The Rubicon - 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.
"I was with them in Algiers last year."
"Do you like her very much?"
"That's a wrong word to use, somehow," he said. "I think she is the cleverest woman I ever saw, and, perhaps, the most interesting," he added, in a burst of veiled confidence.
"Ah!"--it was somewhat discouraging to hear that so many people took this as their main characteristic--"I don't know her at all. But I don't feel as if I should like her."
"I believe women dislike her very much, as a rule," remarked Jim, drily.
Something in his speech made Gertrude angry. It is always annoying, however modest an opinion we may have of ourselves, to be cla.s.sed as a probable example to an universal rule. She waited a moment before she answered him.
"Why do you say that?"
"Well, there are very few people whom both women and men like much. Of course, I am not referring to the ordinary, stupid, good-natured people who are universal favourites--that is to say, whom no one dislikes--but to the people whom many men or women get excited about. She is one of those."
Mrs. Davenport was beginning to collect eyes--that is to say, she was looking at Gertrude, for no one could collect the dowager's eyes--and Gertrude rose in obedience.
"I think I know what you mean," she said.
Jim was left in excusable uncertainty as to what she meant, and the ladies left the room.
Mr. Davenport sat down again with an air of relief.
"I have always been considered a strong man," he said, "but, by the side of that old lady, I am a cripple and a baby. Get the cigarettes, Reggie."
"She told me that cigarettes were slow but certain death, yesterday,"
remarked Reggie, "but she cannot make me rude to her. It would be such a pity."
"Oh! she regards you as a possible convert," said Jim. "She hopes that you will go about with eight holes in your boots before long."
"How does she get on with Percy's sister?" asked Reggie, innocently.
Jim Armine laughed.
"Didn't you know you were her ark? She got routed in several pitched battles, and retired precipitately."
"That was when you were abroad last year, Reggie," said Mr. Davenport.
"She came here one day with her boxes and medicines, and asked us to take her in. She gave no reason; but Lady Hayes told your mother."
"Was Lady Hayes so rude to her?"
Jim Armine laughed.
"She was so polite, on the contrary. Don't you know her?"
Gertrude went off next morning to meet Mrs. Carston at Tunbridge, and go with her to Aix. Reggie went with her to Victoria, and had parting words on the platform.
"I wish you were coming with me, Reggie," said Gertrude. "We're going to Lucerne in a month from now, when mother has had her course. That will be towards the end of June. Do come. It is an awfully nice place, and you can go up mountains--or row if you like. Will you?"
Reggie thought it a brilliant and feasible idea.
"I don't care a bit about London," he said, "and I do happen to care about you. It will be lovely. Write to me just before you go there, and tell me the hotel, and so on. Of course, I'll come. Ah! good-bye, Gerty."
The train moved slowly out of the station, and Reggie was left standing on the platform, waiting for it to curl away into the dark arch which soon swallowed it up. He had lost a great deal, and he went home somewhat silently.
That evening there was a great reception at one of the Foreign Emba.s.sies. Mrs. Davenport was the sister of the Amba.s.sador's wife, and, after dinner, she asked whether anybody was going with her. Her husband eschewed such festivities; like a sensible man, he preferred, he said, to sit quietly at home, than to stand wedged in among a crowd of people who didn't care whether they saw him or not, and fight his way into a stuffy drawing-room. Reggie was sitting in the window, which he had thrown wide open, and was reading _The Field_. He had written a short note to Gertrude because he missed her, and as her bodily presence was not there, he felt it was something to communicate with her, but letter-writing was a difficulty to him, and the note had been very short.
An idea seemed to strike Mrs. Davenport when she saw him.
"Reggie, why don't you come?"
"I'll come if you like. Will it be amusing? Yes; I should like to come.
Let me smoke in the carriage, mummy."
The two went downstairs together, and got into the carriage.
"Poor old boy," said Mrs. Davenport, laying her hand on his, "you will feel rather lonely to-night. I thought you'd like to come."
"It's an awful bore, Gerty having to go away," said Reggie, without any obvious discontent, "but it's only for a month, you know. I'm going to join her at Lucerne, if you don't want me. I hope there's something to do there. She said there were some mountains about. I shall climb."
Mrs. Davenport was conscious of a slight chill.
"Well, there'll be Gerty there," she said.
"Oh, yes; of course," said Reggie. "I shouldn't think of going if she wasn't there. You said I might smoke, didn't you?"
"I'm very happy about you and Gerty," said Mrs. Davenport, after a pause. "I should have chosen her of all others for a daughter-in-law."
"Oh! but I chose her first," said Reggie. "That's more important, isn't it? I wrote her a line this evening. I wish I didn't hate writing letters so. I can never think of anything to say. What do you say in letters, mother, you always write such good ones?"
"But you don't find it difficult to talk, Reggie. Why should you find it difficult to write?"
"Oh! but I do find it difficult to talk," said he. "It's dreadfully puzzling. I never talk to Gerty."
"Are you always quite silent, then?"
"No; but I don't talk. At least, I suppose I do talk, in a way. I babble, you know. She does most of the talking."
Mrs. Davenport laughed.
"Babble on paper, then," she said; "Gerty will like it just as well."
"Oh! but I can't. It's so silly if you put it down. Is this the Emba.s.sy?
I hope I shall meet a lot of people I know."
Reggie's common sense was enormous. Gertrude had gone away, and she wouldn't come back for the wis.h.i.+ng. He wished she had not gone very much, but here he was in England without her. Surely England without her was the same as England with her, except that she was not there. Her absence, from a practical point of view, did not take the taste out of everything else. How should it? She was a very charming person, the most charming person Reggie had ever met. But there were other charming people, on a distinctly lower level, no doubt, but they did not cease to be charming because Gertrude had gone to Aix. After all, Reggie agreed with the great materialistic philosophers of all time, though he had never read their works. Mrs. Davenport felt somewhat annoyed with this school of thought as she dismounted from the carriage.
The Emba.s.sy stood at the corner of a large square, and a broad, red carpet ran from the door across to the road, for royalty was expected.
Inside the house the arrangements all corresponded with the magnificent promise of the red carpet. A row of gorgeous flunkies, a band in the hall beneath the stairs, several hundred pounds' worth of hot-house flowers banked up against the wall, a crowd of perfectly-dressed, bustling aristocrats, crowding up and staring, in the worst possible breeding, at a small s.p.a.ce between two pillars, where three princesses were looking rather bored, and a similar number of princes were talking to the few who had managed, by dint of loyal shoves, to edge themselves into the august presences; the smiling host and hostess, the pleasant music of women's voices, crossing the somewhat sombre strains of the band below, all these things are the invariable concomitants of such festivities, and on the whole one crush is rather like another crush.