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As Miss Macleod grasped her nephew by the shoulder with a sufficiently muscular grasp, the Rev. Alan put on his hat and went with her.
CHAPTER II--UNDER THE SPELL
They walked all the way--it is some distance from Cadogan Place to Ladbroke Grove. There was not much conversation--what there was was not of a particularly cheerful kind. The day was warm. The lady was tall, the gentleman short. Miss Macleod was a first-rate pedestrian; the Rev. Alan was not good at any kind of exercise. By the time they reached their journey's end he was in quite a pitiable plight. He was bedewed with perspiration, and agitated beyond measure by the rather better than four miles-an-hour pace which his aunt would persist in keeping up.
Pomona Villa proved to be a little house which stood back at some distance from the road. Just as they reached it the door was opened, shut again with a bang, and a gentleman came hastening out of the house as though he were pressed for time. He was a tall, portly person, with very red whiskers, and a complexion which was even more vivid than his whiskers. He was attired in what might be called recollections of clerical costume, and was without a hat. He appeared to be very much distressed either in body or in mind. Just as he laid his hand on the handle on one side of the gate, Miss Macleod grasped it on the other. Brought in this way unexpectedly face to face, he stared at the lady, and the lady stared at him.
"She's at it again!" he cried.
"Sir!" exclaimed Miss Macleod. She drew herself up.
"I beg your pardon." The gentleman on the other side of the gate produced a very dirty pocket-handkerchief, and mopped his head and face with it. "I thought it was a friend of mine."
"Is this Pomona Villa?" asked Miss Macleod.
The bare-headed man looked up and down, and round about, and seemed as though he were more than half disposed to say it wasn't. But as the name was painted over the top bar of the wooden gate, within twelve inches of the lady's nose, he perhaps deemed it wiser to dissemble.
"What--what name?" he stammered.
"I've come about the apostle spoons."
"The apostle spoons! Oh!" The bare-headed man looked blank. He added in a sort of stage aside--"Letters only."
"Perhaps you will allow me to enter."
Miss Macleod did not wait for the required permission, but pushed the gate open, and entered. Her nephew followed at her heels. The bare-headed man stared at the Rev. Alan, and the Rev. Alan at him--one seemed quite as confused as the other.
"Can I see the spoons?" continued Miss Macleod.
"Eh--the fact is--eh--owing to distressing family circ.u.mstances--eh--it is impossible--"
What was impossible will never be known, for at that moment the door was opened, and a woman appeared.
"If you please, mum, Miss Vesey says, will you walk in? She's upstairs."
Miss Macleod walked in, her nephew always at her heels. The bare-headed man stared after them, as though he did not understand this mode of procedure in the least.
"Up the stairs, first door to the right," continued the woman who had bade them enter. As, in accordance with these directions, Miss Macleod proceeded to mount the stairs, the woman, who still stood at the open door, addressed herself to the bare-headed man at the gate. Her words were sufficiently audible.
"You brute!" she said, and banged the door in his face.
Seemingly unconscious of there being anything peculiar about the house or its inhabitants, Miss Macleod strode up the stairs. The Rev. Alan, conscious for himself and his aunt as well, crept uncomfortably after.
The first door on the right stood wide open. Miss Macleod unceremoniously entered the room. Her nephew followed sheepishly in the rear.
The room was a good-sized one, and was scantily furnished. One striking piece of furniture, however, it did contain, and that was a grand piano. At the moment of their entrance the instrument stood wide open, and at the keyboard was seated a young lady.
"I am Miss Vesey," she observed, without troubling herself to rise as the visitors entered.
Miss Macleod bowed. She appeared about to make some remark, possibly with reference to the apostle spoons; but before she could speak, Miss Vesey went on,--
"That is my father you saw outside--the Rev. George Vesey. He's a dipsomaniac."
Miss Macleod started, which, under the circ.u.mstances, was not unnatural. Her nephew stared with all his eyes and spectacles. Miss Vesey was a fine young woman, about nineteen years of age. The most prominent feature in her really intellectual countenance was a pair of large and radiant black eyes.
"I'm engaged in his cure," she added.
"I have called," remarked Miss Macleod, perhaps deeming it wiser to ignore the young lady's candid allusion to her father's weakness, "with reference to an advertis.e.m.e.nt about some apostle spoons."
Miss Vesey, still seated on the music-stool, clasped her hands behind her head.
"Oh, that's one of his swindles," she said.
"One of his swindles!" echoed Miss Macleod.
"He's agent for a Birmingham firm. He finds it a good dodge to put in advertis.e.m.e.nts like that. Each person who buys thinks she gets the only set he has to sell; but he sells dozens every week. It's drink has brought him to it. But I'm engaged in curing him all round. The worst of it is that when I begin to cure him, he runs away. He was just going to run away when you came to the gate."
"If what you say is correct," said Miss Macleod grimly, "I should say the case was incurable--save by the police."
"Ah, that's because you don't understand my means of cure: I'm a magician."
"A magician!"
There was a pause. Miss Macleod eyed Miss Vesey keenly, Miss Vesey returning the compliment by eyeing her.
Miss Macleod was a woman of the day. Openly expressing unbelief in all the faiths that are old, she was continually on the look-out for a faith that was new. She had tried spiritualism and theosophy. She had sworn by all sorts of rogues and humbugs--until she found them out to be rogues and humbugs, which, to her credit be it said, it did not take her long to do. Just at that moment she was without a fetish. So that when Miss Vesey calmly announced that she was a magician, she did not do what, for instance, that very much more weak-minded person than herself, her nephew, would have done--she did not promptly laugh her to scorn.
"What do you mean by saying you're a magician?" she inquired.
"I mean what I say. I have my magic here."
Miss Vesey laid her hand on the piano.
"I suppose you mean that you're a fine pianist."
"More than that. With my music I can do with men and women what I will. I can drive the desire for drink out of my father for days together; I can make him keep sober against his will."
Miss Macleod turned towards her nephew.
"This is my nephew. Exercise your power upon him."
"Aunt!" cried the Rev. Alan.
Miss Vesey laughed.
"Shall I?" she asked.
"You have my permission. You say you can do with men and women what you will. He will be a rich man one of these fine days. Make him marry you."