Let me think where we were.
Oh, yes . . . that conversation took place on the
4th of August, 1913. I remember saying to her
that, on that day, exactly nine years before, I had
made their acquaintance, so that it had seemed quite
appropriate and like a birthday speech to utter my
little testimonial to my friend Edward. I could
quite confidently say that, though we four had been
about together in all sorts of places, for all that
length of time, I had not, for my part, one single
complaint to make of either of them. And I added,
that that was an unusual record for people who had
been so much together. You are not to imagine
that it was only at Nauheim that we met. That
would not have suited Florence.
I find, on looking at my diaries,
that on the 4th of September, 1904, Edward accompanied
Florence and myself to Paris, where we put him up
till the twenty-first of that month. He made
another short visit to us in December of that year—the
first year of our acquaintance. It must have
been during this visit that he knocked Mr Jimmy’s
teeth down his throat. I daresay Florence had
asked him to come over for that purpose. In 1905
he was in Paris three times—once with
Leonora, who wanted some frocks. In 1906 we spent
the best part of six weeks together at Mentone, and
Edward stayed with us in Paris on his way back to
London. That was how it went.
The fact was that in Florence the
poor wretch had got hold of a Tartar, compared with
whom Leonora was a sucking kid. He must have
had a hell of a time. Leonora wanted to keep
him for—what shall I say—for
the good of her church, as it were, to show that
Catholic women do not lose their men. Let it
go at that, for the moment. I will write more
about her motives later, perhaps. But Florence
was sticking on to the proprietor of the home of her
ancestors. No doubt he was also a very passionate
lover. But I am convinced that he was sick of
Florence within three years of even interrupted companionship
and the life that she led him. . . .
If ever Leonora so much as mentioned
in a letter that they had had a woman staying with
them—or, if she so much as mentioned a
woman’s name in a letter to me—off
would go a desperate cable in cipher to that poor
wretch at Branshaw, commanding him on pain of an
instant and horrible disclosure to come over and assure
her of his fidelity. I daresay he would have
faced it out; I daresay he would have thrown over
Florence and taken the risk of exposure. But
there he had Leonora to deal with. And Leonora
assured him that, if the minutest fragment of the
real situation ever got through to my senses, she
would wreak upon him the most terrible vengeance that
she could think of. And he did not have a very
easy job. Florence called for more and more attentions
from him as the time went on. She would make
him kiss her at any moment of the day; and it was
only by his making it plain that a divorced lady
could never assume a position in the county of Hampshire
that he could prevent her from making a bolt of it
with him in her train. Oh, yes, it was a difficult
job for him.
For Florence, if you please, gaining
in time a more composed view of nature, and overcome
by her habits of garrulity, arrived at a frame of
mind in which she found it almost necessary to tell
me all about it—nothing less than that.
She said that her situation was too unbearable with
regard to me.
She proposed to tell me all, secure
a divorce from me, and go with Edward and settle
in California. . . . I do not suppose that she
was really serious in this. It would have meant
the extinction of all hopes of Branshaw Manor for
her. Besides she had got it into her head that
Leonora, who was as sound as a roach, was consumptive.
She was always begging Leonora, before me, to go
and see a doctor. But, none the less, poor Edward
seems to have believed in her determination to carry
him off. He would not have gone; he cared for
his wife too much. But, if Florence had put him
at it, that would have meant my getting to know of
it, and his incurring Leonora’s vengeance.
And she could have made it pretty hot for him in
ten or a dozen different ways. And she assured
me that she would have used every one of them.
She was determined to spare my feelings. And
she was quite aware that, at that date, the hottest
she could have made it for him would have been to
refuse, herself, ever to see him again. . . .
Well, I think I have made it pretty
clear. Let me come to the 4th of August, 1913,
the last day of my absolute ignorance—and,
I assure you, of my perfect happiness. For the
coming of that dear girl only added to it all.
On that 4th of August I was sitting
in the lounge with a rather odious Englishman called
Bagshawe, who had arrived that night, too late for
dinner. Leonora had just gone to bed and I was
waiting for Florence and Edward and the girl to come
back from a concert at the Casino. They had not
gone there all together. Florence, I remember,
had said at first that she would remain with Leonora,
and me, and Edward and the girl had gone off alone.
And then Leonora had said to Florence with perfect
calmness:
“I wish you would go with those
two. I think the girl ought to have the appearance
of being chaperoned with Edward in these places.
I think the time has come.” So Florence,
with her light step, had slipped out after them.
She was all in black for some cousin or other.
Americans are particular in those matters.
We had gone on sitting in the lounge
till towards ten, when Leonora had gone up to bed.
It had been a very hot day, but there it was cool.
The man called Bagshawe had been reading The Times
on the other side of the room, but then he moved over
to me with some trifling question as a prelude to
suggesting an acquaintance. I fancy he asked
me something About the poll-tax on Kur-guests, and
whether it could not be sneaked out of. He was
that sort of person.
Well, he was an unmistakable man,
with a military figure, rather exaggerated, with
bulbous eyes that avoided your own, and a pallid
complexion that suggested vices practised in secret
along with an uneasy desire for making acquaintance
at whatever cost. . . . The filthy toad. . .
.
He began by telling me that he came
from Ludlow Manor, near Ledbury. The name had
a slightly familiar sound, though I could not fix
it in my mind. Then he began to talk about a
duty on hops, about Californian hops, about Los Angeles,
where he had been. He fencing for a topic with
which he might gain my affection.
And then, quite suddenly, in the bright
light of the street, I saw Florence running.
It was like that—I saw Florence running
with a face whiter than paper and her hand on the
black stuff over her heart. I tell you, my own
heart stood still; I tell you I could not move.
She rushed in at the swing doors. She looked
round that place of rush chairs, cane tables and
newspapers. She saw me and opened her lips.
She saw the man who was talking to me. She stuck
her hands over her face as if she wished to push her
eyes out. And she was not there any more.
I could not move; I could not stir
a finger. And then that man said:
“By Jove: Florry Hurlbird.”
He turned upon me with an oily and uneasy sound meant
for a laugh. He was really going to ingratiate
himself with me. “Do you know who that
is?” he asked. “The last time I saw
that girl she was coming out of the bedroom of a young
man called Jimmy at five o’clock in the morning.
In my house at Ledbury. You saw her recognize
me.” He was standing on his feet, looking
down at me. I don’t know what I looked like.
At any rate, he gave a sort of gurgle and then stuttered:
“Oh, I say. . . .”
Those were the last words I ever heard of Mr Bagshawe’s.
A long time afterwards I pulled myself out of the
lounge and went up to Florence’s room.
She had not locked the door—for the first
time of our married life. She was lying, quite
respectably arranged, unlike Mrs Maidan, on her bed.
She had a little phial that rightly should have contained
nitrate of amyl, in her right hand. That was
on the 4th of August, 1913.