THE ABOMINATION OF DESOLATION
Sullenly, persistently, the rain came
down. In the harbour the wash was just sufficient
to make the raveled fruit-baskets, the shredded vegetables,
the crusts and offal thrown out from the galleys, heave
and sway upon the oily surface of the water, while
screaming gulls dropped greedily upon the floating
refuse, and rising, circled over the black, liquid
lanes and open spaces between the hulls of the many
ships. But it was insufficient to lift the yacht,
tied up to the southern quay of the Porto Grande.
She lay there inert and in somewhat sorry plight under
the steady downpour. For the moment all the winsome
devilry of a smart, sea-going craft was dead in her,
and she sulked, ashamed through all her eight hundred
tons of wood and iron, copper, brass, and steel.
For she was coaling, over-deck, and was grimy from
stem to stern. While, arrayed in the cast clothes
of all Europe, tattered, undersized, gesticulating,
the human scum of Naples swarmed up the steep, narrow
planks from the inky lighters and in over her side.
“Beastly dirty job this.
Shan’t get her paint clean under a week!”
the first mate grumbled to his companion, the second
mate a dark-haired, dreamy-eyed, West-country
lad, but just out of his teens.
The two officers, in dripping oilskins,
stood at the gangway checking the tally of coal-baskets
as they came on board. Just now there was a pause
in the black procession, as an empty lighter sheered
off, making room for a full one to come alongside,
thus rendering conversation momentarily possible.
“Pity the boss couldn’t
have stayed on shore till we were through with it
and cleaned up a bit,” the speaker continued.
“Makes the old man no end waxy to have any one
on board when the yacht’s like she is. I
don’t blame him. She’s as neat and
pretty as a white daisy in a green pasture when she’s
away to sea. And now, poor little soul, she’s
a regular slut.”
“I know I’d ’ave
stayed ashore fast enough if I was the boss,”
the boy said, half wistfully. “That villa
of his is like a piece of poetry. I keep on saying
over to myself how it looks.”
“Oh! it’s not so bad for
foreign parts,” the senior officer replied.
“And you’re young yet and soft, Penberthy.
You’ll come of that presently. England’s
best for houses, town and country, and most other
things women, and fights, and even sunshine,
for when you do get sunshine at home there’s
no spite in it. Hi! there you ganger,”
he shouted suddenly, and resentfully, leaning out
over the bulwarks, “hurry ’em up a bit,
can’t you? You don’t suppose I mean
to stand here till the second anniversary of the Day
of Judgment, watching your blithering, chicken-shanked
macaronies suck rotten oranges, do you? Start
’em up again. Whatever are you waiting for,
man? Start ’em up, I say.”
The boy’s dreamy eyes, full
of unwritten verse, dwelt with a curious indifference
upon the broken procession of ascending, black figures.
He had but lately joined, and to him both the fine
vessel and her owner were invested with a certain
romance.
“What was the fancy for calling
the yacht the Reprieve?” he asked presently.
“Wait till you’ve had
the chance to take a good look at Sir Richard, and
you’ll answer your question yourself,”
the other man answered oracularly. Then he broke
out again into sustained invective: “Hold
up there, you little fool of a tight-rope-dancing,
bella Napoli gorilla, and don’t go dropping
good, honest, Welsh steam-coal overboard into your
confounded, stinking local sewer! I don’t
care to see any of your blamed posturings, don’t
flatter yourself. Hold up you grimacing, great
grandson of a lousy she-ape, can’t you, and walk
straight. Take him all round Sir Richard
Calmady’s the best boss I ever sailed with one
of the sternest, but the civilest too. Shove
’em along, ganger, will you. Shove ’em
along, I say. He’s one of the few
men I’ve loved, I’m not ashamed to say
it, Mr. Penberthy, and about the only one I ever remember
to have feared, in my life.”
Meanwhile, if the scene to seaward
was cheerless, that to landward offered but small
improvement. For the murk of low-brooding cloud
and falling rain blotted out the Castel S. Elmo, and
the Capo di Monte and Pizzafalcone
heights. Even the Castello del’Ovo down
on the shore line, comparatively near at hand, loomed
up but a denser mass of indigo-gray amid the all obtaining
grayness. The tall multi-coloured, many-shuttered
houses fronting the quays restaurants, cafes,
money-changers’ bureaux, ships’ chandlers,
and slopshops looked tawdry and degraded
as a clown’s painted face seen by daylight.
Thick, malodorous vapours arose from the squalid streets,
lying back on the level, and from the crowded shipping
of the port. These hung in the stagnant air,
about the forest of masts and the funnels of steamers.
And the noise of the place was as that of Bedlam let
loose. The long-drawn, chattering rush
of the coal pitched from the baskets down the echoing,
iron shoots. The grate and scream of saws cutting
through blocks of stone and marble. The grind
of heavy wheels upon the broken, irregular flags.
The struggling clatter of hoofs, lashing of whips,
squeal of mules, savage voices raised in cries and
imprecations. The clank and roar of machinery.
The repeated bellowing of a great liner, blowing off
steam as she took up her berth in the outer harbour.
The shattering rattle of the chains of a steam crane,
when the monster iron-arm swung round seeking or depositing
its burden and the crank ran out in harsh anger, as
it seemed, and defiance. And through all this,
as under-current, the confused clamour of the ever-shifting,
ever-present crowd, and the small, steady drip of the
rain. Squalid, sordid, brutal even, the coarse
actualities of her trade and her poverty alike disclosed,
her fictions and her foulness uncondoned by reconciling
sunshine, Naples had declined from radiant goddess
to common drab.
It was in this character that Richard
Calmady, driving yesterday, and for the first time,
through the streets at noon, had been fated to see
his so fondly-idealised city. It was in this character
that he apprehended it again to-day, waiting in his
deck-cabin until cessation of the rain and on-coming
of the friendly dusk should render it not wholly odious
to sit out on deck. The hours lagged, and even
this bright and usually spotless apartment with
its shining, white walls, its dark, blue leather and
polished, mahogany fittings the coal dust
penetrated. It rimmed the edge of the books neatly
ranged on the racks. It smirched the charts laid
out on the square locker-table below. It drifted
in at the cabin windows, along with the babel of sound
and the all-pervading stench of the port. This
was, in itself, sufficiently distasteful, sufficiently
depressing. And to Richard, just now, the disgust
of it came with the heightened sensibility of physical
illness, and as accompaniment to an immense private
shame and immense self-condemnation, a conviction
of outlawry and a desolation passing speech.
He looked for comfort, for promise of restoration,
and found none, in things material or things intellectual,
in others or in himself. For his mind, always
prone to apprehend by images rather than by words,
and to advance by analogy rather than by argument,
discovered, in surrounding aspects and surrounding
circumstance, a rather hideously apt parable and illustration
of its present state. Just as this seemingly
fair city was proven, on intimate acquaintance, repulsive
beyond the worst he had ever feared and earnestly refused
to know of it, so a certain fair woman, upon whom,
since boyhood, his best, most chivalrous, most unselfish,
affections had centred, was proven herself,
moreover, flagrantly contributing to that proving vile
beyond all that rumor, heard and passionately denied
by him, had ever ventured to whisper concerning her.
Nor was the misery of this revelation lessened by
the knowledge that his own part in it all had been
very base. He had sinned before. He would
sin again probably. Richard had long ceased to
regard these matters from a strictly puritanic standpoint.
But this particular sinning was different to any that
had gone before, or which could come after it.
For it partook so at least, it now appeared
to him of the nature of sacrilege, since
he had sinned against his ideal, degrading that to
gross uses which he had agreed with himself to hold
sacred, defiling it and, thereby, very horribly defiling
himself.
And this disgrace of their relation,
his own and hers, the inherent abomination of it all
and its inherent falsity, had been forced home on
him with a certain violence of directness just in the
common course of daily happenings. For among
the letters, brought to him along with his first breakfast,
yesterday, after that night of secret licence, had
been three of serious import. One was from Lady
Calmady, and that he put aside with a certain anger,
calling himself unwilling, knowing himself unfit,
to read it. Another he tore open. The handwriting
was unknown to him. He began reading it in bewilderment.
Then he understood.
“MONSIEUR,” it
ran, “You are in process of exterminating
me. But, since I have reason to believe that
no sufficient opportunity has been afforded you of
realising the enormity of your conduct, I rally the
profoundness of nobility which I discover within me I
calm myself. I go further, I explain. Living
in retirement, you may not have learned that I am
in Naples. I followed your cousin here Madame
de Vallorbes. My connection with her represents
the supreme passion of my passionate youth. At
once a frenzy and an anodyne, I have found in it the
inspiration of my genius in its later development.
This work must not be put a stop to. It is too
majestic, it is weighted with too serious consequences
to the whole of thinking France, of thinking Europe.
A less experienced woman cannot satisfy the extravagance
of my desires, the demands of my all-consuming imagination.
The reverence with which a person, such as yourself,
must regard commanding talent, the concessions he
must be willing to make to its necessities, are without
limit. This I cannot doubt that you will admit.
The corollary is obvious. Either, monsieur,
you will immediately invite me to reside with you
at your villa thereby securing for yourself
daily intercourse with a nature of distinguished merit or
you will restore Madame de Vallorbes to me without
hesitation or delay. Her devotion to me is absolute.
How could it fail to be so, since I have lavished upon
her the treasures of my extraordinary personality?
But a fear of insular prejudice on your part withholds
her at this moment from full expression of that devotion.
She suffers as well as myself. It will be your
privilege to put a term to this suffering by requesting
me to join her, or by restoring her to me. To
do otherwise will be to prolong the eclipse of my
genius, and thereby outrage the conscience of civilised
humanity which breathlessly awaits the next utterance
of its chosen poet. If you require the consolation
of feminine society, marry it would be
very simple some white-souled, English miss.
But restore to me, to whom her presence is indispensable,
this woman of regal passions. I shall present
myself at your house to-day to receive your answer
in person. The result of a refusal on your part
to receive me will be attended by calamitous consequences
to yourself. Accept, monsieur, the
expression of my highest consideration,
“PAUL AUGUSTE DESTOURNELLE.”
For the moment Richard saw red, mad
with rage at the insolence of the writer. And
then came the question, was it true, this which the
letter implied? Had Helen, indeed, lied to him?
And, notwithstanding its insane vanity, did this precious
epistle give a more veracious account of her relation
to the young poet than that which she had herself
volunteered? He tried to put the thought from
him. Who was he to-day of all days to
be nice about the conduct of another? Who was
he to sit in judgment? So he turned to his correspondence
again, taking another letter, at random, from the
pile. And then, looking at the superscription,
he turned somewhat sick.
“MON CHER,” wrote
M. de Vallorbes, “My steward informs
me that he has just received your draft for a quarter’s
rent of the villa. I thank you a thousand times
for your admirable punctuality. Decidedly you
are of those with whom it is a consolation to do business.
Need I assure you that the advent of this money is
far from inopportune, since a grateful country, while
showering distinctions upon me with one hand, with
the other picks my pocket. I find it not a little
expensive this famous military service! But then,
ever since I can remember, I have found all that afforded
me the slightest, active pleasure equally that!
And this sport of war, I promise you, is the most
excellent sport in which I have as yet participated.
It satisfies the primitive instincts more thoroughly
than even your English fox-hunting. A battue
of Communards is obviously superior to a battue
of pheasants. To the dignity of killing one’s
fellow-men is added the satisfaction of ridding oneself
of vermin. It becomes a matter of sanitation and
self-respect. And this, indirectly, recalls to
me, that report declares my wife to be with you at
Naples. Mon cher je vous en fais cadeau.
With you, at least, I know that my honour is safe.
You may even instil into her mind some faint conception
of the rudiments of morality. To be frank with
you, she needs that. A couple of months ago she
did me the honour to elope temporarily,
of course with M. Paul Destournelle.
You may have glanced, one day, at his crapulous verses.
I suppose honour demanded that I should pursue the
guilty pair and account for one, if not both, of them.
But I was too busily engaged with my little Communards.
We set these gentry up against a wall and dispose of
them in batches. I have had a good deal of this,
but, as I say, it has not yet become monotonous.
Traits of individual character lend it vivacity.
And then, putting aside the exigencies of my profession,
I do not know that anything is to be gained by inviting
public scandal. You have an English proverb to
the effect that one should wash one’s dirty linen
at home. This I have tried to do, as you cannot
but be aware, all along. If one has had the misfortune
to marry Messalina, one learns to be philosophic.
A few lovers more or less, in that connection, what,
after all, does it matter? Indeed, I begin to
derive ironical consolation from the fact of their
multiplicity. The existence of one would have
constituted a reflection upon my charms. But a
matter of ten, fifteen, twenty, ceases to be in any
degree personal to myself. Only I object to Destournelle.
He is too young, too rococco. He represents
a descent in the scale. I prefer des hommes
mures, generals, ministers, princes. The
devil knows we have had our share of such! Your
generosity to her has saved us from Jews so far, and
from nouveaux riches, by relieving the business
of commercial aspects. Give her some salutary
advice, therefore, mon cher, and if she becomes
inconvenient forward her to Paris. I forgive
to seventy-times-seven, being still proud enough to
struggle after an appearance of social and conjugal
decency. Enfin it is a relief to have unburdened
myself for once, and you have been the good genius
of my unfortunate ménage, for which heaven
reward you. Yours, in true cousinly regard
and supreme reliance on your discretion,
“LUIGI ANGELO FRANCESCO DE VALLORBES.”
That this, in any case, had a stamp
of sincerity upon it, Richard could not doubt.
It must be admitted that he had long ceased to accept
Madame de Vallorbes’ estimate of her husband
with unqualified belief. But, be that as it might,
whether he were a consummate, or merely an average,
profligate, one thing was certain that this man trusted
him Richard Calmady, and that
he Richard Calmady had very vilely
betrayed that trust. He stared at the letter,
and certain sentences in it seemed to sear him, even
as the branding-iron used on a felon might. This
was a new shame, different to, and greater than, any
his deformity had ever induced in him, even as evil
done is different to, and greater than, evil suffered.
Morality may be relative only and conventional.
Honour, for all persons of a certain standing and
breeding, remains absolute. And it was precisely
of his own honour that he had deprived himself.
Not only in body, but in character, he was henceforth
monstrous. For a while Richard had remained very
still, looking at this thing into which he had made
himself as though it were external and physically visible
to him.
Then, suddenly, he had reached out
his hand for his mother’s letter. A decision
of great moment was impending. He would know what
she had to say before finally making that decision.
He wondered bitterly, grimly, whether her words would
plunge him yet deeper in this abyss of self-hatred
and self-contempt.
MY DARLING,” she
wrote, “I am foolishly glad to learn
that you are back at Naples. It gives me comfort
to know you are even thus much nearer home and in
a country where I too have traveled and of which I
retain many dear and delightful recollections.
You may be surprised, perhaps, to see the unaccustomed
address upon my note-paper and may wonder what has
made me guilty of deserting my post. Now, since
the worst of it is certainly over, I may tell you
that my health has failed a good deal of late.
Nothing of a really serious nature you need
not be alarmed about me. But I had got into a
rather weak and unworthy state, from which it became
very desirable I should rouse myself. Selfishness
is insidious, but none the less reprehensible because
it takes the apparently innocent form of sitting in
a chair with one’s eyes shut! However,
that best of men, John Knott, brought very bracing
influences to bear on me, convincing me of sin in
the gentlest way in the world by means
of Honoria St. Quentin. And so I picked myself
up, dear Dickie, picked the whole of myself
up, as I hope, always saving and excepting my self-indulgent
inertia, and came away here to Ormiston.
At first, I confess, I felt very much like a dog at
a fair, or the proverbial mummy at a feast. But
they all bore with me in the plenty of their kindness,
and, in the last week, I have banished the mummy and
trained the scared dog to altogether polite and pretty
behaviour. Till I came back to it, I hardly realised
how truly I loved this place. How should it be
otherwise? I met your father first here after
his third term at Eton. I remember he snubbed
me roundly. I met him again the year before our
marriage. Without vanity I declare that then
he snubbed me not one little bit. These things
are very far away. But to me, though far away,
they are very vivid and very lovely. I see them
as you, when you were small, so often pleaded to see
a fairy landscape by looking through the large end
of the gold and tortoise-shell spy-glass upon my writing-table.
All of which may seem to you somewhat childish and
trivial, but I grow an old woman and have a fancy
for toys and tender make-believes such as
fairy landscapes seen through the big end of a spy-glass.
The actual landscape, at times, is a trifle discouragingly
rain-washed and cloudy! –Roger and
Mary are here. Their two boys are just gone back
to school again. They are fine, courteous, fearless,
little fellows. Roger makes a rather superb middle-aged
man. He has much of my father your
grandfather’s reticence and dignity. Indeed,
he might prove slightly alarming, was one not so perfectly
sure of him, dear creature. Mary remains, as of
old, the most wholesome and helpful of women.
Yes, it is good to dwell, for a time, among one’s
own people. And I cannot but rejoice that my
eldest brother has come to an arrangement by which,
at his death, your Uncle William will receive a considerable
sum of money in lieu of the property. This last
will go direct to Roger, and eventually to his boys.
If your Uncle William had a son, the whole matter would
be different. But I own it would hurt me that
in the event of his death there would be no Ormiston
at Ormiston after these many generations. In
all probability the place would be sold immediately,
moreover, for it is an open secret that, through no
fault of his own, poor man, William is sadly embarrassed
in money matters. And he has other sorrows of
a rather terrible nature, since they are touched with
disgrace. But here you will probably detect a
point of prejudice, so I had better stop! I
look out upon a gray, northern sea, where ’the
white horses fume and fret’ under a cold, gray,
northern sky. The oaks in the park are just thickening
with yellow-green buds. And there, close to my
window, perched on a topmost twig, a missel-thrush
is singing, facing the wind like a gentleman.
You look out upon a purple sea, I suppose, beneath
clear skies and over orange trees and palms. I
wonder if any brave bird pipes to you as my storm-cock
to me? It brings up one’s courage to hear
his song, so strong and wild and sweet, in the very
teeth of the gale too! But now you will have
had enough of my news and more than enough. I
write to you more freely, you see, than for a long
time past, being myself more free of spirit.
And therefore I dare add this, in all and every case,
my darling, God keep you. And remember, should
you weary of wandering, that not only the doors of
Brockhurst, but the doors of my heart, stand forever
wide open to welcome you home. Yours always,
K. C.”
Reading which gentle, yet in a sense
daring, words, Richard’s shame took on another
complexion, but one by no means calculated to mitigate
the burning of it. His treachery towards de Vallorbes
became almost vulgar and of small moment beside his
cruelty to this superbly magnanimous woman, his mother.
For, all these years, determinately and of set purpose,
defiant of every better impulse, he had hardened his
heart against her. To differ from her, to cherish
that which was unsympathetic to her, to put aside
every tradition in which she had nurtured him, to
love that which she condemned, to condemn that which
she loved and this, if silently, yet unswervingly had
been the ruling purpose of his action. That which
had its origin in passionate revolt against his own
unhappy disfigurement, had come to be an interest and
object in itself. In this quarrel with her a
quarrel, intimate, pre-natal, anterior to consciousness
and to volition he found the justification
of his every lapse, his every crookedness of conduct
and of thought. Since he could not reach Almighty
God, and strike at the eternal First Cause which he
held responsible for the inalienable wrong done to
him, he would strike, with cold-blooded persistence,
at the woman whom Almighty God had permitted to be
His instrument in the infliction of that wrong.
And to where had that sustained purpose of striking
led him? Even so he judged just now to
the dishonour and desolation of to-day, following
upon the sacrilegious licence of last night.
All this Richard saw with the alternately
groping, benumbed, mental vision and the glaring,
mental nakedness of breeding fever. Small wonder
that looking for comfort, for promise of restoration,
he found none in things material, in things intellectual,
in others, or in himself! He felt outcasted beyond
hope of redemption, but not repentant, hardly remorseful
even, only aware of all that which had happened, and
of his own state. For Lady Calmady’s letter
was to him little more, as yet, than a placing of
facts. To trade upon her magnificent generosity
of affection, and seek refuge in those outstretched
arms now, with the mark of the branding-iron so sensibly
upon him, appeared to him of all contemptible doings
the most radically contemptible. Obviously it
was impossible to go back. He must go on rather out
of sight, out of mind. Fantastic schemes of disappearing,
of losing himself, far away, in remote and nameless
places, among the coral islands of the Pacific or
the chill majesty of the Antarctic seas, offered themselves
to his imagination. The practical difficulties
presented by such schemes, their infeasibility, did
not trouble him. He would sever all connection
with that which had been, with that which had made
for good equally with that which had made for evil.
By his own voluntary act and choice he would become
as a man dead, the disgrace of his malformed body,
the closer and more hideous disgrace of his defiled
and prostituted soul, surviving in legend merely, as
might some ugly, old-time fable useful for the frightening
of unruly babies.
And to that end of self-obliteration
he instantly applied himself, with outward calm, but
with the mental hurry and restlessness of increasing
illness. His first duty was to end the whole matter
of his relation to Helen, Helen shorn of
her divinity, convicted liar and wanton, yet mistress
still for him, as he feared, of mighty enchantments.
So he wrote to her very briefly. The note should
be given her later in the day. In it he stated
that he should have left the villa before this announcement
reached her, left it finally and without remotest prospect
of return, since he could not doubt that she recognised,
as he did, how impossible it had become that he and
she should meet again. He added that he would
communicate with her shortly as to business arrangements.
That done, he summoned Powell, his valet, bidding him
pack. He would go down to the yacht at once.
He had received information which made it imperative
that he should quit Naples immediately.
To be out of all this, rid of it,
fairly started on the road of negation of social being,
negation of recognised existence, infected him like
a madness. But even the most forceful human will
must bend to stupidities of detail and of material
fact. Unexpected delays had occurred. The
yacht was not ready for sea, neither coaled, nor provisioned,
nor sound of certain small damages to her machinery.
Vanstone, the captain, might mislay his temper, and
the first mate expend himself in polysyllabic invective,
young Penberthy cease to dream, stewards, engineers,
carpenters, cooks, quartermasters, seamen, firemen,
do their most willing and urgent best, nevertheless
the morning of next day, and even the afternoon of
it, still found Richard Calmady seated at the locker-table
of the white-walled deck-cabin, his voyage towards
self-obliteration not yet begun.
Charts were outspread before him,
upon which, at weary intervals, he essayed to trace
the course of his coming wanderings. But his brain
was dull, he had no power of consecutive thought.
That same madness of going was upon him with undiminished
power, yet he knew not where he wanted to go, hardly
why he wanted to go, only that a blind obsession of
going drove him. He was miserably troubled about
other matters too about that same brief
letter he had written to Helen before leaving the
villa. He was convinced that he had written such
a letter, but struggle as he might to remember the
contents of it they remained to him a blank.
He was haunted by the fear that in that letter he had
committed some irremediable folly, had bound himself
to some absurdly unworthy course of action. But
what it might be escaped and, in escaping, tortured
him. And then, this surely was Friday, and Morabita
sang at the San Carlo to-night? And surely he
had promised to be there, and to meet the famous prima
donna and sup with her after the performance,
as in former days at Vienna? He had not always
been quite kind to her, poor, dear, fat, good-natured,
silly soul! He could not fail her now. And
then he went back to a chart of the South Pacific
again. Only he could not see it plainly, but saw,
instead of it, the great folio of copper-plate engravings
lying on the broad window-seat of the eastern bay
of the Long Gallery at home. He was sitting there
to watch for the race-horses coming back from exercise,
Tom Chifney pricking along beside them on his handsome
cob. And the long-ago, boyish desperation of
longing for wholeness, for freedom, brought a moistness
to his eyes, and a lump into his throat. And all
the while the coal dust drifted in at each smallest
crevice and aperture, and the air was vibrant with
rasping, jarring uproar and nauseous with the stale,
heavy odours of the city and the port. And steadily,
ceaselessly, the descending rain drummed upon the roofing
overhead.
At length a stupor took him.
His head sunk upon his arms, folded upon those outspread
charts, while the noise of all the rude activities
surrounding him subtly transformed itself into that
of a great orchestra. And above this, superior
to, yet nobly supported by it, Morabita’s voice
rose in the suave and passionate phrases of the glorious
cavatina “Ernani, Ernani, involami,
all aborito ampleso.” Yes, her
voice was as good as ever! Richard drew a long
breath of relief. Here, at least, was something
true to itself, and amid so much of change, so much
of spoiling, still unspoilt! He raised his head
and listened. For something must have happened,
something of serious moment. The orchestra, for
some unaccountable reason, had suddenly broken down.
Yes, it must be the orchestra which disaster had overtaken,
for a voice very certainly continued. No, not
a voice, but voices those of Vanstone the
captain, and Price the first mate, and old Billy Tinn
the boatswain loud, imperative, violently
remonstrant, but swept under and swamped at moments
by cries and volleys of foulest, Neapolitan argot
from hoarse, Neapolitan throats. And that abruptly
silenced orchestra? Richard came back to
himself, came back to actualities of environment and
prosaic fact. An infinitely weariful despair
seized him. For the sound that had reached so
sudden a termination was not that of cunningly-attuned,
musical instruments, but the long-drawn, chattering
rush of the coal, pitched from the baskets down the
echoing, iron shoots.
The cabin door opened discreetly and
Powell, incarnation of decorous punctualities even
amid existing tumultuously discomposing circumstances,
entered.
“From the villa, sir,”
he said, depositing letters and newspapers upon the
table.
Richard put out his hand, turned them
over mechanically. For again, somehow, notwithstanding
the babel without, that exquisite invitation “Ernani,
Ernani, involami,” assailed his
ears.
The valet waited a little, quiet and
deferential in bearing, yet observing his master with
a certain keenness and anxiety.
“I saw Mr. Bates, as you desired, sir,”
he said at last.
Richard looked up at him vaguely.
And it struck him that while Powell was on shore to-day
he had undoubtedly had his hair cut. This interested
him though why, he would have found it difficult
to say.
“Mr. Bates thought you should
be informed that a gentleman called early yesterday
afternoon, as he said by appointment.”
Yes certainly Powell had
had his hair cut. “Did the gentleman
give his name?”
“Yes, sir, M. Paul Destournelle.”
Powell spoke slowly, getting his tongue
carefully round the foreign syllables, and, for all
the confusion of his hearer’s mind, the name
went home. Vagueness passed from Richard’s
glance.
“He was refused, of course.”
“Her ladyship had given orders
that should any person of that name call he was to
be admitted.” Powell spoke with evident
reluctance. “Consequently Mr. Bates was
uncertain how to act, having received contrary orders
from you, sir, the day before yesterday. He explained
this to her ladyship, but she insisted.”
Richard’s mind had become perfectly lucid.
“Very well,” he said coldly.
“Mr. Bates also thought you
should know, sir, that after M. Destournelle’s
visit her ladyship announced she should not remain
at the villa. She left about five o’clock,
taking her maid. Charles followed with all the
baggage.”
The valet paused. Richard’s
manner was decidedly discouraging, yet, something
further must at least be intimated.
“Her ladyship gave no address
to Mr. Bates for the forwarding of her letters.”
But here the cabin door, left slightly
ajar by Powell, was opened wide, and that with none
of the calm and discretion displayed by the functionary
in question. A long perspective of grimy deck
behind him, his oilskins shiny from the wet, with
trim, black beard, square-made, bold-eyed, hot-tempered,
warm-hearted, alert, humorous typical West
Countryman as his gentle dreamy cousin, Penberthy,
the second mate, though of a very different type stood
Captain Vanstone. His easily-ruffled temper suffered
from the after effects of what is commonly known as
a “jolly row,” and his speech was curt
in consequence thereof.
“Sorry to disturb you, Sir Richard,”
he said, “and still more sorry to disappoint
you, but it can’t be helped.”
Dickie turned upon him so strangely
drawn and haggard a countenance, that Vanstone with
difficulty repressed an exclamation. He looked
in quick inquiry at the valet, who so far departed
from his usual decorum as to nod his head in assent
to the silent questioning.
“What’s wrong now?” Richard said.
“Why, these beggarly rascals
have knocked off. Price offered them a higher
scale of pay. I had empowered him to do so.
But they won’t budge. The rain’s
washed the heart out of them. We’ve tried
persuasion and we’ve tried threats it’s
no earthly use. Not a basket more coal will they
put on board before five to-morrow morning.”
“Can’t we sail with what we have got?”
“Not enough to carry us to Port Said.”
“What will be the extent of
the delay this time?” Richard asked. His
tone had an edge to it.
Again Captain Vanstone glanced at the valet.
“With luck we may get off to-morrow about midnight.”
He stepped back, shook himself like
a big dog, scattering the water off his oilskins in
a shower upon the slippery deck. Then he came
inside the cabin and stood near Richard. His
expression was very kindly, tender almost.
“You must excuse me, sir,”
he said. “I know it doesn’t come within
my province to give you advice. But you do look
pretty ill, Sir Richard. Every one’s remarking
that. And you are ill, sir you know
it, and I know it, and Mr. Powell here knows it.
You ought to see a doctor, sir and if you’ll
pardon plain language, this beastly cess-pit of a
harbour is not a fit place for you to sleep in.”
And poor Dickie, after an instant
of sharp annoyance, touched by the man’s honest
humanity smiled upon him a smile of utter
weariness, utter homelessness.
“Perfectly true. Get me
out to sea then, Vanstone. I shall be better
there than anywhere else,” he said.
Whereupon the kindly sailor-man turned
away, swearing gently into his trim, black beard.
But the valet remained, impassive
in manner, actively anxious at heart.
“Have you any orders for the
carriage, sir?” he asked. “Garcia
drove me down. I told him to wait until I had
inquired.”
Richard was long in replying.
His brain was all confused and clouded again, while
again he heard the voice of the famous soprano “Ernani,
Ernani, involami.”
“Yes,” he said at last.
“Tell Garcia to be here in good time to drive
me to the San Carlo. I have an appointment at
the opera to-night.”