And it is on record that his fellow footman, Alfred, meeting the groom of
the chambers in the passage outside, positively prodded him in the lower ribs,
winked, and said: "What a day we're having!" One has to go back to
the worst excesses of the French Revolution to parallel these outrages. It was
held by Mr. Beach and Mrs. Twemlow afterward that the social fabric of the castle
never fully recovered from this upheaval. It may be they took an extreme view
of the matter, but it cannot be denied that it wrought changes. The rise of
Slingsby is a case in point. Until this affair took place the chauffeur's
standing had never been satisfactorily settled. Mr. Beach and Mrs. Twemlow led
the party which considered that he was merely a species of coachman; but there
was a smaller group which, dazzled by Slingsby's personality, openly declared
it was not right that he should take his meals in the servants' hall with such
admitted plebeians as the odd man and the steward's-room footman.
The Aline-George elopement settled the point once and for all. Slingsby had
carried George's bag to the train. Slingsby had been standing a few yards from
the spot where Aline began her dash for the carriage door. Slingsby was able to
exhibit the actual half sovereign with which George had tipped him only five
minutes before the great event. To send such a public man back to the servants'
hall was impossible. By unspoken consent the chauffeur dined that night in the
steward's room, from which he was never dislodged.
Mr. Judson alone stood apart from the throng that clustered about the
chauffeur. He was suffering the bitterness of the supplanted. A brief while
before and he had been the central figure, with his story of the letter he had
found in the Honorable Freddie's coat pocket. Now the importance of his story
had been engulfed in that of this later and greater sensation, Mr. Judson was
learning, for the first time, on what unstable foundations popularity stands.
Joan was nowhere to be seen. In none of the spots where she might have been
expected to be at such a time was she to be found. Ashe had almost given up the
search when, going to the back door and looking out as a last chance, he
perceived her walking slowly on the gravel drive.
She greeted Ashe with a smile, but something was plainly troubling her. She
did not speak for a moment and they walked side by side.
"What is it?" said Ashe at length. "What is the matter?"
She looked at him gravely.
"Gloom," she said. "Despondency, Mr. Marson--A sort of flat
feeling. Don't you hate things happening?"
"I don't quite understand."
"Well, this affair of Aline, for instance. It's so big it makes one
feel as though the whole world had altered. I should like nothing to happen
ever, and life just to jog peacefully along. That's not the gospel I preached
to you in Arundel Street, is it! I thought I was an advanced apostle of action;
but I seem to have changed. I'm afraid I shall never be able to make clear what
I do mean. I only know I feel as though I have suddenly grown old. These things
are such milestones. Already I am beginning to look on the time before Aline
behaved so sensationally as terribly remote. To-morrow it will be worse, and
the day after that worse still. I can see that you don't in the least
understand what I mean."
"Yes; I do--or I think I do. What it comes to, in a few words, is that
somebody you were fond of has gone out of your life. Is that it?"
Joan nodded.
"Yes--at least, that is partly it. I didn't really know Aline
particularly well, beyond having been at school with her, but you're right.
It's not so much what has happened as what it represents that matters. This
elopement has marked the end of a phase of my life. I think I have it now. My
life has been such a series of jerks. I dash along--then something happens
which stops that bit of my life with a jerk; and then I have to start over
again--a new bit. I think I'm getting tired of jerks. I want something stodgy
and continuous.
"I'm like one of the old bus horses that could go on forever if people
got off without making them stop. It's the having to get the bus moving again
that wears one out. This little section of my life since we came here is over,
and it is finished for good. I've got to start the bus going again on a new
road and with a new set of passengers. I wonder whether the old horses used to
be sorry when they dropped one lot of passengers and took on a lot of strangers?"
A sudden dryness invaded Ashe's throat. He tried to speak, but found no
words. Joan went on:
"Do you ever get moods when life seems absolutely meaningless? It's
like a badly-constructed story, with all sorts of characters moving in and out
who have nothing to do with the plot. And when somebody comes along that you
think really has something to do with the plot, he suddenly drops out. After a
while you begin to wonder what the story is about, and you feel that it's about
nothing--just a jumble."
"There is one thing," said Ashe, "that knits it
together."
"What is that?"
"The love interest."
Their eyes met and suddenly there descended on Ashe confidence. He felt cool
and alert, sure of himself, as in the old days he had felt when he ran races and,
the nerve-racking hours of waiting past, he listened for the starter's gun.
Subconsciously he was aware he had always been a little afraid of Joan, and
that now he was no longer afraid.
"Joan, will you marry me?"
Her eyes wandered from his face. He waited.
"I wonder!" she said softly. "You think that is the
solution?"
"Yes."
"How can you tell?" she broke out. "We scarcely know each
other. I shan't always be in this mood. I may get restless again. I may find it
is the jerks that I really like."
"You won't!"
"You're very confident."
"I am absolutely confident."
"'She travels fastest who travels alone,'" misquoted Joan.
"What is the good," said Ashe, "of traveling fast if you're
going round in a circle? I know how you feel. I've felt the same myself. You
are an individualist. You think there is something tremendous just round the
corner and that you can get it if you try hard enough. There isn't--or if there
is it isn't worth getting. Life is nothing but a mutual aid association. I am
going to help old Peters--you are going to help me--I am going to help
you."
"Help me to do what?"
"Make life coherent instead of a jumble."
"Mr. Marson---"
"Don't call me Mr. Marson."
"Ashe, you don't know what you are doing. You don't know me. I've been
knocking about the world for five years and I'm hard--hard right through. I
should make you wretched."
"You are not in the least hard--and you know it. Listen to me, Joan.
Where's your sense of fairness? You crash into my life, turn it upside down,
dig me out of my quiet groove, revolutionize my whole existence; and now you
propose to drop me and pay no further attention to me. Is it fair?"
"But I don't. We shall always be the best of friends."
"We shall--but we will get married first."
"You are determined?"
"I am!"
Joan laughed happily.
"How perfectly splendid! I was terrified lest I might have made you
change your mind. I had to say all I did to preserve my self-respect after
proposing to you. Yes; I did. How strange it is that men never seem to
understand a woman, however plainly she talks! You don't think I was really
worrying because I had lost Aline, do you? I thought I was going to lose you,
and it made me miserable. You couldn't expect me to say it in so many words;
but I thought--I was hoping--you guessed. I practically said it. Ashe! What are
you doing?"
Ashe paused for a moment to reply.
"I am kissing you," he said.
"But you mustn't! There's a scullery maid or somebody looking through
the kitchen window. She will see us."
Ashe drew her to him.
"Scullery maids have few pleasures," he said. "Theirs is a
dull life. Let her see us."
CHAPTER
XII
The Earl of Emsworth sat by the sick bed and regarded the Honorable Freddie
almost tenderly.
"I fear, Freddie, my dear boy, this has been a great shock to you."
"Eh? What? Yes--rather! Deuce of a shock, gov'nor."
"I have been thinking it over, my boy, and perhaps I have been a little
hard on you. When your ankle is better I have decided to renew your allowance;
and you may return to London, as you do not seem happy in the country. Though
how any reasonable being can prefer--"
The Honorable Freddie started, pop-eyed, to a sitting posture.
"My word! Not really?"
His father nodded.
"I say, gov'nor, you really are a topper! You really are, you know! I
know just how you feel about the country and the jolly old birds and trees and
chasing the bally slugs off the young geraniums and all that sort of thing, but
somehow it's never quite hit me the same way. It's the way I'm built, I
suppose. I like asphalt streets and crowds and dodging taxis and meeting
chappies at the club and popping in at the Empire for half an hour and so
forth. And there's something about having an allowance--I don't know . . . sort
of makes you chuck your chest out and feel you're someone. I don't know how to
thank you, gov'nor! You're--you're an absolute sportsman! This is the most
priceless bit of work you've ever done. I feel like a two-year-old. I don't
know when I've felt so braced. I--I--really, you know, gov'nor, I'm most
awfully grateful."
"Exactly," said Lord Emsworth. "Ah--precisely. But, Freddie,
my boy," he added, not without pathos, "there is just one thing more.
Do you think that--with an effort--for my sake--you could endeavor this time
not to make a--a damned fool of yourself?"
He eyed his offspring wistfully.
"Gov'nor," said the Honorable Freddie firmly, "I'll have a
jolly good stab at it!"
|