The Countess disappeared upstairs in
a cloud of shrill apologies and trailing aldermen. She seemed to
have greeted everybody except Denry. Somehow he was relieved that she had not drawn
attention to him. He lingered, hesitating, and then he saw a being in a long yellow
overcoat, with a bit of peacock’s feather at the summit of a shiny high hat.
This being held a lady’s fur mantle. Their eyes met. Denry had to decide
instantly. He decided.
‘Hello, Jock!’ he said.
‘Hello, Denry!’ said the
other, pleased.
‘What’s been
happening?’ Denry inquired, friendly.
Then Jock told him about the antics of
one of the Countess’s horses.
He went upstairs again, and met Ruth
Earp coming down. She was glorious in white. Except that nothing glittered in her
hair, she looked the very equal of the Countess, at a little distance, plain though
her features were.
‘What about that waltz?’
Denry began informally.
‘That waltz is nearly over,’
said Ruth Earp, with chilliness. ‘I suppose you’ve been staring at her
ladyship with all the other men.’
‘I’m awfully sorry,’
he said. ‘I didn’t know the waltz was—’
‘Well, why didn’t you look
at your programme?’
‘Haven’t got one,’ he
said naïvely.
He had omitted to take a programme.
Ninny! Barbarian!
‘Better get one,’ she said
cuttingly, somewhat in her role of dancing mistress.
‘Can’t we finish the
waltz?’ he suggested, crestfallen.
‘No!’ she said, and
continued her solitary way downwards.
She was hurt. He tried to think of
something to say that was equal to the situation, and equal to the style of his
suit. But he could not. In a moment he heard her, below him, greeting some male
acquaintance in the most effusive way.
Yet, if Denry had not committed a wicked
crime for her, she could never have come to the dance at all!
He got a programme,
and with terror gripping his heart he asked sundry young and middle-aged women whom
he knew by sight and by name for a dance. (Ruth had taught him how to ask.) Not one
of them had a dance left. Several looked at him as much as to say: ‘You must
be a goose to suppose that my programme is not filled up in the twinkling of my
eye!’
Then he joined a group of despisers of
dancing near the main door. Harold Etches was there, the wealthiest manufacturer of
his years (barely twenty-four) in the Five Towns. Also Shillitoe, cause of another
of Denry’s wicked crimes. The group was taciturn, critical, and very
doggish.
The group observed that the Countess was
not dancing. The Earl was dancing (need it be said with Mrs Jos Curtenty, second
wife of the Deputy Mayor?), but the Countess stood resolutely smiling, surrounded by
aldermen. Possibly she was getting her breath; possibly nobody had had the pluck to
ask her. Anyhow, she seemed to be stranded there, on a beach of aldermen. Very
wisely she had brought with her no members of a house-party from Sneyd Hall. Members
of a house-party, at a municipal ball, invariably operate as a bar between greatness
and democracy; and the Countess desired to participate in the life of the
people.
‘Why don’t some of those
johnnies ask her?’ Denry burst out. He had hitherto said nothing in the group,
and he felt that he must be a man with the rest of them.
‘Well, you go and do it.
It’s a free country,’ said Shillitoe.
‘So I would, for two pins!’
said Denry.
Harold Etches glanced at him, apparently
resentful of his presence there. Harold Etches was determined to put the
extinguisher on him.
‘I’ll bet you a fiver you
don’t,’ said Etches scornfully.
‘I’ll take you,’ said
Denry, very quickly, and very quickly walked off.
VII
‘She can’t eat me. She
can’t eat me!’
This was what he said to himself as he
crossed the floor. People seemed to make a lane for him, divining his incredible
intention. If he had not started at once, if his legs had not started of themselves,
he would never have started; and, not being in command of a fiver, he would
afterwards have cut a preposterous figure in the group. But started he was, like a
piece of clockwork that could not be stopped! In the grand crises of his life
something not himself, something more powerful than himself, jumped up in him and
forced him to do things.
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