"A light-coloured thing," said d.i.c.k.
"And what"s it trimmed with?"
"Lace," said the unfortunate man. Lace indeed!
"And what coloured boots?"
"Black," said d.i.c.k, at a venture.
"And what flower?"
"I don"t know--a pink rose, I think."
She started up. "Look," she cried gaily. "Oh, d.i.c.k! I"ll never marry you till you have the common decency to look at me--never! never! never! I dressed myself this beautiful morning just to please you. Oh, d.i.c.k!
d.i.c.k, you"ve lost such a chance."
She stood with her hands behind her back regarding him mockingly, as Eve in the first orchard must have regarded Adam when he was more dull and masculine than usual--when, for instance, she had attired herself in hybiscus flowers which he took for the hum-drum, everyday fig-leaves.
"I"m a born duffer," said d.i.c.k pathetically. "But your face is all that I see when I look at you."
"That"s all very pretty," she retorted. "But you ought to see more. Now let us talk sense. Mind, if I sit on that bench again you"re to talk sense."
d.i.c.k sighed. "Very well," said he.
That was the history of all his love-making. She drew him on to pa.s.sionate utterance, and then, with a twist of her wit and a twirl of her skirts, she eluded him. When she had thus put herself out of his reach, he felt ashamed. What right had he, dull, useless, lumbering, squiredomless squire, to ask a woman like Viviette to marry him? How could he support a wife? As it was, he lived a pensioner on Austin"s bounty. Could he ask Austin to feed his wife and family as well? This thought, which always came to him as soon as his pa.s.sion was checked, filled him with deep humiliation. Viviette had reason on her side when she said, "Let us talk sense."
He glowered at his fate, and tugged his tawny moustache for some time in silence. Then Viviette began to talk to him prettily of things that made up his country interests, his dogs, the garden, the personalities of the country-side. Soon she had him laughing, which pleased and flattered her, as it proved her power over the primitive man. Indeed, at such moments, she felt very tenderly towards him, and would have liked to pat his cheeks and crown him with flowers, thus manifesting her favour by dainty caresses. But she refrained, knowing that primitive men are too dense to interpret such demonstrations rightly, and limited herself to less compromising words.
"I am going to tell you a secret," he said at last, in a shamefaced way.
"You mustn"t laugh at me--promise me you won"t."
"I promise," said Viviette solemnly.
"I am thinking of going in for local politics--Rural District Council, you know."
Viviette nodded her head approvingly. "A village Hampden--in Tory clothing?"
"They"re running things on party lines down here. The influence of Westhampton is Radical, and fills the Council with a lot of outsiders.
So they"ve got together a Conservative Committee, and are going to run a good strong man for a vacancy. I"ve given them to understand that I"ll be a candidate if they"ll have me. I"d like to be one. It"s a rubbishy thing, dear, but somehow it would give me a little interest in life."
"I don"t think it a rubbishy thing at all," said Viviette. "A country gentleman ought to have a hand in rural administration. I do hope you"ll get in. When will you know that the committee have selected you?"
"There"s a meeting this evening. I ought to know to-night or to-morrow morning."
"Are you very keen on it?"
"Very," said d.i.c.k. And he added proudly, "It was my own idea."
"But you"re not as keen on that as on going abroad?"
"Ah, that!" said d.i.c.k. "That, bar one, is the dearest wish of my heart.
And who knows--it might enable me to carry out the other."
The sound of a gong within the house floated through the still June air.
Viviette rose. "I must tidy myself for lunch."
They walked to the house together. On parting she put out both her hands.
"Do be reasonable, d.i.c.k, and don"t look for slights in what you call Austin"s airy ways. He is awfully fond of you, and would not hurt you for the world."
At the luncheon table, however, Austin did hurt him, in utter unconsciousness, by his gay command of the situation, his eager talk with Viviette of things d.i.c.k did not understand, places he had not visited, books he had never read, pictures he had never seen. It was heartache rather than envy. He did not grudge Austin his scholarship and brilliance. But his soul sank at the sight of Austin and Viviette moving as familiars in a joyous world as remote from him as Neptune. Mrs. Ware kept Katherine Holroyd engaged in mild talk of cooks and curates, while the other two maintained their baffling conversation, half banter, half serious, on a bewildering number of topics, and poor d.i.c.k remained as dumb as the fish and cutlets he was eating. He sat at the head of the table, Mrs. Ware at the foot. On his right hand sat Katherine Holroyd, on his left Viviette, and between her and his mother was Austin. With Viviette talking to Austin and Mrs. Ware to Katherine, he felt lonely and disregarded in a kind of polar waste of snowy tablecloth. Once Katherine, escaping from Mrs. Ware"s plat.i.tudinous ripple, took pity on him, and asked him when he was going to redeem his promise and show her his collection of armour and weapons. d.i.c.k brightened. This was the only keen interest he had in life outside things of earth and air and stream.
He had inherited a good family collection, and had added to it occasionally, as far as his slender means allowed. He had read deeply, and understood his subject.
"Whenever you like, Katherine," he said.
"This afternoon?"
"I"m afraid they want polishing up and arranging. I"ve got some new things which I"ve not placed. I"ve rather neglected them lately. Let us say to-morrow afternoon. Then they"ll all be spick and span for you."
Katherine a.s.sented. "I"ve been down here so often and never seen them,"
she said. "It seems odd, considering the years we"ve known each other."
"I only took it up after father"s death," said d.i.c.k. "And since then, you know, you haven"t been here so very often."
"It was only the last time that I discovered you took an interest an the collection. You hid your light under a bushel. Then I went to London and heard that you were a great authority on the subject."
d.i.c.k"s tanned face reddened with pleasure.
"I do know something about it. You see, guns and swords and pistols are in my line. I"m good at killing things. I ought to have been a soldier, only I couldn"t pa.s.s examinations, so I sort of interest myself in the old weapons and do my killing in imagination."
"You give a regular lecture, don"t you?"
"Well, you know," said d.i.c.k modestly, "a lot of them are historical.
There"s a mace used by a bishop, an ancestor of ours. He couldn"t wield a sword in battle, so he cottoned on to that, and in order to salve his conscience before using it he would cry out "Gare! gare!"--and they say that"s what our name comes from--see? "Ware--Ware." He was the founder of our family--though, of course, he oughtn"t to have been. And then we have the duelling pistols my great-grandfather shot Lord Estcourt with.
They"re beautiful things--in the case just as he left it after the duel, with powder, b.a.l.l.s, and caps, all complete. It"s a romantic story--"
"My dear d.i.c.k," interposed Mrs. Ware, with fragile, uplifted hand, "please don"t offend us with these horrible family scandals. Katharine, dear, are you going to the vicar"s garden party this afternoon? If you are, will you take a message to Mrs. Cook?"
So Katherine being monopolized, d.i.c.k was silenced, and as Austin and Viviette were talking in a lively but unintelligible way about a thing, or a play, or a horse called Nietzsche, he relapsed into the heavy, full-blooded man"s animal enjoyment of his food and the sensitive"s consciousness of heartache.
When the ladies had left the table and the coffee had been brought in, and the men"s cigars were lit, Austin said:
"What a magnificently beautiful creature she has grown into."
"Whom do you mean?" asked d.i.c.k.
"Why, Viviette, of course. She"s the most fascinating thing I"ve come across for years."