TEA AND TENNIS
“Met the professor’s late
boatman on the Cob,” said Mr. Chase, dissecting
a chocolate cake.
“Clumsy man,” said Phyllis.
“I hope he was ashamed of himself. I shall
never forgive him for trying to drown papa.”
My heart bled for Mr. Henry Hawk, that modern martyr.
“When I met him,” said
Tom Chase, “he looked as if he had been trying
to drown his sorrow as well.”
“I knew he drank,” said
Phyllis severely, “the very first time I saw
him.”
“You might have warned the professor,”
murmured Mr. Chase.
“He couldn’t have upset the boat if he
had been sober.”
“You never know. He may have done it on
purpose.”
“Tom, how absurd.”
“Rather rough on the man, aren’t you?”
I said.
“Merely a suggestion,”
continued Mr. Chase airily. “I’ve
been reading sensational novels lately, and it seems
to me that Mr. Hawk’s cut out to be a minion.
Probably some secret foe of the professor’s bribed
him.”
My heart stood still. Did he
know, I wondered, and was this all a roundabout way
of telling me he knew?
“The professor may be a member
of an Anarchist League, or something, and this is
his punishment for refusing to assassinate some sportsman.”
“Have another cup of tea, Tom,
and stop talking nonsense.”
Mr. Chase handed in his cup.
“What gave me the idea that
the upset was done on purpose was this. I saw
the whole thing from the Ware Cliff. The spill
looked to me just like dozens I had seen at Malta.”
“Why do they upset themselves
on purpose at Malta particularly?” inquired
Phyllis.
“Listen carefully, my dear,
and you’ll know more about the ways of the Navy
that guards your coasts than you did before. When
men are allowed on shore at Malta, the owner has a
fancy to see them snugly on board again at a certain
reasonable hour. After that hour any Maltese
policeman who brings them aboard gets one sovereign,
cash. But he has to do all the bringing part
of it on his own. Consequence is, you see boats
rowing out to the ship, carrying men who have overstayed
their leave; and when they get near enough, the able-bodied
gentleman in custody jumps to his feet, upsets the
boat, and swims for the gangway. The policemen,
if they aren’t drowned they sometimes
are race him, and whichever gets there
first wins. If it’s the policeman, he gets
his sovereign. If it’s the sailor, he is
considered to have arrived not in a state of custody
and gets off easier. What a judicious remark that
was of the governor of North Carolina to the governor
of South Carolina, respecting the length of time between
drinks. Just one more cup, please, Phyllis.”
“But how does all that apply?” I asked,
dry-mouthed.
“Mr. Hawk upset the professor
just as those Maltese were upset. There’s
a patent way of doing it. Furthermore, by judicious
questioning, I found that Hawk was once in the Navy,
and stationed at Malta. Now, who’s going
to drag in Sherlock Holmes?”
“You don’t really think?”
I said, feeling like a criminal in the dock when the
case is going against him.
“I think friend Hawk has been
re-enacting the joys of his vanished youth, so to
speak.”
“He ought to be prosecuted,”
said Phyllis, blazing with indignation.
Alas, poor Hawk!
“Nobody’s safe with a
man of that sort, hiring out a boat.” Oh,
miserable Hawk!
“But why on earth should he
play a trick like that on Professor Derrick, Chase?”
“Pure animal spirits, probably.
Or he may, as I say, be a minion.”
I was hot all over.
“I shall tell father that,”
said Phyllis in her most decided voice, “and
see what he says. I don’t wonder at the
man taking to drink after doing such a thing.”
“I I think you’re making a
mistake,” I said.
“I never make mistakes,”
Mr. Chase replied. “I am called Archibald
the All-Right, for I am infallible. I propose
to keep a reflective eye upon the jovial Hawk.”
He helped himself to another section
of the chocolate cake.
“Haven’t you finished
yet, Tom?” inquired Phyllis. “I’m
sure Mr. Garnet’s getting tired of sitting talking
here,” she said.
I shot out a polite negative.
Mr. Chase explained with his mouth full that he had
by no means finished. Chocolate cake, it appeared,
was the dream of his life. When at sea he was
accustomed to lie awake o’ nights thinking of
it.
“You don’t seem to realise,”
he said, “that I have just come from a cruise
on a torpedo-boat. There was such a sea on as
a rule that cooking operations were entirely suspended,
and we lived on ham and sardines without
bread.”
“How horrible!”
“On the other hand,” added
Mr. Chase philosophically, “it didn’t matter
much, because we were all ill most of the time.”
“Don’t be nasty, Tom.”
“I was merely defending myself.
I hope Mr. Hawk will be able to do as well when his
turn comes. My aim, my dear Phyllis, is to show
you in a series of impressionist pictures the sort
of thing I have to go through when I’m not here.
Then perhaps you won’t rend me so savagely over
a matter of five minutes’ lateness for breakfast.”
“Five minutes! It was three-quarters
of an hour, and everything was simply frozen.”
“Quite right too in weather
like this. You’re a slave to convention,
Phyllis. You think breakfast ought to be hot,
so you always have it hot. On occasion I prefer
mine cold. Mine is the truer wisdom. You
can give the cook my compliments, Phyllis, and tell
her gently, for I don’t wish the
glad news to overwhelm her that I enjoyed
that cake. Say that I shall be glad to hear from
her again. Care for a game of tennis, Garnet?”
“What a pity Norah isn’t
here,” said Phyllis. “We could have
had a four.”
“But she is at present wasting
her sweetness on the desert air of Yeovil. You
had better sit down and watch us, Phyllis. Tennis
in this sort of weather is no job for the delicately-nurtured
feminine. I will explain the finer points of
my play as we go on. Look out particularly for
the Tilden Back-Handed Slosh. A winner every time.”
We proceeded to the tennis court.
I played with the sun in my eyes. I might, if
I chose, emphasise that fact, and attribute my subsequent
rout to it, adding, by way of solidifying the excuse,
that I was playing in a strange court with a borrowed
racquet, and that my mind was preoccupied firstly,
with l’affaire Hawk, secondly, and chiefly,
with the gloomy thought that Phyllis and my opponent
seemed to be on friendly terms with each other.
Their manner at tea had been almost that of an engaged
couple. There was a thorough understanding between
them. I will not, however, take refuge behind
excuses. I admit, without qualifying the statement,
that Mr. Chase was too good for me. I had always
been under the impression that lieutenants in the Royal
Navy were not brilliant at tennis. I had met
them at various houses, but they had never shone conspicuously.
They had played an earnest, unobtrusive game, and
generally seemed glad when it was over. Mr. Chase
was not of this sort. His service was bottled
lightning. His returns behaved like jumping crackers.
He won the first game in precisely six strokes.
He served. Only once did I take the service with
the full face of the racquet, and then I seemed to
be stopping a bullet. I returned it into the
net. The last of the series struck the wooden
edge of my racquet, and soared over the back net into
the shrubbery, after the manner of a snick to long
slip off a fast bowler.
“Game,” said Mr. Chase, “we’ll
look for that afterwards.”
I felt a worm and no man. Phyllis,
I thought, would probably judge my entire character
from this exhibition. A man, she would reflect,
who could be so feeble and miserable a failure at
tennis, could not be good for much in any department
of life. She would compare me instinctively with
my opponent, and contrast his dash and brilliance with
my own inefficiency. Somehow the massacre was
beginning to have a bad effect on my character.
All my self-respect was ebbing. A little more
of this, and I should become crushed, a
mere human jelly. It was my turn to serve.
Service is my strong point at tennis. I am inaccurate,
but vigorous, and occasionally send in a quite unplayable
shot. One or two of these, even at the expense
of a fault or so, and I might be permitted to retain
at least a portion of my self-respect.
I opened with a couple of faults.
The sight of Phyllis, sitting calm and cool in her
chair under the cedar, unnerved me. I served another
fault. And yet another.
“Here, I say, Garnet,”
observed Mr. Chase plaintively, “do put me out
of this hideous suspense. I’m becoming a
mere bundle of quivering ganglions.”
I loathe facetiousness in moments of stress.
I frowned austerely, made no reply, and served another
fault, my fifth.
Matters had reached a crisis.
Even if I had to lob it underhand, I must send the
ball over the net with the next stroke.
I restrained myself this time, eschewing
the careless vigour which had marked my previous efforts.
The ball flew in a slow semicircle, and pitched inside
the correct court. At least, I told myself, I
had not served a fault.
What happened then I cannot exactly
say. I saw my opponent spring forward like a
panther and whirl his racquet. The next moment
the back net was shaking violently, and the ball was
rolling swiftly along the ground on a return journey
to the other court.
“Love-forty,” said Mr. Chase. “Phyllis!”
“Yes?”
“That was the Tilden Slosh.”
“I thought it must be,” said Phyllis.
In the third game I managed to score
fifteen. By the merest chance I returned one
of his red-hot serves, and probably through
surprise he failed to send it back again.
In the fourth and fifth games I omitted
to score. Phyllis had left the cedar now, and
was picking flowers from the beds behind the court.
We began the sixth game. And
now for some reason I played really well. I struck
a little vein of brilliance. I was serving, and
this time a proportion of my serves went over the
net instead of trying to get through. The score
went from fifteen all to forty-fifteen. Hope began
to surge through my veins. If I could keep this
up, I might win yet.
The Tilden Slosh diminished my lead
by fifteen. Then I got in a really fine serve,
which beat him. ’Vantage In. Another
Slosh. Deuce. Another Slam. ’Vantage
out. It was an awesome moment. There is a
tide in the affairs of men, which, taken by the flood I
served. Fault. I served again, a
beauty. He returned it like a flash into the corner
of the court. With a supreme effort I got to
it. We rallied. I was playing like a professor.
Then whizz!
The Slosh had beaten me on the post.
“Game and ,”
said Mr. Chase, tossing his racquet into the air and
catching it by the handle. “Good game that
last one.”
I turned to see what Phyllis thought of it.
At the eleventh hour I had shown her of what stuff
I was made.
She had disappeared.
“Looking for Miss Derrick?”
said Chase, jumping the net, and joining me in my
court, “she’s gone into the house.”
“When did she go?”
“At the end of the fifth game,” said Chase.
“Gone to dress for dinner, I
suppose,” he continued. “It must be
getting late. I think I ought to be going, too,
if you don’t mind. The professor gets a
little restive if I keep him waiting for his daily
bread. Great Scott, that watch can’t be
right! What do you make of it? Yes, so do
I. I really think I must run. You won’t
mind. Good-night, then. See you to-morrow,
I hope.”
I walked slowly out across the fields.
That same star, in which I had confided on a former
occasion, was at its post. It looked placid and
cheerful. It never got beaten by six games to
love under the very eyes of a lady-star. It
was never cut out ignominiously by infernally capable
lieutenants in His Majesty’s Navy. No wonder
it was cheerful.