Part 3 (1/2)
CHAPTER III
It could not be denied that Kitty had a charm. Miss Keating was not denying it, even now, when she was saying to herself that Kitty had a way of attracting very disagreeable attention.
At first she had supposed that this was an effect of Kitty's charm, disagreeable to Kitty. Then, even in the beginning, she had seen that there was something deliberate and perpetual in Kitty's challenge of the public eye. The public eye, so far from pursuing Kitty, was itself pursued, tracked down and captured. Kitty couldn't let it go. Publicity was what Kitty coveted.
She had then supposed that Kitty was used to it; that she was, in some mysterious way, a personage. There would be temptations, she had imagined, for any one who had a charm that lived thus in the public eye.
And Kitty had her good points, too. There was n.o.body so easy to live with as Kitty in her private capacity, if she could be said to have one.
She never wanted to be amused, or read to, or sat up with late at night, like the opulent invalids Miss Keating had been with hitherto. Miss Keating owed everything she had to Kitty, her health (she was const.i.tutionally anaemic), her magnificent salary, the luxurious gaiety in which they lived and moved (moved, perhaps, rather more than lived).
The very combs in her hair were Kitty's. So were the gowns she wore on occasions of splendour and display. It struck her as odd that they were all public, these occasions, things they paid to go to.
It had dawned on her by this time, coldly, disagreeably, that Kitty Tailleur was n.o.body, n.o.body, that is to say, in particular. A person of no account in the places where they had stayed. In their three months'
wanderings they had never been invited to any private house. Miss Keating could not account for that air of ill-defined celebrity that hung round Kitty like a scent, and marked her trail.
Not that any social slur seemed to attach to Kitty. The acquaintances she had made in her brief and curious fas.h.i.+on were all, or nearly all, socially immaculate. The friends (they were all men) who came to her of their own intimate accord, belonged, some of them, to an aristocracy higher than that represented by Mr. Lucy or the Colonel. And they had been by no means impervious to Kitty's charm.
From the sounds that came from the billiard-room she gathered that Kitty's charm appealed also to her audience in there. Leaning her body forward so as to listen, Miss Keating became aware that Lucy had returned to the lounge, and was strolling about in it, as if he were looking for somebody. He strolled into the veranda.
The garden was dark now, but a little light fell on the veranda from the open windows of the lounge. Lucy looked at Mrs. Tailleur's empty chair.
He was about to sit in it when he saw that he was alone with Mrs.
Tailleur's companion. He rose again for flight. Miss Keating rose also with the same intention.
Lucy protested. ”Please don't let me disturb you. I am not going to sit here.”
”But I am driving you in.”
”Not at all. I only thought you might object to my smoking.”
”But I don't object.”
”You don't, really?”
”If I stay,” said she, ”will that prove it?”
”Please do,” said Lucy.
Miss Keating pushed her chair as far as possible from his. She seated herself with a fugitive, sidelong movement; as much as to say she left him to the sanctuary he sought. He would please to observe the perfection of her withdrawal. The table with the match-stand on it stood between them.
Lucy approached the match-stand tentatively. Miss Keating, averted and effaced, was yet aware of him.
”I'm afraid there are no matches,” said she. ”Mrs. Tailleur has used them all.” So effaced and so averted was Miss Keating that there was nothing left of her but a sweet, attenuated, disembodied voice. It was as if spirit spoke to spirit with the consecrated doors between.
Lucy smiled. He paused at Mrs. Tailleur's chair.
”Is your friend coming back again?” he asked.
”I don't think so.”