A “HOARDING HUSTLING”
There was probably no family in Johannesburg
better known or better loved than that of Henry Pym,
the millionaire. Even Aunt Emily was something
of a favourite, in spite of her peculiarities, perhaps
a little for the sake of the delightful entertaining
that took place at Hill Court. Diana was adored
for her spirits, and Meryl was regarded somewhat as
a treasure Johannesburg had a right to be proud of.
Certain it was that if eventually she followed the
example of her American cousins and enriched an English
peerage with her wealth, she would hold her own amidst
the loveliest and most charming of England’s
peeresses. At the same time, though many perhaps
hoped that she would lead the way for the young South
African heiresses, not many had much belief that she
would lead it in the particular fashion they hoped;
for there was ever that uncertain elusive quality about
Meryl, that suggestion of the visionary and dreamer,
that betold a nature not very likely to follow in
any beaten path, or give overmuch value to the advantages
of a high alliance from a worldly point of view.
It was probable she would see things in quite a different
light to the majority and act for herself. Nevertheless
Johannesburg hoped for the best, and would have been
pleased to number a peeress among her daughters; if
it were only to show the world, for one thing, that
some of South Africa’s heiresses were every
whit as refined and clever and charming as America’s,
whatever may have been implied to the contrary by
scathing comments on Johannesburg’s millionaires
which have appeared from time to time in varied guise.
Mr. Pym himself, however, was not
among those who nursed such high hopes. When
he took the Piccadilly mansion the preceding spring,
and transferred his household to London for the season,
he meant to entertain lavishly, and give the girls
every possible opportunity to see the world of the
highest London society, knowing full well he could
do this because his friends numbered many among England’s
high names. That he should take them into the
wilds of Rhodesia instead had certainly been the very
last thought in his mind. On the other hand,
as we have said, it did not greatly perturb him.
He was inclined to think they might gain as much from
their pioneer pilgrimage as from a rush of continuous
gaiety. What exactly they had gained it
would have been difficult to gauge; nothing perhaps
that Aunt Emily would detect, fussing and exclaiming
round them upon their first arrival.
Diana, in a mood for merriment, and
possibly to cover a certain invisible shadow that
rested as a dim cloud upon the party, rouged her face
to a brilliant red with an alarmingly fiery nose end.
When she lifted her veil and confronted her aunt with
a perfectly unconcerned smile, that lady raised her
hands in horror and bemoaning. “O, my dear!...
my dear!... your complexion is ruined. How could
you be so careless? How could Meryl let you?...
It will take weeks of care to undo the mischief.”
“O, don’t make a fuss,
aunty! Complexions don’t matter tuppence-halfpenny
in Rhodesia. You surely didn’t imagine I
was going to carry a sun-umbrella about, did you?”
“But my dear child!...”
still in great distress. “It is a dreadful
thing to say, but you really look as if ... as if ...”
but there her courage forsook her, and she could not
name the dreadful possibility.
“As if I had been drinking!”
finished Diana cheerfully. “Yes, it’s
a little awkward, but perhaps if I don’t lurch
or look foolish ...” Then she encountered
the astonished eyes of a young footman, who had come
in with some small paraphernalia from the motor, and
unable to keep her face, turned hurriedly away.
“I’m rather afraid James
is going to have a fit,” she remarked to Meryl.
“I hope it won’t incapacitate him for the
rest of the day,” and she chuckled to herself.
Meryl had not yet raised her veil, and the anxiety
on Aunt Emily’s face, which she vainly strove
to hide, was delighting Diana more than ever.
“Better not take your veil off downstairs, Meryl.
Aunt Emily has had rather a shock from my face; I
don’t think she could bear any more.”
But the poor lady’s concern
was too pitiful to Meryl, and she threw her veil far
back, saying, “She is a wicked creature, aunty.
Her face only wants washing”; and then Aunt
Emily, reassured and comforted, joined in the general
laugh.
“But soap and water won’t
remedy all the defects,” Diana told her.
“I’ve acquired a violent dislike to houses
and rooms and tableclothes and clean hands, and all
the absurd paraphernalia of civilised existence.
Of course, I suppose I shall become rational again
in time, but at present I thought of having a tent
on the lawn and becoming a hermit.”
“How is everyone, Aunty?”
Meryl asked, as the poor lady seemed again somewhat
overcome. “Have you had hosts of visitors
while you were all alone?”
“Yes, people have been very
kind, and I have not had much time to be dull; and
everyone is delighted you are back again. Mr.
van Hert has called twice this week to know which
day you would arrive.”
Meryl’s lips contracted a little,
but Diana murmured, “Oho!... Dutch Willie!
ready to be on the doorstep, of course, in spite of
the hullabaloo you’ve been causing in the country,
unrestrained by my caustic criticisms.”
“I expect he thought he would
make hay while the sun shone,” Meryl told her,
“and air his pet theories while they were not
in danger of being stamped on.”
Then they both went upstairs, and
Meryl stood awhile at the wide window, looking over
the lovely garden; and though she still answered kindly
to her aunt’s flow of chatter, the good lady
having followed them to their room, her heart was
far away among distant kopjes, where mysterious grey
walls basked in the sunlight with the silence and the
patience of the ages.
For the next two or three days a continuous
stream of visitors passed up and down the drive, and
invitations poured in, and the girls found themselves
quickly in a very vortex of social life.
William van Hert did not come until
the third day, and then he chose as late an hour as
he well could, hoping to escape the throng. This
he succeeded in doing, but Diana he could not escape.
If it had been his hope to see Meryl alone he was
entirely frustrated. Diana’s small, practical
head perceived the wisdom of avoiding all haste in
what these two might have to say to each other, and
van Hert had to bow to her decision. Still further,
he had to undergo a small fire of chaff with an edge
to it, concerning some of his political doings and
sayings during their absence. But this from Diana
he could always take. Whether she knew it or
not, and whether she cared or not, at the time she
probably wielded a more direct influence over van Hert
than anyone else living. Certainly a more direct
influence than Meryl and her father, for whereas his
liking for them only tempered his rashness and indiscretions,
Diana aimed shafts straight at any of his rabid policies
in a manner that caused him secretly to reconsider.
Yet all his devotion was drawn to Meryl in her fairness
and quiet strength, and the hope of his heart was
still to win her.
As it happened, it was a very white-faced,
silent Meryl who sat on the deep verandah that afternoon
of his first call, and was content chiefly to listen
to Diana waging her usual war. That astute young
person had much to say, in her own slangy phraseology,
concerning certain utterances of the Dutch extremists,
openly derogatory to the English, and seemingly opposed
to any spirit of racial conciliation.
“Why don’t you try and
teach your people to play the game?” she asked
him, with a fine scorn. “Do you hear any
of our eminent men haranguing about ‘keeping
down the Dutch’ and ‘steam-rollering the
Dutch,’ and without any hesitation openly speaking
of themselves as a separate and superior race?
Whatever our men think, they are at least sportsmen
enough just now to keep it to themselves, for the sake
of the hopes and aims of the country. But you
apparently allow your following to say anything, and
either pretend not to hear or take no notice.
Listen to this, said by a predicant of the Dutch Reformed
Church....” She picked up a pamphlet, lying
near, and read aloud: “’We are a nation
with our own taal, traditions, and history. We
must now stand shoulder to shoulder and hand in hand
for the rights of our people.... May God
give our people strength to be unanimous!’
Unanimous in what?... Why, forcing the issue
of the language question according to their own ends,
and retrenching English teachers, and generally looking
upon themselves as the superior, chosen people whom
God meant to reign alone in South Africa.”
“My dear young lady,”
he remonstrated, “can you blame me for the unwise,
indiscreet utterances of every Dutch predicant who
opens his mouth?”
“Why, of course I do. You
are a leader, and you ought to protest openly against
any such utterance; but naturally, if you only consider
it unwise and indiscreet, you don’t regret the
purport of the words at all, merely their being uttered
at perhaps the wrong time. Well, that sort of
spirit isn’t ‘cricket,’ as we understand
it; and your attitude, in professing to hold out a
hand to the English section, while the other is making
secret signs to the Dutch, is what we call trying
to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds; and
that is an experiment being attempted by far too many
of your colleagues just now.”
“I am doing nothing of the kind,”
he repudiated indignantly. “I am standing
by my countrymen, that they may maintain the dignity
of their nation and not be trampled under foot by
the English.”
“O fiddlesticks! No one
wants to trample you under foot. We mostly want
to raise you. We want to broaden your outlook
and widen your views. But you know perfectly
well that that means a great united country, for the
back-veldters might learn at last where strength lay;
and then your precious taal, traditions, and history
will have to take their proper place in the general
scheme, and that will be on a plane of equality and
not blatantly on top.”
Again he protested with outspread
hands. “But we have a great country now
through union. You overlook the most important
fact.”
“We should have had,”
she corrected, “if the Bond in Cape Colony, and
Het Volk in the Transvaal, and the Unie in the
Orange River Colony had not chanced to be powerful
enough to work almost entirely in the interests of
a Dutch South Africa all the time they were waving
a flag, and cheering the colours, and delivering orations
on the beauty of Union and their love for the great
Mother Country, meaning the Liberal Government, who
mostly, it would seem, told them to do as they like
and please themselves and not make a fuss, so long
as they called it Union.”
He turned to Meryl with a deprecating
air, as if asking for her support, and she smiled
rather a tired smile and said, “It is only that
she has had to bottle it all up for a long time, as
you were not at hand. The next time you come
she will be ready to smile on you.”
“But I hope in the meantime
you do not endorse the slander?...”
“I have plenty of hope to balance
a certain amount of doubt; and if it is any pleasure
to you to know it, Diana never troubles to cross swords
with a man she has not considerable regard for.”
He flushed and looked gratified, and
Diana remarked coolly, “O, I’ve lots of
regard for you. I’m only sorry that a man
who might be brilliant is content to be mediocre because
of his prejudices. Now when we were in Rhodesia
...” and she paused, regarding him with the
bright, piquant eyes of a small bird.
“Well, what about Rhodesia?
You didn’t find much brilliance there, I imagine?
Brilliance does not thrive on bully beef and existence
in a mud hut.”
“Neither does ‘back-veldt’
obtuseness and narrow-minded bigotry and indiscreet
loquacity, Meinheer van Hert.”
He could not help laughing at the
droll way she made the statement. “Well,
what does thrive?”
“Silence,” thoughtfully.
“But that did not appeal to you?” with
significance.
“Not perhaps so much as the growl,” was
her enigmatic reply.
“And did you like this wild, wilderness land
of silence?”
She regarded him with half-grave,
half-mocking eyes. “Well, we understood
why you want to have a finger in Rhodesia’s
pie, you and your various active organisations working
in the interests of a Dutch South Africa. Any
child could see what such a country would be worth
to you. But you won’t succeed, my friend.
They’ve got a few strong men up there who believe
in ‘to-morrow’ more than ‘to-day,’
and are not afraid to forego present honours for future
progress. You won’t bribe them, and you
won’t hoodwink them, and you won’t get
them. They may not have much weight or power
or money to back them, but there’s something
in the atmosphere up there, something in the very air,
that would tell anyone with a grain of perspicacity
they could be dangerous if they liked. I shouldn’t
rouse the sleeping lion in Rhodesia if I were you,
Meinheer, you and your colleagues, with coercion or
anything else that way lie explosives.”
At that moment Mr. Pym joined them,
and the conversation at once became general, though
van Hert laughingly told his host he had been undergoing
a regular hoarding hustling. Then he told them
of a few happenings since they went away, and because
he was as glad as he could be to see them back again,
all his natural versatility came uppermost, and one
could easily perceive why he was a leader of men,
and likely to remain so.
“If only one could make him
see straight,” said Diana, when they spoke of
it afterwards, “instead of with the warped vision
of a one-idea’d fanatic.”
Later she tried to draw Meryl a little
concerning her attitude towards him, but Meryl would
only maintain an unrevealing silence, and Diana was
baffled and troubled. She felt vaguely that some
new thought was forming in Meryl’s mind, some
thought that held danger, but she could not grasp
in what direction it tended.
And van Hert smoked his pipe with
a very thoughtful air that evening, pondering deeply.
Meryl had neither encouraged him nor repulsed him,
and she seemed just the same and yet different; and
once more that half-formed dread came back to his
memory that through Rhodesia he might lose her.
And then he thought he would put the
uncertainty at an end quickly and learn his fate as
soon as possible; for he was treading on rather thin
ice in his public capacity just now, and a strong coalition
against him, which was rumoured in the air, might
place him in an unpleasant position.
On the other hand, Mr. Pym’s
support and Meryl’s charm might prove weapons
which would see him safely through, and help him to
mould his position anew on broader lines.
But for another three weeks Diana
successfully baffled his intention, influenced by
that vague fear she could not fathom, and a futile,
helpless desire to ward off some pending destiny.
And in the meantime she puzzled her small head daily
concerning the invulnerable silence and aloofness
of Peter Carew, and the blue shadows deepening under
Meryl’s eyes, though she strove hourly to be
ever her old self and show no sign.