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"Wednesday," Henry answered.
"Cecily's made me promise to go and see it with her. What sort of a piece is it?"
They entered the house as he spoke.
"It's excellent...."
"Is it comic?"
"Well, I suppose it is. He calls it a comedy," Henry said.
"So long as there's a laugh in it, I don't mind going to see it. I can't stand these weepy bits. 'Hamlet' and that sort of stuff. Enough to give a chap the pip! Oh, here's Cecily!"
Henry turned to look up the stairs down which Lady Cecily was coming, and then he went forward to greet her.
"How nice of you," she said. "Has Gilbert come, too?"
"No," he answered, chilled by her question. "He has a rehearsal this morning!"
"Oh, yes, of course," she said. "His play! I forgot. We're going to see it on Wednesday. I hope it's good!"
"It's very good," Henry replied.
3
Jimphy left them after lunch. He was awfully sorry, old chap, to have to tear himself away and all that, but the fact was he had an appointment ... an important appointment ... and of course a chap had to keep an important appointment....
"We'll forgive you, Jimphy!" Lady Cecily said, and then he went away, begging Henry to remember that they must go to the Empire together one night.
"Well?" said Lady Cecily when her husband had gone, "how are you all getting on?"
She was reclining on a couch, with her feet resting on a cus.h.i.+on, and as she asked her question she pointed to another cus.h.i.+on lying on a chair.
He fetched it and put it behind her back.
"Splendidly," he answered. "Is that right?"
She settled herself more comfortably. "Yes, thanks," she said. "I read your novel," she went on.
"Did you like it?"
"Oh, yes. Of course, I liked it. I suppose you're writing another book now!" He nodded his head, and she went on. "I wish I could write books, but of course I can't. Mr. Lensley says I live books. Isn't that nice of him? Do you put real people in your books, or do you make them all up?
Do you know, I think I'll have another cigarette!"
He pa.s.sed the box of cigarettes to her and held it while she made up her mind whether she would smoke an Egyptian or a Turkish. Her delicate fingers moved indecisively from the one brand to the other. "You like Turkish, don't you?" he said, wis.h.i.+ng that he could take her slender hand in his and hold it forever.
"Choose one for me," she said, capriciously, lying back and clasping her hands about her head.
He took a cigarette from the box and offered it to her, but she did not hold out her hand to take it, and he understood that he was to place it between her lips. His fingers trembled as he did so, and he turned hurriedly to find the matches.
"Behind you," she said, and he turned and picked them up.
He lit a match and held it to her cigarette, and while he held it, her fingers touched his. She had taken hold of the cigarette to remove it from her lips.... He blew out the light and threw the match into the ash-tray, and then went and sat down in the deep chair in which he had been sitting when she asked him to get the cus.h.i.+on for her.
"Why didn't you call before?" she said, lazily blowing the smoke up into the air.
It was difficult to say why he had not called before, so he answered vaguely. There had been so much to do of late....
"And Gilbert? He doesn't rehea.r.s.e all day long, does he?"
"No, not all day, but he's pretty tired by the time he gets home."
"Why didn't he come to the Savoy that night?" she asked.
He wished she would not talk about Gilbert. He could not tell her the real reason why Gilbert had not kept his promise to join the supper-party and he was a poor hand at inventing convincing lies.
"There was some trouble at his office, I think," he said, "and he couldn't get away until too late!..."
"He didn't write or come to see me!" she protested.
It was probable that Gilbert forgot his duty in the excitement of hearing that his play was to be produced....
"I suppose so," she said.
She talked to him about his books and about Ireland. She had been to Dublin once and had gone to the Viceregal Lodge ... Lady Dundrum had taken her to some function there ... and she was eager for the t.i.ttle-tattle of the Court. Was it true that Lord Kelpie was indifferent to his lady?... Henry knew very little of the Dublin gossip. "I haven't been there since I left Trinity," he said, in explanation, "and the only people who write to me don't take any interest in Court functions!"
He rose to go, but she asked him to stay to tea with her, and so he remained.
"I don't suppose any one will call," she said, "but in case ..."
She told a servant that she was "not at home" to any one, and Henry, wondering why she had done so, felt vaguely flattered and as vaguely nervous. Her beauty filled him with desire and apprehension and left him half eager, half afraid to be alone with her. He understood Gilbert's fear that if he yielded to Cecily, she would destroy him. There was something in this woman that overpowered the senses, that made a man as will-less as a log, and left him in the end, spent, exhausted, incapable. He saw the danger that had frightened Gilbert, but he could not make up his mind to run away from it. There was something so exquisitely sensual in her look as she lay on the couch, looking at him and chattering in the Lensley style, that he felt inclined to yield himself to her, even if in yielding he should lose everything.
"Of course," he said to himself, "this is all imagination. She doesn't want me at all ... she wants Gilbert!"
She asked for another cigarette, and he took one and placed it in her lips and lit it for her, and again his fingers touched hers, and again he trembled with unaccountable emotion. As he bent over her, holding the match to the cigarette, he felt the blood rus.h.i.+ng to his head and for a moment or two his eyes were blurred and he could not see clearly. Then his eyes cleared and he saw that she was looking steadily at him, and he knew that she understood what was pa.s.sing in his mind. He dropped the match on to the ash-tray and bent a little nearer to her. He would take her in his arms, he said to himself, and hold her tightly to him....
"Won't you sit down," she said, pointing to his chair.
He straightened himself, but did not move away. His eyes were still intent on hers, as if he could not avoid her gaze, and for a while neither of them spoke or moved. Then she smiled at him.
"You're a funny boy," she said. "Won't you sit down!" and again she pointed to the chair.
His answer was so low that he could hardly hear himself speak, and at first he thought she had not heard him. "I'd better go," he said.
"Not yet," she answered. "You needn't go yet!"
"I'd better...."