arms round her mother’s neck. “Mother
darling,” she said, in a half whisper, “it’s
really all your fault for writing such very long letters,
but but we don’t exactly
know how we came to do it but Horace and
I have got engaged somehow. You aren’t
very angry, are you?”
“I think you’re both extremely
foolish,” said Mrs. Futvoye, as she extricated
herself from Sylvia’s arms and turned to face
Horace. “From all I hear, Mr. Ventimore,
you’re not in a position to marry at present.”
“Unfortunately, no” said
Horace; “I’m making nothing as yet.
But my chance must come some day. I don’t
ask you to give me Sylvia till then.”
“And you know you like Horace,
mother!” pleaded Sylvia. “And I’m
ready to wait for him, any time. Nothing will
induce me to give him up, and I shall never, never
care for anybody else. So you see you may just
as well give us your consent!”
“I’m afraid I’ve
been to blame,” said Mrs. Futvoye. “I
ought to have foreseen this at St. Luc. Sylvia
is our only child, Mr. Ventimore, and I would far
rather see her happily married than making what is
called a ‘grand match.’ Still, this
really does seem rather hopeless. I am
quite sure her father would never approve of it.
Indeed, it must not be mentioned to him he
would only be irritated.”
“So long as you are not against
us,” said Horace, “you won’t forbid
me to see her?”
“I believe I ought to,”
said Mrs. Futvoye; “but I don’t object
to your coming here occasionally, as an ordinary visitor.
Only understand this until you can prove
to my husband’s satisfaction that you are able
to support Sylvia in the manner she has been accustomed
to, there must be no formal engagement. I think
I am entitled to ask that of you.”
She was so clearly within her rights,
and so much more indulgent than Horace had expected for
he had always considered her an unsentimental and
rather worldly woman that he accepted her
conditions almost gratefully. After all, it was
enough for him that Sylvia returned his love, and
that he should be allowed to see her from time to time.
“It’s rather a pity,”
said Sylvia, meditatively, a little later, when her
mother had gone back to her letter-writing, and she
and Horace were discussing the future; “it’s
rather a pity that you didn’t manage to get
something at that sale. It might have helped
you with papa.”
“Well, I did get something on
my own account,” he said, “though I don’t
know whether it is likely to do me any good with your
father.” And he told her how he had come
to acquire the brass bottle.
“And you actually gave a guinea
for it?” said Sylvia, “when you could
probably get exactly the same thing, only better, at
Liberty’s for about seven-and-sixpence!
Nothing of that sort has any charms for papa, unless
it’s dirty and dingy and centuries old.”
“This looks all that. I
only bought it because, though it wasn’t down
on the catalogue, I had a fancy that it might interest
the Professor.”
“Oh!” cried Sylvia, clasping
her pretty hands, “if only it does, Horace!
If it turns out to be tremendously rare and valuable!
I do believe dad would be so delighted that he’d
consent to anything. Ah, that’s his step
outside ... he’s letting himself in. Now
mind you don’t forget to tell him about that
bottle.”
The Professor did not seem in the
sweetest of humours as he entered the drawing-room.
“Sorry I was obliged to be from home, and there
was nobody but my wife and daughter here to entertain
you. But I am glad you stayed yes,
I’m rather glad you stayed.”
“So am I, sir,” said Horace,
and proceeded to give his account of the sale, which
did not serve to improve the Professor’s temper.
He thrust out his under lip at certain items in the
catalogue. “I wish I’d gone myself,”
he said; “that bowl, a really fine example of
sixteenth-century Persian work, going for only five
guineas! I’d willingly have given ten for
it. There, there, I thought I could have depended
on you to use your judgment better than that!”
“If you remember, sir, you strictly
limited me to the sums you marked.”
“Nothing of the sort,”
said the Professor, testily; “my marginal notes
were merely intended as indications, no more.
You might have known that if you had secured one of
the things at any price I should have approved.”
Horace had no grounds for knowing
anything of the kind, and much reason for believing
the contrary, but he saw no use in arguing the matter
further, and merely said he was sorry to have misunderstood.
“No doubt the fault was mine,”
said the Professor, in a tone that implied the opposite.
“Still, making every allowance for inexperience
in these matters, I should have thought it impossible
for any one to spend a whole day bidding at a place
like Hammond’s without even securing a single
article.”
“But, dad,” put in Sylvia,
“Mr. Ventimore did get one thing on
his own account. It’s a brass bottle, not
down in the catalogue, but he thinks it may be worth
something perhaps. And he’d very much like
to have your opinion.”
“Tchah!” said the Professor.
“Some modern bazaar work, most probably.
He’d better have kept his money. What was
this bottle of yours like, now, eh?”
Horace described it.
“H’m. Seems to be
what the Arabs call a ‘kum-kum,’ probably
used as a sprinkler, or to hold rose-water. Hundreds
of ’em about,” commented the Professor,
crustily.
“It had a lid, riveted or soldered
on,” said Horace; “the general shape was
something like this ...” And he made a rapid
sketch from memory, which the Professor took reluctantly,
and then adjusted his glasses with some increase of
interest.
“Ha the form is antique,
certainly. And the top hermetically fastened,
eh? That looks as if it might contain something.”
“You don’t think it has
a genie inside, like the sealed jar the fisherman
found in the ’Arabian Nights’?” cried
Sylvia. “What fun if it had!”
“By genie, I presume you mean
a Jinnee, which is the more correct and scholarly
term,” said the Professor. “Female,
Jinneeyeh, and plural Jinn. No,
I do not contemplate that as a probable contingency.
But it is not quite impossible that a vessel closed
as Mr. Ventimore describes may have been designed
as a receptacle for papyri or other records of archaeological
interest, which may be still in preservation.
I should recommend you, sir, to use the greatest precaution
in removing the lid don’t expose
the documents, if any, too suddenly to the outer air,
and it would be better if you did not handle them yourself.
I shall be rather curious to hear whether it really
does contain anything, and if so, what.”
“I will open it as carefully
as possible,” said Horace, “and whatever
it may contain, you may rely upon my letting you know
at once.”
He left shortly afterwards, encouraged
by the radiant trust in Sylvia’s eyes, and thrilled
by the secret pressure of her hand at parting.
He had been amply repaid for all the
hours he had spent in the close sale-room. His
luck had turned at last: he was going to succeed;
he felt it in the air, as if he were already fanned
by Fortune’s pinions.
Still thinking of Sylvia, he let himself
into the semi-detached, old-fashioned house on the
north side of Vincent Square, where he had lodged
for some years. It was nearly twelve o’clock,
and his landlady, Mrs. Rapkin, and her husband had
already gone to bed.
Ventimore went up to his sitting-room,
a comfortable apartment with two long windows opening
on to a trellised verandah and balcony a
room which, as he had furnished and decorated it himself
to suit his own tastes, had none of the depressing
ugliness of typical lodgings.
It was quite dark, for the season
was too mild for a fire, and he had to grope for the
matches before he could light his lamp. After
he had done so and turned up the wicks, the first
object he saw was the bulbous, long-necked jar which
he had bought that afternoon, and which now stood
on the stained boards near the mantelpiece. It
had been delivered with unusual promptitude!
Somehow he felt a sort of repulsion
at the sight of it. “It’s a beastlier-looking
object than I thought,” he said to himself disgustedly.
“A chimney-pot would be about as decorative and
appropriate in my room. What a thundering ass
I was to waste a guinea on it! I wonder if there
really is anything inside it. It is so infernally
ugly that it ought to be useful. The Professor
seemed to fancy it might hold documents, and he ought
to know. Anyway, I’ll find out before I
turn in.”
He grasped it by its long, thick neck,
and tried to twist the cap off; but it remained firm,
which was not surprising, seeing that it was thickly
coated with a lava-like crust.
“I must get some of that off
first, and then try again,” he decided; and
after foraging downstairs, he returned with a hammer
and chisel, with which he chipped away the crust till
the line of the cap was revealed, and an uncouth metal
knob that seemed to be a catch.
This he tapped sharply for some time,
and again attempted to wrench off the lid. Then
he gripped the vessel between his knees and put forth
all his strength, while the bottle seemed to rock
and heave under him in sympathy. The cap was
beginning to give way, very slightly; one last wrench and
it came off in his hand with such suddenness that he
was flung violently backwards, and hit the back of
his head smartly against an angle of the wainscot.
He had a vague impression of the bottle
lying on its side, with dense volumes of hissing,
black smoke pouring out of its mouth and towering up
in a gigantic column to the ceiling; he was conscious,
too, of a pungent and peculiarly overpowering perfume.
“I’ve got hold of some sort of infernal
machine,” he thought, “and I shall be all
over the square in less than a second!” And,
just as he arrived at this cheerful conclusion, he
lost consciousness altogether.
He could not have been unconscious
for more than a few seconds, for when he opened his
eyes the room was still thick with smoke, through which
he dimly discerned the figure of a stranger, who seemed
of abnormal and almost colossal height. But this
must have been an optical illusion caused by the magnifying
effects of the smoke; for, as it cleared, his visitor
proved to be of no more than ordinary stature.
He was elderly, and, indeed, venerable of appearance,
and wore an Eastern robe and head-dress of a dark-green
hue. He stood there with uplifted hands, uttering
something in a loud tone and a language unknown to
Horace.
Ventimore, being still somewhat dazed,
felt no surprise at seeing him. Mrs. Rapkin must
have let her second floor at last to some
Oriental. He would have preferred an Englishman
as a fellow-lodger, but this foreigner must have noticed
the smoke and rushed in to offer assistance, which
was both neighbourly and plucky of him.
“Awfully good of you to come
in, sir,” he said, as he scrambled to his feet.
“I don’t know what’s happened exactly,
but there’s no harm done. I’m only
a trifle shaken, that’s all. By the way,
I suppose you can speak English?”
“Assuredly I can speak so as
to be understood by all whom I address,” answered
the stranger.
“Dost thou not understand my speech?”
“Perfectly, now,” said
Horace. “But you made a remark just now
which I didn’t follow would you mind
repeating it?”
“I said: ’Repentance,
O Prophet of God! I will not return to the like
conduct ever.’”
“Ah,” said Horace.
“I dare say you were rather startled.
So was I when I opened that bottle.”
“Tell me was it indeed
thy hand that removed the seal, O young man of kindness
and good works?”
“I certainly did open it,”
said Ventimore, “though I don’t know where
the kindness comes in for I’ve no
notion what was inside the thing.”
“I was inside it,” said the stranger,
calmly.