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Lady Adela and I studiously avoided all reference to gardening or diet upon our six-mile drive to Laxley, and reached the course in a condition of comparative amicability.
We arrived just in time to hear the roar that greeted the result of the first race.
"I wonder what has won," I said, as the victoria b.u.mped over the gra.s.s.
"I have never been greatly interested in racing," said Lady Adela majestically. "My father was devoted to it, and so is my brother Rumborough. But I never know one horse from another. For instance, I have not the faintest notion which of the two animals now drawing us is Romulus and which is Remus, although d.i.c.k says it is impossible to mistake them. But then d.i.c.k has a name for every animal in the estate.
Ah! there is the motor, against the railings! That is rather a relief.
Dear Constance is an excellent driver, d.i.c.k says, but she is inclined to be venturesome."
"Miss Damer appears to be a lady of exceptional talents," I observed.
"Yes, indeed!" agreed Lady Adela, with, for her, quite remarkable enthusiasm. "It is a pity she has no money."
I do not know whether the last remark was intended as a lamentation or an intimation. But I understood now why Miss Damer was only First Reserve.
I changed the subject.
"I suppose you do not bet, Lady Adela?"
"I make it a rule," replied my hostess precisely, "to put half-a-sovereign on any horse whose owner we happen to know. One should always support one's friends, should not one?"
I was still pondering in my heart Lady Adela's system of turf speculation, wondering whether if every animal in the race had belonged to a friend she would have backed it, and in any case what benefit or otherwise (beyond shortening the price) one confers upon an owner by backing his horses at all, when the victoria, rolling heavily, came to anchor astern of the motor, and Hilda Beverley, Sylvia, and Crick, who had been standing upon the seats to view the race, turned to greet us.
"I had no idea racing was so exciting, dear Lady Adela," exclaimed Miss Beverley. "I came armed with a copy of 'The Nation,' prepared to spend the afternoon in the back seat of the car, and here I am quite thrilled."
"I am so glad, dear Hilda," said Lady Adela graciously. "d.i.c.k would have been disappointed if you had not enjoyed yourself. Where is that boy, by the way?"
"He and Connie have gone to collect Mr. Carmyle's winnings," said Sylvia.
"Has--ha! h'm!--Plumstone won, then?" I enquired, timorously avoiding Lady Adela's eye.
"Yes, worse luck!" replied Mr. Crick lugubriously. "We were all on Mercutio. But Miss Damer stuck to it that Plumstone was the right horse, and made d.i.c.ky put on five s.h.i.+llings for her and five for you.
They got three to one, I believe."
At this moment d.i.c.ky and Miss Damer returned from the ring, and I was duly presented with six half-crowns.
"Three-quarters of an hour till the next race," announced d.i.c.ky.
"Better have lunch."
By this time the whole party had become infected with that fierce spirit of cupidity which a.s.sails respectable Britons when they find themselves in the neighbourhood of that singularly uncorrupt animal, the horse; and the succeeding half-hour was devoted by seven well-born and well-to-do persons to an elaborate consideration of the best means of depriving a hard-working and mainly deserving section of the community of as large a sum of money as possible.
Our symposium resulted in a far from unanimous decision. Lady Adela, having studied the list of owners' names upon the card, handed me a sovereign and instructed me to seek out a book-maker who should be both cheap and respectable, and back the Earl of Moddlewick's Extinguisher and Mr. Hector McCorquodale's Inverary. Mr. Crick, the expert of the party, let fall dark hints on the subject of a quadruped named The Chicken. d.i.c.ky and I decided to wait until the numbers went up.
"d.i.c.k, you must positively back a horse for me this time," announced Miss Beverley.
"You are getting on, Hilda!" replied The Freak, obviously pleased to find his beloved in sympathy with his simple pleasures.
Miss Beverley handed him five s.h.i.+llings.
"And if the horse does n't win I shall never speak to you again," she concluded; and from the tone of her voice I could not help feeling that she meant what she said.
"What is your selection this time, Connie?" asked Sylvia.
Miss Damer produced a dirty pink envelope and began to open it.
d.i.c.ky laughed.
"Connie has been patronising a tipster," he said.
"I got this," explained Miss Damer, "from a man on the course. His name was Lively. He was trying to earn an honest living, he said, by supplying reliable stable information to sportsmen; but he did n't seem to be getting on very well, poor thing! People were standing all round him in a ring, laughing, and n.o.body would buy any of his envelopes, although he had given lots of them the winner of the first race for nothing. Just then he caught sight of d.i.c.ky and me standing on the edge of the crowd. He pushed his way towards us, and said that if I bought one of his tips, he knew it would bring him luck. He said," Miss Damer added with a smile of genuine gratification, "that I was a beautiful young lady. So I bought one of his envelopes, and after that a lot of other people did, too."
d.i.c.ky grinned.
"Yes; that was the point at which we ought to have pa.s.sed along quietly," he said.
"Did n't you?" I asked.
"Bless you, no! Connie had n't nearly finished. She and her friend were as thick as thieves by this time. The conversation was just beginning to interest them."
"What did you find to talk about, Miss Damer?" asked Hilda Beverley curiously.
"I could n't help wondering," Connie continued, "whether he had a wife and children to support; so I asked him if he was married. He said he was afraid he was, but if ever he became a widower he would let me know.
We left after that."
"Constance, _dear_ child!" began Lady Adela, amid unseemly laughter.
"It was all right, Lady Adela," Miss Damer a.s.sured her. "They were quite a nice crowd, and I had d.i.c.ky with me."
"You are a great deal better able to take care of yourself than I am, old lady," said The Freak admiringly.
I saw Miss Beverley's fine eyes rest disapprovingly for a moment upon her philogynistic swain. Then some one asked:--
"What is your tip, Connie?"
Miss Damer scanned her paper.
"It's not very well written," she said. "Perry--Perry--something."
"Periander?" I suggested. "He is on the card."
"Yes--Periander. I shall back him."
"Rank outsider," said Mr. Crick's warning voice.
"I shall back him all the same," persisted Miss Damer, with a little nod of finality. "It would n't be fair to Lively's luck if I did n't. Mr.
Carmyle, will you come and find a bookmaker with me?"
We departed together, and pushed our way through the crowd to the ring.