The Country House
PART II
CHAPTER X
GEORGE GOES FOR THE GLOVES
On the Thursday of the Epsom Summer Meeting, George Pendyce sat in the
corner of a first-class railway-carriage trying to make two and two into
five. On a sheet of Stoics' Club note-paper his racing-debts were
stated to a penny—one thousand and forty five pounds overdue, and
below, seven hundred and fifty lost at the current meeting. Below these
again his private debts were indicated by the round figure of one thousand
pounds. It was round by courtesy, for he had only calculated those bills
which had been sent in, and Providence, which knows all things, preferred
the rounder figure of fifteen hundred. In sum, therefore, he had against
him a total of three thousand two hundred and ninety-five pounds. And
since at Tattersalls and the Stock Exchange, where men are engaged in
perpetual motion, an almost absurd punctiliousness is required in the
payment of those sums which have for the moment inadvertently been lost,
seventeen hundred and ninety-five of this must infallibly be raised by
Monday next. Indeed, only a certain liking for George, a good loser and a
good winner, and the fear of dropping a good customer, had induced the
firm of bookmakers to let that debt of one thousand and forty-five stand
over the Epsom Meeting.
To set against these sums (in which he had not counted his current trainer's
bill, and the expenses, which he could not calculate, of the divorce
suit), he had, first, a bank balance which he might still overdraw another
twenty pounds; secondly, the Ambler and two bad selling platers; and
thirdly (more considerable item), X, or that which he might, or indeed
must, win over the Ambler's race this afternoon.
Whatever else, it was not pluck that was lacking in the character of
George Pendyce. This quality was in his fibre, in the consistency of his
blood, and confronted with a situation which, to some men, and especially
to men not brought up on the hereditary plan, might have seemed desperate,
he exhibited no sign of anxiety or distress. Into the consideration of his
difficulties he imported certain principles: (1) He did not intend to be
posted at Tattersalls. Sooner than that he would go to the Jews; the
entail was all he could look to borrow on; the Hebrews would force him to
pay through the nose. (2) He did not intend to show the white feather, and
in backing his horse meant to “go for the gloves.” (3) He did
not intend to think of the future; the thought of the present was quite
bad enough.
The train bounded and swung as though rushing onwards to a tune, and
George sat quietly in his corner.
Amongst his fellows in the carriage was the Hon. Geoffrey Winlow, who,
though not a racing-man, took a kindly interest in our breed of horses,
which by attendance at the principal meetings he hoped to improve.
“Your horse going to run, George?”
George nodded.
“I shall have a fiver on him for luck. I can't afford to bet.
Saw your mother at the Foxholme garden-party last week. You seen them
lately?”
George shook his head and felt an odd squeeze: at his heart.
“You know they had a fire at old Peacock's farm; I hear the
Squire and Barter did wonders. He's as game as a pebble, the Squire.”
Again George nodded, and again felt that squeeze at his heart.
“Aren't they coming to town this season?”
“Haven't heard,” answered George. “Have a cigar?”
Winlow took the cigar, and cutting it with a small penknife, scrutinised
George's square face with his leisurely eyes. It needed a
physiognomist to penetrate its impassivity. Winlow thought to himself:
'I shouldn't be surprised if what they say about old George is
true.'... “Had a good meeting so far?”
“So-so.”
They parted on the racecourse. George went at once to see his trainer and
thence into Tattersalls' ring. He took with him that equation with
X, and sought the society of two gentlemen quietly dressed, one of whom
was making a note in a little book with a gold pencil. They greeted him
respectfully, for it was to them that he owed the bulk of that seventeen
hundred and ninety-five pounds.
“What price will you lay against my horse?”
“Evens, Mr. Pendyce,” replied the gentleman with the gold
pencil, “to a monkey.”
George booked the bet. It was not his usual way of doing business, but
to-day everything seemed different, and something stronger than custom was
at work.
'I am going for the gloves,' he thought; 'if it doesn't
come off, I'm done anyhow.'
He went to another quietly dressed gentleman with a diamond pin and a
Jewish face. And as he went from one quietly dressed gentleman to another
there preceded him some subtle messenger, who breathed the words, 'Mr.
Pendyce is going for the gloves,' so that at each visit he found
they had greater confidence than ever in his horse. Soon he had promised
to pay two thousand pounds if the Ambler lost, and received the assurance
of eminent gentlemen, quietly dressed, that they would pay him fifteen
hundred if the Ambler won. The odds now stood at two to one on, and he had
found it impossible to back the Ambler for “a place,” in
accordance with his custom.
'Made a fool of myself,' he thought; 'ought never to
have gone into the ring at all; ought to have let Barney's work it
quietly. It doesn't matter!'
He still required to win three hundred pounds to settle on the Monday, and
laid a final bet of seven hundred to three hundred and fifty pounds upon
his horse. Thus, without spending a penny, simply by making a few
promises, he had solved the equation with X.
On leaving the ring, he entered the bar and drank some whisky. He then
went to the paddock. The starting-bell for the second race had rung; there
was hardly anyone there, but in a far corner the Ambler was being led up
and down by a boy.
George glanced round to see that no acquaintances were near, and joined in
this promenade. The Ambler turned his black, wild eye, crescented with
white, threw up his head, and gazed far into the distance.
'If one could only make him understand!' thought George.
When his horse left the paddock for the starting-post George went back to
the stand. At the bar he drank some more whisky, and heard someone say:
“I had to lay six to four. I want to find Pendyce; they say he's
backed it heavily.”
George put down his glass, and instead of going to his usual place,
mounted slowly to the top of the stand.
'I don't want them buzzing round me,' he thought.
At the top of the stand—that national monument, visible for twenty
miles around—he knew himself to be safe. Only “the many”
came here, and amongst the many he thrust himself till at the very top he
could rest his glasses on a rail and watch the colours. Besides his own
peacock blue there was a straw, a blue with white stripes, a red with
white stars.
They say that through the minds of drowning men troop ghosts of past
experience. It was not so with George; his soul was fastened on that
little daub of peacock blue. Below the glasses his lips were colourless
from hard compression; he moistened them continually. The four little
Coloured daubs stole into line, the flag fell.
“They're off!” That roar, like the cry of a monster,
sounded all around. George steadied his glasses on the rail. Blue with
white stripes was leading, the Ambler lying last. Thus they came round the
further bend. And Providence, as though determined that someone should
benefit by his absorption, sent a hand sliding under George's
elbows, to remove the pin from his tie and slide away. Round Tattenham
Corner George saw his horse take the lead. So, with straw closing up, they
came into the straight. The Ambler's jockey looked back and raised
his whip; in that instant, as if by magic, straw drew level; down came the
whip on the Ambler's flank; again as by magic straw was in front.
The saying of his old jockey darted through George's mind: “Mark
my words, sir, that 'orse knows what's what, and when they're
like that they're best let alone.”
“Sit still, you fool!” he muttered.
The whip came down again; straw was two lengths in front.
Someone behind said:
“The favourite's beat! No, he's not, by Jove!” For
as though George's groan had found its way to the jockey's
ears, he dropped his whip. The Ambler sprang forward. George saw that he
was gaining. All his soul went out to his horse's struggle. In each
of those fifteen seconds he died and was born again; with each stride all
that was loyal and brave in his nature leaped into flame, all that was
base sank, for he himself was racing with his horse, and the sweat poured
down his brow. And his lips babbled broken sounds that no one heard, for
all around were babbling too.
Locked together, the Ambler and straw ran home. Then followed a hush, for
no one knew which of the two had won. The numbers went up “Seven-Two-Five.”
“The favourite's second! Beaten by a nose!” said a
voice.
George bowed his head, and his whole spirit felt numb. He closed his
glasses and moved with the crowd to the stairs. A voice behind him said:
“He'd have won in another stride!”
Another answered:
“I hate that sort of horse. He curled up at the whip.”
George ground his teeth.
“Curse you!” he muttered, “you little Cockney; what do
you know about a horse?”
The crowd surged; the speakers were lost to sight.
The long descent from the stand gave him time. No trace of emotion showed
on his face when he appeared in the paddock. Blacksmith the trainer stood
by the Ambler's stall.
“That idiot Tipping lost us the race, sir,” he began with
quivering lips. “If he'd only left him alone, the horse would
have won in a canter. What on earth made him use his whip? He deserves to
lose his license. He——”
The gall and bitterness of defeat surged into George's brain.
“It's no good your talking, Blacksmith,” he said;
“you put him up. What the devil made you quarrel with Swells?”
The little man's chin dropped in sheer surprise.
George turned away, and went up to the jockey, but at the sick look on the
poor youth's face the angry words died off his tongue.
“All right, Tipping; I'm not going to rag you.” And with
the ghost of a smile he passed into the Ambler's stall. The groom
had just finished putting him to rights; the horse stood ready to be led
from the field of his defeat. The groom moved out, and George went to the
Ambler's head. There is no place, no corner, on a racecourse where a
man may show his heart. George did but lay his forehead against the velvet
of his horse's muzzle, and for one short second hold it there. The
Ambler awaited the end of that brief caress, then with a snort threw up
his head, and with his wild, soft eyes seemed saying, 'You fools!
what do you know of me?'
George stepped to one side.
“Take him away,” he said, and his eyes followed the Ambler's
receding form.
A racing-man of a different race, whom he knew and did not like, came up
to him as he left the paddock.
“I suppothe you won't thell your horse, Pendythe?” he
said. “I'll give you five thou. for him. He ought never to
have lotht; the beating won't help him with the handicappers a
little bit.”
'You carrion crow!' thought George.
“Thanks; he's not for sale,” he answered.
He went back to the stand, but at every step and in each face, he seemed
to see the equation which now he could only solve with X2. Thrice he went
into the bar. It was on the last of these occasions that he said to
himself: “The horse must go. I shall never have a horse like him
again.”
Over that green down which a hundred thousand feet had trodden brown,
which a hundred thousand hands had strewn with bits of paper, cigar-ends,
and the fragments of discarded food, over the great approaches to the
battlefield, where all was pathway leading to and from the fight, those
who make livelihood in such a fashion, least and littlest followers, were
bawling, hawking, whining to the warriors flushed with victory or wearied
by defeat. Over that green down, between one-legged men and ragged
acrobats, women with babies at the breast, thimble-riggers, touts, walked
George Pendyce, his mouth hard set and his head bent down.
“Good luck, Captain, good luck to-morrow; good luck, good luck!...
For the love of Gawd, your lordship!... Roll, bowl, or pitch!”
The sun, flaming out after long hiding, scorched the back of his neck; the
free down wind, fouled by foetid odours, brought to his ears the monster's
last cry, “They're off!”
A voice hailed him.
George turned and saw Winlow, and with a curse and a smile he answered:
“Hallo!”
The Hon. Geoffrey ranged alongside, examining George's face at
leisure.
“Afraid you had a bad race, old chap! I hear you've sold the
Ambler to that fellow Guilderstein.”
In George's heart something snapped.
'Already?' he thought. 'The brute's been crowing.
And it's that little bounder that my horse—my horse....'
He answered calmly:
“Wanted the money.”
Winlow, who was not lacking in cool discretion, changed the subject.
Late that evening George sat in the Stoics' window overlooking
Piccadilly. Before his eyes, shaded by his hand, the hansoms passed,
flying East and West, each with the single pale disc of face, or the twin
discs of faces close together; and the gentle roar of the town came in,
and the cool air refreshed by night. In the light of the lamps the trees
of the Green Park stood burnished out of deep shadow where nothing moved;
and high over all, the stars and purple sky seemed veiled with golden
gauze. Figures without end filed by. Some glanced at the lighted windows
and the man in the white shirt-front sitting there. And many thought:
'Wish I were that swell, with nothing to do but step into his father's
shoes;' and to many no thought came. But now and then some passer
murmured to himself: “Looks lonely sitting there.”
And to those faces gazing up, George's lips were grim, and over them
came and went a little bitter smile; but on his forehead he felt still the
touch of his horse's muzzle, and his eyes, which none could see,
were dark with pain.