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And still the cold increased, and the personality of Fane's invisible companion seemed to develop in power. There was a sort of silent violence in the hidden room, as if a noiseless combat were taking place.
Waves of darkness were stirred into motion; and Fane, as a man is drawn by the retreating tides of the sea out and away, was drawn from the wall where he had been crouching.
He stole along the floor, the dagger held in his right hand, his heart barely beating, his lips white--nearer, nearer to his enemy.
He counted each step, until he was enfolded in the inmost circle of that deadly frost emanating from the blackness before him.
Then, with a hoa.r.s.e cry, he lifted his arm and sprang forward and upward, das.h.i.+ng the dagger down as one plunging it through a human heart.
The cry died suddenly into silence.
There was the sound of a heavy fall.
It reached the ears of the servants below stairs.
The footman took a light, and, with a scared face, went hesitatingly to the studio door, paused outside and listened while the female servants huddled in the pa.s.sage.
The heavy silence succeeding the strange sound appalled them, but at length the man thrust the door open and peered in.
The light from the candle flickered merrily upon Fane's bowed figure, huddled face downwards upon the floor.
His neck was broken.
The statue, that was the dead sculptor's last earthly achievement, stood as if watching over him. But it was no longer perfect and complete.
Some splinters of marble had been struck from the left breast, and among them, on the smooth parquet, lay a bent Oriental dagger.
A BOUDOIR BOY
I
"It is so impossible to be young," Claude Melville said very wearily, and with his little air of played-out indifference. He was smoking a cigarette, as always, and wore a dark red smoking-suit that, he thought, went excellently with his black eyes and swarthy complexion.
His father had been a blue-eyed Saxon giant, his mother a pretty Kentish woman, with an apple-blossom complexion and sunny hair; yet he managed to look exquisitely Turkish, and thought himself a clever boy for so doing. But then he always thought himself clever. He had cultivated this conception of himself until it had become a confirmed habit of mind. On his head was a fez with a ta.s.sel, and he was sitting upon the hearthrug with his long legs crossed meditatively. His room was dimly lit, and had an aspect of divans, Attar of roses scented the air. A fire was burning, although it was a spring evening and not cold. London roared faintly in the distance, like a lion at a far-away evening party.
"It is so impossible to be young," Claude repeated, without emphasis. "I was middle-aged at ten. Now I am twenty-two, and have done everything I ought not to have done, I feel that life has become altogether improbable. Even if I live until I am seventy--the correct age for entering into one's dotage, I believe--I cannot expect to have a second childhood. I have never had a first."
He sighed. It seemed so hard to be deprived of one's legal dotage.
His friend, Jimmy Haddon, looked at him and laughed. Jimmy was puffing at a pipe. His pipe was the only one Claude ever allowed to be smoked among his divans and his roses.
After thoroughly completing his laugh, Jimmy remarked:--
"Would you like to take a lesson in the art of being young?"
"Immensely."
"I know somebody who could give you one."
"Really, Jimmy! What strange people you always know; curates, and women who have never written improper novels, and all sorts of beings who seem merely mythical to the rest of us!"
"This is not a curate."
"Then it must be a woman who has never written an improper novel."
"It is."
"And you mean to tell me seriously that there is such a person? To see her would be to take what _Punch_ calls a pre-historic peep. She must be ingeniously old."
"She is sixty-four, and she is my aunt."
"How beautiful of her. I am an only child, so I can never be an uncle.
It is one of my lasting regrets, although I daresay that profession is terribly overcrowded like the others. But why is she sixty-four? It seems a risky thing for a woman to be?"
"She takes the risk without thinking at all about it."
"She must be very daring."
"No; she's only completely natural."
"Natural. What is that?"
Jimmy laughed again. He was fond of Claude, but he and Claude met so often chiefly because they were extremes. Jimmy was a handsome athlete, who had been called to the bar, and persistently played cricket or football whenever the courts were sitting. He was cursed with a large private income, which he spent royally, and blessed with a good heart.
Once he had appeared for the defence in a divorce case, which--lasting longer than he had antic.i.p.ated, owing to the obvious guilt of all parties concerned in it, and the consequent difficulty of getting an innocent jury to agree about a verdict--had cost him a cricket match.
Since then he had looked upon the law in the legendary way, as an a.s.s, and spent most of his time in exercising his muscles. In the intervals of leisure which he allowed himself from sports and pastimes, he saw a good deal of Claude, who amused him, and whom he never bored. He called him a boudoir boy, but had a real liking for him, nevertheless, and sometimes longed to wake him up, and separate him from the absurd _chiffons_ with which he occupied his time. Now he laughed at him openly, and Claude did not mind in the least. They were really friends, however preposterous such a friends.h.i.+p might seem.
"What is that? Well--my aunt. When you see her you will understand thoroughly."
"Does she live in Park Lane or in Clapham?"
"She lives in the country, in Northamptons.h.i.+re, is very well off, and has a place of her own."
"And a husband?"
"No. She is a prosperous spinster, dines the local cricket team once a year, keeps the church going, knows all the poor people, and all the rich in the neighbourhood, and has only one fad."
"What is that?"
"She always wears her hair powdered. Come down and stay with her, and she will teach you to be young."
"Well--but I am afraid she will work me very hard."
"Not she. You would like a new experience."
Claude yawned, and blinked his long dark eyes in a carefully Eastern manner.