Second String

Chapter 48

"Why? Has anything happened?" asked Billy Foot.

"I think so." He bent down to the Nun again. "Miss Vintry has got to sleep here to-night." His voice was low, but they were all very still, and the voice carried.

"There"s no room for her--with Gilly here as well as us," the Nun protested rather fretfully.

"You must make room somehow," he returned firmly. "I"m going to bring them in now." He looked significantly at Billy Foot. "We"re rather a large party."

Billy turned to his brother. "I"m off home. Will you stroll with me as far as Halton?"



Gilly nodded in a bewildered fashion--he was not up in Meriton affairs--and slowly rose.

"And when I come back I"ll go straight to bed," he said, looking at Andy to see whether what he suggested met with acceptance.

Andy nodded approval; Gilly would be best in bed.

With the briefest farewell the brothers pa.s.sed out. As they went, they saw Harry Belfield, with a woman on his arm, walking slowly up and down on the other side of the street.

Sally Dutton rose. "I"ll go to bed too." As she reached the door she turned round and said, "At least I"ll wait in my room. She--she can come in with me, if she likes, Andy."

"Thank you," said Andy gravely.

"What is it, Andy?" the Nun asked.

"A general break-up," he answered briefly, as he followed Sally Dutton out of the room.

The Nun sat on amidst the relics of her feast--the fruit, the flowers, the empty bottles. Somehow they all looked rather ghastly. She gave a little shiver of disgust.

Andy came in with Isobel Vintry clinging to his arm, Harry following and carefully closing the door.

Andy made Isobel sit down at the table and offered her some wine from a half-emptied bottle. She refused with a gesture and laid her head between her hands on the table. Harry threw his hat on a chair and stood helplessly in the middle of the room. The Nun sat in a hostile silence.

"She"d better go straight to bed," said Andy.

"She can have my room. I"ll go in with Sally."

He looked at her. "She"d better have somebody with her, I think. Will you call Sally?"

The Nun obeyed, and Sally came. As she pa.s.sed Harry, she smiled in her queer derisive fashion, but her voice was kind as she took hold of Isobel"s arm and raised her, saying, "Come, you"re upset to-night. It won"t look half so bad in the morning."

Harry met Isobel and clasped her hands. Then she and Sally Dutton went out together.

Harry sat down heavily in a chair by the table and poured out a gla.s.s of wine.

"Do you two men want to be alone together?" the Nun asked.

Harry shook his head. "I"m just off home."

"It"s all arranged," said Andy. "Harry goes to London by the early train to-morrow. I shall get her things from Nutley directly after breakfast and bring them here. You and Sally will look after her till twelve o"clock. Then I"ll take her to the station. Harry will meet her at the other end, and--well, they"ve made their plans."

Harry lit a cigarette and smoked it very quickly, between gulps of wine.

Andy had begun to smoke too. His air was calm, though grave; he seemed to have taken charge of the whole affair.

"Are you going to marry her?" the Nun suddenly inquired, with her usual directness.

"You might have gathered that much from what Andy said," Harry grumbled in an injured tone.

"Does Vivien know yet?"

He dropped his cigarette-end into his emptied gla.s.s.

"Yes," he answered, frowning. "For G.o.d"s sake, don"t put me through a catechism, Doris!" He rose from his chair, looking round for his hat.

"Shall I walk back with you?" Andy asked.

"No, thanks. I"d rather be alone." His tone was still very injured, as though the two were in league with one another, and with all the world, to persecute him. He came up to the Nun. "I shan"t see you again for a bit, I expect. Good-bye, Doris." He held out his hand to her. The Nun interlaced her hands on the table in front of her.

"I won"t!" she said. "I won"t shake hands with you to-night, Harry Belfield. You"ve broken the heart of the sweetest girl I ever met.

You"ve brought shame and misery on her--you who aren"t fit to black her shoes! You"ve brought shame on your people. I suppose you"ve pretty well done for yourself in Meriton. And all for what? Because you must philander, must have your conquests, must always be proving to yourself that n.o.body can resist you!"

Harry looked morosely resentful at the indictment. "Oh, you can"t understand. n.o.body can understand who--who isn"t made that way. You talk as if I"d meant to do it!"

"I think I"d rather you had meant to do it. That"d be rather less contemptible, I think."

"Gently, gently, Doris!" Andy interposed.

She turned on him. "Oh yes, it"s always "Gently, gently!" with Harry Belfield. He"s to be indulged, and excused, and forgiven, and all the rest of it. Let him hear the truth for once, Andy. Even if it doesn"t do him any good to hear it, it does me good to say it--lots of good!"

"You"d better go, Harry. You won"t find her good company to-night. I"ll be at the station to see you off to-morrow--before I see about the things at Nutley."

"I"m going; and I"m much obliged to Doris for her abuse. She"s always been the same about me--sneering and snarling!"

"I"ve never made a fool of myself about you. That"s what you can"t forgive, Harry."

"Go, my dear fellow, go," said Andy. "What"s the use of this?"

Harry moved off towards the door. As he went out, he said over his shoulder, "At any rate you can"t say I"m not doing the square thing now!"

They heard the "Boots" open the door of the inn for him; a moment later his step pa.s.sed the window. Andy came and sat down by the Nun; she caught his big hand in hers.

"I"m trying hard not to cry. I don"t want to break my record. How did it all happen?"

"Wellgood came back before they expected him. Harry met her--by chance, he says--after he"d left Vivien, and he was carried away, he says.

Somehow or other--I don"t quite understand how--Vivien came on the scene again. Then Wellgood was on to them, and had the whole thing out, before his daughter. It seems that he"s in love with Miss Vintry himself--so I understood Harry. That, of course, didn"t make him any kinder."

"It"s cruel, cruel, cruel!"

"Yes, but do you remember a talk we had about it once?"

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