The arrival of Mrs. Raynor and the
General upon the scene, with Harry Raynor in their
wake, gave a different atmosphere, so to speak, to
Cleek’s thoughts, and he threw himself, heart
and soul, into getting into the good graces of the
family. He did not much fancy Mr. Harry Raynor,
who was too self-assertive to be pleasant company to
a matured man of the world, and just at the age which
may be best described in the quotation, “young
enough to know everything.”
Nevertheless, he had made up his mind
to secure an invitation to stay overnight at Wuthering
Grange, in order that he might have a peep at Lord
St. Ulmer, and he knew that it was only by making himself
a boon companion of the young man that he could hope
to secure it. About three and twenty, the idol
of an adoring mother, if not of his father, that gentleman
was of the type that favour the ladies of the ballet
with their attentions, and prefer chorus girls, stage
doors, and late suppers to home amusements and the
like; and it was not long before Cleek had him nicely
“managed” and in the desired frame of mind.
A casual remark about a certain dashing
musical-comedy actress who had sprung into sudden
prominence set the ball rolling; then Cleek expressed
in confidence a burning desire to know the lady and
deep disappointment over the fact that he knew no
one who was in a position to introduce him; and in
ten minutes’ time he had his fish hooked.
“I say, you know, I’ll
give you an introduction to her like a shot, old chap,
if you really do want to know her,” young Raynor
imparted to him in deep confidence as he led him outside
and got him away from the ladies. “Know
her like a book! Rippin’ sort! Introduce
you any time you like. My hat! yes!”
“Really?” said Cleek with
every appearance of boundless delight. “You
know her you actually know her?”
“Yes, rather! Know the
whole blessed shoot of ’em from Flossie Twinkletoes
down. Get reams of letters from ’em and
bushels of photos all autographed.
I say, come up to my den and have a peep. You
never saw such a gallery!”
Cleek admitted to himself when he
saw them that he never had, for the room was literally
smothered under photographs of actresses, gymnasts,
ladies of the music-hall persuasion, and public characters
in general.
“Always sport my oak, you know,”
said the young man with a laugh and a wink, as he
locked the door behind him. “Pater might
see ’em, and then there would be a time of it.
Awful old muff, the pater; good sort, you know, but
he’d have this lot in the fire in less than no
time if he knew. Fearful old fossil. Flowers,
fruits, rubber at whist, pipe, and an old army friend that’s
his idea of life.”
Cleek felt like taking him by the
back of the neck and kicking him. He didn’t,
however. He had other fish to fry; and he succeeded
so well that before he left that room he had an invitation
to stop the night, and as he had brought no evening
clothes with him, the offer of a suit to meet the
emergency.
“Look here, I’ll tell
you what, Barch,” said Raynor when this invitation
and this offer were accepted, turning round as he spoke he
was at a window which overlooked the drive up from
the gates of the Grange “chaps like us don’t
want to sit in a drawing-room and waste time with a
pair of prunes and prisms like Lady Katharine Fordham
and that prig of a Lorne girl. If you’re
in for a lark, we’ll slip out and I’ll
show you a bit of life on the sly. I like you
I’m blest if I don’t; so if you’re
game for a kick up, I’ll let you into a secret
and give you the time of your life. Now, then,
listen here, old chap.”
He stopped abruptly as a sudden grating
sound of wheels rose from the drive, and looking down,
he saw that a vehicle had swung in through the gates
and was advancing toward the house.
“Oh Lord! that settles it; now
we’re in for a visitation!” he said with
an expression of deep disgust. “There’s
that prig of a chap, Geoff Clavering, driving in.
Can’t stick that fellow at any price!”
Geoff Clavering! Cleek rose as
he heard the name, walked to the window, and looked
out. So, then, he had not been so far out in his
reckoning after all. Geoff Clavering had come
at last to seek an interview with the girl of his
heart.
Why the boy had delayed until now
Cleek could not guess, unless it was because of a
shrinking dread of going abroad anywhere at such a
time; but that he had nerved himself to come at last
for something more than a mere call was apparent at
first glance; for his face was white and strained,
and it was evident, even from this distance, that he
was labouring under strong excitement.
Undoubtedly there would be, as he
had surmised, a private interview arranged between
those two people, and undoubtedly he must manage to
overhear it. What a pity that this should have
happened at this particular time, that young Clavering
should have arrived while he was up here, out of the
way of seeing what happened when Geoff and Lady Katharine
first met!
A glance, a movement, a hundred different
things, might tell him what he wanted to know if he
were there at that moment of first meeting. But
perhaps it was not yet too late. The carriage
hadn’t reached the entrance of the house as
yet; perhaps, if he hurried, if he went at once
“I say, let’s go down,
Raynor,” he said desperately. “I don’t
know what’s come over me, but my head’s
suddenly begun to swim, and I’m afraid I shall
keel over if I don’t get out in the air.
We can let the lark you were speaking of rest until
afterward. Come on, will you? By Jove! you
know, I’m in a fearful way.”
And from the effort to carry out the
impression of extreme giddiness a curious thing came:
Clapping his hand to his head, and
wheeling staggeringly round to make his way to the
door, he had the good or ill fortune to blunder against
a little table, upon which stood what was undoubtedly
an earthenware tobacco jar, and to send it crashing
to the ground. Instantly and out of it there
rolled, on top of the quantity of spilled tobacco which
had originally been used to cover it, a little silver
box, which flew open as it fell and disgorged a photograph,
a couple of letters in a woman’s hand, and a
fragment of pink gauze.
Cleek had just stooped to pick these
things up and to lay them back upon the table, when
a yet more curious thing happened.
“I say! You let those things
alone!” snapped young Raynor excitedly; and
springing forward, whisked them out of his hand.
But not before Cleek had made a rather startling discovery:
the letters were written in a woman’s hand a
hand he recognized the instant he saw it and
the picture which accompanied them was a photograph
of Margot. He had no longer a desire to hurry
downstairs.
The rudeness of his act and of his
manner of speaking seemed to dawn upon young Raynor
almost as he snatched the photograph and letters, and
he hastened to apologize.
“I say, don’t think me
stable-bred, Barch,” he said, a flush of mortification
reddening his face. “Didn’t mean to
rip out at you like that, b’gad! Fact is,
I was a bit excited; forgot for a moment that you’re
a pal. So don’t get your back up, please.”
“I haven’t the slightest
intention of doing so, dear chap,” replied Cleek,
who, it must be confessed, was a little shaken by the
discovery. “Every man has a right to cut
up a bit rough when he thinks some other fellow is
going to pry into his secrets. And I reckon this
is one of your pet mashes eh, what?”
“Yes, something like that.
The latest and a ripper. French, you
know. That’s what rattled me for the moment.
The dad loathes French women. I’m extra
careful to keep this one’s picture out of sight.
I say! Don’t know what you’ll think
about my manners, but I forgot all about your asking
to go down and get out into the air. Sorry, old
chap! Come along! Take my arm, and I’ll
help you.”
As the breaking of the tobacco jar
had deprived Raynor of again making use of that as
a means of hiding the little silver box and its contents,
he had, while speaking, crammed the letters, the photograph,
and the scrap of pink gauze into an inside pocket
of his coat, and now came forward and took Cleek’s
arm with the amiable intention of leading him from
the room.
There was, of course, in the circumstances
nothing for it but to go, much as Cleek would have
preferred to stop and trace the connection between
young Raynor and Margot; but he was far too careful
in his methods to cast any doubt regarding the genuineness
of that sudden attack of a moment before by pretending
that it had begun to abate, and therefore yielded
himself to the inevitable.
But he had this consolation in doing
it: not only would he now be enabled to witness
the meeting between Geoff Clavering and Lady Katharine
Fordham after all, but as a man who is ill is always
more or less an object of sympathy and attention upon
the part of women, he foresaw that he might induce
Lady Katharine to hover round him, and thus bring
Geoff Clavering within close range for easy and careful
studying. Nor did he fear that he had lost all
opportunity for pursuing the subject of Harry Raynor’s
acquaintance with Margot. The mere fact that
that young man had the contents of the little silver
box upon his person might easily cause an apprehensive
inquiry regarding the risk of carrying them about
where they might be dropped, and so brought to his
father’s attention; and from that inquiry it
would be simple work getting back to the subject itself
without exciting any suspicion regarding his keen
interest in it. He therefore allowed young Raynor
to lead him from the room.
“Fearfully groggy, old chap,
fearfully,” he said in answer to young Raynor’s
inquiry regarding how he felt as they went down the
dim passage toward the staircase; “head going
round like a teetotum; hope I don’t keel over
and spoil the evening’s sport by having to be
put to bed like a kid. Don’t want two sick
men on one floor, do you, eh? Or is it on this
floor that Lord St. Ulmer’s room is situated?”
“Yes, that one over there second
door from the wing staircase. Speak low, old
chap, or you may disturb him. Sleeps like a cat,
they say one eye and both ears always open.
Doesn’t do anything but sleep, I imagine, day
and night, from the way he keeps to his room.
Hullo! I say! What’s it? Aren’t
going to crumple up, Barch, are you?”
This, because Cleek had suddenly lurched
against the bannister at the head of the stairs, and
swung clean round until his back was resting against
it.
“No that is, I hope
not; but I do feel rotten, old chap,” replied
he. “Just half a second, will you?”
He lolled back his head, gave a sort
of groan, and rapidly and silently began to count
the doors and to make sure of the location of Lord
St. Ulmer’s room. “All right; only
a passing spasm, I reckon, old chap,” he went
on as soon as he had discovered that his lordship’s
door was the third from the end of the passage, and
that his window would, therefore, be the second from
the angle of the wing in the outer wall of the house.
“Come on let’s go down.”
And leaning heavily upon young Raynor, he descended
to the dining-room.