I had gone far beyond that initial
stage; I had had two smashes and a broken rib which
my aunt nursed with great energy, and was getting
some reputation in the aeronautic world when, suddenly,
as though she had never really left it, the Honourable
Beatrice Normandy, dark-eyed, and with the old disorderly
wave of the hair from her brow, came back into my
life. She came riding down a grass path in the
thickets below Lady Grove, perched up on a huge black
horse, and the old Earl of Carnaby and Archie Garvell,
her half-brother, were with her. My uncle had
been bothering me about the Crest Hill hot-water pipes,
and we were returning by a path transverse to theirs
and came out upon them suddenly. Old Carnaby
was trespassing on our ground, and so he hailed us
in a friendly fashion and pulled up to talk to us.
I didn’t note Beatrice at all
at first. I was interested in Lord Carnaby,
that remarkable vestige of his own brilliant youth.
I had heard of him, but never seen him. For
a man of sixty-five who had sinned all the sins, so
they said, and laid waste the most magnificent political
debut of any man of his generation, he seemed to me
to be looking remarkably fit and fresh. He was
a lean little man with grey-blue eyes in his brown
face, and his cracked voice was the worst thing in
his effect.
“Hope you don’t mind us
coming this way, Ponderevo,” he cried; and my
uncle, who was sometimes a little too general and generous
with titles, answered, “Not at all, my lord,
not at all! Glad you make use of it!”
“You’re building a great
place over the hill,” said Carnaby.
“Thought I’d make a show
for once,” said my uncle. “It looks
big because it’s spread out for the sun.”
“Air and sunlight,” said
the earl. “You can’t have too much
of them. But before our time they used to build
for shelter and water and the high road.”
Then I discovered that the silent
figure behind the earl was Beatrice.
I’d forgotten her sufficiently
to think for a moment that she hadn’t changed
at all since she had watched me from behind the skirts
of Lady Drew. She was looking at me, and her
dainty brow under her broad brimmed hat—she
was wearing a grey hat and loose unbuttoned coat—was
knit with perplexity, trying, I suppose, to remember
where she had seen me before. Her shaded eyes
met mine with that mute question….
It seemed incredible to me she didn’t remember.
“Well,” said the earl and touched his
horse.
Garvell was patting the neck of his
horse, which was inclined to fidget, and disregarding
me. He nodded over his shoulder and followed.
His movement seemed to release a train of memories
in her. She glanced suddenly at him and then
back at me with a flash of recognition that warmed
instantly to a faint smile. She hesitated as
if to speak to me, smiled broadly and understandingly
and turned to follow the others. All three broke
into a canter and she did not look back. I stood
for a second or so at the crossing of the lanes, watching
her recede, and then became aware that my uncle was
already some paces off and talking over his shoulder
in the belief that I was close behind. I turned
about and strode to overtake him. My mind was
full of Beatrice and this surprise. I remembered
her simply as a Normandy. I’d clean forgotten
that Garvell was the son and she the step-daughter
of our neighbour, Lady Osprey. Indeed, I’d
probably forgotten at that time that we had Lady Osprey
as a neighbour. There was no reason at all for
remembering it. It was amazing to find her in
this Surrey countryside, when I’d never thought
of her as living anywhere in the world but at Bladesover
Park, near forty miles and twenty years away.
She was so alive—so unchanged! The
same quick warm blood was in her cheeks. It
seemed only yesterday that we had kissed among the
bracken stems….
“Eh?” I said.
“I say he’s good stuff,”
said my uncle. “You can say what you like
against the aristocracy, George; Lord Carnaby’s
rattling good stuff. There’s a sort of
Savoir Faire, something—it’s
an old-fashioned phrase, George, but a good one there’s
a Bong-Tong…. It’s like the Oxford turf,
George, you can’t grow it in a year. I
wonder how they do it. It’s living always
on a Scale, George. It’s being there from
the beginning.”...
“She might,” I said to
myself, “be a picture by Romney come alive!”
“They tell all these stories
about him,” said my uncle, “but what do
they all amount to?”
“Gods!” I said to myself;
“but why have I forgotten for so long?
Those queer little brows of hers, the touch of mischief
in her eyes—the way she breaks into a smile!”
“I don’t blame him,”
said my uncle. “Mostly it’s imagination.
That and leisure, George. When I was a young
man I was kept pretty busy. So were you.
Even then—!”
What puzzled me more particularly
was the queer trick of my memory that had never recalled
anything vital of Beatrice whatever when I met Garvell
again that had, indeed, recalled nothing except a
boyish antagonism and our fight. Now when my
senses were full of her, it seemed incredible that
I could ever have forgotten….