THE deluge began punctually on the
Thursday, and Vyse, arriving as punctually, had an
impressive pile of letters to attack. Betton,
on his way to the Park for a ride, came into the library,
smoking the cigarette of indolence, to look over his
secretary’s shoulder.
“How many of ’em?
Twenty? Good Lord! It’s going to be
worse than ‘Diadems.’ I’ve
just had my first quiet breakfast in two years—time
to read the papers and loaf. How I used to dread
the sight of my letter-box! Now I sha’n’t
know I have one.”
He leaned over Vyse’s chair,
and the secretary handed him a letter.
“Here’s rather an exceptional
one—lady, evidently. I thought you
might want to answer it yourself—”
“Exceptional?” Betton
ran over the mauve pages and tossed them down.
“Why, my dear man, I get hundreds like that.
You’ll have to be pretty short with her, or
she’ll send her photograph.”
He clapped Vyse on the shoulder and
turned away, humming a tune. “Stay to luncheon,”
he called back gaily from the threshold.
After luncheon Vyse insisted on showing
a few of his answers to the first batch of letters.
“If I’ve struck the note I won’t
bother you again,” he urged; and Betton groaningly
consented.
“My dear fellow, they’re
beautiful—too beautiful. I’ll
be let in for a correspondence with every one of these
people.”
Vyse, at this, meditated for a while
above a blank sheet. “All right—how’s
this?” he said, after another interval of rapid
writing.
Betton glanced over the page.
“By George—by George! Won’t
she see it?” he exulted, between fear
and rapture.
“It’s wonderful how little
people see,” said Vyse reassuringly.
The letters continued to pour in for
several weeks after the appearance of “Abundance.”
For five or six blissful days Betton did not even
have his mail brought to him, trusting to Vyse to single
out his personal correspondence, and to deal with the
rest according to their agreement. During those
days he luxuriated in a sense of wild and lawless
freedom; then, gradually, he began to feel the need
of fresh restraints to break, and learned that the
zest of liberty lies in the escape from specific obligations.
At first he was conscious only of a vague hunger,
but in time the craving resolved into a shame-faced
desire to see his letters.
“After all, I hated them only
because I had to answer them”; and he told Vyse
carelessly that he wished all his letters submitted
to him before the secretary answered them.
At first he pushed aside those beginning:
“I have just laid down ‘Abundance’
after a third reading,” or: “Every
day for the last month I have been telephoning my
bookseller to know when your novel would be out.”
But little by little the freshness of his interest
revived, and even this stereotyped homage began to
arrest his eye. At last a day came when he read
all the letters, from the first word to the last,
as he had done when “Diadems and Faggots”
appeared. It was really a pleasure to read them,
now that he was relieved of the burden of replying:
his new relation to his correspondents had the glow
of a love-affair unchilled by the contingency of marriage.
One day it struck him that the letters
were coming in more slowly and in smaller numbers.
Certainly there had been more of a rush when “Diadems
and Faggots” came out. Betton began to wonder
if Vyse were exercising an unauthorized discrimination,
and keeping back the communications he deemed least
important. This sudden conjecture carried the
novelist straight to his library, where he found Vyse
bending over the writing-table with his usual inscrutable
pale smile. But once there, Betton hardly knew
how to frame his question, and blundered into an enquiry
for a missing invitation.
“There’s a note—a
personal note—I ought to have had this morning.
Sure you haven’t kept it back by mistake among
the others?”
Vyse laid down his pen. “The
others? But I never keep back any.”
Betton had foreseen the answer.
“Not even the worst twaddle about my book?”
he suggested lightly, pushing the papers about.
“Nothing. I understood
you wanted to go over them all first.”
“Well, perhaps it’s safer,”
Betton conceded, as if the idea were new to him.
With an embarrassed hand he continued to turn over
the letters at Vyse’s elbow.
“Those are yesterday’s,”
said the secretary; “here are to-day’s,”
he added, pointing to a meagre trio.
“H’m—only these?”
Betton took them and looked them over lingeringly.
“I don’t see what the deuce that chap means
about the first part of ‘Abundance’ ’certainly
justifying the title’—do you?”
Vyse was silent, and the novelist
continued irritably: “Damned cheek, his
writing, if he doesn’t like the book. Who
cares what he thinks about it, anyhow?”
And his morning ride was embittered
by the discovery that it was unexpectedly disagreeable
to have Vyse read any letters which did not express
unqualified praise of his books. He began to fancy
there was a latent rancour, a kind of baffled sneer,
under Vyse’s manner; and he decided to return
to the practice of having his mail brought straight
to his room. In that way he could edit the letters
before his secretary saw them.
Vyse made no comment on the change,
and Betton was reduced to wondering whether his imperturbable
composure were the mask of complete indifference or
of a watchful jealousy. The latter view being
more agreeable to his employer’s self-esteem,
the next step was to conclude that Vyse had not forgotten
the episode of “The Lifted Lamp,” and
would naturally take a vindictive joy in any unfavourable
judgments passed on his rival’s work. This
did not simplify the situation, for there was no denying
that unfavourable criticisms preponderated in Betton’s
correspondence. “Abundance” was neither
meeting with the unrestricted welcome of “Diadems
and Faggots,” nor enjoying the alternative of
an animated controversy: it was simply found
dull, and its readers said so in language not too
tactfully tempered by regretful comparisons with its
predecessor. To withhold unfavourable comments
from Vyse was, therefore, to make it appear that correspondence
about the book had died out; and its author, mindful
of his unguarded predictions, found this even more
embarrassing. The simplest solution would be to
get rid of Vyse; and to this end Betton began to address
his energies.
One evening, finding himself unexpectedly
disengaged, he asked Vyse to dine; it had occurred
to him that, in the course of an after-dinner chat,
he might delicately hint his feeling that the work
he had offered his friend was unworthy so accomplished
a hand.
Vyse surprised him by a momentary
hesitation. “I may not have time to dress.”
Betton stared. “What’s
the odds? We’ll dine here—and
as late as you like.”
Vyse thanked him, and appeared, punctually
at eight, in all the shabbiness of his daily wear.
He looked paler and more shyly truculent than usual,
and Betton, from the height of his florid stature,
said to himself, with the sudden professional instinct
for “type”: “He might be an
agent of something—a chap who carries deadly
secrets.”
Vyse, it was to appear, did carry
a deadly secret; but one less perilous to society
than to himself. He was simply poor—inexcusably,
irremediably poor. Everything failed him, had
always failed him: whatever he put his hand to
went to bits.
This was the confession that, reluctantly,
yet with a kind of white-lipped bravado, he flung
at Betton in answer to the latter’s tentative
suggestion that, really, the letter-answering job wasn’t
worth bothering him with—a thing that any
type-writer could do.
“If you mean you’re paying
me more than it’s worth, I’ll take less,”
Vyse rushed out after a pause.
“Oh, my dear fellow—” Betton
protested, flushing.
“What do you mean, then?
Don’t I answer the letters as you want them
answered?”
Betton anxiously stroked his silken
ankle. “You do it beautifully, too beautifully.
I mean what I say: the work’s not worthy
of you. I’m ashamed to ask you—”
“Oh, hang shame,” Vyse
interrupted. “Do you know why I said I
shouldn’t have time to dress to-night? Because
I haven’t any evening clothes. As a matter
of fact, I haven’t much but the clothes I stand
in. One thing after another’s gone against
me; all the infernal ingenuities of chance. It’s
been a slow Chinese torture, the kind where they keep
you alive to have more fun killing you.”
He straightened himself with a sudden blush.
“Oh, I’m all right now—getting
on capitally. But I’m still walking rather
a narrow plank; and if I do your work well enough—if
I take your idea—”
Betton stared into the fire without
answering. He knew next to nothing of Vyse’s
history, of the mischance or mis-management that had
brought him, with his brains and his training, to so
unlikely a pass. But a pang of compunction shot
through him as he remembered the manuscript of “The
Lifted Lamp” gathering dust on his table for
half a year.
“Not that it would have made
any earthly difference—since he’s
evidently never been able to get the thing published.”
But this reflection did not wholly console Betton,
and he found it impossible, at the moment, to tell
Vyse that his services were not needed.