Then in that darkness below the chestnut-tree a match was struck, and he lit a cigarette, and dropped the still flaming vesta into the Thames.
Then he shifted his position a little, and sat nearer to that other figure dressed in grey, whose arm was leaning over the side of the punt, and whose hand just dabbled in the water.
And then Daisy suddenly hid her face in the cushions of the window-seat and began to sob.
CHAPTER XVI.
Jeannie, as Daisy had heard, had advised that in view of the approaching storm they should not go far, and it was now about an hour since she and Tom Lindfield had, after this stipulation, gone down to the river. They had taken a punt, and pushed out from the hot, reeking boathouse that smelt strongly of the tar that was growing soft and viscous on its roof beneath the heat of the day, and slid down the backwater towards the river. The weeds here wanted cutting, and they wrapped themselves affectionately round the punt-pole, and dragged their green slender fingers along the bottom of the punt as if seeking to delay its pa.s.sage. Then for a moment they had found a little coolness as they pa.s.sed below the chestnut trees that extended their long boughs three-quarters of the way across the backwater, and Jeannie had said,--
"Lord Lindfield, you will certainly get very hot if you punt me up-stream, and we shall probably both get very wet before we get back.
Let us stop here."
He had been by no means unwilling, and they had tied up.
"And sit down," she said; "out of these two thousand cushions I can spare you a few. There, on the bottom of the boat."
"I didn"t suggest stopping," he said. "You mustn"t be sarcastic afterwards over the immense expedition I took you."
"I promise not. I don"t think I should ever be sarcastic to you, do you know? You would only laugh. The point of sarcasm is to give pain."
"And you don"t want to give me pain? Hurrah!"
"Ah, I"m not sure that a little pain would not be rather good for you. I think you have almost too delightful a time. When did you last not enjoy yourself? And yet I don"t know; perhaps you deserve it all. I am sure you give your friends a delightful time though you do have one yourself. Poor Daisy! I am afraid she isn"t having a good time this afternoon; she has a headache. I offered sympathy and companionship, but she felt like being alone. Poor Daisy!"
Jeannie"s voice suddenly died. She meant him to say something about Daisy, but for herself she felt as if she could not go on talking.
"I"m sorry," he said. "I thought she wasn"t looking very brilliant. She should have come out with us for a run in the motor. Jove! it is hot even here. I think it was an excellent plan not to go any further; besides, I want to talk most awfully."
A week ago Jeannie had loathed the thought of this man even as, and for the same reason, she loathed the thought of Paris when she pa.s.sed through it. But at the moment she did not loathe the thought of him at all, nor did she loathe him. She who so loved the sunshine and joy of life could not but like one who took so keen and boyish a pleasure in its pleasantness, and, boylike also, turned so uncompromising a back on all that was unpleasant or even puzzling.
He had no use for unpleasantness and no head for puzzles. From an intellectual point of view he might have been called stupid; but intellectual though Jeannie was, she never took her view of life or her estimate of people from that standpoint. Affection and simplicity and good-fellowship were things that seemed to matter to her much more.
From the human point of view, then, which does not concern itself with one"s neighbour"s intellectual qualities any more than it concerns itself with his morals, she had quickly grown to like this simple, pleasant man, who had so good an appet.i.te for the joys of life. And her liking for him made her task far more difficult and far more repulsive to her than she had antic.i.p.ated.
She had thought that as far as he was concerned she would find it perfectly easy to be ruthless, steeling herself to it by the memory of Diana. That memory had not in the least faded, but there had come into the foreground of her life this liking and sympathy for the man who she hoped was to be her victim.
It made what she was doing doubly odious to her, and yet, think and puzzle as she might, she could devise no plan but this, which, if it succeeded, would spare Daisy the knowledge that she herself had promised Diana to spare her.
As far as things had gone, she was fairly content with what she had accomplished. It was all horrible to her, but the plan was working quite well. He had scarcely seen Daisy since they had come down here, while he had seldom been out of her own company, and it was clear to Mrs.
Halton that Daisy was certainly beginning to be puzzled, and, poor child, was beginning to feel hurt and slighted.
But there had been as yet no more than a beginning made; Lord Lindfield would have to be far more taken up with herself than he was now, and Daisy, poor dear, would have to be far more deeply wounded and hurt before the thing was accomplished. And already Mrs. Halton felt sick at heart about it all. Yet till a better plan could be thought of she had not to set her teeth, but to smile her best, and flirt, flirt, flirt.
There was but one bright spot in the whole affair, and that the few words which she had had with Victor early that morning before breakfast. She had asked him, not pointedly, but in a general way arising out of their talk, what he would think if in some way she completely puzzled him, and acted in a manner that was incomprehensible. And he had laughed.
"Why, my darling, what an easy question," he said. "I should know that there was something behind I didn"t understand. I should wait for you to tell me about it."
"And if I never told you about it?" asked Jeannie.
"Then, dear, I should know you had some good reason for that. But I should never ask you, I think, and I know I should never cease to trust you or forget that we are--well, you and me."
That was wine to her.
CHAPTER XVII.
But she liked Lindfield; that made her task so much harder. It was shameful to treat a man like this, and yet--and yet there was still the memory of that dreadful gilded house in Paris and the dying voice of Diana.
So once more, and not for the last time, she settled down to the task that was so odious--odious because she liked him.
"We shall quarrel, then, I am afraid," she said, "because I want to talk too. We both want to talk--I to you, you to me."
He leant over her a moment, since the punt-pole had to be grounded at the stern of the boat, for he had tied the chain in the bow to an unearthed root of the tree. She leant a little sideways away from him, and this was done. It was then she gave him the few cushions out of the two thousand.
"Have you got anything very special to say?" she asked. "Because I have, and so I shall begin. Yet I don"t know if it is special, except that between friends everything seems to be special."
Again Jeannie could not get on for a moment, but she proceeded without notable pause.
"The difference between friends and acquaintances is so enormous," she said, "and yet so many people confuse the two. One may meet another person a hundred times and be only an acquaintance; one may meet a person once and be a friend in a minute. Perhaps it is not the same with men. I don"t think a man recognizes those who are going to be or are capable of being his friends at the first glance, whereas a woman does.
She feels it to the end of her finger-tips."
Jeannie gave a quick glance at him, and saw that he was listening with considerable attention. She gave a little sigh, and clasped her hands behind her head.
"What an uneconomical world it is," she said, "and what a lot of affection and emotion Nature allows to run to waste. A man sees in some woman the one quality, the one character that he is for ever seeking; he sees that she is in some way the complement of himself, and perhaps the woman merely dislikes him. Or it may happen the other way round. What a waste of n.o.ble stuff that means. All his affection is poured away like a stream losing itself in the desert. It does seem a pity."
"Jove! yes, and I never thought of that," he said. "There must be a lot of that going on. So much, perhaps, that some day the desert will get quite damp, and then won"t it cease to be a desert?"
She looked at him rather longer, letting her eyes rest on his.
"That is a much more hopeful solution," she said. "Perhaps it doesn"t all go to waste. Or shall we say that Nature never throws things away, but puts all these odds and ends of affection in the stock-pot to make soup. But they will make soup for other people. Ah! there was lightning far off. The storm is beginning."
They waited in silence, till a long, drowsy peal of thunder answered.
"Oh, it is miles away yet," he said.
Jeannie arranged her cushions more comfortably. "And yet I rather like Nature"s uneconomical habits," she said, "if we settle she is a spendthrift. There is something rather royal and large-handed about it.
She is just the same in physical affairs. I saw in some snippety paper the other day that the amount of electricity discharged in a good thunderstorm would be sufficient to light every house in London for five hours, or run all the trains on all the tubes for about the same time. I should think you are rather spendthrift, too, Lord Lindfield."
He laughed.
"I? Oh, yes. I pour out gallons of affection in all directions.
Always have."