Part 17 (2/2)
”I am a citizen of the world,” Selingman admitted. ”I enjoy myself as I go, but I have my eyes always fixed upon the future. I make many friends, and I do not lose them. I set my face towards the pleasant places, and I keep it in that direction. It is the cult of some to be miserable; it is mine to be happy. The person who does most good in the world is the person who reflects the greatest amount of happiness. Therefore, I am a philanthropist. You shall learn from me, my young friend, how to banish some of that gloom from your face. You shall learn how to find happiness.”
They made their way across to the Gaiety, where Selingman was a very conspicuous figure in the largest and most conspicuous box. He watched with complacency the delivery of enormous bouquets to the princ.i.p.al artistes, and received their little bow of thanks with spontaneous and unaffected graciousness. Afterwards he dragged Norgate round to the stage-door, installed him in a taxi, and handed over to his escort two or three of his guests.
”I entrust you, Mr. Norgate,” he declared, ”with our one German export more wonderful, even, than my crockery--Miss Rosa Morgen. Take good care of her and bring her to the Milan. The other young ladies are my honoured guests, but they are also Miss Morgen's. She will tell you their names. I have others to look after.”
Norgate's last glimpse of Selingman was on the pavement outside the theatre, surrounded by a little group of light-hearted girls and a few young men.
”He is perfectly wonderful, our Mr. Selingman,” Miss Morgen murmured, as they started off. ”Tell me how long you have known him, Mr. Norgate?”
”Four days,” Norgate replied.
She screamed with laughter.
”It is so like him,” she declared. ”He makes friends everywhere. A day is sufficient. He gives such wonderful parties. I do not know why we all like to come, but we do. I suppose that we all get half-a-dozen invitations to supper most nights, but there is not one of us who does not put off everything to sup with Mr. Selingman. He sits in the middle--oh, you shall watch him to-night!--and what he says I do not know, but we laugh, and then we laugh again, and every one is happy.”
”I think he is the most irresistible person,” Norgate agreed. ”I met him two or three nights ago, coming over from Berlin, and he spoke of nothing but crockery and politics. To-night I dine with him, and I find a different person.”
”He is a perfect dear,” one of the other girls exclaimed, ”but so curiously inquisitive! I have a great friend, a gunner, whom I brought with me to one of his parties, and he is always asking me questions about him and his work. I had to absolutely worry d.i.c.k so as to be able to answer all his questions, didn't I, Rosa?”
Miss Morgen nodded a little guardedly.
”I should not call him really inquisitive,” she said. ”It is because he likes to seem interested in the subject which interests you.”
”I am not at all sure whether that is true,” the other young lady objected. ”You remember when Ellison Gray was always around with us?
Why, I know that Mr. Selingman simply worried Maud's life out of her to get a little model of his aeroplane from him. There were no end of things he wanted to know about cubic feet and dimensions. He is a dear, all the same.”
”A perfect dear!” the others echoed.
They drew up outside the Milan. Rosa Morgen turned to their escort.
”We will meet you in the hall in five minutes,” she said. ”Then we can all go together and find Mr. Selingman.”
CHAPTER XV
Selingman's supper party was in some respects both distinctive and unusual. Norgate, looking around him, thought that he had never in his life been among such a motley a.s.semblage of people. There were eight or nine musical comedy young ladies; a couple of young soldiers, one of whom he knew slightly, who had arrived as escorts to two of the young ladies; Prince Edward of Lenemaur; a youthful peer, who by various misdemeanours had placed himself outside the pale of any save the most Bohemian society, and several other men whose faces were unfamiliar. They occupied a round table just inside the door of the restaurant, and they sat there till long after the lights were lowered. The conversation all the time was of the most general and frivolous description, and Selingman, as the hour grew later, seemed to grow larger and redder and more joyous. The only hint at any serious conversation came from the musical comedy star who sat at Norgate's left.
”Do you know our host very well?” she asked Norgate once.
”I am afraid I can't say that I know him well at all,” Norgate replied.
”I met him in the train coming from Berlin, a few nights ago.”
”He is the most original person,” she declared. ”He entertains whenever he has a chance; he makes new friends every hour; he eats and drinks and seems always to be enjoying himself like an overgrown baby. And yet, all the time there is such a very serious side to him. One feels that he has a purpose in it all.”
”Perhaps he has,” Norgate ventured.
”Perhaps he has,” she agreed, lowering her voice a little. ”At least, I believe one thing. I believe that he is a good German and yet a great friend of England.”
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