Part 32 (1/2)

The fact that her brother had admitted Sally to the room, made Mrs.

Durlacher realize that he held her in special regard. Notwithstanding that Miss Bishop called upon him at his own rooms at half-past nine at night, when all young ladies who valued their reputations would be either playing incompetent bridge in the suburban home, or going respectably with relations to a harmless piece at the theatre, she took the other fact well into consideration--gave it full weight--and all in that brief moment of a pause, realized that as yet there was no intimacy between these two.

She did not look upon women as a cla.s.s--the cla.s.s he mixed with--as dangerous to her brother's ultimate salvation; but coming across the individual in Sally, quiet, un.o.btrusive--the type that valued its own possessions, and would certainly expect substantial settlement, if not marriage itself--she felt called into action and answered the call, as only such women with her training know how.

When she had shaken hands, she leant back again with one graceful elbow, bared, upon the mantelpiece--the pose of absolute ease. Sally, who, except for the students' b.a.l.l.s, to which Janet had sometimes taken her, had not been in the presence of people in evening dress since she left home, stood, hiding her nervousness, but not hiding the fact that it was concealed. Traill's heart warmed to her. He knew his sister through and through--guessed every thought that was taking shape in her mind. But Sally--even her presence there alone--was more or less of an enigma and, seeing her almost pathetic perturbation of manner, he paid all the attentions he roughly knew to her.

”Here--you must sit down,” he said easily. ”We're not going to let you rush away before you've come.”

For that plural of the p.r.o.noun, Sally thanked him generously in her heart; for that also, Mrs. Durlacher smiled inwardly and saw visions of the power by which Jack would eventually win his way.

”Will you have some coffee?” he added, when she had accepted the chair he proffered. ”We've just had some. Good--wasn't it, Dolly?”

”Excellent.”

”Will you have some?” he repeated.

”No, thank you--well--yes,--yes, I think I will.”

Even to take coffee is action--action that it is an aid to conceal.

”Some milk?”

”No, thank you--black, please.”

She trusted that he would not remember that she had taken it with milk before. She always did take it with milk, but the eyes of that woman by the mantelpiece were on her, and she knew well enough how coffee ought to be taken.

All that Traill had told her of his sister, was racing wildly through her thoughts. She knew she was being criticized, knew that her position there was being looked upon in the least charitable light of all. She should never have come into the room. The fact that her voice had been heard, would have made no difference. But who thinks of such things when the moment is a goad, p.r.i.c.king mercilessly? Now she was there, her position could scarcely be worse. She would have given her life almost, in those first few moments, to sink into obscurity, no matter what peals of ironical laughter might ring in her ears as she vanished. But the thing was done now, and for every little attention he paid her, she thanked Traill with a full heart.

”What on earth have you got in that parcel?” he asked her, as he crushed down the saucepan of coffee to heat upon the fire.

Her cheeks reddened--flamed. It felt to her as if the eyes of his sister were lenses concentrating a burning sun upon her face.

”Oh it's nothing,” she said, mastering confusion; ”only something that I was taking home.”

His eyes questioned her, noting the flaming cheeks while his sister studied the muscular development and forbidding features of James Brownrigg--heavy-weight champion in the fifties, whose portrait hung over the mantelpiece.

”Isn't this the type of man you'd call a bruiser?” she asked, with a pretty trace of doubtful confidence in her technical knowledge on the last word.

”That chap--Brownrigg? No. I should call him a gentleman. I'd have given a good deal to see him fight. He always allowed his man to have his chance, though there wasn't one in England he couldn't have knocked out in the first round. He used to keep that glorious left of his tucked up, as quiet as a pet spaniel under a lady's arm, till he'd given his man time to show what he was worth. Then he'd shake his shoulders, grin a bit with that ugly mouth--never with his eyes--and plant his blow, the kick of a mule, and his man curled up like a caterpillar on a hot brick. That stroke got to be known as James Brownrigg's Waiting Left. I've met him. He kept a public house up in Islington. Died about four years ago, with both fists clenched, and his left still waiting. It's quite possible he kept it waiting till he got to the gates of heaven.”

Mrs. Durlacher looked up at the portrait again and then half-shuddered her graceful shoulders.

”I suppose a man can be a gentleman and look like that,” she said.

”But some one ought to have told him to grow his hair a little longer.

As it is, it has a fatal suggestion of three years' imprisonment for a.s.sault and battery.”

”Or the army,” suggested Traill, with a laugh.

She took that well and laughed with him. ”Yes, quite so; or the army; but they don't look so much like convicts as they used to. What do you think, Miss Bishop? Would you say, to look at him, that James Brownrigg was a gentleman?”

This, in a period of ten minutes, was the first remark that she had addressed to Sally. Coming, as it did, after that s.p.a.ce of time, pitched on the casual note, the eyebrows gently lifted, there was a whip in it that stung across Sally's sensitive cheeks. The words in themselves, of course, were nothing. Traill, in fact, thought that this icicle of a sister of his was beginning to thaw, and looked towards Sally for her answer in encouraging expectancy.