CHAPTER I
The train was half an hour late and
the drive from the station longer than he had supposed,
so that when he reached the house its inmates had
dispersed to dress for dinner and he was conducted
straight to his room. The curtains were drawn
in this asylum, the candles were lighted, the fire
was bright, and when the servant had quickly put out
his clothes the comfortable little place became suggestive seemed
to promise a pleasant house, a various party, talks,
acquaintances, affinities, to say nothing of very
good cheer. He was too occupied with his profession
to pay many country visits, but he had heard people
who had more time for them speak of establishments
where ‘they do you very well.’ He
foresaw that the proprietors of Stayes would do him
very well. In his bedroom at a country house
he always looked first at the books on the shelf and
the prints on the walls; he considered that these things
gave a sort of measure of the culture and even of
the character of his hosts. Though he had but
little time to devote to them on this occasion a cursory
inspection assured him that if the literature, as usual,
was mainly American and humorous the art consisted
neither of the water-colour studies of the children
nor of ‘goody’ engravings. The walls
were adorned with old-fashioned lithographs, principally
portraits of country gentlemen with high collars and
riding gloves: this suggested and
it was encouraging that the tradition of
portraiture was held in esteem. There was the
customary novel of Mr. Le Fanu, for the bedside; the
ideal reading in a country house for the hours after
midnight. Oliver Lyon could scarcely forbear beginning
it while he buttoned his shirt.
Perhaps that is why he not only found
every one assembled in the hall when he went down,
but perceived from the way the move to dinner was
instantly made that they had been waiting for him.
There was no delay, to introduce him to a lady, for
he went out in a group of unmatched men, without this
appendage. The men, straggling behind, sidled
and edged as usual at the door of the dining-room,
and the denouement of this little comedy was
that he came to his place last of all. This made
him think that he was in a sufficiently distinguished
company, for if he had been humiliated (which he was
not), he could not have consoled himself with the
reflection that such a fate was natural to an obscure,
struggling young artist. He could no longer think
of himself as very young, alas, and if his position
was not so brilliant as it ought to be he could no
longer justify it by calling it a struggle. He
was something of a celebrity and he was apparently
in a society of celebrities. This idea added
to the curiosity with which he looked up and down the
long table as he settled himself in his place.
It was a numerous party five
and twenty people; rather an odd occasion to have
proposed to him, as he thought. He would not be
surrounded by the quiet that ministers to good work;
however, it had never interfered with his work to
see the spectacle of human life before him in the
intervals. And though he did not know it, it was
never quiet at Stayes. When he was working well
he found himself in that happy state the
happiest of all for an artist in which things
in general contribute to the particular idea and fall
in with it, help it on and justify it, so that he
feels for the hour as if nothing in the world can happen
to him, even if it come in the guise of disaster or
suffering, that will not be an enhancement of his
subject. Moreover there was an exhilaration (he
had felt it before) in the rapid change of scene the
jump, in the dusk of the afternoon, from foggy London
and his familiar studio to a centre of festivity in
the middle of Hertfordshire and a drama half acted,
a drama of pretty women and noted men and wonderful
orchids in silver jars. He observed as a not
unimportant fact that one of the pretty women was
beside him: a gentleman sat on his other hand.
But he went into his neighbours little as yet:
he was busy looking out for Sir David, whom he had
never seen and about whom he naturally was curious.
Evidently, however, Sir David was
not at dinner, a circumstance sufficiently explained
by the other circumstance which constituted our friend’s
principal knowledge of him his being ninety
years of age. Oliver Lyon had looked forward
with great pleasure to the chance of painting a nonagenarian,
and though the old man’s absence from table was
something of a disappointment (it was an opportunity
the less to observe him before going to work), it
seemed a sign that he was rather a sacred and perhaps
therefore an impressive relic. Lyon looked at
his son with the greater interest wondered
whether the glazed bloom of his cheek had been transmitted
from Sir David. That would be jolly to paint,
in the old man the withered ruddiness of
a winter apple, especially if the eye were still alive
and the white hair carried out the frosty look.
Arthur Ashmore’s hair had a midsummer glow, but
Lyon was glad his commission had been to delineate
the father rather than the son, in spite of his never
having seen the one and of the other being seated
there before him now in the happy expansion of liberal
hospitality.
Arthur Ashmore was a fresh-coloured,
thick-necked English gentleman, but he was just not
a subject; he might have been a farmer and he might
have been a banker: you could scarcely paint
him in characters. His wife did not make up the
amount; she was a large, bright, negative woman, who
had the same air as her husband of being somehow tremendously
new; a sort of appearance of fresh varnish (Lyon could
scarcely tell whether it came from her complexion
or from her clothes), so that one felt she ought to
sit in a gilt frame, suggesting reference to a catalogue
or a price-list. It was as if she were already
rather a bad though expensive portrait, knocked off
by an eminent hand, and Lyon had no wish to copy that
work. The pretty woman on his right was engaged
with her neighbour and the gentleman on his other
side looked shrinking and scared, so that he had time
to lose himself in his favourite diversion of watching
face after face. This amusement gave him the
greatest pleasure he knew, and he often thought it
a mercy that the human mask did interest him and that
it was not less vivid than it was (sometimes it ran
its success in this line very close), since he was
to make his living by reproducing it. Even if
Arthur Ashmore would not be inspiring to paint (a certain
anxiety rose in him lest if he should make a hit with
her father-in-law Mrs. Arthur should take it into
her head that he had now proved himself worthy to
aborder her husband); even if he had looked
a little less like a page (fine as to print and margin)
without punctuation, he would still be a refreshing,
iridescent surface. But the gentleman four persons
off what was he? Would he be a subject,
or was his face only the legible door-plate of his
identity, burnished with punctual washing and shaving the
least thing that was decent that you would know him
by?
This face arrested Oliver Lyon:
it struck him at first as very handsome. The
gentleman might still be called young, and his features
were regular: he had a plentiful, fair moustache
that curled up at the ends, a brilliant, gallant,
almost adventurous air, and a big shining breastpin
in the middle of his shirt. He appeared a fine
satisfied soul, and Lyon perceived that wherever he
rested his friendly eye there fell an influence as
pleasant as the September sun as if he could
make grapes and pears or even human affection ripen
by looking at them. What was odd in him was a
certain mixture of the correct and the extravagant:
as if he were an adventurer imitating a gentleman with
rare perfection or a gentleman who had taken a fancy
to go about with hidden arms. He might have been
a dethroned prince or the war-correspondent of a newspaper:
he represented both enterprise and tradition, good
manners and bad taste. Lyon at length fell into
conversation with the lady beside him they
dispensed, as he had had to dispense at dinner-parties
before, with an introduction by asking who
this personage might be.
‘Oh, he’s Colonel Capadose,
don’t you know?’ Lyon didn’t know
and he asked for further information. His neighbour
had a sociable manner and evidently was accustomed
to quick transitions; she turned from her other interlocutor
with a methodical air, as a good cook lifts the cover
of the next saucepan. ’He has been a great
deal in India isn’t he rather celebrated?’
she inquired. Lyon confessed he had never heard
of him, and she went on, ’Well, perhaps he isn’t;
but he says he is, and if you think it, that’s
just the same, isn’t it?’
‘If you think it?’
‘I mean if he thinks it that’s
just as good, I suppose.’
‘Do you mean that he says that which is not?’
’Oh dear, no because
I never know. He is exceedingly clever and amusing quite
the cleverest person in the house, unless indeed you
are more so. But that I can’t tell yet,
can I? I only know about the people I know; I
think that’s celebrity enough!’
‘Enough for them?’
‘Oh, I see you’re clever.
Enough for me! But I have heard of you,’
the lady went on. ’I know your pictures;
I admire them. But I don’t think you look
like them.’
‘They are mostly portraits,’
Lyon said; ’and what I usually try for is not
my own resemblance.’
’I see what you mean. But
they have much more colour. And now you are going
to do some one here?’
’I have been invited to do Sir
David. I’m rather disappointed at not seeing
him this evening.’
’Oh, he goes to bed at some
unnatural hour eight o’clock or something
of that sort. You know he’s rather an old
mummy.’
‘An old mummy?’ Oliver Lyon repeated.
’I mean he wears half a dozen
waistcoats, and that sort of thing. He’s
always cold.’
’I have never seen him and never
seen any portrait or photograph of him,’ Lyon
said. ’I’m surprised at his never
having had anything done at their waiting
all these years.’
’Ah, that’s because he
was afraid, you know; it was a kind of superstition.
He was sure that if anything were done he would die
directly afterwards. He has only consented to-day.’
‘He’s ready to die then?’
‘Oh, now he’s so old he doesn’t
care.’
‘Well, I hope I shan’t
kill him,’ said Lyon. ’It was rather
unnatural in his son to send for me.’
‘Oh, they have nothing to gain everything
is theirs already!’ his companion rejoined,
as if she took this speech quite literally. Her
talkativeness was systematic she fraternised
as seriously as she might have played whist.
’They do as they like they fill the
house with people they have carte blanche.’
‘I see but there’s still the
title.’
‘Yes, but what is it?’
Our artist broke into laughter at
this, whereat his companion stared. Before he
had recovered himself she was scouring the plain with
her other neighbour. The gentleman on his left
at last risked an observation, and they had some fragmentary
talk. This personage played his part with difficulty:
he uttered a remark as a lady fires a pistol, looking
the other way. To catch the ball Lyon had to bend
his ear, and this movement led to his observing a
handsome creature who was seated on the same side,
beyond his interlocutor. Her profile was presented
to him and at first he was only struck with its beauty;
then it produced an impression still more agreeable a
sense of undimmed remembrance and intimate association.
He had not recognised her on the instant only because
he had so little expected to see her there; he had
not seen her anywhere for so long, and no news of
her ever came to him. She was often in his thoughts,
but she had passed out of his life. He thought
of her twice a week; that may be called often in relation
to a person one has not seen for twelve years.
The moment after he recognised her he felt how true
it was that it was only she who could look like that:
of the most charming head in the world (and this lady
had it) there could never be a replica. She was
leaning forward a little; she remained in profile,
apparently listening to some one on the other side
of her. She was listening, but she was also looking,
and after a moment Lyon followed the direction of
her eyes. They rested upon the gentleman who had
been described to him as Colonel Capadose rested,
as it appeared to him, with a kind of habitual, visible
complacency. This was not strange, for the Colonel
was unmistakably formed to attract the sympathetic
gaze of woman; but Lyon was slightly disappointed
that she could let him look at her so long
without giving him a glance. There was nothing
between them to-day and he had no rights, but she
must have known he was coming (it was of course not
such a tremendous event, but she could not have been
staying in the house without hearing of it), and it
was not natural that that should absolutely fail to
affect her.
She was looking at Colonel Capadose
as if she were in love with him a queer
accident for the proudest, most reserved of women.
But doubtless it was all right, if her husband liked
it or didn’t notice it: he had heard indefinitely,
years before, that she was married, and he took for
granted (as he had not heard that she had become a
widow) the presence of the happy man on whom she had
conferred what she had refused to him, the
poor art-student at Munich. Colonel Capadose appeared
to be aware of nothing, and this circumstance, incongruously
enough, rather irritated Lyon than gratified him.
Suddenly the lady turned her head, showing her full
face to our hero. He was so prepared with a greeting
that he instantly smiled, as a shaken jug overflows;
but she gave him no response, turned away again and
sank back in her chair. All that her face said
in that instant was, ‘You see I’m as handsome
as ever.’ To which he mentally subjoined,
‘Yes, and as much good it does me!’ He
asked the young man beside him if he knew who that
beautiful being was the fifth person beyond
him. The young man leaned forward, considered
and then said, ‘I think she’s Mrs. Capadose.’
‘Do you mean his wife that
fellow’s?’ And Lyon indicated the subject
of the information given him by his other neighbour.
‘Oh, is he Mr. Capadose?’
said the young man, who appeared very vague.
He admitted his vagueness and explained it by saying
that there were so many people and he had come only
the day before. What was definite to Lyon was
that Mrs. Capadose was in love with her husband; so
that he wished more than ever that he had married
her.
‘She’s very faithful,’
he found himself saying three minutes later to the
lady on his right. He added that he meant Mrs.
Capadose.
‘Ah, you know her then?’
‘I knew her once upon a time when
I was living abroad.’
‘Why then were you asking me about her husband?’
’Precisely for that reason.
She married after that I didn’t even
know her present name.’
‘How then do you know it now?’
‘This gentleman has just told me he
appears to know.’
‘I didn’t know he knew anything,’
said the lady, glancing forward.
‘I don’t think he knows anything but that.’
’Then you have found out for
yourself that she is faithful. What do you mean
by that?’
‘Ah, you mustn’t question
me I want to question you,’ Lyon said.
’How do you all like her here?’
‘You ask too much! I can only speak for
myself. I think she’s hard.’
‘That’s only because she’s honest
and straightforward.’
‘Do you mean I like people in proportion as
they deceive?’
‘I think we all do, so long
as we don’t find them out,’ Lyon said.
’And then there’s something in her face a
sort of Roman type, in spite of her having such an
English eye. In fact she’s English down
to the ground; but her complexion, her low forehead
and that beautiful close little wave in her dark hair
make her look like a glorified contadina.’
’Yes, and she always sticks
pins and daggers into her head, to increase that effect.
I must say I like her husband better: he is so
clever.’
’Well, when I knew her there
was no comparison that could injure her. She
was altogether the most delightful thing in Munich.’
‘In Munich?’
’Her people lived there; they
were not rich in pursuit of economy in
fact, and Munich was very cheap. Her father was
the younger son of some noble house; he had married
a second time and had a lot of little mouths to feed.
She was the child of the first wife and she didn’t
like her stepmother, but she was charming to her little
brothers and sisters. I once made a sketch of
her as Werther’s Charlotte, cutting bread and
butter while they clustered all round her. All
the artists in the place were in love with her but
she wouldn’t look at ‘the likes’
of us. She was too proud I grant you
that; but she wasn’t stuck up nor young ladyish;
she was simple and frank and kind about it. She
used to remind me of Thackeray’s Ethel Newcome.
She told me she must marry well: it was the one
thing she could do for her family. I suppose you
would say that she has married well.’
‘She told you?’ smiled Lyon’s
neighbour.
’Oh, of course I proposed to
her too. But she evidently thinks so herself!’
he added.
When the ladies left the table the
host as usual bade the gentlemen draw together, so
that Lyon found himself opposite to Colonel Capadose.
The conversation was mainly about the ‘run,’
for it had apparently been a great day in the hunting-field.
Most of the gentlemen communicated their adventures
and opinions, but Colonel Capadose’s pleasant
voice was the most audible in the chorus. It
was a bright and fresh but masculine organ, just such
a voice as, to Lyon’s sense, such a ‘fine
man’ ought to have had. It appeared from
his remarks that he was a very straight rider, which
was also very much what Lyon would have expected.
Not that he swaggered, for his allusions were very
quietly and casually made; but they were all too dangerous
experiments and close shaves. Lyon perceived
after a little that the attention paid by the company
to the Colonel’s remarks was not in direct relation
to the interest they seemed to offer; the result of
which was that the speaker, who noticed that he
at least was listening, began to treat him as his
particular auditor and to fix his eyes on him as he
talked. Lyon had nothing to do but to look sympathetic
and assent Colonel Capadose appeared to
take so much sympathy and assent for granted.
A neighbouring squire had had an accident; he had
come a cropper in an awkward place just
at the finish with consequences that looked
grave. He had struck his head; he remained insensible,
up to the last accounts: there had evidently been
concussion of the brain. There was some exchange
of views as to his recovery how soon it
would take place or whether it would take place at
all; which led the Colonel to confide to our artist
across the table that he shouldn’t despair
of a fellow even if he didn’t come round for
weeks for weeks and weeks and weeks for
months, almost for years. He leaned forward;
Lyon leaned forward to listen, and Colonel Capadose
mentioned that he knew from personal experience that
there was really no limit to the time one might lie
unconscious without being any the worse for it.
It had happened to him in Ireland, years before; he
had been pitched out of a dogcart, had turned a sheer
somersault and landed on his head. They thought
he was dead, but he wasn’t; they carried him
first to the nearest cabin, where he lay for some days
with the pigs, and then to an inn in a neighbouring
town it was a near thing they didn’t
put him under ground. He had been completely insensible without
a ray of recognition of any human thing for
three whole months; had not a glimmer of consciousness
of any blessed thing. It was touch and go to
that degree that they couldn’t come near him,
they couldn’t feed him, they could scarcely
look at him. Then one day he had opened his eyes as
fit as a flea!
‘I give you my honour it had
done me good it rested my brain.’
He appeared to intimate that with an intelligence
so active as his these periods of repose were providential.
Lyon thought his story very striking, but he wanted
to ask him whether he had not shammed a little not
in relating it, but in keeping so quiet. He hesitated
however, in time, to imply a doubt he was
so impressed with the tone in which Colonel Capadose
said that it was the turn of a hair that they hadn’t
buried him alive. That had happened to a friend
of his in India a fellow who was supposed
to have died of jungle fever they clapped
him into a coffin. He was going on to recite the
further fate of this unfortunate gentleman when Mr.
Ashmore made a move and every one got up to adjourn
to the drawing-room. Lyon noticed that by this
time no one was heeding what his new friend said to
him. They came round on either side of the table
and met while the gentlemen dawdled before going out.
‘And do you mean that your friend
was literally buried alive?’ asked Lyon, in
some suspense.
Colonel Capadose looked at him a moment,
as if he had already lost the thread of the conversation.
Then his face brightened and when it brightened
it was doubly handsome. ’Upon my soul he
was chucked into the ground!’
‘And was he left there?’
‘He was left there till I came and hauled him
out.’
‘You came?’
’I dreamed about him it’s
the most extraordinary story: I heard him calling
to me in the night. I took upon myself to dig
him up. You know there are people in India a
kind of beastly race, the ghouls who violate
graves. I had a sort of presentiment that they
would get at him first. I rode straight, I can
tell you; and, by Jove, a couple of them had just
broken ground! Crack crack, from a
couple of barrels, and they showed me their heels,
as you may believe. Would you credit that I took
him out myself? The air brought him to and he
was none the worse. He has got his pension he
came home the other day; he would do anything for
me.’
‘He called to you in the night?’ said
Lyon, much startled.
’That’s the interesting
point. Now what was it? It wasn’t
his ghost, because he wasn’t dead. It wasn’t
himself, because he couldn’t. It was something
or other! You see India’s a strange country there’s
an element of the mysterious: the air is full
of things you can’t explain.’
They passed out of the dining-room,
and Colonel Capadose, who went among the first, was
separated from Lyon; but a minute later, before they
reached the drawing-room, he joined him again.
’Ashmore tells me who you are. Of course
I have often heard of you I’m very
glad to make your acquaintance; my wife used to know
you.’
’I’m glad she remembers
me. I recognised her at dinner and I was afraid
she didn’t.’
‘Ah, I daresay she was ashamed,’
said the Colonel, with indulgent humour.
‘Ashamed of me?’ Lyon replied, in the
same key.
‘Wasn’t there something about a picture?
Yes; you painted her portrait.’
‘Many times,’ said the
artist; ’and she may very well have been ashamed
of what I made of her.’
’Well, I wasn’t, my dear
sir; it was the sight of that picture, which you were
so good as to present to her, that made me first fall
in love with her.’
‘Do you mean that one with the
children cutting bread and butter?’
’Bread and butter? Bless
me, no vine leaves and a leopard skin a
kind of Bacchante.’
‘Ah, yes,’ said Lyon;
’I remember. It was the first decent portrait
I painted. I should be curious to see it to-day.’
‘Don’t ask her to show
it to you she’ll be mortified!’
the Colonel exclaimed.
‘Mortified?’
‘We parted with it in
the most disinterested manner,’ he laughed.
’An old friend of my wife’s her
family had known him intimately when they lived in
Germany took the most extraordinary fancy
to it: the Grand Duke of Silberstadt-Schreckenstein,
don’t you know? He came out to Bombay while
we were there and he spotted your picture (you know
he’s one of the greatest collectors in Europe),
and made such eyes at it that, upon my word it
happened to be his birthday she told him
he might have it, to get rid of him. He was perfectly
enchanted but we miss the picture.’
‘It is very good of you,’
Lyon said. ’If it’s in a great collection a
work of my incompetent youth I am infinitely
honoured.’
’Oh, he has got it in one of
his castles; I don’t know which you
know he has so many. He sent us, before he left
India to return the compliment a
magnificent old vase.’
‘That was more than the thing was worth,’
Lyon remarked.
Colonel Capadose gave no heed to this
observation; he seemed to be thinking of something.
After a moment he said, ’If you’ll come
and see us in town she’ll show you the vase.’
And as they passed into the drawing-room he gave the
artist a friendly propulsion. ’Go and speak
to her; there she is she’ll be delighted.’
Oliver Lyon took but a few steps into
the wide saloon; he stood there a moment looking at
the bright composition of the lamplit group of fair
women, the single figures, the great setting of white
and gold, the panels of old damask, in the centre
of each of which was a single celebrated picture.
There was a subdued lustre in the scene and an air
as of the shining trains of dresses tumbled over the
carpet. At the furthest end of the room sat Mrs.
Capadose, rather isolated; she was on a small sofa,
with an empty place beside her. Lyon could not
flatter himself she had been keeping it for him; her
failure to respond to his recognition at table contradicted
that, but he felt an extreme desire to go and occupy
it. Moreover he had her husband’s sanction;
so he crossed the room, stepping over the tails of
gowns, and stood before his old friend.
‘I hope you don’t mean to repudiate me,’
he said.
She looked up at him with an expression
of unalloyed pleasure. ’I am so glad to
see you. I was delighted when I heard you were
coming.’
‘I tried to get a smile from
you at dinner but I couldn’t.’
’I didn’t see I
didn’t understand. Besides, I hate smirking
and telegraphing. Also I’m very shy you
won’t have forgotten that. Now we can communicate
comfortably.’ And she made a better place
for him on the little sofa. He sat down and they
had a talk that he enjoyed, while the reason for which
he used to like her so came back to him, as well as
a good deal of the very same old liking. She
was still the least spoiled beauty he had ever seen,
with an absence of coquetry or any insinuating art
that seemed almost like an omitted faculty; there were
moments when she struck her interlocutor as some fine
creature from an asylum a surprising deaf-mute
or one of the operative blind. Her noble pagan
head gave her privileges that she neglected, and when
people were admiring her brow she was wondering whether
there were a good fire in her bedroom. She was
simple, kind and good; inexpressive but not inhuman
or stupid. Now and again she dropped something
that had a sifted, selected air the sound
of an impression at first hand. She had no imagination,
but she had added up her feelings, some of her reflections,
about life. Lyon talked of the old days in Munich,
reminded her of incidents, pleasures and pains, asked
her about her father and the others; and she told
him in return that she was so impressed with his own
fame, his brilliant position in the world, that she
had not felt very sure he would speak to her or that
his little sign at table was meant for her. This
was plainly a perfectly truthful speech she
was incapable of any other and he was affected
by such humility on the part of a woman whose grand
line was unique. Her father was dead; one of her
brothers was in the navy and the other on a ranch
in America; two of her sisters were married and the
youngest was just coming out and very pretty.
She didn’t mention her stepmother. She
asked him about his own personal history and he said
that the principal thing that had happened to him was
that he had never married.
‘Oh, you ought to,’ she answered.
‘It’s the best thing.’
‘I like that from you!’ he
returned.
‘Why not from me? I am very happy.’
’That’s just why I can’t
be. It’s cruel of you to praise your state.
But I have had the pleasure of making the acquaintance
of your husband. We had a good bit of talk in
the other room.’
‘You must know him better you
must know him really well,’ said Mrs. Capadose.
’I am sure that the further
you go the more you find. But he makes a fine
show, too.’
She rested her good gray eyes on Lyon.
‘Don’t you think he’s handsome?’
‘Handsome and clever and entertaining.
You see I’m generous.’
‘Yes; you must know him well,’ Mrs. Capadose
repeated.
‘He has seen a great deal of life,’ said
her companion.
’Yes, we have been in so many
places. You must see my little girl. She
is nine years old she’s too beautiful.’
‘You must bring her to my studio some day I
should like to paint her.’
‘Ah, don’t speak of that,’
said Mrs. Capadose. ’It reminds me of something
so distressing.’
’I hope you don’t mean
when you used to sit to me though
that may well have bored you.’
’It’s not what you did it’s
what we have done. It’s a confession I must
make it’s a weight on my mind!
I mean about that beautiful picture you gave me it
used to be so much admired. When you come to see
me in London (I count on your doing that very soon)
I shall see you looking all round. I can’t
tell you I keep it in my own room because I love it
so, for the simple reason ’
And she paused a moment.
‘Because you can’t tell wicked lies,’
said Lyon.
‘No, I can’t. So before you ask for
it ’
‘Oh, I know you parted with
it the blow has already fallen,’ Lyon
interrupted.
’Ah then, you have heard?
I was sure you would! But do you know what we
got for it? Two hundred pounds.’
‘You might have got much more,’ said Lyon,
smiling.
’That seemed a great deal at
the time. We were in want of the money it
was a good while ago, when we first married. Our
means were very small then, but fortunately that has
changed rather for the better. We had the chance;
it really seemed a big sum, and I am afraid we jumped
at it. My husband had expectations which have
partly come into effect, so that now we do well enough.
But meanwhile the picture went.’
’Fortunately the original remained.
But do you mean that two hundred was the value of
the vase?’ Lyon asked.
‘Of the vase?’
‘The beautiful old Indian vase the
Grand Duke’s offering.’
‘The Grand Duke?’
’What’s his name? Silberstadt-Schreckenstein.
Your husband mentioned the transaction.’
‘Oh, my husband,’ said
Mrs. Capadose; and Lyon saw that she coloured a little.
Not to add to her embarrassment, but
to clear up the ambiguity, which he perceived the
next moment he had better have left alone, he went
on: ‘He tells me it’s now in his
collection.’
’In the Grand Duke’s?
Ah, you know its reputation? I believe it contains
treasures.’ She was bewildered, but she
recovered herself, and Lyon made the mental reflection
that for some reason which would seem good when he
knew it the husband and the wife had prepared different
versions of the same incident. It was true that
he did not exactly see Everina Brant preparing a version;
that was not her line of old, and indeed it was not
in her eyes to-day. At any rate they both had
the matter too much on their conscience. He changed
the subject, said Mrs. Capadose must really bring
the little girl. He sat with her some time longer
and thought perhaps it was only a fancy that
she was rather absent, as if she were annoyed at their
having been even for a moment at cross-purposes.
This did not prevent him from saying to her at the
last, just as the ladies began to gather themselves
together to go to bed: ’You seem much impressed,
from what you say, with my renown and my prosperity,
and you are so good as greatly to exaggerate them.
Would you have married me if you had known that I
was destined to success?’
‘I did know it.’
‘Well, I didn’t’
‘You were too modest.’
‘You didn’t think so when I proposed to
you.’
’Well, if I had married you
I couldn’t have married him and
he’s so nice,’ Mrs. Capadose said.
Lyon knew she thought it he had learned
that at dinner but it vexed him a little
to hear her say it. The gentleman designated
by the pronoun came up, amid the prolonged handshaking
for good-night, and Mrs. Capadose remarked to her
husband as she turned away, ‘He wants to paint
Amy.’
‘Ah, she’s a charming
child, a most interesting little creature,’ the
Colonel said to Lyon. ‘She does the most
remarkable things.’
Mrs. Capadose stopped, in the rustling
procession that followed the hostess out of the room.
‘Don’t tell him, please don’t,’
she said.
‘Don’t tell him what?’
‘Why, what she does. Let him find out for
himself.’ And she passed on.
‘She thinks I swagger about
the child that I bore people,’ said
the Colonel. ‘I hope you smoke.’
He appeared ten minutes later in the smoking-room,
in a brilliant equipment, a suit of crimson foulard
covered with little white spots. He gratified
Lyon’s eye, made him feel that the modern age
has its splendour too and its opportunities for costume.
If his wife was an antique he was a fine specimen of
the period of colour: he might have passed for
a Venetian of the sixteenth century. They were
a remarkable couple, Lyon thought, and as he looked
at the Colonel standing in bright erectness before
the chimney-piece while he emitted great smoke-puffs
he did not wonder that Everina could not regret she
had not married him. All the gentlemen
collected at Stayes were not smokers and some of them
had gone to bed. Colonel Capadose remarked that
there probably would be a smallish muster, they had
had such a hard day’s work. That was the
worst of a hunting-house the men were so
sleepy after dinner; it was devilish stupid for the
ladies, even for those who hunted themselves for
women were so extraordinary, they never showed it.
But most fellows revived under the stimulating influences
of the smoking-room, and some of them, in this confidence,
would turn up yet. Some of the grounds of their
confidence not all of them might
have been seen in a cluster of glasses and bottles
on a table near the fire, which made the great salver
and its contents twinkle sociably. The others
lurked as yet in various improper corners of the minds
of the most loquacious. Lyon was alone with Colonel
Capadose for some moments before their companions,
in varied eccentricities of uniform, straggled in,
and he perceived that this wonderful man had but little
loss of vital tissue to repair.
They talked about the house, Lyon
having noticed an oddity of construction in the smoking-room;
and the Colonel explained that it consisted of two
distinct parts, one of which was of very great antiquity.
They were two complete houses in short, the old one
and the new, each of great extent and each very fine
in its way. The two formed together an enormous
structure Lyon must make a point of going
all over it. The modern portion had been erected
by the old man when he bought the property; oh yes,
he had bought it, forty years before it
hadn’t been in the family: there hadn’t
been any particular family for it to be in. He
had had the good taste not to spoil the original house he
had not touched it beyond what was just necessary
for joining it on. It was very curious indeed a
most irregular, rambling, mysterious pile, where they
every now and then discovered a walled-up room or a
secret staircase. To his mind it was essentially
gloomy, however; even the modern additions, splendid
as they were, failed to make it cheerful. There
was some story about a skeleton having been found years
before, during some repairs, under a stone slab of
the floor of one of the passages; but the family were
rather shy of its being talked about. The place
they were in was of course in the old part, which contained
after all some of the best rooms: he had an idea
it had been the primitive kitchen, half modernised
at some intermediate period.
‘My room is in the old part
too then I’m very glad,’ Lyon
said. ’It’s very comfortable and
contains all the latest conveniences, but I observed
the depth of the recess of the door and the evident
antiquity of the corridor and staircase the
first short one after I came out.
That panelled corridor is admirable; it looks as if
it stretched away, in its brown dimness (the lamps
didn’t seem to me to make much impression on
it), for half a mile.’
‘Oh, don’t go to the end
of it!’ exclaimed the Colonel, smiling.
‘Does it lead to the haunted room?’ Lyon
asked.
His companion looked at him a moment. ‘Ah,
you know about that?’
’No, I don’t speak from
knowledge, only from hope. I have never had any
luck I have never stayed in a dangerous
house. The places I go to are always as safe
as Charing Cross. I want to see whatever
there is, the regular thing. Is there a ghost
here?’
‘Of course there is a rattling good
one.’
‘And have you seen him?’
’Oh, don’t ask me what
I’ve seen I should tax your
credulity. I don’t like to talk of these
things. But there are two or three as bad that
is, as good! rooms as you’ll find
anywhere.’
‘Do you mean in my corridor?’ Lyon asked.
’I believe the worst is at the
far end. But you would be ill-advised to sleep
there.’
‘Ill-advised?’
’Until you’ve finished
your job. You’ll get letters of importance
the next morning, and you’ll take the 10.20.’
‘Do you mean I will invent a pretext for running
away?’
’Unless you are braver than
almost any one has ever been. They don’t
often put people to sleep there, but sometimes the
house is so crowded that they have to. The same
thing always happens ill-concealed agitation
at the breakfast-table and letters of the greatest
importance. Of course it’s a bachelor’s
room, and my wife and I are at the other end of the
house. But we saw the comedy three days ago the
day after we got here. A young fellow had been
put there I forget his name the
house was so full; and the usual consequence followed.
Letters at breakfast an awfully queer face an
urgent call to town so very sorry his visit
was cut short. Ashmore and his wife looked at
each other, and off the poor devil went.’
‘Ah, that wouldn’t suit
me; I must paint my picture,’ said Lyon.
’But do they mind your speaking of it?
Some people who have a good ghost are very proud of
it, you know.’
What answer Colonel Capadose was on
the point of making to this inquiry our hero was not
to learn, for at that moment their host had walked
into the room accompanied by three or four gentlemen.
Lyon was conscious that he was partly answered by
the Colonel’s not going on with the subject.
This however on the other hand was rendered natural
by the fact that one of the gentlemen appealed to
him for an opinion on a point under discussion, something
to do with the everlasting history of the day’s
run. To Lyon himself Mr. Ashmore began to talk,
expressing his regret at having had so little direct
conversation with him as yet. The topic that
suggested itself was naturally that most closely connected
with the motive of the artist’s visit. Lyon
remarked that it was a great disadvantage to him not
to have had some preliminary acquaintance with Sir
David in most cases he found that so important.
But the present sitter was so far advanced in life
that there was doubtless no time to lose. ‘Oh,
I can tell you all about him,’ said Mr. Ashmore;
and for half an hour he told him a good deal.
It was very interesting as well as very eulogistic,
and Lyon could see that he was a very nice old man,
to have endeared himself so to a son who was evidently
not a gusher. At last he got up he
said he must go to bed if he wished to be fresh for
his work in the morning. To which his host replied,
’Then you must take your candle; the lights
are out; I don’t keep my servants up.’
In a moment Lyon had his glimmering
taper in hand, and as he was leaving the room (he
did not disturb the others with a good-night; they
were absorbed in the lemon-squeezer and the soda-water
cork) he remembered other occasions on which he had
made his way to bed alone through a darkened country-house;
such occasions had not been rare, for he was almost
always the first to leave the smoking-room. If
he had not stayed in houses conspicuously haunted
he had, none the less (having the artistic temperament),
sometimes found the great black halls and staircases
rather ‘creepy’: there had been often
a sinister effect, to his imagination, in the sound
of his tread in the long passages or the way the winter
moon peeped into tall windows on landings. It
occurred to him that if houses without supernatural
pretensions could look so wicked at night, the old
corridors of Stayes would certainly give him a sensation.
He didn’t know whether the proprietors were sensitive;
very often, as he had said to Colonel Capadose, people
enjoyed the impeachment. What determined him
to speak, with a certain sense of the risk, was the
impression that the Colonel told queer stories.
As he had his hand on the door he said to Arthur Ashmore,
’I hope I shan’t meet any ghosts.’
‘Any ghosts?’
‘You ought to have some in this fine
old part.’
‘We do our best, but que
voulez-vous?’ said Mr. Ashmore. ’I
don’t think they like the hot-water pipes.’
’They remind them too much of
their own climate? But haven’t you a haunted
room at the end of my passage?’
‘Oh, there are stories we try to
keep them up.’
‘I should like very much to sleep there,’
Lyon said.
‘Well, you can move there to-morrow if you like.’
‘Perhaps I had better wait till I have done
my work.’
’Very good; but you won’t
work there, you know. My father will sit to you
in his own apartments.’
’Oh, it isn’t that; it’s
the fear of running away, like that gentleman three
days ago.’
‘Three days ago? What gentleman?’
Mr. Ashmore asked.
’The one who got urgent letters
at breakfast and fled by the 10.20. Did he stand
more than one night?’
’I don’t know what you
are talking about. There was no such gentleman three
days ago.’
‘Ah, so much the better,’
said Lyon, nodding good-night and departing.
He took his course, as he remembered it, with his wavering
candle, and, though he encountered a great many gruesome
objects, safely reached the passage out of which his
room opened. In the complete darkness it seemed
to stretch away still further, but he followed it,
for the curiosity of the thing, to the end. He
passed several doors with the name of the room painted
upon them, but he found nothing else. He was tempted
to try the last door to look into the room
of evil fame; but he reflected that this would be
indiscreet, since Colonel Capadose handled the brush as
a raconteur with such freedom.
There might be a ghost and there might not; but the
Colonel himself, he inclined to think, was the most
mystifying figure in the house.
CHAPTER II
Lyon found Sir David Ashmore a capital
subject and a very comfortable sitter into the bargain.
Moreover he was a very agreeable old man, tremendously
puckered but not in the least dim; and he wore exactly
the furred dressing-gown that Lyon would have chosen.
He was proud of his age but ashamed of his infirmities,
which however he greatly exaggerated and which did
not prevent him from sitting there as submissive as
if portraiture in oils had been a branch of surgery.
He demolished the legend of his having feared the
operation would be fatal, giving an explanation which
pleased our friend much better. He held that a
gentleman should be painted but once in his life that
it was eager and fatuous to be hung up all over the
place. That was good for women, who made a pretty
wall-pattern; but the male face didn’t lend itself
to decorative repetition. The proper time for
the likeness was at the last, when the whole man was
there you got the totality of his experience.
Lyon could not reply that that period was not a real
compendium you had to allow so for leakage;
for there had been no crack in Sir David’s crystallisation.
He spoke of his portrait as a plain map of the country,
to be consulted by his children in a case of uncertainty.
A proper map could be drawn up only when the country
had been travelled. He gave Lyon his mornings,
till luncheon, and they talked of many things, not
neglecting, as a stimulus to gossip, the people in
the house. Now that he did not ‘go out,’
as he said, he saw much less of the visitors at Stayes:
people came and went whom he knew nothing about, and
he liked to hear Lyon describe them. The artist
sketched with a fine point and did not caricature,
and it usually befell that when Sir David did not
know the sons and daughters he had known the fathers
and mothers. He was one of those terrible old
gentlemen who are a repository of antecedents.
But in the case of the Capadose family, at whom they
arrived by an easy stage, his knowledge embraced two,
or even three, generations. General Capadose
was an old crony, and he remembered his father before
him. The general was rather a smart soldier, but
in private life of too speculative a turn always
sneaking into the City to put his money into some
rotten thing. He married a girl who brought him
something and they had half a dozen children.
He scarcely knew what had become of the rest of them,
except that one was in the Church and had found preferment wasn’t
he Dean of Rockingham? Clement, the fellow who
was at Stayes, had some military talent; he had served
in the East, he had married a pretty girl. He
had been at Eton with his son, and he used to come
to Stayes in his holidays. Lately, coming back
to England, he had turned up with his wife again;
that was before he the old man had
been put to grass. He was a taking dog, but he
had a monstrous foible.
‘A monstrous foible?’ said Lyon.
‘He’s a thumping liar.’
Lyon’s brush stopped short,
while he repeated, for somehow the formula startled
him, ‘A thumping liar?’
‘You are very lucky not to have found it out.’
‘Well, I confess I have noticed a romantic tinge ’
’Oh, it isn’t always romantic.
He’ll lie about the time of day, about the name
of his hatter. It appears there are people like
that.’
‘Well, they are precious scoundrels,’
Lyon declared, his voice trembling a little with the
thought of what Everina Brant had done with herself.
‘Oh, not always,’ said
the old man. ’This fellow isn’t in
the least a scoundrel. There is no harm in him
and no bad intention; he doesn’t steal nor cheat
nor gamble nor drink; he’s very kind he
sticks to his wife, is fond of his children.
He simply can’t give you a straight answer.’
’Then everything he told me
last night, I suppose, was mendacious: he delivered
himself of a series of the stiffest statements.
They stuck, when I tried to swallow them, but I never
thought of so simple an explanation.’
‘No doubt he was in the vein,’
Sir David went on. ’It’s a natural
peculiarity as you might limp or stutter
or be left-handed. I believe it comes and goes,
like intermittent fever. My son tells me that
his friends usually understand it and don’t
haul him up for the sake of his wife.’
‘Oh, his wife his wife!’ Lyon
murmured, painting fast.
‘I daresay she’s used to it.’
‘Never in the world, Sir David. How can
she be used to it?’
’Why, my dear sir, when a woman’s
fond! And don’t they mostly handle
the long bow themselves? They are connoisseurs they
have a sympathy for a fellow-performer.’
Lyon was silent a moment; he had no
ground for denying that Mrs. Capadose was attached
to her husband. But after a little he rejoined:
’Oh, not this one! I knew her years ago before
her marriage; knew her well and admired her.
She was as clear as a bell.’
‘I like her very much,’
Sir David said, ’but I have seen her back him
up.’
Lyon considered Sir David for a moment,
not in the light of a model. ‘Are you very
sure?’
The old man hesitated; then he answered,
smiling, ’You’re in love with her.’
‘Very likely. God knows I used to be!’
‘She must help him out she can’t
expose him.’
‘She can hold her tongue,’ Lyon remarked.
‘Well, before you probably she will.’
‘That’s what I am curious
to see.’ And Lyon added, privately, ’Mercy
on us, what he must have made of her!’ He kept
this reflection to himself, for he considered that
he had sufficiently betrayed his state of mind with
regard to Mrs. Capadose. None the less it occupied
him now immensely, the question of how such a woman
would arrange herself in such a predicament.
He watched her with an interest deeply quickened when
he mingled with the company; he had had his own troubles
in life, but he had rarely been so anxious about anything
as he was now to see what the loyalty of a wife and
the infection of an example would have made of an
absolutely truthful mind. Oh, he held it as immutably
established that whatever other women might be prone
to do she, of old, had been perfectly incapable of
a deviation. Even if she had not been too simple
to deceive she would have been too proud; and if she
had not had too much conscience she would have had
too little eagerness. It was the last thing she
would have endured or condoned the particular
thing she would not have forgiven. Did she sit
in torment while her husband turned his somersaults,
or was she now too so perverse that she thought it
a fine thing to be striking at the expense of one’s
honour? It would have taken a wondrous alchemy working
backwards, as it were to produce this latter
result. Besides these two alternatives (that she
suffered tortures in silence and that she was so much
in love that her husband’s humiliating idiosyncrasy
seemed to her only an added richness a proof
of life and talent), there was still the possibility
that she had not found him out, that she took his
false pieces at his own valuation. A little reflection
rendered this hypothesis untenable; it was too evident
that the account he gave of things must repeatedly
have contradicted her own knowledge. Within an
hour or two of his meeting them Lyon had seen her
confronted with that perfectly gratuitous invention
about the profit they had made off his early picture.
Even then indeed she had not, so far as he could see,
smarted, and but for the present he could
only contemplate the case.
Even if it had not been interfused,
through his uneradicated tenderness for Mrs. Capadose,
with an element of suspense, the question would still
have presented itself to him as a very curious problem,
for he had not painted portraits during so many years
without becoming something of a psychologist.
His inquiry was limited for the moment to the opportunity
that the following three days might yield, as the Colonel
and his wife were going on to another house.
It fixed itself largely of course upon the Colonel
too this gentleman was such a rare anomaly.
Moreover it had to go on very quickly. Lyon was
too scrupulous to ask other people what they thought
of the business he was too afraid of exposing
the woman he once had loved. It was probable
also that light would come to him from the talk of
the rest of the company: the Colonel’s queer
habit, both as it affected his own situation and as
it affected his wife, would be a familiar theme in
any house in which he was in the habit of staying.
Lyon had not observed in the circles in which he visited
any marked abstention from comment on the singularities
of their members. It interfered with his progress
that the Colonel hunted all day, while he plied his
brushes and chatted with Sir David; but a Sunday intervened
and that partly made it up. Mrs. Capadose fortunately
did not hunt, and when his work was over she was not
inaccessible. He took a couple of longish walks
with her (she was fond of that), and beguiled her at
tea into a friendly nook in the hall. Regard
her as he might he could not make out to himself that
she was consumed by a hidden shame; the sense of being
married to a man whose word had no worth was not, in
her spirit, so far as he could guess, the canker within
the rose. Her mind appeared to have nothing on
it but its own placid frankness, and when he looked
into her eyes (deeply, as he occasionally permitted
himself to do), they had no uncomfortable consciousness.
He talked to her again and still again of the dear
old days reminded her of things that he
had not (before this reunion) the least idea that
he remembered. Then he spoke to her of her husband,
praised his appearance, his talent for conversation,
professed to have felt a quick friendship for him and
asked (with an inward audacity at which he trembled
a little) what manner of man he was. ‘What
manner?’ said Mrs. Capadose. ’Dear
me, how can one describe one’s husband?
I like him very much.’
‘Ah, you have told me that already!’
Lyon exclaimed, with exaggerated ruefulness.
‘Then why do you ask me again?’
She added in a moment, as if she were so happy that
she could afford to take pity on him, ’He is
everything that’s good and kind. He’s
a soldier and a gentleman and
a dear! He hasn’t a fault. And he
has great ability.’
’Yes; he strikes one as having
great ability. But of course I can’t think
him a dear.’
‘I don’t care what you
think him!’ said Mrs. Capadose, looking, it
seemed to him, as she smiled, handsomer than he had
ever seen her. She was either deeply cynical
or still more deeply impenetrable, and he had little
prospect of winning from her the intimation that he
longed for some hint that it had come over
her that after all she had better have married a man
who was not a by-word for the most contemptible, the
least heroic, of vices. Had she not seen had
she not felt the smile go round when her
husband executed some especially characteristic conversational
caper? How could a woman of her quality endure
that day after day, year after year, except by her
quality’s altering? But he would believe
in the alteration only when he should have heard her
lie. He was fascinated by his problem and yet
half exasperated, and he asked himself all kinds of
questions. Did she not lie, after all, when she
let his falsehoods pass without a protest? Was
not her life a perpetual complicity, and did she not
aid and abet him by the simple fact that she was not
disgusted with him? Then again perhaps she was
disgusted and it was the mere desperation of her pride
that had given her an inscrutable mask. Perhaps
she protested in private, passionately; perhaps every
night, in their own apartments, after the day’s
hideous performance, she made him the most scorching
scene. But if such scenes were of no avail and
he took no more trouble to cure himself, how could
she regard him, and after so many years of marriage
too, with the perfectly artless complacency that Lyon
had surprised in her in the course of the first day’s
dinner? If our friend had not been in love with
her he could have taken the diverting view of the Colonel’s
delinquencies; but as it was they turned to the tragical
in his mind, even while he had a sense that his solicitude
might also have been laughed at.
The observation of these three days
showed him that if Capadose was an abundant he was
not a malignant liar and that his fine faculty exercised
itself mainly on subjects of small direct importance.
’He is the liar platonic,’ he said to
himself; ’he is disinterested, he doesn’t
operate with a hope of gain or with a desire to injure.
It is art for art and he is prompted by the love of
beauty. He has an inner vision of what might
have been, of what ought to be, and he helps on the
good cause by the simple substitution of a nuance.
He paints, as it were, and so do I!’ His manifestations
had a considerable variety, but a family likeness ran
through them, which consisted mainly of their singular
futility. It was this that made them offensive;
they encumbered the field of conversation, took up
valuable space, converted it into a sort of brilliant
sun-shot fog. For a fib told under pressure a
convenient place can usually be found, as for a person
who presents himself with an author’s order
at the first night of a play. But the supererogatory
lie is the gentleman without a voucher or a ticket
who accommodates himself with a stool in the passage.
In one particular Lyon acquitted his
successful rival; it had puzzled him that irrepressible
as he was he had not got into a mess in the service.
But he perceived that he respected the service that
august institution was sacred from his depredations.
Moreover though there was a great deal of swagger
in his talk it was, oddly enough, rarely swagger about
his military exploits. He had a passion for the
chase, he had followed it in far countries and some
of his finest flowers were reminiscences of lonely
danger and escape. The more solitary the scene
the bigger of course the flower. A new acquaintance,
with the Colonel, always received the tribute of a
bouquet: that generalisation Lyon very promptly
made. And this extraordinary man had inconsistencies
and unexpected lapses lapses into flat
veracity. Lyon recognised what Sir David had
told him, that his aberrations came in fits or periods that
he would sometimes keep the truce of God for a month
at a time. The muse breathed upon him at her
pleasure; she often left him alone. He would
neglect the finest openings and then set sail in the
teeth of the breeze. As a general thing he affirmed
the false rather than denied the true; yet this proportion
was sometimes strikingly reversed. Very often
he joined in the laugh against himself he
admitted that he was trying it on and that a good
many of his anecdotes had an experimental character.
Still he never completely retracted nor retreated he
dived and came up in another place. Lyon divined
that he was capable at intervals of defending his
position with violence, but only when it was a very
bad one. Then he might easily be dangerous then
he would hit out and become calumnious. Such
occasions would test his wife’s equanimity Lyon
would have liked to see her there. In the smoking-room
and elsewhere the company, so far as it was composed
of his familiars, had an hilarious protest always
at hand; but among the men who had known him long
his rich tone was an old story, so old that they had
ceased to talk about it, and Lyon did not care, as
I have said, to elicit the judgment of those who might
have shared his own surprise.
The oddest thing of all was that neither
surprise nor familiarity prevented the Colonel’s
being liked; his largest drafts on a sceptical attention
passed for an overflow of life and gaiety almost
of good looks. He was fond of portraying his
bravery and used a very big brush, and yet he was
unmistakably brave. He was a capital rider and
shot, in spite of his fund of anecdote illustrating
these accomplishments: in short he was very nearly
as clever and his career had been very nearly as wonderful
as he pretended. His best quality however remained
that indiscriminate sociability which took interest
and credulity for granted and about which he bragged
least. It made him cheap, it made him even in
a manner vulgar; but it was so contagious that his
listener was more or less on his side as against the
probabilities. It was a private reflection of
Oliver Lyon’s that he not only lied but made
one feel one’s self a bit of a liar, even (or
especially) if one contradicted him. In the evening,
at dinner and afterwards, our friend watched his wife’s
face to see if some faint shade or spasm never passed
over it. But she showed nothing, and the wonder
was that when he spoke she almost always listened.
That was her pride: she wished not to be even
suspected of not facing the music. Lyon had none
the less an importunate vision of a veiled figure
coming the next day in the dusk to certain places to
repair the Colonel’s ravages, as the relatives
of kleptomaniacs punctually call at the shops that
have suffered from their pilferings.
’I must apologise, of course
it wasn’t true, I hope no harm is done, it is
only his incorrigible ’ Oh,
to hear that woman’s voice in that deep abasement!
Lyon had no nefarious plan, no conscious wish to practise
upon her shame or her loyalty; but he did say to himself
that he should like to bring her round to feel that
there would have been more dignity in a union with
a certain other person. He even dreamed of the
hour when, with a burning face, she would ask him
not to take it up. Then he should be almost consoled he
would be magnanimous.
Lyon finished his picture and took
his departure, after having worked in a glow of interest
which made him believe in his success, until he found
he had pleased every one, especially Mr. and Mrs. Ashmore,
when he began to be sceptical. The party at any
rate changed: Colonel and Mrs. Capadose went
their way. He was able to say to himself however
that his separation from the lady was not so much
an end as a beginning, and he called on her soon after
his return to town. She had told him the hours
she was at home she seemed to like him.
If she liked him why had she not married him or at
any rate why was she not sorry she had not? If
she was sorry she concealed it too well. Lyon’s
curiosity on this point may strike the reader as fatuous,
but something must be allowed to a disappointed man.
He did not ask much after all; not that she should
love him to-day or that she should allow him to tell
her that he loved her, but only that she should give
him some sign she was sorry. Instead of this,
for the present, she contented herself with exhibiting
her little daughter to him. The child was beautiful
and had the prettiest eyes of innocence he had ever
seen: which did not prevent him from wondering
whether she told horrid fibs. This idea gave him
much entertainment the picture of the anxiety
with which her mother would watch as she grew older
for the symptoms of heredity. That was a nice
occupation for Everina Brant! Did she lie to the
child herself, about her father was that
necessary, when she pressed her daughter to her bosom,
to cover up his tracks? Did he control himself
before the little girl so that she might
not hear him say things she knew to be other than
he said? Lyon doubted this: his genius would
be too strong for him, and the only safety for the
child would be in her being too stupid to analyse.
One couldn’t judge yet she was too
young. If she should grow up clever she would
be sure to tread in his steps a delightful
improvement in her mother’s situation! Her
little face was not shifty, but neither was her father’s
big one: so that proved nothing.
Lyon reminded his friends more than
once of their promise that Amy should sit to him,
and it was only a question of his leisure. The
desire grew in him to paint the Colonel also an
operation from which he promised himself a rich private
satisfaction. He would draw him out, he would
set him up in that totality about which he had talked
with Sir David, and none but the initiated would know.
They, however, would rank the picture high, and it
would be indeed six rows deep a masterpiece
of subtle characterisation, of legitimate treachery.
He had dreamed for years of producing something which
should bear the stamp of the psychologist as well
as of the painter, and here at last was his subject.
It was a pity it was not better, but that was not his
fault. It was his impression that already no
one drew the Colonel out more than he, and he did
it not only by instinct but on a plan. There were
moments when he was almost frightened at the success
of his plan the poor gentleman went so
terribly far. He would pull up some day, look
at Lyon between the eyes guess he was being
played upon which would lead to his wife’s
guessing it also. Not that Lyon cared much for
that however, so long as she failed to suppose (as
she must) that she was a part of his joke. He
formed such a habit now of going to see her of a Sunday
afternoon that he was angry when she went out of town.
This occurred often, as the couple were great visitors
and the Colonel was always looking for sport, which
he liked best when it could be had at other people’s
expense. Lyon would have supposed that this sort
of life was particularly little to her taste, for
he had an idea that it was in country-houses that
her husband came out strongest. To let him go
off without her, not to see him expose himself that
ought properly to have been a relief and a luxury
to her. She told Lyon in fact that she preferred
staying at home; but she neglected to say it was because
in other people’s houses she was on the rack:
the reason she gave was that she liked so to be with
the child. It was not perhaps criminal to draw
such a bow, but it was vulgar: poor Lyon was delighted
when he arrived at that formula. Certainly some
day too he would cross the line he would
become a noxious animal. Yes, in the meantime
he was vulgar, in spite of his talents, his fine person,
his impunity. Twice, by exception, toward the
end of the winter, when he left town for a few days’
hunting, his wife remained at home. Lyon had not
yet reached the point of asking himself whether the
desire not to miss two of his visits had something
to do with her immobility. That inquiry would
perhaps have been more in place later, when he began
to paint the child and she always came with her.
But it was not in her to give the wrong name, to pretend,
and Lyon could see that she had the maternal passion,
in spite of the bad blood in the little girl’s
veins.
She came inveterately, though Lyon
multiplied the sittings: Amy was never entrusted
to the governess or the maid. He had knocked off
poor old Sir David in ten days, but the portrait of
the simple-faced child bade fair to stretch over into
the following year. He asked for sitting after
sitting, and it would have struck any one who might
have witnessed the affair that he was wearing the
little girl out. He knew better however and Mrs.
Capadose also knew: they were present together
at the long intermissions he gave her, when she left
her pose and roamed about the great studio, amusing
herself with its curiosities, playing with the old
draperies and costumes, having unlimited leave to handle.
Then her mother and Mr. Lyon sat and talked; he laid
aside his brushes and leaned back in his chair; he
always gave her tea. What Mrs. Capadose did not
know was the way that during these weeks he neglected
other orders: women have no faculty of imagination
with regard to a man’s work beyond a vague idea
that it doesn’t matter. In fact Lyon put
off everything and made several celebrities wait.
There were half-hours of silence, when he plied his
brushes, during which he was mainly conscious that
Everina was sitting there. She easily fell into
that if he did not insist on talking, and she was
not embarrassed nor bored by it. Sometimes she
took up a book there were plenty of them
about; sometimes, a little way off, in her chair,
she watched his progress (though without in the least
advising or correcting), as if she cared for every
stroke that represented her daughter. These strokes
were occasionally a little wild; he was thinking so
much more of his heart than of his hand. He was
not more embarrassed than she was, but he was agitated:
it was as if in the sittings (for the child, too,
was beautifully quiet) something was growing between
them or had already grown a tacit confidence,
an inexpressible secret. He felt it that way;
but after all he could not be sure that she did.
What he wanted her to do for him was very little; it
was not even to confess that she was unhappy.
He would be superabundantly gratified if she should
simply let him know, even by a silent sign, that she
recognised that with him her life would have been
finer. Sometimes he guessed his presumption
went so far that he might see this sign
in her contentedly sitting there.
CHAPTER III
At last he broached the question of
painting the Colonel: it was now very late in
the season there would be little time before
the general dispersal. He said they must make
the most of it; the great thing was to begin; then
in the autumn, with the resumption of their London
life, they could go forward. Mrs. Capadose objected
to this that she really could not consent to accept
another present of such value. Lyon had given
her the portrait of herself of old, and he had seen
what they had had the indelicacy to do with it.
Now he had offered her this beautiful memorial of
the child beautiful it would evidently be
when it was finished, if he could ever satisfy himself;
a precious possession which they would cherish for
ever. But his generosity must stop there they
couldn’t be so tremendously ‘beholden’
to him. They couldn’t order the picture of
course he would understand that, without her explaining:
it was a luxury beyond their reach, for they knew
the great prices he received. Besides, what had
they ever done what above all had she
ever done, that he should overload them with benefits?
No, he was too dreadfully good; it was really impossible
that Clement should sit. Lyon listened to her
without protest, without interruption, while he bent
forward at his work, and at last he said: ’Well,
if you won’t take it why not let him sit for
me for my own pleasure and profit? Let it be a
favour, a service I ask of him. It will do me
a lot of good to paint him and the picture will remain
in my hands.’
‘How will it do you a lot of good?’ Mrs.
Capadose asked.
’Why, he’s such a rare
model such an interesting subject.
He has such an expressive face. It will teach
me no end of things.’
‘Expressive of what?’ said Mrs. Capadose.
‘Why, of his nature.’
‘And do you want to paint his nature?’
’Of course I do. That’s
what a great portrait gives you, and I shall make
the Colonel’s a great one. It will put me
up high. So you see my request is eminently interested.’
‘How can you be higher than you are?’
‘Oh, I’m insatiable! Do consent,’
said Lyon.
‘Well, his nature is very noble,’ Mrs.
Capadose remarked.
‘Ah, trust me, I shall bring
it out!’ Lyon exclaimed, feeling a little ashamed
of himself.
Mrs. Capadose said before she went
away that her husband would probably comply with his
invitation, but she added, ’Nothing would induce
me to let you pry into me that way!’
‘Oh, you,’ Lyon laughed ’I
could do you in the dark!’
The Colonel shortly afterwards placed
his leisure at the painter’s disposal and by
the end of July had paid him several visits. Lyon
was disappointed neither in the quality of his sitter
nor in the degree to which he himself rose to the
occasion; he felt really confident that he should
produce a fine thing. He was in the humour; he
was charmed with his motif and deeply interested
in his problem. The only point that troubled
him was the idea that when he should send his picture
to the Academy he should not be able to give the title,
for the catalogue, simply as ‘The Liar.’
However, it little mattered, for he had now determined
that this character should be perceptible even to the
meanest intelligence as overtopping as
it had become to his own sense in the living man.
As he saw nothing else in the Colonel to-day, so he
gave himself up to the joy of painting nothing else.
How he did it he could not have told you, but it seemed
to him that the mystery of how to do it was revealed
to him afresh every time he sat down to his work.
It was in the eyes and it was in the mouth, it was
in every line of the face and every fact of the attitude,
in the indentation of the chin, in the way the hair
was planted, the moustache was twisted, the smile came
and went, the breath rose and fell. It was in
the way he looked out at a bamboozled world in short the
way he would look out for ever. There were half
a dozen portraits in Europe that Lyon rated as supreme;
he regarded them as immortal, for they were as perfectly
preserved as they were consummately painted.
It was to this small exemplary group that he aspired
to annex the canvas on which he was now engaged.
One of the productions that helped to compose it was
the magnificent Moroni of the National Gallery the
young tailor, in the white jacket, at his board with
his shears. The Colonel was not a tailor, nor
was Moroni’s model, unlike many tailors, a liar;
but as regards the masterly clearness with which the
individual should be rendered his work would be on
the same line as that. He had to a degree in
which he had rarely had it before the satisfaction
of feeling life grow and grow under his brush.
The Colonel, as it turned out, liked to sit and he
liked to talk while he was sitting: which was
very fortunate, as his talk largely constituted Lyon’s
inspiration. Lyon put into practice that idea
of drawing him out which he had been nursing for so
many weeks: he could not possibly have been in
a better relation to him for the purpose. He encouraged,
beguiled, excited him, manifested an unfathomable credulity,
and his only interruptions were when the Colonel did
not respond to it. He had his intermissions,
his hours of sterility, and then Lyon felt that the
picture also languished. The higher his companion
soared, the more gyrations he executed, in the blue,
the better he painted; he couldn’t make his
flights long enough. He lashed him on when he
flagged; his apprehension became great at moments
that the Colonel would discover his game. But
he never did, apparently; he basked and expanded in
the fine steady light of the painter’s attention.
In this way the picture grew very fast; it was astonishing
what a short business it was, compared with the little
girl’s. By the fifth of August it was pretty
well finished: that was the date of the last
sitting the Colonel was for the present able to give,
as he was leaving town the next day with his wife.
Lyon was amply content he saw his way so
clear: he should be able to do at his convenience
what remained, with or without his friend’s
attendance. At any rate, as there was no hurry,
he would let the thing stand over till his own return
to London, in November, when he would come back to
it with a fresh eye. On the Colonel’s asking
him if his wife might come and see it the next day,
if she should find a minute this was so
greatly her desire Lyon begged as a special
favour that she would wait: he was so far from
satisfied as yet. This was the repetition of
a proposal Mrs. Capadose had made on the occasion of
his last visit to her, and he had then asked for a
delay declared that he was by no means
content. He was really delighted, and he was again
a little ashamed of himself.
By the fifth of August the weather
was very warm, and on that day, while the Colonel
sat straight and gossiped, Lyon opened for the sake
of ventilation a little subsidiary door which led
directly from his studio into the garden and sometimes
served as an entrance and an exit for models and for
visitors of the humbler sort, and as a passage for
canvases, frames, packing-boxes and other professional
gear. The main entrance was through the house
and his own apartments, and this approach had the
charming effect of admitting you first to a high gallery,
from which a crooked picturesque staircase enabled
you to descend to the wide, decorated, encumbered
room. The view of this room, beneath them, with
all its artistic ingenuities and the objects of value
that Lyon had collected, never failed to elicit exclamations
of delight from persons stepping into the gallery.
The way from the garden was plainer and at once more
practicable and more private. Lyon’s domain,
in St. John’s Wood, was not vast, but when the
door stood open of a summer’s day it offered
a glimpse of flowers and trees, you smelt something
sweet and you heard the birds. On this particular
morning the side-door had been found convenient by
an unannounced visitor, a youngish woman who stood
in the room before the Colonel perceived her and whom
he perceived before she was noticed by his friend.
She was very quiet, and she looked from one of the
men to the other. ‘Oh, dear, here’s
another!’ Lyon exclaimed, as soon as his eyes
rested on her. She belonged, in fact, to a somewhat
importunate class the model in search of
employment, and she explained that she had ventured
to come straight in, that way, because very often
when she went to call upon gentlemen the servants played
her tricks, turned her off and wouldn’t take
in her name.
‘But how did you get into the garden?’
Lyon asked.
‘The gate was open, sir the
servants’ gate. The butcher’s cart
was there.’
‘The butcher ought to have closed it,’
said Lyon.
‘Then you don’t require me, sir?’
the lady continued.
Lyon went on with his painting; he
had given her a sharp look at first, but now his eyes
lighted on her no more. The Colonel, however,
examined her with interest. She was a person
of whom you could scarcely say whether being young
she looked old or old she looked young; she had at
any rate evidently rounded several of the corners of
life and had a face that was rosy but that somehow
failed to suggest freshness. Nevertheless she
was pretty and even looked as if at one time she might
have sat for the complexion. She wore a hat with
many feathers, a dress with many bugles, long black
gloves, encircled with silver bracelets, and very bad
shoes. There was something about her that was
not exactly of the governess out of place nor completely
of the actress seeking an engagement, but that savoured
of an interrupted profession or even of a blighted
career. She was rather soiled and tarnished, and
after she had been in the room a few moments the air,
or at any rate the nostril, became acquainted with
a certain alcoholic waft. She was unpractised
in the h, and when Lyon at last thanked her
and said he didn’t want her he was
doing nothing for which she could be useful she
replied with rather a wounded manner, ’Well,
you know you ’ave ‘ad me!’
‘I don’t remember you,’ Lyon answered.
’Well, I daresay the people
that saw your pictures do! I haven’t much
time, but I thought I would look in.’
‘I am much obliged to you.’
‘If ever you should require me, if you just
send me a postcard ’
‘I never send postcards,’ said Lyon.
’Oh well, I should value a private
letter! Anything to Miss Geraldine, Mortimer
Terrace Mews, Notting ‘ill ’
‘Very good; I’ll remember,’ said
Lyon.
Miss Geraldine lingered. ‘I thought I’d
just stop, on the chance.’
‘I’m afraid I can’t
hold out hopes, I’m so busy with portraits,’
Lyon continued.
‘Yes; I see you are. I wish I was in the
gentleman’s place.’
‘I’m afraid in that case
it wouldn’t look like me,’ said the Colonel,
laughing.
’Oh, of course it couldn’t
compare it wouldn’t be so ’andsome!
But I do hate them portraits!’ Miss Geraldine
declared. ’It’s so much bread out
of our mouths.’
‘Well, there are many who can’t
paint them,’ Lyon suggested, comfortingly.
’Oh, I’ve sat to the very
first and only to the first! There’s
many that couldn’t do anything without me.’
‘I’m glad you’re
in such demand.’ Lyon was beginning to be
bored and he added that he wouldn’t detain her he
would send for her in case of need.
’Very well; remember it’s
the Mews more’s the pity! You
don’t sit so well as us!’ Miss
Geraldine pursued, looking at the Colonel. ’If
you should require me, sir ’
‘You put him out; you embarrass him,’
said Lyon.
‘Embarrass him, oh gracious!’
the visitor cried, with a laugh which diffused a fragrance.
‘Perhaps you send postcards, eh?’
she went on to the Colonel; and then she retreated
with a wavering step. She passed out into the
garden as she had come.
‘How very dreadful she’s
drunk!’ said Lyon. He was painting hard,
but he looked up, checking himself: Miss Geraldine,
in the open doorway, had thrust back her head.
‘Yes, I do hate it that
sort of thing!’ she cried with an explosion of
mirth which confirmed Lyon’s declaration.
And then she disappeared.
‘What sort of thing what
does she mean?’ the Colonel asked.
‘Oh, my painting you, when I might be painting
her.’
‘And have you ever painted her?’
‘Never in the world; I have never seen her.
She is quite mistaken.’
The Colonel was silent a moment; then
he remarked, ’She was very pretty ten
years ago.’
’I daresay, but she’s
quite ruined. For me the least drop too much
spoils them; I shouldn’t care for her at all.’
‘My dear fellow, she’s
not a model,’ said the Colonel, laughing.
‘To-day, no doubt, she’s
not worthy of the name; but she has been one.’
‘Jamais de la vie! That’s all a
pretext.’
‘A pretext?’ Lyon pricked
up his ears he began to wonder what was
coming now.
‘She didn’t want you she wanted
me.’
‘I noticed she paid you some attention.
What does she want of you?’
’Oh, to do me an ill turn.
She hates me lots of women do. She’s
watching me she follows me.’
Lyon leaned back in his chair he
didn’t believe a word of this. He was all
the more delighted with it and with the Colonel’s
bright, candid manner. The story had bloomed,
fragrant, on the spot. ‘My dear Colonel!’
he murmured, with friendly interest and commiseration.
‘I was annoyed when she came
in but I wasn’t startled,’ his
sitter continued.
‘You concealed it very well, if you were.’
’Ah, when one has been through
what I have! To-day however I confess I was half
prepared. I have seen her hanging about she
knows my movements. She was near my house this
morning she must have followed me.’
‘But who is she then with such a
toupet?’
‘Yes, she has that,’ said
the Colonel; ’but as you observe she was primed.
Still, there was a cheek, as they say, in her coming
in. Oh, she’s a bad one! She isn’t
a model and she never was; no doubt she has known
some of those women and picked up their form.
She had hold of a friend of mine ten years ago a
stupid young gander who might have been left to be
plucked but whom I was obliged to take an interest
in for family reasons. It’s a long story I
had really forgotten all about it. She’s
thirty-seven if she’s a day. I cut in and
made him get rid of her I sent her about
her business. She knew it was me she had to thank.
She has never forgiven me I think she’s
off her head. Her name isn’t Geraldine
at all and I doubt very much if that’s her address.’
‘Ah, what is her name?’
Lyon asked, most attentive. The details always
began to multiply, to abound, when once his companion
was well launched they flowed forth in
battalions.
’It’s Pearson Harriet
Pearson; but she used to call herself Grenadine wasn’t
that a rum appellation? Grenadine Geraldine the
jump was easy.’ Lyon was charmed with the
promptitude of this response, and his interlocutor
went on: ’I hadn’t thought of her
for years I had quite lost sight of her.
I don’t know what her idea is, but practically
she’s harmless. As I came in I thought I
saw her a little way up the road. She must have
found out I come here and have arrived before me.
I daresay or rather I’m sure she
is waiting for me there now.’
‘Hadn’t you better have
protection?’ Lyon asked, laughing.
’The best protection is five
shillings I’m willing to go that length.
Unless indeed she has a bottle of vitriol. But
they only throw vitriol on the men who have deceived
them, and I never deceived her I told her
the first time I saw her that it wouldn’t do.
Oh, if she’s there we’ll walk a little
way together and talk it over and, as I say, I’ll
go as far as five shillings.’
‘Well,’ said Lyon, ‘I’ll
contribute another five.’ He felt that this
was little to pay for his entertainment.
That entertainment was interrupted
however for the time by the Colonel’s departure.
Lyon hoped for a letter recounting the fictive sequel;
but apparently his brilliant sitter did not operate
with the pen. At any rate he left town without
writing; they had taken a rendezvous for three months
later. Oliver Lyon always passed the holidays
in the same way; during the first weeks he paid a
visit to his elder brother, the happy possessor, in
the south of England, of a rambling old house with
formal gardens, in which he delighted, and then he
went abroad usually to Italy or Spain.
This year he carried out his custom after taking a
last look at his all but finished work and feeling
as nearly pleased with it as he ever felt with the
translation of the idea by the hand always,
as it seemed to him, a pitiful compromise. One
yellow afternoon, in the country, as he was smoking
his pipe on one of the old terraces he was seized
with the desire to see it again and do two or three
things more to it: he had thought of it so often
while he lounged there. The impulse was too strong
to be dismissed, and though he expected to return to
town in the course of another week he was unable to
face the delay. To look at the picture for five
minutes would be enough it would clear up
certain questions which hummed in his brain; so that
the next morning, to give himself this luxury, he
took the train for London. He sent no word in
advance; he would lunch at his club and probably return
into Sussex by the 5.45.
In St. John’s Wood the tide
of human life flows at no time very fast, and in the
first days of September Lyon found unmitigated emptiness
in the straight sunny roads where the little plastered
garden-walls, with their incommunicative doors, looked
slightly Oriental. There was definite stillness
in his own house, to which he admitted himself by his
pass-key, having a theory that it was well sometimes
to take servants unprepared. The good woman who
was mainly in charge and who cumulated the functions
of cook and housekeeper was, however, quickly summoned
by his step, and (he cultivated frankness of intercourse
with his domestics) received him without the confusion
of surprise. He told her that she needn’t
mind the place being not quite straight, he had only
come up for a few hours he should be busy
in the studio. To this she replied that he was
just in time to see a lady and a gentleman who were
there at the moment they had arrived five
minutes before. She had told them he was away
from home but they said it was all right; they only
wanted to look at a picture and would be very careful
of everything. ’I hope it is all right,
sir,’ the housekeeper concluded. ’The
gentleman says he’s a sitter and he gave me
his name rather an odd name; I think it’s
military. The lady’s a very fine lady, sir;
at any rate there they are.’
‘Oh, it’s all right,’
Lyon said, the identity of his visitors being clear.
The good woman couldn’t know, for she usually
had little to do with the comings and goings; his
man, who showed people in and out, had accompanied
him to the country. He was a good deal surprised
at Mrs. Capadose’s having come to see her husband’s
portrait when she knew that the artist himself wished
her to forbear; but it was a familiar truth to him
that she was a woman of a high spirit. Besides,
perhaps the lady was not Mrs. Capadose; the Colonel
might have brought some inquisitive friend, a person
who wanted a portrait of her husband. What
were they doing in town, at any rate, at that moment?
Lyon made his way to the studio with a certain curiosity;
he wondered vaguely what his friends were ‘up
to.’ He pushed aside the curtain that hung
in the door of communication the door opening
upon the gallery which it had been found convenient
to construct at the time the studio was added to the
house. When I say he pushed it aside I should
amend my phrase; he laid his hand upon it, but at
that moment he was arrested by a very singular sound.
It came from the floor of the room beneath him and
it startled him extremely, consisting apparently as
it did of a passionate wail a sort of smothered
shriek accompanied by a violent burst of
tears. Oliver Lyon listened intently a moment,
and then he passed out upon the balcony, which was
covered with an old thick Moorish rug. His step
was noiseless, though he had not endeavoured to make
it so, and after that first instant he found himself
profiting irresistibly by the accident of his not
having attracted the attention of the two persons in
the studio, who were some twenty feet below him.
In truth they were so deeply and so strangely engaged
that their unconsciousness of observation was explained.
The scene that took place before Lyon’s eyes
was one of the most extraordinary they had ever rested
upon. Delicacy and the failure to comprehend
kept him at first from interrupting it for
what he saw was a woman who had thrown herself in
a flood of tears on her companion’s bosom and
these influences were succeeded after a minute (the
minutes were very few and very short) by a definite
motive which presently had the force to make him step
back behind the curtain. I may add that it also
had the force to make him avail himself for further
contemplation of a crevice formed by his gathering
together the two halves of the portiere.
He was perfectly aware of what he was about he
was for the moment an eavesdropper, a spy; but he was
also aware that a very odd business, in which his
confidence had been trifled with, was going forward,
and that if in a measure it didn’t concern him,
in a measure it very definitely did. His observation,
his reflections, accomplished themselves in a flash.
His visitors were in the middle of
the room; Mrs. Capadose clung to her husband, weeping,
sobbing as if her heart would break. Her distress
was horrible to Oliver Lyon but his astonishment was
greater than his horror when he heard the Colonel
respond to it by the words, vehemently uttered, ‘Damn
him, damn him, damn him!’ What in the world had
happened? Why was she sobbing and whom was he
damning? What had happened, Lyon saw the next
instant, was that the Colonel had finally rummaged
out his unfinished portrait (he knew the corner where
the artist usually placed it, out of the way, with
its face to the wall) and had set it up before his
wife on an empty easel. She had looked at it a
few moments and then apparently what
she saw in it had produced an explosion of dismay
and resentment. She was too busy sobbing and the
Colonel was too busy holding her and reiterating his
objurgation, to look round or look up. The scene
was so unexpected to Lyon that he could not take it,
on the spot, as a proof of the triumph of his hand of
a tremendous hit: he could only wonder what on
earth was the matter. The idea of the triumph
came a little later. Yet he could see the portrait
from where he stood; he was startled with its look
of life he had not thought it so masterly.
Mrs. Capadose flung herself away from her husband she
dropped into the nearest chair, buried her face in
her arms, leaning on a table. Her weeping suddenly
ceased to be audible, but she shuddered there as if
she were overwhelmed with anguish and shame. Her
husband remained a moment staring at the picture;
then he went to her, bent over her, took hold of her
again, soothed her. ’What is it, darling,
what the devil is it?’ he demanded.
Lyon heard her answer. ‘It’s cruel oh,
it’s too cruel!’
‘Damn him damn him damn
him!’ the Colonel repeated.
‘It’s all there it’s
all there!’ Mrs. Capadose went on.
‘Hang it, what’s all there?’
’Everything there oughtn’t
to be everything he has seen it’s
too dreadful!’
’Everything he has seen?
Why, ain’t I a good-looking fellow? He has
made me rather handsome.’
Mrs. Capadose had sprung up again;
she had darted another glance at the painted betrayal.
‘Handsome? Hideous, hideous! Not that never,
never!’
‘Not what, in heaven’s
name?’ the Colonel almost shouted. Lyon
could see his flushed, bewildered face.
’What he has made of you what
you know! He knows he has seen.
Every one will know every one will see.
Fancy that thing in the Academy!’
‘You’re going wild, darling;
but if you hate it so it needn’t go.’
‘Oh, he’ll send it it’s
so good! Come away come away!’
Mrs. Capadose wailed, seizing her husband.
‘It’s so good?’ the poor man cried.
‘Come away come away,’
she only repeated; and she turned toward the staircase
that ascended to the gallery.
‘Not that way not
through the house, in the state you’re in,’
Lyon heard the Colonel object. ‘This way we
can pass,’ he added; and he drew his wife to
the small door that opened into the garden. It
was bolted, but he pushed the bolt and opened the
door. She passed out quickly, but he stood there
looking back into the room. ‘Wait for me
a moment!’ he cried out to her; and with an
excited stride he re-entered the studio. He came
up to the picture again, and again he stood looking
at it. ’Damn him damn him damn
him!’ he broke out once more. It was not
clear to Lyon whether this malediction had for its
object the original or the painter of the portrait.
The Colonel turned away and moved rapidly about the
room, as if he were looking for something; Lyon was
unable for the instant to guess his intention.
Then the artist said to himself, below his breath,
‘He’s going to do it a harm!’ His
first impulse was to rush down and stop him; but he
paused, with the sound of Everina Brant’s sobs
still in his ears. The Colonel found what he was
looking for found it among some odds and
ends on a small table and rushed back with it to the
easel. At one and the same moment Lyon perceived
that the object he had seized was a small Eastern
dagger and that he had plunged it into the canvas.
He seemed animated by a sudden fury, for with extreme
vigour of hand he dragged the instrument down (Lyon
knew it to have no very fine edge) making a long,
abominable gash. Then he plucked it out and dashed
it again several times into the face of the likeness,
exactly as if he were stabbing a human victim:
it had the oddest effect that of a sort
of figurative suicide. In a few seconds more the
Colonel had tossed the dagger away he looked
at it as he did so, as if he expected it to reek with
blood and hurried out of the place, closing
the door after him.
The strangest part of all was as
will doubtless appear that Oliver Lyon
made no movement to save his picture. But he did
not feel as if he were losing it or cared not if he
were, so much more did he feel that he was gaining
a certitude. His old friend was ashamed
of her husband, and he had made her so, and he had
scored a great success, even though the picture had
been reduced to rags. The revelation excited him
so as indeed the whole scene did that
when he came down the steps after the Colonel had
gone he trembled with his happy agitation; he was dizzy
and had to sit down a moment. The portrait had
a dozen jagged wounds the Colonel literally
had hacked it to death. Lyon left it where it
was, never touched it, scarcely looked at it; he only
walked up and down his studio, still excited, for
an hour. At the end of this time his good woman
came to recommend that he should have some luncheon;
there was a passage under the staircase from the offices.
‘Ah, the lady and gentleman
have gone, sir? I didn’t hear them.’
‘Yes; they went by the garden.’
But she had stopped, staring at the
picture on the easel. ’Gracious, how you
’ave served it, sir!’
Lyon imitated the Colonel. ‘Yes,
I cut it up in a fit of disgust.’
‘Mercy, after all your trouble!
Because they weren’t pleased, sir?’
‘Yes; they weren’t pleased.’
‘Well, they must be very grand! Blessed
if I would!’
‘Have it chopped up; it will do to light fires,’
Lyon said.
He returned to the country by the
3.30 and a few days later passed over to France.
During the two months that he was absent from England
he expected something he could hardly have
said what; a manifestation of some sort on the Colonel’s
part. Wouldn’t he write, wouldn’t
he explain, wouldn’t he take for granted Lyon
had discovered the way he had, as the cook said, served
him and deem it only decent to take pity in some fashion
or other on his mystification? Would he plead
guilty or would he repudiate suspicion? The latter
course would be difficult and make a considerable
draft upon his genius, in view of the certain testimony
of Lyon’s housekeeper, who had admitted the
visitors and would establish the connection between
their presence and the violence wrought. Would
the Colonel proffer some apology or some amends, or
would any word from him be only a further expression
of that destructive petulance which our friend had
seen his wife so suddenly and so potently communicate
to him? He would have either to declare that
he had not touched the picture or to admit that he
had, and in either case he would have to tell a fine
story. Lyon was impatient for the story and, as
no letter came, disappointed that it was not produced.
His impatience however was much greater in respect
to Mrs. Capadose’s version, if version there
was to be; for certainly that would be the real test,
would show how far she would go for her husband, on
the one side, or for him, Oliver Lyon, on the other.
He could scarcely wait to see what line she would take;
whether she would simply adopt the Colonel’s,
whatever it might be. He wanted to draw her out
without waiting, to get an idea in advance. He
wrote to her, to this end, from Venice, in the tone
of their established friendship, asking for news,
narrating his wanderings, hoping they should soon
meet in town and not saying a word about the picture.
Day followed day, after the time, and he received no
answer; upon which he reflected that she couldn’t
trust herself to write was still too much
under the influence of the emotion produced by his
‘betrayal.’ Her husband had espoused
that emotion and she had espoused the action he had
taken in consequence of it, and it was a complete
rupture and everything was at an end. Lyon considered
this prospect rather ruefully, at the same time that
he thought it deplorable that such charming people
should have put themselves so grossly in the wrong.
He was at last cheered, though little further enlightened,
by the arrival of a letter, brief but breathing good-humour
and hinting neither at a grievance nor at a bad conscience.
The most interesting part of it to Lyon was the postscript,
which consisted of these words: ’I have
a confession to make to you. We were in town
for a couple of days, the 1st of September, and I
took the occasion to defy your authority it
was very bad of me but I couldn’t help it.
I made Clement take me to your studio I
wanted so dreadfully to see what you had done with
him, your wishes to the contrary notwithstanding.
We made your servants let us in and I took a good
look at the picture. It is really wonderful!’
‘Wonderful’ was non-committal, but at least
with this letter there was no rupture.
The third day after Lyon’s return
to London was a Sunday, so that he could go and ask
Mrs. Capadose for luncheon. She had given him
in the spring a general invitation to do so and he
had availed himself of it several times. These
had been the occasions (before he sat to him) when
he saw the Colonel most familiarly. Directly after
the meal his host disappeared (he went out, as he
said, to call on his women) and the second
half-hour was the best, even when there were other
people. Now, in the first days of December, Lyon
had the luck to find the pair alone, without even
Amy, who appeared but little in public. They were
in the drawing-room, waiting for the repast to be
announced, and as soon as he came in the Colonel broke
out, ’My dear fellow, I’m delighted to
see you! I’m so keen to begin again.’
‘Oh, do go on, it’s so
beautiful,’ Mrs. Capadose said, as she gave him
her hand.
Lyon looked from one to the other;
he didn’t know what he had expected, but he
had not expected this. ‘Ah, then, you think
I’ve got something?’
‘You’ve got everything,’
said Mrs. Capadose, smiling from her golden-brown
eyes.
‘She wrote you of our little
crime?’ her husband asked. ’She dragged
me there I had to go.’ Lyon
wondered for a moment whether he meant by their little
crime the assault on the canvas; but the Colonel’s
next words didn’t confirm this interpretation.
’You know I like to sit it gives
such a chance to my bavardise. And just
now I have time.’
‘You must remember I had almost finished,’
Lyon remarked.
‘So you had. More’s the pity.
I should like you to begin again.’
‘My dear fellow, I shall have
to begin again!’ said Oliver Lyon with a laugh,
looking at Mrs. Capadose. She did not meet his
eyes she had got up to ring for luncheon.
‘The picture has been smashed,’ Lyon continued.
‘Smashed? Ah, what did
you do that for?’ Mrs. Capadose asked, standing
there before him in all her clear, rich beauty.
Now that she looked at him she was impenetrable.
‘I didn’t I
found it so with a dozen holes punched in
it!’
‘I say!’ cried the Colonel.
Lyon turned his eyes to him, smiling. ‘I
hope you didn’t do it?’
‘Is it ruined?’ the Colonel
inquired. He was as brightly true as his wife
and he looked simply as if Lyon’s question could
not be serious. ’For the love of sitting
to you? My dear fellow, if I had thought of it
I would!’
‘Nor you either?’ the painter demanded
of Mrs. Capadose.
Before she had time to reply her husband
had seized her arm, as if a highly suggestive idea
had come to him. ’I say, my dear, that
woman that woman!’
‘That woman?’ Mrs. Capadose
repeated; and Lyon too wondered what woman he meant.
’Don’t you remember when
we came out, she was at the door or a little
way from it? I spoke to you of her I
told you about her. Geraldine Grenadine the
one who burst in that day,’ he explained to
Lyon. ‘We saw her hanging about I
called Everina’s attention to her.’
‘Do you mean she got at my picture?’
‘Ah yes, I remember,’ said Mrs. Capadose,
with a sigh.
’She burst in again she
had learned the way she was waiting for
her chance,’ the Colonel continued. ‘Ah,
the little brute!’
Lyon looked down; he felt himself
colouring. This was what he had been waiting
for the day the Colonel should wantonly
sacrifice some innocent person. And could his
wife be a party to that final atrocity? Lyon had
reminded himself repeatedly during the previous weeks
that when the Colonel perpetrated his misdeed she
had already quitted the room; but he had argued none
the less it was a virtual certainty that
he had on rejoining her immediately made his achievement
plain to her. He was in the flush of performance;
and even if he had not mentioned what he had done
she would have guessed it. He did not for an instant
believe that poor Miss Geraldine had been hovering
about his door, nor had the account given by the Colonel
the summer before of his relations with this lady
deceived him in the slightest degree. Lyon had
never seen her before the day she planted herself
in his studio; but he knew her and classified her
as if he had made her. He was acquainted with
the London female model in all her varieties in
every phase of her development and every step of her
decay. When he entered his house that September
morning just after the arrival of his two friends there
had been no symptoms whatever, up and down the road,
of Miss Geraldine’s reappearance. That
fact had been fixed in his mind by his recollecting
the vacancy of the prospect when his cook told him
that a lady and a gentleman were in his studio:
he had wondered there was not a carriage nor a cab
at his door. Then he had reflected that they would
have come by the underground railway; he was close
to the Marlborough Road station and he knew the Colonel,
coming to his sittings, more than once had availed
himself of that convenience. ’How in the
world did she get in?’ He addressed the question
to his companions indifferently.
‘Let us go down to luncheon,’
said Mrs. Capadose, passing out of the room.
’We went by the garden without
troubling your servant I wanted to show
my wife.’ Lyon followed his hostess with
her husband and the Colonel stopped him at the top
of the stairs. ’My dear fellow, I can’t
have been guilty of the folly of not fastening the
door?’
‘I am sure I don’t know,
Colonel,’ Lyon said as they went down. ’It
was a very determined hand a perfect wild-cat.’
’Well, she is a wild-cat confound
her! That’s why I wanted to get him away
from her.’
‘But I don’t understand her motive.’
‘She’s off her head and she
hates me; that was her motive.’
‘But she doesn’t hate me, my dear fellow!’
Lyon said, laughing.
’She hated the picture don’t
you remember she said so? The more portraits
there are the less employment for such as her.’
’Yes; but if she is not really
the model she pretends to be, how can that hurt her?’
Lyon asked.
The inquiry baffled the Colonel an
instant but only an instant. ’Ah,
she was in a vicious muddle! As I say, she’s
off her head.’
They went into the dining-room, where
Mrs. Capadose was taking her place. ‘It’s
too bad, it’s too horrid!’ she said.
’You see the fates are against you. Providence
won’t let you be so disinterested painting
masterpieces for nothing.’
‘Did you see the woman?’
Lyon demanded, with something like a sternness that
he could not mitigate.
Mrs. Capadose appeared not to perceive
it or not to heed it if she did. ’There
was a person, not far from your door, whom Clement
called my attention to. He told me something
about her but we were going the other way.’
‘And do you think she did it?’
‘How can I tell? If she did she was mad,
poor wretch.’
‘I should like very much to
get hold of her,’ said Lyon. This was a
false statement, for he had no desire for any further
conversation with Miss Geraldine. He had exposed
his friends to himself, but he had no desire to expose
them to any one else, least of all to themselves.
‘Oh, depend upon it she will
never show again. You’re safe!’ the
Colonel exclaimed.
‘But I remember her address Mortimer
Terrace Mews, Notting Hill.’
‘Oh, that’s pure humbug; there isn’t
any such place.’
‘Lord, what a deceiver!’ said Lyon.
‘Is there any one else you suspect?’ the
Colonel went on.
‘Not a creature.’
‘And what do your servants say?’
’They say it wasn’t them,
and I reply that I never said it was. That’s
about the substance of our conferences.’
‘And when did they discover the havoc?’
‘They never discovered it at all. I noticed
it first when I came back.’
‘Well, she could easily have
stepped in,’ said the Colonel. ’Don’t
you remember how she turned up that day, like the
clown in the ring?’
’Yes, yes; she could have done
the job in three seconds, except that the picture
wasn’t out.’
‘My dear fellow, don’t curse me! but
of course I dragged it out.’
‘You didn’t put it back?’ Lyon asked
tragically.
‘Ah, Clement, Clement, didn’t
I tell you to?’ Mrs. Capadose exclaimed in a
tone of exquisite reproach.
The Colonel groaned, dramatically;
he covered his face with his hands. His wife’s
words were for Lyon the finishing touch; they made
his whole vision crumble his theory that
she had secretly kept herself true. Even to her
old lover she wouldn’t be so! He was sick;
he couldn’t eat; he knew that he looked very
strange. He murmured something about it being
useless to cry over spilled milk he tried
to turn the conversation to other things. But
it was a horrid effort and he wondered whether they
felt it as much as he. He wondered all sorts of
things: whether they guessed he disbelieved them
(that he had seen them of course they would never
guess); whether they had arranged their story in advance
or it was only an inspiration of the moment; whether
she had resisted, protested, when the Colonel proposed
it to her, and then had been borne down by him; whether
in short she didn’t loathe herself as she sat
there. The cruelty, the cowardice of fastening
their unholy act upon the wretched woman struck him
as monstrous no less monstrous indeed than
the levity that could make them run the risk of her
giving them, in her righteous indignation, the lie.
Of course that risk could only exculpate her and not
inculpate them the probabilities protected
them so perfectly; and what the Colonel counted on
(what he would have counted upon the day he delivered
himself, after first seeing her, at the studio, if
he had thought about the matter then at all and not
spoken from the pure spontaneity of his genius) was
simply that Miss Geraldine had really vanished for
ever into her native unknown. Lyon wanted so much
to quit the subject that when after a little Mrs.
Capadose said to him, ’But can nothing be done,
can’t the picture be repaired? You know
they do such wonders in that way now,’ he only
replied, ’I don’t know, I don’t care,
it’s all over, n’en parlons plus!’
Her hypocrisy revolted him. And yet, by way of
plucking off the last veil of her shame, he broke out
to her again, shortly afterward, ‘And you did
like it, really?’ To which she returned, looking
him straight in his face, without a blush, a pallor,
an evasion, ‘Oh, I loved it!’ Truly her
husband had trained her well. After that Lyon
said no more and his companions forbore temporarily
to insist, like people of tact and sympathy aware that
the odious accident had made him sore.
When they quitted the table the Colonel
went away without coming upstairs; but Lyon returned
to the drawing-room with his hostess, remarking to
her however on the way that he could remain but a moment.
He spent that moment it prolonged itself
a little standing with her before the chimney-piece.
She neither sat down nor asked him to; her manner
denoted that she intended to go out. Yes, her
husband had trained her well; yet Lyon dreamed for
a moment that now he was alone with her she would
perhaps break down, retract, apologise, confide, say
to him, ‘My dear old friend, forgive this hideous
comedy you understand!’ And then
how he would have loved her and pitied her, guarded
her, helped her always! If she were not ready
to do something of that sort why had she treated him
as if he were a dear old friend; why had she let him
for months suppose certain things or almost;
why had she come to his studio day after day to sit
near him on the pretext of her child’s portrait,
as if she liked to think what might have been?
Why had she come so near a tacit confession, in a
word, if she was not willing to go an inch further?
And she was not willing she was not; he
could see that as he lingered there. She moved
about the room a little, rearranging two or three
objects on the tables, but she did nothing more.
Suddenly he said to her: ‘Which way was
she going, when you came out?’
‘She the woman we saw?’
‘Yes, your husband’s strange
friend. It’s a clew worth following.’
He had no desire to frighten her; he only wanted to
communicate the impulse which would make her say,
’Ah, spare me and spare him!
There was no such person.’
Instead of this Mrs. Capadose replied,
’She was going away from us she crossed
the road. We were coming towards the station.’
‘And did she appear to recognise
the Colonel did she look round?’
’Yes; she looked round, but
I didn’t notice much. A hansom came along
and we got into it. It was not till then that
Clement told me who she was: I remember he said
that she was there for no good. I suppose we
ought to have gone back.’
‘Yes; you would have saved the picture.’
For a moment she said nothing; then
she smiled. ’For you, I am very sorry.
But you must remember that I possess the original!’
At this Lyon turned away. ‘Well,
I must go,’ he said; and he left her without
any other farewell and made his way out of the house.
As he went slowly up the street the sense came back
to him of that first glimpse of her he had had at
Stayes the way he had seen her gaze across
the table at her husband. Lyon stopped at the
corner, looking vaguely up and down. He would
never go back he couldn’t. She
was still in love with the Colonel he had
trained her too well.