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That may have accounted for a tone of pessimism that always seemed to pervade his life. Now, you are quite different. You are not a pessimist--eh?"
Guy gravely examined the back of his gloved hand. "Well, I am afraid I have not given much thought to the question."
Lady Cantourne gave him the benefit of a very wise smile. She was unrivalled in the art of turning a young man's mind inside out and shaking it.
"No! you need not apologise. I am glad you have given no thought to it.
Thought is the beginning of pessimism, especially with young men; for if they think at all, they naturally think of themselves."
"Well, I suppose I think as much of myself as other people."
"Possibly; but I doubt it. Will you ring the bell? We will have some tea."
He obeyed, and she watched him with approval. For some reason--possibly because he had not sought it--Lady Cantourne had bestowed her entire approval on this young man. She had been duly informed, a few weeks before this visit, that Miss Millicent Chyne had engaged herself to be married to Jack Meredith whenever that youth should find himself in a position to claim the fulfilment of her promise. She said nothing against the choice or the decision, merely observing that she was sorry that Jack had quarrelled with his father. By way of counsel she advised strongly that the engagement be kept as much in the background as possible. She did not, she said, want Millicent to be a sort of red rag to Sir John, and there was no necessity to publish abroad the lamentable fact that a quarrel had resulted from a very natural and convenient attachment. Sir John was a faddist, and, like the rest of his kind, eminently pig-headed. It was more than likely that in a few months he would recall his son, and, in the meantime, it never did a girl any good to be quarrelled over.
Lady Cantourne was too clever a woman to object to the engagement. On the contrary, she allowed it to be understood that such a match was in many ways entirely satisfactory. At the same time, however, she encouraged Guy Oscard to come to the house, knowing quite well that he was entirely unaware of the existence of Jack Meredith.
"I am," she was in the habit of saying, "a great advocate for allowing young people to manage their affairs themselves. One young man, if he be the right one, has more influence with a girl than a thousand old women; and it is just possible that he knows better than they do what is for her happiness. It is the interference that makes mischief."
So she did not interfere. She merely invited Guy Oscard to stay to tea.
CHAPTER V. WITH EDGED TOOLS
Do not give dalliance Too much the rein; the strongest oaths are straw To the fire i' the blood.
"And what do you intend to do with yourself?" asked Lady Cantourne when she had poured out tea. "You surely do not intend to mope in that dismal house in Russell Square?"
"No, I shall let it if I can."
"Oh, you will have no difficulty in doing that. People live in Russell Square again now, and try to make one believe that it is a fas.h.i.+onable quarter. Your father stayed on there because the carpets fitted the rooms, and on account of other ancestral conveniences. He did not live there--he knew nothing of his immediate environments. He lived in Phoenicia."
"Then," continued Guy Oscard, "I shall go abroad."
"Ah! Will you have a second cup? Why will you go abroad?"
Guy Oscard paused for a moment. "I know an old hippopotamus in a certain African river who has twice upset me. I want to go back and shoot him."
"Don't go at once; that would be running away from it--not from the hippopotamus--from the inquest. It does not matter being upset in an African river; but you must not be upset in London by--an inquest."
"I did not propose going at once," replied Guy Oscard, with a peculiar smile which Lady Cantourne thought she understood. "It will take me some time to set my affairs in order--the will, and all that."
Lady Cantourne waited with perfectly suppressed curiosity, and while she was waiting Millicent Chyne came into the room. The girl was dressed with her habitual perfect taste and success, and she came forward with a smile of genuine pleasure, holding out a small hand neatly gloved in Suede. Her ladys.h.i.+p was looking not at Millicent, but at Guy Oscard.
Millicent was glad that he had called, and said so. She did not add that during the three months that had elapsed since Jack Meredith's sudden departure she had gradually recognised the approaching ebb of a very full tide of popularity. It was rather dull at times, when Jack's letters arrived at intervals of two and sometimes of three weeks--when her girl friends allowed her to see somewhat plainly that she was no longer to be counted as one of themselves. An engagement sits as it were on a young lady like a weak heart on a schoolboy, setting her apart in work and play, debarring her from partic.i.p.ation in that game of life which is ever going forward where young folks do congregate.
Moreover, she liked Guy Oscard. He aroused her curiosity. There was something in him--something which she vaguely suspected to be connected with herself--which she wanted to drag out and examine. She possessed more than the usual allowance of curiosity--which is saying a good deal; for one may take it that the beginning of all things in the feminine mind is curiosity. They want to know what is inside Love before they love. Guy Oscard was a new specimen of the genus h.o.m.o; and while remaining perfectly faithful to Jack, Miss Millicent Chyne saw no reason why she should not pa.s.s the time by studying him, merely, of course, in a safe and innocent manner. She was one of those intelligent young ladies who think deeply--about young men. And such thinking usually takes the form of speculation as to how the various specimens selected will act under specified circ.u.mstances. The circ.u.mstances need hardly be mentioned. Young men are only interesting to young women in circ.u.mstances strictly personal to and bearing upon themselves. In a word, maidens of a speculative mind are always desirous of finding out how different men will act when they are in love; and we all know and cannot fail to applaud the a.s.siduity with which they pursue their studies.
"Ah!" said Miss Chyne, "it is very good of you to take pity upon two lone females. I was afraid that you had gone off to the wilds of America or somewhere in search of big game. Do you know, Mr. Oscard, you are quite a celebrity? I heard you called the 'big-game man' the other day, also the 'travelling fellow.'"
The specimen smiled happily under this delicate handling.
"It is not," he said modestly, "a very lofty fame. Anybody could let off a rifle."
"I am afraid I could not," replied Millicent, with a pretty little shudder of horror, "if anything growled."
"Mr. Oscard has just been telling me," interposed Lady Cantourne conversationally, "that he is thinking of going off to the wilds again."
"Then it is very disappointing of him," said Millicent, with a little droop of the eyelids which went home. "It seems to be only the uninteresting people who stay at home and live humdrum lives of enormous duration."
"He seems to think that his friends are going to cast him off because his poor father died without the a.s.sistance of a medical man," continued the old lady meaningly.
"No--I never said that, Lady Cantourne."
"But you implied it."
Guy Oscard shook his head. "I hate being a notoriety," he said. "I like to pa.s.s through with the crowd. If I go away for a little while I shall return a nonent.i.ty."
At this moment another visitor was announced, and presently made his appearance. He was an old gentleman of no personality whatever, who was nevertheless welcomed effusively, because two people in the room had a distinct use for him. Lady Cantourne was exceedingly gracious. She remembered instantly that horticulture was among his somewhat antiquated accomplishments, and she was immediately consumed with a desire to show him the conservatory which she had had built outside the drawing-room window. She took a genuine interest in this abode of flowers, and watered the plants herself with much enthusiasm--when she remembered.
Added to a number of positive virtues the old gentleman possessed that of abstaining from tea, which enabled the two horticulturists to repair to the conservatory at once, leaving the young people alone at the other end of the drawing-room.
Millicent smoothed her gloves with downcast eyes and that demure air by which the talented fair imply the consciousness of being alone and out of others' earshot with an interesting member of the stronger s.e.x.
Guy sat and watched the Suede gloves with a certain sense of placid enjoyment. Then suddenly he spoke, continuing his remarks where they had been broken off by the advent of the useful old gentleman.
"You see," he said, "it is only natural that a great many people should give me the cold shoulder. My story was a little lame. There is no reason why they should believe in me."
"I believe in you," she answered.
"Thank you."
He looked at her in a strange way, as if he liked her terse creed, and would fain have heard it a second time. Then suddenly he leant back with his head against a corner of the piano. The fronds of a maidenhair fern hanging in delicate profusion almost hid his face. He was essentially muscular in his thoughts, and did not make the most of his dramatic effects. The next remark was made by a pair of long legs ending off with patent-leather boots which were not quite new. The rest of him was invisible.
"It was a very unpleasant business," he said, in a jerky, self-conscious voice. "I didn't know that I was that sort of fellow. The temptation was very great. I nearly gave in and let him do it. He was a stronger man than I. You know--we did not get on well together. He always hoped that I would turn out a literary sort of fellow, and I suppose he was disappointed. I tried at one time, but I found it was no good. From indifference it turned almost to hatred. He disliked me intensely, and I am afraid I did not care for him very much."
She nodded her head, and he went on. Perhaps he could see her through the maidenhair fern. She was getting more and more interested in this man. He obviously disliked talking of himself--a pleasant change which aroused her curiosity. He was so unlike other men, and his life seemed to be different from the lives of the men whom she had known--stronger, more intense, and of greater variety of incident.
"Of course," he went on, "his death was really of enormous advantage to me. They say that I shall have two or three thousand a year, instead of five hundred, paid quarterly at c.o.x's. He could not prevent it coming to me. It was my mother's money. He would have done so if he could, for we never disguised our antipathy for each other. Yet we lived together, and--and I had the nursing of him."
Millicent was listening gravely without interrupting--like a man. She had the gift of adapting herself to her environments in a marked degree.
"And," he added curtly, "no one knows how much I wanted that three thousand a year."
The girl moved uneasily, and glanced towards the conservatory.
"He was not an old man," Guy Oscard went on. "He was only forty-nine. He might have lived another thirty years."