5. The young girl.
In her blue dress, with her cheeks
lightly flushed, her blue, blue eyes, and her gold
curls pinned up as though for the first time—pinned
up to be out of the way for her flight—Mrs.
Raddick’s daughter might have just dropped from
this radiant heaven. Mrs. Raddick’s timid,
faintly astonished, but deeply admiring glance looked
as if she believed it, too; but the daughter didn’t
appear any too pleased—why should she?—to
have alighted on the steps of the Casino. Indeed,
she was bored—bored as though Heaven had
been full of casinos with snuffy old saints for croupiers
and crowns to play with.
“You don’t mind taking
Hennie?” said Mrs. Raddick. “Sure
you don’t? There’s the car, and
you’ll have tea and we’ll be back here
on this step— right here—in
an hour. You see, I want her to go in.
She’s not been before, and it’s worth
seeing. I feel it wouldn’t be fair to her.”
“Oh, shut up, mother,”
said she wearily. “Come along. Don’t
talk so much. And your bag’s open; you’ll
be losing all your money again.”
“I’m sorry, darling,” said Mrs.
Raddick.
“Oh, do come in! I want
to make money,” said the impatient voice.
“It’s all jolly well for you—but
I’m broke!”
“Here—take fifty
francs, darling, take a hundred!” I saw Mrs.
Raddick pressing notes into her hand as they passed
through the swing doors.
Hennie and I stood on the steps a
minute, watching the people. He had a very broad,
delighted smile.
“I say,” he cried, “there’s
an English bulldog. Are they allowed to take
dogs in there?”
“No, they’re not.”
“He’s a ripping chap,
isn’t he? I wish I had one. They’re
such fun. They frighten people so, and they’re
never fierce with their—the people they
belong to.” Suddenly he squeezed my arm.
“I say, do look at that old woman. Who
is she? Why does she look like that? Is
she a gambler?”
The ancient, withered creature, wearing
a green satin dress, a black velvet cloak and a white
hat with purple feathers, jerked slowly, slowly up
the steps as though she were being drawn up on wires.
She stared in front of her, she was laughing and
nodding and cackling to herself; her claws clutched
round what looked like a dirty boot-bag.
But just at that moment there was
Mrs. Raddick again with—her—and
another lady hovering in the background. Mrs.
Raddick rushed at me. She was brightly flushed,
gay, a different creature. She was like a woman
who is saying “good-bye” to her friends
on the station platform, with not a minute to spare
before the train starts.
“Oh, you’re here, still.
Isn’t that lucky! You’ve not gone.
Isn’t that fine! I’ve had the most
dreadful time with—her,” and she waved
to her daughter, who stood absolutely still, disdainful,
looking down, twiddling her foot on the step, miles
away. “They won’t let her in.
I swore she was twenty-one. But they won’t
believe me. I showed the man my purse; I didn’t
dare to do more. But it was no use. He
simply scoffed…And now I’ve just met Mrs.
MacEwen from New York, and she just won thirteen thousand
in the Salle Privee—and she wants me to
go back with her while the luck lasts. Of course
I can’t leave—her. But if you’d—”
At that “she” looked up;
she simply withered her mother. “Why can’t
you leave me?” she said furiously. “What
utter rot! How dare you make a scene like this?
This is the last time I’ll come out with you.
You really are too awful for words.”
She looked her mother up and down. “Calm
yourself,” she said superbly.
Mrs. Raddick was desperate, just desperate.
She was “wild” to go back with Mrs. MacEwen,
but at the same time …
I seized my courage. “Would
you—do you care to come to tea with—us?”
“Yes, yes, she’ll be delighted.
That’s just what I wanted, isn’t it,
darling? Mrs. MacEwen…I’ll be back here
in an hour…or less…I’ll—”
Mrs. R. dashed up the steps. I saw her bag was
open again.
So we three were left. But really
it wasn’t my fault. Hennie looked crushed
to the earth, too. When the car was there she
wrapped her dark coat round her—to escape
contamination. Even her little feet looked as
though they scorned to carry her down the steps to
us.
“I am so awfully sorry,” I murmured as
the car started.
“Oh, I don’t mind,”
said she. “I don’t want to look twenty-one.
Who would—if they were seventeen!
It’s”—and she gave a faint
shudder—“the stupidity I loathe,
and being stared at by old fat men. Beasts!”
Hennie gave her a quick look and then
peered out of the window.
We drew up before an immense palace
of pink-and-white marble with orange-trees outside
the doors in gold-and-black tubs.
“Would you care to go in?” I suggested.
She hesitated, glanced, bit her lip,
and resigned herself. “Oh well, there
seems nowhere else,” said she. “Get
out, Hennie.”
I went first—to find the
table, of course—she followed. But
the worst of it was having her little brother, who
was only twelve, with us. That was the last,
final straw—having that child, trailing
at her heels.
There was one table. It had
pink carnations and pink plates with little blue tea-napkins
for sails.
“Shall we sit here?”
She put her hand wearily on the back of a white wicker
chair.
“We may as well. Why not?” said
she.
Hennie squeezed past her and wriggled
on to a stool at the end. He felt awfully out
of it. She didn’t even take her gloves
off. She lowered her eyes and drummed on the
table. When a faint violin sounded she winced
and bit her lip again. Silence.
The waitress appeared. I hardly
dared to ask her. “Tea—coffee?
China tea—or iced tea with lemon?”
Really she didn’t mind.
It was all the same to her. She didn’t
really want anything. Hennie whispered, “Chocolate!”
But just as the waitress turned away
she cried out carelessly, “Oh, you may as well
bring me a chocolate, too.”
While we waited she took out a little,
gold powder-box with a mirror in the lid, shook the
poor little puff as though she loathed it, and dabbed
her lovely nose.
“Hennie,” she said, “take
those flowers away.” She pointed with her
puff to the carnations, and I heard her murmur, “I
can’t bear flowers on a table.”
They had evidently been giving her intense pain, for
she positively closed her eyes as I moved them away.
The waitress came back with the chocolate
and the tea. She put the big, frothing cups
before them and pushed across my clear glass.
Hennie buried his nose, emerged, with, for one dreadful
moment, a little trembling blob of cream on the tip.
But he hastily wiped it off like a little gentleman.
I wondered if I should dare draw her attention to
her cup. She didn’t notice it—didn’t
see it—until suddenly, quite by chance,
she took a sip. I watched anxiously; she faintly
shuddered.
“Dreadfully sweet!” said she.
A tiny boy with a head like a raisin
and a chocolate body came round with a tray of pastries—row
upon row of little freaks, little inspirations, little
melting dreams. He offered them to her.
“Oh, I’m not at all hungry. Take
them away.”
He offered them to Hennie. Hennie
gave me a swift look—it must have been
satisfactory—for he took a chocolate cream,
a coffee eclair, a meringue stuffed with chestnut
and a tiny horn filled with fresh strawberries.
She could hardly bear to watch him. But just
as the boy swerved away she held up her plate.
“Oh well, give me one,” said she.
The silver tongs dropped one, two,
three—and a cherry tartlet. “I
don’t know why you’re giving me all these,”
she said, and nearly smiled. “I shan’t
eat them; I couldn’t!”
I felt much more comfortable.
I sipped my tea, leaned back, and even asked if I
might smoke. At that she paused, the fork in
her hand, opened her eyes, and really did smile.
“Of course,” said she. “I
always expect people to.”
But at that moment a tragedy happened
to Hennie. He speared his pastry horn too hard,
and it flew in two, and one half spilled on the table.
Ghastly affair! He turned crimson. Even
his ears flared, and one ashamed hand crept across
the table to take what was left of the body away.
“You utter little beast!” said she.
Good heavens! I had to fly to
the rescue. I cried hastily, “Will you
be abroad long?”
But she had already forgotten Hennie.
I was forgotten, too. She was trying to remember
something…She was miles away.
“I—don’t—know,”
she said slowly, from that far place.
“I suppose you prefer it to London. It’s
more—more—”
When I didn’t go on she came
back and looked at me, very puzzled. “More—?”
“Enfin—gayer,” I cried, waving
my cigarette.
But that took a whole cake to consider.
Even then, “Oh well, that depends!” was
all she could safely say.
Hennie had finished. He was still very warm.
I seized the butterfly list off the
table. “I say—what about an
ice, Hennie? What about tangerine and ginger?
No, something cooler. What about a fresh pineapple
cream?”
Hennie strongly approved. The
waitress had her eye on us. The order was taken
when she looked up from her crumbs.
“Did you say tangerine and ginger?
I like ginger. You can bring me one.”
And then quickly, “I wish that orchestra wouldn’t
play things from the year One. We were dancing
to that all last Christmas. It’s too sickening!”
But it was a charming air. Now
that I noticed it, it warmed me.
“I think this is rather a nice
place, don’t you, Hennie?” I said.
Hennie said: “Ripping!”
He meant to say it very low, but it came out very
high in a kind of squeak.
Nice? This place? Nice?
For the first time she stared about her, trying to
see what there was…She blinked; her lovely eyes wondered.
A very good-looking elderly man stared back at her
through a monocle on a black ribbon. But him
she simply couldn’t see. There was a hole
in the air where he was. She looked through
and through him.
Finally the little flat spoons lay
still on the glass plates. Hennie looked rather
exhausted, but she pulled on her white gloves again.
She had some trouble with her diamond wrist-watch;
it got in her way. She tugged at it—tried
to break the stupid little thing—it wouldn’t
break. Finally, she had to drag her glove over.
I saw, after that, she couldn’t stand this
place a moment longer, and, indeed, she jumped up and
turned away while I went through the vulgar act of
paying for the tea.
And then we were outside again.
It had grown dusky. The sky was sprinkled with
small stars; the big lamps glowed. While we waited
for the car to come up she stood on the step, just
as before, twiddling her foot, looking down.
Hennie bounded forward to open the
door and she got in and sank back with—
oh—such a sigh!
“Tell him,” she gasped, “to drive
as fast as he can.”
Hennie grinned at his friend the chauffeur.
“Allie veet!” said he. Then he
composed himself and sat on the small seat facing us.
The gold powder-box came out again.
Again the poor little puff was shaken; again there
was that swift, deadly-secret glance between her and
the mirror.
We tore through the black-and-gold
town like a pair of scissors tearing through brocade.
Hennie had great difficulty not to look as though
he were hanging on to something.
And when we reached the Casino, of
course Mrs. Raddick wasn’t there. There
wasn’t a sign of her on the steps—not
a sign.
“Will you stay in the car while I go and look?”
But no—she wouldn’t
do that. Good heavens, no! Hennie could
stay. She couldn’t bear sitting in a car.
She’d wait on the steps.
“But I scarcely like to leave
you,” I murmured. “I’d very
much rather not leave you here.”
At that she threw back her coat; she
turned and faced me; her lips parted. “Good
heavens—why! I—I don’t
mind it a bit. I—I like waiting.”
And suddenly her cheeks crimsoned, her eyes grew
dark—for a moment I thought she was going
to cry. “L—let me, please,”
she stammered, in a warm, eager voice. “I
like it. I love waiting! Really—really
I do! I’m always waiting—in
all kinds of places…”
Her dark coat fell open, and her white
throat—all her soft young body in the blue
dress—was like a flower that is just emerging
from its dark bud.