Anthony Lyveden - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
Whether the Sealyham in fact appreciated the nature and gravity of the request is a matter which cannot be decided upon this side of the grave. The fact remains that when, upon entering the grounds of the Dogs' Home some thirty-five minutes later, he encountered that very Irish terrier, looking rather sorry for himself and attached to the end of a long lead, he walked straight up to him and bestowed upon him as generous a greeting as his nostrils and tail could convey.
Anthony could hardly believe his eyes....
At the other end of the lead was a kennelman, who spoke quickly and to the point.
"Beggin' your pardon, sir, but I wouldn't let 'im talk to 'im. 'E's not very grand--this little dog ain't. I think it's only a chill, but we've hisolated 'im, in case..."
Patch was summoned peremptorily, to come running wide-eyed. Happily in his sight his master could do no wrong; otherwise it is possible that he might have thought himself hardly used and love's labour lost indeed.
Anthony pa.s.sed into the hall, thinking furiously. With Patch under his arm, he spoke to the fair-haired girl in charge of the office.
"I've seen a dog out there that I recognize--an Irish terrier. He's not very well, your man said. May I know whose he is?"
"Oh, yes. He belongs to Miss French--Miss Valerie French. He's a nice little dog, isn't he?"
If Anthony Lyveden had reflected, it would have occurred to him that his informant had been, as they say, "very quick in the uptake." The truth was that less than a week ago Miss Valerie French had recognized Patch and had asked the same girl for the name of his owner.
"He's a beauty," said Anthony. "Does she keep him here all the time?"
"When she's in London," said the girl. "I expect you've seen her.
She's very often down."
Anthony nodded.
"I think I must have," he said.
Then he made much of Patch and handed him over.
"See you next week, little Patch. Next Sat.u.r.day. Only a week from to-day. Good-bye, little fellow."
He ruffled the tousled head with a last caress, smiled at the puzzled brown eyes, and turned away....
There was no sweet sorrow about these partings. They were purely abominable.
At the very hour that Lyveden walked heavily down the wet lanes on his way to the station, Valerie French, who was to dine early and go to the play, was sitting before her dressing-table in an apricot kimono.
The evening sun stared into her bedroom mercilessly and found no fault in it. It was a broad low room, full of soft colours and the warm glow of highly polished wood. Walls, curtains, and carpet were all of powder-blue; an old rose fabric covered what seats there were; an apple-green coverlet filled up the symphony. That taper elegance which modern craftsmans.h.i.+p can give mahogany was most apparent, lending the usual suite unusual comeliness. A great pier-gla.s.s flashed in a corner, upon a little table beside a deep chair a bowl of roses sweetened the London air, above the well-found bed dangled an ivory switch.
If the chamber was fair, so was my lady.
Looking upon her beauty, as she sat at the gla.s.s, Valerie French might have felt very proud. But, if we pry into her mind, it will be seen that her thoughts were otherwise occupied. Indeed, the fixing of her hair--usually so simple a matter--was making her knit her brow. The fact that the soft dark tresses had been washed that morning made them unruly. In vain the pointed fingers strove to secure and order them to their mistress's liking....
At length, with a sigh, she brought her hands to her lap.
Then she made a mouth at the reflection of her labours.
"I look like his Sealyham," she said.
It was on Monday morning that Lord Pomfret suggested to Lyveden the propriety of putting a pound each way on Slip Along.
"I don't suppose the swine's any good," said his lords.h.i.+p moodily.
"But he'll probably start at twenty, so I may as well have a dart. I forget who told me about him."
"Very good, my lord," said Anthony.
To receive this commission, he had been summoned from the drawing-room, whose floor he was engaged in leathering to the requisite degree of l.u.s.tre. He had had to remove an ap.r.o.n, turn down his sleeves, and put on his plum-coloured coat. So soon as his lords.h.i.+p, who was yet at breakfast, released him, he would reverse the procedure and return to his floor.
Lord Pomfret peered muttering into his cigarette case. Then he plucked out a ten-s.h.i.+lling note and flicked it across the tablecloth.
"That's all I appear to have," he said sulkily. "I'll have to owe you the thirty s.h.i.+llings."
Anthony braced himself.
"I'm afraid I haven't any money at all, my lord."
The other looked up sharply.
"What? ... Oh, nonsense, Lyveden."
Anthony said nothing. He was not anxious to repeat the lie, but he was determined not to lend to Lord Pomfret. That the loan would lose itself was much too probable, and the construction of his slender resources would not stand such a strain.
"Of course you've got thirty s.h.i.+llings. But you don't like parting."
Lord Pomfret laughed rather nastily. "I'll pay you back, man, if that's your trouble."
"I haven't the money, my lord."
The youth stared at Anthony furiously. Then--
"Oh, go to h.e.l.l!" he said thickly.
Anthony picked up the note and placed it beside his lords.h.i.+p. Then he left the room and returned to his work.
Lord Pomfret was exceedingly wrath. In fact, he brooded over the incident. This augured ill for Anthony. The cold fact that in due season--to be precise, at eleven minutes to four that same afternoon--Slip Along won his race easily did not improve matters.
That he started at thirty-three to one was still less digestible....
When his lords.h.i.+p read the news at half-past five, he broke into a cold sweat. Then he bit savagely at the nail of his favourite thumb.
Considering that, so recently as that morning, he had reluctantly decided that that toothsome _entremet_ must be allowed to go unmolested for at least a week, his action was indicative of an emotion which knew no rules. That he made no mention of the matter to Anthony, was the ugliest omen of all.
Two days later the second footman called Anthony, who was crossing the hall.
It was a fine July morning, and the famous square was full of sunlight and clear-cut shadows and the soft swish of leaves. All this could be marked from the hall, for the front door stood wide open, and a fresh cool breeze came floating into the mansion, to flirt with the high and mighty curtains upon the landing, jostle the stately palms, and ruffle up the pompous atmosphere with gay irreverence. The air itself would have told you the hour. The intermittent knocks of a retreating postman declared the time even more accurately.
"'Ere's a letter fer you, mate," said the second footman. "'A.
Lyveden, Esquire,' it says, all bald-like. No C.M.G., no B.F., no nothin'. I should 'ave a raow abaout this."
Anthony came grinning.