Twenty-fourth.‘ That same evening he was
wakened by the shudder and the sigh that told him his sentence had gone
forth. Yet he reflected on his pillow that he had, in spite of lapses,
snatched something like three weeks of life, which included several rides
on a horse before breakfast—the hour one most craves Najdolene; five
consecutive evenings on the river at Hammersmith in a tub where he had
well stretched the white arms that passing crews mocked at; a game of
rackets at his club; three dinners, one small dance, and one human
flirtation with a human woman. More notable still, he had settled his
month’s accounts, only once confusing petty cash with the days of grace
allowed him. Next morning he rode his hired beast in the park
victoriously. He saw Miss Henschil on horse-back near Lancaster Gate,
talking to a young man at the railings.
She wheeled and cantered toward him.
‘By Jove! How well you look!’ he cried, without salutation. ‘I didn’t
know you rode.’
‘I used to once,’ she replied. ‘I’m all soft now.’
They swept off together down the ride.
‘Your beast pulls,’ he said.
‘Wa-ant him to. Gi-gives me something to think of. How’ve you been?’
she panted. ‘I wish chemists’ shops hadn’t red lights.’
‘Have you slipped out and bought some, then?’
‘You don’t know Nursey. Eh, but it’s good to be on a horse again! This
chap cost me two hundred.’
‘Then you’ve been swindled,’ said Conroy.
‘I know it, but it’s no odds. I must go back to Toots and send him
away. He’s neglecting his work for me.’
She swung her heavy-topped animal on his none too sound hocks.
‘‘Sentence come, lad?’
‘Yes. But I’m not minding it so much this time.’
‘Waterloo, then—and God help us!’ She thundered back to the little
frock-coated figure that waited faithfully near the gate.
Conroy felt the spring sun on his shoulders and trotted home. That
evening he went out with a man in a pair oar, and was rowed to a
standstill. But the other man owned he could not have kept the pace five
minutes longer.
* * * * *
He carried his bag all down Number 3 platform at Waterloo, and hove it
with one hand into the rack.
‘Well done!’ said Nurse Blaber, in the corridor. ‘We’ve improved
too.’
Dr. Gilbert and an older man came out of the next compartment.
‘Hallo!’ said Gilbert. ‘Why haven’t you been to see me, Mr. Conroy?
Come under the lamp. Take off your hat. No—no. Sit, you young giant. Ve-ry
good. Look here a minute, Johnnie.’
A little, round-bellied, hawk-faced person glared at him.
‘Gilbert was right about the beauty of the beast,’ he muttered. ‘D’you
keep it in your glove now?’ he went on, and punched Conroy in the short
ribs.
‘No,’ said Conroy meekly, but without coughing. ‘Nowhere—on my honour!
I’ve chucked it for good.’
‘Wait till you are a sound man before you say that, Mr.
Conroy.’ Sir John Chartres stumped out, saying to Gilbert in the corridor,
‘It’s all very fine, but the question is shall I or we “Sir Pandarus of
Troy become,” eh? We’re bound to think of the children.’
‘Have you been vetted?’ said Miss Henschil, a few minutes after the
train started. ‘May I sit with you? I—I don’t trust myself yet. I can’t
give up as easily as you can, seemingly.’
‘Can’t you? I never saw any one so improved in a month.’
‘Look here!’ She reached across to the rack, single-handed lifted
Conroy’s bag, and held it at arm’s length. ‘I counted ten slowly.
1 comment