Sally Bishop Part 30
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"But read the letter," she said at last. "Read the letter again. Would he ever have written as abruptly as that if--if what you suggest is right? He might have asked me to--to think sometimes when I wore it--"
"Why? Is he a sentimentalist?"
"My goodness! No!"
"Well, then, he wouldn't. That's a stock phrase of the sentimentalist.
The sentimentalist is always thinking, that's all he does, and he breaks his heart over it if other people don't act what he thinks."
"Well, he's not a sentimentalist, certainly."
She even smiled when she thought of his exclamations during the fight.
"What are you smiling at?" asked Janet, quickly. "Something he said?"
"Yes."
"That wasn't sentimental?"
"Yes."
"Well, he certainly wouldn't have told you to think about him when you wore it. I imagine I can guess exactly what sort he is."
"How can you guess?"
"Well, because I know what sort you are, and I fancy I know just the type of man whom you'd fall in love with as rapidly as you've fallen in love with this Mr. Traill. He's hard--he can bend you--he can break you--he can crush you to dust, and there'll still be some wind or other that'ud blow your ashes to his feet. He's all man--man that's got the brute in him, too--and you're all woman, woman that's got the mating instinct in her, and will go like the lioness across the miles of desert, without food and without water, when once she hears the song of s.e.x in the hungry throat of her mate. Oh, it's a pretty little story, too strong for a drawing-room; but Darwin'll tell it you, Huxley'll tell it you. But you'll never read Darwin, and you'll never read Huxley--except in a man's eyes. Oh, I know you think I'm a beast, I know you think I've got no sense of refinement at all, that I might have been a man just as well as a woman. Lord! how your friend Traill would hate me, 'cause he's got all I've got and more--in himself. But I don't care what you say about that letter--the letter's nothing. It's the gift that's the thing. That's the song of s.e.x if you like; and whether you return it, or whether you don't, you'll answer it, as he meant you to. You'll go creeping across the desert, and you won't touch water, and you won't touch food, till you've reached him."
She stood there, shaking the words out of her, the revolutionary in her eyes and G.o.d's truth fearlessly in her breath. Then she lit a Virginian cigarette and walked out of the room.
CHAPTER XX
There were occasions, as he had said, when Traill met his sister.
They were infrequent, as infrequent as he could make them. And they were seldom, if ever, at her house in Sloane Street.
One evening, some three weeks or less after his parting with Sally, he took her out to dinner. He donned evening dress, loudly cursing the formality, and brought her to a fas.h.i.+onable restaurant, where he gently cursed the abject civility of the waiters beneath his breath.
"They're not men," he said to his sister; "they're worms of the underworld, waiting for the corpse to be lowered its regulation six feet."
Mrs. Durlacher shuddered. "You make use of horrible similes sometimes, Jack," she said.
"I see some horrible things," said Traill. "Look at that waiter, hovering like a vulture, while the fat old gentleman from Aberdeen goes through the items of the bill. He might just as well shut one eye and stand on one leg to make the picture complete. That's rather a pretty girl, too, at the same table."
His sister looked in the direction. "Why, he's not from Aberdeen,"
she said, daintily. "That's Sir Standish-Roe; he sits on boards in the city."
"A vigorous exercise like that ought to reduce his bulk," said Traill.
"Do you know them, then?"
"Yes."
"Who's the girl?"
"That's his daughter. I'll introduce you after dinner if they're not hurrying off to a theatre."
"No you don't," said Traill; "baited traps don't catch me, however alluring they are."
So they talked, all through dinner, criticizing in idle good-humour the various people about them. Whenever he was in his sister's company Traill sharpened his wits. Putting on the social gloss, he called it, whenever she laughed at his remarks and told him he would be a G.o.d-send at some of her dinners.
"Is it quite hopeless?" she asked him that evening.
"Quite! As far removed from possibility as I am from a seat in the Cabinet."
"But you might if you took up politics."
"Exactly, the point of absolute certainty being that I never shall."
She waited awhile, letting the conversation drift as it liked; then she dipped her oar again.
"Do you ever hunt or shoot now?"
"Hunt, yes, for jobs. I've made that feeble joke before to somebody else. No--neither."
"We had some rather good days with the pheasants this year down at Apsley."
"Did you?"
"Yes, Harold got sixty-seven birds one day."
"Lucky dog! Have you finished? Well, look here, we'll come along to my rooms--I'm on the first floor now; I hate talking in these places.
You won't have to climb up all those stairs this time, and I'll give you some more of that coffee."
She needed no second persuasion. In the drift of her mind, she fancied she saw impressions floating by, first one and then another, impressions that he was more tractable this evening, more likely to be won a little to her side; for social though she was--the blood in her veins to the finger tips--she still cared for this Bohemian brother of hers; considered it trouble well spent to bring him to her way of thinking. We are all of us apt to think thus generously of those whom we hold dear.
"There aren't many women who come up these stairs in evening dress, I can a.s.sure you," he said, as they mounted the flight together.
She laughed. "And I suppose the ones who do are on their way to see you?"
"Dolly, I'm ashamed of you," he replied.
"Well, you've made yourself the reputation; don't grumble at it or s.h.i.+rk it."
"s.h.i.+rk it? Why should I?" He stood aside to let her pa.s.s in. "I've nothing to be ashamed of. I don't wear the garment of respectability, but then I'm not stark naked. Every man clothes himself in some article of faith, virtue if you like." The name of Sally and Sally's face swept across his mind. There was one virtue at least which he could put on. "You people, the set you want me to join, the hunting set, the country house set--all you wear--I don't mean you particularly. G.o.d! If you were like that!" He was too intent upon what he was saying to notice the smile of ice that twisted her pretty lips. "All you wear is the big, comprehensive cloak of respectability, and sometimes you're not particular whether that's tied up properly."
Dolly broke into low laughter. "If you'd come down to Apsley," she said, "one week end, I'd get a certain number of people down there, and when they are all congregated in the drawing-room after dinner, you could stand with your back to the fire, command the whole room and, at a signal from me, make that speech. You'd be the lion of the evening."
Sally Bishop Part 30
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Sally Bishop Part 30 summary
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