WHICH SMELLS VERY VILELY OF THE STABLE
April softened into May, and the hawthorns
were in blossom before Richard passed any other very
note-worthy milestone on the road of personal development.
Then, greatly tempted, he committed a venial sin;
received prompt and coarse chastisement; and, by means
of the said chastisement, as is the merciful way of
the Eternal Justice, found unhoped of emancipation.
It happened thus. As the spring
days grew warm Mademoiselle de Mirancourt failed somewhat.
The darkness and penetrating chill of the English
winter tried her, and this year her recuperative powers
seemed sadly deficient. A fuller tide of life
had pulsed through Brockhurst since Colonel Ormiston’s
arrival. The old stillness was departing, the
old order changing. With that change Mademoiselle
de Mirancourt had no quarrel, since, to her serene
faith, all that came must, of necessity, come through
a divine ordering and in conformity to a divine plan.
Yet this more of activity and of movement strained
her. The weekly drive over to Westchurch, to
hear mass at the humble Catholic chapel tucked away
in a side street, sorely taxed her strength. She
returned fortified, her soul ravished by that heavenly
love, which, in pure and innocent natures, bears such
gracious kinship to earthly love. Yet in body
she was outworn and weary. On such occasions she
would rally Julius March, not without a touch of malice,
saying:
“Ah! très cher ami, had
you only followed the ever blessed footsteps of those
dear Oxford friends of yours and entered the fold of
the true Church, what fatigue might you not now spare
me let alone the incalculable advantages
to your own poor, charming, fatally darkened soul!”
While Julius who, though
no less devout than of yore, was happily less fastidiously
sensitive would reply:
“But, dearest lady, had I followed
the footsteps of my Oxford friends, remember I should
not be at Brockhurst at all.”
“Clearly, then, everything is
well ordered,” she would say, folding her fragile
hands upon her embroidery frame, “since it is
altogether impossible we could do without you.
Yet I regret for your soul. It is so capable
of receiving illumination. You English even
the most finished among you remain really
deplorably stubborn, and nevertheless it is my fate
perpetually to set my affections upon one or other
of you.”
It followed that Katherine devoted
much of her time to Mademoiselle de Mirancourt, walked
slowly beside her up and down the sunny, garden paths
sheltered by the high, red walls whereon the clematis
and jasmine began to show for flower; or took her
for quiet, little drives within the precincts of the
park. They spoke much of Lucia St. Quentin, of
Katherine’s girlhood, and of those pleasant days
in Paris long ago. And this brought soothing
and comfort, not only to the old lady, but to the
young lady also and of soothing and comfort
the latter stood in need just now.
For it is harsh discipline even to
a noble woman, whose life is still strong in her,
to stand by and see another woman but a few years her
junior entering on those joys which she has lost, marriage,
probably motherhood as well. Roger Ormiston’s
and Mary Cathcart’s love-making was restrained
and dignified. But the very calm of their attitude
implied a security of happiness passing all need of
advertisement. And Katherine was very far from
grudging them this. She was not envious, still
less jealous. She did not want to take anything
of theirs; but she wanted, she sorely wanted, her
own again. A word, a look, a certain quickness
of quiet laughter, would pierce her with recollection.
Once for her too, below the commonplaces of daily
detail, flowed that same magic river of delight.
But the springs of it had gone dry. Therefore
it was a relief to be alone with Mademoiselle de Mirancourt virgin
and saint and to speak with her of the
days before she had sounded the lovely depths of that
same magic flood days when she had known
of its existence only by the mirage, born of the dazzle
of its waters, which plays over the innocent vacant
spaces of a young girl’s mind.
It was a relief even, though of sterner
quality, to go into the red drawing-room on the ground
floor and pace there, her hands clasped behind her,
her proud head bowed, by the half hour together.
If personal joy is dead past resurrection, there is
bitter satisfaction in realising to the full personal
pain. The room was duly swept, dusted, casements
set open to welcome breeze and sunshine, fires lighted
in the grate. But no one ever sat there.
It knew no cheerfulness of social intercourse.
The crimson curtains and covers had become faded.
They were not renewed. The furniture, save for
the absence of the narrow bed, stood in precisely
the same order as on the night when Sir Richard Calmady
died. It was pushed back against the walls.
And in the wide empty way between the two doors, Katherine
paced, saturating all her being with thoughts of that
which was, and must remain, wholly and inalienably
her own namely, her immense distress.
And in this she took the more comfort,
because something else, until now appearing wholly
her own, was slipping a little away from her.
Dickie’s health had improved notably in the last
few weeks. His listlessness had vanished, while
his cheeks showed a wholesome warmth of colour.
But his cry was ever. “Mother, Uncle Roger’s
going to such a place. He says he’ll take
me. I can go, can’t I?” Or, “Mother,
Mary’s going to do such a thing. She says
she’ll show me how. She may, mayn’t
she?” And Katherine’s answer was always
“Yes.” She grudged the boy none of
his new-found pleasures, rejoiced indeed to see him
interested and gay. Yet to watch the new broom,
which sweeps so clean, is rarely exhilarating to those
that have swept diligently with the old one. The
nest had held her precious fledgling so safely till
now; and this fluttering of wings, eager for flight,
troubled her somewhat. Not only was Dickie’s
readiness to be away from her a trifle hard to bear;
but she knew that disappointment, of a certainty,
lay in wait for him, and that each effort towards
wider action would but reveal to him how circumscribed
his powers actually were.
Meanwhile, however, Richard enjoyed
himself recklessly, almost feverishly, in the attempt
to disprove the teaching of that ugly dream, and keep
truth at bay. There had been further drives, and
the excitement of witnessing a forest fire only
too frequent in the Brockhurst country when the sap
is up, and the easterly wind and May sun have scorched
all moisture from the surface of the moorland.
He and Mary had bumped over fir roots and scuttled
down bridle-paths in the pony-carriage, to avoid the
rush of flame and smoke; had skirmished round at a
hand gallop, in search of recruits to reinforce Ormiston,
and Iles, and a small army of beaters, battling against
the blazing line that threatened destruction to the
fir avenue. Now and again, with a mighty roar,
which sent Dickie’s heart into his mouth, great
tongues of flame, clear as topaz and ruby in the steady
sunshine, would leap upwards, converting a whole tall
fir into a tree of fire, while the beaters running
back, grimed with smoke and sweat, took a moment’s
breathing-space in the open.
There had been more peaceful pastimes
as well several days’ fishing, enchanting
beyond the power of language to describe. The
clear trout-stream meandering through the rich water-meadows;
the herds of cattle standing knee-deep in the grass,
lazily chewing the cud and switching their tails at
the cloud of flies; the birds and wild creatures haunting
the streamside; the long dreamy hours of gentle sport,
had opened up to Dickie a whole new world of romance.
His donkey-chair had been left at the yellow-washed
mill beneath the grove of silvery-leaved, ever-rustling,
balsam poplars. And thence, while Ormiston and
Mary sauntered slowly on ahead, the men Winter
in mufti, oblivious of plate-cleaning and cellarage,
and the onerous duties of his high estate, Stamp,
the water-bailiff, and Moorcock, one of the under-keepers had
carried him across the great green levels. Winter
was an old and tried friend, and it was somewhat diverting
to behold him in this novel aspect, affable and chatty
with inferiors, displaying, moreover, unexpected knowledge
in the mysteries of the angler’s craft.
The other two men sharp-featured, their
faces ruddy as summer apples, merry-eyed, clad in
velveteen coats, that bulged about the pockets, and
wrinkled leather gaiters reaching halfway up the thigh charmed
Richard, when his first shyness was passed. They
were eager to please him. Their talk was racy.
Their laughter ready and sincere. Did not Stamp
point out to him a water-ouzel, with impudently jerking
tail, dipping and wading in the shallows of the stream?
Did not Moorcock find him a water-rail’s nest,
hidden in a tuft of reeds and grass, with ten, yellowish,
speckled eggs in it? And did not both men pluck
him handfuls of cowslips, of tawny-pink avens, and
of mottled, snake-headed fritillaries, and stow them
away in the fishing-baskets above the load of silver-and-red
spotted trout?
Mary had protested Dickie could throw
a fly, if he had a light enough rod. And not
only did he throw a fly, but at the fourth or fifth
cast a fish rose, and he played it with
skirling reel and much advice and most complimentary
excitement on the part of the whole good company and
brought it skilfully within range of Stamp’s
landing-net. Never surely was trout spawned that
begot such bliss in the heart of an angler! As,
with panting sides and open gills, this three-quarter-pound
treasure of treasures flopped about on the sunny stream
bank all the hereditary instinct of sport spoke up
clearly in Dickie. The boy such is
youthful masculine human nature believed
he understood at last why the world was made!
At dressing-time he had his sacred fish carried on
a plate up to his room to show Clara; and, but for
strong remonstrance on the part of that devoted handmaiden,
would have kept it by his bedside all night, so as
to assure himself at intervals, by sense of touch let
alone that of smell of the adorable fact
of its veritable existence.
But all this, inspiring though it
was, served but as prelude to a more profoundly coveted
acquaintance that with the racing-stable.
For it was after this last that Dickie still supremely
longed the more so, it is to be feared,
because it was, if not explicitly, yet implicitly
forbidden. A spirit of defiance had entered into
him. Being granted the inch, he was disposed
to take the ell. And this, not in conscious opposition
to his mother’s will; but in protest, not uncourageous,
against the limitations imposed on him by physical
misfortune. The boy’s blood was up, and
consequently, with greater pluck than discretion,
he struggled against the intimate, inalienable enemy
that so marred his fate. And it was this not
ignoble effort which culminated in disobedience.
For driving back one afternoon, later
than usual, Ormiston had met them, and
Mary and he had taken a by-path home through the woods, the
pony-carriage, turned along the high level road beside
the lake, going eastward, just as the string of race-horses,
coming home from exercise, passed along it coming
west. Richard was driving, Chaplin, the second
coachman, sitting in the dickey at the back of the
low carriage. He checked the pony, and his eyes
took in the whole scene the blue-brown
expanse of the lake dotted with water-fowl, on the
one hand, the immense blue-brown landscape on the
other, ranging away to the faint line of the chalk
downs in the south; the downward slope of the park,
to the great square of red stable buildings in the
hollow; the horses coming slowly towards him in single
file. Cawing rooks streamed back from the fallow-fields
across the valley. Thrushes and blackbirds carolled.
A wren, in the bramble brake close by, broke into sharp
sweet song. The recurrent ring of an axe came
from somewhere away in the fir plantations, and the
strident rasping of a saw from the wood-yard in the
beech grove near the house.
Richard stared at that oncoming procession.
Half-way between him and the foremost of the horses
the tan ride branched off, and wound down the hillside
to the stables. The boy set his teeth. He
arrived at a desperate decision, touched
up the pony, drove on.
Chaplin leaned forward, addressing
him, over the back of the seat.
“Better wait here, hadn’t
we, Sir Richard? They’ll turn off in a
minute.”
Richard did not look round. He
tried to answer coldly, but his voice shook.
“I know. That’s why I am going on.”
There was a silence save for the cawing
of the rooks, ring of the axe, and grinding of wheels
on the gravel. Chaplin, responsible, correct,
over five-and-thirty, and fully intending to succeed
old Mr. Wenham, the head coachman, on the latter’s
impending retirement from active service, went very
red in the face.
“Excuse me, but I have my orders, Sir Richard,”
he said.
Dickie still looked straight ahead.
“Very well,” he answered,
“then perhaps you’d better get out and
walk on home.”
“You know I’m bound not to leave you,
sir,” the man said.
Dickie laughed a little in uncontrollable
excitement. He was close to them now. The
leading horse was just moving off the main road, its
shadow lying long across the turf. How was it
possible to give way with the prize within reach? “You
can go or stay Chaplin, as you please. I mean
to speak to Chifney. I I mean to see
the stables.”
“It’s as much as my place is worth, sir.”
“Oh! bother your place!”
the boy cried impetuously. Dear heart alive,
how fine they were as they filed by! That chestnut
filly, clean made as a deer, her ears laid back as
she reached at the bit; and the brown, just behind
her “I mean, I mean you needn’t
be afraid, Chaplin I’ll speak to
her ladyship. I’ll arrange all that.
Go to the pony’s head.”
At the end of the long string of horses
came the trainer a square-built, short-necked
man, sanguine complexioned and clean shaven.
Of hair, indeed, Mr. Chifney could only boast a rim
of carroty-gray stubble under the rim of the back
of his hard hat. His right eye had suffered damage,
and the pupil of it was white and viscous. His
lips were straight and purplish in colour. He
raised his hat and would have followed on down the
slope, but Dickie called to him.
As he rode up an unwonted expression
came over Mr. Chifney’s shrewd, hard-favoured
face. He took off his hat and sat there, bare-headed
in the sunshine, looking down at the boy, his hand
on his hip.
“Good-day, Sir Richard,”
he said. “Anything I can do for you?”
“Yes, yes,” Dickie stammered,
all his soul in his eyes, his cheeks aflame, “you
can do just what I want most. Take me down, Chifney,
and show me the horses.”
Here Chaplin coughed discreetly behind
his hand. But that proved of small avail, save
possibly in the way of provocation. For socially
between the racing and house stables was a great gulf
fixed; and Mr. Chifney could hardly be expected to
recognise the existence of a man in livery standing
at a pony’s head, still less to accept direction
from such a person. Servants must be kept in
their place impudent, lazy enough lot anyhow,
bless you! On his feet the trainer had been known
to decline to moments of weakness. But in the
saddle, a good horse under him, he possessed unlimited
belief in his own judgment, fearing neither man, devil,
nor even his own meek-faced wife with pink ribbons
in her cap. Moreover, he felt such heart as he
had go out strangely to the beautiful, eager boy gazing
up at him.
“Nothing ’ud give me greater
pleasure in life, Sir Richard,” he said, “if
you’re free to come. We’ve waited
a long time, a precious long time, sir, for you to
come down and take a look at your horses.”
“I’d have been to see
them sooner. I’d have given anything to
see them. I’ve never had the chance, somehow.”
Chifney pursed up his lips, and surveyed
the distant landscape with a very meaning glance.
“I dare say not, Sir Richard. But better
late than never, you know; and so, if you are free
to come ”
Again Chaplin coughed.
“Free to come? Of course
I am free to come,” Dickie asserted, his pride
touched to arrogance. And Mr. Chifney looked at
him, an approving twinkle in his sound eye.
“I agree, Sir Richard.
Quite right, sir, you’re free, of course.”
Stolen waters are sweet, says the
proverb. And to Richard Calmady, his not wholly
legitimate experience of the next hour was sweet indeed.
For there remains rich harvest of poetry in all sport
worth the name, let squeamish and sentimental persons
declaim against it as they may. Strength and
endurance, disregard of suffering have a permanent
appeal and value, even in their coarsest manifestations.
No doubt the noble gentlemen of the neighbourhood,
who “lay at Brockhurst two nights” on
the occasion of Sir Denzil’s historic house-warming,
to witness the mighty bear-baiting, were sensible
of something more in that somewhat disgusting exhibition,
than the mere gratification of brutal instincts, the
mere savage relish for wounds and pain and blood.
And to Sir Denzil’s latest descendant the first
sight of the training-stable as the pony-carriage
came to a standstill alongside the grass plot in the
centre of the great, graveled square offered
very definite and stirring poetry of a kind.
On three sides the quadrangle was
shut in by one-storied, brick buildings, the woodwork
of doors and windows immaculate with white paint.
Behind, over the wide archway, closed fortress-like
by heavy doors at night, were the head-lad’s
and helpers’ quarters. On either side,
forge and weighing-room, saddler’s and doctor’s
shop. To right and left a range of stable doors,
with round swing-lights between each; and, above these,
the windows of hay and straw lofts and of the boys’
dormitories. In front were the dining-rooms and
kitchens, and the trainer’s house a
square clock tower, carrying an ornate gilt vane,
rising from the cluster of red roofs. Twenty years
had weathered the raw of brick walls, and painted
the tiling with all manner of orange and rusty-coloured
lichens; yet the whole place was admirably spick and
span, free of litter. Many cats, as Dickie noted,
meditated in sunny corners, or prowled in the open
with truly official composure. Over all stretched
a square of bluest sky, crossed by a skein of homeward-wending
rooks. While above the roofs, on either side the
archway, the high-lying lands of the park showed up,
broken, here and there, by clumps of trees.
Mr. Chifney slipped out of the saddle. “Here
boy, take my horse,” he shouted to a little
fellow hurrying across the yard. “I’m
heartily glad to see you, Sir Richard,” he went
on. “Now, if you care, as your father’s
son can’t very well be off caring, for horses ”
“If I care!” echoed Dickie,
his eyes following the graceful chestnut filly as
she was led in over the threshold of her stable.
“I like that. That’ll
do. Chip of the old block after all,” the
trainer said, with evident relish. “Well
then, since you do care for horses as you ought to,
Sir Richard, we’ll just make you free of this
establishment. About the most first-class private
establishment in England, sir, though I say it that
have run the concern pretty well single-handed for
the best part of the last fifteen years make
you free of it right away, sir. And, look you,
when you’ve got hold, don’t you leave
hold.”
“No, I won’t,” Dickie said stoutly.
Mr. Chifney was in a condition of
singular emotion, as he wrapped Richard’s rug
about him and bore him away into the stables.
He even went so far as to swear a little under his
breath; and Chifney was a very fairly clean-mouthed
man, unless members of his team of twenty and odd
naughty boys got up to some devilry with their charges.
He carried Richard as tenderly as could any woman,
while he tramped from stall to stall, loose-box to
loose-box, praising his racers, calling attention
to their points, recounting past prowess, or prophesying
future victories.
And the record was a fine one; for
good luck had clung to the masterless stable, as Lady
Calmady’s bank-books and ledgers could testify.
“Vinedresser by Red Burgundy
out of Valeria won two races at the Newmarket
Spring Meeting the year before last. Lamed himself
somehow in the horse-box coming back did
nothing for eighteen months hope to enter
him for some of the autumn events.” Then
later: “Sahara, by North African
out of Sally-in-our-Alley. Beautiful mare?
I believe you, Sir Richard. Why she won the Oaks
for you. Jack White was up. Pretty a race
as ever I witnessed, and cleverly ridden. Like
to go up to her in the stall? She’s as
quiet as a lamb. Catch hold of her head, boy.”
And so Dick found himself seated on
the edge of the manger, the trainer’s arm round
him, and the historic Sahara snuffing at his jacket
pockets.
Then they crossed the quadrangle to
inspect the colts and fillies, where glories still
lay ahead.
“Verdigris by Copper King out
of Valeria again. And if he doesn’t make
a name I’ll never judge another horse, sir.
Strain of the old Touchstone blood there. Rather
ugly? Yes, they’re often a bit ugly that
lot, but devilish good uns to go. You ask
Miss Cathcart about them. Never met a lady who’d
as much knowledge as she has of a horse. The
Baby, by Punch out of Lady Bountiful. Not much
good, I’m afraid. No grip, you see, too
contracted in the hoofs. Chloroform by Sawbones
out of sister to Castinette.”
And so forth, an endless repetition
of genealogies, comments, anecdotes to which Dickie
lent most attentive ear. He was keen to learn,
his attention was on the stretch. He was in process
of initiation, and every moment of the sacred rites
came to him with power and value. Yet it must
be owned that he found the lessening of the strain
on his memory and attention not wholly unwelcome when
Mr. Chifney, sitting beside him on the big, white-painted
cornbin opposite Diplomacy’s loose-box, began
to tell him of the old times when he a little
fellow of eight to ten years of age had
been among the boys in his cousin, Sam Chifney’s
famous stable at Newmarket. Of the long, weary
traveling before the days of railways, when the horses
were walked by highroad and country lane, ankle deep
in mud, from Newmarket to Epsom; and after victory
or defeat, walked by slow stages all the way home again.
Of how, later, he had migrated to Doncaster; but,
not liking the “Yorkshire tykes,” had
got taken on in some well-known stables upon the Berkshire
downs.
“And it was there, Sir Richard,”
he said, “I met your father, and we fancied
each other from the first. And he asked me to
come to him. These stables were just building
then. And here I’ve been ever since.”
Mr. Chifney stared down at the clean
red quarries of the stable floor, and tapped his neat
gaiters with the switch he held in his hand.
“Rum places, racing stables,”
he went on, meditatively; “and a lot of rum
things go on in ’em, one way and another, as
you’ll come to know. And it ain’t
the easiest thing going, I tell you, to keep your hands
clean. Ungrateful business a trainer’s,
Sir Richard wearing business shortens
a man’s temper and makes him old before his time.
Out by four o’clock on summer mornings, minding
your cattle and keeping your eye on those shirking
blackguards of boys. No real rest, sir, day or
night. Wearing business studying all
the meetings and entering your horses where you’ve
reason to reckon they’ve most chance. And
if your horse wins, the jockey gets all the praise
and the petting. And if it fails the trainer
gets all the blame. Yes, it’s wearing work.
But, confound it all, sir,” he broke out hotly,
“there’s nothing like it on the face of
God’s earth. Horses horses horses why
the very smell of the bedding’s sweeter than
a bunch of roses. Love ’em? I believe
you. And you’ll love ’em too before
you’ve done.”
He turned and gripped Dickie hard by the shoulder.
“For we’ll make a thorough-paced
sportsman of you yet, Sir Richard,” he said,
“God bless you danged if we don’t.”
Which assertion Mr. Chifney repeated
at frequent intervals over his grog that evening,
as he sat, not in the smart dining-room hung round
with portraits of Vinedresser and Sahara and other
equine notabilities, but in the snug, little, back
parlour looking out on to the yard. Mrs. Chifney
was a gentle, pious woman, with whom her husband’s
profession went somewhat against the grain. She
would have preferred a nice grocery, or other respectable,
uneventful business in a country town, and dissipation
in the form of prayer rather than of race-meetings.
But as a slender, slightly self-righteous, young maiden
she had fallen very honestly and completely in love
with Tom Chifney. So there was nothing for it
but to marry him and regard the horses as her appointed
cross. She nursed the boys when they were sick
or injured, intervened fairly successfully between
their poor, little backs and her husband’s all-too-ready
ash stick; and assisted Julius March in promoting their
spiritual welfare, even while deploring that the latter
put his faith in forms and ceremonies rather than
in saving grace. Upon the trainer himself she
exercised a gently repressive influence.
“We won’t swear, Mr. Chifney,” she
remarked mildly now.
“Swear! It’s enough
to make the whole bench of bishops swear to see that
lad.”
“I did see him,” Mrs. Chifney observed.
“Yes, out of window. But
you didn’t carry him round, and hear him talk knowledgeable
talk as you could ask from one of his age. And
watch his face as like as two peas to his
father’s.”
“But her ladyship’s eyes,” put in
Mrs. Chifney.
“I don’t know whose eyes
they are, but I know he can use ’em. It
was as pretty as a picture to see how he took it all.”
Chifney tossed off the remainder of
his tumbler of brandy and water at a gulp.
“Swear,” he repeated,
“I could find it in my heart to swear like hell.
But I can find it in my heart to do more than that.
I can forgive her ladyship. By all that’s ”
“Thomas, forgiveness and oaths
don’t go suitably together.”
“Well, but I can though, and
I tell you, I do,” he said solemnly. “I
forgive her. Shoot the Clown! by G !
I beg your pardon, Maria; but upon my soul,
once or twice, when I had him in my arms to-day, I
felt I could have understood it if she’d had
every horse shot that stood in the stable.”
He held the tumbler up against the
lamp. But it was quite empty.
“Uncommon glad she didn’t
though, poor lady, all the same,” he added,
parenthetically, as he set it down on the table again.
“What do you say, Maria about time
we toddled off to bed?”