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"Couldn't I go on with it in your absence?"
"No, that would hardly do."
"If you could only give me another week--"
"I couldn't possibly. I have to join my father at Cannes on the twenty-seventh."
So she was Sir Frederick Harden's daughter then, not his wife. Her last words were illuminating; they suggested the programme of a family whose affairs were in liquidation. They also revealed Sir Frederick Harden's amazing indifference to the fate of the library, an indifference that argued a certain ignorance of its commercial value.
His father who had a scent keen as a hound's for business had taken in the situation. And d.i.c.ky, you might trust d.i.c.ky to be sure of his game. But if this were so, why should the Hardens engage in such a leisurely and expensive undertaking as a catalogue _raisonne_? Was the gay Sir Frederick trying to throw dust in the eyes of his creditors?
"I see," he said, "Sir Frederick Harden is anxious to have the catalogue finished before you leave?"
"No, he isn't anxious about it at all. He doesn't know it's being done. It is entirely my affair."
So Sir Frederick's affairs and his daughter's were separate and distinct; and apparently neither knew what the other was about.
Rickman's conscience reproached him for the rather low cunning which had prompted him to force her hand. It also suggested that he ought not to take advantage of her ignorance. Miss Harden was charming, but evidently she was a little rash.
"If I may make the suggestion, it might perhaps be wiser to wait till your return."
"If it isn't done before I go," said Miss Harden, "it may never be done at all."
"And you are very anxious that it should be done?"
"Yes, I am. But if you can't do it, you had better say so at once."
"That would not be strictly true. I could do it, if I worked at it pretty nearly all day and half the night. Say sixteen hours out of the twenty-four."
"You are thinking of one person's work?"
"Yes."
"But if there are two persons?"
"Then, of course, it would take eight hours."
"So, if _I_ worked, too--"
"In that case," he replied imperturbably, "it would take twelve hours."
"You said eight just now."
"a.s.suming that the two persons worked equally hard."
She crossed to a table in the middle of the room, it was littered with papers. She brought and showed him some sheets covered with delicate handwriting; her work, poor lady.
"This is a rough catalogue as far as I've got. I think it will be some help."
"Very great help," he murmured, stung by an indescribable compunction.
He had not reckoned on this complication; and it made the ambiguity of his position detestable. It was bad enough to come sneaking into her house as his father's agent and spy, and be doing his business all the while that this adorably innocent lady believed him to be exclusively engaged on hers. But that she should work with him, toiling at a catalogue which would eventually be Rickman's catalogue, there was something in the notion extremely repulsive to his sense of honour.
Under its m.u.f.fling of headache his mind wrestled feebly with the situation. He wished he had not got drunk last night so that he could see the thing clearly all round. As far as he could see at present the only decent course was to back out of it.
"What I have done covers the first five sections up to F."
"I see," he said with a faint interest, "you are keeping the cla.s.sical and modern sections distinct."
"Yes, I thought that was better."
"Much better."
"I haven't begun the cla.s.sical section yet. Can I leave that to you?"
"Certainly." He felt that every a.s.sent was committing him to he knew not what.
"You see a great deal of the work is done already. That makes a difference, doesn't it?"
"Oh, yes; it makes all the difference." And indeed it did.
"In this case you can undertake it?"
"No. I think that in this case I couldn't undertake it at all."
"But--why not?" she asked, as well she might.
Why not, indeed? He walked two or three paces from her, trying to think it out. If only his head didn't ache so abominably! To refuse to share the work with her was of course to lay himself open to a most disgusting suspicion.
He paced back again. Did she suspect him of mercenary motives? No; she suspected nothing. Her face expressed disappointment and bewilderment, so far as she allowed it to express anything. One more turn. Thank Goodness, she was not looking at him; she was giving him time. Only a second, though. She had seated herself, as much as to say she was now waiting for an explanation. He mustn't keep her waiting; he must say something, but what on earth was he going to say?
And as he looked at the lady so serenely seated, there rose up before him a sudden impertinent, incongruous vision of Miss Poppy Grace's legs. They reminded him that certain affairs of his own imperatively called him back to town. Happy thought--why not say so?
"I ought to have said that in any case I couldn't undertake it. I couldn't make time without giving up some very important engagements."
"Could you not have thought of that before you came?"
"I did think of it. I thought I could fit everything in by going up to town from Sat.u.r.day to Monday. But if I'm to finish by the twenty-seventh, even--even with your help, I oughtn't to lose a day, much less three days."
"I see. You are afraid of not being able to finish?"
He wavered, selecting some form of expression that might shadow forth what was pa.s.sing in his mind.
"I'm afraid of making any promises I mightn't be able to keep."
Man's vacillation is Fate's determination, and Miss Harden was as firm as Fate. He felt that the fine long hands playing with the catalogue were shaping events for him, while her eyes measured him with their meditative gaze.
"I must risk that," she said. "I should lose more than three days in finding a subst.i.tute, and I think you will do the work as I want it done."
"And supposing I can't do it in time?"
"Will you do your best--that's all?"