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"I didn't suggest a duster as anything but a supplement to your ordinary costume. I didn't antic.i.p.ate that you were going to rely entirely upon the duster."
"I say, V, can you twig what Uncle John says?"
Viola shook her head.
"Nor more can I," said Bertram, sympathetically.
Before the taxi reached Church Row, John found himself adopting a positively deferential manner towards his nephew and his niece, and when they were once again back in the quiet house, the hall of which was faintly savoury with the maturing lunch he asked them if they would mind amusing themselves for an hour while he wrote some letters.
"For I take it you won't want to dress up immediately," he added as an excuse for attending to his own business.
The children confirmed his supposition, but went on to inform him that the domenical regime at Earl's Court prescribed a walk after church.
"Owing to the accident to my hat I'm afraid I must ask you to let me off this morning."
"Right-o," Bertram agreed, cheerfully. "But I vote we come up and sit with you while you write your letters. I think letters are a beastly f.a.g, don't you?"
John felt that the boy was proffering his own and his sister's company in a spirit of altruism, and he could not muster enough gracelessness to decline the proposal. So upstairs they all went.
"I think this is rather a ripping room, don't you, V?"
"The carpet's very old," said Viola.
"Have you got any decent books?" Bertram inquired, looking round at the shelves. "Any Henty's, I mean, or anything?"
"No, I'm afraid I haven't," said John, apologetically.
"Or bound up Boys Own Papers?"
John shook his head.
"But I'll tell you what I have got," he added with a sudden inspiration.
"Kingsley's _Heroes_."
"Is that a pi book?" asked Bertram, suspiciously.
"Not at all. It's about Greek G.o.ds and G.o.ddesses, essentially broad-minded divinities."
"Right-o. I'll have a squint at it, if you like," Bertram volunteered.
"Come on, V, don't start showing off your rotten dancing. Come and look at this book. It's got some spiffing pictures."
"Lunch won't be very long," John announced in order to propitiate any impatience at what they might consider the boring entertainment he was offering.
Presently the two children left their uncle alone, and he observed with pride that they took with them the book. He little thought that so mild a dose of romance as could be extracted from Kingsley's _Heroes_ would before the twilight of that November day run through 36 Church Row like fire. But then John did not know that there was a calf's head for dinner that night; he had not realized the scenic capacity of the cistern cupboard at the top of the house; and most of all he had not a.s.sociated with dressing up on Sunday afternoon the histrionic force that Bertram and Viola inherited from their mother.
"Is it Andromeda or Andromeda?" Bertram asked at lunch.
"Andromeda, my boy," John answered. "Perseus and Andromeda."
"I think it would make a jolly good play, don't you?" Bertram went on.
Really, thought John, this nephew was a great improvement upon that spectacled inquisitor at Ambles.
"A capital play," he agreed, heartily. "Are you thinking of writing it?"
"V and I thought we'd do it instead of finis.h.i.+ng Robinson Crusoe. Well, you see, you haven't got any decent fur rugs, and V's awfully stupid about having her face blacked."
"It's my turn not to be a savage," Viola pleaded in defense of her squeamishness.
"I said you could be Will Atkins as well. I know I'd jolly well like to be Will Atkins myself."
"All right," Viola offered. "You can, and I'll be Robinson."
"You can't change like that in the middle of a play," her brother argued.
John, who appreciated both Viola's dislike of burnt-cork and Bertram's esthetic objection to changing parts in the middle of a piece, strongly recommended Perseus and Andromeda.
"Of course, you got the idea from Kingsley? Bravo, Bertram," he said, beaming with cordial patronage.
"And I suppose," his nephew went on, "that you'd rather we played at the top of the house. I expect it would be quieter, if you're writing letters. Mother said you often liked to be quiet." He alluded to this desire rather shamefully, as if it were a secret vice of his uncle, who hurriedly approved the choice of the top landing for the scene of the cla.s.sic drama.
"Then would you please tell Mrs. Worfolk that we can have the calf's head?"
"The what?"
"V found a calf's head in the larder, and it would make a fizzing Gorgon's head, but Mrs. Worfolk wouldn't let us have it."
John was so much delighted with the trend of Bertram's ingenuity that he sent for Mrs. Worfolk and told her that the calf's head might be borrowed for the play.
"I'll take no responsibility for your dinner," said his housekeeper, warningly.
"That's all right, Mrs. Worfolk. If anything happens to the head I shan't grumble. There'll always be the cold beef, won't there?"
Mrs. Worfolk turned up her eyes to heaven and left the room.
"Well, I think I've arranged that for you successfully."
"Thank you, Uncle John," said Bertram.
"Thank you, Uncle John," said Viola.
What nice quiet well-mannered children they were, after all; and he by no means ought to blame them for the fiasco of the churchgoing; the setting had of course been utterly unfamiliar; these ritualistic places of wors.h.i.+p were a mistake in an unexcitable country like England. John retired to his library and lit a Corona with a sense that he thoroughly deserved a good cigar.
"Children are not difficult," he said to himself, "if one tries to put oneself in their place. That request for the calf's head undoubtedly showed a rare combination of adaptiveness with for a schoolboy what was almost a poetic fancy. Harold would have wanted to know how much the head weighed, and whether in life it preferred to browse on b.u.t.tercups or daisies; but when finally it was cooked he would have eaten twice as much as anybody else. I prefer Bertram's att.i.tude; though naturally I can appreciate a housekeeper's feelings. These cigars are in capital condition. Really, Bertram's example is infectious, and by gad, I feel quite like a couple of hours with Joan. Yes, it's a pity Laurence hasn't got Bertram's dramatic sense. A great pity."
The sabbath afternoon wore on, and though John did not acc.u.mulate enough energy to seat himself at his table, he dreamed a good deal of wonderful situations in the fourth act, puffing away at his cigar and hearing from time to time distant shouts and scamperings; these, however, did not keep him from falling into a gentle doze, from which he was abruptly wakened by the opening of the library door.
"Ah, is that tea?" he asked cheerfully in that tone with which the roused sleeper always implies his uninterrupted attention to time and s.p.a.ce.