If he had meant to speak he changed
his mind after his first sight of her. He merely
came in and closed the door behind him. Curious
experiences with which life had provided him had added
finish to an innate aptness of observation, and a
fine readiness in action.
If she had been of another type he
would have saved both her and himself a scene and
steered ably through the difficulties of the situation
towards a point where they could have met upon a normal
plane. A very pretty woman with whose affairs
one has nothing whatever to do, and whose pretty home
has been the perfection of modern smartness of custom,
suddenly opening her front door in the unexplained
absence of a footman and confronting a visitor, plainly
upon the verge of hysteria, suggests the necessity
of promptness.
But Feather gave him not a breath’s
space. She was in fact not merely on the verge
of her hysteria. She had gone farther. And
here he was. Oh, here he was! She fell down
upon her knees and actually clasped his immaculateness.
“Oh, Lord Coombe! Lord
Coombe! Lord Coombe!” She said it three
times because he presented to her but the one idea.
He did not drag himself away from
her embrace but he distinctly removed himself from
it.
“You must not fall upon your
knees, Mrs. Lawless,” he said. “Shall
we go into the drawing-room?”
“I—was writing to
you. I am starving—but it seemed too
silly when I wrote it. And it’s true!”
Her broken words were as senseless in their sound
as she had thought them when she saw them written.
“Will you come up into the drawing-room
and tell me exactly what you mean,” he said
and he made her release him and stand upon her feet.
As the years had passed he had detached
himself from so many weaknesses and their sequelae
of emotion that he had felt himself a safely unreachable
person. He was not young and he knew enough of
the disagreeableness of consequences to be adroit in
keeping out of the way of apparently harmless things
which might be annoying. Yet as he followed Mrs.
Gareth-Lawless and watched her stumbling up the stairs
like a punished child he was aware that he was abnormally
in danger of pitying her as he did not wish to pity
people. The pity was also something apart from
the feeling that it was hideous that a creature so
lovely, so shallow and so fragile should have been
caught in the great wheels of Life.
He knew what he had come to talk to
her about but he had really no clear idea of what
her circumstances actually were. Most people
had of course guessed that her husband had been living
on the edge of his resources and was accustomed to
debt and duns, but a lovely being greeting you by
clasping your knees and talking about “starving”—in
this particular street in Mayfair, led one to ask
oneself what one was walking into. Feather herself
had not known, in fact neither had any other human
being known, that there was a special reason why he
had drifted into seeming rather to allow her about—why
he had finally been counted among the frequenters
of the narrow house—and why he had seemed
to watch her a good deal sometimes with an expression
of serious interest—sometimes with an air
of irritation, and sometimes with no expression at
all. But there existed this reason and this it
was and this alone which had caused him to appear
upon her threshold and it had also been the power
which had prevented his disengaging himself with more
incisive finality when he found himself ridiculously
clasped about the knees as one who played the part
of an obdurate parent in a melodrama.
Once in the familiar surroundings
of her drawing-room her ash-gold blondness and her
black gauzy frock heightened all her effects so extraordinarily
that he frankly admitted to himself that she possessed
assets which would have modified most things to most
men.
As for Feather, when she herself beheld
him against the background of the same intimate aspects,
the effect of the sound of his voice, the manner in
which he sat down in a chair and a certain remotely
dim hint in the hue of his clothes and an almost concealed
note of some touch of colour which scarcely seemed
to belong to anything worn—were so reminiscent
of the days which now seemed past forever that she
began to cry again.
He received this with discreet lack
of melodrama of tone.
“You mustn’t do that,
Mrs. Lawless,” he said, “or I shall burst
into tears myself. I am a sensitive creature.”
“Oh, do say ‘Feather’
instead of Mrs. Lawless,” she implored.
“Sometimes you said ’Feather’.”
“I will say it now,” he
answered, “if you will not weep. It is an
adorable name.”
“I feel as if I should never
hear it again,” she shuddered, trying to dry
her eyes. “It is all over!”
“What is all over?”
“This—!” turning
a hopeless gaze upon the two tiny rooms crowded with
knick-knacks and nonsense. “The parties
and the fun—and everything in the world!
I have only had some biscuits and raisins to eat today—and
the landlord is going to turn me out.”
It seemed almost too preposterous
to quite credit that she was uttering naked truth.—And
yet—! After a second’s gaze at her
be repeated what he had said below stairs.
“Will you tell me exactly what you mean?”
Then he sat still and listened while
she poured it all forth. And as he listened he
realized that it was the mere every day fact that
they were sitting in the slice of a house with the
cream-coloured front and the great lady in her mansion
on one side and the millionaire and his splendours
on the other, which peculiarly added to a certain
hint of gruesomeness in the situation.
It was not necessary to add colour
and desperation to the story. Any effort Feather
had made in that direction would only have detracted
from the nakedness of its stark facts. They were
quite enough in themselves in their normal inevitableness.
Feather in her pale and totally undignified panic
presented the whole thing with clearness which had—without
being aided by her—an actual dramatic value.
This in spite of her mental dartings to and from and
dragging in of points and bits of scenes which were
not connected with each other. Only a brain whose
processes of inclusion and exclusion were final and
rapid could have followed her. Coombe watched
her closely as she talked. No grief-stricken young
widowed loneliness and heart-break were the background
of her anguish. She was her own background and
also her own foreground. The strength of the
fine body laid prone on the bed of the room she held
in horror, the white rigid face whose good looks had
changed to something she could not bear to remember,
had no pathos which was not concerned with the fact
that Robert had amazingly and unnaturally failed her
by dying and leaving her nothing but unpaid bills.
This truth indeed made the situation more poignantly
and finally squalid, as she brought forth one detail
after another. There were bills which had been
accumulating ever since they began their life in the
narrow house, there had been trades-people who had
been juggled with, promises made and supported by
adroit tricks and cleverly invented misrepresentations
and lies which neither of the pair had felt any compunctions
about and had indeed laughed over. Coombe saw
it all though he also saw that Feather did not know
all she was telling him. He could realize the
gradually increasing pressure and anger at tricks
which betrayed themselves, and the gathering determination
on the part of the creditors to end the matter in the
only way in which it could be ended. It had come
to this before Robert’s illness, and Feather
herself had heard of fierce interviews and had seen
threatening letters, but she had not believed they
could mean all they implied. Since things had
been allowed to go on so long she felt that they would
surely go on longer in the same way. There had
been some serious threatening about the rent and the
unpaid-for furniture. Robert’s supporting
idea had been that he might perhaps “get something
out of Lawdor who wouldn’t enjoy being the relation
of a fellow who was turned into the street!”
“He ought to have done something,”
Feather plained. “Robert would have been
Lord Lawdor himself if his uncle had died before he
had all those disgusting children.”
She was not aware that Coombe frequently
refrained from saying things to her—but
occasionally allowed himself not to refrain.
He did not refrain now from making a simple comment.
“But he is extremely robust
and he has the children. Six stalwart boys and
a stalwart girl. Family feeling has apparently
gone out of fashion.”
As she wandered on with her story
he mentally felt himself actually dragged into the
shrimp-pink bedroom and standing an onlooker when
the footman outside the door “did not know”
where Tonson had gone. For a moment he felt conscious
of the presence of some scent which would have been
sure to exhale itself from draperies and wardrobe.
He saw Cook put the account books on the small table,
he heard her, he also comprehended her. And Feather
at the window breathlessly watching the two cabs with
the servants’ trunks on top, and the servants
respectably unprofessional in attire and going away
quietly without an unpractical compunction—he
saw these also and comprehended knowing exactly why
compunctions had no part in latter-day domestic arrangements.
Why should they?
When Feather reached the point where
it became necessary to refer to Robin some fortunate
memory of Alice’s past warnings caused her to
feel—quite suddenly—that certain
details might be eliminated.
“She cried a little at first,”
she said, “but she fell asleep afterwards.
I was glad she did because I was afraid to go to her
in the dark.”
“Was she in the dark?”
“I think so. Perhaps Louisa
taught her to sleep without a light. There was
none when I took her some condensed milk this morning.
There was only c-con-d-densed milk to give her.”
She shed tears and choked as she described
her journey into the lower regions and the cockroaches
scuttling away before her into their hiding-places.
“I must have a nurse!
I must have one!” she almost sniffed.
“Someone must change her clothes and give her
a bath!”
“You can’t?” Coombe said.
“I!” dropping her handkerchief. “How—how
can I?”
“I don’t know,”
he answered and picked up the handkerchief with an
aloof grace of manner.
It was really Robin who was for Feather the breaking-point.
He thought she was in danger of flinging
herself upon him again. She caught at his arm
and her eyes of larkspur blue were actually wild.
“Don’t you see where I
am! How there is nothing and nobody—Don’t
you see?”
“Yes, I see,” he answered.
“You are quite right. There is nothing
and nobody. I have been to Lawdor myself.”
“You have been to talk to him?”
“Yesterday. That was my
reason for coming here. He will not see you or
be written to. He says he knows better to begin
that sort of thing. It may be that family feeling
has not the vogue it once had, but you may recall
that your husband infuriated him years ago. Also
England is a less certain quantity than it once was—and
the man has a family. He will allow you a hundred
a year but there he draws the line.”
“A hundred a year!” Feather
breathed. From her delicate shoulders hung floating
scarf-like sleeves of black transparency and she lifted
one of them and held it out like a night moth’s
wing—“This cost forty pounds,”
she said, her voice quite faint and low. “A
good nurse would cost forty! A cook—and
a footman and a maid—and a coachman—and
the brougham—I don’t know how much
they would cost. Oh-h!”
She drooped forward upon her sofa
and laid face downward on a cushion—slim,
exquisite in line, lost in despair.
The effect produced was that she gave
herself into his hands. He felt as well as saw
it and considered. She had no suggestion to offer,
no reserve. There she was.
“It is an incredible sort of
situation,” he said in an even, low-pitched
tone rather as if he were thinking aloud, “but
it is baldly real. It is actually simple.
In a street in Mayfair a woman and child might—”
He hesitated a second and a wailed word came forth
from the cushion.
“Starve!”
He moved slightly and continued.
“Since their bills have not
been paid the trades-people will not send in food.
Servants will not stay in a house where they are not
fed and receive no wages. No landlord will allow
a tenant to occupy his property unless he pays rent.
It may sound inhuman—but it is only human.”
The cushion in which Feather’s
face was buried retained a faint scent of Robert’s
cigar smoke and the fragrance brought back to her
things she had heard him say dispassionately about
Lord Coombe as well as about other men. He had
not been a puritanic or condemnatory person.
She seemed to see herself groveling again on the floor
of her bedroom and to feel the darkness and silence
through which she had not dared to go to Robin.
Not another night like that! No! No!
“You must go to Jersey to your
mother and father,” Coombe said. “A
hundred a year will help you there in your own home.”
Then she sat upright and there was
something in her lovely little countenance he had
never seen before. It was actually determination.
“I have heard,” she said,
“of poor girls who were driven—by
starvation to—to go on the streets.
I—would go anywhere before I would
go back there.”
“Anywhere!” he repeated,
his own countenance expressing—or rather
refusing to express something as new as the thing he
had seen in her own.
“Anywhere!” she cried
and then she did what he had thought her on the verge
of doing a few minutes earlier—she fell
at his feet and embraced his knees. She clung
to him, she sobbed, her pretty hair loosened itself
and fell about her in wild but enchanting disorder.
“Oh, Lord Coombe! Oh, Lord
Coombe! Oh, Lord Coombe!” she cried as
she had cried in the hall.
He rose and endeavoured to disengage
himself as he had done before. This time with
less success because she would not let him go.
He had the greatest possible objection to scenes.
“Mrs. Lawless—Feather—I
beg you will get up,” he said.
But she had reached the point of not
caring what happened if she could keep him. He
was a gentleman—he had everything in the
world. What did it matter?
“I have no one but you and—and
you always seemed to like me, I would do anything—anyone
asked me, if they would take care of me. I have
always liked you very much—and I did amuse
you—didn’t I? You liked to come
here.”
There was something poignant about
her delicate distraught loveliness and, in the remoteness
of his being, a shuddering knowledge that it was quite
true that she would do anything for any man who would
take care of her, produced an effect on him nothing
else would have produced. Also a fantastic and
finely ironic vision of Joseph and Potiphar’s
wife rose before him and the vision of himself as
Joseph irked a certain complexness of his mentality.
Poignant as the thing was in its modern way, it was
also faintly ridiculous.
Then Robin awakened and shrieked again.
The sound which had gained strength through long sleep
and also through added discomfort quite rang through
the house. What that sound added to the moment
he himself would not have been able to explain until
long afterwards. But it singularly and impellingly
added.
“Listen!” panted Feather.
“She has begun again. And there is no one
to go to her.”
“Get up, Mrs. Lawless,”
he said. “Do I understand that you are
willing that I arrange this for you!”
He helped her to her feet.
“Do you mean—really!” she faltered.
“Will you—will you—?”
Her uplifted eyes were like a young
angel’s brimming with crystal drops which slipped—as
a child’s tears slip—down her cheeks.
She clasped her hands in exquisite appeal. He
stood for a moment quite still, his mind fled far
away and he forgot where he was. And because
of this the little simpleton’s shallow discretion
deserted her.
“If you were a—a
marrying man—?” she said foolishly—almost
in a whisper.
He recovered himself.
“I am not,” with a finality
which cut as cleanly as a surgical knife.
Something which was not the words
was of a succinctness which filled her with new terror.
“I—I know!” she whimpered,
“I only said if you were!”
“If I were—in this
instance—it would make no difference.”
He saw the kind of slippery silliness he was dealing
with and what it might transform itself into if allowed
a loophole. “There must be no mistakes.”
In her fright she saw him for a moment
more distinctly than she had ever seen him before
and hideous dread beset her lest she had blundered
fatally.
“There shall be none,”
she gasped. “I always knew. There shall
be none at all.”
“Do you know what you are asking me?”
he inquired.
“Yes, yes—I’m
not a girl, you know. I’ve been married.
I won’t go home. I can’t starve or
live in awful lodgings. Somebody must save
me!”
“Do you know what people will
say?” his steady voice was slightly lower.
“It won’t be said to me.”
Rather wildly. “Nobody minds—really.”
He ceased altogether to look serious.
He smiled with the light detached air his world was
most familiar with.
“No—they don’t
really,” he answered. “I had, however,
a slight preference for knowing whether you would
or not. You flatter me by intimating that you
would not.”
He knew that if he had held out an
arm she would have fallen upon his breast and wept
there, but he was not at the moment in the mood to
hold out an arm. He merely touched hers with a
light pressure.
“Let us sit down and talk it over,” he
suggested.
A hansom drove up to the door and
stopped before he had time to seat himself. Hearing
it he went to the window and saw a stout businesslike
looking man get out, accompanied by an attendant.
There followed a loud, authoritative ringing of the
bell and an equally authoritative rap of the knocker.
This repeated itself. Feather, who had run to
the window and caught sight of the stout man, clutched
his sleeve.
“It’s the agent we took
the house from. We always said we were out.
It’s either Carson or Bayle. I don’t
know which.”
Coombe walked toward the staircase.
“You can’t open the door!” she shrilled.
“He has doubtless come prepared
to open it himself.” he answered and proceeded
at leisure down the narrow stairway.
The caller had come prepared.
By the time Coombe stood in the hall a latchkey was
put in the keyhole and, being turned, the door opened
to let in Carson—or Bayle—who
entered with an air of angered determination, followed
by his young man.
The physical presence of the Head
of the House of Coombe was always described as a subtly
impressive one. Several centuries of rather careful
breeding had resulted in his seeming to represent things
by silent implication. A man who has never found
the necessity of explaining or excusing himself inevitably
presents a front wholly unsuggestive of uncertainty.
The front Coombe presented merely awaited explanations
from others.
Carson—or Bayle—had
doubtless contemplated seeing a frightened servant
trying to prepare a stammering obvious lie. He
confronted a tall, thin man about whom—even
if his clothes had been totally different—there
could be no mistake. He stood awaiting an apology
so evidently that Carson—or Bayle—began
to stammer himself even before he had time to dismiss
from his voice the suggestion of bluster. It
would have irritated Coombe immensely if he had known
that he—and a certain overcoat—had
been once pointed out to the man at Sandown and that—in
consequence of the overcoat—he vaguely
recognized him.
“I—I beg pardon,” he began.
“Quite so,” said Coombe.
“Some tenants came to look at
the house this morning. They had an order to
view from us. They were sent away, my lord—and
decline to come back. The rent has not been paid
since the first half year. There is no one now
who can even pretend it’s going to be paid.
Some step had to be taken.”
“Quite so,” said Coombe. “Suppose
you step into the dining-room.”
He led the pair into the room and
pointed to chairs, but neither the agent nor his attendant
was calm enough to sit down.
Coombe merely stood and explained himself.
“I quite understand,”
he said. “You are entirely within your
rights. Mrs. Gareth-Lawless is, naturally, not
able to attend to business. For the present—as
a friend of her late husband’s—I
will arrange matters for her. I am Lord Coombe.
She does not wish to give up the house. Don’t
send any more possible tenants. Call at Coombe
House in an hour and I will give you a cheque.”
There were a few awkward apologetic
moments and then the front door opened and shut, the
hansom jingled away and Coombe returned to the drawing-room.
Robin was still shrieking.
“She wants some more condensed
milk,” he said. “Don’t be frightened.
Go and give her some. I know an elderly woman
who understands children. She was a nurse some
years ago. I will send her here at once.
Kindly give me the account books. My housekeeper
will send you some servants. The trades-people
will come for orders.”
Feather was staring at him.
“W-will they?” she stammered. “W-will
everything—?”
“Yes—everything,”
he answered. “Don’t be frightened.
Go upstairs and try to stop her. I must go now.
I never heard a creature yell with such fury.”
She turned away and went towards the
second flight of stairs with a rather dazed air.
She had passed through a rather tremendous crisis
and she was dazed. He made her feel so.
She had never understood him for a moment and she
did not understand him now—but then she
never did understand people and the whole situation
was a new one to her. If she had not been driven
to the wall she would have been quite as respectable
as she knew how to be.
Coombe called a hansom and drove home,
thinking of many things and looking even more than
usually detached. He had remarked the facial
expression of the short and stout man as he had got
into his cab and he was turning over mentally his
own exact knowledge of the views the business mind
would have held and what the business countenance
would have decently covered if he—Coombe—had
explained in detail that he was so far—in
this particular case—an entirely blameless
character.