Part 35 (1/2)
”I'm afraid”--he heard Miss Bax talking as it were an immense way off as he floated away on the wings of his dream--”that my views would startle Mr Gallup.”
The motor turned in at the drive gates, they had reached the door.
Eloquent was right in the middle of his dream.
He followed Lady Campion and Miss Bax across the hall and down a corridor to a room he had never been in when he was a child.
Fusby threw open a door and announced loudly, ”Sir George and Lady Campion, Miss Bax, Mr Gallup.”
They were the last of the guests.
For a little while he was less conscious of his dream. This light, bright room with white panelled walls and furniture covered with gay chintzes, soft blurred chintz in palest pinks and greens, with pictures in oval frames, and people, ordinary people that he had seen before, all talking and laughing together. This was not the Redmarley that he knew, grave and beautiful and old.
This was not the Redmarley of his dream. It came back to him as Mrs Ffolliot gave him her hand in welcome, presenting him to her husband and one or two other people. It left him as she turned away and Grantly came forward and greeted him. Grantly, tall and irreproachably well dressed, cheerful withal and quite at his ease.
Sir George had pulled Mary into the very middle of the room and held her at arm's length with laughing comments. How could men find the courage for that sort of thing? He heard him ask what she had done with her sash, and then Mrs Ffolliot said, ”I think you know my daughter, Mr Gallup; will you take her in to dinner?”
And once more he was well in the middle of his dream, for he found himself in the corridor he knew, side by side with Mary, part of a procession moving towards the dining-room.
Her hand was on his arm, but the exquisite moment was a little marred by the discovery that she was quite an inch taller than he.
Eloquent had been to a good many public dinners; he had even dined with certain Cabinet Ministers, but always when there were only men. He had never yet dined with people of the Ffolliots' cla.s.s in this intimate, friendly way, and he found everything a little different from what he expected. He had read very little fiction, and such mental pictures as he had evolved were drawn from his inner consciousness. As always, he wondered how they contrived to be so gay, to talk such nonsense, and to laugh at it. Seated between Mary and witty Mrs Ward, whose husband was one of his ardent supporters in the county, he did his best to join in the general conversation, but he found it hard. Miss Bax, whose premonition regarding her fate was justified, seemed to have overcome her objection to cadets. She and Grantly were just opposite to him, and he noticed with regret that Grantly was drinking champagne. It would have been better, Eloquent thought, if the boy had abstained altogether after his experience at the election. Mary, too, drank champagne, but Eloquent condoned this weakness in her case, she drank so little. Everyone drank champagne except Sir George, who preferred whisky, and Eloquent himself, who drank Apollinaris.
”Do you suffer from rheumatism?” Mary asked innocently. ”Do you think it would hurt you once in a way?”
”I am not in the least rheumatic,” Eloquent protested, ”but I have never tasted anything intoxicating.”
”Then you don't know whether you'd like it or not. Why not try some and see?” Mary suggested hospitably.
Eloquent shook his head. ”Better not,” he said, ”you don't know what effect it might have on me.”
He ate whatever was put before him, wholly unaware of its nature, and in spite of Mary's efforts to keep the conversational ball rolling gaily, he was very silent.
The dream had got him again, for he knew this room with the dark oak panelling and great old portraits of departed Ffolliots, some of them with eyes that followed you. He knew the room, but as he knew it, the long narrow table, like the table in a refectory, was bare and polished and empty; or with a little cloth laid just at one end for old Mr Ffolliot.
What did they think of it now, these solemn pictured people?--this long, narrow strip of brilliant light and flowers and sparkling gla.s.s and silver, surrounded by well-dressed cheerful persons, all, apparently, laughing and talking at the same time.
They had reached dessert, and he was handing Mary a dish of sweets; she took four. ”Do take some,” she whispered, ”take lots, and what you don't want give to me; you can put them in my bridge-bag under the table, I want them for the children. I promised Ger.”
Bewildered, but only too happy to do anything she asked him, Eloquent helped himself largely.
”Now,” Mary whispered, holding a little white satin bag open under the table, ”and if they come round again, take some more.”
”It was my grandfather began it,” she explained; ”he used always to save sweets for us when we stayed with him, and now it's a rule--if we dine downstairs--if there are any--there aren't always, you know--and Fusby's so stingy, if there are any left he takes them and locks them up in a box till next time. You watch Grantly, he's got some too, but he hasn't got anywhere to put them, like me. I must go round behind him when mother collects eyes, then I'll nip up to Ger, for he'll never go to sleep till I've been . . .”
”You see,” she went on confidentially, ”they will take them to Willets to-morrow. He loves good sweets and he never gets any unless they take them to him. They'll make a party of it, and Mrs Willets will give them each a weeny gla.s.s of ginger-wine. They'll have a lovely time--do you know Willets?”
”By sight, I think . . . he's your keeper, isn't he? From all I can hear to-night he seems a very remarkable person, everyone is talking about him.”
”Oh, you ought to know him, he's the greatest dear in Redmarley.