There Ca.s.sy looked up at the inkbeast. "How is Mr. Lennox? Do you see him?"
"I find it very difficult not to. Unattached people are sticky as flies. When Lennox was engaged, he was invisible. Now he is all over the place."
From the tunnel a train erupted. It came with the belch of a monstrous beetle, red-eyed and menacing, hastening terribly to some horrible task.
Jones, shoving the girl into its bowels, added: "I was happier when he was jugged."
A corner beckoned. There, as the beetle resumed its flight, the novelist spread his wings.
"I would have wagered a red pippin that you couldn"t say Jack Robinson before he and that young woman were convoluting joyously. I even planned to be best man. Saw my tailor about it. Whether it were on that account or not the Lords of Karma only know, but he told Miss Austen to go to h.e.l.l."
Ca.s.sy started. From before her everything was receding.
Jones noting the movement, interpreted it naturally and therefore stupidly. He apologised.
"Forgive me. I picture you as Our Lady of the Immaculate Conversation.
Forgive me, then. Besides, what Lennox did say, he said with less elegance. He said: "I"m through." Yes and asked me to repeat it to her.
I studiously omitted to, but as Proteus--Mr. Blount in private life--somewhere expressed it, "h.e.l.l has no more fixed or absolute decree.""
Because of the crashing beetle Jones had to shout it. He shouted it in Ca.s.sy"s ear. It was a lovely ear and Jones was aware of it. But only professionally. Since that night in Naples when, by way of keepsake, he got a dagger in his back, he had entertained the belief that a novelist should have everything, even to s.e.x, in his brain. Such theories are very safe. Jones" admirations were not therefore carnal. To Balzac, a pretty woman was a plot. Ca.s.sy was a plot to Jones, who continued to shout.
"If Lennox and Margaret Austen moved and had their being in a novel of mine, the wedding-bells would now be ringing at a cradle in the last chapter. Commercially it would be my duty to supply that happy and always unexpected touch. I even made a bet about it, which shows how iniquitous gambling is. What"s more, it shows that I must have an unsuspected talent for picture-plays. As it was in heaven, so it is now in the movies. It is there that marriages are made. But forgive me again. I am talking shop."
The renewed apology was needless. Though Jones shouted, Ca.s.sy did not hear. It was not the clattering beetle that interfered. To that also Ca.s.sy was deaf. She heard nothing. The echo of noisy millions had gone.
The slamming doors were silent. But her face was pale as running water when, the beetle at last abandoned, she thanked Jones for seeing her all the way.
All the way to where? G.o.d, if she only knew!
x.x.xV
Later that day, Jeroloman, the attorney for the other side, who at the time had no idea that there was another side, or any side at all, entered the rotunda and asked for Dunwoodie.
In asking, he removed his hat, glanced at its glisten, put it on again.
The hat was silk. It topped iron grey hair, steel-blue eyes, a turn-under nose, a thin-lipped mouth, a pointed chin, a stand-up collar, a dark neckcloth, a morning coat, grey gloves, grey trousers, drab spats and patent-leather boots. These attributes gave him an air that was intensely respectable, equally tiresome. One pitied his wife.
"This way, sir."
In the inner and airy office, Dunwoodie nodded, motioned at a chair.
"Ha! Very good of you to trouble."
Jeroloman, seating himself, again removed his hat. Before he could dispose of it, Dunwoodie was at him.
"Young Paliser"s estate. In round figures what does it amount to?"
Jeroloman, selecting a safe place on the table, put the hat on it and answered, not sparringly, there was nothing to spar about, but with civil indifference: "Interested professionally?"
"His widow is my client."
Jeroloman"s eyes fastened themselves on Dunwoodie, who he knew was incapable of anything that savoured, however remotely, of shysterism.
But it was a year and a day since he had been closeted with him. In the interim, time had told. Diverting those eyes, he displayed a smile that was chill and dental.
"Well, well! We all make mistakes. There is no such person." He paused, awaiting the possible protest. None came and he added: "The morning after the murder, his father told me that the young man contemplated marriage with a lady who had his entire approval. Unfortunately----"
"Yaas," Dunwoodie broke in. "Unfortunately, as you say. The morning after was the 26th. On the 21st, a gardener, who pretended to be a clergyman, officiated at his marriage to my client."
Dryly but involuntarily Jeroloman laughed. Dunwoodie was getting on, getting old. In his day he had been remarkably able. That day had gone.
"Well, well! Even admitting that such a thing could have happened, it must have been only by way of a lark."
Dunwoodie whipped out his towel. "You don"t say so!"
Carelessly Jeroloman surveyed him. He was certainly senile, yet, because of his laurels, ent.i.tled to all the honours of war.
"Look here, Mr. Dunwoodie. You are not by any chance serious, are you?"
"Oh, I"m looking. While I was about it, I looked into the case. Per verba de praesenti, my client consented to be young Paliser"s wife. Now she is his widow."
Jeroloman weighed it. The weighing took but an instant. Dunwoodie was living in the past, but there was no use in beating about the bush and he said as much.
"You are thinking of the common law, sir."
Absently Dunwoodie creased his towel. "Now you mention it, I believe I am."
Jeroloman glanced at his watch. It was getting late. His residence was five miles away. He was to dress, dine early and take his wife to the theatre. He would have to hurry and he reached for his hat.
"The common law was abrogated long ago."
Dunwoodie rumpled the towel. "Why, so it was!"
Jeroloman took the hat and with a gloved finger rubbed at the brim.
"Even otherwise, the term common-law wife is not legally recognised. The law looks with no favour on the connection indicated by it. The term is synonymous for a woman who, having lived illicitly with a man, seeks to a.s.sume the relationship of wife after his death and thereby share in the proceeds of his property."
From under beetling brows, Dunwoodie looked at him. "Thanks for the lecture, Jeroloman. My client has no such desire. In this office, an hour ago, she refused them."
Jeroloman stood up. "Very sensible of her, I"m sure." He twirled the hat. "Who is she?"
"I thought I told you. She is Mrs. Paliser."
Jeroloman waved that hat. "Well, well! I thought I told you. As it is, if you will take the trouble to look at the laws of 1901, you will find that common-law marriages are inhibited."
"Hum! Ha! And if you will trouble to look at the Laws of 1907, you will find they are inhibited no longer."
Jeroloman stared. "I have yet to learn of it."