When this change had been made Eve
seemed to throw off a burden. She met Hilliard
with something like the ease of manner, the frank
friendliness, which marked her best moods in their
earlier intercourse. At a restaurant dinner,
to which he persuaded her in company with Patty, she
was ready in cheerful talk, and an expedition to Versailles,
some days after, showed her radiant with the joy of
sunshine and movement. Hilliard could not but
wonder at the success of his prescription.
He did not visit the girls in their
new abode, and nothing more was said of his making
the acquaintance of Mdlle. Roche. Meetings
were appointed by post-card always in Patty’s
hand if the initiative were female; they took place
three or four times a week. As it was now necessary
for Eve to make payments on her own account, Hilliard
despatched to her by post a remittance in paper money,
and of this no word passed between them. Three
weeks later he again posted the same sum. On
the morrow they went by river to St. Cloud it
was always a trio, Hilliard never making any other
proposal and the steam-boat afforded Eve
an opportunity of speaking with her generous friend
apart.
“I don’t want this money,”
she said, giving him an envelope. “What
you sent before isn’t anything like finished.
There’s enough for a month more.”
“Keep it all the same. I won’t have
any pinching.”
“There’s nothing of the
kind. If I don’t have my way in this I shall
go back to London.”
He put the envelope in his pocket,
and stood silent, with eyes fixed on the river bank.
“How long do you intend us to stay?” asked
Eve.
“As long as you find pleasure here.”
“And what am I to do afterwards?”
He glanced at her.
“A holiday must come to an end,”
she added, trying, but without success, to meet his
look.
“I haven’t given any thought
to that,” said Hilliard, carelessly; “there’s
plenty of time. It will be fine weather for many
weeks yet.”
“But I have been thinking about it. I should
be crazy if I didn’t.”
“Tell me your thoughts, then.”
“Should you be satisfied if I got a place at
Birmingham?”
There again Was the note of self-abasement. It
irritated the listener.
“Why do you put it in that way?
There’s no question of what satisfies me, but
of what is good for you.”
“Then I think it had better be Birmingham.”
“Very well. It’s understood that
when we leave Paris we go there.”
A silence. Then Eve asked abruptly:
“You will go as well?”
“Yes, I shall go back.”
“And what becomes of your determination
to enjoy life as long as you can?”
“I’m carrying it out. I shall go
back satisfied, at all events.”
“And return to your old work?”
“I don’t know. It
depends on all sorts of things. We won’t
talk of it just yet.”
Patty approached, and Hilliard turned
to her with a bright, jesting face.
Midway in August, on his return home
one afternoon, the concierge let him know that two
English gentlemen had been inquiring for him; one of
them had left a card. With surprise and pleasure
Hilliard read the name of Robert Narramore, and beneath
it, written in pencil, an invitation to dine that
evening at a certain hotel in the Rue de Provence.
As usual, Narramore had neglected the duties of a
correspondent; this was the first announcement of
his intention to be in Paris. Who the second
man might be Hilliard could not conjecture.
He arrived at the hotel, and found
Narramore in company with a man of about the same
age, his name Birching, to Hilliard a stranger.
They had reached Paris this morning, and would remain
only for a day or two, as their purpose was towards
the Alps.
“I couldn’t stand this
heat,” remarked Narramore, who, in the very
lightest of tourist garbs, sprawled upon a divan, and
drank something iced out of a tall tumbler. “We
shouldn’t have stopped here at all if it hadn’t
been for you. The idea is that you should go on
with us.”
“Can’t impossible ”
“Why, what are you doing here besides
roasting?”
“Eating and drinking just what suits my digestion.”
“You look pretty fit a
jolly sight better than when we met last. All
the same, you will go on with us. We won’t
argue it now; it’s dinner-time. Wait till
afterwards.”
At table, Narramore mentioned that his friend Birching
was an architect.
“Just what this fellow ought
to have been,” he said, indicating Hilliard.
“Architecture is his hobby. I believe he
could sit down and draw to scale a front elevation
of any great cathedral in Europe couldn’t
you, Hilliard?”
Laughing the joke aside, Hilliard
looked with interest at Mr. Birching, and began to
talk with him. The three young men consumed a
good deal of wine, and after dinner strolled about
the streets, until Narramore’s fatigue and thirst
brought them to a pause at a cafe on the Boulevard
des Italiens. Birching presently moved
apart, to reach a newspaper, and remained out of earshot
while Narramore talked with his other friend.
“What’s going on?”
he began. “What are you doing here?
Seriously, I want you to go along with us. Birching
is a very good sort of chap, but just a trifle heavy takes
things rather solemnly for such hot weather.
Is it the expense? Hang it! You and I know
each other well enough, and, thanks to my old uncle ”
“Never mind that, old boy,”
interposed Hilliard. “How long are you
going for?”
“I can’t very well be
away for more than three weeks. The brass bedsteads,
you know ”
Hilliard agreed to join in the tour.
“That’s right: I’ve
been looking forward to it,” said his friend
heartily. “And now, haven’t you anything
to tell me? Are you alone here? Then, what
the deuce do you do with yourself?”
“Chiefly meditate.”
“You’re the rummest fellow
I ever knew. I’ve wanted to write to you,
but hang it! what with hot weather
and brass bedsteads, and this and that Now,
what are you going to do? Your money won’t
last for ever. Haven’t you any projects?
It was no good talking about it before you left Dudley.
I saw that. You were all but fit for a lunatic
asylum, and no wonder. But you’ve pulled
round, I see. Never saw you looking in such condition.
What is to be the next move?”
“I have no idea.”
“Well, now, I have.
This fellow Birching is partner with his brother,
in Brum, and they’re tolerably flourishing.
I’ve thought of you ever since I came to know
him; I think it was chiefly on your account that I
got thick with him though there was another
reason I’ll tell you about that some time.
Now, why shouldn’t you go into their office?
Could you manage to pay a small premium? I believe
I could square it with them. I haven’t
said anything. I never hurry like things
to ripen naturally. Suppose you saw your way,
in a year or two, to make only as much in an architect’s
office as you did in that machine-shop,
wouldn’t it be worth while?”
Hilliard mused. Already he had
a flush on his cheek, but his eyes sensibly brightened.
“Yes,” he said at length
with deliberation. “It would be worth while.”
“So I should think. Well,
wait till you’ve got to be a bit chummy with
Birching. I think you’ll suit each other.
Let him see that you do really know something about
architecture there’ll be plenty of
chances.”
Hilliard, still musing, repeated with
mechanical emphasis:
“Yes, it would be worth while.”
Then Narramore called to Birching, and the talk became
general again.
The next morning they drove about
Paris, all together. Narramore, though it was
his first visit to the city, declined to see anything
which demanded exertion, and the necessity for quenching
his thirst recurred with great frequency. Early
in the afternoon he proposed that they should leave
Paris that very evening.
“I want to see a mountain with
snow on it. We’re bound to travel by night,
and another day of this would settle me. Any objection,
Birching?”
The architect agreed, and time-tables
were consulted. Hilliard drove home to pack.
When this was finished, he sat down and wrote a letter:
“DEAR MISS MADELEY, My
friend Narramore is here, and has persuaded me to
go to Switzerland with him. I shall be away for
a week or two, and will let you hear from me in the
meantime. Narramore says I am looking vastly
better, and it is you I have to thank for this.
Without you, my attempts at ‘enjoying life’
would have been a poor business. We start in
an hour or two, Yours ever,
“MAURICE HILLIARD.”