He worked with an appearance of rapidity. "A very dream of elusiveness!"
he exclaimed presently. "I must seize it whilst I"m in form."
"Ah, I was just thinking it over," she said gravely. "I am not sure that I am really so pleased at being "elusive." If my features are not to be seized, how are they to be remembered? Definite women have the best of it--they are less easily forgotten, I should say."
"That would be true if one had any desire to remember them," he returned. "But no," he corrected himself; "it is not true in any case.
Where there is only one definite set of features to forget, it is forgotten wholly and absolutely, once that point is reached. But the woman with the elusive features has so many sides that it would take a long time to forget them all. And then a man is always so entrancingly occupied calling up her picture. You let all the fleeting phases float around you. What more engrossing than to choose among these rival gleams of loveliness, yet find them all enchanting and precious?"
"You convince me of the absolute unforgetableness of the elusive woman,"
she laughed. Then, abruptly, she grew grave again.
When he stopped work for that morning, they both inspected the canvas critically. "I think I have made the right beginning--you see the spirit of the idea is all there."
"With the help of the lesson you gave me before," she ventured.
"If I continue equally well, we shall find oceans of time before the end of the month. Wouldn"t it be splendid if the Salon received it!"
She was full of joyous delight at the prospect, but, glancing at the clock, gave an exclamation of horror. "We are forgetting lunch!"
A minute or two later Wyndham was shaking hands with the old earl, who was gazing into his face with apparently affectionate interest.
"This is very pleasant," said the earl. "Why, bless my soul, I haven"t caught a glimpse of you for--let me see--three or four years is it? What has been amiss? Genius starving in a garret?--eh?"
"Pretty good guess," said Wyndham.
"You look fat enough, and sleek enough," laughed the earl. "On the face of things, I should have taken it that you"ve done very much better than I have. Now, if you had had to put up with my scoundrel of a cook----"
"There was only one sauce on one occasion, father."
"So you insist, so you insist. Well, you seem pretty straight on your feet again, my boy; so all"s well that ends well."
They sat down to table.
"Making lots of nice little pictures?--eh?" recommenced the earl genially.
"Oh, the one I am making sketches for here is rather tremendous--the size of a wall!"
"The size of a wall!" echoed the earl. "My gracious!"
"And now Mr. Wyndham has started a tiny one of me," put in Lady Betty.
"I"m going to stand to him an hour or two every morning, and we"ll send it to the Salon next month."
"Bless my soul! That"ll be a very pretty little thing."
"It"s only one side of me. Mr. Wyndham thinks I"ve so many sides, and he selected just one of them."
"Mr. Wyndham"s a genius, but, with all deference to him, I don"t see that you"ve any more sides to you than I have or Mr. Wyndham has. We have each two sides and no more." He raised his tumbler of egg-and-milk and whiskey, and drank deeply. The others laughed.
"Oh, Mr. Wyndham thinks I"m so many persons rolled into one," explained Lady Betty, "and that you can take your choice."
"Many persons rolled into one! You are!" said the earl emphatically, setting down his gla.s.s. "Only I never _can_ take my choice. If Mr.
Wyndham has succeeded in doing so, I offer him my congratulations. Oh, by the way, talking of congratulations, it is true, I suppose, that you are going to be married!"
Lady Betty looked down and manipulated her fish.
"One of these days," said Wyndham lightly. "There is no date fixed yet."
"Ah," said the earl. "How is your _fiancee_?"
"Perfectly well," said Wyndham. "First-rate."
"A Miss--er--Llewellyn--wasn"t it?"
"Miss Robinson," corrected Wyndham.
"Oh, ah--Miss Robinson! Yes, yes, that was the name--perfectly!" said the earl. "Mind you give her my compliments and respects.... By the way, Betty, did I tell you I"m sick of the climate? We shall have thrown out the Embankment Bill by the end of the week, and then I can turn my back on the House. It"ll be Egypt or a voyage to j.a.pan--why, I might meet Mr.
Wyndham on his honeymoon!--eh?--what? I"ll go across to c.o.c.kspur Street this afternoon, and see what"s sailing."
"Shall I come with you, father, and help you to make up your mind?"
"If you"ll be so kind," said the earl. "It was my intention to suggest that you should accompany me a great deal further than that, but I changed my mind just now."
"That is very considerate of you, father."
"Not at all, not at all." The earl made a movement of deprecation. "You couldn"t come till the end of the month, so I simply make a virtue of necessity."
"You horrify me, father. You are making Mr. Wyndham think you are sorry I am standing to him."
"It"s only my fun, little girl. You don"t really suppose I want my own daughter trotting behind my tail, and keeping her watchful, charming eye on all my doings. No, no, no! I had it in mind to suggest your joining me as a matter of form. You might have liked it, and I wanted to do the proper thing. But I"m only too glad of the opportunity of having you off my hands. Mr. Wyndham was really providential. Meanwhile I shall be proud to think of the nice little picture of you--I beg your pardon, of one side of you--hanging in the Salon."
"If you take one of the long voyages, I presume you"ll be away some months," ventured Wyndham.
"Probably till the autumn. I a.s.sure you my daughter long since washed her hands of me. She carries off her maid and disappears for years at the time. When I think she"s in Paris, somebody says, "I saw your daughter last week at Baden-Baden. How well she"s looking!" When I imagine she"s in Baden-Baden, somebody says, "I met your daughter at Florence last week. How well she"s looking!" Nowadays I never speculate as to her whereabouts. I give her absolutely _carte blanche_. I"m prepared to hear and believe anything of her, and what"s more! to approve of it and give her my blessing. On one point, you will observe, the testimony is unanimous: "How well she"s looking!" That"s the one settled thing about her--and the sides of her. For I suppose no two people ever do see the same side of her." He scrutinised her beamingly.
"Very well, father. It shall be goodbye till the autumn. We shall part friends."
"So far as I see at present. We"ve to get through the week yet. You"ll lunch with us these days, Mr. Wyndham?"
Wyndham murmured his acceptance, enchanted at being so cordially recognised as a friend of the house.
XIX
Wyndham told Alice of the happy chance that had presented itself of a dash at Lady Lakeden"s portrait, and held out the possibility of the Salon"s finding a corner for it.
"How delightful!" she exclaimed. "Wouldn"t it be brilliant to be in the Salon as well as in the Academy?"