The great carnival completely restored
Glory’s spirits. She laughed and cried
out constantly and lived from minute to minute like
a child. Everybody recognised her and nearly
everybody saluted her. Drake beamed with pride
and delight. He took her about the course, answered
her questions, punctuated her jests, and explained
everything, leaving Lord Robert to entertain his guests.
Who were “those dwellers in tents”?
They were the Guards’ Club, and the service
was also represented by artillery men, king’s
hussars, and a line regiment from Aldershot. This
was called “The Hill,” where jovial rascaldom,
usually swarmed, looking out for stray overcoats and
the lids of luncheon dishes left unprotected on carriages.
Yes, the pickpocket, the card-sharper, the “lumberer,”
the confidence man, the blarneying beggar, and the
fakir of every description laid his snares on this
holy spot. In fact, this is his Sanctuary and
he peddles under the eye of the police. “Holy
Land?” Ha, ha! “All the patriarchs
out of the Bible here?” Oh, the vociferous gentlemen
with patriarchal names in velveteen coats under the
banners and canvas sign-boardsMoses, Aaron,
and so forth? They were the “bookies,”
otherwise bookmakers, generally Jews and sometimes
Welshers.
“Here, come along, some of you
sportsmen! I ain’t made the price of my
railway fare, s’elp me!” “It’s
a dead cert, gents.” “Can’t
afford to buy thick ’uns at four quid apiece!”
“Five to one on the field!” “I lay
on the field!”
A “thick un?” Oh, that
was a sovereign, half a thick un half a sovereign,
twenty-five pounds a “pony,” five hundred
a “monkey,” flash notes were “stumers,”
and a bookmaker who couldn’t pay was “a
Welsher.” That? That was “the
great Brockton,” gentleman and tipster.
“Amusement enough!” Yes, niggers, harpists,
Christy Minstrels, strong men, acrobats, agile clowns
and girls on stilts, and all the ragamuffins from “the
Burrer,” bent on “making a bit.”
African Jungle? A shooting gallery with model
lions and bears. Fine Art Exhibition? A
picture of the hanging of recent murderers. Boxing
Ring? Yes, for womenthey strip to
the waist and fight like fiends. Then look at
the lady auctioneer selling brass sovereigns a penny
apiece.
“Buy one, gentlemen, and see
what they’re like, so as the ‘bookies’
can’t pawse ’em on ye unawares!”
“Food enough!” Yes, at
Margett’s, Patton’s, Hatton’s, and
“The Three Brooms,” as well as the barrows
for stewed eels, hard-boiled eggs, trotters, coker-nuts,
winkles, oysters, cockles, and all the luxuries of
the New Cut. Why were they calling that dog “Cookshop”?
Because he was pretty sure to go there in the end.
By this time they had ploughed over
some quarter of a mile of the hillside, fighting their
way among the carriages that stood six deep along
the rails and through a seething mass of ruffianism,
in a stifling atmosphere polluted by the smell of
ale and the reeking breath of tipsy people.
“Whoo! I feel like Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego rolled into one,” said
Glory.
“Let us go into the Paddock,”
said Drake, and they began to cross the race track.
“But wasn’t that somebody
preaching as we galloped down the hill?”
“Was it? I didn’t notice,”
and they struggled through.
It was fresh and cool under the trees,
and Glory thought it cheap even at ten shillings a
head to walk for ten minutes on green grass. Horses
waiting for their race were being walked about in clothes
with their names worked on the quarter sheets, and
breeders, trainers, jockeys, and clerks of the course
mingled with gentlemen in silk hats and ladies in
smart costumes.
Drake’s horse was a big bay
colt, very thin, almost gaunt, and with long, high-stepping
legs. The trainer was waiting for a last word
with his owner. He was cool and confident.
“Never better or fitter, Sir Francis, and one
of the grandest three-year-olds that ever looked through
a bridle. Improved wonderful since he got over
his dental troubles, and does justice to the contents
of his manger. Capital field, sir, but it’s
got to run up against summat smart to-day. Favourite,
sir? Pooh! A coach horse! Not stripping
welllight in the flank and tucked up.
But this colt fills the eye as a first-class one should.
Whatever beats him will win, sir, take my word for
that.”
And the jockey, standing by in his
black-and-white-jacket, wagged his head and said in
a cheery whisper: “Have what ye like on
’im, Sir Francis. Great horse, sir!
Got a Derby in ’im or I’m a Slowcome.”
Drake laughed at their predictions,
and Glory patted the creature while it beat its white
feet on the ground and the leather of its saddle squeaked.
The club stand from there? looked like a sea of foaming
laces, feathers, flowers, and sunshades. They
turned to go to it, passing first by the judge’s
box, whereof Drake explained the use, then through
the Jockey Club inclosure, which was full of peers,
peeresses, judges, members of Parliament, and other
turfites, and finally through the betting ring where
some hundreds of betting men of the superior class
proclaimed their calling in loud voices and loud clothes
and the gold letters on their betting books.
To one of these pencillers Drake said:
“What’s the figure for Ellan Vannin?”
“Ten to one, market price, sir.”
“I’ll take you in hundreds,”
said Drake, and they struggled through the throng.
Going up the stairs Glory said:
“But wasn’t the Archdeacon at your office
this morning? We saw him coming out of the square
with Mr. Golightly.”
“Oh, did you? How hot it is to-day!”
“Isn’t it? I feel
as if I should like to play Ariel in gossamerBut
wasn’t it?”
“You needn’t trouble about
that, Glory. It’s an old, story that religious
intolerance likes to throw the responsibility of its
acts on the civil government.”
“Then John Storm ”
“He is in no danger yetnone whatever.”
“Oh, how glorious!” They
had reached the balcony, and Glory was pretending
that the change in her voice and manner came of delight
at the sudden view. She stood for a moment spellbound,
and then leaned over the rail and looked through the
dazzling haze that was rising from the vast crowd
below. Not a foot of turf was to be seen for a
mile around, save where at the jockeys’ gate
a space was kept clear by the police. It was a
moving mass of humanity, and a low, indistinguishable
murmur was coming up from it such as the sea makes
on the headlands above.
The cloud had died off Glory’s
face and her eyes were sparkling. “What
a wonderfully happy world it must be, after all!”
she said.
Just then the standard was hoisted
over the royal stand to indicate that the Prince had
arrived. Immediately afterward there was a silent
movement of hats on the lawns below the boxes, and
then somebody down there began to sing God save the
Queen. The people on the Grand Stand took up the
chorus, then the people on the course joined in, then
the people on “The Hill,” until finally
the whole multitude sang the national hymn in a voice
that was like the voice of an ocean.
Glory’s eyes were now full of
tears, she was struggling with a desire to cry aloud,
and Drake, who was watching her smallest action, stood
before her to screen her from the glances of gorgeously
attired ladies who were giggling and looking through
lorgnettes. The fine flower of the aristocracy
was present in force, and the club stand was full of
the great ladies who took an interest in sport and
even kept studs of their own. Oriental potentates
were among them in suits of blue and gold, and the
French language was being spoken on all sides.
Glory attracted attention and Drake’s
face beamed with delight. An illustrious personage
asked to be introduced to her, and said he had seen
her first performance and predicted her extraordinary
success. She did not flinch. There was a
slight tremor, a scarcely perceptible twitching of
the lip, and then she bore her honours as if she had
been born to them. The Prince entertained a party
to luncheon, and Drake and Glory were invited to join
it. All the smart people were there, and they
looked like a horticultural exhibition of cream colour
and rose pink and gray. Glory kept watching the
great ones of the earth, and she found them very amusing.
“Well, what do you think?” said Drake.
“I think most people at the
Derby must have the wrong make-up on. That gentleman,
nowhe ought to be done up as a stable-boy.
And that lady in mauveshe’s a ballet
girl really, only ”
“Hush, for Heaven’s sake!”
But Glory whispered, “Let’s go round the
corner and laugh.”
She sat between Drake and a ponderous
gentleman with a great beard like a waterfall.
“What are the odds against the colt, Drake?”
Drake answered, and Glory recalled
herself from her studies and said, “Oh, yes,
what did you say it was?”
“A prohibitive pricefor you.”
said Drake.
“Nonsense! I’m going
to do a flutter on my own, you know, and plunge against
you.”
It was explained to her that only
bookmakers bet against horses, but the gentleman with
the beard volunteered to reverse positions, and take
Glory’s ten to one against Ellan Vannin.
“In what?”
“Ohh’min thick
’uns, of course.”
“But what is the meaning of this running after
strange gods?” said Drake.
“Never mind, sir! Out of
the mouths of babes and sucklings, you know ”
and then the bell rang for the race of the day, and
they scurried back to the Stand. The numbers
were going up and a line of fifty policemen abreast
were clearing the course. Some of the party had
come over from the coach, and Lord Robert was jotting
down in a notebook the particulars of betting commissions
for his fair companions.
“And am I to be honoured with a commission from
the Hurricane?” he asked.
“Yes; what’s the price for Ellan Vannin?”
“Come down to five to one, pretty lady.”
“Get me one to five that he’s going to
lose.”
“But what in the world are you
doing, Glory?” said Drake. His eyes were
dancing with delight.
“Running a race with that old
man in the box which can find a loser first.”
At that moment the horses were sent
out for the preliminary canter and parade before the
royal stand, and a tingling electrical atmosphere
seemed to come from somewhere and set every tongue
wagging. It seemed as if something unexpected
was about to occur, and countless eyes went up to
the place where Drake stood with Glory by his side.
He was outwardly calm, but with a proud flush under
his pallor; she was visibly excited, and could not
stand on the same spot for many seconds together.
By this time the noise made by the bookmakers in the
inclosure below was like that of ten thousand sea
fowl on a reef of rock, and Glory was trying to speak
above the deafening clangour.
“Silver and gold have I none, but if I hadwhat’s
that?”
A white flag had fallen as signal
for the start, there was a hollow roar from the starting
post, and people were shouting, “They’re
off!” Then there was a sudden silence, a dead
hushbelow, above, around, everywhere,
and all eyes, all glasses, all lorgnettes were turned
in the direction of the runners.
The horses got well away and raced
up the hill like cavalry charging in line; then at
the mile post the favourite drew to the front, and
the others went after him in an indistinguishable
mass. But the descent seemed not to his liking;
he twisted a good deal, and the jockey was seen sawing
the reins and almost hanging over the horse’s
head. When the racers swung round Tattenham Corner
and came up like mice in the distance, it was seen
that another horse had taken advantage of an opening
and was overhauling the favourite with a tremendous
rush. His colours were white and black.
It was Ellan Vannin. From that moment Drake’s
horse never relinquished his advantage, but came down
the straight like a great bird with his wings ceasing
to flap, passed the Stand amid great excitement, and
won handsomely by a length.
Then in the roar of delight that went
up from the crowd Glory, with her hand on Drake’s
shoulder, was seen to be crying, laughing, and cheering
at the same moment.
“But you’ve lost,” said Drake.
“Oh, bother that!” she
said, and when the jockey had slipped from his saddle,
and Drake had taken his horse into the weighing-room
and the “All right!” was shouted, she
started the cheering again and said she meant to make
a dead heat of it with Tennyson’s brook.
“But why did you bet against me?” said
Drake.
“You silly boy,” she answered
with a crow of happiness and gaiety, “didn’t
the gipsy tell me I should lose money to-day?
And how could I bet on your horse unless you lost
the race?”
Drake laughed merrily at her delicious
duplicity and could hardly resist an impulse to take
her in his arms and kiss her. Meantime his friends
were slapping him on the back and people were crushing
up to offer him congratulations. He turned to
take his horse into the Paddock, and Lord Robert took
Glory down after him. The trainer and jockey were
there, looking proud and happy, and Drake, with a
pale and triumphant face, was walking the great creature
about as if reluctant to part with it. It was
breathing heavily, and sweat stood in drops on its
throat, head, and ears.
“Oh, you beauty! How I
should love to ride you!” said Glory.
“But dare you?” said Drake.
“Dare I! Only give me the chance.”
“I will, by I will, or it
won’t be my fault.”
Somebody brought champagne and Glory
had to drink a bumper to “the best horse of
the century, bar none.” Then her glass was
filled afresh and she had to drink to the owner, “the
best fellow on earth, bar none,” and again she
was compelled to drink “to the best bit of history
ever made at Epsom, bar none.” With that
she was excused while the men drank at Drake’s
proposal “to the loveliest, liveliest, leeriest
little woman in the world, God bless her!” and
she hid her face in her hands and said with a merry
laugh:
“Tell me when it’s over, boys, and I’ll
come again.”
After Drake had despatched telegrams
and been bombarded by interviewers, he led the way
back to the coach on the Hill, and the company prepared
for their return. The sun had now gone, a thick
veil of stagnant clouds had gathered over it, the
sky looked sulky, and Glory’s head tad begun
to ache between the eyes. Rosa was to go home
by train in order to reach her office early, and Glory
half wished to accompany her. But an understudy
was to play her part that night and she had no excuse.
The coach wormed its way through the close pack of
vehicles at the top of the Hill and began to follow
the ebbing tide of humanity back to London.
“But what about my pair of gloves?”
“Oh, you’re a hard man,
reaping where you have not sowed and gathering ”
“There, then, we’re quits,”
said Drake, leaning over from the box seat and snatching
a kiss of her. It was now clear that he had been
drinking a good deal.