Two years later, Scorrier heard once
more of Pippin. A note from Hemmings reached
him asking if he could make it convenient to attend
their Board meeting the following Thursday. He
arrived rather before the appointed time. The
secretary received him, and, in answer to inquiry,
said: “Thank you, we are doing well between
ourselves, we are doing very well.”
“And Pippin?”
The secretary frowned. “Ah,
Pippin! We asked you to come on his account.
Pippin is giving us a lot of trouble. We have
not had a single line from him for just two years!”
He spoke with such a sense of personal grievance that
Scorrier felt quite sorry for him. “Not
a single line,” said Hemmings, “since
that explosion you were there at the time,
I remember! It makes it very awkward; I call
it personal to me.”
“But how ” Scorrier began.
“We get telegrams.
He writes to no one, not even to his family. And
why? Just tell me why? We hear of him; he’s
a great nob out there. Nothing’s done in
the colony without his finger being in the pie.
He turned out the last Government because they wouldn’t
grant us an extension for our railway shows
he can’t be a fool. Besides, look at our
balance-sheet!”
It turned out that the question on
which Scorrier’s opinion was desired was, whether
Hemmings should be sent out to see what was the matter
with the superintendent. During the discussion
which ensued, he was an unwilling listener to strictures
on Pippin’s silence. “The explosion,”
he muttered at last, “a very trying time!”
Mr. Booker pounced on him. “A
very trying time! So it was to all
of us. But what excuse is that now,
Mr. Scorrier, what excuse is that?”
Scorrier was obliged to admit that it was none.
“Business is business eh, what?”
Scorrier, gazing round that neat Board-room,
nodded. A deaf director, who had not spoken for
some months, said with sudden fierceness: “It’s
disgraceful!” He was obviously letting off the
fume of long-unuttered disapprovals. One perfectly
neat, benevolent old fellow, however, who had kept
his hat on, and had a single vice that of
coming to the Board-room with a brown paper parcel
tied up with string murmured: “We
must make all allowances,” and started an anecdote
about his youth. He was gently called to order
by his secretary. Scorrier was asked for his
opinion. He looked at Hemmings. “My
importance is concerned,” was written all over
the secretary’s face. Moved by an impulse
of loyalty to Pippin, Scorrier answered, as if it
were all settled: “Well, let me know when
you are starting, Hemmings I should like
the trip myself.”
As he was going out, the chairman,
old Jolyon Forsyte, with a grave, twinkling look at
Hemmings, took him aside. “Glad to hear
you say that about going too, Mr. Scorrier; we must
be careful Pippin’s such a good fellow,
and so sensitive; and our friend there a
bit heavy in the hand, um?”
Scorrier did in fact go out with Hemmings.
The secretary was sea-sick, and his prostration, dignified
but noisy, remained a memory for ever; it was sonorous
and fine the prostration of superiority;
and the way in which he spoke of it, taking casual
acquaintances into the caves of his experience, was
truly interesting.
Pippin came down to the capital to
escort them, provided for their comforts as if they
had been royalty, and had a special train to take
them to the mines.
He was a little stouter, brighter
of colour, greyer of beard, more nervous perhaps in
voice and breathing. His manner to Hemmings was
full of flattering courtesy; but his sly, ironical
glances played on the secretary’s armour like
a fountain on a hippopotamus. To Scorrier, however,
he could not show enough affection:
The first evening, when Hemmings had
gone to his room, he jumped up like a boy out of school.
“So I’m going to get a wigging,”
he said; “I suppose I deserve it; but if you
knew if you only knew...! Out here
they’ve nicknamed me ’the King’ they
say I rule the colony. It’s myself that
I can’t rule”; and with a sudden burst
of passion such as Scorrier had never seen in him:
“Why did they send this man here? What can
he know about the things that I’ve been through?”
In a moment he calmed down again. “There!
this is very stupid; worrying you like this!”
and with a long, kind look into Scorrier’s face,
he hustled him off to bed.
Pippin did not break out again, though
fire seemed to smoulder behind the bars of his courteous
irony. Intuition of danger had evidently smitten
Hemmings, for he made no allusion to the object of
his visit. There were moments when Scorrier’s
common-sense sided with Hemmings these
were moments when the secretary was not present.
‘After all,’ he told himself,
’it’s a little thing to ask one
letter a month. I never heard of such a case.’
It was wonderful indeed how they stood it! It
showed how much they valued Pippin! What was the
matter with him? What was the nature of his trouble?
One glimpse Scorrier had when even Hemmings, as he
phrased it, received “quite a turn.”
It was during a drive back from the most outlying
of the company’s trial mines, eight miles through
the forest. The track led through a belt of trees
blackened by a forest fire. Pippin was driving.
The secretary seated beside him wore an expression
of faint alarm, such as Pippin’s driving was
warranted to evoke from almost any face. The sky
had darkened strangely, but pale streaks of light,
coming from one knew not where, filtered through the
trees. No breath was stirring; the wheels and
horses’ hoofs made no sound on the deep fern
mould. All around, the burnt tree-trunks, leafless
and jagged, rose like withered giants, the passages
between them were black, the sky black, and black the
silence. No one spoke, and literally the only
sound was Pippin’s breathing. What was
it that was so terrifying? Scorrier had a feeling
of entombment; that nobody could help him; the feeling
of being face to face with Nature; a sensation as
if all the comfort and security of words and rules
had dropped away from him. And-nothing happened.
They reached home and dined.
During dinner he had again that old
remembrance of a little man chopping at a castle with
his sword. It came at a moment when Pippin had
raised his hand with the carving-knife grasped in
it to answer some remark of Hemmings’ about
the future of the company. The optimism in his
uplifted chin, the strenuous energy in his whispering
voice, gave Scorrier a more vivid glimpse of Pippin’s
nature than he had perhaps ever had before. This
new country, where nothing but himself could help a
man that was the castle! No wonder
Pippin was impatient of control, no wonder he was
out of hand, no wonder he was silent chopping
away at that! And suddenly he thought: ’Yes,
and all the time one knows, Nature must beat him in
the end!’
That very evening Hemmings delivered
himself of his reproof. He had sat unusually
silent; Scorrier, indeed, had thought him a little
drunk, so portentous was his gravity; suddenly, however
he rose. It was hard on a man, he said, in his
position, with a Board (he spoke as of a family of
small children), to be kept so short of information.
He was actually compelled to use his imagination to
answer the shareholders’ questions. This
was painful and humiliating; he had never heard of
any secretary having to use his imagination!
He went further it was insulting! He
had grown grey in the service of the company.
Mr. Scorrier would bear him out when he said he had
a position to maintain his name in the City
was a high one; and, by George! he was going to keep
it a high one; he would allow nobody to drag it in
the dust that ought clearly to be understood.
His directors felt they were being treated like children;
however that might be, it was absurd to suppose that
he (Hemmings) could be treated like a child...!
The secretary paused; his eyes seemed to bully the
room.
“If there were no London office,”
murmured Pippin, “the shareholders would get
the same dividends.”
Hemmings gasped. “Come!” he said,
“this is monstrous!”
“What help did I get from London
when I first came here? What help have I ever
had?”
Hemmings swayed, recovered, and with
a forced smile replied that, if this were true, he
had been standing on his head for years; he did not
believe the attitude possible for such a length of
time; personally he would have thought that he too
had had a little something to say to the company’s
position, but no matter...! His irony was crushing....
It was possible that Mr. Pippin hoped to reverse the
existing laws of the universe with regard to limited
companies; he would merely say that he must not begin
with a company of which he (Hemmings) happened to be
secretary. Mr. Scorrier had hinted at excuses;
for his part, with the best intentions in the world,
he had great difficulty in seeing them. He would
go further he did not see them! The
explosion...! Pippin shrank so visibly that Hemmings
seemed troubled by a suspicion that he had gone too
far.
“We know,” he said, “that it was
trying for you....”
“Trying!” “burst out Pippin.
“No one can say,” Hemmings
resumed soothingly, “that we have not dealt
liberally.” Pippin made a motion of the
head. “We think we have a good superintendent;
I go further, an excellent superintendent. What
I say is: Let’s be pleasant! I am
not making an unreasonable request!” He ended
on a fitting note of jocularity; and, as if by consent,
all three withdrew, each to his own room, without
another word.
In the course of the next day Pippin
said to Scorrier: “It seems I have been
very wicked. I must try to do better”; and
with a touch of bitter humour, “They are kind
enough to think me a good superintendent, you see!
After that I must try hard.”
Scorrier broke in: “No
man could have done so much for them;” and,
carried away by an impulse to put things absolutely
straight, went on “But, after all, a letter
now and then what does it amount to?”
Pippin besieged him with a subtle
glance. “You too?” he said “I
must indeed have been a wicked man!” and turned
away.
Scorrier felt as if he had been guilty
of brutality; sorry for Pippin, angry with himself;
angry with Pippin, sorry for himself. He earnestly
desired to see the back of Hemmings. The secretary
gratified the wish a few days later, departing by
steamer with ponderous expressions of regard and the
assurance of his goodwill.
Pippin gave vent to no outburst of
relief, maintaining a courteous silence, making only
one allusion to his late guest, in answer to a remark
of Scorrier:
“Ah! don’t tempt me! mustn’t speak
behind his back.”