The Country House
by
John Galsworthy

Part 1 out of 6








This etext was produced by David Widger





THE COUNTRY HOUSE

By John Galsworthy




CHAPTER I

A PARTY AT WORSTED SKEYNES

The year was 1891, the month October, the day Monday. In the dark
outside the railway-station at Worsted Skeynes Mr. Horace Pendyce's
omnibus, his brougham, his luggage-cart, monopolised space. The face
of Mr. Horace Pendyce's coachman monopolised the light of the
solitary station lantern. Rosy-gilled, with fat close-clipped grey
whiskers and inscrutably pursed lips, it presided high up in the
easterly air like an emblem of the feudal system. On the platform
within, Mr. Horace Pendyce's first footman and second groom in long
livery coats with silver buttons, their appearance slightly relieved
by the rakish cock of their top-hats, awaited the arrival of the
6.15.

The first footman took from his pocket a half-sheet of stamped and
crested notepaper covered with Mr. Horace Pendyce's small and precise
calligraphy. He read from it in a nasal, derisive voice:

"Hon. Geoff, and Mrs. Winlow, blue room and dress; maid, small drab.
Mr. George, white room. Mrs. Jaspar Bellew, gold. The Captain, red.
General Pendyce, pink room; valet, back attic. That's the lot."

The groom, a red-cheeked youth, paid no attention.

"If this here Ambler of Mr. George's wins on Wednesday," he said,
"it's as good as five pounds in my pocket. Who does for Mr. George?"

"James, of course."

The groom whistled.

"I'll try an' get his loadin' to-morrow. Are you on, Tom?"

The footman answered:

"Here's another over the page. Green room, right wing--that
Foxleigh; he's no good. 'Take all you can and give nothing' sort!
But can't he shoot just! That's why they ask him!"

>From behind a screen of dark trees the train ran in.

Down the platform came the first passengers--two cattlemen with long
sticks, slouching by in their frieze coats, diffusing an odour of
beast and black tobacco; then a couple, and single figures, keeping
as far apart as possible, the guests of Mr. Horace Pendyce. Slowly
they came out one by one into the loom of the carriages, and stood
with their eyes fixed carefully before them, as though afraid they
might recognise each other. A tall man in a fur coat, whose tall
wife carried a small bag of silver and shagreen, spoke to the
coachman:

"How are you, Benson? Mr. George says Captain Pendyce told him he
wouldn't be down till the 9.30. I suppose we'd better---"

Like a breeze tuning through the frigid silence of a fog, a high,
clear voice was heard:

"Oh, thanks; I'll go up in the brougham."

Followed by the first footman carrying her wraps, and muffled in a
white veil, through which the Hon. Geoffrey Winlow's leisurely gaze
caught the gleam of eyes, a lady stepped forward, and with a backward
glance vanished into the brougham. Her head appeared again behind
the swathe of gauze.

"There's plenty of room, George."

George Pendyce walked quickly forward, and disappeared beside her.
There was a crunch of wheels; the brougham rolled away.

The Hon. Geoffrey Winlow raised his face again.

"Who was that, Benson?"

The coachman leaned over confidentially, holding his podgy
white-gloved hand outspread on a level with the Hon. Geoffrey's hat.

"Mrs. Jaspar Bellew, sir. Captain Bellew's lady, of the Firs."

"But I thought they weren't---"

"No, sir; they're not, sir."

"Ah!"

A calm rarefied voice was heard from the door of the omnibus:

"Now, Geoff!"

The Hon. Geoffrey Winlow followed his wife, Mr. Foxleigh, and General
Pendyce into the omnibus, and again Mrs. Winlow's voice was heard:

"Oh, do you mind my maid? Get in, Tookson!"

Mr. Horace Pendyce's mansion, white and long and low, standing well
within its acres, had come into the possession of his great-great-
great-grandfather through an alliance with the last of the Worsteds.
Originally a fine property let in smallish holdings to tenants who,
having no attention bestowed on them, did very well and paid
excellent rents, it was now farmed on model lines at a slight loss.
At stated intervals Mr. Pendyce imported a new kind of cow, or
partridge, and built a wing to the schools. His income was
fortunately independent of this estate. He was in complete accord
with the Rector and the sanitary authorities, and not infrequently
complained that his tenants did not stay on the land. His wife was a
Totteridge, and his coverts admirable. He had been, needless to say,
an eldest son. It was his individual conviction that individualism
had ruined England, and he had set himself deliberately to eradicate
this vice from the character of his tenants. By substituting for
their individualism his own tastes, plans, and sentiments, one might
almost say his own individualism, and losing money thereby, he had
gone far to demonstrate his pet theory that the higher the
individualism the more sterile the life of the community. If,
however, the matter was thus put to him he grew both garrulous and
angry, for he considered himself not an individualist, but what he
called a "Tory Communist." In connection with his agricultural
interests he was naturally a Fair Trader; a tax on corn, he knew,
would make all the difference in the world to the prosperity of
England. As he often said: "A tax of three or four shillings on
corn, and I should be farming my estate at a profit."

Mr. Pendyce had other peculiarities, in which he was not too
individual. He was averse to any change in the existing order of
things, made lists of everything, and was never really so happy as
when talking of himself or his estate. He had a black spaniel dog
called John, with a long nose and longer ears, whom he had bred
himself till the creature was not happy out of his sight.

In appearance Mr. Pendyce was rather of the old school, upright and
active, with thin side-whiskers, to which, however, for some years
past he had added moustaches which drooped and were now grizzled. He
wore large cravats and square-tailed coats. He did not smoke.

At the head of his dining-table loaded with flowers and plate, he sat
between the Hon. Mrs. Winlow and Mrs. Jaspar Bellew, nor could he
have desired more striking and contrasted supporters. Equally tall,
full-figured, and comely, Nature had fixed between these two women a
gulf which Mr. Pendyce, a man of spare figure, tried in vain to fill.
The composure peculiar to the ashen type of the British aristocracy
wintered permanently on Mrs. Winlow's features like the smile of a
frosty day. Expressionless to a degree, they at once convinced the
spectator that she was a woman of the best breeding. Had an
expression ever arisen upon these features, it is impossible to say
what might have been the consequences. She had followed her nurse's
adjuration: "Lor, Miss Truda, never you make a face--You might grow
so!" Never since that day had Gertrude Winlow, an Honourable in her
own right and in that of her husband, made a face, not even, it is
believed, when her son was born. And then to find on the other side
of Mr. Pendyce that puzzling Mrs. Bellew with the green-grey eyes, at
which the best people of her own sex looked with instinctive
disapproval! A woman in her position should avoid anything
conspicuous, and Nature had given her a too-striking appearance.
People said that when, the year before last, she had separated from
Captain Bellew, and left the Firs, it was simply because they were
tired of one another. They said, too, that it looked as if she were
encouraging the attentions of George, Mr. Pendyce's eldest son.

Lady Maiden had remarked to Mrs. Winlow in the drawing-room before
dinner:

"What is it about that Mrs. Bellew? I never liked her. A woman
situated as she is ought to be more careful. I don't understand her
being asked here at all, with her husband still at the Firs, only
just over the way. Besides, she's very hard up. She doesn't even
attempt to disguise it. I call her almost an adventuress."

Mrs. Winlow had answered:

"But she's some sort of cousin to Mrs. Pendyce. The Pendyces are
related to everybody! It's so boring. One never knows---"

Lady Maiden replied:

"Did you know her when she was living down here? I dislike those
hard-riding women. She and her husband were perfectly reckless. One
heard of nothing else but what she had jumped and how she had jumped
it; and she bets and goes racing. If George Pendyce is not in love
with her, I'm very much mistaken. He's been seeing far too much of
her in town. She's one of those women that men are always hanging
about!"

At the head of his dinner-table, where before each guest was placed a
menu carefully written in his eldest daughter's handwriting, Horace
Pendyce supped his soup.

"This soup," he said to Mrs. Bellew, "reminds me of your dear old
father; he was extraordinarily fond of it. I had a great respect for
your father--a wonderful man! I always said he was the most
determined man I'd met since my own dear father, and he was the most
obstinate man in the three kingdoms!"

He frequently made use of the expression "in the three kingdoms,"
which sometimes preceded a statement that his grandmother was
descended from Richard III., while his grandfather came down from the
Cornish giants, one of whom, he would say with a disparaging smile,
had once thrown a cow over a wall.

"Your father was too much of an individualist, Mrs. Bellew. I have a
lot of experience of individualism in the management of my estate,
and I find that an individualist is never contented. My tenants have
everything they want, but it's impossible to satisfy them. There's a
fellow called Peacock, now, a most pig-headed, narrowminded chap. I
don't give in to him, of course. If he had his way, he'd go back to
the old days, farm the land in his own fashion. He wants to buy it
from me. Old vicious system of yeoman farming. Says his grandfather
had it. He's that sort of man. I hate individualism; it's ruining
England. You won't fend better cottages, or better farm-buildings
anywhere than on my estate. I go in for centralisation. I dare say
you know what I call myself--a 'Tory Communist.' To my mind, that's
the party of the future. Now, your father's motto was: 'Every man
for himself!' On the land that would never do. Landlord and tenant
must work together. You'll come over to Newmarket with us on
Wednesday? George has a very fine horse running in the Rutlandshire
a very fine horse. He doesn't bet, I'm glad to say. If there's one
thing I hate more than another, it's gambling!"

Mrs. Bellew gave him a sidelong glance, and a little ironical smile
peeped out on her full red lips. But Mr. Pendyce had been called
away to his soup. When he was ready to resume the conversation she
was talking to his son, and the Squire, frowning, turned to the Hon.
Mrs. Winlow. Her attention was automatic, complete, monosyllabic;
she did not appear to fatigue herself by an over-sympathetic
comprehension, nor was she subservient. Mr. Pendyce found her a
competent listener.

"The country is changing," he said, "changing every day. Country
houses are not what they were. A great responsibility rests on us
landlords. If we go, the whole thing goes."

What, indeed, could be more delightful than this country-house life
of Mr. Pendyce; its perfect cleanliness, its busy leisure, its
combination of fresh air and scented warmth, its complete
intellectual repose, its essential and professional aloofness from
suffering of any kind, and its soup--emblematically and above all,
its soup--made from the rich remains of pampered beasts?

Mr. Pendyce thought this life the one right life; those who lived it
the only right people. He considered it a duty to live this life,
with its simple, healthy, yet luxurious curriculum, surrounded by
creatures bred for his own devouring, surrounded, as it were, by a
sea of soup! And that people should go on existing by the million in
the towns, preying on each other, and getting continually out of
work, with all those other depressing concomitants of an awkward
state, distressed him. While suburban life, that living in little
rows of slate-roofed houses so lamentably similar that no man of
individual taste could bear to see them, he much disliked. Yet, in
spite of his strong prejudice in favour of country-house life, he was
not a rich man, his income barely exceeding ten thousand a year.

The first shooting-party of the season, devoted to spinneys and the
outlying coverts, had been, as usual, made to synchronise with the
last Newmarket Meeting, for Newmarket was within an uncomfortable
distance of Worsted Skeynes; and though Mr. Pendyce had a horror of
gaming, he liked to figure there and pass for a man interested in
sport for sport's sake, and he was really rather proud of the fact
that his son had picked up so good a horse as the Ambler promised to
be for so little money, and was racing him for pure sport.

The guests had been carefully chosen. On Mrs. Winlow's right was
Thomas Brandwhite (of Brown and Brandwhite), who had a position in
the financial world which could not well be ignored, two places in
the country, and a yacht. His long, lined face, with very heavy
moustaches, wore habitually a peevish look. He had retired from his
firm, and now only sat on the Boards of several companies. Next to
him was Mrs. Hussell Barter, with that touching look to be seen on
the faces of many English ladies, that look of women who are always
doing their duty, their rather painful duty; whose eyes, above cheeks
creased and withered, once rose-leaf hued, now over-coloured by
strong weather, are starry and anxious; whose speech is simple,
sympathetic, direct, a little shy, a little hopeless, yet always
hopeful; who are ever surrounded by children, invalids, old people,
all looking to them for support; who have never known the luxury of
breaking down--of these was Mrs. Hussell Barter, the wife of the
Reverend Hussell Barter, who would shoot to-morrow, but would not
attend the race-meeting on the Wednesday. On her other hand was
Gilbert Foxleigh, a lean-flanked man with a long, narrow head, strong
white teeth, and hollow, thirsting eyes. He came of a county family
of Foxleighs, and was one of six brothers, invaluable to the owners
of coverts or young, half-broken horses in days when, as a Foxleigh
would put it, "hardly a Johnny of the lot could shoot or ride for
nuts." There was no species of beast, bird, or fish, that he could
not and did not destroy with equal skill and enjoyment. The only
thing against him was his income, which was very small. He had taken
in Mrs. Brandwhite, to whom, however, he talked but little, leaving
her to General Pendyce, her neighbour on the other side.

Had he been born a year before his brother, instead of a year after,
Charles Pendyce would naturally have owned Worsted Skeynes, and
Horace would have gone into the Army instead. As it was, having
almost imperceptibly become a Major-General, he had retired, taking
with him his pension. The third brother, had he chosen to be born,
would have gone into the Church, where a living awaited him; he had
elected otherwise, and the living had passed perforce to a collateral
branch. Between Horace and Charles, seen from behind, it was
difficult to distinguish. Both were spare, both erect, with the
least inclination to bottle shoulders, but Charles Pendyce brushed
his hair, both before and behind, away from a central parting, and
about the back of his still active knees there was a look of
feebleness. Seen from the front they could readily be
differentiated, for the General's whiskers broadened down his cheeks
till they reached his moustaches, and there was in his face and
manner a sort of formal, though discontented, effacement, as of an
individualist who has all his life been part of a system, from which
he has issued at last, unconscious indeed of his loss, but with a
vague sense of injury. He had never married, feeling it to be
comparatively useless, owing to Horace having gained that year on him
at the start, and he lived with a valet close to his club in Pall
Mall.

In Lady Maiden, whom he had taken in to dinner, Worsted Skeynes
entertained a good woman and a personality, whose teas to Working Men
in the London season were famous. No Working Man who had attended
them had ever gone away without a wholesome respect for his hostess.
She was indeed a woman who permitted no liberties to be taken with
her in any walk of life. The daughter of a Rural Dean, she appeared
at her best when seated, having rather short legs. Her face was
well-coloured, her mouth, firm and rather wide, her nose well-shaped,
her hair dark. She spoke in a decided voice, and did not mince her
words. It was to her that her husband, Sir James, owed his
reactionary principles on the subject of woman.

Round the corner at the end of the table the Hon. Geoffrey Winlow was
telling his hostess of the Balkan Provinces, from a tour in which he
had just returned. His face, of the Norman type, with regular,
handsome features, had a leisurely and capable expression. His
manner was easy and pleasant; only at times it became apparent that
his ideas were in perfect order, so that he would naturally not care
to be corrected. His father, Lord Montrossor, whose seat was at
Coldingham six miles away, would ultimately yield to him his place in
the House of Lords.

And next him sat Mrs. Pendyce. A portrait of this lady hung over the
sideboard at the end of the room, and though it had been painted by a
fashionable painter, it had caught a gleam of that "something" still
in her face these twenty years later. She was not young, her dark
hair was going grey; but she was not old, for she had been married at
nineteen and was still only fifty-two. Her face was rather long and
very pale, and her eyebrows arched and dark and always slightly
raised. Her eyes were dark grey, sometimes almost black, for the
pupils dilated when she was moved; her lips were the least thing
parted, and the expression of those lips and eyes was of a rather
touching gentleness, of a rather touching expectancy. And yet all
this was not the "something"; that was rather the outward sign of an
inborn sense that she had no need to ask for things, of an
instinctive faith that she already had them. By that "something,"
and by her long, transparent hands, men could tell that she had been
a Totteridge. And her voice, which was rather slow, with a little,
not unpleasant, trick of speech, and her eyelids by second nature
just a trifle lowered, confirmed this impression. Over her bosom,
which hid the heart of a lady, rose and fell a piece of wonderful old
lace.

Round the corner again Sir James Maiden and Bee Pendyce (the eldest
daughter) were talking of horses and hunting--Bee seldom from choice
spoke of anything else. Her face was pleasant and good, yet not
quite pretty, and this little fact seemed to have entered into her
very nature, making her shy and ever willing to do things for others.

Sir James had small grey whiskers and a carved, keen visage. He came
of an old Kentish family which had migrated to Cambridgeshire; his
coverts were exceptionally fine; he was also a Justice of the Peace,
a Colonel of Yeomanry, a keen Churchman, and much feared by poachers.
He held the reactionary views already mentioned, being a little
afraid of Lady Malden.

Beyond Miss Pendyce sat the Reverend Hussell Barter, who would shoot
to-morrow, but would not attend the race-meeting on Wednesday.

The Rector of Worsted Skeynes was not tall, and his head had been
rendered somewhat bald by thought. His broad face, of very straight
build from the top of the forehead to the base of the chin, was
well-coloured, clean-shaven, and of a shape that may be seen in
portraits of the Georgian era. His cheeks were full and folded, his
lower lip had a habit of protruding, and his eyebrows jutted out
above his full, light eyes. His manner was authoritative, and he
articulated his words in a voice to which long service in the pulpit
had imparted remarkable carrying-power--in fact, when engaged in
private conversation, it was with difficulty that he was not
overheard. Perhaps even in confidential matters he was not unwilling
that what he said should bear fruit. In some ways, indeed, he was
typical. Uncertainty, hesitation, toleration--except of such
opinions as he held--he did not like. Imagination he distrusted. He
found his duty in life very clear, and other people's perhaps
clearer, and he did not encourage his parishioners to think for
themselves. The habit seemed to him a dangerous one. He was
outspoken in his opinions, and when he had occasion to find fault,
spoke of the offender as "a man of no character," "a fellow like
that," with such a ring of conviction that his audience could not but
be convinced of the immorality of that person. He had a bluff jolly
way of speaking, and was popular in his parish--a good cricketer, a
still better fisherman, a fair shot, though, as he said, he could not
really afford time for shooting. While disclaiming interference in
secular matters, he watched the tendencies of his flock from a sound
point of view, and especially encouraged them to support the existing
order of things--the British Empire and the English Church. His cure
was hereditary, and he fortunately possessed some private means, for
he had a large family. His partner at dinner was Norah, the younger
of the two Pendyce girls, who had a round, open face, and a more
decided manner than her sister Bee.

Her brother George, the eldest son, sat on her right. George was of
middle height, with a red-brown, clean-shaved face and solid jaw.
His eyes were grey; he had firm lips, and darkish, carefully brushed
hair, a little thin on the top, but with that peculiar gloss seen on
the hair of some men about town. His clothes were unostentatiously
perfect. Such men may be seen in Piccadilly at any hour of the day
or night. He had been intended for the Guards, but had failed to
pass the necessary examination, through no fault of his own, owing to
a constitutional inability to spell. Had he been his younger brother
Gerald, he would probably have fulfilled the Pendyce tradition, and
passed into the Army as a matter of course. And had Gerald (now
Captain Pendyce) been George the elder son, he might possibly have
failed. George lived at his club in town on an allowance of six
hundred a year, and sat a great deal in a bay-window reading Ruff's
"Guide to the Turf."

He raised his eyes from the menu and looked stealthily round. Helen
Bellew was talking to his father, her white shoulder turned a little
away. George was proud of his composure, but there was a strange
longing in his face. She gave, indeed, just excuse for people to
consider her too good-looking for the position in which she was
placed. Her figure was tall and supple and full, and now that she no
longer hunted was getting fuller. Her hair, looped back in loose
bands across a broad low brow, had a peculiar soft lustre.

There was a touch of sensuality about her lips. The face was too
broad across the brow and cheekbones, but the eyes were magnificent--
ice-grey, sometimes almost green, always luminous, and set in with
dark lashes.

There was something pathetic in George's gaze, as of a man forced to
look against his will.

It had been going on all that past summer, and still he did not know
where he stood. Sometimes she seemed fond of him, sometimes treated
him as though he had no chance. That which he had begun as a game
was now deadly earnest. And this in itself was tragic. That
comfortable ease of spirit which is the breath of life was taken
away; he could think of nothing but her. Was she one of those women
who feed on men's admiration, and give them no return? Was she only
waiting to make her conquest more secure? These riddles he asked of
her face a hundred times, lying awake in the dark. To George
Pendyce, a man of the world, unaccustomed to privation, whose simple
creed was "Live and enjoy," there was something terrible about a
longing which never left him for a moment, which he could not help
any more than he could help eating, the end of which he could not
see. He had known her when she lived at the Firs, he had known her
in the hunting-field, but his passion was only of last summer's date.
It had sprung suddenly out of a flirtation started at a dance.

A man about town does not psychologise himself; he accepts his
condition with touching simplicity. He is hungry; he must be fed.
He is thirsty; he must drink. Why he is hungry, when he became
hungry, these inquiries are beside the mark. No ethical aspect of
the matter troubled him; the attainment of a married woman, not
living with her husband, did not impinge upon his creed. What would
come after, though full of unpleasant possibilities, he left to the
future. His real disquiet, far nearer, far more primitive and
simple, was the feeling of drifting helplessly in a current so strong
that he could not keep his feet.

"Ah yes; a bad case. Dreadful thing for the Sweetenhams! That young
fellow's been obliged to give up the Army. Can't think what old
Sweetenham was about. He must have known his son was hit. I should
say Bethany himself was the only one in the dark. There's no doubt
Lady Rose was to blame!" Mr. Pendyce was speaking.

Mrs. Bellew smiled.

"My sympathies are all with Lady Rose. What do you say, George?"

George frowned.

"I always thought," he said, "that Bethany was an ass."

"George," said Mr. Pendyce, "is immoral. All young men are immoral.
I notice it more and more. You've given up your hunting, I hear."

Mrs. Bellew sighed.

"One can't hunt on next to nothing!"

"Ah, you live in London. London spoils everybody. People don't take
the interest in hunting and farming they used to. I can't get George
here at all. Not that I'm a believer in apron-strings. Young men
will be young men!"

Thus summing up the laws of Nature, the Squire resumed his knife and
fork.

But neither Mrs. Bellew nor George followed his example; the one sat
with her eyes fixed on her plate and a faint smile playing on her
lips, the other sat without a smile, and his eyes, in which there was
such a deep resentful longing, looked from his father to Mrs. Bellew,
and from Mrs. Bellew to his mother. And as though down that vista of
faces and fruits and flowers a secret current had been set flowing,
Mrs. Pendyce nodded gently to her son.




CHAPTER II

THE COVERT SHOOT

At the head of the breakfast-table sat Mr. Pendyce, eating
methodically. He was somewhat silent, as became a man who has just
read family prayers; but about that silence, and the pile of half-
opened letters on his right, was a hint of autocracy.

"Be informal--do what you like, dress as you like, sit where you
like, eat what you like, drink tea or coffee, but----" Each glance of
his eyes, each sentence of his sparing, semi-genial talk, seemed to
repeat that "but."

At the foot of the breakfast-table sat Mrs. Pendyce behind a silver
urn which emitted a gentle steam. Her hands worked without ceasing
amongst cups, and while they worked her lips worked too in spasmodic
utterances that never had any reference to herself. Pushed a little
to her left and entirely neglected, lay a piece of dry toast on a
small white plate. Twice she took it up, buttered a bit of it, and
put it down again. Once she rested, and her eyes, which fell on Mrs.
Bellow, seemed to say: "How very charming you look, my dear!" Then,
taking up the sugar-tongs, she began again.

On the long sideboard covered with a white cloth reposed a number of
edibles only to be found amongst that portion of the community which
breeds creatures for its own devouring. At one end of this row of
viands was a large game pie with a triangular gap in the pastry; at
the other, on two oval dishes, lay four cold partridges in various
stages of decomposition. Behind them a silver basket of openwork
design was occupied by three bunches of black, one bunch of white
grapes, and a silver grape-cutter, which performed no function (it
was so blunt), but had once belonged to a Totteridge and wore their
crest.

No servants were in the room, but the side-door was now and again
opened, and something brought in, and this suggested that behind the
door persons were collected, only waiting to be called upon. It was,
in fact, as though Mr. Pendyce had said: "A butler and two footmen at
least could hand you things, but this is a simple country house."

At times a male guest rose, napkin in hand, and said to a lady: "Can
I get you anything from the sideboard?" Being refused, he went and
filled his own plate. Three dogs--two fox-terriers and a decrepit
Skye circled round uneasily, smelling at the visitors' napkins. And
there went up a hum of talk in which sentences like these could be
distinguished: "Rippin' stand that, by the wood. D'you remember your
rockettin' woodcock last year, Jerry?" "And the dear old Squire
never touched a feather! Did you, Squire?" "Dick--Dick! Bad dog!--
come and do your tricks. Trust-trust! Paid for! Isn't he rather a
darling?"

On Mr. Pendyce's foot, or by the side of his chair, whence he could
see what was being eaten, sat the spaniel John, and now and then Mr.
Pendyce, taking a small portion of something between his finger and
thumb, would say:

"John!--Make a good breakfast, Sir James; I always say a half-
breakfasted man is no good!"

And Mrs. Pendyce, her eyebrows lifted, would look anxiously up and
down the table, murmuring: "Another cup, dear; let me see--are you
sugar?"

When all had finished a silence fell, as if each sought to get away
from what he had been eating, as if each felt he had been engaged in
an unworthy practice; then Mr. Pendyce, finishing his last grape,
wiped his mouth.

"You've a quarter of an hour, gentlemen; we start at ten-fifteen."

Mrs. Pendyce, left seated with a vague, ironical smile, ate one
mouthful of her buttered toast, now very old and leathery, gave the
rest to "the dear dogs," and called:

"George! You want a new shooting tie, dear boy; that green one's
quite faded. I've been meaning to get some silks down for ages.
Have you had any news of your horse this morning?"

"Yes, Blacksmith says he's fit as a fiddle."

"I do so hope he'll win that race for you. Your Uncle Hubert once
lost four thousand pounds over the Rutlandshire. I remember
perfectly; my father had to pay it. I'm so glad you don't bet, dear
boy!"

"My dear mother, I do bet."

"Oh, George, I hope not much! For goodness' sake, don't tell your
father; he's like all the Pendyces, can't bear a risk."

"My dear mother, I'm not likely to; but, as a matter of fact, there
is no risk. I stand to win a lot of money to nothing."

"But, George, is that right?"

"Of course it's all right."

"Oh, well, I don't understand." Mrs. Pendyce dropped her eyes, a
flush came into her white cheeks; she looked up again and said
quickly: "George, I should like just a little bet on your horse--a
real bet, say about a sovereign."

George Pendyce's creed permitted the show of no emotion. He smiled.

"All right, mother, I'll put it on for you. It'll be about eight to
one."

"Does that mean that if he wins I shall get eight?"

George nodded.

Mrs. Pendyce looked abstractedly at his tie.

"I think it might be two sovereigns; one seems very little to lose,
because I do so want him to win. Isn't Helen Bellew perfectly
charming this morning! It's delightful to see a woman look her best
in the morning."

George turned, to hide the colour in his cheeks.

"She looks fresh enough, certainly."

Mrs. Pendyce glanced up at him; there was a touch of quizzicality in
one of her lifted eyebrows.

"I mustn't keep you, dear; you'll be late for the shooting."

Mr. Pendyce, a sportsman of the old school, who still kept pointers,
which, in the teeth of modern fashion, he was unable to employ, set
his face against the use of two guns.

"Any man," he would say, "who cares to shoot at Worsted Skeynes must
do with one gun, as my dear old father had to do before me. He'll
get a good day's sport--no barndoor birds" (for he encouraged his
pheasants to remain lean, that they might fly the better), "but don't
let him expect one of these battues--sheer butchery, I call them."

He was excessively fond of birds--it was, in fact, his hobby, and he
had collected under glass cases a prodigious number of specimens of
those species which are in danger of becoming extinct, having really,
in some Pendycean sort of way, a feeling that by this practice he was
doing them a good turn, championing them, as it were, to a world that
would soon be unable to look upon them in the flesh. He wished, too,
that his collection should become an integral part of the estate, and
be passed on to his son, and his son's son after him.

"Look at this Dartford Warbler," he would say; "beautiful little
creature--getting rarer every day. I had the greatest difficulty in
procuring this specimen. You wouldn't believe me if I told you what
I had to pay for him!"

Some of his unique birds he had shot himself, having in his youth
made expeditions to foreign countries solely with this object, but
the great majority he had been compelled to purchase. In his library
were row upon row of books carefully arranged and bearing on this
fascinating subject; and his collection of rare, almost extinct,
birds' eggs was one of the finest in the "three kingdoms." One egg
especially he would point to with pride as the last obtainable of
that particular breed. "This was procured," he would say, "by my
dear old gillie Angus out of the bird's very nest. There was just
the single egg. The species," he added, tenderly handling the
delicate, porcelain-like oval in his brown hand covered with very
fine, blackish hairs, "is now extinct." He was, in fact, a true
bird-lover, strongly condemning cockneys, or rough, ignorant persons
who, with no collections of their own, wantonly destroyed
kingfishers, or scarce birds of any sort, out of pure stupidity.
"I would have them flogged," he would say, for he believed that no
such bird should be killed except on commission, and for choice--
barring such extreme cases as that Dartford Warbler--in some foreign
country or remoter part of the British Isles. It was indeed
illustrative of Mr. Pendyce's character and whole point of view that
whenever a rare, winged stranger appeared on his own estate it was
talked of as an event, and preserved alive with the greatest care, in
the hope that it might breed and be handed down with the property;
but if it were personally known to belong to Mr. Fuller or Lord
Quarryman, whose estates abutted on Worsted Skeynes, and there was
grave and imminent danger of its going back, it was promptly shot and
stuffed, that it might not be lost to posterity. An encounter with
another landowner having the same hobby, of whom there were several
in his neighbourhood, would upset him for a week, making him
strangely morose, and he would at once redouble his efforts to add
something rarer than ever to his own collection.

His arrangements for shooting were precisely conceived. Little slips
of paper with the names of the "guns" written thereon were placed in
a hat, and one by one drawn out again, and this he always did
himself. Behind the right wing of the house he held a review of the
beaters, who filed before him out of the yard, each with a long stick
in his hand, and no expression on his face. Five minutes of
directions to the keeper, and then the guns started, carrying their
own weapons and a sufficiency of cartridges for the first drive in
the old way.

A misty radiance clung over the grass as the sun dried the heavy dew;
the thrushes hopped and ran and hid themselves, the rooks cawed
peacefully in the old elms. At an angle the game cart, constructed
on Mr. Pendyce's own pattern, and drawn by a hairy horse in charge of
an aged man, made its way slowly to the end of the first beat:

George lagged behind, his hands deep in his pockets, drinking in the
joy of the tranquil day, the soft bird sounds, so clear and friendly,
that chorus of wild life. The scent of the coverts stole to him, and
he thought:

'What a ripping day for shooting!'

The Squire, wearing a suit carefully coloured so that no bird should
see him, leather leggings, and a cloth helmet of his own devising,
ventilated by many little holes, came up to his son; and the spaniel
John, who had a passion for the collection of birds almost equal to
his master's, came up too.

"You're end gun, George," he said; "you'll get a nice high bird!"

George felt the ground with his feet, and blew a speck of dust off
his barrels, and the smell of the oil sent a delicious tremor darting
through him. Everything, even Helen Bellew, was forgotten. Then in
the silence rose a far-off clamour; a cock pheasant, skimming low,
his plumage silken in the sun, dived out of the green and golden
spinney, curled to the right, and was lost in undergrowth. Some
pigeons passed over at a great height. The tap-tap of sticks beating
against trees began; then with a fitful rushing noise a pheasant came
straight out. George threw up his gun and pulled. The bird stopped
in mid-air, jerked forward, and fell headlong into the grass sods
with a thud. In the sunlight the dead bird lay, and a smirk of
triumph played on George's lips. He was feeling the joy of life.

During his covert shoots the Squire had the habit of recording his
impressions in a mental note-book. He put special marks against such
as missed, or shot birds behind the waist, or placed lead in them to
the detriment of their market value, or broke only one leg of a hare
at a time, causing the animal to cry like a tortured child, which
some men do not like; or such as, anxious for fame, claimed dead
creatures that they had not shot, or peopled the next beat with
imaginary slain, or too frequently "wiped an important neighbour's
eye," or shot too many beaters in the legs. Against this evidence,
however, he unconsciously weighed the more undeniable social facts,
such as the title of Winlow's father; Sir James Malden's coverts,
which must also presently be shot; Thomas Brandwhite's position in
the financial world; General Pendyce's relationship to himself; and
the importance of the English Church. Against Foxleigh alone he
could put no marks. The fellow destroyed everything that came within
reach with utter precision, and this was perhaps fortunate, for
Foxleigh had neither title, coverts, position, nor cloth! And the
Squire weighed one thing else besides--the pleasure of giving them
all a good day's sport, for his heart was kind.

The sun had fallen well behind the home wood when the guns stood
waiting for the last drive of the day. From the keeper's cottage in
the hollow, where late threads of crimson clung in the brown network
of Virginia creeper, rose a mist of wood smoke, dispersed upon the
breeze. Sound there was none, only that faint stir--the far, far
callings of men and beasts and birds--that never quite dies of a
country evening. High above the wood some startled pigeons were
still wheeling, no other life in sight; but a gleam of sunlight stole
down the side of the covert and laid a burnish on the turned leaves
till the whole wood seemed quivering with magic. Out of that
quivering wood a wounded rabbit had stolen and was dying. It lay on
its side on the slope of a tussock of grass, its hind legs drawn
under it, its forelegs raised like the hands of a praying child.
Motionless as death, all its remaining life was centred in its black
soft eyes. Uncomplaining, ungrudging, unknowing, with that poor soft
wandering eye, it was going back to Mother Earth. There Foxleigh,
too, some day must go, asking of Nature why she had murdered him.




CHAPTER III

THE BLISSFUL HOUR

It was the hour between tea and dinner, when the spirit of the
country house was resting, conscious of its virtue, half asleep.

Having bathed and changed, George Pendyce took his betting-book into
the smoking-room. In a nook devoted to literature, protected from
draught and intrusion by a high leather screen, he sat down in an
armchair and fell into a doze.

With legs crossed, his chin resting on one hand, his comely figure
relaxed, he exhaled a fragrance of soap, as though in this perfect
peace his soul were giving off its natural odour. His spirit, on the
borderland of dreams, trembled with those faint stirrings of chivalry
and aspiration, the outcome of physical well-being after a long day
in the open air, the outcome of security from all that is unpleasant
and fraught with danger. He was awakened by voices.

"George is not a bad shot!"

"Gave a shocking exhibition at the last stand; Mrs. Bellew was with
him. They were going over him like smoke; he couldn't touch a
feather."

It was Winlow's voice. A silence, then Thomas Brandwhite's:

"A mistake, the ladies coming out. I never will have them myself.
What do you say, Sir James?"

"Bad principle--very bad!"

A laugh--Thomas Brandwhite's laugh, the laugh of a man never quite
sure of himself.

"That fellow Bellew is a cracked chap. They call him the 'desperate
character' about here. Drinks like a fish, and rides like the devil.
She used to go pretty hard, too. I've noticed there's always a
couple like that in a hunting country. Did you ever see him? Thin,
high-shouldered, white-faced chap, with little dark eyes and a red
moustache."

"She's still a young woman?"

"Thirty or thirty-two."

"How was it they didn't get on?"

The sound of a match being struck.

"Case of the kettle and the pot."

"It's easy to see she's fond of admiration. Love of admiration plays
old Harry with women!"

Winlow's leisurely tones again

"There was a child, I believe, and it died. And after that--I know
there was some story; you never could get to the bottom of it.
Bellew chucked his regiment in consequence. She's subject to moods,
they say, when nothing's exciting enough; must skate on thin ice,
must have a man skating after her. If the poor devil weighs more
than she does, in he goes."

"That's like her father, old Cheriton. I knew him at the club--one
of the old sort of squires; married his second wife at sixty and
buried her at eighty. Old 'Claret and Piquet,' they called him; had
more children under the rose than any man in Devonshire. I saw him
playing half-crown points the week before he died. It's in the
blood. What's George's weight?--ah, ha!"

"It's no laughing matter, Brandwhite. There's time for a hundred up
before dinner if you care for a game, Winlow?"

The sound of chairs drawn back, of footsteps, and the closing of a
door. George was alone again, a spot of red in either of his cheeks.
Those vague stirrings of chivalry and aspiration were gone, and gone
that sense of well-earned ease. He got up, came out of his corner,
and walked to and fro on the tiger-skin before the fire. He lit a
cigarette, threw it away, and lit another.

Skating on thin ice! That would not stop him! Their gossip would
not stop him, nor their sneers; they would but send him on the
faster!

He threw away the second cigarette. It was strange for him to go to
the drawing-room at this hour of the day, but he went.

Opening the door quietly, he saw the long, pleasant room lighted with
tall oil-lamps, and Mrs. Bellew seated at the piano, singing. The
tea-things were still on a table at one end, but every one had
finished. As far away as might be, in the embrasure of the bay-
window, General Pendyce and Bee were playing chess. Grouped in the
centre of the room, by one of the lamps, Lady Maiden, Mrs. Winlow,
and Mrs. Brandwhite had turned their faces towards the piano, and a
sort of slight unwillingness or surprise showed on those faces, a
sort of "We were having a most interesting talk; I don't think we
ought to have been stopped" expression.

Before the fire, with his long legs outstretched, stood Gerald
Pendyce. And a little apart, her dark eyes fixed on the singer, and
a piece of embroidery in her lap, sat Mrs. Pendyce, on the edge of
whose skirt lay Roy, the old Skye terrier.

"But had I wist, before I lost,
That love had been sae ill to win;
I had lockt my heart in a case of gowd
And pinn'd it with a siller pin....
O waly! waly! but love be bonny
A little time while it is new,
But when 'tis auld, it waxeth cauld,
And fades awa' like morning dew!"

This was the song George heard, trembling and dying to the chords of
the fine piano that was a little out of tune.

He gazed at the singer, and though he was not musical, there came a
look into his eyes that he quickly hid away.

A slight murmur occurred in the centre of the room, and from the
fireplace Gerald called out, "Thanks; that's rippin!"

The voice of General Pendyce rose in the bay-window: "Check!"

Mrs. Pendyce, taking up her embroidery, on which a tear had dropped,
said gently:

"Thank you, dear; most charming!"

Mrs. Bellew left the piano, and sat down beside her. George moved
into the bay-window. He knew nothing of chess-indeed, he could not
stand the game; but from here, without attracting attention, he could
watch Mrs. Bellew.

The air was drowsy and sweet-scented; a log of cedarwood had just
been put on the fire; the voices of his mother and Mrs. Bellew,
talking of what he could not hear, the voices of Lady Malden, Mrs.
Brandwhite, and Gerald, discussing some neighbours, of Mrs. Winlow
dissenting or assenting in turn, all mingled in a comfortable, sleepy
sound, clipped now and then by the voice of General Pendyce calling,
"Check!" and of Bee saying, "Oh, uncle!"

A feeling of rage rose in George. Why should they all be so
comfortable and cosy while this perpetual fire was burning in
himself? And he fastened his moody eyes on her who was keeping him
thus dancing to her pipes.

He made an awkward movement which shook the chess-table. The General
said behind him: "Look out, George! What--what!"

George went up to his mother.

"Let's have a look at that, Mother."

Mrs. Pendyce leaned back in her chair and handed up her work with a
smile of pleased surprise.

"My dear boy, you won't understand it a bit. It's for the front of
my new frock."

George took the piece of work. He did not understand it, but turning
and twisting it he could breathe the warmth of the woman he loved.
In bending over the embroidery he touched Mrs. Bellew's shoulder; it
was not drawn away, a faint pressure seemed to answer his own. His
mother's voice recalled him:

"Oh, my needle, dear! It's so sweet of you, but perhaps"

George handed back the embroidery. Mrs. Pendyce received it with a
grateful look. It was the first time he had ever shown an interest
in her work.

Mrs. Bellew had taken up a palm-leaf fan to screen her face from the
fire. She said slowly:

"If we win to-morrow I'll embroider you something, George."

"And if we lose?"

Mrs. Bellew raised her eyes, and involuntarily George moved so that
his mother could not see the sort of slow mesmerism that was in them.

"If we lose," she said, "I shall sink into the earth. We must win,
George."

He gave an uneasy little laugh, and glanced quickly at his mother.
Mrs. Pendyce had begun to draw her needle in and out with a half-
startled look on her face.

"That's a most haunting little song you sang, dear," she said.

Mrs. Bellew answered: "The words are so true, aren't they?"

George felt her eyes on him, and tried to look at her, but those
half-smiling, half-threatening eyes seemed to twist and turn him
about as his hands had twisted and turned about his mother's
embroidery. Again across Mrs. Pendyce's face flitted that half-
startled look.

Suddenly General Pendyce's voice was heard saying very loud, "Stale?
Nonsense, Bee, nonsense! Why, damme, so it is!"

A hum of voices from the centre of the room covered up that outburst,
and Gerald, stepping to the hearth, threw another cedar log upon the
fire. The smoke came out in a puff.

Mrs. Pendyce leaned back in her chair smiling, and wrinkling her
fine, thin nose.

"Delicious!" she said, but her eyes did not leave her son's face, and
in them was still that vague alarm.




CHAPTER IV

THE HAPPY HUNTING-GROUND

Of all the places where, by a judicious admixture of whip and spur,
oats and whisky, horses are caused to place one leg before another
with unnecessary rapidity, in order that men may exchange little
pieces of metal with the greater freedom, Newmarket Heath is "the
topmost, and merriest, and best."

This museum of the state of flux--the secret reason of horse-racing
being to afford an example of perpetual motion (no proper racing-man
having ever been found to regard either gains or losses in the light
of an accomplished fact)--this museum of the state of flux has a
climate unrivalled for the production of the British temperament.

Not without a due proportion of that essential formative of
character, east wind, it has at once the hottest sun, the coldest
blizzards, the wettest rain, of any place of its size in the "three
kingdoms." It tends--in advance even of the City of London--to the
nurture and improvement of individualism, to that desirable "I'll see
you d---d" state of mind which is the proud objective of every
Englishman, and especially of every country gentleman. In a word--a
mother to the self-reliant secretiveness which defies intrusion and
forms an integral part in the Christianity of this country--Newmarket
Heath is beyond all others the happy hunting-ground of the landed
classes.

In the Paddock half an hour before the Rutlandshire Handicap was to
be run numbers of racing-men were gathered in little knots of two and
three, describing to each other with every precaution the points of
strength in the horses they had laid against, the points of weakness
in the horses they had backed, or vice versa, together with the
latest discrepancies of their trainers and jockeys. At the far end
George Pendyce, his trainer Blacksmith, and his jockey Swells, were
talking in low tones. Many people have observed with surprise the
close-buttoned secrecy of all who have to do with horses. It is no
matter for wonder. The horse is one of those generous and somewhat
careless animals that, if not taken firmly from the first, will
surely give itself away. Essential to a man who has to do with
horses is a complete closeness of physiognomy, otherwise the animal
will never know what is expected of him. The more that is expected
of him, the closer must be the expression of his friends, or a grave
fiasco may have to be deplored.

It was for these reasons that George's face wore more than its
habitual composure, and the faces of his trainer and his jockey were
alert, determined, and expressionless. Blacksmith, a little man, had
in his hand a short notched cane, with which, contrary to
expectation, he did not switch his legs. His eyelids drooped over
his shrewd eyes, his upper lip advanced over the lower, and he wore
no hair on his face. The Jockey Swells' pinched-up countenance, with
jutting eyebrows and practically no cheeks, had under George's
racing-cap of "peacock blue" a subfusc hue like that of old
furniture.

The Ambler had been bought out of the stud of Colonel Dorking, a man
opposed on high grounds to the racing of two-year-olds, and at the
age of three had never run. Showing more than a suspicion of form in
one or two home trials, he ran a bye in the Fane Stakes, when
obviously not up to the mark, and was then withdrawn from the public
gaze. The Stable had from the start kept its eye on the Rutlandshire
Handicap, and no sooner was Goodwood over than the commission was
placed in the hands of Barney's, well known for their power to enlist
at the most appropriate moment the sympathy of the public in a
horse's favour. Almost coincidentally with the completion of the
Stable Commission it was found that the public were determined to
support the Ambler at any price over seven to one. Barney's at once
proceeded judiciously to lay off the Stable Money, and this having
been done, George found that he stood to win four thousand pounds to
nothing. If he had now chosen to bet this sum against the horse at
the then current price of eight to one, it is obvious that he could
have made an absolute certainty of five hundred pounds, and the horse
need never even have started. But George, who would have been glad
enough of such a sum, was not the man to do this sort of thing. It
was against the tenets of his creed. He believed, too, in his horse;
and had enough of the Totteridge in him to like a race for a race's
sake. Even when beaten there was enjoyment to be had out of the
imperturbability with which he could take that beating, out of a
sense of superiority to men not quite so sportsmanlike as himself.

"Come and see the nag saddled," he said to his brother Gerald.

In one of the long line of boxes the Ambler was awaiting his
toilette, a dark-brown horse, about sixteen hands, with well-placed
shoulders, straight hocks, a small head, and what is known as a rat-
tail. But of all his features, the most remarkable was his eye. In
the depths of that full, soft eye was an almost uncanny gleam, and
when he turned it, half-circled by a moon of white, and gave
bystanders that look of strange comprehension, they felt that he saw
to the bottom of all this that was going on around him. He was still
but three years old, and had not yet attained the age when people
apply to action the fruits of understanding; yet there was little
doubt that as he advanced in years he would manifest his disapproval
of a system whereby men made money at his expense. And with that eye
half-circled by the moon he looked at George, and in silence George
looked back at him, strangely baffled by the horse's long, soft, wild
gaze. On this heart beating deep within its warm, dark satin sheath,
on the spirit gazing through that soft, wild eye, too much was
hanging, and he turned away.

"Mount, jockeys!"

Through the crowd of hard-looking, hatted, muffled, two-legged men,
those four-legged creatures in their chestnut, bay, and brown, and
satin nakedness, most beautiful in all the world, filed proudly past,
as though going forth to death. The last vanished through the gate,
the crowd dispersed.

Down by the rails of Tattersall's George stood alone. He had screwed
himself into a corner, whence he could watch through his long glasses
that gay-coloured, shifting wheel at the end of the mile and more of
turf. At this moment, so pregnant with the future, he could not bear
the company of his fellows.

"They're off!"

He looked no longer, but hunched his shoulders, holding his elbows
stiff, that none might see what he was feeling. Behind him a man
said:

"The favourite's beat. What's that in blue on the rails?"

Out by himself on the far rails, out by himself, sweeping along like
a home-coming bird, was the Ambler. And George's heart leaped, as a
fish leaps of a summer evening out of a dark pool.

"They'll never catch him. The Ambler wins! It's a walk-over! The
Ambler!"

Silent amidst the shouting throng, George thought: 'My horse! my
horse!' and tears of pure emotion sprang into his eyes. For a full
minute he stood quite still; then, instinctively adjusting hat and
tie, made his way calmly to the Paddock. He left it to his trainer
to lead the Ambler back, and joined him at the weighing-room.

The little jockey was seated, nursing his saddle, negligent and
saturnine, awaiting the words "All right."

Blacksmith said quietly:

"Well, sir, we've pulled it off. Four lengths. I've told Swells he
does no more riding for me. There's a gold-mine given away. What on
earth was he about to come in by himself like that? We shan't get
into the 'City' now under nine stone. It's enough to make a man
cry!"

And, looking at his trainer, George saw the little man's lips quiver.

In his stall, streaked with sweat, his hind-legs outstretched,
fretting under the ministrations of the groom, the Ambler stayed the
whisking of his head to look at his owner, and once more George met
that long, proud, soft glance. He laid his gloved hand on the
horse's lather-flecked neck. The Ambler tossed his head and turned
it away.

George came out into the open, and made his way towards the Stand.
His trainer's words had instilled a drop of poison into his cup. "A
goldmine given away!"

He went up to Swells. On his lips were the words: "What made you
give the show away like that?" He did not speak them, for in his
soul he felt it would not become him to ask his jockey why he had not
dissembled and won by a length. But the little jockey understood at
once.

"Mr. Blacksmith's been at me, sir. You take my tip: he's a queer
one, that 'orse. I thought it best to let him run his own race.
Mark my words, be knows what's what. When they're like that, they're
best let alone."

A voice behind him said:

"Well, George, congratulate you! Not the way I should have ridden
the race myself. He should have lain off to the distance.
Remarkable turn of speed that horse. There's no riding nowadays!"

The Squire and General Pendyce were standing there. Erect and slim,
unlike and yet so very much alike, the eyes of both of them seemed
saying:

'I shall differ from you; there are no two opinions about it. I
shall differ from you!'

Behind them stood Mrs. Bellew. Her eyes could not keep still under
their lashes, and their light and colour changed continually. George
walked on slowly at her side. There was a look of triumph and
softness about her; the colour kept deepening in her cheeks, her
figure swayed. They did not look at each other.

Against the Paddock railings stood a man in riding-clothes, of spare
figure, with a horseman's square, high shoulders, and thin long legs
a trifle bowed. His narrow, thin-lipped, freckled face, with close-
cropped sandy hair and clipped red moustache, was of a strange dead
pallor. He followed the figures of George and his companion with
little fiery dark-brown eyes, in which devils seemed to dance.
Someone tapped him on the arm.

"Hallo, Bellew! had a good race?"

"Devil take you, no! Come and have a drink?"

Still without looking at each other, George and Mrs. Bellew walked
towards the gate.

"I don't want to see any more," she said. "I should like to get away
at once."

"We'll go after this race," said George. "There's nothing running in
the last."

At the back of the Grand Stand, in the midst of all the hurrying
crowd, he stopped.

"Helen?" he said.

Mrs. Bellew raised her eyes and looked full into his.

Long and cross-country is the drive from Royston Railway Station to
Worsted Skeynes. To George Pendyce, driving the dog cart, with Helen
Bellew beside him, it seemed but a minute--that strange minute when
the heaven is opened and a vision shows between. To some men that
vision comes but once, to some men many times. It comes after long
winter, when the blossom hangs; it comes after parched summer, when
the leaves are going gold; and of what hues it is painted--of frost-
white and fire, of wine and purple, of mountain flowers, or the
shadowy green of still deep pools--the seer alone can tell. But this
is certain--the vision steals from him who looks on it all images of
other things, all sense of law, of order, of the living past, and the
living present. It is the future, fair-scented, singing, jewelled,
as when suddenly between high banks a bough of apple-blossom hangs
quivering in the wind loud with the song of bees.

George Pendyce gazed before him at this vision over the grey mare's
back, and she who sat beside him muffled in her fur was touching his
arm with hers. And back to them the second groom, hugging himself
above the road that slipped away beneath, saw another kind of vision,
for he had won five pounds, and his eyes were closed. And the grey
mare saw a vision of her warm light stall, and the oats dropping
between her manger bars, and fled with light hoofs along the lanes
where the side-lamps shot two moving gleams over dark beech-hedges
that rustled crisply in the northeast wind. Again and again she
sneezed in the pleasure of that homeward flight, and the light foam
of her nostrils flicked the faces of those behind. And they sat
silent, thrilling at the touch of each other's arms, their cheeks
glowing in the windy darkness, their eyes shining and fixed before
them.

The second groom awoke suddenly from his dream.

"If I owned that 'orse, like Mr. George, and had such a topper as
this 'ere Mrs. Bellew beside me, would I be sittin' there without a
word?"




CHAPTER V

MRS. PENDYCE'S DANCE

Mrs. Pendyce believed in the practice of assembling county society
for the purpose of inducing it to dance, a hardy enterprise in a
county where the souls, and incidentally the feet, of the inhabitants
were shaped for more solid pursuits. Men were her chief difficulty,
for in spite of really national discouragement, it was rare to find a
girl who was not "fond of dancing."

"Ah, dancing; I did so love it! Oh, poor Cecil Tharp!" And with a
queer little smile she pointed to a strapping red-faced youth dancing
with her daughter. "He nearly trips Bee up every minute, and he hugs
her so, as if he were afraid of falling on his head. Oh, dear, what
a bump! It's lucky she's so nice and solid. I like to see the dear
boy. Here come George and Helen Bellew. Poor George is not quite up
to her form, but he's better than most of them. Doesn't she look
lovely this evening?"

Lady Maiden raised her glasses to her eyes by the aid of a tortoise-
shell handle.

"Yes, but she's one of those women you never can look at without
seeing that she has a--a--body. She's too-too--d'you see what I
mean? It's almost--almost like a Frenchwoman!"

Mrs. Bellew had passed so close that the skirt of her seagreen dress
brushed their feet with a swish, and a scent as of a flower-bed was
wafted from it. Mrs. Pendyce wrinkled her nose.

"Much nicer. Her figure's so delicious," she said.

Lady Maiden pondered.

"She's a dangerous woman. James quite agrees with me."

Mrs. Pendyce raised her eyebrows; there was a touch of scorn in that
gentle gesture.

"She's a very distant cousin of mine," she said. "Her father was
quite a wonderful man. It's an old Devonshire family. The Cheritons
of Bovey are mentioned in Twisdom. I like young people to enjoy.
themselves."

A smile illumined softly the fine wrinkles round her eyes. Beneath
her lavender satin bodice, with strips of black velvet banding it at
intervals, her heart was beating faster than usual. She was thinking
of a night in her youth, when her old playfellow, young Trefane of
the Blues, danced with her nearly all the evening, and of how at her
window she saw the sun rise, and gently wept because she was married
to Horace Pendyce.

"I always feel sorry for a woman who can dance as she does. I should
have liked to have got some men from town, but Horace will only have
the county people. It's not fair to the girls. It isn't so much
their dancing, as their conversation--all about the first meet, and
yesterday's cubbing, and to-morrow's covert-shooting, and their fox-
terriers (though I'm awfully fond of the dear dogs), and then that
new golf course. Really, it's quite distressing to me at times."
Again Mrs. Pendyce looked out into the room with her patient smile,
and two little lines of wrinkles formed across her forehead between
the regular arching of her eyebrows that were still dark-brown.
"They don't seem able to be gay. I feel they don't really care about
it. They're only just waiting till to-morrow morning, so that they
can go out and kill something. Even Bee's like that!"

Mrs. Pendyce was not exaggerating. The guests at Worsted Skeynes on
the night of the Rutlandshire Handicap were nearly all county people,
from the Hon. Gertrude Winlow, revolving like a faintly coloured
statue, to young Tharp, with his clean face and his fair bullety
head, who danced as though he were riding at a bullfinch. In a niche
old Lord Quarryman, the Master of the Gaddesdon, could be discerned
in conversation with Sir James Malden and the Reverend Hussell
Barter.

Mrs. Pendyce said:

"Your husband and Lord Quarryman are talking of poachers; I can tell
that by the look of their hands. I can't help sympathising a little
with poachers."

Lady Malden dropped her eyeglasses.

"James takes a very just view of them," she said. "It's such an
insidious offence. The more insidious the offence the more important
it is to check it. It seems hard to punish people for stealing bread
or turnips, though one must, of course; but I've no sympathy with
poachers. So many of them do it for sheer love of sport!"

Mrs. Pendyce answered:

"That's Captain Maydew dancing with her now. He is a good dancer.
Don't their steps fit? Don't they look happy? I do like people to
enjoy themselves! There is such a dreadful lot of unnecessary
sadness and suffering in the world. I think it's really all because
people won't make allowances for each other."

Lady Malden looked at her sideways, pursing her lips; but Mrs.
Pendyce, by race a Totteridge, continued to smile. She had been born
unconscious of her neighbours' scrutinies.

"Helen Bellew," she said, "was such a lovely girl. Her grandfather
was my mother's cousin. What does that make her? Anyway, my cousin,
Gregory Vigil, is her first cousin once removed--the Hampshire
Vigils. Do you know him?"

Lady Malden answered:

"Gregory Vigil? The man with a lot of greyish hair? I've had to do
with him in the S.R.W.C."

But Mrs. Pendyce was dancing mentally.

"Such a good fellow! What is that--the----?"

Lady Malden gave her a sharp look.

"Society for the Rescue of Women and Children, of course. Surely you
know about that?"

Mrs. Pendyce continued to smile.

"Ah, yes, that is nice! What a beautiful figure she has! It's so
refreshing. I envy a woman with a figure like that; it looks as if
it would never grow old. 'Society for the Regeneration of Women'?
Gregory's so good about that sort of thing. But he never seems quite
successful, have you noticed? There was a woman he was very
interested in this spring. I think she drank."

"They all do," said Lady Malden; "it's the curse of the day."

Mrs. Pendyce wrinkled her forehead.

"Most of the Totteridges," she said, "were great drinkers. They
ruined their constitutions. Do you know Jaspar Bellew?"

"No."

"It's such a pity he drinks. He came to dinner here once, and I'm
afraid he must have come intoxicated. He took me in; his little eyes
quite burned me up. He drove his dog cart into a ditch on the way
home. That sort of thing gets about so. It's such a pity. He's
quite interesting. Horace can't stand him."

The music of the waltz had ceased. Lady Maiden put her glasses to
her eyes. From close beside them George and Mrs. Bellew passed by.
They moved on out of hearing, but the breeze of her fan had touched
the arching hair on Lady Maiden's forehead, the down on her upper
lip.

"Why isn't she with her husband?" she asked abruptly.

Mrs. Pendyce lifted her brows.

"Do you concern yourself to ask that which a well-bred woman leaves
unanswered?" she seemed to say, and a flush coloured her cheeks.

Lady Maiden winced, but, as though it were forced through her mouth
by some explosion in her soul, she said:

"You have only to look and see how dangerous she is!"

The colour in Mrs. Pendyce's cheeks deepened to a blush like a
girl's.

"Every man," she said, "is in love with Helen Bellew. She's so
tremendously alive. My cousin Gregory has been in love with her for
years, though he is her guardian or trustee, or whatever they call
them now. It's quite romantic. If I were a man I should be in love
with her myself." The flush vanished and left her cheeks to their
true colour, that of a faded rose.

Once more she was listening to the voice of young Trefane, "Ah,
Margery, I love you!"--to her own half whispered answer, "Poor boy!"
Once more she was looking back through that forest of her life where
she had wandered so long, and where every tree was Horace Pendyce.

"What a pity one can't always be young!" she said.

Through the conservatory door, wide open to the lawn, a full moon
flooded the country with pale gold light, and in that light the
branches of the cedar-trees seemed printed black on the grey-blue
paper of the sky; all was cold, still witchery out there, and not
very far away an owl was hooting.

The Reverend Husell Barter, about to enter the conservatory for a
breath of air, was arrested by the sight of a couple half-hidden by a
bushy plant; side by side they were looking at the moonlight, and he
knew them for Mrs. Bellew and George Pendyce. Before he could either
enter or retire, he saw George seize her in his arms. She seemed to
bend her head back, then bring her face to his. The moonlight fell
on it, and on the full, white curve of her neck. The Rector of
Worsted Skeynes saw, too, that her eyes were closed, her lips parted.




CHAPTER VI

INFLUENCE OF THE REVEREND HUSSELL BARTER

Along the walls of the smoking-room, above a leather dado, were
prints of horsemen in night-shirts and nightcaps, or horsemen in red
coats and top-hats, with words underneath such as:

"'Yeoicks' says Thruster; 'Yeoicks' says Dick.
'My word! these d---d Quornites shall now see the trick!'"

Two pairs of antlers surmounted the hearth, mementoes of Mr.
Pendyce's deer-forest, Strathbegally, now given up, where, with the
assistance of his dear old gillie Angus McBane, he had secured the
heads of these monarchs of the glen. Between them was the print of a
personage in trousers, with a rifle under his arm and a smile on his
lips, while two large deerhounds worried a dying stag, and a lady
approached him on a pony.

The Squire and Sir James Malden had retired; the remaining guests
were seated round the fire. Gerald Pendyce stood at a side-table, on
which was a tray of decanters, glasses, and mineral water.

"Who's for a dhrop of the craythur? A wee dhrop of the craythur?
Rector, a dhrop of the craythur? George, a dhrop--"

George shook his head. A smile was on his lips, and that smile had
in it a quality of remoteness, as though it belonged to another
sphere, and had strayed on to the lips of this man of the world
against his will. He seemed trying to conquer it, to twist his face
into its habitual shape, but, like the spirit of a strange force, the
smile broke through. It had mastered him, his thoughts, his habits,
and his creed; he was stripped of fashion, as on a thirsty noon a man
stands stripped for a cool plunge from which he hardly cares if he
come up again.

And this smile, not by intrinsic merit, but by virtue of its
strangeness, attracted the eye of each man in the room; so, in a
crowd, the most foreign-looking face will draw all glances.

The Reverend Husell Barter with a frown watched that smile, and
strange thoughts chased through his mind.

"Uncle Charles, a dhrop of the craythur a wee dhrop of the craythur?"

General Pendyce caressed his whisker.

"The least touch," he said, "the least touch! I hear that our friend
Sir Percival is going to stand again."

Mr. Barter rose and placed his back before the fire.

"Outrageous!" he said. "He ought to be told at once that we can't
have him."

The Hon. Geoffrey Winlow answered from his chair:

"If he puts up, he'll get in; they can't afford to lose him." And
with a leisurely puff of smoke: "I must say, sir, I don't quite see
what it has to do with his public life."

Mr. Barter thrust forth his lower lip.

"An impenitent man," he said.

"But a woman like that! What chance has a fellow if she once gets
hold of him?"

"When I was stationed at Halifax," began General Pendyce, "she was
the belle of the place---"

Again Mr. Barter thrust out his lower lip.

"Don't let's talk of her---the jade!" Then suddenly to George:
"Let's hear your opinion, George. Dreaming of your victories, eh?"
And the tone of his voice was peculiar.

But George got up.

"I'm too sleepy," he said; "good-night." Curtly nodding, he left the
room.

Outside the door stood a dark oak table covered with silver
candlesticks; a single candle burned thereon, and made a thin gold
path in the velvet blackness. George lighted his candle, and a
second gold path leaped out in front; up this he began to ascend. He
carried his candle at the level of his breast, and the light shone
sideways and up over his white shirt-front and the comely, bulldog
face above it. It shone, too, into his eyes, 'grey and slightly
bloodshot, as though their surfaces concealed passions violently
struggling for expression. At the turning platform of the stair he
paused. In darkness above and in darkness below the country house
was still; all the little life of its day, its petty sounds,
movements, comings, goings, its very breathing, seemed to have fallen
into sleep. The forces of its life had gathered into that pool of
light where George stood listening. The beating of his heart was the
only sound; in that small sound was all the pulse of this great
slumbering space. He stood there long, motionless, listening to the
beating of his heart, like a man fallen into a trance. Then floating
up through the darkness came the echo of a laugh. George started.
"The d----d parson!" he muttered, and turned up the stairs again;
but now he moved like a man with a purpose, and held his candle high
so that the light fell far out into the darkness. He went beyond his
own room, and stood still again. The light of the candle showed
the blood flushing his forehead, beating and pulsing in the veins at
the side of his temples; showed, too, his lips quivering, his shaking
hand. He stretched out that hand and touched the handle of a door,
then stood again like a man of stone, listening for the laugh. He
raised the candle, and it shone into every nook; his throat clicked,
as though he found it hard to swallow....


It was at Barnard Scrolls, the next station to Worsted Skeynes, on
the following afternoon, that a young man entered a first-class
compartment of the 3.10 train to town. The young man wore a
Newmarket coat, natty white gloves, and carried an eyeglass. His
face was well coloured, his chestnut moustache well brushed, and his
blue eyes with their loving expression seemed to say, "Look at me--
come, look at me--can anyone be better fed?" His valise and hat-box,
of the best leather, bore the inscription, "E. Maydew, 8th Lancers."

There was a lady leaning back in a corner, wrapped to the chin in a
fur garment, and the young man, encountering through his eyeglass her
cool, ironical glance, dropped it and held out his hand.

"Ah, Mrs. Bellew, great pleasure t'see you again so soon. You goin'
up to town? Jolly dance last night, wasn't it? Dear old sort, the
Squire, and Mrs. Pendyce such an awf'ly nice woman."

Mrs. Bellew took his hand, and leaned back again in her corner. She
was rather paler than usual, but it became her, and Captain Maydew
thought he had never seen so charming a creature.

"Got a week's leave, thank goodness. Most awf'ly slow time of year.
Cubbin's pretty well over, an' we don't open till the first."

He turned to the window. There in the sunlight the hedgerows ran
golden and brown away from the clouds of trailing train smoke. Young
Maydew shook his head at their beauty.

"The country's still very blind," he said. "Awful pity you've given
up your huntin'."

Mrs. Bellew did not trouble to answer, and it was just that certainty
over herself, the cool assurance of a woman who has known the world,
her calm, almost negligent eyes, that fascinated this young man. He
looked at her quite shyly.

'I suppose you will become my slave,' those eyes seemed to say, 'but
I can't help you, really.'

"Did you back George's horse? I had an awf'ly good race. I was at
school with George. Charmin' fellow, old George."

In Mrs. Bellew's eyes something seemed to stir down in the depths,
but young Maydew was looking at his glove. The handle of the
carriage had left a mark that saddened him.

"You know him well, I suppose, old George?"

"Very well."

"Some fellows, if they have a good thing, keep it so jolly dark. You
fond of racin', Mrs. Bellew?"

"Passionately."

"So am I" And his eyes continued, 'It's ripping to like what you
like,' for, hypnotised, they could not tear themselves away from that
creamy face, with its full lips and the clear, faintly smiling eyes
above the high collar of white fur.

At the terminus his services were refused, and rather crestfallen,
with his hat raised, he watched her walk away. But soon, in his cab,
his face regained its normal look, his eyes seemed saying to the
little mirror, 'Look at me come, look at me--can anyone be better
fed?'




CHAPTER VII

SABBATH AT WORSTED SKEYNES

In the white morning-room which served for her boudoir Mrs. Pendyce
sat with an opened letter in her lap. It was her practice to sit
there on Sunday mornings for an hour before she went to her room
adjoining to put on her hat for church. It was her pleasure during
that hour to do nothing but sit at the window, open if the weather
permitted, and look over the home paddock and the squat spire of the
village church rising among a group of elms. It is not known what
she thought about at those times, unless of the countless Sunday
mornings she had sat there with her hands in her lap waiting to be
roused at 10.45 by the Squire's entrance and his "Now, my dear,
you'll be late!" She had sat there till her hair, once dark-brown,
was turning grey; she would sit there until it was white. One day
she would sit there no longer, and, as likely as not, Mr. Pendyce,
still well preserved, would enter and say, "Now, my dear, you'll be
late!" having for the moment forgotten.

But this was all to be expected, nothing out of the common; the same
thing was happening in hundreds of country houses throughout the
"three kingdoms," and women were sitting waiting for their hair to
turn white, who, long before, at the altar of a fashionable church,
had parted with their imaginations and all the changes and chances of
this mortal life.

Round her chair "the dear dogs" lay--this was their practice too, and
now and again the Skye (he was getting very old) would put out a long
tongue and lick her little pointed shoe. For Mrs. Pendyce had been a
pretty woman, and her feet were as small as ever.

Beside her on a spindley table stood a china bowl filled with dried
rose-leaves, whereon had been scattered an essence smelling like
sweetbriar, whose secret she had learned from her mother in the old
Warwickshire home of the Totteridges, long since sold to Mr. Abraham
Brightman. Mrs. Pendyce, born in the year 1840, loved sweet
perfumes, and was not ashamed of using them.

The Indian summer sun was soft and bright; and wistful, soft, and
bright were Mrs. Pendyce's eyes, fixed on the letter in her lap. She
turned it over and began to read again. A wrinkle visited her brow.
It was not often that a letter demanding decision or involving
responsibility came to her hands past the kind and just censorship of
Horace Pendyce. Many matters were under her control, but were not,
so to speak, connected with the outer world. Thus ran the letter:


"S.R.W.C., HANOVER SQUARE,
"November 1, 1891.

"DEAR MARGERY,

"I want to see you and talk something over, so I'm running down on
Sunday afternoon. There is a train of sorts. Any loft will do for
me to sleep in if your house is full, as it may be, I suppose, at
this time of year. On second thoughts I will tell you what I want to
see you about. You know, of course, that since her father died I am
Helen Bellew's only guardian. Her present position is one in which
no woman should be placed; I am convinced it ought to be put an end
to. That man Bellew deserves no consideration. I cannot write of
him coolly, so I won't write at all. It is two years now since they
separated, entirely, as I consider, through his fault. The law has
placed her in a cruel and helpless position all this time; but now,
thank God, I believe we can move for a divorce. You know me well
enough to realise what I have gone through before coming to this
conclusion. Heaven knows if I could hit on some other way in which
her future could be safeguarded, I would take it in preference to
this, which is most repugnant; but I cannot. You are the only woman
I can rely on to be interested in her, and I must see Bellew. Let
not the fat and just Benson and his estimable horses be disturbed on
my account; I will walk up and carry my toothbrush.

"Affectionately your cousin,
"GREGORY VIGIL."


Mrs. Pendyce smiled. She saw no joke, but she knew from the wording
of the last sentence that Gregory saw one, and she liked to give it a
welcome; so smiling and wrinkling her forehead, she mused over the
letter. Her thoughts wandered. The last scandal--Lady Rose
Bethany's divorce--had upset the whole county, and even now one had
to be careful what one said. Horace would not like the idea of
another divorce-suit, and that so close to Worsted Skeynes. When
Helen left on Thursday he had said:

"I'm not sorry she's gone. Her position is a queer one. People
don't like it. The Maidens were quite----"

And Mrs. Pendyce remembered with a glow at her heart how she had
broken in:

"Ellen Maiden is too bourgeoise for anything!"

Nor had Mr. Pendyce's look of displeasure effaced the comfort of that
word.

Poor Horace! The children took after him, except George, who took
after her brother Hubert. The dear boy had gone back to his club on
Friday--the day after Helen and the others went. She wished he could
have stayed. She wished----The wrinkle deepened on her brow. Too
much London was bad for him! Too much----Her fancy flew to the
London which she saw now only for three weeks in June and July, for
the sake of the girls, just when her garden was at its best, and when
really things were such a whirl that she never knew whether she was
asleep or awake. It was not like London at all--not like that London
under spring skies, or in early winter lamplight, where all the
passers-by seemed so interesting, living all sorts of strange and
eager lives, with strange and eager pleasures, running all sorts of
risks, hungry sometimes, homeless even--so fascinating, so unlike----

"Now, my dear, you'll be late!"

Mr. Pendyce, in his Norfolk jacket, which he was on his way to change
for a black coat, passed through the room, followed by the spaniel
John. He turned at the door, and the spaniel John turned too.

"I hope to goodness Barter'll be short this morning. I want to talk
to old Fox about that new chaff-cutter."

Round their mistress the three terriers raised their heads; the aged
Skye gave forth a gentle growl. Mrs. Pendyce leaned over and stroked
his nose.

"Roy, Roy, how can you, dear?"

Mr. Pendyce said:

"The old dog's losing all his teeth; he'll have to be put away."

His wife flushed painfully.

"Oh no, Horace--oh no!"

The Squire coughed.

"We must think of the dog!" he said.

Mrs. Pendyce rose, and crumpling the letter nervously, followed him
from the room.

A narrow path led through the home paddock towards the church, and
along it the household were making their way. The maids in feathers
hurried along guiltily by twos and threes; the butler followed slowly
by himself. A footman and a groom came next, leaving trails of
pomatum in the air. Presently General Pendyce, in a high square-
topped bowler hat, carrying a malacca cane, and Prayer-Book, appeared
walking between Bee and Norah, also carrying Prayer-Books, with fox-
terriers by their sides. Lastly, the Squire in a high hat, six or
seven paces in advance of his wife, in a small velvet toque.

The rooks had ceased their wheeling and their cawing; the five-
minutes bell, with its jerky, toneless tolling, alone broke the
Sunday hush. An old horse, not yet taken up from grass, stood
motionless, resting a hind-leg, with his face turned towards the
footpath. Within the churchyard wicket the Rector, firm and square,
a low-crowned hat tilted up on his bald forehead, was talking to a
deaf old cottager. He raised his hat and nodded to the ladies; then,
leaving his remark unfinished, disappeared within the vestry. At the
organ Mrs. Barter was drawing out stops in readiness to play her
husband into church, and her eyes, half-shining and half-anxious,
were fixed intently on the vestry door.

The Squire and Mrs. Pendyce, now almost abreast, came down the aisle
and took their seats beside their daughters and the General in the
first pew on the left. It was high and cushioned. They knelt down
on tall red hassocks. Mrs. Pendyce remained over a minute buried in
thought; Mr. Pendyce rose sooner, and looking down, kicked the
hassock that had been put too near the seat. Fixing his glasses on
his nose, he consulted a worn old Bible, then rising, walked to the
lectern and began to find the Lessons. The bell ceased; a wheezing,
growling noise was heard. Mrs. Barter had begun to play; the Rector,
in a white surplice, was coming in. Mr. Pendyce, with his back
turned, continued to find the Lessons. The service began.

Through a plain glass window high up in the right-hand aisle the sun
shot a gleam athwart the Pendyces' pew. It found its last resting-
place on Mrs. Barter's face, showing her soft crumpled cheeks
painfully flushed, the lines on her forehead, and those shining eyes,
eager and anxious, travelling ever from her husband to her music and
back again. At the least fold or frown on his face the music seemed
to quiver, as to some spasm in the player's soul. In the Pendyces'
pew the two girls sang loudly and with a certain sweetness. Mr.
Pendyce, too, sang, and once or twice he looked in surprise at his
brother, as though he were not making a creditable noise.

Mrs. Pendyce did not sing, but her lips moved, and her eyes followed
the millions of little dust atoms dancing in the long slanting
sunbeam. Its gold path canted slowly from her, then, as by magic,
vanished. Mrs. Pendyce let her eyes fall. Something had fled from
her soul with the sunbeam; her lips moved no more.

The Squire sang two loud notes, spoke three, sang two again; the
Psalms ceased. He left his seat, and placing his hands on the
lectern's sides, leaned forward and began to read the Lesson. He
read the story of Abraham and Lot, and of their flocks and herds, and
how they could not dwell together, and as he read, hypnotised by the
sound of his own voice, he was thinking:

'This Lesson is well read by me, Horace Pendyce. I am Horace
Pendyce--Horace Pendyce. Amen, Horace Pendyce!'

And in the first pew on the left Mrs. Pendyce fixed her eyes upon
him, for this was her habit, and she thought how, when the spring
came again, she would run up to town, alone, and stay at Green's
Hotel, where she had always stayed with her father when a girl.
George had promised to look after her, and take her round the
theatres. And forgetting that she had thought this every autumn for
the last ten years, she gently smiled and nodded. Mr. Pendyce said:

"'And I will make thy seed as the dust of the earth; so that if a man
can number the dust of the earth, then shall thy seed also be
numbered. Arise, walk through the land in the length of it and in
the breadth of it; for I will give it unto thee. Then Abram removed
his tent, and came and dwelt in the plain of Mamre, which is in
Hebron, and built there an altar unto the Lord.' Here endeth the
first Lesson."

The sun, reaching the second window, again shot a gold pathway
athwart the church; again the millions of dust atoms danced, and the
service went on.

There came a hush. The spaniel John, crouched close to the ground
outside, poked his long black nose under the churchyard gate; the
fox-terriers, seated patient in the grass, pricked their ears. A
voice speaking on one note broke the hush. The spaniel John sighed,
the fox-terriers dropped their ears, and lay down heavily against
each other. The Rector had begun to preach. He preached on
fruitfulness, and in the first right-hand pew six of his children at
once began to fidget. Mrs. Barter, sideways and unsupported on her
seat, kept her starry eyes fixed on his cheek; a line of perplexity
furrowed her brow. Now and again she moved as though her back ached.
The Rector quartered his congregation with his gaze, lest any amongst
them should incline to sleep. He spoke in a loud-sounding voice.

God-he said-wished men to be fruitful, intended them to be fruitful,
commanded them to be fruitful. God--he said--made men, and made the
earth; He made man to be fruitful in the earth; He made man neither
to question nor answer nor argue; He made him to be fruitful and
possess the land. As they had heard in that beautiful Lesson this
morning, God had set bounds, the bounds of marriage, within which man
should multiply; within those bounds it was his duty to multiply, and
that exceedingly--even as Abraham multiplied. In these days dangers,
pitfalls, snares, were rife; in these days men went about and openly,
unashamedly advocated shameful doctrines. Let them beware. It would
be his sacred duty to exclude such men from within the precincts of
that parish entrusted to his care by God. In the language of their
greatest poet, "Such men were dangerous"--dangerous to Christianity,
dangerous to their country, and to national life. They were not
brought into this world to follow sinful inclination, to obey their
mortal reason. God demanded sacrifices of men. Patriotism demanded
sacrifices of men, it demanded that they should curb their
inclinations and desires. It demanded of them their first duty as
men and Christians, the duty of being fruitful and multiplying, in
order that they might till this fruitful earth, not selfishly, not
for themselves alone. It demanded of them the duty of multiplying in
order that they and their children might be equipped to smite the
enemies of their Queen and country, and uphold the name of England in
whatever quarrel, against all who rashly sought to drag her flag in
the dust.

The Squire opened his eyes and looked at his watch. Folding his
arms, he coughed, for he was thinking of the chaff-cutter. Beside
him Mrs. Pendyce, with her eyes on the altar, smiled as if in sleep.
She was thinking, 'Skyward's in Bond Street used to have lovely lace.
Perhaps in the spring I could----Or there was Goblin's, their Point
de Venise----'

Behind them, four rows back, an aged cottage woman, as upright as a
girl, sat with a rapt expression on her carved old face. She never
moved, her eyes seemed drinking in the movements of the Rector's
lips, her whole being seemed hanging on his words. It is true her
dim eyes saw nothing but a blur, her poor deaf ears could not hear
one word, but she sat at the angle she was used to, and thought of
nothing at all. And perhaps it was better so, for she was near her
end.

Outside the churchyard, in the sun-warmed grass, the fox-terriers lay
one against the other, pretending to shiver, with their small bright
eyes fixed on the church door, and the rubbery nostrils of the
spaniel John worked ever busily beneath the wicket gate.




CHAPTER VIII

GREGORY VIGIL PROPOSES

About three o'clock that afternoon a tall man walked up the avenue at
Worsted Skeynes, in one hand carrying his hat, in the other a small
brown bag. He stopped now and then, and took deep breaths, expanding
the nostrils of his straight nose. He had a fine head, with wings of
grizzled hair. His clothes were loose, his stride was springy.
Standing in the middle of the drive, taking those long breaths, with
his moist blue eyes upon the sky, he excited the attention of a
robin, who ran out of a rhododendron to see, and when he had passed
began to whistle. Gregory Vigil turned, and screwed up his humorous
lips, and, except that he was completely lacking in embonpoint, he
had a certain resemblance to this bird, which is supposed to be
peculiarly British.

He asked for Mrs. Pendyce in a high, light voice, very pleasant to
the ear, and was at once shown to the white morning-room.

She greeted him affectionately, like many women who have grown used
to hearing from their husbands the formula "Oh! your people!"--she
had a strong feeling for her kith and kin.

"You know, Grig," she said, when her cousin was seated, "your letter
was rather disturbing. Her separation from Captain Bellew has caused
such a lot of talk about here. Yes; it's very common, I know, that
sort of thing, but Horace is so----! All the squires and parsons and
county people we get about here are just the same. Of course, I'm
very fond of her, she's so charming to look at; but, Gregory, I
really don't dislike her husband. He's a desperate sort of person--I
think that's rather, refreshing; and you know I do think she's a
little like him in that!"

The blood rushed up into Gregory Vigil's forehead; he put his hand to
his head, and said:

"Like him? Like that man? Is a rose like an artichoke?"

Mrs. Pendyce went on:

"I enjoyed having her here immensely. It's the first time she's been
here since she left the Firs. How long is that? Two years? But you
know, Grig, the Maidens were quite upset about her. Do you think a
divorce is really necessary?"

Gregory Vigil answered: "I'm afraid it is."

Mrs. Pendyce met her cousin's gaze serenely; if anything, her brows
were uplifted more than usual; but, as at the stirring of secret
trouble, her fingers began to twine and twist. Before her rose a
vision of George and Mrs. Bellew side by side. It was a vague
maternal feeling, an instinctive fear. She stilled her fingers, let
her eyelids droop, and said:

"Of course, dear Grig, if I can help you in any way--Horace does so
dislike anything to do with the papers."

Gregory Vigil drew in his breath.

"The papers!" he said. "How hateful it is! To think that our
civilisation should allow women to be cast to the dogs! Understand,
Margery, I'm thinking of her. In this matter I'm not capable of
considering anything else."

Mrs. Pendyce murmured: "Of course, dear Grig, I quite understand."

"Her position is odious; a woman should not have to live like that,
exposed to everyone's foul gossip."

"But, dear Grig, I don't think she minds; she seemed to me in such
excellent spirits."



 


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