Commons was an official
livery of which he divested himself as
thoroughly as possible in private life. He did not propose to sit
through dinner as a mere
listener to Mr. Thorle's personal
narrative of philanthropic movements and experiences, and took the
first opportunity of launching himself into a flow of satirical
observations on current political affairs. Lady Veula was inured
to this sort of thing in her own home
circle, and sat listening
with the stoical
indifference with which an Esquimau might accept
the
occurrence of one
snowstorm the more, in the course of an
Arctic winter. Serena Golackly felt a certain
relief at the fact
that her imported guest was not, after all, monopolising the
conversation. But the latter was too determined a
personality to
allow himself to be
thrust aside for many minutes by the talkative
M.P. Henry Greech paused for an
instant to
chuckle at one of his
own shafts of
satire, and immediately Thorle's penetrating voice
swept across the table.
"Oh, you politicians!" he exclaimed, with pleasant superiority;
"you are always fighting about how things should be done, and the
consequence is you are never able to do anything. Would you like
me to tell you what a Unitarian horsedealer said to me at Brindisi
about politicians?"
A Unitarian horsedealer at Brindisi had all the
allurement of the
unexpected. Henry Greech's witticisms at the expense of the Front
Opposition bench were destined to remain as
unfinished as his
wife's history of the broken soup-plates. Thorle was primed with
an ample
succession of stories and themes,
chiefly concerning
poverty, thriftlessness, reclamation, reformed characters, and so
forth, which carried him in an almost uninterrupted sequence
through the
remainder of the dinner.
"What I want to do is to make people think," he said, turning his
prominent eyes on to his
hostess; "it's so hard to make people
think."
"At any rate you give them the opportunity," said Comus,
cryptically.
As the ladies rose to leave the table Comus crossed over to pick up
one of Lady Veula's gloves that had fallen to the floor.
"I did not know you kept a dog," said Lady Veula.
"We don't," said Comus, "there isn't one in the house."
"I could have sworn I saw one follow you across the hall this
evening," she said.
"A small black dog, something like a schipperke?" asked Comus in a
low voice.
"Yes, that was it."
"I saw it myself to-night; it ran from behind my chair just as I
was sitting down. Don't say anything to the others about it; it
would
frighten my mother."
"Have you ever seen it before?" Lady Veula asked quickly.
"Once, when I was six years old. It followed my father
downstairs."
Lady Veula said nothing. She knew that Comus had lost his father
at the age of six.
In the drawing-room Serena made
nervous excuses for her talkative
friend.
"Really, rather an interesting man, you know, and up to the eyes in
all sorts of movements. Just the sort of person to turn loose at a
drawing-room meeting, or to send down to a mission-hall in some
unheard-of neighbourhood. Given a sounding-board and a harmonium,
and a titled woman of some sort in the chair, and he'll be
perfectly happy; I must say I hadn't realised how overpowering he
might be at a small dinner-party."
"I should say he was a very good man," said Mrs. Greech; she had
forgiven the mutilation of her soup-plate story.
The party broke up early as most of the guests had other
engagements to keep. With a
belatedrecognition of the
farewellnature of the occasion they made pleasant little good-bye remarks
to Comus, with the usual predictions of
prosperity and
anticipations of an
ultimate auspicious return. Even Henry Greech
sank his personal
dislike of the boy for the moment, and made
hearty jocular allusions to a home-coming, which, in the elder
man's eyes, seemed possibly
pleasantlyremote. Lady Veula alone
made no
reference to the future; she simply said, "Good-bye,
Comus," but her voice was the kindest of all and he responded with
a look of
gratitude. The
weariness in her eyes was more marked
than ever as she lay back against the cushions of her carriage.
"What a
tragedy life is," she said, aloud to herself.
Serena and Stephen Thorle were the last to leave, and Francesca
stood alone for a moment at the head of the
stairway watching Comus
laughing and chatting as he escorted the departing guests to the
door. The ice-wall was melting under the influence of coming
separation, and never had he looked more adorably handsome in her
eyes, never had his merry laugh and mischief-loving
gaiety seemed
more
infectious than on this night of his
farewellbanquet. She
was glad enough that he was going away from a life of
idleness and
extravagance and
temptation, but she began to
suspect that she
would miss, for a little while at any rate, the high-spirited boy
who could be so
attractive in his better moods. Her
impulse, after
the guests had gone, was to call him to her and hold him once more
in her arms, and repeat her wishes for his happiness and good-luck
in the land he was going to, and her promise of his
welcome back,
some not too distant day, to the land he was leaving. She wanted
to forget, and to make him forget, the months of
irritable jangling
and sharp discussions, the months of cold aloofness and
indifference and to remember only that he was her own dear Comus as
in the days of yore, before he had grown from an unmanageable
pickle into a weariful problem. But she feared lest she should
break down, and she did not wish to cloud his light-hearted
gaietyon the very eve of his
departure. She watched him for a moment as
he stood in the hall, settling his tie before a mirror, and then
went quietly back to her drawing-room. It had not been a very
successful dinner party, and the general effect it had left on her
was one of depression.
Comus, with a
livelymusical-comedy air on his lips, and a look of
wretchedness in his eyes, went out to visit the haunts that he was
leaving so soon.
CHAPTER XV
ELAINE YOUGHAL sat at lunch in the Speise Saal of one of Vienna's
costlier hotels. The double-headed eagle, with its "K.u.K."
legend, everywhere met the eye and announced the
imperial favour in
which the
establishment basked. Some several square yards of
yellow
bunting, charged with the image of another double-headed
eagle, floating from the highest flag-staff above the building,
betrayed to the initiated the fact that a Russian Grand Duke was
concealed somewhere on the premises. Unannounced by heraldic
symbolism but unconcealable by reason of nature's own blazonry,
were several citizens and citizenesses of the great
republic of the
Western world. One or two Cobdenite members of the British
Parliament engaged in the useful task of proving that the cost of
living in Vienna was on an exorbitant scale, flitted with
restrained importance through a land whose fatness they had come to
spy out; every fancied over-charge in their bills was
welcome as
providing another nail in the
coffin of their
fiscal opponents. It
is the glory of democracies that they may be misled but never
driven. Here and there, like brave deeds in a dust-patterned
world, flashed and glittered the
sumptuous uniforms of
representatives of the Austrian military caste. Also in evidence,
at
discreet intervals, were stray units of the Semetic tribe that
nineteen centuries of European
neglect had been
unable to mislay.
Elaine sitting with Courtenay at an elaborately appointed luncheon
table, gay with high goblets of Bohemian glassware, was
mistress of
three discoveries. First, to her
disappointment, that if you
frequent the more
expensive hotels of Europe you must be prepared
to find, in
whatever country you may chance to be staying, a
depressing
internationallikeness between them all. Secondly, to
her
relief, that one is not expected to be sentimentally amorous
during a modern
honeymoon. Thirdly, rather to her
dismay, that