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HORACE VENTIMORE RECEIVES A COMMISSION This day six weeks - just six weeks ago! Horace Ventimore said, half aloud, to himself, and pulled out his watch. Half-past twelve - what was I doing at half-past twelve?
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CHAPTER I
Ā Ā HORACE VENTIMORE RECEIVES A COMMISSION "This day six
weeks ā just six weeks ago!" Horace Ventimore said, half aloud, to
himself, and pulled out his watch. "Half-past twelve ā what was I
doing at half-past twelve?"
Ā Ā As he sat at the window of his office in Great
Cloister Street, Westminster, he made his thoughts travel back to a
certain glorious morning in August which now seemed so remote and
irrecoverable. At this precise time he was waiting on the balcony
of the HĆ“tel de la Plage ā the sole hostelry of St. Luc-en-Port,
the tiny Normandy watering-place upon which, by some happy
inspiration, he had lighted during a solitary cycling tour ā
waiting until She should appear.
Ā Ā He could see the whole scene: the tiny cove, with
the violet shadow of the cliff sleeping on the green water; the
swell of the waves lazily lapping against the diving-board from
which he had plunged half an hour before; he remembered the long
swim out to the buoy; the exhilarated anticipation with which he
had dressed and climbed the steep path to the hotel terrace.
Ā Ā For was he not to pass the whole remainder of that
blissful day in Sylvia Futvoye's society? Were they not to cycle
together (there were, of course, others of the party ā but they did
not count), to cycle over to Veulettes, to picnic there under the
cliff, and ride back ā always together ā in the sweet-scented dusk,
over the slopes, between the poplars or the cornfields glowing
golden against a sky of warm purple?
Ā Ā Now he saw himself going round to the gravelled
courtyard in front of the hotel with a sudden dread of missing her.
There was nothing there but the little low cart, with its canvas
tilt which was to convey Professor Futvoye and his wife to the
place of rendezvous.
Ā Ā There was Sylvia at last, distractingly fair and
fresh in her cool pink blouse and cream-coloured skirt; how
gracious and friendly and generally delightful she had been
throughout that unforgettable day, which was supreme amongst others
only a little less perfect, and all now fled for ever!
Ā Ā They had had drawbacks, it was true. Old Futvoye was
perhaps the least bit of a bore at times, with his interminable
disquisitions on Egyptian art and ancient Oriental
character-writing, in which he seemed convinced that Horace must
feel a perfervid interest, as, indeed, he thought it politic to
affect. The Professor was a most learned archƦologist, and
positively bulged with information on his favourite subjects; but
it is just possible that Horace might have been less curious
concerning the distinction between Cuneiform and AramƦan or Kufic
and Arabic inscriptions if his informant had happened to be the
father of anybody else. However, such insincerities as these are
but so many evidences of sincerity.
Ā Ā So with self-tormenting ingenuity Horace conjured up
various pictures from that Norman holiday of his: the little
half-timbered cottages with their faded blue shutters and the
rushes growing out of their thatch roofs; the spires of village
churches gleaming above the bronze-green beeches; the bold
headlands, their ochre and yellow cliffs contrasting grimly with
the soft ridges of the turf above them; the tethered
black-and-white cattle grazing peacefully against a background of
lapis lazuli and malachite sea, and in every scene the sensation of
Sylvia's near presence, the sound of her voice in his ears. And
now?... He looked up from the papers and tracing-cloth on his desk,
and round the small panelled room which served him as an office, at
the framed plans and photographs, the set squares and T squares on
the walls, and felt a dull resentment against his surroundings.
From his window he commanded a cheerful view of a tall, mouldering
wall, once part of the Abbey boundaries, surmounted by
chevaux-de-frise, above whose rust-attenuated spikes some
plane trees stretched their yellowing branches. "She would have
come to care for me," Horace's thoughts ran on, disjointedly. "I
could have sworn that that last day of all ā and her people didn't
seem to object to me. Her mother asked me cordially enough to call
on them when they were back in town. When I did ā ā "
Ā Ā When he had called, there had been a difference ā
not an unusual sequel to an acquaintanceship begun in a Continental
watering-place. It was difficult to define, but unmistakable ā a
certain formality and constraint on Mrs. Futvoye's part, and even
on Sylvia's, which seemed intended to warn him that it is not every
friendship that survives the Channel passage. So he had gone away
sore at heart, but fully recognising that any advances in future
must come from their side. They might ask him to dinner, or at
least to call again; but more than a month had passed, and they had
made no sign. No, it was all over; he must consider himself
dropped. "After all," he told himself, with a short and anything
but mirthful laugh, "it's natural enough. Mrs. Futvoye has probably
been making inquiries about my professional prospects. It's better
as it is. What earthly chance have I got of marrying unless I can
get work of my own? It's all I can do to keep myself decently. I've
no right to dream of asking any one ā to say nothing of Sylvia ā to
marry me. I should only be rushing into temptation if I saw any
more of her. She's not for a poor beggar like me, who was born
unlucky. Well, whining won't do any good ā let's have a look at
Beevor's latest performance."
Ā Ā He spread out a large coloured plan, in a corner of
which appeared the name of "William Beevor, Architect," and began
to study it in a spirit of anything but appreciation. "Beevor gets
on," he said to himself. "Heaven knows that I don't grudge him his
success. He's a good fellow ā though he does build
architectural atrocities, and seem to like 'em. Who am I to give
myself airs? He's successful ā I'm not. Yet if I only had his
opportunities, what wouldn't I make of them!"
Ā Ā Let it be said here that this was not the ordinary
self-delusion of an incompetent. Ventimore really had talent above
the average, with ideals and ambitions which might under better
conditions have attained recognition and fulfilment before
this.
Ā Ā But he was not quite energetic enough, besides being
too proud, to push himself into notice, and hitherto he had met
with persistent ill-luck.
Ā Ā So Horace had no other occupation now but to give
Beevor, whose offices and clerk he shared, such slight assistance
as he might require, and it was by no means cheering to feel that
every year of this enforced semi-idleness left him further
handicapped in the race for wealth and fame, for he had already
passed his twenty-eighth birthday.
Ā Ā If Miss Sylvia Futvoye had indeed felt attracted
towards him at one time it was not altogether incomprehensible.
Horace Ventimore was not a model of manly beauty ā models of manly
beauty are rare out of novels, and seldom interesting in them; but
his clear-cut, clean-shaven face possessed a certain distinction,
and if there were faint satirical lines about the mouth, they were
redeemed by the expression of the grey-blue eyes, which were
remarkably frank and pleasant. He was well made, and tall enough to
escape all danger of being described as short; fair-haired and
pale, without being unhealthily pallid, in complexion, and he gave
the impression of being a man who took life as it came, and whose
sense of humour would serve as a lining for most clouds that might
darken his horizon.
Ā Ā There was a rap at the door which communicated with
Beevor's office, and Beevor himself, a florid, thick-set man, with
small side-whiskers, burst in. "I say, Ventimore, you didn't run
off with the plans for that house I'm building at Larchmere, did
you? Because ā ah, I see you're looking over them. Sorry to deprive
you, but ā ā " "Thanks, old fellow, take them, by all means. I've
seen all I wanted to see." "Well, I'm just off to Larchmere now.
Want to be there to check the quantities, and there's my other
house at Fittlesdon. I must go on afterwards and set it out, so I
shall probably be away some days. I'm taking Harrison down, too.
You won't be wanting him, eh?"
Ā Ā Ventimore laughed. "I can manage to do nothing
without a clerk to help me. Your necessity is greater than mine.
Here are the plans." "I'm rather pleased with 'em myself, you
know," said Beevor; "that roof ought to look well, eh? Good idea of
mine lightening the slate with that ornamental tile-work along the
top. You saw I put in one of your windows with just a trifling
addition. I was almost inclined to keep both gables alike, as you
suggested, but it struck me a little variety ā one red brick and
the other 'parged' ā would be more out-of-the-way." "Oh, much,"
agreed Ventimore, knowing that to disagree was useless. "Not, mind
you," continued Beevor, "that I believe in going in for too much
originality in domestic architecture. The average client no more
wants an original house than he wants an original hat; he wants
something he won't feel a fool in. I've often thought, old man,
that perhaps the reason why you haven't got on ā ā you don't mind
my speaking candidly, do you?" "Not a bit," said Ventimore,
cheerfully. "Candour's the cement of friendship. Dab it on." "Well,
I was only going to say that you do yourself no good by all those
confoundedly unconventional ideas of yours. If you had your chance
to-morrow, it's my belief you'd throw it away by insisting on some
fantastic fad or other." "These speculations are a trifle
premature, considering that there doesn't seem the remotest
prospect of my ever getting a chance at all." "I got mine before
I'd set up six months," said Beevor. "The great thing, however," he
went on, with a flavour of personal application, "is to know how to
use it when it does come. Well, I must be off if I mean to
catch that one o'clock from Waterloo. You'll see to anything that
may come in for me while I'm away, won't you, and let me know? Oh,
by the way, the quantity surveyor has just sent in the quantities
for that schoolroom at Woodford ā do you mind running through them
and seeing they're right? And there's the specification for the new
wing at Tusculum Lodge ā you might draft that some time when you've
nothing else to do. You'll find all the papers on my desk. Thanks
awfully, old chap."
Ā Ā And Beevor hurried back to his own room, where for
the next few minutes he could be heard bustling Harrison, the
clerk, to make haste; then a hansom was whistled for, there were
footsteps down the old stairs, the sounds of a departing vehicle on
the uneven stones, and after that silence and solitude.
Ā Ā It was not in Nature to avoid feeling a little
envious. Beevor had work to do in the world: even if it chiefly
consisted in profaning sylvan retreats by smug or pretentious
villas, it was still work which entitled him to consideration and
respect in the eyes of all right-minded persons.
Ā Ā And nobody believed in Horace; as yet he had never
known the satisfaction of seeing the work of his brain realised in
stone and brick and mortar; no building stood anywhere to bear
testimony to his existence and capability long after he himself
should have passed away.
Ā Ā It was not a profitable train of thought, and, to
escape from it, he went into Beevor's room and fetched the
documents he had mentioned ā at least they would keep him occupied
until it was time to go to his club and lunch. He had no sooner
settled down to his calculations, however, when he heard a
shuffling step on the landing, followed by a knock at Beevor's
office-door. "More work for Beevor," he thought; "what luck the
fellow has! I'd better go in and explain that he's just left town
on business."
Ā Ā But on entering the adjoining room he heard the
knocking repeated ā this time at his own door; and hastening back
to put an end to this somewhat undignified form of hide-and-seek,
he discovered that this visitor at least was legitimately his, and
was, in fact, no other than Professor Anthony Futvoye himself.
Ā Ā The Professor was standing in the doorway peering
short-sightedly through his convex glasses, his head protruded from
his loosely-fitting great-coat with an irresistible suggestion of
an inquiring tortoise. To Horace his appearance was more welcome
than that of the wealthiest client ā for why should Sylvia's father
take the trouble to pay him this visit unless he still wished to
continue the acquaintanceship? It might even be that he was the
bearer of some message or invitation.
Ā Ā So, although to an impartial eye the Professor might
not seem the kind of elderly gentleman whose society would produce
any wild degree of exhilaration, Horace was unfeignedly delighted
to see him. "Extremely kind of you to come and see me like this,
sir," he said warmly, after establishing him in the solitary
armchair reserved for hypothetical clients. "Not at all. I'm afraid
your visit to Cottesmore Gardens some time ago was somewhat of a
disappointment." "A disappointment?" echoed Horace, at a loss to
know what was coming next. "I refer to the fact ā which possibly,
however, escaped your notice" ā explained the Professor, scratching
his scanty patch of grizzled whisker with a touch of irascibility,
"that I myself was not at home on that occasion." "Indeed, I was
greatly disappointed," said Horace, "though of course I know how
much you are engaged. It's all the more good of you to spare time
to drop in for a chat just now." "I've not come to chat, Mr.
Ventimore. I never chat. I wanted to see you about a matter which I
thought you might be so obliging as to ā ā But I observe you are
busy ā probably too busy to attend to such a small affair."
Ā Ā It was clear enough now; the Professor was going to
build, and had decided ā could it be at Sylvia's suggestion? ā to
entrust the work to him! But he contrived to subdue any
self-betraying eagerness, and reply (as he could with perfect
truth) that he had nothing on hand just then which he could not lay
aside, and that if the Professor would let him know what he
required, he would take it up at once. "So much the better," said
the Professor; "so much the better. Both my wife and daughter
declared that it was making far too great a demand upon your good
nature; but, as I told them, 'I am much mistaken,' I said, 'if Mr.
Ventimore's practice is so extensive that he cannot leave it for
one afternoon ā ā '"
Ā Ā Evidently it was not a house. Could he be needed to
escort them somewhere that afternoon? Even that was more than he
had hoped for a few minutes since. He hastened to repeat that he
was perfectly free that afternoon. "In that case," said the
Professor, beginning to fumble in all his pockets ā was he
searching for a note in Sylvia's handwriting? ā "in that case, you
will be conferring a real favour on me if you can make it
convenient to attend a sale at Hammond's Auction Rooms in Covent
Garden, and just bid for one or two articles on my behalf."
Ā Ā Whatever disappointment Ventimore felt, it may be
said to his credit that he allowed no sign of it to appear. "Of
course I'll go, with pleasure," he said, "if I can be of any use."
"I knew I shouldn't come to you in vain," said the Professor. "I
remembered your wonderful good nature, sir, in accompanying my wife
and daughter on all sorts of expeditions in the blazing hot weather
we had at St. Luc ā when you might have remained quietly at the
hotel with me. Not that I should trouble you now, only I have to
lunch at the Oriental Club, and I've an appointment afterwards to
examine and report on a recently-discovered inscribed cylinder for
the Museum, which will fully occupy the rest of the afternoon, so
that it's physically impossible for me to go to Hammond's myself,
and I strongly object to employing a broker when I can avoid it.
Where did I put that catalogue?... Ah, here it is. This was sent to
me by the executors of my old friend, General Collingham, who died
the other day. I met him at Nakada when I was out excavating some
years ago. He was something of a collector in his way, though he
knew very little about it, and, of course, was taken in right and
left. Most of his things are downright rubbish, but there are just
a few lots that are worth securing, at a reasonable figure, by some
one who knew what he was about." "But, my dear Professor,"
remonstrated Horace, not relishing this responsibility, "I'm afraid
I'm as likely as not to pick up some of the rubbish. I've no
special knowledge of Oriental curios." "At St. Luc," said the
Professor, "you impressed me as having, for an amateur, an
exceptionally accurate and comprehensive acquaintance with Egyptian
and Arabian art from the earliest period." (If this were so, Horace
could only feel with shame what a fearful humbug he must have
been.) "However, I've no wish to lay too heavy a burden on you,
and, as you will see from this catalogue, I have ticked off the
lots in which I am chiefly interested, and made a note of the limit
to which I am prepared to bid, so you'll have no difficulty." "Very
well," said Horace; "I'll go straight to Covent Garden, and slip
out and get some lunch later on." "Well, perhaps, if you don't
mind. The lots I have marked seem to come on at rather frequent
intervals, but don't let that consideration deter you from getting
your lunch, and if you should miss anything by not being on
the spot, why, it's of no consequence, though I don't say it
mightn't be a pity. In any case, you won't forget to mark what each
lot fetches, and perhaps you wouldn't mind dropping me a line when
you return the catalogue ā or stay, could you look in some time
after dinner this evening, and let me know how you got on? ā that
would be better."
Ā Ā Horace thought it would be decidedly better, and
undertook to call and render an account of his stewardship that
evening. There remained the question of a deposit, should one or
more of the lots be knocked down to him; and, as he was obliged to
own that he had not so much as ten pounds about him at that
particular moment, the Professor extracted a note for that amount
from his case, and handed it to him with the air of a benevolent
person relieving a deserving object. "Don't exceed my limits," he
said, "for I can't afford more just now; and mind you give Hammond
your own name, not mine. If the dealers get to know I'm after the
things, they'll run you up. And now, I don't think I need detain
you any longer, especially as time is running on. I'm sure I can
trust you to do the best you can for me. Till this evening,
then."
Ā Ā A few minutes later Horace was driving up to Covent
Garden behind the best-looking horse he could pick out.
Ā Ā The Professor might have required from him rather
more than was strictly justified by their acquaintanceship, and
taken his acquiescence too much as a matter of course ā but what of
that? After all, he was Sylvia's parent. "Even with my
luck," he was thinking, "I ought to succeed in getting at least one
or two of the lots he's marked; and if I can only please him,
something may come of it."
Ā Ā And in this sanguine mood Horace entered Messrs.
Hammond's well-known auction rooms.
CHAPTER II A CHEAP LOT
In spite of the fact that it was the luncheon hour when Ventimore reached Hammond's Auction Rooms, he found the big, skylighted gallery where the sale of the furniture and effects of the late General Collingham was proceeding crowded to a degree which showed that the deceased officer had some reputation as a connoisseur.
The narrow green baize tables below the auctioneer's rostrum were occupied by professional dealers, one or two of them women, who sat, paper and pencil in hand, with much the same air of apparent apathy and real vigilance that may be noticed in the Casino at Monte Carlo. Around them stood a decorous and businesslike crowd, mostly dealers, of various types. On a magisterial-looking bench sat the auctioneer, conducting the sale with a judicial impartiality and dignity which forbade him, even in his most laudatory comments, the faintest accent of enthusiasm.
The October sunshine, striking through the glazed roof, re-gilded the tarnished gas-stars, and suffused the dusty atmosphere with palest gold. But somehow the utter absence of excitement in the crowd, the calm, methodical tone of the auctioneer, and the occasional mournful cry of "Lot here, gentlemen!" from the porter when any article was too large to move, all served to depress Ventimore's usually mercurial spirits.
For all Horace knew, the collection as a whole might be of little value, but it very soon became clear that others besides Professor Futvoye had singled out such gems as there were, also that the Professor had considerably under-rated the prices they were likely to fetch.
Ventimore made his bids with all possible discretion, but time after time he found the competition for some perforated mosque lantern, engraved ewer, or ancient porcelain tile so ...
Table of contents
- CHAPTER I
- CHAPTER II A CHEAP LOT
- CHAPTER III AN UNEXPECTED OPENING
- CHAPTER IV
- CHAPTER V CARTE BLANCHE
- CHAPTER VI EMBARRAS DE RICHESSES
- CHAPTER VII
- CHAPTER VIII
- CHAPTER IX
- CHAPTER X
- CHAPTER XI A FOOL'S PARADISE
- CHAPTER XII THE MESSENGER OF HOPE
- CHAPTER XIII A CHOICE OF EVILS
- CHAPTER XIV
- CHAPTER XV BLUSHING HONOURS
- CHAPTER XVI A KILLING FROST
- CHAPTER XVII HIGH WORDS
- CHAPTER XVIII
- THE EPILOGUE
- Copyright
