After that strange outburst, Lennan considered long whether he
should speak to Oliver. But what could he say, from what
standpoint say it, and--with that feeling? Or should he speak to
Dromore? Not very easy to speak on such a subject to one off whose
turf all spiritual matters were so permanently warned. Nor somehow
could he bring himself to tell Sylvia; it would be like violating a
confidence to speak of the child's outburst and that quivering
moment, when she had kneeled and put her hot forehead to his lips
for comfort. Such a disclosure was for Nell herself to make, if
she so wished.
And then young Oliver solved the difficulty by coming to the studio
himself next day. He entered with 'Dromore' composure, very well
groomed, in a silk hat, a cut-away black coat and charming lemon-
coloured gloves; what, indeed, the youth did, besides belonging to
the Yeomanry and hunting all the winter, seemed known only to
himself. He made no excuse for interrupting Lennan, and for some
time sat silently smoking his cigarette, and pulling the ears of
the dogs. And Lennan worked on, waiting. There was always
something attractive to him in this young man's broad, good-looking
face, with its crisp dark hair, and half-insolent good humour, now
so clouded.
At last Oliver got up, and went over to the unfinished 'Girl on the
Magpie Horse.' Turning to it so that his face could not be seen,
he said:
"You and Mrs. Lennan have been awfully kind to me; I behaved rather
like a cad yesterday. I thought I'd better tell you. I want to
marry Nell, you know."
Lennan was glad that the young man's face was so religiously
averted. He let his hands come to anchor on what he was working at
before he answered: "She's only a child, Oliver;" and then,
watching his fingers making an inept movement with the clay, was
astonished at himself.
"She'll be eighteen this month," he heard Oliver say. "If she once
gets out--amongst people--I don't know what I shall do. Old
Johnny's no good to look after her."
The young man's face was very red; he was forgetting to hide it
now. Then it went white, and he said through clenched teeth: "She
sends me mad! I don't know how not to-- If I don't get her, I
shall shoot myself. I shall, you know--I'm that sort. It's her
eyes. They draw you right out of yourself--and leave you--" And
from his gloved hand the smoked-out cigarette-end fell to the
floor. "They say her mother was like that. Poor old Johnny!
D'you think I've got a chance, Mr. Lennan? I don't mean now, this
minute; I know she's too young."
"Yes. I've got the run of that, you know. And I shan't be able to
keep away." He took up his hat. "I suppose I oughtn't to have
come and bored you about this, but Nell thinks such a lot of you;
and, you being different to most people--I thought you wouldn't
mind." He turned again at the door. "It wasn't gas what I said
just now--about not getting her. Fellows say that sort of thing,
but I mean it."
And Lennan stood, staring at the statuette. So! Passion broke
down even the defences of Dromoredom. Passion! Strange hearts it
chose to bloom in!
'Being different to most people--I thought you wouldn't mind'! How
had this youth known that Sylvia would not understand passion so
out of hand as this? And what had made it clear that he (Lennan)
would? Was there, then, something in his face? There must be!
Even Johnny Dromore--most reticent of creatures--had confided to
him that one hour of his astute existence, when the wind had swept
him out to sea!
Yes! And that statuette would never be any good, try as he might.
Oliver was right--it was her eyes! How they had smoked--in their
childish anger--if eyes could be said to smoke, and how they had
drawn and pleaded when she put her face to his in her still more
childish entreaty! If they were like this now, what would they be
when the woman in her woke? Just as well not to think of her too
much! Just as well to work, and take heed that he would soon be
forty-seven! Just as well that next week she would be gone to
Ireland!
And the last evening before she went they took her to see "Carmen"
at the Opera. He remembered that she wore a nearly high white
frock, and a dark carnation in the ribbon tying her crinkly hair,
that still hung loose. How wonderfully entranced she sat, drunk on
that opera that he had seen a score of times; now touching his arm,
now Sylvia's, whispering questions: "Who's that?" "What's coming
now?" The Carmen roused her to adoration, but Don Jose was 'too
fat in his funny little coat,' till, in the maddened jealousy of
the last act, he rose superior. Then, quite lost in excitement,
she clutched Lennan's arm; and her gasp, when Carmen at last fell
dead, made all their neighbours jump. Her emotion was far more
moving than that on the stage; he wanted badly to stroke, and
comfort her and say: "There, there, my dear, it's only make-
believe!" And, when it was over, and the excellent murdered lady
and her poor fat little lover appeared before the curtain, finally
forgetting that she was a woman of the world, she started forward
in her seat and clapped, and clapped. Fortunate that Johnny
Dromore was not there to see! But all things coming to an end,
they had to get up and go. And, as they made their way out to the
hall, Lennan felt a hot little finger crooked into his own, as if
she simply must have something to squeeze. He really did not know
what to do with it. She seemed to feel this half-heartedness, soon
letting it go. All the way home in the cab she was silent. With
that same abstraction she ate her sandwiches and drank her
lemonade; took Sylvia's kiss, and, quite a woman of the world once
more, begged that they would not get up to see her off--for she was
to go at seven in the morning, to catch the Irish mail. Then,
holding out her hand to Lennan, she very gravely said:
"Thanks most awfully for taking me to-night. Good-bye!"
He stayed full half an hour at the window, smoking. No street lamp
shone just there, and the night was velvety black above the plane-
trees. At last, with a sigh, he shut up, and went tiptoe-ing
upstairs in darkness. Suddenly in the corridor the white wall
seemed to move at him. A warmth, a fragrance, a sound like a tiny
sigh, and something soft was squeezed into his hand. Then the wall
moved back, and he stood listening--no sound, no anything! But in
his dressing-room he looked at the soft thing in his hand. It was
the carnation from her hair. What had possessed the child to give
him that? Carmen! Ah! Carmen! And gazing at the flower, he held
it away from him with a sort of terror; but its scent arose. And
suddenly he thrust it, all fresh as it was, into a candle-flame,
and held it, burning, writhing, till it blackened to velvet. Then
his heart smote him for so cruel a deed. It was still beautiful,
but its scent was gone. And turning to the window he flung it far
out into the darkness.