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She collapsed, roaring with laughter, upon a flamboyant tiger-skin. She was still laughing when the guests poured in. The gigantic Captain Fenshawe-Fanshawe, my rival with the monocle and the Habsburg chin, taller than Brynhild herself, towered among them.
Everybody laughed, chattered, and admired. "Marvellous work, Mr. Harringay! When our dear Pongo dies, I shall send him to you."
"I hope you will do our Fifi, Mr. Harringay."
Harringay bowed and smiled.
"He did it for love, they say."
"Love!" boomed the Captain, filliping me under the nose. I trembled with rage and mortification.
"Be careful! He's very delicately wired," said Harringay.
"Love!" boomed the Captain. "A squirrel! Ha! Ha! It takes a full-sized man to hold a worth-while amount of love. What sort of heart did you find in him, Harringay?"
"Quite a good sort," said Harringay. "Broken of course."
Brynhild's laughter, which had been continuous, stopped.
"A squirrel!" sneered the Captain. "Didn't know you went in for small deer, Brynhild. Send you a stuffed mouse for Christmas."
He had not observed Brynhild's expression. I had. It looked like one of those bird's-eye views of the world you see before a news-reel, with everything going round and round: clouds, continents, seas, one thing after another. Suddenly, in a single convulsive movement, she was off her flamboyant tiger-skin, and stretched superbly p.r.o.ne on the funeral pelt of a black panther. "Leave me!" she cried chokingly. "Go away, everybody. Go away! Go away!"
The guests felt something was wrong. They edged out.
"Does that mean me?" said the Captain.
"Go away!" she cried.
"Me, too?" said Bogey.
"Everybody," sobbed Brynhild. Nevertheless a woman must have a friend: she clutched her by the hand.
"Brynhild! What is it? You are crying. I have never seen you cry. Tell me. We are alone."
"Bogey, he did it for love."
"Yes."
"I've just realized what that means, Bogey. I didn't know. I've been all my life hunting things - killing them - having them stuffed. Bogey, that's all done now. He's everything to me. I'll marry him."
"I don't think you can, if he's stuffed, Brynhild darling."
"Live with him, then."
"The world - ?"
"The world's gross libidinous sneers can't touch a girl who lives with a man who's stuffed, Bogey. But I shall seat him at table, and talk to him, just as if he were alive."
"Brynhild, you're wonderful!"
I agreed. At the same time my position was a difficult one. It is no joke to have to seem stuffed when your beloved adores you, pa.s.sionately, remorsefully, seats you up at table, talks to you in the firelight, tells you all, weeps even. And yet, if I unbent, if I owned up, I felt her newborn love might wither in the bud.
Sometimes she would stroke my brow, press a burning kiss upon it, dash off, fling herself down on a leopard-skin, and do her exercises, frantically, hopelessly. I needed all my control.
Harringay called every morning, "to service me" as he said. He insisted that Brynhild should go out for an hour, pretending that a professional secret was involved. He gave me my sandwich, my gla.s.s of milk, dusted me thoroughly, ma.s.saged my joints where they were stiff.
"You can't ma.s.sage the stiffness out of this absurd situation," said I.
"Trust me," he said.
"All right," I said. "I will."
Brynhild returned, as usual, five minutes or so too early. She couldn't stay away the full hour. "I miss him so," she said, "when I'm out. And yet, when I come back, he's stuffed. It's too terrible."
"Perhaps I can help you," said Harringay.
"I dare not believe it," she said, clutching her heart.
"What?" cried he. "And you the little girl who shoots tigers? Pluck up your courage. Would you be too scared to believe in an artificial leg?"
"No," said she. "I could face that."
"One of those modern ones," said he, "that walk, kick, dance even, all by machinery?"
"Yes," she said. "I believe in it."
"Now," said he, "for his sake, believe in two of them."
"I will. I do."
"Be brave. Two arms as well."
"Yes. Yes."
"And so forth. I can make his jaw work. He'll eat. He'll open and shut his eyes. Everything."
"Will he speak to me?"
"Well, maybe he'll say 'Mamma.'"
"Science! It's wonderful! But - what will the world say?"
"I don't know. 'Bravo!' Something of that sort."
"No. Gross libidinous sneers. If I live with him, and he says 'Mamma.' And I can't marry him because he's stuffed. Oh, I knew it would be no good."
"Don't worry," said Harringay. "These are just technicalities. I'll straighten it all out. More tomorrow."
She saw him out, and came back shaking her head. She was in despair. So was I. I knew the Diana element in her. So did she. She spent the afternoon on the skin of an immense grizzly. I longed to be with her. I felt myself as if I were on the skin of a porcupine.
Suddenly, just as the shadows were falling thick in the vast apartment, there was a knock at the door. She opened. It was the abominable Fenshawe-Fanshawe.
"What do you want?" said she.
"Guess," said he.
"I wouldn't dream of it," said she.
"No need to," said he, removing his jacket.
"What are you doing?" said she.
"I have waited long enough," said he. "Listen, I don't like that kirtle. It doesn't suit you."
She made a bound, however, and reached the wall. Her guns were there. She pointed the Lee-Enfield. "Stand back!" she cried.
The Captain, sneering, continued to advance.
She pulled the trigger. A hollow click sounded. The Captain smiled and came nearer.
She caught up to the Ballard. Click. The Winchester light repeater. Click! Click! Click!
"I removed the cartridges," said the Captain, "when you where laughing so heartily at the c.o.c.ktail party."
"Oh, Squirrel. If you could help me!"
"He can't. He's stuffed"
"Oh, Squirrel! Help me! Squirrel! Squirre -" At that moment, he seized her. She broke free. "Help me!"
"You're durn tootin' I will," said I, rising stiffly from my seat. The effect, in the shadowy alcove, was probably uncanny. The Captain gave a throbbing cry. He turned and fled for the door. My blood was up, however, and regardless of the pins and needles I pursued him, s.n.a.t.c.hing a prize elephant's tusk as I ran. While yet he scrabbled at the latch I let him have it. He fell.
I felt Brynhild beside me, a true comrade. "Forgive me," I said. "I have deceived you."
"You have saved me. My hero!"
"But I'm not stuffed," I murmured.
"At least," said she, "you have more stuffing in you than that great beast."
"He will need it now, Brynhild. Or the mountainous carca.s.s will become offensive."
"Yes, We'll call in Harringay."
"Good old Harringay!"
"A clean kill, Squirrel mine! Great hunting!"
"Thank you."
I put one foot on the mighty torso, then the other. Our lips were on a level.
"Brynhild! May I?"
"Yes."
"Really?"
"Yes."
It was a divine moment. We sank upon the skin of a giant panda. Bogey knocked in vain.
Next day, of course, we were married.
HALFWAY TO h.e.l.l.
Louis Thurlow, having decided to take his own life, felt that at least he might take his own time also. He consulted his bank-book; there was a little over a hundred pounds left. "Very well," said he. "I'll get out of this flat, which stinks, and spend a really delightful week at Mutton's. I'll taste all the little pleasures just once more, to say good-bye to them."
He engaged his suite at Mutton's, where he kept the pageboys on the run. At one moment they had to rush round into Piccadilly to buy him chrysanthemums, in which to smell the oncoming autumn, which he would never see. Next they were sent to Soho to get him some French cigarettes, to put him in mind of a certain charming hotel which overlooked the Seine. He had also a little Manet sent round by the Neuilly Galleries -"To try living with," he said, with the most whimsical smile. You may be sure he ate and drank the very best; just a bite of this and a gla.s.s of that, he had so many farewells to take.
On the last night of all he telephoned Celia, whose voice he felt inclined to hear once more. He did not speak, of course, though he thought of saying, "You should really not keep on repeating 'Hallo,' but say 'Goodbye.'" However, she had said that already, and he had been taught never to sacrifice good taste to a bad mot.
He hung up the receiver, and opened the drawer in which he had stored his various purchases of veronal tablets.
"It seems a great deal to get down," he thought. "Everything is relative. I prided myself on not being one of those panic-stricken, crack-brained suicides who rush to burn out their guts with gulps of disinfectant; now it seems scarcely less civilized to end this pleasant week with twenty hard swallows and twenty sips of water. Still, life is like that. I'll take it easy."
Accordingly he arranged his pillows very comfortably, congratulated himself on his pyjamas, and propped up a photograph against his bedside clock. "I have no appet.i.te," he said. "I force myself to eat as a duty to my friends. There is no bore like a despairing lover." And with that he began to toy with this last, light, plain little meal.
The tablets were not long in taking effect. Our hero closed his eyes. He put on a smile such as a man of taste would wish to wear when found in the morning. He shut off that engine which drives us from one moment to the next, and prepared to glide into the valley of the shadow.
The glide was a long one. He antic.i.p.ated no landing, and was the more surprised to learn that there is no such thing as nothing, while there is quite definitely such a thing as being dead in the most comfortable bedroom in all Mutton's Hotel.
"Here I am," he said. "Dead! In Mutton's Hotel!"
The idea was novel enough to make him get out of bed at once. He noticed that his corpse remained there, and was glad to observe that the smile was still in place, and looked extremely well.
He strolled across to the mirror to see if his present face was capable of an equally subtle expression, but when he came to look in he saw nothing at all. Nevertheless he obviously had arms and legs, and he felt that he could still do his old trick with his eyebrows. From this he a.s.sumed that he was much the same, only different.
"I am just invisible," he said, "and in that there are certain advantages."