CHAPTER
V
The four-fifteen express slid softly out of Paddington Station and Ashe
Marson settled himself in the corner seat of his second-class compartment.
Opposite him Joan Valentine had begun to read a magazine. Along the corridor,
in a first-class smoking compartment, Mr. Peters was lighting a big black
cigar. Still farther along the corridor, in a first-class non-smoking compartment,
Aline Peters looked through the window and thought of many things.
In English trains the tipping classes travel first; valets, lady's maids,
footmen, nurses, and head stillroom maids, second; and housemaids, grooms, and
minor and inferior stillroom maids, third. But for these social distinctions,
the whole fabric of society, would collapse and anarchy stalk naked through the
land--as in the United States.
Ashe was feeling remarkably light-hearted. He wished he had not bought Joan
that magazine and thus deprived himself temporarily of the pleasure of her
conversation; but that was the only flaw in his happiness. With the starting of
the train, which might be considered the formal and official beginning of the
delicate and dangerous enterprise on which he had embarked, he had definitely
come to the conclusion that the life adventurous was the life for him. He had
frequently suspected this to be the case, but it had required the actual
experiment to bring certainty.
Almost more than physical courage, the ideal adventurer needs a certain
lively inquisitiveness, the quality of not being content to mind his own
affairs; and in Ashe this quality was highly developed. From boyhood up he had
always been interested in things that were none of his business. And it is just
that attribute which the modern young man, as a rule, so sadly lacks.
The modern young man may do adventurous things if they are thrust on him;
but left to himself he will edge away uncomfortably and look in the other
direction when the goddess of adventure smiles at him. Training and tradition
alike pluck at his sleeve and urge him not to risk making himself ridiculous.
And from sheer horror of laying himself open to the charge of not minding his
own business he falls into a stolid disregard of all that is out of the
ordinary and exciting. He tells himself that the shriek from the lonely house
he passed just now was only the high note of some amateur songstress, and that
the maiden in distress whom he saw pursued by the ruffian with a knife was
merely earning the salary paid her by some motion-picture firm. And he proceeds
on his way, looking neither to left nor right.
Ashe had none of this degenerate coyness toward adventure. Though born
within easy distance of Boston and deposited by circumstances in London, he
possessed, nevertheless, to a remarkable degree, that quality so essentially
the property of the New Yorker--the quality known, for want of a more polished
word, as rubber. It is true that it had needed the eloquence of Joan Valentine
to stir him from his groove; but that was because he was also lazy. He loved
new sights and new experiences. Yes; he was happy. The rattle of the train
shaped itself into a lively march. He told himself that he had found the right
occupation for a young man in the Spring.
Joan, meantime, intrenched behind her magazine, was also busy with her
thoughts. She was not reading the magazine; she held it before her as a
protection, knowing that if she laid it down Ashe would begin to talk. And just
at present she had no desire for conversation. She, like Ashe, was
contemplating the immediate future, but, unlike him, was not doing so with much
pleasure. She was regretting heartily that she had not resisted the temptation
to uplift this young man and wishing that she had left him to wallow in the
slothful peace in which she had found him.
It is curious how frequently in this world our attempts to stimulate and
uplift swoop back on us and smite us like boomerangs. Ashe's presence was the
direct outcome of her lecture on enterprise, and it added a complication to an
already complicated venture.
She did her best to be fair to Ashe. It was not his fault that he was about
to try to deprive her of five thousand dollars, which she looked on as her
personal property; but illogically she found herself feeling a little hostile.
She glanced furtively at him over the magazine, choosing by ill chance a
moment when he had just directed his gaze at her. Their eyes met and there was
nothing for it but to talk; so she tucked away her hostility in a corner of her
mind, where she could find it again when she wanted it, and prepared for the
time being to be friendly. After all, except for the fact that he was her
rival, this was a pleasant and amusing young man, and one for whom, until he
made the announcement that had changed her whole attitude toward him, she had
entertained a distinct feeling of friendship--nothing warmer.
There was something about him that made her feel that she would have liked
to stroke his hair in a motherly way and straighten his tie, and have cozy
chats with him in darkened rooms by the light of open fires, and make him tell
her his inmost thoughts, and stimulate him to do something really worth while
with his life; but this, she held, was merely the instinct of a generous nature
to be kind and helpful even to a comparative stranger.
"Well, Mr. Marson," she said, "Here we are!"
"Exactly what I was thinking," said Ashe.
He was conscious of a marked increase in the exhilaration the starting of
the expedition had brought to him. At the back of his mind he realized there
had been all along a kind of wistful resentment at the change in this girl's
manner toward him. During the brief conversation when he had told her of his
having secured his present situation, and later, only a few minutes back, on
the platform of Paddington Station, he had sensed a coldness, a certain
hostility--so different from her pleasant friendliness at their first meeting.
She had returned now to her earlier manner and he was surprised at the difference
it made. He felt somehow younger, more alive. The lilt of the train's rattle
changed to a gay ragtime. This was curious, because Joan was nothing more than
a friend. He was not in love with her. One does not fall in love with a girl
whom one has met only three times. One is attracted--yes; but one does not fall
in love.
A moment's reflection enabled him to diagnose his sensations correctly. This
odd impulse to leap across the compartment and kiss Joan was not love. It was
merely the natural desire of a good-hearted young man to be decently chummy
with his species.
"Well, what do you think of it all, Mr. Marson?" said Joan.
"Are you sorry or glad that you let me persuade you to do this perfectly
mad thing? I feel responsible for you, you know. If it had not been for me you
would have been comfortably in Arundel Street, writing your Wand of
Death."
"I'm glad."
"You don't feel any misgivings now that you are actually committed to
domestic service?"
"Not one."
Joan, against her will, smiled approval on this uncompromising attitude.
This young man might be her rival, but his demeanor on the eve of perilous
times appealed to her. That was the spirit she liked and admired--that reckless
acceptance of whatever might come. It was the spirit in which she herself had
gone into the affair and she was pleased to find that it animated Ashe
also--though, to be sure, it had its drawbacks. It made his rivalry the more
dangerous. This reflection injected a touch of the old hostility into her
manner.
"I wonder whether you will continue to feel so brave."
"What do you mean?"
Joan perceived that she was in danger of going too far. She had no wish to
unmask Ashe at the expense of revealing her own secret. She must resist the
temptation to hint that she had discovered his.
"I meant," she said quickly, "that from what I have seen of
him Mr. Peters seems likely to be a rather trying man to work for."
Ashe's face cleared. For a moment he had almost suspected that she had
guessed his errand.
"Yes. I imagine he will be. He is what you might call quick-tempered.
He has dyspepsia, you know."
"I know."
"What he wants is plenty of fresh air and no cigars, and a regular
course of those Larsen Exercises that amused you so much."
Joan laughed.
"Are you going to try and persuade Mr. Peters to twist himself about
like that? Do let me see it if you do."
"I wish I could."
"Do suggest it to him."
"Don't you think he would resent it from a valet?"
"I keep forgetting that you are a valet. You look so unlike one."
"Old Peters didn't think so. He rather complimented me on my
appearance. He said I was ordinary-looking."
"I shouldn't have called you that. You look so very strong and
fit."
"Surely there are muscular valets?"
"Well, yes; I suppose there are."
Ashe looked at her. He was thinking that never in his life had he seen a
girl so amazingly pretty. What it was that she had done to herself was beyond
him; but something, some trick of dress, had given her a touch of the demure
that made her irresistible. She was dressed in sober black, the ideal
background for her fairness.
"While on the subject," he said, "I suppose you know you
don't look in the least like a lady's maid? You look like a disguised
princess."
She laughed.
"That's very nice of you, Mr. Marson, but you're quite wrong. Anyone
could tell I was a lady's maid, a mile away. You aren't criticizing the dress,
surely?"
"The dress is all right. It's the general effect. I don't think your
expression is right. It's--it's--there's too much attack in it. You aren't meek
enough."
Joan's eyes opened wide.
"Meek! Have you ever seen an English lady's maid, Mr. Marson?"
"Why, no; now that I come to think of it, I don't believe I have."
"Well, let me tell you that meekness is her last quality. Why should
she be meek? Doesn't she go in after the groom of the chambers?"
"Go in? Go in where?"
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