appearance."
"I'm afraid I shan't sleep at all to-night," said Lola pathetically;
"every fifth night I suffer from insomnia, and it's due to-night."
"It's most provoking," said Bertie; "of course, we can back both
horses, but it would be much more
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satisfactory to have all our money
on the
winner. Can't you take a sleeping-draught, or something?"
"Oakleaves, soaked in warm water and put under the bed, are
recommended by some," said Mrs. de Claux.
"A glass of Benedictine, with a drop of eau-de-Cologne--" said Sir
Lulworth.
"I have tried every known remedy," said Lola, with
dignity; "I've
been a
martyr to insomnia for years."
"But now we are being
martyrs to it," said Odo sulkily; "I
particularly want to land a big coup over this race."
"I don't have insomnia for my own
amusement," snapped Lola.
"Let us hope for the best," said Mrs. de Claux soothingly; "to-night
may prove an
exception to the fifth-night rule."
But when breakfast time came round again Lola reported a blank night
as far as visions were concerned.
"I don't suppose I had as much as ten minutes' sleep, and,
certainly, no dreams."
"I'm so sorry, for your sake in the first place, and ours as well,"
said her
hostess; "do you think you could induce a short nap after
breakfast? It would be so good for you--and you MIGHT dream
something. There would still be time for us to get our bets on."
"I'll try if you like," said Lola; "it sounds rather like a small
child being sent to bed in disgrace."
"I'll come and read the Encyclopaedia Britannica to you if you think
it will make you sleep any sooner," said Bertie obligingly.
Rain was falling too
steadily to permit of outdoor
amusement, and
the party suffered
considerably during the next two hours from the
absolute quiet that was enforced all over the house in order to give
Lola every chance of achieving
slumber. Even the click of billiard
balls was considered a possible
factor of
disturbance, and the
canaries were carried down to the gardener's lodge, while the cuckoo
clock in the hall was muffled under several layers of rugs. A
notice, "Please do not Knock or Ring," was posted on the front door
at Bertie's
suggestion, and guests and servants spoke in tragic
whispers as though the dread presence of death or
sickness had
invaded the house. The precautions proved of no avail: Lola added
a
sleepless morning to a wakeful night, and the bets of the party
had to be impartially divided between Nursery Tea and the French
Colt.
"So provoking to have to split out bets," said Mrs. de Claux, as her
guests gathered in the hall later in the day,
waiting for the result
of the race.
"I did my best for you," said Lola, feeling that she was not getting
her due share of
gratitude; "I told you what I had seen in my
dreams, a brown horse, called Bread and Butter,
winning easily from
all the rest."
"What?"
screamed Bertie, jumping up from his sea, "a brown horse!
Miserable woman, you never said a word about it's being a brown
horse."
"Didn't I?" faltered Lola; "I thought I told you it was a brown
horse. It was certainly brown in both dreams. But I don't see what
the colour has got to do with it. Nursery Tea and Le Five O'Clock
are both chestnuts."
"Merciful Heaven! Doesn't brown bread and butter with a sprinkling
of lemon in the colours suggest anything to you?" raged Bertie.
A slow, cumulative groan broke from the
assembly as the meaning of
his words gradually dawned on his hearers.
For the second time that day Lola
retired to the seclusion of her
room; she could not face the
universal looks of
reproach directed at
her when Whitebait was announced
winner at the comfortable price of
fourteen to one.
BERTIE'S CHRISTMAS EVE
It was Christmas Eve, and the family
circle of Luke Steffink, Esq.,
was aglow with the amiability and
random mirth which the occasion
demanded. A long and
lavish dinner had been partaken of, waits had
been round and sung carols; the house-party had regaled itself with
more caroling on its own
account, and there had been romping which,
even in a
pulpitreference, could not have been condemned as
ragging. In the midst of the general glow, however, there was one
black unkindled cinder.
Bertie Steffink,
nephew of the aforementioned Luke, had early in
life adopted the
profession of ne'er-do-weel; his father had been
something of the kind before him. At the age of eighteen Bertie had
commenced that round of visits to our Colonial possessions, so
seemly and
desirable in the case of a Prince of the Blood, so
suggestive of insincerity in a young man of the
middle-class. He
had gone to grow tea in Ceylon and fruit in British Columbia, and to
help sheep to grow wool in Australia. At the age of twenty he had
just returned from some similar
errand in Canada, from which it may
be gathered that the trial he gave to these various experiments was
of the
summary drum-head nature. Luke Steffink, who fulfilled the
troubled role of
guardian and deputy-parent to Bertie, deplored the
persistent
manifestation of the homing
instinct on his
nephew's
part, and his
solemn thanks earlier in the day for the
blessing of
reporting a united family had no
reference to Bertie's return.
Arrangements had been
promptly made for packing the youth off to a
distant corner of Rhodesia,
whence return would be a difficult
matter; the journey to this uninviting
destination was
imminent, in
fact a more careful and
willing traveller would have already begun
to think about his packing. Hence Bertie was in no mood to share in
the
festive spirit which displayed itself around him, and resentment
smouldered within him at the eager, self-absorbed
discussion of
social plans for the coming months which he heard on all sides.
Beyond depressing his uncle and the family
circle generally by
singing "Say au revoir, and not good-bye," he had taken no part in
the evening's conviviality.
Eleven o'clock had struck some
half-hour ago, and the elder
Steffinks began to throw out
suggestions leading up to that process
which they called retiring for the night.
"Come, Teddie, it's time you were in your little bed, you know,"
said Luke Steffink to his thirteen-year-old son.
"That's where we all ought to be," said Mrs. Steffink.
"There wouldn't be room," said Bertie.
The remark was considered to border on the scandalous; everybody ate
raisins and almonds with the
nervous industry of sheep feeding
during threatening weather.
"In Russia," said Horace Bordenby, who was staying in the house as a
Christmas guest, "I've read that the peasants believe that if you go
into a cow-house or
stable at
midnight on Christmas Eve you will
hear the animals talk. They're
supposed to have the gift of speech
at that one moment of the year."
"Oh, DO let's ALL go down to the cow-house and listen to what
they've got to say!" exclaimed Beryl, to whom anything was thrilling
and
amusing if you did it in a troop.
Mrs. Steffink made a laughing protest, but gave a virtual consent by
saying, "We must all wrap up well, then." The idea seemed a
scatterbrained one to her, and almost heathenish, but if afforded an
opportunity for "throwing the young people together," and as such
she welcomed it. Mr. Horace Bordenby was a young man with quite
substantial prospects, and he had danced with Beryl at a local
subscription ball a sufficient number of times to
warrant the
authorised
inquiry on the part of the neighbours whether "there was
anything in it." Though Mrs. Steffink would not have put it in so
many words, she shared the idea of the Russian peasantry that on
this night the beast might speak.
The cow-house stood at the
junction of the garden with a small