Winton was staggered. With a glance at Gyp's vanishing figure, he
said curtly to Markey, "Where have you put this gentleman?" But
the use of the word "this" was the only trace he showed of his
emotions. In that little journey across the hall he entertained
many extravagant thoughts. Arrived at the study, he inclined his
head courteously enough, waiting for Fiorsen to speak. The
"fiddler," still in his fur-lined coat, was twisting a squash hat
in his hands. In his own peculiar style he was impressive. But
why couldn't he look you in the face; or, if he did, why did he
seem about to eat you?
"You knew I was returned to London, Major Winton?"
Then Gyp had been seeing the fellow without letting him know! The
thought was chill and bitter to Winton. He must not give her away,
however, and he simply bowed. He felt that his visitor was afraid
of his frigid courtesy; and he did not mean to help him over that
fear. He could not, of course, realize that this ascendancy would
not prevent Fiorsen from laughing at him behind his back and acting
as if he did not exist. No real contest, in fact, was possible
between men moving on such different planes, neither having the
slightest respect for the other's standards or beliefs.
Fiorsen, who had begun to pace the room, stopped, and said with
agitation:
"Major Winton, your daughter is the most beautiful thing on earth.
I love her desperately. I am a man with a future, though you may
not think it. I have what future I like in my art if only I can
marry her. I have a little money, too--not much; but in my violin
there is all the fortune she can want."
Winton's face expressed nothing but cold contempt. That this
fellow should take him for one who would consider money in
connection with his daughter simply affronted him.
"You do not like me--that is clear. I saw it the first moment.
You are an English gentleman"--he pronounced the words with a sort
of irony--"I am nothing to you. Yet, in my world, I am something.
I am not an adventurer. Will you permit me to beg your daughter to
be my wife?" He raised his hands that still held the hat;
involuntarily they had assumed the attitude of prayer.
For a second, Winton realized that he was suffering. That weakness
went in a flash, and he said frigidly:
"I am obliged to you, sir, for coming to me first. You are in my
house, and I don't want to be discourteous, but I should be glad if
you would be good enough to withdraw and take it that I shall
certainly oppose your wish as best I can."
The almost childish disappointment and trouble in Fiorsen's face
changed quickly to an expression fierce, furtive, mocking; and then
shifted to despair.
"Major Winton, you have loved; you must have loved her mother. I
suffer!"
Winton, who had turned abruptly to the fire, faced round again.
"I don't control my daughter's affections, sir; she will do as she
wishes. I merely say it will be against my hopes and judgment if
she marries you. I imagine you've not altogether waited for my
leave. I was not blind to the way you hung about her at Wiesbaden,
Mr. Fiorsen."
"Poor wretches do what they can. May I see her? Let me just see
her."
Was it any good to refuse? She had been seeing the fellow already
without his knowledge, keeping from him--him--all her feelings,
whatever they were. And he said:
"I'll send for her. In the meantime, perhaps you'll have some
refreshment?"
Fiorsen shook his head, and there followed half an hour of acute
discomfort. Winton, in his mud-stained clothes before the fire,
supported it better than his visitor. That child of nature, after
endeavouring to emulate his host's quietude, renounced all such
efforts with an expressive gesture, fidgeted here, fidgeted there,
tramped the room, went to the window, drew aside the curtains and
stared out into the dark; came back as if resolved again to
confront Winton; then, baffled by that figure so motionless before
the fire, flung himself down in an armchair, and turned his face to
the wall. Winton was not cruel by nature, but he enjoyed the
writhings of this fellow who was endangering Gyp's happiness.
Endangering? Surely not possible that she would accept him! Yet,
if not, why had she not told him? And he, too, suffered.
Then she came. He had expected her to be pale and nervous; but Gyp
never admitted being naughty till she had been forgiven. Her
smiling face had in it a kind of warning closeness. She went up to
Fiorsen, and holding out her hand, said calmly:
Winton had the bitter feeling that he--he--was the outsider. Well,
he would speak plainly; there had been too much underhand doing.
"Mr. Fiorsen has done us the honour to wish to marry you. I've
told him that you decide such things for yourself. If you accept
him, it will be against my wish, naturally."
While he was speaking, the glow in her cheeks deepened; she looked
neither at him nor at Fiorsen. Winton noted the rise and fall of
the lace on her breast. She was smiling, and gave the tiniest
shrug of her shoulders. And, suddenly smitten to the heart, he
walked stiffly to the door. It was evident that she had no use for
his guidance. If her love for him was not worth to her more than
this fellow! But there his resentment stopped. He knew that he
could not afford wounded feelings; could not get on without her.
Married to the greatest rascal on earth, he would still be standing
by her, wanting her companionship and love. She represented too
much in the present and--the past. With sore heart, indeed, he
went down to dinner.
Fiorsen was gone when he came down again. What the fellow had
said, or she had answered, he would not for the world have asked.
Gulfs between the proud are not lightly bridged. And when she came
up to say good-night, both their faces were as though coated with
wax.
In the days that followed, she gave no sign, uttered no word in any
way suggesting that she meant to go against his wishes. Fiorsen
might not have existed, for any mention made of him. But Winton
knew well that she was moping, and cherishing some feeling against
himself. And this he could not bear. So, one evening, after
dinner, he said quietly:
"Tell me frankly, Gyp; do you care for that chap?"
Her lips had quivered; and Winton's heart softened, as it always
did when he saw her moved. He put his hand out, covered one of
hers, and said:
"I shall never stand in the way of your happiness, Gyp. But it
must be happiness. Can it possibly be that? I don't think so.
You know what they said of him out there?"
Winton turned away. She followed, slipping her hand under his arm.
"I didn't mean to hurt. But it's true, isn't it? I don't belong
among society people. They wouldn't have me, you know--if they
knew about what you told me. Ever since that I've felt I don't
belong to them. I'm nearer him. Music means more to me than
anything!"
Winton gave her hand a convulsive grip. A sense of coming defeat
and bereavement was on him.
"If your happiness went wrong, Gyp, I should be most awfully cut
up."
"If you were, I could put up with anyone. But, I tell you, I can't
believe you would be. I beg you, my dear--for God's sake, make
sure. I'll put a bullet into the man who treats you badly."
Gyp laughed, then kissed him. But they were silent. At bedtime he
said:
Whether from a feeling of the inevitable, or from the forlorn hope
that seeing more of the fellow might be the only chance of curing
her--he put no more obstacles in the way.
And the queer courtship began again. By Christmas she had
consented, still under the impression that she was the mistress,
not the slave--the cat, not the bird. Once or twice, when Fiorsen
let passion out of hand and his overbold caresses affronted her,
she recoiled almost with dread from what she was going toward.
But, in general, she lived elated, intoxicated by music and his
adoration, withal remorseful that she was making her father sad.
She was but little at Mildenham, and he, in his unhappiness, was
there nearly all the time, riding extra hard, and leaving Gyp with
his sister. Aunt Rosamund, though under the spell of Fiorsen's
music, had agreed with her brother that Fiorsen was "impossible."
But nothing she said made any effect on Gyp. It was new and
startling to discover in this soft, sensitive girl such a vein of
stubbornness. Opposition seemed to harden her resolution. And the
good lady's natural optimism began to persuade her that Gyp would
make a silk purse out of that sow's ear yet. After all, the man
was a celebrity in his way!
It was settled for February. A house with a garden was taken in
St. John's Wood. The last month went, as all such last months go,
in those intoxicating pastimes, the buying of furniture and
clothes. If it were not for that, who knows how many engagement
knots would slip!
And to-day they had been married. To the last, Winton had hardly
believed it would come to that. He had shaken the hand of her
husband and kept pain and disappointment out of his face, knowing
well that he deceived no one. Thank heaven, there had been no
church, no wedding-cake, invitations, congratulations, fal-lals of
any kind--he could never have stood them. Not even Rosamund--who
had influenza--to put up with!
Lying back in the recesses of that old chair, he stared into the
fire.
They would be just about at Torquay by now--just about. Music!
Who would have thought noises made out of string and wood could
have stolen her away from him? Yes, they would be at Torquay by
now, at their hotel. And the first prayer Winton had uttered for
years escaped his lips: