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"If you nip out of your seat as the curtain goes down," said Henry, "we can both get up to her box before the rus.h.!.+..."
"There won't be any rush."
"Well, anyhow, we can get up to the box pretty quickly!"
Gilbert walked away without replying, and Henry sat back in his seat and watched the boxes so that he might see Lady Cecily the moment she entered. His stall was in the last row, against the first row of the pit, and the girls who had applauded Miss Terry and Sir Charles Wyndham were still identifying the fas.h.i.+onable people.
"I tell you it _is_ 'im," said the more a.s.sertive of the two.
"I sawr 'is picture in the _Daily Reflexion_ the time that feller ...
wot's 'is name ... the one that 'anged all 'is wives in the coal-cellar ... you know!..."
"I know," the other girl replied. "'Orrible case, I call it!"
"Well, 'e defended 'im. I sawr 'is picture in the _Daily Reflexion_ myself. Very 'andsome man, eh? They do say!..."
Lady Cecily came into her box, followed by her husband, and Henry looked steadily up at her in the hope that she would see him, but she did not glance in his direction. He could see that she had found Gilbert in the audience, but Gilbert was not looking at her. An odd sensation of jealousy ran through him. He suddenly resented her familiarity with Gilbert. He remembered that she had called him by his Christian name, that she distinguished between him and other men by calling him by his proper name, and not by some fanciful perversion of it. If only she would call _him_ by his Christian name!...
She was leaning on the edge of the box, and looking about the auditorium.
"That's Lydy Cecily Jyne!" he heard the a.s.sertive girl behind him saying.
"'Oo?'"
"Lydy Cecily Jyne. _You_ know!"
Her husband leant back in his seat, stifling a yawn as he did so, and Henry saw that he was a faded, insignificant-looking man whose head sloped so sharply that it seemed to be galloping away from his forehead; but he did not pay much attention to him. His eyes were fixed on Lady Cecily.
"A bit 'ot, she is," the girl behind him was saying. "Well, I mean to say!..."
But what she meant to say, Henry neither knew nor cared. The lights in the theatre were lowered, leaving only the bright, warm glow of the footlights on the heavy curtain. He could see Lady Cecily's face still golden and glowing even in the darkness.
"My dear," said the girl behind him, "the things I've 'eard ... well, they'd fill a book!"
Then the curtain went up and the play began.
He saw her leaning forward eagerly to watch the stage, and presently he heard her laughing at some piece of wit in the play: a clear, joyful laugh; and as she laughed, she turned for a few moments and gazed into the darkened theatre. Her beautiful eyes seemed to him to be s.h.i.+ning stars, and he imagined that she was looking straight at him. He smiled at her, and then jeered at himself. "Of course, she can't see me," he said.
He tried to interest himself in the traffic of the stage, but his thoughts continually wandered to the woman in the box above him.
"She's the loveliest woman I've ever seen," he said to himself.
THE FIFTH CHAPTER
1
She turned to greet them as they entered the box. "Come and sit beside me, Gilbert!" she said. "Mr. Quinn ... oh, you don't know Jimphy, do you?" She introduced Henry to her husband who mumbled "How do!" in a sulky voice, and stood against the wall of the box twisting his moustache. The shyness which had enveloped Henry in the vestibule of the theatre still clung about him, and he felt awkward and tongue-tied. Lord Jasper Jayne did not help Henry to get rid of his shyness. There was a "Who-the-devil-are-you?" look about him that made easy conversation impossible and any conversation difficult. Lady Cecily was chatting to Gilbert as if she had been saving up all her conversation for a month past exclusively for his ears; and Henry could hear a recurrent phrase.... "But, Gilbert, it's ages since you've been to see me, and you know I like you to come!..." that jangled his temper and made him feel savage towards his friend....
He made an effort to be chatty with Lord Jasper. "How do you like the play?" he said, as pleasantly as he could, for it was not easy to be chatty with Lord Jasper, whose coa.r.s.e, flat features roused a sensation of repulsion in Henry.
"I don't like it," he replied. "Rotten twaddle!"
"Oh!" Henry exclaimed.
There did not appear to be anything more to say, nor did Lord Jasper seem anxious to continue the conversation; but just when it appeared that the effort to be pleasantly chatty was likely to be abortive, Lord Jasper suddenly walked towards the door of the box. "Come and have a drink!" he said.
Henry did not wish to go and have a drink, and he paused irresolutely until Lady Cecily suddenly leant forward and said with a laugh, "Yes, do go with Jimphy, Mr. Quinn. Gilbert and I have such a lot to say to each other, and Jimphy's not in a good temper. Are you, Jimphy, dear? You see," she went on, "he wanted to go to the Empire, but I made him bring me here!... Do cheer up, Jimphy, dear! Smile for the company!..."
Lord Jasper opened the door of the box and went out, and Henry, raging inwardly, followed him. Before he had quite shut the door again, Lady Cecily had turned to Gilbert. Her hand was on his sleeve, and she was saying, "But Gilbert, darling!..." He shut the door quickly and almost ran after Lord Jasper. She was in love with Gilbert, and Gilbert was in love with her. A woman would not put her hand so affectionately on a man's arm and call him "Gilbert, darling!" if she were not in love with him. She had wished to be alone with Gilbert ... had practically turned him out of the box so that she might be alone with Gilbert ... had not waited for him to close the door before she began to fondle him ... and Gilbert had spoken so bitterly of her!...
He followed on the heels of Lord Jasper, pa.s.sing through a throng of men in the pa.s.sages and on the stairs, until he reached the bar. "Whisky and soda?" said Lord Jasper, and Henry nodded his head.
"I hate theatres," Lord Jasper said.
"Oh!" Henry replied.
That seemed to be the only adequate retort to make to anything that Jimphy said.
"Yes, I can't stand 'em. Cecily let me in to-night ... on a chap's birthday, too. She might have chosen the Empire!"
"You like music-halls then?"
"They're all right. Better than theatres anyhow. I like to see girls dancing and ... and ... all that kind of thing!"
A bell rang, warning them that the second act was about to begin.
"I suppose we ought to go back," said Henry, putting his gla.s.s down. He had barely touched the whisky and soda.
"No hurry," Lord Jasper replied. "No hurry. And you haven't drunk your whisky? Cecily's quite happy with that chap, Farlow.... I don't like him myself ... oh, I say, he's a pal of yours, isn't he? Well, it doesn't matter now. I don't like him, and he doesn't like me. I know he doesn't.
I can always tell a chap doesn't like me because I generally don't like him. Have another, will you?"
Henry shook his head.
"I think we ought to be getting back," he said, "I hate disturbing people after the curtain's gone up!"
"You don't want to see that rotten play, do you? Look here ... I've forgotten your name! Sorry!..."
"Quinn. Henry Quinn!"
"Oh, Quinn! You're not English, are you?"
"I'm Irish."
"Are you? That's d.a.m.n funny! Well, anyhow, what I was going to say was this. You don't want to see this rotten play, do you?"