CHAPTER XXX
Denis had been called, but in spite of the parted
curtains he had dropped off again into that drowsy, dozy state when sleep
becomes a sensual pleasure almost consciously savoured. In this condition he might have remained for
another hour, if he had not been disturbed by a violent rapping at the door.
'Come in,'
he mumbled, without opening his eyes.
The latch clicked, a hand seized him by the shoulder and he was rudely
shaken.
'Get up, get
up!'
His eyelids
blinked painfully apart, and he saw Mary standing over him, bright-faced and
earnest.
'Get up!'
she repeated. 'You must go and send the
telegram. Don't you remember?'
'O
Lord!' He threw off the bedclothes; his
tormentor retired.
Denis
dressed as quickly as he could and ran up the road to the village post
office. Satisfaction glowed within him
as he returned. He had sent a long
telegram, which would in a few hours evoke an answer ordering him back to town
at once - on urgent business. It was an
act performed, a decisive step taken - and he so rarely took decisive steps; he
felt pleased with himself. It was with a
whetted appetite that he came in to breakfast.
'Good
morning,' said Mr Scogan. 'I hope you're better.'
'Better?'
'You were
rather worried about the cosmos last night.'
Denis tried
to laugh away the impeachment. 'Was I?'
he lightly asked.
'I wish,'
said Mr Scogan, 'that I had nothing worse to prey on
my mind. I should be a happy man.'
'One is
only happy in action,' Denis enunciated, thinking of the telegram.
He looked
out of the window. Great florid baroque
clouds floated high in the blue heaven.
A wind stirred among the trees, and their shaken foliage twinkled and
glittered like metal in the sun.
Everything seemed marvellously beautiful. At the thought that he would soon be leaving
all this beauty he felt a momentary pang; but he comforted himself be
recollecting how decisively he was acting.
'Action,'
he repeated aloud, and going over to the sideboard he helped himself to an
agreeable mixture of bacon and fish.
Breakfast
over, Denis repaired to the terrace, and sitting there, raised the enormous
bulwark of The Times against the possible assaults of Mr Scogan, who showed an unappeased desire to go on talking
about the Universe. Secure behind the
crackling pages, he meditated. In the
light of this brilliant morning the emotions of last night seemed somehow
rather remote. And what if he had seen
them embracing in the moonlight? Perhaps
it didn't mean much after all. And even
if it did, why shouldn't he stay? He
felt strong enough to stay, strong enough to be aloof, disinterested, a mere
friendly acquaintance. And even if he
weren't strong enough ...
'What time
do you think the telegram will arrive?' asked Mary suddenly, thrusting upon him
over the top of the paper.
Denis
started guiltily. 'I don't know at all,'
he said.
'I was only
wondering,' said Mary, 'because there's a very good train at 3.27 No flowers.... Mary was gone. No, he was blowed
if he'd let himself be hurried down to the Necropolis like this. He was blowed. The sight of Mr Scogan
looking out, with a hungry expression, from the drawing-room window made him
precipitately hoist The Times once more.
For a long while it kept it hoisted. Lowering it at last to take another cautious
peep at his surroundings, he found himself, with what astonishment! confronted
by Anne's faint, amused, malicious smile.
She was standing before him, - the woman who was a tree, - the swaying
grace of her movement arrested in a pose that seemed itself a movement.
'How long
have you been standing there?' he asked, when he had done gaping at her.
'Oh, about
half an hour, I suppose,' she said airily.
'You were so very deep in your paper - head over ears - I didn't like to
disturb you.'
'You look
lovely this morning,' Denis exclaimed.
It was the first time he had ever had the courage to utter a personal
remark of the kind.
Anne held
up her hand as though to ward off a blow.
'Don't bludgeon me, please.' She
sat down on the bench beside him. He was
a nice boy, she thought, quite charming; and Gombauld's
violent insistences were really becoming rather tiresome. 'Why don't you wear white trousers?' she
asked. 'I like you so much in white
trousers.'
'They're at
the wash,' Denis replied rather curtly.
This white-trouser business was all in the wrong spirit. He was just preparing a scheme to manoeuvre
the conversation back to the proper path, when Mr Scogan
suddenly darted out of the house, crossed the terrace with clockwork rapidity,
and came to a halt in front of the bench on which they were seated.
'To go on
with our interesting conversation about the cosmos,' he began. 'I become more and more convinced that the
various parts of the concern are fundamentally discreet.... But would you mind,
Denis, moving a shade to your right?' He
wedged himself between them on the bench.
'And if you would shift a few inches to the left, my dear Anne.... Thank
you. Discrete, I think, was what I was
saying.'
'You were,'
said Anne. Denis was speechless.
They were
taking their after-luncheon coffee in the library when the telegram
arrived. Denis blushed guiltily as he
took the orange envelope from the salver and tore it open. 'Return at once. Urgent family business! Wouldn't it be best just to crumple the thing
up and put it in his pocket without saying anything about it? He looked up; Mary's large blue china eyes
were fixed upon him, seriously, penetratingly.
He blushed more deeply than ever, hesitated in a horribly uncertainty.
'What's
your telegram about?' Mary asked significantly.
He lost his
head. 'I'm afraid,' he mumbled, 'I'm
afraid this means I shall have to go back to town at once.' He frowned at the telegram ferociously.
'But that's
absurd, impossible,' cried Anne. She had
been standing by the window talking to Gombauld; but
at Denis's words she came swaying across the room towards him.
'It's
urgent,' he repeated desperately.
'But you've
only been here such a short time,' Anne protested.
'I know,'
he said, utterly miserable. Oh, if only
she could understand! Women were
supposed to have intuition.
'If he must
go, he must,' put in Mary firmly.
'Yes, I
must.' He looked at the telegram again
for inspiration. 'You see, it's urgent
family business,' he explained.
Priscilla
got up from her chair in some excitement.
'I had a distinct presentiment of this last night,' she said. 'A distinct presentiment.'
'A mere
coincidence, no doubt,' said Mary, brushing Mrs Wimbush
out of the conversation. 'There's a very
good train at 3.27.' She looked at the
clock on the mantelpiece. 'You'll have
nice time to pack.'
'I'll order
the motor at once.' Henry Wimbush rang the bell.
The funeral was well under way.
It was awful, awful.
'I'm wretched
you should be going,' said Anne.
Denis
turned towards her; she really did look wretched. He abandoned himself hopelessly,
fatalistically to his destiny. That was
what came of action, of doing something decisive. If only he'd just let things drift! If only ...
'I shall
miss your conversation,' said Mr Scogan.
Mary looked
at the clock again. 'I think perhaps you
ought to go and pack,' she said.
Obediently
Denis left the room. Never again, he
said to himself, never again would he do anything decisive. Camlet, West Bowlby,
Knipswich for Timpany,
Spavin Delawarr; and then all the other stations; and
then, finally, London. The thought of
the journey appalled him. And what on
earth was he going to do in London when he got there? He climbed wearily up the stairs. It was time for him to lay himself in his
coffin.
The car was
at the door - the hearse. The whole
party had assembled to see him go.
Goodbye, goodbye. Mechanically he
tapped the barometer than hung in the porch; the needle stirred perceptibly to
the left. A sudden smile lighted up his
lugubrious face.
'"It
stinks, and I am ready to depart,"' he said, quoting Landor
with an exquisite aptness. He looked
quickly round from face to face. Nobody
had noticed. He climbed into the hearse.