Two strange meetings.
“Mrs. Hugh Holker, at home,
Saturday, May 29th, 3 to 6.30. Chetwood Court;
tennis.”
Cyril Waring read it out with a little
thrill of triumph. To be sure, it was by no means
certain that Elma would be there; but still, Chetwood
Court was well within range of Tilgate town, and Montague
Nevitt felt convinced, he said, the Holkers were friends
of the Cliffords and the Kelmscotts.
“For my part,” Guy remarked,
balancing a fragment of fried sole on his fork as
he spoke, “I’m not going all that way down
to Chetwood merely to swell Mrs. Holker’s triumph.”
“I wouldn’t if I were
you,” Cyril answered, with quiet incisiveness.
He hadn’t exactly fallen in love with Elma at
first sight, but he was very much interested in her,
and it struck him at once that what interested him
was likely also to interest his twin brother.
And this is just one of those rare cases in life where
a man prefers that his interest in a subject should
not be shared by any other person.
Before Saturday, the 29th, arrived,
however, Guy had so far changed his mind in the matter,
that he presented himself duly with Nevitt at Waterloo
to catch the same train to Chetwood station that Cyril
went down by.
“After all,” he said to
Nevitt, as they walked together from the club in Piccadilly,
“I may as well see what the girl’s like,
anyhow. If she’s got to be my sister-in-law—which
seems not unlikely now—I’d better
have a look at her beforehand, so to speak, on approbation.”
The Holkers’ grounds were large
and well planted, with velvety lawns on the slope
of a well-wooded hill overlooking the boundless blue
weald of Surrey. Nevitt and the Warings were
late to arrive, and found most of the guests already
assembled before them.
After a time Guy found himself, to
his intense chagrin, told off by his hostess to do
the honours to an amiable old lady of high tonnage
and great conversational powers, who rattled on uninterruptedly
in one silvery stream about everybody on the ground,
their histories and their pedigrees. She took
the talking so completely off his hands, however,
that, after a very few minutes, Guy, who was by nature
of a lazy and contemplative disposition, had almost
ceased to trouble himself about what she said, interposing
“indeeds” and “reallys” with
automatic politeness at measured intervals; when suddenly
the old lady, coming upon a bench where a mother and
daughter were seated in the shade, settled down by
their sides in a fervour of welcome, and shook hands
with them both effusively in a most demonstrative
fashion.
The daughter was pretty—yes,
distinctly pretty. She attracted Guy’s
attention at once by the piercing keenness of her lustrous
dark eyes, and the delicate olive-brown of her transparent
complexion. Her expression was merry, but with
a strange and attractive undertone, he thought, of
some mysterious charm. A more taking girl, indeed,
now he came to look close, he hadn’t seen for
months. He congratulated himself on his garrulous
old lady’s choice of a bench to sit upon, if
it helped him to an introduction to the beautiful stranger.
But before he could even be introduced,
the pretty girl with the olive-brown complexion had
held out her hand to him frankly, and exclaimed in
a voice as sunny as her face—
“I don’t need to be told
your friend’s name, I’m sure, Mrs. Godfrey.
He’s so awfully like him. I should have
known him anywhere. Of course, you’re Mr.
Waring’s brother, aren’t you?”
Guy smiled, and bowed gracefully;
he was always graceful.
“I refuse to be merely Mr.
Waring’s brother,” he answered,
with some amusement, as he took the proffered hand
in his own warmly. “If it comes to that,
I’m Mr. Waring myself; and Cyril, whom you seem
to know already, is only my brother.”
“Ah, but my Mr. Waring
isn’t here to-day, is he?” the olive-brown
girl put in, looking around with quite an eager interest
at the crowd in the distance. “Naturally,
to me, he’s the Mr. Waring, of course,
and you are only my Mr. Waring’s brother.”
“Elma, my dear, what on earth
will Mr. Waring think of you?” her mother put
in, with the conventional shocked face of British
propriety. “You know,” she went on,
turning round quickly to Guy, “we’re all
so grateful to your brother for his kindness to our
girl in that dreadful accident the other day at Lavington,
that we can’t help thinking and talking of him
all the time as our Mr. Waring. I’m sorry
he isn’t here himself this afternoon to receive
our thanks. It would be such a pleasure to all
of us to give them to him in person.”
“Oh, he is about, somewhere,”
Guy answered carelessly, still keeping his eye fixed
hard on the pretty girl. “I’ll fetch
him round by-and-by to pay his respects in due form.
He’ll be only too glad. And this, I suppose,
must be Miss Clifford that I’ve heard so much
about.”
As he said those words, a little gleam
of pleasure shot through Elma’s eyes. Her
painter hadn’t forgotten her, then. He had
talked much about her.
“Yes, I knew who you must be
the very first moment I saw you,” she answered,
blushing; “you’re so much like him in some
ways, though not in all…. And he told me that
day he had a twin brother.”
“So much like him in some ways,”
Guy repeated, much amused. “Why, I wonder
you don’t take me for Cyril himself at once.
You’re the very first person I ever knew in
my life, except a few old and very intimate friends,
who could tell at all the difference between us.”
Elma drew back, almost as if shocked
and hurt at the bare suggestion.
“Oh, dear no,” she cried
quickly, scanning him over at once with those piercing
keen eyes of hers; “you’re like him, of
course—I don’t deny the likeness—as
brothers may be like one another. Your features
are the same, and the colour of your hair and eyes,
and all that sort of thing; but still, I knew at a
glance you weren’t my Mr. Waring. I could
never mistake you for him. The expression and
the look are so utterly different.”
“You must be a very subtle judge
of faces,” the young man answered, still smiling,
“if you knew us apart at first sight; for I never
before in my life met anybody who’d seen my brother
once or twice, and who didn’t take me for him,
or him for me, the very first time he saw us apart.
But then,” he added, after a short pause, with
a quick dart of his eyes, “you were with him
in the tunnel for a whole long day; and in that time,
of course, you saw a good deal of him.”
Elma blushed again, and Guy noticed
in passing that she blushed very prettily.
“And how’s Sardanapalus?”
she asked, in a somewhat hurried voice, making an
inartistic attempt to change the subject.
“Oh, Sardanapalus is all right,”
Guy answered, laughing. “Cyril told me
you had made friends with him, and weren’t one
bit afraid of him. Most people are so dreadfully
frightened of the poor old creature.”
“But he isn’t old,”
Elma exclaimed, interrupting him with some warmth.
“He’s in the prime of life. He’s
so glossy and beautiful. I quite fell in love
with him.”
“And who is Sardanapalus?”
Mrs. Clifford asked, with a vague maternal sense of
discomfort and doubt. “A dog or a monkey?”
“Oh, Sardanapalus, mother—didn’t
I tell you about him? “Elma cried enthusiastically.
“Why, he’s just lovely and beautiful.
He’s such a glorious green and yellow-banded
snake; and he coiled around my arm as if he’d
always known me.”
Mrs. Clifford drew back with a horror-stricken
face, darting across at her daughter the same stealthy
sort of look she had given her husband the night after
Elma’s adventure.
“A snake!” she repeated,
aghast, “a snake! Oh, Elma! Why, you
never told me that. And he coiled round your
arm. How horrible!”
But Elma wasn’t to be put down
by exclamations of horror.
“Why, you’re not afraid
of snakes yourself, you know, mother,” she went
on, undismayed. “I remember papa saying
that when you were at St. Kitts with him you never
minded them a bit, but caught them in your hands like
an Indian juggler, and treated them as playthings,
so I wasn’t afraid either. I suppose it’s
hereditary.”
Mrs. Clifford gazed at her fixedly
for a few seconds with a very pale face.
“I suppose it is,” she
said slowly and stiffly, with an evident effort.
“Most things are, in fact, in this world we live
in. But I didn’t know you at least
had inherited it, Elma.”
Just at that moment they were relieved
from the temporary embarrassment which the mention
of Sardanapalus seemed to have caused the party, by
the approach of a tall and very handsome man, who came
forward with a smile towards where their group was
standing. He was military in bearing, and had
dark brown hair, with a white moustache; but he hardly
looked more than fifty for all that, as Guy judged
at once from his erect carriage and the singular youthfulness
of both face and figure. That he was a born aristocrat
one could see in every motion of his well-built limbs.
His mien had that ineffable air of grace and breeding
which sometimes marks the members of our old English
families. Very much like Cyril, too, Guy thought
to himself, in a flash of intuition; very much like
Cyril, the way he raised his hat and then smiled urbanely
on Mrs. Clifford and Elma. But it was Cyril grown
old and prematurely white, and filled full with the
grave haughtiness of an honoured aristocrat.
“Why, here’s Colonel Kelmscott!”
Mrs. Clifford exclaimed, with a sigh of relief, not
a little set at ease by the timely diversion.
“We’re so glad you’ve come, Colonel.
And Lady Emily too; she’s over yonder, is she?
Ah, well, I’ll look out for her. We heard
you were to be here. Oh, how kind of you; thank
you. No, Elma’s none the worse for her
adventure, thank Heaven! just a little shaken, that’s
all, but not otherwise injured. And this gentleman’s
the brother of the kind friend who was so good to
her in the tunnel. I’m not quite sure of
the name. I think it’s—–”
“Guy Waring,” the young
man interposed blandly. Hardly any one who looked
at Colonel Kelmscott’s eyes could even have perceived
the profound surprise this announcement caused him.
He bowed without moving a muscle of that military
face. Guy himself never noticed the intense emotion
the introduction aroused in the distinguished stranger.
But Mrs. Clifford and Elma, each scanning him closely
with those keen grey eyes of theirs, observed at once
that, unmoved as he appeared, a thunderbolt falling
at Colonel Kelmscott’s feet could not more thoroughly
or completely have stunned him. For a second
or two he gazed in the young man’s face uneasily,
his colour came and went, his bosom heaved in silence;
then he roped his moustache with his trembling fingers,
and tried in vain to pump up some harmless remark
appropriate to the occasion. But no remark came
to him. Mrs. Clifford darted a furtive glance
at Elma, and Elma darted back a furtive glance at
Mrs. Clifford. Neither said a word, and each
let her eyes drop to the ground at once as they met
the other’s. But each knew in her heart
that something passing strange had astonished Colonel
Kelmscott; and each knew, too, that the other had
observed it.
Mother and daughter, indeed, needed
no spoken words to tell these things plainly to one
another. The deep intuition that descended to
both was enough to put them in sympathy at once without
the need of articulate language.
“Yes, Mr. Guy Waring,”
Mrs. Clifford repeated at last, breaking the awkward
silence that supervened upon the group. “The
brother of Mr. Cyril Waring, who was so kind the other
day to my daughter in the tunnel.”
The Colonel started imperceptibly
to the naked eye again.
“Oh, indeed,” he said,
forcing himself with an effort to speak at last.
“I’ve read about it, of course; it was
in all the papers…. And—eh—is
your brother here, too, this afternoon, Mr. Waring?”