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Complete Works of a E W Mason

Page 405

by A. E. W. Mason


  “What puzzles me,” said Warrisden, “is that Stretton does not go in.”

  Stretton walked up to the corner of the square, turned, and retraced his steps. Again he approached the steps of the house. “Now,” thought Mr. Mudge, with a good deal of suspense, “now he will ascend them.” Pamela had the same conviction, but in her case hope inspired it. Tony, however, merely cast a glance upwards and walked on. They heard his footsteps for a little while upon the pavement; then that sound ceased.

  “He has gone,” cried Pamela, blankly; “he has gone away again.”

  Mr. Mudge turned to her very seriously.

  “Believe me,” said he, “nothing better could have happened.”

  Tony, in fact, had never had a thought of entering the house. Having this one night in London, he had yielded to a natural impulse to revisit again the spot where he and Millie had lived — where she still lived. The bad days of the quarrels and the indifference and the weariness were forgotten by him to-night. His thoughts went back to the early days when they played truant, and truancy was good fun. The escapes from the house, the little suppers at the Savoy, the stealthy home-comings, the stumbling up the stairs in the dark, laughing and hushing their laughter — upon these incidents his mind dwelt, wistfully, yet with a great pleasure and a great hopefulness. Those days were gone, but in others to come all that was good in them might be repeated. The good humour, the intimacy, the sufficiency of the two, each to the other, might be recovered if only he persisted. To return now, to go in at the door and say, “I have come home,” that would be the mistake which there would be no retrieving. He was at the cross-ways, and if he took the wrong road life would not give him the time to retrace his steps. He walked away, dreaming of the good days to come.

  Meanwhile, Lionel Callon was talking to Millie in that little sitting-room which had once been hers and Tony’s.

  Millie was surprised at the lateness of his visit, and when he was shown into the room she rose at once.

  “Something has happened?” she said.

  “No,” Callon replied. “I was at Lady Millingham’s party. I suddenly thought of you sitting here alone. I am tired besides, and overworked. I knew it would be a rest for me if I could see you and talk to you for a few minutes. You see, I am selfish.”

  Millie smiled at him.

  “No, kind,” said she.

  She asked him to sit down.

  “You look tired,” she added. “How does your election work go on?”

  Callon related the progress of his campaign, and with an air of making particular confidences. He could speak without any reserve to her, he said. He conveyed the impression that he was making headway against almost insuperable obstacles. He flattered her, moreover, by a suggestion that she herself was a great factor in his successes. The mere knowledge that she wished him well, that perhaps, once or twice in the day, she gave him a spare thought, helped him much more than she could imagine. Millie was induced to believe that, although she sat quietly in London, she was thus exercising power through Callon in his constituency.

  “Of course, I am a poor man,” said Callon. “Poverty hampers one.”

  “Oh, but you will win,” cried Millie Stretton, with a delighted conviction; “yes, you will win.”

  She felt strong, confident — just, in a word, as she had felt when she had agreed with Tony that he must go away.

  “With your help, yes,” he answered; and the sound of his voice violated her like a caress. Millie rose from her chair.

  At once Callon rose too, and altered his tone.

  “You have heard from Sir Anthony Stretton?” he said. “Tell me of yourself.”

  “Yes, I have heard. He will not return yet.”

  There came a light into Callon’s eyes. He raised his hand to his mouth to hide a smile.

  “Few men,” he said, with the utmost sympathy, “would have left you to bear these last weeks alone.”

  He was standing just behind her, speaking over her shoulder. He was very still, the house was very silent. Millie was suddenly aware of danger.

  “You must not say that, Mr. Callon,” she said rather sharply.

  And immediately he answered, “I beg your pardon. I had no idea my sympathy would have seemed to you an insult.”

  He spoke with a sudden bitterness. Millicent turned round in surprise. She saw that his face was stern and cold.

  “An insult?” she said, and her voice was troubled. “No, you and I are friends.”

  But Callon would have none of these excuses. He had come to the house deliberately to quarrel. He had a great faith in the efficacy of quarrels, given the right type of woman. As Mudge had told Pamela, he knew the tactics of the particular kind of warfare which he waged. To cause a woman some pain, to make her think with regret that in him she had lost a friend; that would fix him in her thoughts. So Callon quarrelled. Millie Stretton could not say a word but he misinterpreted it. Every sentence he cleverly twisted into an offence.

  “I will say good-bye,” he said, at length, as though he had reached the limits of endurance.

  Millie Stretton looked at him with troubled eyes.

  “I am so sorry it should end like this,” she said piteously. “I don’t know why it has.”

  Callon went out of the room, and closed the door behind him. Then he let himself into the street. Millie Stretton would miss him, he felt sure. Her looks, her last words assured him of that. He would wait now without a movement towards a reconciliation. That must come from her, it would give him in her eyes a reputation for strength. He knew the value of that reputation. He had no doubt, besides, that she would suggest a reconciliation. Other women might not, but Millie — yes. On the whole, Mr. Callon was very well content with his night’s work. He had taken, in his way of thinking, a long step. The square was empty, except for the carriages outside Lady Millingham’s door. Lionel Callon walked briskly home.

  CHAPTER XV

  MR. MUDGE COMES TO THE RESCUE

  LIONEL CALLON’S VISIT to Millie Stretton bore, however, consequences which had not at all entered into his calculations. He was unaware of the watchers at Lady Millingham’s window; he had no knowledge of Pamela’s promise to Tony Stretton; no suspicion, therefore, that she was now passionately resolved to keep it in the spirit and the letter. He was even without a thought that his advances towards Millie had at all been remarked upon or their motive discovered. Ignorance lulled him into security. But within a short while a counter-plot was set in train.

  The occasion was the first summer meeting on Newmarket Heath. Pamela Mardale seldom missed a race meeting at Newmarket dining the spring and summer. There were the horses, in the first place; she met her friends besides; the heath itself, with its broad expanse and its downs, had for her eyes a beauty of its own; and in addition the private enclosure was separated by the width of the course from the crowd and clamour of the ring. She attended this particular meeting, and after the second race was over she happened to be standing amidst a group of friends within the grove of trees at the back of the paddock. Outside, upon the heath, the air was clear and bright; a light wind blew pleasantly. Here the trees were in bud, and the sunlight, split by the boughs, dappled with light and shadow the glossy coats of the horses as they were led in and out amongst the boles. A mare was led past Pamela, and one of her friends said —

  “Semiramis. I think she will win this race.”

  Pamela looked towards the mare, and saw, just beyond her, Mr. Mudge. He was alone, as he usually was; and though he stopped in his walk, now here, now there, to exchange a word with some acquaintance, he moved on again, invariably alone. Gradually he drew nearer to the group in which Pamela was standing, and his face brightened. He quickened his step; Pamela, on her side, advanced rather quickly towards him.

  “You are here?” she said, with a smile. “I am glad, though I did not think to meet you.”

  Mr. Mudge, to tell the truth, though he carried a race-card in his hand, and glasses slung across his shoulde
r, had the disconsolate air of a man conscious that he was out of place. He answered Pamela, indeed, almost apologetically.

  “It is better after all to be here than in London on a day of summer,” he said, and he added, with a shrewd glance at her, “You have something to say to me — a question to ask.”

  Pamela looked up at him in surprise.

  “Yes, I have. Let us go out.”

  They walked into the paddock, and thence through the gate into the enclosure. The enclosure was at this moment rather empty. Pamela led the way to the rails alongside the course, and chose a place where they were out of the hearing of any bystander.

  “You remember the evening at Frances Millingham’s?” she asked. She had not seen Mr. Mudge since that date.

  Mr. Mudge replied immediately.

  “Yes; Sir Anthony Stretton” — and the name struck so oddly upon Pamela’s ears that, serious as at this moment she was, she laughed. “Sir Anthony Stretton turned away from the steps of his house. You were distressed, Miss Mardale: I, on the contrary, said that nothing better could have happened. You wish to ask me why I said that?”

  “Yes,” said Pamela; “I am very anxious to know. Millie is my friend. I am, in a sort of way, too, responsible for her;” and as Mr. Mudge looked surprised, she repeated the word— “Yes, responsible. And I am rather troubled.” She spoke with a little hesitation. There was a frown upon her forehead, a look of perplexity in her dark eyes. She was reluctant to admit that her friend was in any danger or needed any protection from her own weakness. The freemasonry of her sex impelled her to silence. On the other hand, she was at her wits’ end what to do. And she had confidence in her companion’s discretion; she determined to speak frankly.

  “It is not only your remark which troubles me,” she said, “but I called on Millie the next afternoon.”

  “Oh, you did?” exclaimed Mr. Mudge.

  “Yes; I asked after Tony. Millie had not seen him, and did not expect him. She showed me letters from his solicitors empowering her to do what she liked with the house and income, and a short letter from Tony himself, written on the Perseverance, to the same effect.”

  She did not explain to Mr. Mudge what the Perseverance was, and he asked no questions.

  “I told Millie,” she continued, “that Tony had returned, but she refused to believe it. I told her when and where I had seen him.”

  “You did that?” said Mr. Mudge. “Wait a moment.” He saw and understood Pamela’s reluctance to speak. He determined to help her out. “Let me describe to you what followed. She stared blankly at you and asked you to repeat what you had said?”

  “Yes,” replied Pamela, in surprise; “that is just what she did.”

  “And when you had repeated it, she turned a little pale, perhaps was disconcerted, perhaps a little — afraid.”

  “Yes, it is that which troubles me,” Pamela cried, in a low voice. “She was afraid. I would have given much to have doubted it. I could not; her eyes betrayed it, her face, her whole attitude. She was afraid.”

  Mr. Mudge nodded his head, and went quietly on —

  “And when she had recovered a little from her fear she questioned you closely as to the time when you first saw Stretton outside the house, and the time when he went away.”

  He spoke with so much certitude that he might have been present at the interview.

  “I told her that it was some little time after eleven when he came, and that he only stayed a few minutes,” answered Pamela.

  “And at that,” rejoined Mr. Mudge, “Lady Stretton’s anxiety diminished.”

  “Yes, that is true, too,” Pamela admitted; and she turned her face to him with its troubled appeal. “Why was she afraid? For, since you have guessed that she was, you must know the reason which she had for fear. Why was it so fortunate that Tony Stretton did not mount the steps of the house and ring the bell?”

  Mr. Mudge answered her immediately, and very quietly.

  “Because Lionel Callon was inside the house.”

  A great sympathy made his voice gentle — sympathy for Pamela. None the less the words hurt her cruelly. She turned away from him so that he might not see her face, and stood gazing down the course through a mist. Bitter disappointment was hers at that moment. She was by nature a partisan. The thing which she did crept closer to her heart by the mere act of doing it. She knew it, and it was just her knowledge which had so long kept her to inaction. Now her thoughts were passionately set on saving Millie, and here came news to her which brought her to the brink of despair. She blamed Tony. “Why did he ever go away?” she cried. “Why, when he had come back, did he not stay?” And at once she saw the futility of her outcry. Tony, Millie, Lionel Callon — what was the use of blaming them? They acted as their characters impelled them. She had to do her best to remedy the evil which the clash of these three characters had produced. “What can be done?” she asked of herself. There was one course open certainly. She could summon Warrisden again, send him out a second time in search of Tony Stretton, and make him the bearer, not of an excuse, but of the whole truth. Only she dreaded the outcome; she shrank from telling Tony the truth, fearing that he would exaggerate it. “Can nothing be done?” she asked, again in despair, and this time she asked the question aloud, and turned to Mr. Mudge.

  Mudge had been quietly waiting for it.

  “Yes,” he answered, “something can be done. I should not have told you, Miss Mardale, what I knew unless I had already hit upon a means to avert the peril; for I am aware how much my news must grieve you.”

  Pamela looked at Mr. Mudge in surprise. It had not occurred to her at all that he could have solved the problem.

  “What can I do?” she asked.

  “You can leave the whole trouble in my hands for a few days.”

  Pamela was silent for a little while; then she answered doubtfully —

  “It is most kind of you to offer me your help.”

  Mr. Mudge shook his head at Pamela with a certain sadness.

  “There’s no kindness in it at all,” he said; “but I quite understand your hesitation, Miss Mardale. You were surprised that I should offer you help, just as you were surprised to see me here. Although I move in your world I am not of it. Its traditions, its instincts, even its methods of thought — to all of these I am a stranger. I am just a passing visitor who, for the time of his stay, is made an honorary member of your club. He meets with every civility, every kindness; but he is not inside, so that when he suddenly comes forward and offers you help in a matter where other members of your club are concerned, you naturally pause.”

  Pamela made a gesture of dissent; but Mr. Mudge gently insisted —

  “Let me finish. I want you to understand equally well why I offer you help which may very likely seem to you an impertinence.”

  “No, indeed,” said Pamela; “on the contrary, I am very grateful.”

  Others were approaching the spot where they stood. They turned and walked slowly over the grass away from the paddock.

  “There is no need that you should be,” Mudge continued; “you will see that, if you listen.” And in a few words he told her at last something of his own career. “I sprang from a Deptford gutter, with one thought — to get on, and get on, and get on. I moved from Deptford to Peckham. There I married. I moved from Peckham to a residential suburb in the south-west. There my wife died. Looking back now, I am afraid that in my haste to get on I rather neglected my wife’s happiness. You see I am frank with you. From the residential suburb I moved into the Cromwell Road, from the Cromwell Road to Grosvenor Square. I do not think that I was just a snob; but I wanted to have the very best of what was going. There is a difference. A few years ago I found myself at the point which I had aimed to reach, and, as I have told you, it is a position of many acquaintances and much loneliness. You might say that I could give it up and retire into the country. But I have too many undertakings on my hands; besides, I am too tired to start again, so I remain. But I think you will under
stand that it will be a real pleasure to me to help you. I have not so many friends that I can afford to lose the opportunity of doing one of them a service.”

  Pamela heard him to the end without any interruption; but when he had finished she said, with a smile —

  “You are quite wrong about the reason for my hesitation. I asked a friend of mine a few weeks ago to help me, and he gave me the best of help at once. Even the best of help fails at times, and my friend did. I was wondering merely whether it would not be a little disloyal to him if I now accepted yours, for I know he would be grieved if I went to any one but him.”

  “I see,” said Mr. Mudge; “but I think that I can give you help which no one else can.”

  It was clear from his quiet persistence that he had a definite plan. Pamela stopped and faced him.

  “Very well,” she said. “I leave the whole matter for a little while in your hands.”

  “Thank you,” said Mr. Mudge; and he looked up towards the course. “There are the horses going down.”

  A sudden thought occurred to Pamela. She opened the purse she carried on her wrist, and took out a couple of pounds.

  “Put this on Semiramis for me, please,” she said, with a laugh. “Be quick, if you will, and come back.”

  Though she laughed she was still most urgent he should go. Mr. Mudge hurried across the course, made the bet, and returned. Pamela watched the race with an eagerness which astonished Mr. Mudge, so completely did she seem to have forgotten all that had troubled her a minute ago. But he did not understand Pamela. She was, after her custom, seeking for a sign, and when Semiramis galloped in a winner by a neck, she turned with a hopeful smile to her companion —

 

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