Finding it unlikely that his uncle
would ask for him before evening, and that consequently
he had plenty of time at his disposal, Laurence embarked
after breakfast upon a survey of the house. When
a boy at school he had occasionally passed a couple
of nights at Stoke Rivers. His recollections
of these visits were not gay. He had been glad
enough to go away again. It followed that his
impressions of the house itself were vague and confused.
He now found that it was constructed in the shape
of a capital L reversed. The base of the letter,
facing east and west, contained kitchens, offices,
and servants’ quarters. The main building at
right angles to it was two stories in height,
and consisted of suites of handsome rooms opening
on to a wide corridor. The windows of the latter
looked south, those of the rooms north. The colouring
and furnishings resembled, in the main, those of Mr.
Rivers’ bedroom. Dark panelled walls, rich,
sombre hangings of dark blue, crimson, or violet obtained
throughout. In the drawing-rooms were some noble
landscapes by Cuyp, Ruysdael, and other Dutch masters
of note. There was also an admirable collection
of Italian ivories, small figures of exquisite workmanship;
and several glass cases containing fine antique and
renaissance gems. The walls of the libraries were
lined with books a curious and varied collection,
ranging from ancient black-letter volumes down to
the latest German treatise, on natural science or
metaphysics, of the current year. Laurence promised
himself to make nearer acquaintance with these rather
weighty joys at a more convenient season. Meanwhile,
in contrast to the otherwise distinctly old-fashioned
character of the house, he remarked a very complete
installation of electric light, and an ingenious system
of hot-air ventilation, by means of which a temperature
of over seventy degrees was maintained throughout
the whole interior. This produced a heavy and
enervating atmosphere of which Laurence fresh
from the strong clean air of the Atlantic became
increasingly and disagreeably sensible. It made
him at once restless and inert; and as he wandered,
rather aimlessly from room to room, he was annoyed
by finding a slight nervousness gained on him he,
whose nerves were usually of the steadiest, happily
conspicuous by their absence, indeed, rather than by
their presence!
“Upon my word, this beats the
American abomination of steam heat,” he said
to himself.
His visit to the library, where the
smell of old leather bindings added to the deadness
of the air, nearly finished him. He went out on
to the corridor, and paced the length of it, past
the flying staircase of black oak leading to the upper
corridor, and back again. A broad strip of deep-pile,
crimson carpet was spread along the centre of the polished
floor. On one hand, between the doors of the living-rooms,
hung a collection of valuable copper-plate engravings,
representing classic ruins in Italy and Greece.
While on the other, in the spaces between the windows,
were ranged a series of busts Augustus,
Tiberias, Nero, the two Antonines, Caligula, and Commodus set
on tall columnar pedestals of dark green or yellow
marble. The blind, sculptured faces deepened the
general sense of oppression by their rigidity, their
unalterable and somewhat scornful repose.
Out of doors the March morning was
tumultuous with wind and wet, offering marked contrast
to the dry heat, the almost burdensome order and stillness
reigning within. The air of the corridor was perhaps
a degree fresher than that of the library he had just
quitted. Laurence leaned his arms on a stone
window-sill, and glanced in a desultory way at the
day’s Times, which he had picked up off
the hall table in passing. But Chinese railway
concessions, plague reports from Bombay, even the
last racing fixtures, or rumours of fighting on the
North-West Indian Frontier, failed to arouse his interest.
In his present humour, these items of news from the
outside world seemed curiously unimportant and remote.
He stared at the wide, well-wooded, rain-blurred landscape.
The scene at which he had assisted last night, the
intimate drama moving forward relentlessly even now
to its close in that well-appointed room upstairs and
the extraordinary character of the chief actor in that
drama his over-stimulated brain and atrophied
affections, his greed of experiment and of acquiring
information, even yet, in the very article of death depressed
Laurence’s imagination as the close atmosphere
depressed his body. It was all so painfully narrow,
barren, hungry, joyless, somehow. And meanwhile,
he, Laurence, was required to play the fool not
for the provocation of laughter, which would after
all have had a semblance of cheerful good-fellowship
in it. But in cold blood, as an object lesson
in the manner and customs of the average man; a lesson
the result of which would be tabulated and pigeon-holed
by that unwearying intelligence, as might be the habits
of some species of obscure, unpleasant insect.
The young man had developed slight intolerance of
the exclusively worldly side of things lately.
It seemed by no means improbable he might develop
equal intolerance of the exclusively intellectual
side before long, at this rate.
“I seem qualifying as a past-master
in the highly unprofitable act of quarrelling with
my bread and butter,” he said to himself.
“If I chuck society, and proceed to chuck brains
as well, for a man like myself, without genius and
without a profession, what the devil is there left?”
Meditating thus, he had left his station
at the window, and walked to the extreme end of the
corridor farthest away from the servants’ wing
of the house. It was closed by a splendid tapestry
curtain, whereon a crowd of round-limbed cupids drove
a naked and reluctant woman, with gestures of naughty
haste, towards a satyr, seated beneath a shadowy grove
of trees upon a little monticule, who beckoned with
one hand while with the other he stopped the notes
of his reed pipe. The tapestry was of great beauty
and indubitable worth; but the subject of it was slightly
displeasing to Laurence, a trifle gross in suggestion,
as had been the sphinxes and caryatides of the carven
ebony bed.
“Oh! of course there’s
that sort of thing left,” he said to himself,
recurring to his recent train of thought. “But,
no thank you, I flatter myself I can hardly find satisfaction
in those low latitudes at present.”
Having, however, an appreciation of
all fine artistic work, he laid hold of the border
of the curtain, wishing to feel its texture. To
his surprise, it was of very great weight, padded
and lined with leather, as are curtains covering the
doors of certain Roman churches.
Laurence pulled the corner of it towards
him and passed behind it. The curtain fell back
into position with a muffled thud, leaving him standing
in a narrow, dark, cupboard-like space, closed by a
door, of which it took him some stifling seconds to
find the handle. He fumbled blindly in the dark,
an almost childish sense of agitation upon him.
He felt as in dreams, when the place to be traversed
grows more and more contracted, walls closing down
and in on every hand, while the means of exit become
more maddeningly impossible of discovery. To his
surprise, he turned faint and broke into a sweat.
It was not in the least an amusing experience.
At last the handle gave, with a click,
and the door opened, disclosing a large and lofty
room quite unlike any one which he had yet visited.
It was delicately fresh both in atmosphere and colouring.
It wore a gracious and friendly look, seeming to welcome
the intruder with a demure gladsomeness. A certain
gaiety pervaded it even on this unpropitious morning.
The great bay-window, facing east, gave upon a stately
Italian garden, beyond the tall cypresses, white statues,
and fountains of which spread flat, high-lying lawns
of brilliantly green turf. These were crossed
by a broad walk of golden gravel leading to an avenue
of enormous lime-trees, the domed heads of which were
just touched with the rose-pink buds of the opening
spring.
The furniture of the room was of satin-wood,
highly polished and painted with garlands of roses,
true-lovers’ knots of blue ribbon, dainty landscapes,
ladies and lovers, after the manner of Boucher.
The chairs and sofas were upholstered in brocade,
the predominating colours of which were white, pale
yellow, and pale pink. An old-fashioned, square,
semi-grand piano the case of it in satin-wood
and painted like the rest stood out into
the room. On a spindle-legged table beside it
lay a quantity of music, the printing very black,
the pages brown with age. Close against these
was a violin case covered with faded, red velvet,
on which were stamped initials and a crest.
Laurence’s eyes dwelt on these
things. And then surely there should
be a harp in the further left-hand corner, the strings
of it covered by a gilded, stamped leather hood?
Yes, it was there right enough. And a tall
escritoire, with a miniature brass balustrade running
along the top of it, should stand at right angles
to the chimney-piece, upon which last, doubled by
the looking-glass behind, should be tall azure and
gold Sèvres jars, an Empire clock the
golden face of it set in a ring of precious garnets figures
in Chelsea china and branched, gold candlesticks.
Laurence looked for and found these
objects, a prey at once to surprise and to a sense
of happy familiarity. He was perfectly acquainted
with this room but why or how he knew not.
He was filled, too, by a singular sense of expectation.
It was to him as though some exquisite presence had
but lately quitted this apartment and might, at any
instant, return to it. He apprehended something
tenderly, delectably feminine. The china ornaments,
and many little fanciful silver toys, spoke of a woman’s
taste. So did a tambour frame, and an ivory work-box,
the lid of it open, disclosing dainty property of
gold thimble, scissors, cottons, and what not and
a half-finished frill of cobweb-like India muslin,
a little, gold-eyed needle sticking in the mimic hem.
On the small table beside the work-box lay a white
vellum-bound copy of the Vita Nuova of Dante,
and the Introduction to the Devout Life of St.
Francis de Sales.
Perplexed by his own sensations, possessed
too by a sudden, gentle reverence and longing which
he could not explain, Laurence touched the pretty
trifles in the work-box; fitted the thimble on the
tip of his little finger; turned the pages of the
Dante, and read how the poet came near swooning at
first sight of the maiden of eight years old whom,
though she was never destined to be his mistress or
wife, he loved ever after, and made immortal in immortal
verse. He unlocked the worn red-velvet violin
case and drew the bow not for the first
time he could have sworn not across
the wailing strings. What did it all mean?
Yes, what, indeed, in the name of common-sense,
of New York and Newport, of his golf and polo, and
cotillions, of crowded opera-house and shouting racecourse?
In the name, too, of those hard, brilliant, dying
eyes, and that cold, hungry intellect upstairs, what
did it mean? He had no recollection of having
been into this room on his former visits to Stoke
Rivers in his boyhood. And yet, of course, he
must have been here otherwise? But
then this overmastering sense of expectation, this
apprehension of an exquisite feminine presence, this
“Upon my word, I’m playing
the fool to some purpose,” he said, half aloud.
He crossed the room, threw wide the
French window and went onto the head of the semicircular
flight of stone steps without. The wind buffeted
him roughly. The rain spattered in his face.
On the left, the lawns were divided from the downward
slope of rough park and woodland by a sunk fence.
Beyond was outspread an extensive tract of rolling,
wooded country red and white hamlets half
buried among trees, here and there the spire of a
village church, flat, green pastures lying along the
valleys, brown patches of hop-garden and ploughland,
and uplifted against the grey, storm-drifted horizon
a windmill crowning some conspicuous height.
Suddenly the cry of hounds, running, saluted Laurence’s
ear. Then the whole pack, breaking covert, crossed
the open park. The field followed, horses pulling,
riders leaning forward, squaring their shoulders to
the wind a flash of scarlet, chestnut,
black and bay, behind the dappled joy of the racing
pack.
For a moment the strange influences
of this strange day made even the merry hunt appear
to Laurence as the pageant of an uneasy dream.
But soon the honest outdoor life claimed him again,
forcing him back upon unquestioned realities.
He closed the French window behind him, stood on the
wet steps spending some anxious moments in the lighting
of a cigar, and then strolled, hatless, round to the
stables to make inquiry as to what his uncle might
own in the matter of horseflesh.