I
In the vestibule of the Quadrant stood
Peel, looking a veritable colossus of negation.
As Patricia approached he bowed and led the way to
the lift. As it slid upwards Patricia wondered
if Peel could hear the thumping of her heart, and
if so, what he thought of it. She followed him
along the carpeted corridor conscious of a mad desire
to turn and fly. What would Peel do? she wondered.
Possibly in the madness of the moment his mantle
of discretion might fall from him, and he would dash
after her. What a sensation for the Quadrant!
A girl tearing along as if for her life pursued by
a gentleman’s servant. It would look just
like the poster of “Charley’s Aunt.”
Peel opened the door of Bowen’s
sitting-room, and Patricia entered with the smile
still on her lips that the thought of “Charley’s
Aunt” had aroused. Something seemed to
spring towards her from inside the room, and she found
herself caught in a pair of arms and kissed.
She remembered wondering if Peel were behind, or if
he had closed the door, then she abandoned herself
to Bowen’s embrace.
Everything seemed somehow changed.
It was as if someone had suddenly shouldered her
responsibilities, and she would never have to think
again for herself. Her lips, her eyes, her hair,
were kissed in turn. She was being crushed; yet
she was conscious only of a feeling of complete content.
Suddenly the realisation of what was
happening dawned upon her, and she strove to free
herself. With all her force she pushed Bowen
from her. He released her. She stood back
looking at him with crimson cheeks and unseeing eyes.
She was conscious that something unusual was happening
to her, something in which she appeared to have no
voice. Perhaps it was all a dream. She
swayed a little. The same sensation she had
fought back at the telephone was overcoming her.
Was she going to faint? It would be ridiculous
to faint in Bowen’s rooms. Why did people
faint? Was it really, as Aunt Adelaide had told
her, because the heart missed a beat? One beat
She felt Bowen’s arm round her,
she seemed to sway towards a chair. Was the chair
really moving away from her? Then the mist seemed
to clear. Someone was kneeling beside her.
Bowen gazed at her anxiously.
Her face was now colourless, and her eyes closed
wearily. She sighed as a tired child sighs before
falling asleep.
“Patricia! what is the matter?”
cried Bowen In alarm. “You haven’t
fainted, have you?”
She was conscious of the absurdity
of the question. She opened her eyes with a
curious fluttering movement of the lids, as if they
were uncertain how long they could remain unclosed.
A slow, tired smile played across her face, like
a passing shaft of sunshine, then the lids closed
again and the life seemed to go out of her body.
Bowen gently withdrew his arm and,
rising, strode across to a table on which was a decanter
of whisky and syphon of soda. With unsteady
hands, he poured whisky and soda into a glass and,
returning to Patricia, he passed his arm gently behind
her head, placing the glass against her lips.
She drank a little and then, with a shudder, turned
her head aside. A moment later her eyes opened
again. She looked round the room, then fixed
her gaze on Bowen as if trying to explain to herself
his presence. Gradually the colour returned to
her cheeks and she sighed deeply. She shook
her head as Bowen put the glass against her lips.
“I nearly fainted,” she
whispered, sighing again. “I’ve never
done such a thing.” Then after a pause
she added, “I wonder what has happened.
My head feels so funny.”
“It’s all my fault,”
said Bowen penitently. “I’ve waited
so long, and I seemed to go mad. You will forgive
me, dearest, won’t you?” his voice was
full of concern.
Patricia smiled. “Have
I been here long?” she asked. “It
seems ages since I came.”
“No; only about five minutes.
Oh, Patricia! you won’t do it again, will you?”
Bowen drew her nearer to him and upset the glass containing
the remains of the whisky and soda that he had placed
on the floor beside him.
“I didn’t quite faint,
really,” she said earnestly, as if defending
herself from a reproach.
“I mean throw me over,”
explained Bowen. “It’s been hell!”
“Please go and sit down,”
she said, moving restlessly. “I’m
all right now. I I want to talk and
I can’t talk like this.” Again she
smiled, and Bowen lifted her hand and kissed it gently.
Rising he drew a chair near her and sat down.
“You see all this comes of trying
to be a Mrs. Triggs,” she said regretfully.
“Mrs. Triggs!” Bowen looked at her anxiously.
Slowly and a little wearily Patricia
explained her conversation with Elton. “Didn’t
he tell you he had seen me?”
“No,” replied Bowen, relieved
at the explanation; “Godfrey is a perfect dome
of silence on occasion.”
“Why did you suddenly leave
me all alone, Peter?” Patricia enquired presently.
“I couldn’t understand. It hurt
me terribly. I didn’t realise” she
paused “oh, everything, until I heard
you were going away. Oh, my dear!” she
cried in a low voice, “be gentle with me.
I’m all bruises.”
Bowen bent across to her. “I’m
a brute,” he said, “but ”
She shook her head. “Not
that sort,” she said. “It’s
my pride I’ve bruised. I seem to have
turned everything upside down. You’ll have
to be very gentle with me at first, please.”
She looked up at him with a flicker of a smile.
“Not only at first, dear, but
always,” said Bowen gently as he rose and seated
himself beside her. “Patricia, when did
you care?” he blurted out the last
word hurriedly.
“I don’t know,”
she replied dreamily. “You see,”
she continued after a pause, “I’ve not
been like other girls. Do you know, Peter,”
she looked up at him shyly, “you’re the
first man who has ever kissed me, except my father.
Isn’t it absurd?”
“It’s nothing of the sort,”
Bowen declared, tilting up her chin and gazing down
into her eyes. “But you haven’t answered
my question.”
“Well!” continued Patricia,
speaking slowly, “when you sent me flowers and
messengers and telegraph-boys and things I was angry,
and then when you didn’t I ”
she paused.
“Wanted them,” he suggested.
“U-m-m-m!” she nodded
her head. “I suppose so,” she conceded.
“But,” she added with a sudden change
of mood, “I shall always be dreadfully afraid
of Peel. He seems so perfect.”
Bowen laughed. “I’ll try and balance
matters,” he said.
“But you haven’t told
me,” said Patricia, “why you left me alone
all at once. Why did you?” She looked
up enquiringly at him.
During the next half an hour Patricia
slowly drew from Bowen the whole story of the plot
engineered by Lady Tanagra.
“But why,” questioned
Patricia, “were you going away if you knew that that
everything would come all right?”
“I had given up hope, and I
couldn’t break my promise to Tan. I convinced
myself that you didn’t care.”
Patricia held out her hand with a
smile. Bowen bent and kissed it.
“I wonder what you are thinking
of me?” She looked up at him anxiously.
“I’m very much at your mercy now, Peter,
aren’t I? You won’t let me ever
regret it, will you?”
“Do you regret it?” he
whispered, bending towards her, conscious of the fragrance
of her hair.
“It’s such an unconditional
surrender,” she complained. “All
my pride is bruised and trampled underfoot.
You have me at such a disadvantage.”
“So long as I’ve got you I don’t
care,” he laughed.
“Peter,” said Patricia
after a few minutes of silence, “I want you to
ring up Tanagra and Godfrey Elton and ask them to dine
here this evening. They must put off any other
engagement. Tell them I say so.”
“But can’t we ?”
began Bowen.
“There, you are making me regret
already,” she said with a flash of her old vivacity.
Bowen flew to the telephone.
By a lucky chance Elton was calling at Grosvenor
Square, and Bowen was able to get them both with one
call. He was a little disappointed, however,
at not having Patricia to himself that evening.
“When shall we get married?”
Bowen asked eagerly, as Patricia rose and announced
that she must go and repair damages to her face and
garments.
“I will tell you after dinner,”
she said as she walked towards the door.
II
“It is only the impecunious
who are constrained to be modest,” remarked
Elton as the four sat smoking in Bowen’s room
after dinner.
“Is that an apology, or merely
a statement of fact?” asked Lady Tanagra.
“I think,” remarked Patricia
quietly, “that it is an apology.”
Elton looked across at her with one
of those quick movements of his eyes that showed how
alert his mind was, in spite of the languid ease of
his manner.
“And now,” continued Patricia,
“I have something very important to say to you
all.”
“Oh!” groaned Lady Tanagra,
“spare me from the self-importance of the newly-engaged
girl.”
“It has come to my knowledge,
Tanagra,” proceeded Patricia, “that you
and Mr. Elton did deliberately and wittingly conspire
together against my peace of mind and happiness.
There!” she added, “that’s almost
legal in its ambiguity, isn’t it?”
Lady Tanagra and Elton exchanged glances.
“What do you mean?” demanded Lady Tanagra
gaily.
Patricia explained that she had extracted
from Bowen the whole story. Lady Tanagra looked
reproachfully at her brother. Then turning to
Patricia she said with unwonted seriousness:
“I saw that was the only way
to to well get you for a sister-in-law
and,” she paused a moment uncertainly.
“I knew you were the only girl for that silly
old thing there, who was blundering up the whole business.”
“Your mania for interfering
in other people’s affairs will be your ruin,
Tanagra,” said Patricia as she turned to Elton,
her look clearly enquiring if he had any excuse to
offer.
“The old Garden of Eden answer,”
he said. “A woman tempted me.”
“Then we will apply the old
Garden of Eden punishment,” announced Patricia.
Elton, who was the first to grasp
her meaning, looked anxiously at Lady Tanagra, who
with knitted brows was endeavouring to penetrate to
Patricia’s meaning. Bowen was obviously
at sea. Suddenly Lady Tanagra’s face flamed
and her eyes dropped. Elton stroked the back
of his head, a habit he had when preoccupied he
was never nervous.
“You two,” continued Patricia,
now thoroughly enjoying herself, “have precipitated
yourselves into my most private affairs, and in return
I am going to take a hand in yours. Peter has
asked me when I will marry him. I said I would
tell him after dinner this evening.”
Bowen looked across at her eagerly,
Elton lit another cigarette, Lady Tanagra toyed nervously
with her amber cigarette-holder.
“I will marry Peter,”
announced Patricia, “when you, Tanagra,”
she paused slightly, “marry Godfrey Elton.”
Lady Tanagra looked up with a startled
cry. Her eyes were wide with something that
seemed almost fear, then without warning she turned
and buried her head in a cushion and burst into uncontrollable
sobbing.
Bowen started up. With a swift
movement Patricia went over to his side and, before
he knew what was happening, he was in the corridor
stuttering his astonishment to Patricia.
For an hour the two sat in the lounge
below, talking and listening to the band. Patricia
explained to Bowen how from the first she had known
that Elton and Tanagra were in love.
“But we’ve known him all our lives!”
expostulated Bowen.
“The very thing that blinded you all to a most
obvious fact.”
“But why didn’t he ?”
began Bowen.
“Because of her money,”
explained Patricia. “Anyhow,” she
continued gaily, “I had lost my own tail, and
I wasn’t going to see Tanagra wagging hers before
my eyes. Now let’s go up and see what has
happened.”
Just as Bowen’s hand was on
the handle of the sitting-room door, Patricia cried
out that she had dropped a ring. When they entered
the room Elton and Lady Tanagra were standing facing
the door. One glance at their faces, told Patricia
all she wanted to know. Without a word Elton
came forward and bending low, kissed her hand.
There was something so touching in his act of deference
that Patricia felt her throat contract.
She went across to Lady Tanagra and
put her arm round her.
“You darling!” whispered
Lady Tanagra. “How clever of you to know.”
“I knew the first time I saw
you together,” whispered Patricia.
Lady Tanagra hugged her.
“And now we must all run round
to Grosvenor Square. Poor Mother what
a surprise for her!”
III
Elton’s medical board took a
more serious view of his state of health than was
anticipated, and he was temporarily given an appointment
in the Intelligence Department. Bowen’s
application to be allowed to rejoin his regiment was
refused, and thus the way was cleared for the double
wedding that took place at St. Margaret’s, Westminster.
Patricia was given away by the Duke
of Gayton. Lady Peggy declared that it would
rank as the most heroic act he had ever performed.
Mr. Triggs reached the highest sartorial pinnacle
of his career in a light grey, almost white frock-coated
suit with a high hat to match, a white waistcoat,
and a white satin tie. As Elton expressed it,
he looked like a musical-comedy conception of a bookmaker
turned philanthropist.
Galvin House was there in force.
Even Gustave obtained an hour off and, with a large
white rose in his button-hole, beamed on everyone and
everything with the utmost impartiality. Miss
Brent, like Achilles, sulked in her tent.
“The only two men I ever loved,”
wailed Lady Peggy to a friend, “and both gone
at one shot.”
“She’s a lucky girl,”
said an old dowager, “and only a secretary.”
“Some girl. What!”
muttered an embryo field-marshal to a one-pip strategist
in the uniform of the Irish Guards, who concurred with
an emphatic, “Lucky devil!”
At Galvin House for the rest of the
chapter they talked, dreamed and lived the Bowen-Brent
marriage. It was the one ineffaceable sunspot
in the greyness of their lives.