The sea-wall ended not far from Donovan’s
camp of mud and cinders, and having got there, Peter
thought he would go on and get a cup of tea. He
crossed the railway-lines, steered through a great
American rest camp, crossed the canal, and entered
the camp. It was a cheerless place in winter,
and the day was drawing in early with a damp fog.
A great French airship was cruising around overhead
and dropping down towards her resting-place in the
great hangar near by. She looked cold and ghostly
up aloft, the more so when her engines were shut off,
and Peter thought how chilly her crew must be.
He had a hankering after Donovan’s cheery humour,
especially as he had not seen him for some time.
He crossed the camp and made for the mess-room.
It was lit and the curtains were drawn,
and, at the door, he stopped dead at the sound of
laughter. Then he walked quickly in. “Caught
out, by Jove!” said Donovan’s voice.
“You’re for it, Julie.”
A merry party sat round the stove,
taking tea. Julie and Miss Raynard were both
there, with Pennell and another man from Donovan’s
camp. Julie wore furs and had plainly just come
in, for her cheeks were glowing with exercise.
Pennell was sitting next Miss Raynard, but Donovan,
on a wooden camp-seat, just beyond where Julie sat
in a big cushioned chair, looked out at him from almost
under Julie’s arm, as he bent forward. The
other man was standing by the table, teapot in hand.
One thinks quickly at such a time,
and Peter’s mind raced. Something of the
old envy and almost fear of Donovan that he had had
first that day in the hospital came back to him.
He had not seen the two together for so long that
it struck him like a blow to hear Donovan call her
by her Christian name. It flashed across his
mind also that she knew that it was his day at the
hospital, and that she had deliberately gone out; but
it dawned on him equally quickly that he must hide
all that.
“I should jolly well think so,”
he said, laughing. “How do you do, Miss
Raynard? Donovan, can you give me some tea?
I’ve come along the sea-wall, and picked up
a regular appetite. Are you in the habit of taking
tea here, Julie? I thought nurses were not allowed
in camps.”
She looked at him quickly, but he
missed the meaning of her glance. “Rather,”
she said; “I come here for tea about once a week,
don’t I, Jack? No, nurses are not allowed
in camps, but I always do what’s not allowed
as far as possible. And this is so snug and out
of the way. Mr. Pennell, you can give me a cigarette
now.”
The other man offered Peter tea, which
he took. “And how did the festivities go
off at Christmas?” he asked.
“Oh, topping,” said Julie.
“Let me see, you were at the play, so I needn’t
talk about that; but you thought it good, didn’t
you?”
“Rippin’” said Peter.
“Well,” said Julie, “then
there was the dance on Boxing Night. We had glorious
fun. Jack, here, behaved perfectly abominably.
He sat out about half the dances, and I should think
he kissed every pretty girl in the room. Then
we went down to the nurses’ quarters of the officers’
hospital and made cocoa of all things, and had a few
more dances on our own. They made me dance a
skirt dance on the table, and as I had enough laces
on this time, I did. After that but
I don’t think I’ll tell you what we did
after that. Why didn’t you come?”
Peter had been at a big Boxing Night
entertainment for the troops in the Y.M.C.A.
Central Hall, but he did not say so. “Oh,”
he said, “I had to go to another stunt, but
I must say I wish I’d been at yours. May
I have another cup of tea?”
The third man gave it to him again,
and then, apologizing, left the room. Donovan
exchanged glances with Julie, and she nodded.
“I say, Graham,” said
Donovan, “I’ll tell you what we’ve
really met here for to-day. We were going to
fix it up and then ask you; but as you’ve dropped
in, we’ll take it as a dispensation of Providence
and let you into the know. What do you say to
a really sporting dinner at the New Year?”
“Who’s to be asked?”
queried Peter, looking round. “Fives into
a dinner won’t go.”
“I should think not,”
cried Julie gaily. “Jack, here, is taking
me, aren’t you?” Donovan said “I
am” with great emphasis, and made as if he would
kiss her, and she pushed him off, laughing, holding
her muff to his face. Then she went on:
“You’re to take Tommy. It is Tommy’s
own particular desire, and you ought to feel flattered.
She says your auras blend, whatever that may be; and
as to Mr. Pennell, he’s got a girl elsewhere
whom he will ask. Three and three make six; what
do you think of that?”
“Julie,” said Tommy Raynard
composedly, “you’re the most fearful liar
I’ve ever met. But I trust Captain Graham
knows you well enough by now.”
“I do,” said Peter, but
a trifle grimly, though he tried not to show it “I
do. I must say I’m jolly glad Donovan will
be responsible for you. It’s going to be
‘some’ evening, I can see, and what you’ll
do if you get excited I don’t know. Flirt
with the proprietor and have his wife down on us,
as like as not. In which event it’s Donovan
who’ll have to make the explanations. But
come on, what are the details?”
“Tell him, Jack,” said
Julie. “He’s a perfect beast, and
I shan’t speak to him again.”
Peter laughed. “Pas possible,”
he said. “But come on, Donovan; do as you’re
told.”
“Well, old bird,” said
Donovan, “first we meet here. Got that?
It’s safer than any other camp, and we don’t
want to meet in town. We’ll have tea and
a chat and then clear off. We’ll order dinner
in a private room at the Grand, and it’ll be
a dinner fit for the occasion. They’ve got
some priceless sherry there, and some old white port.
Cognac fine champagne for the liqueur, and what date
do you think? 1835 as I’m alive.
I saw some the other day, and spoke about it.
That gave me the idea of the dinner really, and I
put it to the old horse that that brandy was worthy
of a dinner to introduce it. He tumbled at once.
Veuve Cliquot as the main wine. What about
it?”
Peter balanced himself on the back
of his chair and blew out cigarette-smoke.
“What time are you ordering the ambulances?”
he demanded.
“The beds, you mean,”
cried Julie, entirely forgetting her last words.
“That’s what I say. I shall never
be able to walk to a taxi even.”
“I’ll carry you,” said Donovan.
“You won’t be able, not
after such a night; besides, I don’t believe
you could, anyhow. You’re getting flabby
from lack of exercise.”
“Am I?” cried Donovan. “Let’s
see, anyway.”
He darted at her, slipped an arm under
her skirts and another under her arms, and lifted
her bodily from the chair.
“Jack,” she shrieked,
“put me down! Oh, you beast! Tommy,
help, help! Peter, make him put me down and I’ll
forgive you all you’ve said.”
Tommy Raynard sprang up, laughing,
and ran after Donovan, who could not escape her.
She threw an arm round his neck and bent his head backwards.
“I shall drop her,” he shouted. Peter
leaped forward, and Julie landed in his arms.
For a second she lay still, and Peter
stared down at her. With her quick intuition
she read something new in his eyes, and instantly looked
away, scrambling out and standing there flushed and
breathing hard, her hands at her hair. “You
perfect brute!” she said to Donovan, laughing.
“I’ll pay you out, see if I don’t.
All my hair’s coming down.”
“Capital!” said Donovan.
“I’ve never seen it down, and I’d
love to. Here, let me help.”
He darted at her; she dodged behind
Peter; he adroitly put out a foot, and Donovan collapsed
into the big chair.
Julie clapped her hands and rushed
at him, seizing a cushion, and the two struggled there
till Tommy Raynard pulled Julie forcibly away.
“Julie,” she said, “this
is a positive bear-garden. You must behave.”
“And I,” said Pennell,
who had not moved, “would like to know a little
more about the dinner.” He spoke so dryly
that they all laughed, and order was restored.
Donovan, however, refused to get out of the big chair,
and Julie deliberately sat on his knee, smiling provocatively
at him.
Peter felt savage and bitter.
Like a man, he was easily deceived, and he had been
taken by surprise at a bad moment. But he did
his best to hide it, and merely threw any remnants
of caution he had left at all to the winds.
“I suppose this is the best
we can hope for, Captain Graham,” said Miss
Raynard placidly. “Perhaps now you’ll
give us your views. Captain Donovan never gets
beyond the drinks, but I agree with Mr. Pennell we
want something substantial.”
“I’m blest if I don’t
think you all confoundedly ungrateful,” said
Donovan. “I worked that fine champagne for
you beautifully. Anyone would think you could
walk in and order it any day. If we get it at
all, it’ll be due to me and my blarney.
Not but what it does deserve a good introduction,”
he added. “I don’t suppose there’s
another bottle in the town.”
Tommy sighed. “He’s
off again, or he will be,” she said. “Do
be quick, Captain Graham.”
“Well,” said Peter.
“I suggest, first, that you leave the ordering
of the room to me, and the decorations. I’ve
most time, and I’d like to choose the flowers.
And the smokes and crackers. And I’ll worry
round and get some menu-cards, and have ’em
printed in style. And, if you like, I’ll
interview the chef and see what he can give us.
It’s not much use our discussing details without
him.”
“‘A Daniel come to judgment,’”
said Pennell. “Padre, I didn’t know
you had it in you.”
“A Solomon,” said Julie mischievously.
“A Peter Graham,” said
Miss Raynard. “I always knew he had more
sense in his little finger than all the rest of you
in your heads.”
Donovan sighed from the depths of
the chair. “Graham,” he said, “for
Heaven’s sake remember those...”
Julie clapped her hand over his mouth.
He kissed it. She withdrew it with a scream.
“...Drinks,” finished
Donovan. “The chef must suggest accordin’.”
“Well,” said Pennell,
“I reckon that’s settled satisfactorily.
I’ll get out my invitation. In fact, I
think, if I may be excused, I’ll go and do it
now.” He got up and reached for his cap.
They all laughed. “We’ll
see to it that there’s mistletoe,” cried
Julie.
“Ah, thanks!” said Pennell;
“that will be jolly, though some people I know
seem to get on well enough without it. So long.
See you later, padre.”
He avoided Julie’s flung cushion
and stepped through the door. Miss Raynard got
up. “We ought to get a move on too, my dear,”
she said to Julie.
“Oh, not yet,” protested
Donovan. “Let’s have some bridge.
There are just four of us.”
“You can never have played bridge
with Julie, Captain Donovan,” said Miss Raynard.
“She usually flings the cards at you half way
through the rubber. And she never counts.
The other night she played a diamond instead of a
heart, when hearts were trumps, and she had the last
and all the rest of the tricks in her hand.”
“Ah, well,” said Donovan,
“women are like that. They often mistake
diamonds for hearts.”
“Jack,” said Julie, “you’re
really clever. How do you do it? I had no
idea. Does it hurt? But don’t do it
again; you might break something. Peter, you’ve
been praised this evening, but you’d never think
of that.”
“He would not,” said Miss Raynard....
“Come on, Julie.”
Peter hesitated a second. Then
he said: “You’re going my way.
May I see you home?”
“Thanks,” said Miss Raynard, and they
all made a move.
“It’s deuced dark,”
said Donovan. “Here, let me. I’ll
go first with a candle so that you shan’t miss
the duck-boards.”
He passed out, Tommy Raynard after
him. Peter stood back to let Julie pass, and
as she did so she said: “You’re very
glum and very polite to-night, Solomon. What’s
the matter?”
“Am I?” said Peter; “I
didn’t know it. And in any case Donovan
is all right, isn’t he?”
He could have bitten his tongue out
the next minute. She looked at him and then began
to laugh silently, and, still laughing, went out before
him. Peter followed miserably. At the gate
Donovan said good-bye, and the three set out for the
hospital. Miss Raynard walked between Peter and
Julie, and did most of the talking, but the ground
was rough and the path narrow, and it was not until
they got on to the dock road that much could be said.
“This is the best Christmas
I’ve ever had,” declared Miss Raynard.
“I’m feeling positively done up.
There was something on every afternoon and evening
last week, and then Julie sits on my bed till daybreak,
more or less, and smokes cigarettes. We’ve
a bottle of bénédictine, too, and it always goes
to her head. The other night she did a Salome
dance on the strength of it.”
“It was really fine,”
said Julie. “You ought to have seen me.”
“Till the towel slipped off:
not then, I hope,” said Tommy dryly.
“I don’t suppose he’d have minded would
you, Peter?”
“Not a bit,” said Peter cheerfully “on
the contrary.”
“I don’t know if you two
are aware that you are positively indecent,”
said Tommy. “Let’s change the subject.
What’s your news, Captain Graham?”
Peter smiled in the dark to himself.
“Well,” he said, “not much, but I’m
hoping for leave soon. I’ve pushed in for
it, and our Adjutant told me this morning he thought
it would go through.”
“Lucky man! I’ve
got to wait three months. But yours ought to be
about now, Julie.”
“I think it ought,” said
Julie shortly. Then: “What about the
menu-cards, Peter? Would you like me to help
you choose them?”
“Would you?” said he eagerly. “To-morrow?”
“I’m on duty at five o’clock,
but I can get off for an hour in the afternoon.
Could you come, Tommy?”
“No. Sorry; but I must
write letters. I haven’t written one for
ages.”
“Nor have I,” said Julie,
“but I don’t mean to. I hate letters.
Well, what about it, Peter?”
“I should think we had better
try that stationer’s in the Rue Thiers,”
he said. “If that won’t do, the Nouvelles
Galleries might. What do you think?”
“Let’s try the Galleries
first. We could meet there. Say at three,
eh? I want to get some baby-ribbon, too.”
Tommy sighed audibly. “She’s off
again,” she said.
“Thank God, here’s the
hospital! Good-night, Captain Graham. You
mustn’t cross the Rubicon to-night.”
“You oughtn’t to swear
before him,” said Julie in mock severity.
“And what in the world is the Rubicon?”
“Materially, to-night, it’s
the railway-line between his camp and the hospital,”
said Tommy Raynard. “What else it is I’ll
leave him to decide.”
She held out her hand, and Peter saw
a quizzical look on her face. He turned rather
hopelessly to Julie. “I say,” he said,
“didn’t you know it was my afternoon
at the hospital?”
“Yes,” said Julie, “and
I knew you didn’t come. At least, I couldn’t
see you in any of the wards.”
“Oh,” he exclaimed, “I
thought you’d been out all the afternoon.
I’m sorry. I am a damned fool, Julie!”
She laughed in the darkness.
“I’ve known worse, Peter,” she said,
and was gone.
Next day Julie was in her most provocative
of moods. Peter, eminently respectable in his
best tunic, waited ten minutes for her outside the
Nouvelles Galleries, and, like most men in
his condition, considered that she was never coming,
and that he was the cynosure of neighbouring eyes.
When she did come, she was not apparently aware that
she was late. She ran her eyes over him, and
gave a pretended gasp of surprise. “You’re
looking wonderful, Padre Graham,” she said.
“Really, you’re hard to live up to.
I never know what to expect or how to behave.
Those black buttons terrorise me. Come on.”
She insisted on getting her ribbon
first, and turned over everything there was to be
seen at that counter. The French girl who served
them was highly amused.
“Isn’t that chic?”
Julie demanded of Peter, holding up a lacy camisole
and deliberately putting it to her shoulders.
“Wouldn’t you love to see me in it?”
“I would,” he said, without the ghost
of a smile.
“Well, you never will, of course,”
she said. “I shall never marry or be given
in marriage, and in any case, in that uniform, you’ve
nothing whatever to hope for.... Yes, I’ll
take that ribbon, thank you, ma’m’selle.
Peter, I suppose you can’t carry it for me.
Your pocket? Not a bad idea; but let me put it
in.”
Peter stood while she undid his breast-pocket
and stuffed it inside.
“Anything more?” demanded
the French saleswoman interrogatively.
“Not to-day, merci,”
said Julie. “You see, Peter, you couldn’t
carry undies for me, even in your pocket; it wouldn’t
be respectable. Do come on. You will keep
us here the entire day.”
They passed the smoking department,
and she stopped suddenly. “Peter,”
she said, “I’m going to give you a pipe.
Those chocolates you gave me at Christmas were too
delicious for anything. What sort do you like?
A briar? Let me see if it blows nicely.”
She put it to her lips. “I swear I shall
start a pipe soon, in my old age. By the way,
I don’t believe you have any idea how old I
am have you, Peter? Guess.”
She was quick to note the return to
his old manner. He was nervous with her, not
sure of himself, and so not sure of her either.
And she traded on it. At the stationery department
she made eyes at a couple of officers, and insisted
on examining Kirschner picture-postcards, some of
which she would not show him. “You can’t
possibly be seen looking at them with those badges
up,” she whispered. “Dear me, if only
Donovan were here! He wouldn’t mind, and
I don’t know which packet I like best. These
have got very little on, Peter very
little, but I’m not sure that they are not more
decent than those. It’s much worse
than a camisole, you know....”
Peter was horribly conscious that
the men were smiling at her. “Julie,”
he said desperately, “do be sensible,
just for a minute. We must get those menu-cards.”
“Well, you go and find the books,”
she said merrily. “I told you you ought
not to watch me buy these. I’ll take the
best care of myself,” and she looked past him
towards the men.
Peter gave it up. “Julie,”
he said savagely, “if you make eyes any more,
I’ll kiss you here and now I swear
I will.”
Julie laughed her little nearly silent
chuckle, and looked at him. “I believe
you would, Peter,” she said, “and I certainly
mustn’t risk that. I’ll be good.
Are those the books? Fetch me a chair, then, and
I’ll look through them.”
He bent over her as she turned the
leaves. She wore a little toque that had some
relation to a nurse’s uniform, but was distinctive
of Julie. Her fringe of brown hair lay along
her forehead, and the thick masses of the rest of
it tempted him almost beyond endurance. “How
will that do?” she demanded, her eyes dancing.
“Oh, do look at the cards and not at me!
You’re a terrible person to bring shopping, Peter!”
The card selected, she had a bright
idea. “What about candle-shades?”
she queried. “We can’t trust the
hotel. I want some with violets on them:
I love violets.”
“Do you?” he said eagerly.
“That’s just what I wanted to know.
Yes, it’s a fine idea; let’s go and get
them.”
Outside, she gave a sigh of relief,
and looked at the little gold wrist-watch on her arm.
“We’ve time,” she said. “Take
me to tea.”
“You must know it’s not
possible,” he said. “They’re
enforcing the order, and one can’t get tea anywhere.”
She shook her head at him. “I
think, Peter,” she said, “you’ll
never learn the ropes. Follow me.”
Not literally, but metaphorically,
he followed her. She led him to a big confectioner’s
with two doors and several windows, in each of which
was a big notice of the new law forbidding teas or
the purchase of chocolates. Inside, she walked
up to a girl who was standing by a counter, and who
greeted her with a smile. “It is cold outside,”
she said. “May I have a warm by the fire?”
“Certainly, mademoiselle,”
said the girl. “And monsieur also.
Will it please you to come round here?”
They went behind the counter and in
at a little door. There was a fire in the grate
of the small kitchen, and a kettle singing on the hob.
Julie sat down on a chair at the wooden table and
looked round with satisfaction.
“Why, it’s all ready for
us!” she exclaimed. “Chocolate cakes,
Suzanne, please, and hot buttered scones.
I’ll butter them, if you bring the scones.”
They came, and she went to the fire,
splitting them open and spreading the butter lavishly.
“I love France,” she said. “All
laws are made to be broken, which is all that laws
are good for, don’t you think?”
“Yes,” he said deliberately,
glancing at the closed door, and bent and kissed her
neck. She looked up imperiously. “Again,”
she said; and he kissed her on the lips. At that
she jumped up with a quick return to the old manner:
“Peter! For a parson you are the outside
edge. Go and sit down over there and recollect
yourself. To begin with, if we’re found,
here, there’ll be a row, and if you’re
caught kissing me, who knows what will happen?”
He obeyed gaily. “Chaff
away, Julie,” he said, “but I shan’t
wear black buttons at the dinner. You’ll
have to look out that night.”
She put the scones on the table, and
sat down. “And if I don’t?”
she queried. Peter said nothing. He had
suddenly thought of something. He looked at her,
and for the first time she would not meet his eyes.
It was thought better on New Year’s
Eve that they should go separately to Donovan’s
camp, so Peter and Pennell set out for it alone.
By the canal Pennell left his friend to go and meet
Elsie Harding, the third girl. Peter went on
alone, and found Donovan, giving some orders in the
camp. He stood with him till they saw the other
four, who had met on the tow-path, coming in together.
“He’s a dark horse,”
called Julie, almost before they had come up, “and
so’s she. Fancy Elsie being the third!
I didn’t know they knew each other. We’re
a Colonial party to-night, Jack all except
Peter, that is, for Mr. Pennell is more Canadian than
English. We’ll teach them. By the
way, I can’t go on saying ‘Mr. Pennell’
all night. What shall I call him, Elsie?”
Peter saw that the new-comer wore
an Australian brooch, and caught the unmistakable
but charming accent in her reply. “He’s
‘Trevor’ to me, and he can be to you,
if you like, Julie,” she said.
Tommy sighed audibly. “They’re
beginning early,” she said; “but I suppose
the rest of us had better follow the general example eh,
Peter?”
In the anteroom, where tea was ready,
Peter saw that Elsie was likely to play Julie a good
second. She was tall, taller than Pennell himself,
and dark skinned, with black hair and full red lips,
and rather bigly built. It appeared that her
great gift was a set of double joints that allowed
her to play the contortionist with great effect.
“You should just see her in tights,” said
Julie. “Trevor, why didn’t you say
whom you were bringing, and I’d have made her
put them on. Then we could have had an exhibition,
but, as it is, I suppose we can’t.”
“I didn’t know you knew her,” he
said.
“You never have time to talk
of other people when you’re together, I suppose,”
she retorted. “Well, I’ve no doubt
you make the most of your opportunities, and you’re
very wise. But to-night you’ve got to behave,
more or less at least, till after the coffee.
Otherwise all our preparations will be wasted won’t
they, Peter?”
After tea they set off together for
the tram-car that ran into town. It was Julie
who had decided this. She said she liked to see
the people, and the cars were so perfectly absurd,
which was true. Also, that it would be too early
to enjoy taxis, the which was very like her. So
they walked in a body to the terminus, where a crowd
of Tommies and French workmen and factory girls
were waiting. The night was cloudy and a little
damp, but it had the effect of adding mystery to the
otherwise ugly street, and to the great ships under
repair in the dockyards close by. The lights of
the tram appeared at length round the corner, an engine-car
and two trailers. There was a bolt for them.
They were packed on the steps, and the men had to
use elbows freely to get the whole party in, but the
soldiers and the workmen were in excellent humour,
and the French girls openly admiring of Julie.
In the result, then, they were all hunched up in the
end of a “first” compartment, and Peter
found himself with his back to the glass door, Julie
on his right, Elsie on his left.
“Every rib I have is broken,” said the
former.
“The natural or the artificial?”
demanded Elsie. “Personally, I think I
broke a few of other people’s.”
They started, and the rattling of
the ramshackle cars stopped conversation. Julie
drew Peter’s attention to a little scene on the
platform outside, and he looked through the glass to
see a big French linesman with his girl. The
man had got her into a corner, and then, coolly putting
his arms out on either side to the hand-rail and to
the knob of their door, he was facing his amorata,
indifferent to the world. Peter looked at the
girl’s coarse face. She was a factory hand,
bareheaded, and her sleeves were rolled up at her elbows.
For all that, she was neat, as a Frenchwoman invariably
is. The girl caught his gaze, and smiled.
The linesman followed the direction of her eyes and
glanced friendly at Peter too. Then he saw Julie.
A look of admiration came over his face, and he put
one hand comically to his heart. The girl slapped
it in a pretended fury, and Julie doubled up with
laughter in her corner. Peter bent over her.
“’Everybody’s doing it, doing
it, doing it,’” he quoted merrily.
The tram stopped, in the square before
the Hotel de Ville. There was a great air of
festivity and bustle about as they stepped out, for
the New Year is a great time in France. Lights
twinkled in the misty dark; taxis sprinted across
the open spaces; and people greeted each other gaily
by the brightly-lit shops. Somehow or another
the whole thing went to Peter’s head like wine.
The world was good and merry, he thought exultantly,
and he, after all, a citizen of it. He caught
Julie’s arm, “Come on,” he called
to the others. “I know the way,” And
to her: “Isn’t it topping? Do
you feel gloriously exhilarated? I don’t
know why, Julie, but I could do anything to-night.”
She slipped her fingers down into
his hand. “I’m so glad,” she
said. “So could I.”
They whirled across the road, the
others after them, round the little park in the centre
of the square, and down an empty side-street.
Peter had reconnoitred all approaches, he said, and
this was the best way. Begging him to give her
time to breathe, Tommy came along with Donovan, and
it suddenly struck Peter that the latter seemed happy
enough. He pressed Julie’s hand: “Donovan’s
dropped into step with Tommy very easily,” he
said. “Do you mind?”
She laughed happily and glanced back.
“You’re as blind as a bat, Peter, when
all’s said and done,” she said; “but
oh, my dear, I can’t play with you to-night.
There’s only one person I want to walk with Peter.”
Peter all but shouted. He drew
her to him, and for once Julie was honestly alarmed.
“Not now, you mad boy!”
she exclaimed, but her eyes were enough for him.
“All right,” he laughed
at her; “wait a bit. There’s time
yet.”
In the little entrance-hail the maitre
d’hotel greeted them. They were the
party of importance that night. He ushered them
upstairs and opened a door. The mademoiselles
might make the toilette there. Another door:
they would eat here.
The men deposited their caps and sticks
and coats on pegs outside, and the girls, who had
had to come in uniform also, were ready as soon as
they. They went in together. Elsie gave a
little whistle of surprise.
Peter had certainly done well.
Holly and mistletoe were round the walls, and a big
bunch of the latter was placed in such a way that it
would hang over the party as they sat afterwards by
the fire. In the centre a silver bowl held glorious
roses, white and red, and at each girl’s place
was a bunch of Parma violets and a few sprigs of flowering
mimosa. Bon-bons were spread over the white cloth.
Julie’s candle-shades looked perfect, and so
did the menu-cards.
“I trust that monsieur is satisfied,”
said the maitre d’hotel, bowing towards
the man who had had the dealings with him. He
got his answer, but not from Peter, and, being a Frenchman,
smiled, bowed again, and discreetly left the room;
for Elsie, turning to Peter cried: “Did
you do it even the wattle?” and kissed
him heartily. He kissed her back, and caught
hold of Julie. “Tit for tat,” he said
to her under his breath, holding her arms; “do
you remember our first taxi?” Then, louder:
“Julie Is responsible for most of it,”
and he kissed her too.
They sorted themselves out at last,
and the dinner, that two of them at least who were
there that night were never to forget, began.
They were uproariously merry, and the two girls who
waited came and went wreathed in smiles.
With the champagne came a discussion
over the cork. “Give It to me” cried
Julie; “I want to wear it for luck.”
“So do I,” said Elsie; “we must
toss for it.”
Julie agreed, and they spun a coin solemnly.
“It’s mine,” cried Elsie, and pounced
for it.
Julie snatched it away, “No,
you don’t,” she said. “A man
must put it in, or there’s no luck in it.
Here you are, Trevor.”
Pennell took it, laughing, and pushed
back his chair. The others stood up and craned
over to see. Elsie drew up her skirt and Trevor
pushed it down her stocking amid screams of laughter,
and the rattle of chaff.
“No higher or I faint,” said Tommy.
Trevor stood up, a little flushed.
“Here,” said Peter, filling his glass
with what was left in the bottle, “drink this,
Pen. You sure want it.”
“It’s your turn next,”
said Trevor, “and, by Jove, the bottle’s
empty! Encore lé vin,” he
called.
“Good idea. It’s
Julie’s next cork, and Graham’s the man
to do it.” said Jack Donovan. “And
then it’ll be your turn, Tommy.”
“And yours,” she said, glancing at him.
“Bet you won’t dare,” said Elsie.
“Who won’t?” retorted Julie.
“Peter, of course.”
“My dear, you don’t know Peter. Here
you are, Peter; let’s show them.”
She tossed the cork to him and stood
up coolly, put up her foot on the edge of the table,
and lifted her skirt. Peter pushed the cork into
its traditional place amid cheers, but he hardly heard.
His fingers had touched her skin, and he had seen
the look in her eyes. No wine could have intoxicated
him so. He raised his glass. “Toasts!”
he shouted.
They took him up and everyone rose to their feet.
“’Here’s to all those that I love;
Here’s to all those that love me;
Here’s to all those that love them that love
those
That love those that love them that love me!’”
he chanted.
“Julie’s turn,” cried Elsie.
“No,” she said; “they know all my
toasts.”
“Not all,” said Donovan;
“there was one you never finished something
about Blighty.”
“Rhymes with nighty,” put in Tommy coolly;
“don’t you remember, Julie?”
It seemed to Peter that he and Julie
stood there looking at each other for seconds, but
probably no one but Tommy noticed. “Take
it as read,” cried Peter boisterously, and emptied
his glass. His example was infectious, and they
all followed suit, but Donovan remarked across the
table to him:
“You spoiled a humorous situation, old dear.”
Dinner over, they pushed the table
against the wall, and pulled chairs round the fire.
Dessert, crackers, chocolates and cigarettes were piled
on a small table, and the famous liqueur came in with
the coffee. They filled the little glasses.
“This is a great occasion,” said Donovan;
“let’s celebrate it properly. Julie,
give us a dance first.”
She sprang up at once. “Right-o,”
she said. “Clear the table.”
They pushed everything to one side,
and Peter held out his hand. Just touching his
fingers, she leaped up, and next minute circled there
in a whirl of skirts. A piano stood in a corner
of the room, and Elsie ran to it. Looking over
her shoulder, she caught the pace, and the notes rang
out merrily.
Julie was the very spirit of devilment
and fun. So light that she seemed hardly to touch
the table, she danced as if born to it. It was
such an incarnation of grace and music that a little
silence fell on them all. To Peter she appeared
to dance to him. He could not take his eyes off
her; he cared nothing what others thought or saw.
There was a mist before him and thunder in his ears.
He saw only her flushed, childlike face and sparkling
brown eyes, and a wave of her loosened hair that slipped
across them....
The music ceased. Panting for
breath, she leaped down amid a chorus of “Bravo’s!”
and held out her hand for the liqueur-glass. Peter
put it in her fingers, and he was trembling more than
she, and spilt a little of it. “Well, here’s
the best,” she cried, and raised the glass.
Then, with a gay laugh, she put her moistened fingers
to his mouth and he kissed them, the spirit on his
lips.
And now Elsie must show herself off.
They sat down to watch her, and a more insidious feeling
crept over Peter as he did so. The girl bent her
body this way and that; arched herself over and looked
at them between her feet; twisted herself awry and
made faces at them. They laughed, but there was
a new note in the laughter. An intense look had
come into Pennell’s face, and Donovan was lolling
back, his head on one side, smiling evilly.
She finished and straightened herself,
and they had more of the liqueur. Then Tommy,
as usual, remembered herself. “Girls,”
she said, “we must go. It’s fearfully
late.”
Donovan sat up. “What about taxis?”
he demanded.
Peter went to the door. “They’ll
fetch them,” he said. “I’ve
made an arrangement.”
He went a little unsteadily to find
the maitre d’hotel, and a boy was despatched,
while he settled the bill. They were tramping
down the stairs as he came out of the little office.
Julie leading and laughing uproariously at some joke.
Donovan and Tommy were the steadiest, and they came
down together. It seemed to Peter that it was
natural for them to do so.
Pennell and Elsie got into one taxi.
She leaned out of the window and waved her hand.
“We’re the luckiest,” she called;
“we’ve the farthest to go. Good-night
everyone, and thanks ever so much.”
A second taxi came up. “Jump in, Julie,”
said Tommy.
She got in, and Peter put his hand
on the door. “I’ve settled everything,
Donovan,” he said. “See you to-morrow.
Good-night, Tommy.”
“Good-night,” she called
back, and he got in. And next minute he was alone
with Julie.
In the closed and darkened taxi he
put his arm round her and drew her to him. “Oh,
my darling,” he murmured. “Julie,
do you love me as I love you? I can’t live
without you.” He covered her face with hot
kisses, and she kissed him back.
“Julie,” he said at length,
breathlessly, “listen. My leave’s
come. I knew this morning. Couldn’t
you possibly be in England when I am? I saw you
first on the boat coming over remember?
And you’re due again.”
“When do you go?” she queried.
“Fourteenth,” he answered.
She considered. “I couldn’t
get off by then,” she said, “but I might
the twenty-first or thereabouts. I’m due,
as you say, and I think it could be managed.”
“Would you?” he demanded, and hung on
her words.
She turned her face up to him, and
even in the dark he could see her glowing eyes.
“It would be heaven, Peter,” she whispered.
He kissed her passionately.
“I could meet you in town easily,” he
said.
“Not the leave-boat train,”
she replied; “it’s not safe. Anyone
might be there. But I’ll run down for a
day or two to some friends in Sussex, and then come
up to visit more in town. I know very few people,
of course, and all my relations are in South Africa.
No one would know to whom I went, and if I didn’t
go to them, Peter, why nobody would know either.”
“Splendid!” he answered,
the blood pounding in his temples. “I’ll
make all the arrangements. Shall I take a flat,
or shall we go to an hotel? An hotel’s
more fun, perhaps, and we can have a suite.”
She leaned over against him and caught
his hand to her breast, with a little intake of breath.
“I’ll leave it all to you, my darling,”
she whispered.
The taxi swung into the clearing before
the hospital. “Peter,” said Julie,
“Tommy’s so sharp; I believe she’ll
suspect something.”
“I don’t care a damn for
anyone!” said Peter fiercely; “let her.
I only want you.”