The Patrician
CHAPTER VII
Bertie Caradoc, leaving the smoking-room at Monkland Court that same
evening,—on his way to bed, went to the Georgian corridor, where his
pet barometer was hanging. To look at the glass had become the nightly
habit of one who gave all the time he could spare from his profession to
hunting in the winter and to racing in the summer.'
The Hon. Hubert Caradoc, an apprentice to the calling of diplomacy, more
completely than any living Caradoc embodied the characteristic strength
and weaknesses of that family. He was of fair height, and wiry build. His
weathered face, under sleek, dark hair, had regular, rather small
features, and wore an expression of alert resolution, masked by
impassivity. Over his inquiring, hazel-grey eyes the lids were almost
religiously kept half drawn. He had been born reticent, and great, indeed,
was the emotion under which he suffered when the whole of his eyes were
visible. His nose was finely chiselled, and had little flesh. His lips,
covered by a small, dark moustache, scarcely opened to emit his speeches,
which were uttered in a voice singularly muffled, yet unexpectedly quick.
The whole personality was that of a man practical, spirited, guarded,
resourceful, with great power of self-control, who looked at life as if
she were a horse under him, to whom he must give way just so far as was
necessary to keep mastery of her. A man to whom ideas were of no value,
except when wedded to immediate action; essentially neat; demanding to be
'done well,' but capable of stoicism if necessary; urbane, yet always in
readiness to thrust; able only to condone the failings and to
compassionate the kinds of distress which his own experience had taught
him to understand. Such was Miltoun's younger brother at the age of
twenty-six.
Having noted that the glass was steady, he was about to seek the stairway,
when he saw at the farther end of the entrance-hall three figures
advancing arm-in-arm. Habitually both curious and wary, he waited till
they came within the radius of a lamp; then, seeing them to be those of
Miltoun and a footman, supporting between them a lame man, he at once
hastened forward.
“Have you put your knee out, sir? Hold on a minute! Get a chair, Charles.”
Seating the stranger in this chair, Bertie rolled up the trouser, and
passed his fingers round the knee. There was a sort, of loving-kindness in
that movement, as of a hand which had in its time felt the joints and
sinews of innumerable horses.
“H'm!” he said; “can you stand a bit of a jerk? Catch hold of him behind,
Eustace. Sit down on the floor, Charles, and hold the legs of the chair.
Now then!” And taking up the foot, he pulled. There was a click, a little
noise of teeth ground together; and Bertie said: “Good man—shan't
have to have the vet. to you, this time.”
Having conducted their lame guest to a room in the Georgian corridor
hastily converted to a bedroom, the two brothers presently left him to the
attentions of the footman.
“Well, old man,” said Bertie, as they sought their rooms; “that's put paid
to his name—won't do you any more harm this journey. Good plucked
one, though!”
The report that Courtier was harboured beneath their roof went the round
of the family before breakfast, through the agency of one whose practice
it was to know all things, and to see that others partook of that
knowledge, Little Ann, paying her customary morning visit to her mother's
room, took her stand with face turned up and hands clasping her belt, and
began at once.
“Uncle Eustace brought a man last night with a wounded leg, and Uncle
Bertie pulled it out straight. William says that Charles says he only made
a noise like this”—there was a faint sound of small chumping teeth:
“And he's the man that's staying at the Inn, and the stairs were too
narrow to carry him up, William says; and if his knee was put out he won't
be able to walk without a stick for a long time. Can I go to Father?”
Agatha, who was having her hair brushed, thought:
“I'm not sure whether belts so low as that are wholesome,” murmured:
“Wait a minute!”
But little Ann was gone; and her voice could be heard in the dressing-room
climbing up towards Sir William, who from the sound of his replies, was
manifestly shaving. When Agatha, who never could resist a legitimate
opportunity of approaching her husband, looked in, he was alone, and
rather thoughtful—a tall man with a solid, steady face and cautious
eyes, not in truth remarkable except to his own wife.
“That fellow Courtier's caught by the leg,” he said. “Don't know what your
Mother will say to an enemy in the camp.”
“Isn't he a freethinker, and rather——”
Sir William, following his own thoughts, interrupted:
“Just as well, of course, so far as Miltoun's concerned, to have got him
here.”
Agatha sighed: “Well, I suppose we shall have to be nice to him. I'll tell
Mother.”
Sir William smiled.
“Ann will see to that,” he said.
Ann was seeing to that.
Seated in the embrasure of the window behind the looking-glass, where Lady
Valleys was still occupied, she was saying:
“He fell out of the window because of the red pepper. Miss Wallace says he
is a hostage—what does hostage mean, Granny?”
When six years ago that word had first fallen on Lady Valleys' ears, she
had thought: “Oh! dear! Am I really Granny?” It had been a shock, had
seemed the end of so much; but the matter-of-fact heroism of women, so
much quicker to accept the inevitable than men, had soon come to her aid,
and now, unlike her husband, she did not care a bit. For all that she
answered nothing, partly because it was not necessary to speak in order to
sustain a conversation with little Ann, and partly because she was deep in
thought.
The man was injured! Hospitality, of course—especially since their
own tenants had committed the outrage! Still, to welcome a man who had
gone out of his way to come down here and stump the country against her
own son, was rather a tall order. It might have been worse, no doubt. If;
for instance, he had been some 'impossible' Nonconformist Radical! This
Mr. Courtier was a free lance—rather a well-known man, an
interesting creature. She must see that he felt 'at home' and comfortable.
If he were pumped judiciously, no doubt one could find out about this
woman. Moreover, the acceptance of their 'salt' would silence him
politically if she knew anything of that type of man, who always had
something in him of the Arab's creed. Her mind, that of a capable
administrator, took in all the practical significance of this incident,
which, although untoward, was not without its comic side to one disposed
to find zest and humour in everything that did not absolutely run counter
to her interests and philosophy.
The voice of little Ann broke in on her reflections.
“I'm going to Auntie Babs now.”
“Very well; give me a kiss first.”
Little Ann thrust up her face, so that its sudden little nose penetrated
Lady Valleys' soft curving lips....
When early that same afternoon Courtier, leaning on a stick, passed from
his room out on to the terrace, he was confronted by three sunlit peacocks
marching slowly across a lawn towards a statue of Diana. With incredible
dignity those birds moved, as if never in their lives had they been
hurried. They seemed indeed to know that when they got there, there would
be nothing for them to do but to come back again. Beyond them, through the
tall trees, over some wooded foot-hills of the moorland and a promised
land of pinkish fields, pasture, and orchards, the prospect stretched to
the far sea. Heat clothed this view with a kind of opalescence, a fairy
garment, transmuting all values, so that the four square walls and tall
chimneys of the pottery-works a few miles down the valley seemed to
Courtier like a vision of some old fortified Italian town. His sensations,
finding himself in this galley, were peculiar. For his feeling towards
Miltoun, whom he had twice met at Mrs. Noel's, was, in spite of
disagreements, by no means unfriendly; while his feeling towards Miltoun's
family was not yet in existence. Having lived from hand to mouth, and in
many countries, since he left Westminster School, he had now practically
no class feelings. An attitude of hostility to aristocracy because it was
aristocracy, was as incomprehensible to him as an attitude of deference.
His sensations habitually shaped themselves in accordance with those two
permanent requirements of his nature, liking for adventure, and hatred of
tyranny. The labourer who beat his wife, the shopman who sweated his
'hands,' the parson who consigned his parishioners to hell, the peer who
rode roughshod—all were equally odious to him. He thought of people
as individuals, and it was, as it were, by accident that he had conceived
the class generalization which he had fired back at Miltoun from Mrs.
Noel's window. Sanguine, accustomed to queer environments, and always
catching at the moment as it flew, he had not to fight with the timidities
and irritations of a nervous temperament. His cheery courtesy was only
disturbed when he became conscious of some sentiment which appeared to him
mean or cowardly. On such occasions, not perhaps infrequent, his face
looked as if his heart were physically fuming, and since his shell of
stoicism was never quite melted by this heat, a very peculiar expression
was the result, a sort of calm, sardonic, desperate, jolly look.
His chief feeling, then, at the outrage which had laid him captive in the
enemy's camp, was one of vague amusement, and curiosity. People round
about spoke fairly well of this Caradoc family. There did not seem to be
any lack of kindly feeling between them and their tenants; there was said
to be no griping destitution, nor any particular ill-housing on their
estate. And if the inhabitants were not encouraged to improve themselves,
they were at all events maintained at a certain level, by steady and not
ungenerous supervision. When a roof required thatching it was thatched;
when a man became too old to work, he was not suffered to lapse into the
Workhouse. In bad years for wool, or beasts, or crops, the farmers
received a graduated remission of rent. The pottery-works were run on a
liberal if autocratic basis. It was true that though Lord Valleys was said
to be a staunch supporter of a 'back to the land' policy, no disposition
was shown to encourage people to settle on these particular lands, no
doubt from a feeling that such settlers would not do them so much justice
as their present owner. Indeed so firmly did this conviction seemingly
obtain, that Lord Valleys' agent was not unfrequently observed to be
buying a little bit more.
But, since in this life one notices only what interests him, all this
gossip, half complimentary, half not, had fallen but lightly on the ears
of the champion of Peace during his campaign, for he was, as has, been
said, but a poor politician, and rode his own horse very much his own way.
While he stood there enjoying the view, he heard a small high voice, and
became conscious of a little girl in a very shady hat so far back on her
brown hair that it did not shade her; and of a small hand put out in
front. He took the hand, and answered:
“Thank you, I am well—and you?” perceiving the while that a pair of
wide frank eyes were examining his leg.
“Does it hurt?”
“Not to speak of.”
“My pony's leg was blistered. Granny is coming to look at it.”
“I see.”
“I have to go now. I hope you'll soon be better. Good-bye!”
Then, instead of the little girl, Courtier saw a tall and rather florid
woman regarding him with a sort of quizzical dignity. She wore a stiffish
fawn-coloured dress that seemed to be cut a little too tight round her
substantial hips, for it quite neglected to embrace her knees. She had on
no hat, no gloves, no ornaments, except the rings on her fingers, and a
little jewelled watch in a leather bracelet on her wrist. There was,
indeed, about her whole figure an air of almost professional escape from
finery.
Stretching out a well-shaped but not small hand, she said:
“I most heartily apologize to you, Mr. Courtier.”
“Not at all.”
“I do hope you're comfortable. Have they given you everything you want?”
“More than everything.”
“It really was disgraceful! However it's brought us the pleasure of making
your acquaintance. I've read your book, of course.”
To Courtier it seemed that on this lady's face had come a look which
seemed to say: Yes, very clever and amusing, quite enjoyable! But the
ideas——What? You know very well they won't do—in fact
they mustn't do!
“That's very nice of you.”
But into Lady Valleys' answer, “I don't agree with it a bit, you know!”
there had crept a touch of asperity, as though she knew that he had smiled
inside. “What we want preached in these days are the warlike virtues—especially
by a warrior.”
“Believe me, Lady Valleys, the warlike virtues are best left to men of
more virgin imagination.”
He received a quick look, and the words: “Anyway, I'm sure you don't care
a rap for politics. You know Mrs. Lees Noel, don't you? What a pretty
woman she is!”
But as she spoke Courtier saw a young girl coming along the terrace. She
had evidently been riding, for she wore high boots and a skirt which had
enabled her to sit astride. Her eyes were blue, and her hair—the
colour of beech-leaves in autumn with the sun shining through—was
coiled up tight under a small soft hat. She was tall, and moved towards
them like one endowed with great length from the hip joint to the knee.
Joy of life, serene, unconscious vigour, seemed to radiate from her whole
face and figure.
At Lady Valleys' words:
“Ah, Babs! My daughter Barbara—Mr. Courtier,” he put out his hand,
received within it some gauntleted fingers held out with a smile, and
heard her say:
“Miltoun's gone up to Town, Mother; I was going to motor in to
Bucklandbury with a message he gave me; so I can fetch Granny out from the
station:”
“You had better take Ann, or she'll make our lives a burden; and perhaps
Mr. Courtier would like an airing. Is your knee fit, do you think?”
Glancing at the apparition, Courtier replied:
“It is.”
Never since the age of seven had he been able to look on feminine beauty
without a sense of warmth and faint excitement; and seeing now perhaps the
most beautiful girl he had ever beheld, he desired to be with her wherever
she might be going. There was too something very fascinating in the way
she smiled, as if she had a little seen through his sentiments.
“Well then,” she said, “we'd better look for Ann.”
After short but vigorous search little Ann was found—in the car,
instinct having told her of a forward movement in which it was her duty to
take part. And soon they had started, Ann between them in that peculiar
state of silence to which she became liable when really interested.
From the Monkland estate, flowered, lawned, and timbered, to the open
moor, was like passing to another world; for no sooner was the last lodge
of the Western drive left behind, than there came into sudden view the
most pagan bit of landscape in all England. In this wild parliament-house,
clouds, rocks, sun, and winds met and consulted. The 'old' men, too, had
left their spirits among the great stones, which lay couched like lions on
the hill-tops, under the white clouds, and their brethren, the hunting
buzzard hawks. Here the very rocks were restless, changing form, and
sense, and colour from day to day, as though worshipping the unexpected,
and refusing themselves to law. The winds too in their passage revolted
against their courses, and came tearing down wherever there were combes or
crannies, so that men in their shelters might still learn the power of the
wild gods.
The wonders of this prospect were entirely lost on little Ann, and
somewhat so on Courtier, deeply engaged in reconciling those two alien
principles, courtesy, and the love of looking at a pretty face. He was
wondering too what this girl of twenty, who had the self-possession of a
woman of forty, might be thinking. It was little Ann who broke the
silence.
“Auntie Babs, it wasn't a very strong house, was it?”
Courtier looked in the direction of her small finger. There was the wreck
of a little house, which stood close to a stone man who had obviously
possessed that hill before there were men of flesh. Over one corner of the
sorry ruin, a single patch of roof still clung, but the rest was open.
“He was a silly man to build it, wasn't he, Ann? That's why they call it
Ashman's Folly.”
“Is he alive?”
“Not quite—it's just a hundred years ago.”
“What made him build it here?”
“He hated women, and—the roof fell in on him.”
“Why did he hate women?”
“He was a crank.”
“What is a crank?”
“Ask Mr. Courtier.”
Under this girl's calm quizzical glance, Courtier endeavoured to find an
answer to that question.
“A crank,” he said slowly, “is a man like me.”
He heard a little laugh, and became acutely conscious of Ann's
dispassionate examining eyes.
“Is Uncle Eustace a crank?”
“You know now, Mr. Courtier, what Ann thinks of you. You think a good deal
of Uncle Eustace, don't you, Ann?”
“Yes,” said Ann, and fixed her eyes before her. But Courtier gazed
sideways—over her hatless head.
His exhilaration was increasing every moment. This girl reminded him of a
two-year-old filly he had once seen, stepping out of Ascot paddock for her
first race, with the sun glistening on her satin chestnut skin, her neck
held high, her eyes all fire—as sure to win, as that grass was
green. It was difficult to believe her Miltoun's sister. It was difficult
to believe any of those four young Caradocs related. The grave ascetic
Miltoun, wrapped in the garment of his spirit; mild, domestic,
strait-laced Agatha; Bertie, muffled, shrewd, and steely; and this frank,
joyful conquering Barbara—the range was wide.
But the car had left the moor, and, down a steep hill, was passing the
small villas and little grey workmen's houses outside the town of
Bucklandbury.
“Ann and I have to go on to Miltoun's headquarters. Shall I drop you at
the enemy's, Mr. Courtier? Stop, please, Frith.”
And before Courtier could assent, they had pulled up at a house on which
was inscribed with extraordinary vigour: “Chilcox for Bucklandbury.”
Hobbling into the Committee-room of Mr. Humphrey Chilcox, which smelled of
paint, Courtier took with him the scented memory of youth, and ambergris,
and Harris tweed.
In that room three men were assembled round a table; the eldest of whom,
endowed with little grey eyes, a stubbly beard, and that mysterious
something only found in those who have been mayors, rose at once and came
towards him.
“Mr. Courtier, I believe,” he said bluffly. “Glad to see you, sir. Most
distressed to hear of this outrage. Though in a way, it's done us good.
Yes, really. Grossly against fair play. Shouldn't be surprised if it
turned a couple of hundred votes. You carry the effects of it about with
you, I see.”
A thin, refined man, with wiry hair, also came up, holding a newspaper in
his hand.
“It has had one rather embarrassing effect,” he said. “Read this
“'OUTRAGE ON A DISTINGUISHED VISITOR.
“'LORD MILTOUN'S EVENING ADVENTURE.'”
Courtier read a paragraph.
The man with the little eyes broke the ominous silence which ensued.
“One of our side must have seen the whole thing, jumped on his bicycle and
brought in the account before they went to press. They make no imputation
on the lady—simply state the facts. Quite enough,” he added with
impersonal grimness; “I think he's done for himself, sir.”
The man with the refined face added nervously:
“We couldn't help it, Mr. Courtier; I really don't know what we can do. I
don't like it a bit.”
“Has your candidate seen this?” Courtier asked.
“Can't have,” struck in the third Committee-man; “we hadn't seen it
ourselves until an hour ago.”
“I should never have permitted it,” said the man with the refined face; “I
blame the editor greatly.”
“Come to that——” said the little-eyed man, “it's a plain piece
of news. If it makes a stir, that's not our fault. The paper imputes
nothing, it states. Position of the lady happens to do the rest. Can't
help it, and moreover, sir, speaking for self, don't want to. We'll have
no loose morals in public life down here, please God!” There was real
feeling in his words; then, catching sight of Courtier's face, he added:
“Do you know this lady?”
“Ever since she was a child. Anyone who speaks evil of her, has to reckon
with me.”
The man with the refined face said earnestly:
“Believe me, Mr. Courtier, I entirely sympathize. We had nothing to do
with the paragraph. It's one of those incidents where one benefits against
one's will. Most unfortunate that she came out on to the green with Lord
Miltoun; you know what people are.”
“It's the head-line that does it;” said the third Committee-man; “they've
put what will attract the public.”
“I don't know, I don't know,” said the little-eyed man stubbornly; “if
Lord Miltoun will spend his evenings with lonely ladies, he can't blame
anybody but himself.”
Courtier looked from face to face.
“This closes my connection with the campaign,” he said: “What's the
address of this paper?” And without waiting for an answer, he took up the
journal and hobbled from the room. He stood a minute outside finding the
address, then made his way down the street.