Final Story of the Series [First published
in Pictorial Review, October 1916]
“What do you mean you
can’t marry him after all? After all what?
Why can’t you marry him? You are perfectly
childish.”
Lord Evenwood’s gentle voice,
which had in its time lulled the House of Peers to
slumber more often than any voice ever heard in the
Gilded Chamber, had in it a note of unwonted, but quite
justifiable, irritation. If there was one thing
more than another that Lord Evenwood disliked, it
was any interference with arrangements already made.
“The man,” he continued,
“is not unsightly. The man is not conspicuously
vulgar. The man does not eat peas with his knife.
The man pronounces his aitches with meticulous care
and accuracy. The man, moreover, is worth rather
more than a quarter of a million pounds. I repeat,
you are childish!”
“Yes, I know he’s a very
decent little chap, Father,” said Lady Eva.
“It’s not that at all.”
“I should be gratified, then,
to hear what, in your opinion, it is.”
“Well, do you think I could be happy with him?”
Lady Kimbuck gave tongue. She
was Lord Evenwood’s sister. She spent a
very happy widowhood interfering in the affairs of
the various branches of her family.
“We’re not asking you
to be happy. You have such odd ideas of happiness.
Your idea of happiness is to be married to your cousin
Gerry, whose only visible means of support, so far
as I can gather, is the four hundred a year which
he draws as a member for a constituency which has every
intention of throwing him out at the next election.”
Lady Eva blushed. Lady Kimbuck’s
faculty for nosing out the secrets of her family had
made her justly disliked from the Hebrides to Southern
Cornwall.
“Young O’Rion is not to
be thought of,” said Lord Evenwood firmly.
“Not for an instant. Apart from anything
else, his politics are all wrong. Moreover, you
are engaged to this Mr. Bleke. It is a sacred
responsibility not lightly to be evaded. You can
not pledge your word one day to enter upon the most
solemn contract known to ah the
civilized world, and break it the next. It is
not fair to the man. It is not fair to me.
You know that all I live for is to see you comfortably
settled. If I could myself do anything for you,
the matter would be different. But these abominable
land-taxes and Blowick especially Blowick no,
no, it’s out of the question. You will be
very sorry if you do anything foolish. I can
assure you that Roland Blekes are not to be found ah on
every bush. Men are extremely shy of marrying
nowadays.”
“Especially,” said Lady
Kimbuck, “into a family like ours. What
with Blowick’s scandal, and that shocking business
of your grandfather and the circus-woman, to say nothing
of your poor father’s trouble in ’85 ”
“Thank you, Sophia,” interrupted
Lord Evenwood, hurriedly. “It is unnecessary
to go into all that now. Suffice it that there
are adequate reasons, apart from all moral obligations,
why Eva should not break her word to Mr. Bleke.”
Lady Kimbuck’s encyclopedic
grip of the family annals was a source of the utmost
discomfort to her relatives. It was known that
more than one firm of publishers had made her tempting
offers for her reminiscences, and the family looked
on like nervous spectators at a battle while Cupidity
fought its ceaseless fight with Laziness; for the Evenwood
family had at various times and in various ways stimulated
the circulation of the evening papers. Most of
them were living down something, and it was Lady Kimbuck’s
habit, when thwarted in her lightest whim, to retire
to her boudoir and announce that she was not to be
disturbed as she was at last making a start on her
book. Abject surrender followed on the instant.
At this point in the discussion she
folded up her crochet-work, and rose.
“It is absolutely necessary
for you, my dear, to make a good match, or you will
all be ruined. I, of course, can always support
my declining years with literary work, but ”
Lady Eva groaned. Against this
last argument there was no appeal.
Lady Kimbuck patted her affectionately on the shoulder.
“There, run along now,”
she said. “I daresay you’ve got a
headache or something that made you say a lot of foolish
things you didn’t mean. Go down to the
drawing-room. I expect Mr. Bleke is waiting there
to say goodnight to you. I am sure he must be
getting quite impatient.”
Down in the drawing-room, Roland Bleke
was hoping against hope that Lady Eva’s prolonged
absence might be due to the fact that she had gone
to bed with a headache, and that he might escape the
nightly interview which he so dreaded.
Reviewing his career, as he sat there,
Roland came to the conclusion that women had the knack
of affecting him with a form of temporary insanity.
They temporarily changed his whole nature. They
made him feel for a brief while that he was a dashing
young man capable of the highest flights of love.
It was only later that the reaction came and he realized
that he was nothing of the sort.
At heart he was afraid of women, and
in the entire list of the women of whom he had been
afraid, he could not find one who had terrified him
so much as Lady Eva Blyton.
Other women notably Maraquita,
now happily helping to direct the destinies of Paranoya had
frightened him by their individuality. Lady Eva
frightened him both by her individuality and the atmosphere
of aristocratic exclusiveness which she conveyed.
He had no idea whatever of what was the proper procedure
for a man engaged to the daughter of an earl.
Daughters of earls had been to him till now mere names
in the society columns of the morning paper.
The very rules of the game were beyond him. He
felt like a confirmed Association footballer suddenly
called upon to play in an International Rugby match.
All along, from the very moment when to
his unbounded astonishment she had accepted
him, he had known that he was making a mistake; but
he never realized it with such painful clearness as
he did this evening. He was filled with a sort
of blind terror. He cursed the fate which had
taken him to the Charity-Bazaar at which he had first
come under the notice of Lady Kimbuck. The fatuous
snobbishness which had made him leap at her invitation
to spend a few days at Evenwood Towers he regretted;
but for that he blamed himself less. Further acquaintance
with Lady Kimbuck had convinced him that if she had
wanted him, she would have got him somehow, whether
he had accepted or refused.
What he really blamed himself for
was his mad proposal. There had been no need
for it. True, Lady Eva had created a riot of burning
emotions in his breast from the moment they met; but
he should have had the sense to realize that she was
not the right mate for him, even tho he might have
a quarter of a million tucked away in gilt-edged securities.
Their lives could not possibly mix. He was a
commonplace young man with a fondness for the pleasures
of the people. He liked cheap papers, picture-palaces,
and Association football. Merely to think of Association
football in connection with her was enough to make
the folly of his conduct clear. He ought to have
been content to worship her from afar as some inaccessible
goddess.
A light step outside the door made
his heart stop beating.
“I’ve just looked in to
say good night, Mr. er Roland,”
she said, holding out her hand. “Do excuse
me. I’ve got such a headache.”
“Oh, yes, rather; I’m awfully sorry.”
If there was one person in the world
Roland despised and hated at that moment, it was himself.
“Are you going out with the
guns to-morrow?” asked Lady Eva languidly.
“Oh, yes, rather! I mean, no. I’m
afraid I don’t shoot.”
The back of his neck began to glow.
He had no illusions about himself. He was the
biggest ass in Christendom.
“Perhaps you’d like to play a round of
golf, then?”
“Oh, yes, rather! I mean,
no.” There it was again, that awful phrase.
He was certain he had not intended to utter it.
She must be thinking him a perfect lunatic. “I
don’t play golf.”
They stood looking at each other for
a moment. It seemed to Roland that her gaze was
partly contemptuous, partly pitying. He longed
to tell her that, tho she had happened to pick on
his weak points in the realm of sport, there were
things he could do. An insane desire came upon
him to babble about his school football team.
Should he ask her to feel his quite respectable biceps?
No.
“Never mind,” she said,
kindly. “I daresay we shall think of something
to amuse you.”
She held out her hand again.
He took it in his for the briefest possible instant,
painfully conscious the while that his own hand was
clammy from the emotion through which he had been
passing.
“Good night.”
“Good night.”
Thank Heaven, she was gone. That
let him out for another twelve hours at least.
A quarter of an hour later found Roland
still sitting, where she had left him, his head in
his hands. The groan of an overwrought soul escaped
him.
“I can’t do it!”
He sprang to his feet.
“I won’t do it.”
A smooth voice from behind him spoke.
“I think you are quite right, sir if
I may make the remark.”
Roland had hardly ever been so startled
in his life. In the first place, he was not aware
of having uttered his thoughts aloud; in the second,
he had imagined that he was alone in the room.
And so, a moment before, he had been.
But the owner of the voice possessed,
among other qualities, the cat-like faculty of entering
a room perfectly noiselessly a fact which
had won for him, in the course of a long career in
the service of the best families, the flattering position
of star witness in a number of England’s raciest
divorce-cases.
Mr. Teal, the butler for
it was no less a celebrity who had broken in on Roland’s
reverie was a long, thin man of a somewhat
priestly cast of countenance. He lacked that
air of reproving hauteur which many butlers possess,
and it was for this reason that Roland had felt drawn
to him during the black days of his stay at Evenwood
Towers. Teal had been uncommonly nice to him
on the whole. He had seemed to Roland, stricken
by interviews with his host and Lady Kimbuck, the only
human thing in the place.
He liked Teal. On the other hand,
Teal was certainly taking a liberty. He could,
if he so pleased, tell Teal to go to the deuce.
Technically, he had the right to freeze Teal with
a look.
He did neither of these things.
He was feeling very lonely and very forlorn in a strange
and depressing world, and Teal’s voice and manner
were soothing.
“Hearing you speak, and seeing
nobody else in the room,” went on the butler,
“I thought for a moment that you were addressing
me.”
This was not true, and Roland knew
it was not true. Instinct told him that Teal
knew that he knew it was not true; but he did not press
the point.
“What do you mean you
think I am quite right?” he said. “You
don’t know what I was thinking about.”
Teal smiled indulgently.
“On the contrary, sir.
A child could have guessed it. You have just
come to the decision in my opinion a thoroughly
sensible one that your engagement to her
ladyship can not be allowed to go on. You are
quite right, sir. It won’t do.”
Personal magnetism covers a multitude
of sins. Roland was perfectly well aware that
he ought not to be standing here chatting over his
and Lady Eva’s intimate affairs with a butler;
but such was Teal’s magnetism that he was quite
unable to do the right thing and tell him to mind his
own business. “Teal, you forget yourself!”
would have covered the situation. Roland, however,
was physically incapable of saying “Teal, you
forget yourself!” The bird knows all the time
that he ought not to stand talking to the snake, but
he is incapable of ending the conversation. Roland
was conscious of a momentary wish that he was the sort
of man who could tell butlers that they forgot themselves.
But then that sort of man would never be in this sort
of trouble. The “Teal, you forget yourself”
type of man would be a first-class shot, a plus golfer,
and would certainly consider himself extremely lucky
to be engaged to Lady Eva.
“The question is,” went
on Mr. Teal, “how are we to break it off?”
Roland felt that, as he had sinned
against all the decencies in allowing the butler to
discuss his affairs with him, he might just as well
go the whole hog and allow the discussion to run its
course. And it was an undeniable relief to talk
about the infernal thing to some one.
He nodded gloomily, and committed
himself. Teal resumed his remarks with the gusto
of a fellow-conspirator.
“It’s not an easy thing
to do gracefully, sir, believe me, it isn’t.
And it’s got to be done gracefully, or not at
all. You can’t go to her ladyship and say
‘It’s all off, and so am I,’ and
catch the next train for London. The rupture
must be of her ladyship’s making. If some
fact, some disgraceful information concerning you were
to come to her ladyship’s ears, that would be
a simple way out of the difficulty.”
He eyed Roland meditatively.
“If, for instance, you had ever been in jail,
sir?”
“Well, I haven’t.”
“No offense intended, sir, I’m
sure. I merely remembered that you had made a
great deal of money very quickly. My experience
of gentlemen who have made a great deal of money very
quickly is that they have generally done their bit
of time. But, of course, if you .
Let me think. Do you drink, sir?”
“No.”
Mr. Teal sighed. Roland could
not help feeling that he was disappointing the old
man a good deal.
“You do not, I suppose, chance
to have a past?” asked Mr. Teal, not very hopefully.
“I use the word in its technical sense.
A deserted wife? Some poor creature you have
treated shamefully?”
At the risk of sinking still further
in the butler’s esteem, Roland was compelled
to answer in the negative.
“I was afraid not,” said
Mr. Teal, shaking his head. “Thinking it
all over yesterday, I said to myself, ‘I’m
afraid he wouldn’t have one.’ You
don’t look like the sort of gentleman who had
done much with his time.”
“Thinking it over?”
“Not on your account, sir,”
explained Mr. Teal. “On the family’s.
I disapproved of this match from the first. A
man who has served a family as long as I have had
the honor of serving his lordship’s, comes to
entertain a high regard for the family prestige.
And, with no offense to yourself, sir, this would
not have done.”
“Well, it looks as if it would
have to do,” said Roland, gloomily. “I
can’t see any way out of it.”
“I can, sir. My niece at Aldershot.”
Mr. Teal wagged his head at him with a kind of priestly
archness.
“You can not have forgotten my niece at Aldershot?”
Roland stared at him dumbly.
It was like a line out of a melodrama. He feared,
first for his own, then for the butler’s sanity.
The latter was smiling gently, as one who sees light
in a difficult situation.
“I’ve never been at Aldershot in my life.”
“For our purposes you have,
sir. But I’m afraid I am puzzling you.
Let me explain. I’ve got a niece over at
Aldershot who isn’t much good. She’s
not very particular. I am sure she would do it
for a consideration.”
“Do what?”
“Be your ‘Past,’
sir. I don’t mind telling you that as a
‘Past’ she’s had some experience;
looks the part, too. She’s a barmaid, and
you would guess it the first time you saw her.
Dyed yellow hair, sir,” he went on with enthusiasm,
“done all frizzy. Just the sort of young
person that a young gentleman like yourself would
have had a ‘past’ with. You couldn’t
find a better if you tried for a twelvemonth.”
“But, I say !”
“I suppose a hundred wouldn’t hurt you?”
“Well, no, I suppose not, but ”
“Then put the whole thing in
my hands, sir. I’ll ask leave off to-morrow
and pop over and see her. I’ll arrange for
her to come here the day after to see you. Leave
it all to me. To-night you must write the letters.”
“Letters?”
“Naturally, there would be letters,
sir. It is an inseparable feature of these cases.”
“Do you mean that I have got
to write to her? But I shouldn’t know what
to say. I’ve never seen her.”
“That will be quite all right,
sir, if you place yourself in my hands. I will
come to your room after everybody’s gone to bed,
and help you write those letters. You have some
note-paper with your own address on it? Then
it will all be perfectly simple.”
When, some hours later, he read over
the ten or twelve exceedingly passionate epistles
which, with the butler’s assistance, he had
succeeded in writing to Miss Maud Chilvers, Roland
came to the conclusion that there must have been a
time when Mr. Teal was a good deal less respectable
than he appeared to be at present. Byronic was
the only adjective applicable to his collaborator’s
style of amatory composition. In every letter
there were passages against which Roland had felt
compelled to make a modest protest.
“‘A thousand kisses on
your lovely rosebud of a mouth.’ Don’t
you think that is a little too warmly colored?
And ’I am languishing for the pressure of your
ivory arms about my neck and the sweep of your silken
hair against my cheek!’ What I mean is well,
what about it, you know?”
“The phrases,” said Mr.
Teal, not without a touch of displeasure, “to
which you take exception, are taken bodily from correspondence
(which I happened to have the advantage of perusing)
addressed by the late Lord Evenwood to Animalcula,
Queen of the High Wire at Astley’s Circus.
His lordship, I may add, was considered an authority
in these matters.”
Roland criticized no more. He
handed over the letters, which, at Mr. Teal’s
direction, he had headed with various dates covering
roughly a period of about two months antecedent to
his arrival at the Towers.
“That,” Mr. Teal explained,
“will make your conduct definitely unpardonable.
With this woman’s kisses hot upon your lips,” Mr.
Teal was still slightly aglow with the fire of inspiration “you
have the effrontery to come here and offer yourself
to her ladyship.”
With Roland’s timid suggestion
that it was perhaps a mistake to overdo the atmosphere,
the butler found himself unable to agree.
“You can’t make yourself
out too bad. If you don’t pitch it hot and
strong, her ladyship might quite likely forgive you.
Then where would you be?”
Miss Maud Chilvers, of Aldershot,
burst into Roland’s life like one of the shells
of her native heath two days later at about five in
the afternoon.
It was an entrance of which any stage-manager
might have been proud of having arranged. The
lighting, the grouping, the lead-up all
were perfect. The family had just finished tea
in the long drawing-room. Lady Kimbuck was crocheting,
Lord Evenwood dozing, Lady Eva reading, and Roland
thinking. A peaceful scene.
A soft, rippling murmur, scarcely
to be reckoned a snore, had just proceeded from Lord
Evenwood’s parted lips, when the door opened,
and Teal announced, “Miss Chilvers.”
Roland stiffened in his chair.
Now that the ghastly moment had come, he felt too
petrified with fear even to act the little part in
which he had been diligently rehearsed by the obliging
Mr. Teal. He simply sat and did nothing.
It was speedily made clear to him
that Miss Chilvers would do all the actual doing that
was necessary. The butler had drawn no false picture
of her personal appearance. Dyed yellow hair done
all frizzy was but one fact of her many-sided impossibilities.
In the serene surroundings of the long drawing-room,
she looked more unspeakably “not much good”
than Roland had ever imagined her. With such
a leading lady, his drama could not fail of success.
He should have been pleased; he was merely appalled.
The thing might have a happy ending, but while it lasted
it was going to be terrible.
She had a flatteringly attentive reception.
Nobody failed to notice her. Lord Evenwood woke
with a start, and stared at her as if she had been
some ghost from his trouble of ’85. Lady
Eva’s face expressed sheer amazement. Lady
Kimbuck, laying down her crochet-work, took one look
at the apparition, and instantly decided that one
of her numerous erring relatives had been at it again.
Of all the persons in the room, she was possibly the
only one completely cheerful. She was used to
these situations and enjoyed them. Her mind,
roaming into the past, recalled the night when her
cousin Warminster had been pinked by a stiletto in
his own drawing-room by a lady from South America.
Happy days, happy days.
Lord Evenwood had, by this time, come
to the conclusion that the festive Blowick must be
responsible for this visitation. He rose with
dignity.
“To what are we ?” he began.
Miss Chilvers, resolute young woman,
had no intention of standing there while other people
talked. She shook her gleaming head and burst
into speech.
“Oh, yes, I know I’ve
no right to be coming walking in here among a lot
of perfect strangers at their teas, but what I say
is, ’Right’s right and wrong’s wrong
all the world over,’ and I may be poor, but I
have my feelings. No, thank you, I won’t
sit down. I’ve not come for the weekend.
I’ve come to say a few words, and when I’ve
said them I’ll go, and not before. A lady
friend of mine happened to be reading her Daily Sketch
the other day, and she said ‘Hullo! hullo!’
and passed it on to me with her thumb on a picture
which had under it that it was Lady Eva Blyton who
was engaged to be married to Mr. Roland Bleke.
And when I read that, I said ‘Hullo! hullo!’
too, I give you my word. And not being able to
travel at once, owing to being prostrated with the
shock, I came along to-day, just to have a look at
Mr. Roland Blooming Bleke, and ask him if he’s
forgotten that he happens to be engaged to me.
That’s all. I know it’s the sort
of thing that might slip any gentleman’s mind,
but I thought it might be worth mentioning. So
now!”
Roland, perspiring in the shadows
at the far end of the room, felt that Miss Chilvers
was overdoing it. There was no earthly need for
all this sort of thing. Just a simple announcement
of the engagement would have been quite sufficient.
It was too obvious to him that his ally was thoroughly
enjoying herself. She had the center of the stage,
and did not intend lightly to relinquish it.
“My good girl,” said Lady
Kimbuck, “talk less and prove more. When
did Mr. Bleke promise to marry you?”
“Oh, it’s all right.
I’m not expecting you to believe my word.
I’ve got all the proofs you’ll want.
Here’s his letters.”
Lady Kimbuck’s eyes gleamed.
She took the package eagerly. She never lost
an opportunity of reading compromising letters.
She enjoyed them as literature, and there was never
any knowing when they might come in useful.
“Roland,” said Lady Eva,
quietly, “haven’t you anything to contribute
to this conversation?”
Miss Chilvers clutched at her bodice.
Cinema palaces were a passion with her, and she was
up in the correct business.
“Is he here? In this room?”
Roland slunk from the shadows.
“Mr. Bleke,” said Lord Evenwood, sternly,
“who is this woman?”
Roland uttered a kind of strangled cough.
“Are these letters in your handwriting?”
asked Lady Kimbuck, almost cordially. She had
seldom read better compromising letters in her life,
and she was agreeably surprized that one whom she had
always imagined a colorless stick should have been
capable of them.
Roland nodded.
“Well, it’s lucky you’re
rich,” said Lady Kimbuck philosophically.
“What are you asking for these?” she enquired
of Miss Chilvers.
“Exactly,” said Lord Evenwood,
relieved. “Precisely. Your sterling
common sense is admirable, Sophia. You place the
whole matter at once on a businesslike footing.”
“Do you imagine for a moment ?”
began Miss Chilvers slowly.
“Yes,” said Lady Kimbuck. “How
much?”
Miss Chilvers sobbed.
“If I have lost him for ever ”
Lady Eva rose.
“But you haven’t,”
she said pleasantly. “I wouldn’t dream
of standing in your way.” She drew a ring
from her finger, placed it on the table, and walked
to the door. “I am not engaged to Mr. Bleke,”
she said, as she reached it.
Roland never knew quite how he had
got away from The Towers. He had confused memories
in which the principals of the drawing-room scene
figured in various ways, all unpleasant. It was
a portion of his life on which he did not care to
dwell. Safely back in his flat, however, he gradually
recovered his normal spirits. Indeed, now that
the tumult and the shouting had, so to speak, died,
and he was free to take a broad view of his position,
he felt distinctly happier than usual. That Lady
Kimbuck had passed for ever from his life was enough
in itself to make for gaiety.
He was humming blithely one morning
as he opened his letters; outside the sky was blue
and the sun shining. It was good to be alive.
He opened the first letter. The sky was still
blue, the sun still shining.
“Dear Sir,” (it
ran).
“We have been instructed by our
client, Miss Maud Chilvers, of the Goat and Compasses,
Aldershot, to institute proceedings against you
for Breach of Promise of Marriage. In the event
of your being desirous to avoid the expense and
publicity of litigation, we are instructed to
say that Miss Chilvers would be prepared to accept
the sum of ten thousand pounds in settlement of
her claim against you. We would further add
that in support of her case our client has in
her possession a number of letters written by yourself
to her, all of which bear strong prima facie evidence
of the alleged promise to marry: and she
will be able in addition to call as witnesses
in support of her case the Earl of Evenwood, Lady
Kimbuck, and Lady Eva Blyton, in whose presence,
at a recent date, you acknowledged that you had
promised to marry our client.
“Trusting that we hear from
you in the course of post.
We are, dear Sir,
Yours faithfully,
Harrison, Harrison, Harrison,
& Harrison.”