"Do you think so?" said d.i.c.k shortly.
"Don"t you?"
d.i.c.k shrugged his shoulders. Austin laughed.
"What a stolid old beggar you are. To you, she"s just the same little girl that used to run about here in short frocks. If she were a horse you"d have a catalogue yards long of her points."
"But as she"s a lady," said d.i.c.k, tugging his moustache, "I don"t care to catalogue them."
Austin laughed again. "Fairly scored!" He raised his cup to his lips, took a sip, and set it down again.
"Why on earth," said he with some petulance, "can"t mother give us decent coffee?"
CHAPTER II
THE CONSPIRATORS
d.i.c.k went heavy-hearted to bed that night, p.r.o.nouncing himself to be the most abjectly miserable of G.o.d"s creatures, and calling on Providence to remove him speedily from an unsympathetic world. He had said good night to the ladies at eleven o"clock when the three went upstairs to bed, and had forthwith gone to spend the rest of the evening in the friendly solitude of his armoury. Emerging thence an hour later into the hall, he had come upon a picturesque, but heart-rending, spectacle. There, on the third step of the grand staircase, stood Viviette, holding in one hand a candle, and extending the other regally downwards to Austin, who, with sleek head bent, was pressing it to his lips. In the candle-light her hair threw disconcerting shadows over her elfin face, and her great eyes seemed to glow with a magical intensity that poor d.i.c.k had never seen in them before. As soon as he had appeared she had broken into her low laugh, drawn away her hand from Austin, and, descending the steps, extended it in much the same regal manner to d.i.c.k.
"Good night again, d.i.c.k," she said sweetly. "Austin and I have been having a little talk."
But he had disregarded the hand, and, with a gruff "Good night," had returned to his armoury, slamming the door behind him. There he had nourished his wrath on more whiskey and soda than was good for him, and crawled upstairs in the small hours to miserable sleeplessness.
This was the beginning of d.i.c.k"s undoing, the G.o.ds (abetted by Viviette) employing their customary procedure of first driving him mad. But Viviette was not altogether a guilty abettor. Indeed, all day long, she had entertained high notions of acting fairy G.o.dmother, and helping d.i.c.k along the road to fortune and content. He himself, she learned, had taken no steps to free himself from his present mode of life. He had not even confided in Austin. Viviette ran over the list of her influential friends. There was Lady Winsmere, a dowager countess of seventy, surrounded by notabilities, at whose house she stayed now and then in London. On the last occasion an Agent-General for one of the great Colonies had sat next her at dinner. Then there was her friend Mrs.
Penderby, whose husband gathered enormous wealth in some mysterious way in Mark Lane. Why should she not go up to London and open a campaign on d.i.c.k"s behalf, secure him an appointment, and come back flourishing it before his dazzled and delighted eyes? The prospect was enchanting. The fairy G.o.dmother romance of it fascinated her girlish mind. But first she must clear the ground at home. There must be no opposition from Austin. He must be her ally.
When a woman gets an idea like this into her head she must execute it, as the Americans say, right now. A man waits, counts up all the barriers, and speculates on the strength and courage of the lions in the path--but a woman goes straight forward, and does not worry about the lions till they bite her. Viviette resolved to speak to Austin at once; but, owing to a succession of the little ironies of circ.u.mstance, she found no opportunity of doing so all the afternoon or evening. It was only when, standing at the top of the stairs, she had seen d.i.c.k go off to the armoury, and Austin return to the drawing-room--for the men had bidden the ladies good night in the hall--that she saw her chance. She went downstairs and opened the drawing-room door.
"I don"t want to go to bed after all. Do you think you can do with me a little longer?"
"A great deal longer," he said, drawing a chair for her, and arranging the shade of a lamp so that the light should not shine full in her eyes.
"I was just thinking how dull the room looked without you--as if all the flowers had suddenly been taken away."
"I suppose I am decorative," she said blandly.
"You"re bewitching. What instinct made you choose that shade of pale green for your frock? If I had seen it in the pattern I should have said it was impossible for your colouring. But now it seems to be the only perfect thing you could wear."
She laughed her little laugh of pleasure, and thanked him prettily for the compliment. They bandied gay words for a while.
"Oh, I"m so glad you have come down--even for this short visit," said Viviette at last. "I was pining for talk, for wit, for a breath of the great world beyond these sleepy meadows. You bring all that with you."
Austin leaned forward. "How do you know I"m not bringing even more?"
The girl"s eyes drooped before his gaze. Then she fluttered a glance at him in which there was a gleam of mockery.
"You bring the most valuable gift of all--appreciation of my frocks. I love people to notice them. Now d.i.c.k is frock-blind. Why is that?"
"He"s a dear old duffer," said Austin.
"I don"t think he"s happy," said Viviette, who, in her feminine way, had worked round to the subject of the interview.
"He did seem rather cut up about the stables," Austin admitted. "But the things are an eyesore, and mother was worrying herself to death about them."
"It isn"t only the stables," said Viviette. "d.i.c.k is altogether discontented."
Austin looked at her in amazement. "Discontented?"
"He wants something to do."
"Nonsense," he laughed, with the air of a man certain of his facts.
"He"s as happy as a king here. He shoots and hunts--looks after the place--runs the garden and potters about in his armoury--in fact, does just what he likes all day long. He goes to bed without a care sharing his pillow, and, when he wakes up, gets into comfortable country clothes instead of a tight-fitting suit of responsibilities. For a man of his tastes he leads an ideal existence."
He threw away the end of the cigarette he was smoking, as though to say that the argument was finished. But Viviette regarded him with a smile--the smile of woman"s superior wisdom. How astonishingly little he knew of d.i.c.k!
"Do you really think there is one contented being on earth?" she asked.
"Even I know better than that."
Austin maintained that d.i.c.k ought to be contented.
"Dependent for practically all he has on you?"
"I"ve never let him feel it," he said quickly.
"He does, though. He wants to get away--to earn his own living--make a way for himself."
"That"s the first I"ve heard of it," said Austin, genuinely surprised.
"I really thought he was perfectly contented here. Of course, now and then he"s grumpy--but he always has had fits of grumpiness. What kind of work does he want?"
"Something to do with sheep or cattle--in Arizona or New Zealand--the place doesn"t matter--any open-air life."
Austin lit another cigarette and walked about the room. He was a man of well-regulated habits, and did not like being taken unawares. d.i.c.k ought to have told him. Then there was their mother. Who would look after her? d.i.c.k was a dispensation of Providence.
"Perhaps I might be a deputy dispensation, mightn"t I?" said Viviette.
"I don"t think mother is so desperately attached to d.i.c.k as all that. It could be arranged somehow or other. And d.i.c.k is growing more and more wretched about it every day. Every day he pours out his woes to me till I can almost howl with misery."
"What do you want me to do?"
"Not to stand in his way if he gets a chance of going abroad."
"Of course I won"t," cried Austin eagerly. "It never entered my head that he wanted to go away. I would do anything in the world for his happiness, poor old chap. I love d.i.c.k very deeply. In spite of his huge bulk and rough ways there"s something of the woman in him that makes one love him."
They catalogued d.i.c.k"s virtues, and then Viviette unfolded her scheme.
One or other of the powerful personages whom, in her young confidence, she proposed to attack, would surely know of some opening abroad.
"Even humble I sometimes hear of things," said Austin. "Only a day or two ago old Lord Overton asked me if I knew of a man who could manage a timber forest he"s got in Vancouver--"