CARTE BLANCHE
When Ventimore woke next morning his
headache had gone, and with it the recollection of
everything but the wondrous and delightful fact that
Sylvia loved him and had promised to be his some day.
Her mother, too, was on his side; why should he despair
of anything after that? There was the Professor,
to be sure but even he might be brought
to consent to an engagement, especially if it turned
out that the brass bottle ... and here Horace began
to recall an extraordinary dream in connection with
that extremely speculative purchase of his. He
had dreamed that he had forced the bottle open, and
that it proved to contain, not manuscripts, but an
elderly Jinnee who alleged that he had been imprisoned
there by the order of King Solomon!
What, he wondered, could have put
so grotesque a fancy into his head? and then he smiled
as he traced it to Sylvia’s playful suggestion
that the bottle might contain a “genie,”
as did the famous jar in the “Arabian Nights,”
and to her father’s pedantic correction of the
word to “Jinnee.” Upon that slight
foundation his sleeping brain had built up all that
elaborate fabric a scene so vivid and a
story so circumstantial and plausible that, in spite
of its extravagance, he could hardly even now persuade
himself that it was entirely imaginary. The psychology
of dreams is a subject which has a fascinating mystery,
even for the least serious student.
As he entered the sitting-room, where
his breakfast awaited him, he looked round, half expecting
to find the bottle lying with its lid off in the corner,
as he had last seen it in his dream.
Of course, it was not there, and he
felt an odd relief. The auction-room people had
not delivered it yet, and so much the better, for
he had still to ascertain if it had anything inside
it; and who knew that it might not contain something
more to his advantage than a maundering old Jinnee
with a grievance several thousands of years old?
Breakfast over, he rang for his landlady,
who presently appeared. Mrs. Rapkin was a superior
type of her much-abused class. She was scrupulously
clean and neat in her person; her sandy hair was so
smooth and tightly knotted that it gave her head the
colour and shape of a Barcelona nut; she had sharp,
beady eyes, nostrils that seemed to smell battle afar
off, a wide, thin mouth that apparently closed with
a snap, and a dry, whity-brown complexion suggestive
of bran.
But if somewhat grim of aspect, she
was a good soul and devoted to Horace, in whom she
took almost a maternal interest, while regretting
that he was not what she called “serious-minded
enough” to get on in the world. Rapkin
had wooed and married her when they were both in service,
and he still took occasional jobs as an outdoor butler,
though Horace suspected that his more staple form
of industry was the consumption of gin-and-water and
remarkably full-flavoured cigars in the basement parlour.
“Shall you be dining in this
evening, sir?” inquired Mrs. Rapkin.
“I don’t know. Don’t
get anything in for me; I shall most probably dine
at the club,” said Horace; and Mrs. Rapkin, who
had a confirmed belief that all clubs were hotbeds
of vice and extravagance, sniffed disapproval.
“By the way,” he added, “if a kind
of brass pot is sent here, it’s all right.
I bought it at a sale yesterday. Be careful how
you handle it it’s rather old.”
“There was a vawse come
late last night, sir; I don’t know if it’s
that, it’s old-fashioned enough.”
“Then will you bring it up at
once, please? I want to see it.”
Mrs. Rapkin retired, to reappear presently
with the brass bottle. “I thought you’d
have noticed it when you come in last night, sir,”
she explained, “for I stood it in the corner,
and when I see it this morning it was layin’
o’ one side and looking that dirty and disrespectable
I took it down to give it a good clean, which it wanted
it.”
It certainly looked rather the better
for it, and the marks or scratches on the cap were
more distinguishable, but Horace was somewhat disconcerted
to find that part of his dream was true the
bottle had been there.
“I hope I’ve done nothing
wrong,” said Mrs. Rapkin, observing his expression;
“I only used a little warm ale to it, which is
a capital thing for brass-work, and gave it a scrub
with ‘Vitrolia’ soap but it
would take more than that to get all the muck off of
it.”
“It is all right, so long as
you didn’t try to get the top off,” said
Horace.
“Why, the top was off
it, sir. I thought you’d done it with the
’ammer and chisel when you got ’ome,”
said his landlady, staring. “I found them
’ere on the carpet.”
Horace started. Then that
part was true, too! “Oh, ah,” he said,
“I believe I did. I’d forgotten.
That reminds me. Haven’t you let the room
above to to an Oriental gentleman a
native, you know wears a green turban?”
“That I most certainly ’ave
not, Mr. Ventimore,” said Mrs. Rapkin,
with emphasis, “nor wouldn’t. Not
if his turbin was all the colours of the rainbow for
I don’t ’old with such. Why, there
was Rapkin’s own sister-in-law let her parlour
floor to a Horiental a Parsee he
was, or one o’ them Hafrican tribes and
reason she ’ad to repent of it, for all his
gold spectacles! Whatever made you fancy I should
let to a blackamoor?”
“Oh, I thought I saw somebody
about er answering that description,
and I wondered if ”
“Never in this ’ouse,
sir. Mrs. Steggars, next door but one, might let
to such, for all I can say to the contrary, not being
what you might call particular, and her rooms more
suitable to savage notions but I’ve
enough on my hands, Mr. Ventimore, attending
to you not keeping a girl to do the waiting,
as why should I while I’m well able to do it
better myself?”
As soon as she relieved him of her
presence, he examined the bottle: there was nothing
whatever inside it, which disposed of all the hopes
he had entertained from that quarter.
It was not difficult to account for
the visionary Oriental as an hallucination probably
inspired by the heavy fumes (for he now believed in
the fumes) which had doubtless resulted from the rapid
decomposition of some long-buried spices or similar
substances suddenly exposed to the air.
If any further explanation were needed,
the accidental blow to the back of his head, together
with the latent suggestion from the “Arabian
Nights,” would amply provide it.
So, having settled these points to
his entire satisfaction, he went to his office in
Great Cloister Street, which he now had entirely to
himself, and was soon engaged in drafting the specification
for Beevor on which he had been working when so fortunately
interrupted the day before by the Professor.
The work was more or less mechanical,
and could bring him no credit and little thanks, but
Horace had the happy faculty of doing thoroughly whatever
he undertook, and as he sat there by his wide-open
window he soon became entirely oblivious of all but
the task before him.
So much so that, even when the light
became obscured for a moment, as if by some large
and opaque body in passing, he did not look up immediately,
and, when he did, was surprised to find the only armchair
occupied by a portly person, who seemed to be trying
to recover his breath.
“I beg your pardon,” said
Ventimore; “I never heard you come in.”
His visitor could only wave his head
in courteous deprecation, under which there seemed
a suspicion of bewildered embarrassment. He was
a rosy-gilled, spotlessly clean, elderly gentleman,
with white whiskers; his eyes, just then slightly
protuberant, were shrewd, but genial; he had a wide,
jolly mouth and a double chin. He was dressed
like a man who is above disguising his prosperity;
he wore a large, pear-shaped pearl in his crimson
scarf, and had probably only lately discarded his summer
white hat and white waistcoat.
“My dear sir,” he began,
in a rich, throaty voice, as soon as he could speak;
“my dear sir, you must think this is a most unceremonious
way of ah! dropping in on you of
invading your privacy.”
“Not at all,” said Horace,
wondering whether he could possibly intend him to
understand that he had come in by the window.
“I’m afraid there was no one to show you
in my clerk is away just now.”
“No matter, sir, no matter.
I found my way up, as you perceive. The important,
I may say the essential, fact is that I am here.”
“Quite so,” said Horace,
“and may I ask what brought you?”
“What brought ”
The stranger’s eyes grew fish-like for the moment.
“Allow me, I I shall come to that in
good time. I am still a little as
you can see.” He glanced round the room.
“You are, I think, an architect, Mr. ah Mr.
um ?”
“Ventimore is my name,”
said Horace, “and I am an architect.”
“Ventimore, to be sure!”
he put his hand in his pocket and produced a card:
“Yes, it’s all quite correct: I see
I have the name here. And an architect, Mr. Ventimore,
so I I am given to understand, of immense
ability.”
“I’m afraid I can’t
claim to be that,” said Horace, “but I
may call myself fairly competent.”
“Competent? Why, of course
you’re competent. Do you suppose, sir, that
I, a practical business man, should come to any one
who was not competent?” he said, with
exactly the air of a man trying to convince himself against
his own judgment that he was acting with
the utmost prudence.
“Am I to understand that some
one has been good enough to recommend me to you?”
inquired Horace.
“Certainly, not, sir, certainly
not. I need no recommendation but my own judgment.
I ah have a tolerable acquaintance
with all that is going on in the art world, and I
have come to the conclusion, Mr. eh ah Ventimore,
I repeat, the deliberate and unassisted conclusion,
that you are the one man living who can do what I want.”
“Delighted to hear it,”
said Horace, genuinely gratified. “When
did you see any of my designs?”
“Never mind, sir. I don’t
decide without very good grounds. It doesn’t
take me long to make up my mind, and when my mind is
made up, I act, sir, I act. And, to come to the
point, I have a small commission unworthy,
I am quite aware, of your ah distinguished
talent which I should like to put in your
hands.”
“Is he going to ask me
to attend a sale for him?” thought Horace.
“I’m hanged if I do.”
“I’m rather busy at present,”
he said dubiously, “as you may see. I’m
not sure whether ”
“I’ll put the matter in
a nutshell, sir in a nutshell. My name
is Wackerbath, Samuel Wackerbath tolerably
well known, if I may say so, in City circles.”
Horace, of course, concealed the fact that his visitor’s
name and fame were unfamiliar to him. “I’ve
lately bought a few acres on the Hampshire border,
near the house I’m living in just now; and I’ve
been thinking as I was saying to a friend
only just now, as we were crossing Westminster Bridge I’ve
been thinking of building myself a little place there,
just a humble, unpretentious home, where I could run
down for the weekend and entertain a friend or two
in a quiet way, and perhaps live some part of the
year. Hitherto I’ve rented places as I
wanted ’em old family seats and ancestral
mansions and so forth: very nice in their way,
but I want to feel under a roof of my own. I want
to surround myself with the simple comforts, the ah unassuming
elegance of an English country home. And you’re
the man I feel more convinced of it with
every word you say you’re the man
to do the job in style ah to
execute the work as it should be done.”
Here was the long-wished-for client
at last! And it was satisfactory to feel that
he had arrived in the most ordinary and commonplace
course, for no one could look at Mr. Samuel Wackerbath
and believe for a moment that he was capable of floating
through an upper window; he was not in the least that
kind of person.
“I shall be happy to do my best,”
said Horace, with a calmness that surprised himself.
“Could you give me some idea of the amount you
are prepared to spend?”
“Well, I’m no Croesus though
I won’t say I’m a pauper precisely and,
as I remarked before, I prefer comfort to splendour.
I don’t think I should be justified in going
beyond well, say sixty thousand.”
“Sixty thousand!” exclaimed
Horace, who had expected about a tenth of that sum.
“Oh, not more than sixty thousand?
I see.”
“I mean, on the house itself,”
explained Mr. Wackerbath; “there will be outbuildings,
lodges, cottages, and so forth, and then some of the
rooms I should want specially decorated. Altogether,
before we are finished, it may work out at about a
hundred thousand. I take it that, with such a
margin, you could ah run me up
something that in a modest way would take the shine
out of I mean to say eclipse anything
in the adjoining counties?”
“I certainly think,” said
Horace, “that for such a sum as that I can undertake
that you shall have a home which will satisfy you.”
And he proceeded to put the usual questions as to
site, soil, available building materials, the accommodation
that would be required, and so on.
“You’re young, sir,”
said Mr. Wackerbath, at the end of the interview,
“but I perceive you are up to all the tricks
of the I should say, versed in the
minutiae of your profession. You would
like to run down and look at the ground, eh?
Well, that’s only reasonable; and my wife and
daughters will want to have their say in the
matter no getting on without pleasing the
ladies, hey? Now, let me see. To-morrow’s
Sunday. Why not come down by the 8.45 a.m. to
Lipsfield? I’ll have a trap, or a brougham
and pair, or something, waiting for you take
you over the ground myself, bring you back to lunch
with us at Oriel Court, and talk the whole thing thoroughly
over. Then we’ll send you up to town in
the evening, and you can start work the first thing
on Monday. That suit you? Very well, then.
We’ll expect you to-morrow.”
With this Mr. Wackerbath departed,
leaving Horace, as may be imagined, absolutely overwhelmed
by the suddenness and completeness of his good fortune.
He was no longer one of the unemployed: he had
work to do, and, better still, work that would interest
him, give him all the scope and opportunity he could
wish for. With a client who seemed tractable,
and to whom money was clearly no object, he might
carry out some of his most ambitious ideas.
Moreover, he would now be in a position
to speak to Sylvia’s father without fear of
a repulse. His commission on L60,000 would be
L3,000, and that on the decorations and other work
at least as much again probably more.
In a year he could marry without imprudence; in two
or three years he might be making a handsome income,
for he felt confident that, with such a start, he
would soon have as much work as he could undertake.
He was ashamed of himself for ever
having lost heart. What were the last few years
of weary waiting but probation and preparation for
this splendid chance, which had come just when he
really needed it, and in the most simple and natural
manner?
He loyally completed the work he had
promised to do for Beevor, who would have to dispense
with his assistance in future, and then he felt too
excited and restless to stay in the office, and, after
lunching at his club as usual, he promised himself
the pleasure of going to Cottesmore Gardens and telling
Sylvia his good news.
It was still early, and he walked
the whole way, as some vent for his high spirits,
enjoying everything with a new zest the
dappled grey and salmon sky before him, the amber,
russet, and yellow of the scanty foliage in Kensington
Gardens, the pungent scent of fallen chestnuts and
acorns and burning leaves, the blue-grey mist stealing
between the distant tree-trunks, and then the cheery
bustle and brilliancy of the High Street. Finally
came the joy of finding Sylvia all alone, and witnessing
her frank delight at what he had come to tell her,
of feeling her hands on his shoulders, and holding
her in his arms, as their lips met for the first time.
If on that Saturday afternoon there was a happier
man than Horace Ventimore, he would have done well
to dissemble his felicity, for fear of incurring the
jealousy of the high gods.
When Mrs. Futvoye returned, as she
did only too soon, to find her daughter and Horace
seated on the same sofa, she did not pretend to be
gratified. “This is taking a most unfair
advantage of what I was weak enough to say last night,
Mr. Ventimore,” she began. “I thought
I could have trusted you!”
“I shouldn’t have come
so soon,” he said, “if my position were
what it was only yesterday. But it’s changed
since then, and I venture to hope that even the Professor
won’t object now to our being regularly engaged.”
And he told her of the sudden alteration in his prospects.
“Well,” said Mrs. Futvoye,
“you had better speak to my husband about it.”
The Professor came in shortly afterwards,
and Horace immediately requested a few minutes’
conversation with him in the study, which was readily
granted.
The study to which the Professor led
the way was built out at the back of the house, and
crowded with Oriental curios of every age and kind;
the furniture had been made by Cairene cabinet-makers,
and along the cornices of the book-cases were texts
from the Koran, while every chair bore the Arabic
for “Welcome” in a gilded firework on its
leather back; the lamp was a perforated mosque lantern
with long pendent glass tubes like hyacinth glasses;
a mummy-case smiled from a corner with laboured bonhomie.
“Well,” began the Professor,
as soon as they were seated, “so I was not mistaken there
was something in the brass bottle after all, then?
Let’s have a look at it, whatever it is.”
For the moment Horace had almost forgotten
the bottle. “Oh!” he said, “I I
got it open; but there was nothing in it.”
“Just as I anticipated, sir,”
said the Professor. “I told you there couldn’t
be anything in a bottle of that description; it was
simply throwing money away to buy it.”
“I dare say it was, but I wished
to speak to you on a much more important matter;”
and Horace briefly explained his object.
“Dear me,” said the Professor,
rubbing up his hair irritably, “dear me!
I’d no idea of this no idea at all.
I was under the impression that you volunteered to
act as escort to my wife and daughter at St. Luc purely
out of good nature to relieve me from what to
a man of my habits in that extreme heat would
have been an arduous and distasteful duty.”
“I was not wholly unselfish,
I admit,” said Horace. “I fell in
love with your daughter, sir, the first day I met
her only I felt I had no right, as a poor
man with no prospects, to speak to her or you at that
time.”
“A very creditable feeling but
I’ve yet to learn why you should have overcome
it.”
So, for the third time, Ventimore
told the story of the sudden turn in his fortunes.
“I know this Mr. Samuel Wackerbath
by name,” said the Professor; “one of
the chief partners in the firm of Akers and Coverdale,
the great estate agents a most influential
man, if you can only succeed in satisfying him.”
“Oh, I don’t feel any
misgivings about that, sir,” said Horace.
“I mean to build him a house that will be beyond
his wildest expectations, and you see that in a year
I shall have earned several thousands, and I need
not say that I will make any settlement you think proper
when I marry ”
“When you are in possession
of those thousands,” remarked the Professor,
dryly, “it will be time enough to talk of marrying
and making settlements. Meanwhile, if you and
Sylvia choose to consider yourselves engaged, I won’t
object only I must insist on having your
promise that you won’t persuade her to marry
you without her mother’s and my consent.”
Ventimore gave this undertaking willingly
enough, and they returned to the drawing-room.
Mrs. Futvoye could hardly avoid asking Horace, in his
new character of fiance, to stay and dine, which
it need not be said he was only too delighted to do.
“There is one thing, my dear er Horace,”
said the Professor, solemnly, after dinner, when the
neat parlourmaid had left them at dessert, “one
thing on which I think it my duty to caution you.
If you are to justify the confidence we have shown
in sanctioning your engagement to Sylvia, you must
curb this propensity of yours to needless extravagance.”
“Papa!” cried Sylvia.
“What could have made you think Horace
extravagant?”
“Really,” said Horace,
“I shouldn’t have called myself particularly
so.”
“Nobody ever does call
himself particularly extravagant,” retorted the
Professor; “but I observed at St. Luc that you
habitually gave fifty centimes as a pourboire
when twopence, or even a penny, would have been handsome.
And no one with any regard for the value of money would
have given a guinea for a worthless brass vessel on
the bare chance that it might contain manuscripts,
which (as any one could have foreseen) it did not.”
“But it’s not a bad sort
of bottle, sir,” pleaded Horace. “If
you remember, you said yourself the shape was unusual.
Why shouldn’t it be worth all the money, and
more?”
“To a collector, perhaps,”
said the Professor, with his wonted amiability, “which
you are not. No, I can only call it a senseless
and reprehensible waste of money.”
“Well, the truth is,”
said Horace, “I bought it with some idea that
it might interest you.”
“Then you were mistaken, sir.
It does not interest me. Why should I be
interested in a metal jar which, for anything that
appears to the contrary, may have been cast the other
day at Birmingham?”
“But there is something,”
said Horace; “a seal or inscription of some
sort engraved on the cap. Didn’t I mention
it?”
“You said nothing about an inscription
before,” replied the Professor, with rather
more interest. “What is the character Arabic?
Persian? Kufic?”
“I really couldn’t say it’s
almost rubbed out queer little triangular
marks, something like birds’ footprints.”
“That sounds like Cuneiform,”
said the Professor, “which would seem to point
to a Phoenician origin. And, as I am acquainted
with no Oriental brass earlier than the ninth century
of our era, I should regard your description as, a
priori, distinctly unlikely. However, I should
certainly like to have an opportunity of examining
the bottle for myself some day.”
“Whenever you please, Professor. When can
you come?”
“Why, I’m so much occupied
all day that I can’t say for certain when I
can get up to your office again.”
“My own days will be fairly
full now,” said Horace; “and the thing’s
not at the office, but in my rooms at Vincent Square.
Why shouldn’t you all come and dine quietly
there some evening next week, and then you could examine
the inscription comfortably afterwards, you know, Professor,
and find out what it really is? Do say you will.”
He was eager to have the privilege of entertaining
Sylvia in his own rooms for the first time.
“No, no,” said the Professor;
“I see no reason why you should be troubled
with the entire family. I may drop in alone some
evening and take the luck of the pot, sir.”
“Thank you, papa,” put
in Sylvia; “but I should like to come
too, please, and hear what you think of Horace’s
bottle. And I’m dying to see his rooms.
I believe they’re fearfully luxurious.”
“I trust,” observed her
father, “that they are far indeed from answering
that description. If they did, I should consider
it a most unsatisfactory indication of Horace’s
character.”
“There’s nothing magnificent
about them, I assure you,” said Horace.
“Though it’s true I’ve had them done
up, and all that sort of thing, at my own expense but
quite simply. I couldn’t afford to spend
much on them. But do come and see them.
I must have a little dinner, to celebrate my good
fortune it will be so jolly if you’ll
all three come.”
“If we do come,” stipulated
the Professor, “it must be on the distinct understanding
that you don’t provide an elaborate banquet.
Plain, simple, wholesome food, well cooked, such as
we have had this evening, is all that is necessary.
More would be ostentatious.”
“My dear dad!”
protested Sylvia, in distress at this somewhat dictatorial
speech. “Surely you can leave all that to
Horace!”
“Horace, my dear, understands
that, in speaking as I did, I was simply treating
him as a potential member of my family.”
Here Sylvia made a private little grimace. “No
young man who contemplates marrying should allow himself
to launch into extravagance on the strength of prospects
which, for all he can tell,” said the Professor,
genially, “may prove fallacious. On the
contrary, if his affection is sincere, he will incur
as little expense as possible, put by every penny he
can save, rather than subject the girl he professes
to love to the ordeal of a long engagement. In
other words, the truest lover is the best economist.”
“I quite understand, sir,”
said Horace, good-temperedly; “it would be foolish
of me to attempt any ambitious form of entertainment especially
as my landlady, though an excellent plain cook, is
not exactly a cordon bleu. So you can
come to my modest board without misgivings.”
Before he left, a provisional date
for the dinner was fixed for an evening towards the
end of the next week, and Horace walked home, treading
on air rather than hard paving-stones, and “striking
the stars with his uplifted head.”
The next day he went down to Lipsfield
and made the acquaintance of the whole Wackerbath
family, who were all enthusiastic about the proposed
country house. The site was everything that the
most exacting architect could desire, and he came
back to town the same evening, having spent a pleasant
day and learnt enough of his client’s requirements,
and what was even more important those
of his client’s wife and daughters, to enable
him to begin work upon the sketch-plans the next morning.
He had not been long in his rooms
at Vincent Square, and was still agreeably engaged
in recalling the docility and ready appreciation with
which the Wackerbaths had received his suggestions
and rough sketches, their compliments and absolute
confidence in his skill, when he had a shock which
was as disagreeable as it was certainly unexpected.
For the wall before him parted like
a film, and through it stepped, smiling benignantly,
the green-robed figure of Fakrash-el-Aamash, the Jinnee.