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XIV. —
The Superstition Of Lord Pinlow
Mr Callander thought
the matter over a long time before he came to any
decision: before he even consulted Horace, his son. Horace had been in
low
spirits and an object of his father's solicitude. Gladys had been in an
unaccountably good humour, which did not please Mr Callander at all. The trip might raise
the drooping spirits of his son; it might even
subdue the exuberance of his daughter. For Mr Callander was
not altogether a fool. He had not lived his sixty
years of life without making certain fundamental discoveries. He
detected
certain symptoms in his daughter's attitude toward life: a certain
joyousness
of voice, buoyancy of carriage, a lightness and a freshness none of
which were
incompatible with the possibility that she was in love. He had thought for a
very short space of time that it was Pinlow who
was the object of her affection, and curiously enough the notion did
not afford
him the pleasure that it would have done a few weeks before. Pinlow had
not — well,
he had not shone. Mr Callander shook his head at the thought. No,
Pinlow had
decidedly fallen short. Was it Brian? Here again Mr
Callander's feelings had undergone a revolution. Brian was a rascal,
an associate of rascals, and a brawler. A brawler, by Mr
Callander's strict code, was only once removed from a
drunkard. Against which, Brian
had done much for him. Nobody had explained, at
least, nobody had attempted to give an adequate explanation of the
remarkable
conversion of his worthless shares into cash. Yet, without explanation,
Mr
Callander knew that, in some way, Brian was the author of the miracle. So whilst
disapproving of his nephew and all his works, Mr Callander
permitted himself to be tolerant. But not to the
extent of encouraging his daughter in that folly — if
Pallard were the man. He had an
opportunity of consulting Horace on the Saturday night.
Horace was apathetic, he was quite willing to do anything. The interview took
place in Mr Callander's study at Hill View, and
Horace was ill at ease and feverishly anxious to come to another
subject. "Father," he said,
when his parent had finished, "I want to tell you
something: I'm sure you won't mind — I hardly
like to speak to you ..." He stammered away so
far and caught his father's cold eye with
something like a shudder. "It is not, I
trust," said the elder man softly,
"another speculation in provisions?" Horace went pink and
white and muttered a reluctant "No." "I cannot tell you
how grieved I was," said Mr Callander,
"to learn that you had been indulging in what I cannot but describe as
a
gamble — and with the people's food. Oh, shame, Horace!" He was very sad, but
he was also severe, and Horace invented a quick
lie. "No, father, this —
this is a matter — a friend of mine, an
awfully good chap, in temporary difficulties, you know, and I thought
you, that
is I, might do something." "Who is this
friend?" asked Mr Callander with chilling
politeness. "Oh, you wouldn't
know him!" said Horace vaguely; "he's
a man I know, and he's got plenty of money coming along some day." Mr Callander crossed
his legs and put the tips of his fingers together. "I shall be glad to
accommodate your friend," he said. "Thank you, father,"
said the gratified Horace. "To the extent of?"
asked Mr Callander. "Two thousand." His
father nodded. "Must say, governor,
it is really downright decent of you." "I shall, of course,
require security," Mr Callander went on. "I — of course I'll
stand as security," said Horace eagerly. "That will not do,"
said his father, and Horace's face fell.
"I shall want convertible security, realizable security; that, of
course,
your friend will furnish." Horace had fallen
from his exaltation to the depth of gloom. "He can't give you
security, father," he said with a touch of
querulous impatience. "He could get money from a moneylender if he had
security." "He won't get it
from me without," said Mr Callander
decisively, "and I think we will not discuss the matter any further." When Horace was in
trouble he invariably sought his sister. He made no
exception in this case. He found her in the drawing-room reading, and
she did
not need any information as to how the interview had gone. His face
told of his
despair. He flung himself down in a mild rage — Horace was never
violent in
anything he did. "What did father
say?" she asked. "He wouldn't," he
said sulkily. "Did you tell him
everything?" He squirmed angrily
on the settee. "No — well, I told
him all he need know. As a matter of fact, I
didn't say I wanted it for myself; I asked him to let me have it for a
friend
of mine." She was troubled at
this. "I do not think that
you ought to have said that," she said
gently. "Why not tell him the truth — after all, £500 isn't much." "I asked for two
thousand," he said. Her eyebrows rose. "Two thousand —
why?" she asked, in consternation. "Because that
happens to be the amount I want," he said
grimly enough. "But you told me it
was only five hundred," she persisted.
"Oh, Horace, you don't mean it?" He turned a weary
face to her. "Now, please don't
sermonize me," he begged. "I've had
enough of it from father." There was a long and
painful silence which she broke: "Was it butter this
time?" she asked meekly. "It was eggs, or
were eggs," he said. "We sold short,
thinking we could get all the eggs we wanted from Morocco, and then
that
infernal Pretender person started kicking up a rumpus, and we had to
buy
elsewhere and through the nose." "But why did you
want to buy eggs?" she asked. "What
were you going to do with them?" "Oh, eat them!" he
snapped. "What do people do with
things they buy? They sell them, of course." He got up and began
pacing the room. "I really don't know
what I shall do — I know!" He stopped
suddenly as an idea came to him. "What?" she asked. "I'll go to that
fellow Pallard," he said. "After all,
though he's a gambler, he'll understand; and these people who bet are
frightfully generous." She was on her feet
now, and her face was resolute. "You'll do nothing
of the sort," she said quietly. "I
absolutely forbid you to see Mr Pallard." "What on earth do
you mean?" he asked, astonished at her
vehemence. "Exactly what I
say," she said. Her lovely eyes were ablaze
with anger; she was in the mood that her less resolute brother liked
least.
"Have you no sense of dignity, Horace? How can you ask a man to help
you
for whom you have no good word; of whom you cannot speak without a
sneer?" "Well, you needn't
get into a fit about it," he growled.
"You know the kind of chap he is." He utterly mistook
her attitude, for he went on: "After all, we are
entitled to use those kind of people." Her face was very
pale, and had he been anybody but his confident self,
he would have been warned by the clouds that were gathering on her brow. "That kind of
person," she repeated. "What do you mean
by, 'that kind of person'?" "Oh, well — a
gambling chap," he said. "And what are you
but a — a gambling chap?" she asked
sarcastically. "The only difference that I can see between you is that
whilst Mr Pallard gambles on the horses he understands, you gamble on
eggs and
butter that you know nothing about." Horace eyed her
severely. "You are talking
nonsense, Gladys," he said sharply. "It
is ridiculous to compare a business man with a horse-racing person." "It is utterly
ridiculous," she retorted, "to compare
you with Mr Pallard." "You are infernally
offensive," he said hotly; "and if I
do not go to Pallard, I shall go to Pinlow." "That is your
affair," she replied, unmoved by his threats; —
"but if you dare ask Mr Pallard — " "Don't dare me,
please!" he began angrily, when the door
opened to admit his father. "Ah, here you are
both together," said Mr Callander, the
seeds of whose geniality fell upon stony places at the moment. "I have
come to see Gladys about this trip on Monday." "Trip, father?" she
asked. "What trip is this?" Mr Callander
composed himself into an easy-chair before replying. "I have been asked
if I will take you both to — er — a training
establishment, and really I am in two minds about the matter." "A training
establishment?" She had a dim idea
that it was something to do with railways. "Yes, Gladys. I have
had a letter from your — er — Cousin
Brian." He saw the red come
to her face and groaned inwardly. At that moment he
resolved upon his course of action. "I have also had a
letter from the trainer of his horses — a very
well-expressed letter, though I dare say it was written for him; these
people
can afford secretaries — seconding the invitation." Her heart was
beating quickly with mingled delight and apprehension.
Delight at the prospect of seeing the horses, and apprehension lest her
father
refused. "I think we will
go," he said; and Horace looked up in
astonishment. "I think you ought to see the kind of people that your
cousin — er — makes friends of." That was the
brilliant idea which had occurred to Mr Callander. He knew
by hearsay the type she was likely to meet. "Vice,
unfortunately," said Mr Callander oracularly,
"wraps itself in such pleasant garb that, seen from a distance, it
looks
like sober virtue. The blaze of the footlights, so to speak, conceals
rather
than emphasizes the tawdriness of the stage. Young and romantic
persons,"
he looked very hard at his daughter, and she became more confused in
her
endeavour to appear unconcerned, "are often deceived by the glamour of
distance. I think it is only fair that we should take the opportunity
of a
closer view what say you, Horace?" Horace had much to
say, but he contented himself with expressing the
view that he thought the visit ill-advised. Mr Callander hesitated. He
had a
great respect for the opinion of his son — other than on matters of
finance. "Ill-advised,
Horace?" repeated Gladys sweetly. "Yes," he said
sulkily. "I don't want you to meet these
gambling people — at any rate, I shan't come." "Of course, my
dear," hastened his father, "if you take
that view — I would never go against your conscience." "Oh, do come,
Horace!" pleased the girl, and there was a
dangerous glitter in her eye; "it will be so good for you; besides, if
you
do not care to see the horses, you can go to the nearest farm and ask
them
about your hobby." "Hobby?" Mr
Callander was puzzled. "Yes, father; didn't
you know that Horace was awfully keen on
poultry farming?" It was mean of her,
and she knew it; but there was a force working
within her which was stronger than she was. "Horace is very
interested in poultry, aren't you?" — she
turned to the glowering youth "in chickens, and butter, and eggs — " "Oh, I'll come!" He mumbled his
surrender, in which entreaty and rage were equally
blended. "If you'd rather
not," his father still hesitated. "I
should not like to think that I had persuaded you against your will." "It's not against my
will," growled the other ungraciously.
"I'd rather like to see this fellow's horses." Mr Callander nodded. "Well, that's
settled," he said, and turned his attention to
his daughter. "I think," he said, in his best quizzical manner,
"I rather think that you will find your visit an experience." "I'm sure I shall,
father," she replied fervently. "I once visited such
an establishment," mused Mr Callander,
"many years ago, when I was a young man. I am not sure whether it was a
horse-racing stable or a trotting stable — the two are not synonymous,
you will
be surprised to learn," he explained. "At any rate, it was — er — an
adventure. The trainer was a terrible man, somewhat on an intellectual
level
with Charles, the groom. I believe most trainers are of the same class.
You may
expect to meet some rather curious people." He checked himself
saying too much. It would be as well if Gladys saw
these things with her own eyes. It might be a mistake to prepare her. "I shan't be at
church to-morrow, father," said Horace. Mr Callander looked
over his glasses in pained surprise. "Not at church,
Horace?" he repeated reprovingly. "No; the fact is, I
have promised to go to town," said
Horace. "I've got to see a man who is sailing for South Africa on
Monday." His father nodded
slowly. "It cannot be
helped, I suppose," he said, "though I
must confess that I am adverse to Sunday travelling." Horace did not
pursue his excuse. He meant to see Pinlow, though he
despaired of convincing him to a sense of his urgent need. Pinlow had not
exactly been sympathetic on the one occasion when he had
sought his assistance. In fact, his lordship had not given him an
opportunity
of explaining his position. That, at any rate,
was a comfort. Pinlow did not know, and therefore
had not refused his help. The following
morning Horace left for London by a slow train. He
reached town soon after one, and lunched in the Haymarket. He came to Lord
Pinlow's flat in Pall Mall a little before three. Lord
Pinlow was out, said the man. "Will you wait, sir?" He knew Horace as a
friend of Pinlow's. "Is he likely to be
long?" "I don't know, sir,"
said the man. "He had a very bad
night, and went over to see his doctor — at least, not his lordship's
doctor,
but a Dr Jellis." Horace decided to
wait. After an hour's stay
he rang the bell. "I'll go for a
little walk in the Park," he said. "Will
you tell his lordship that I wish to see him urgently, and that I will
return
in an hour?" It was a little more
than the hour before he came back. Pinlow had not
returned, and Horace was debating in his mind whether he
would go out again when the bell rang, and his quarry entered. Pinlow looked tired;
there were dark shadows under his eyes, and hard
lines at the corners of his mouth. He favoured Horace with an
involuntary
scowl. "Hello, Callander!"
he said, in no friendly tone; "what
the devil do you want?" Horace observed that
he carried a little black box in his hand, and
carried it gingerly. It was about two inches square, and looked what it
was, a
very ordinary cartel such as is employed for packing medicinal powders. Horace observed that
his host placed this very carefully on the top
shelf of a bookcase before turning his attention to him. "What do I want?"
repeated Horace, attempting the jocular.
"Well, I want many things, but most immediately I require some
money." Pinlow stared at him. "You don't mean it?"
he said. "I do," said the
youth. "Fact is, I have been
speculating, and I've lost two thousand." Pinlow laughed long
and loud. It was the first amusing thing that had
happened to him for two days. "You poor devil!" he
said; "you poor devil! I never
thought you were so human — and what horse did you lose it on?" "I never back
horses," said Horace, with dignity. "I
hope I am not such a fool as to back horses." "It doesn't matter
very much how you lost it," said the other
sarcastically, "so long as you have been fool enough to lose it. How
did
it happen?" Thereupon Horace
related the sad story of the speculation in
provisions. Pinlow heard him through, and then burst into a fit of
immoderate
laughter. "What a mug!" he
laughed, wiping his eyes. "What an easy
mug! Oh, you innocent child! Now what do you want me, or expect me, to
do?" "I thought you might
lend me the money," said Horace stiffly.
He saw nothing amusing in his cruel dilemma. "Lend it to you? —
don't talk nonsense," said Pinlow, coming
back to the seriousness of his own affairs with a snarl. "If I'd any
luck,
I could have lent it to you, but I'm — " He stopped. "Are you a friend of
Pallard's?" he asked. Horace shrugged his
shoulders. "You know perfectly
well I'm not," he said; "I've never
forgiven him — " "Never mind about
your forgiveness," said Pinlow impatiently;
"are you on visiting terms with him?" This was a
heaven-sent opportunity, thought Pinlow. All the way from
Watford he had been wondering how the essential part of his scheme
could be
carried into effect. And here at hand was the instrument. Seeing Horace
hesitate, he repeated his question. "Well, I'm not
exactly on visiting terms," replied the other;
"as a matter of fact, I never see him, and besides, I can't ask him.
There
are some things a fellow can't do, and that is one of them." He said this
heroically enough, but he confounded his sister as he said
it. It would have been so easy to get the money from Brian. Pinlow's face
darkened again. "Oh!" he growled. "I shall be seeing
him on Monday," Horace went on; "but
I shall have no chance then, and besides — " "Seeing him on
Monday!" asked Pinlow quickly.
"Where?" "He has asked father
down to his stables." "To Wickham?" There was a bright
light in Pinlow's eyes as he eagerly put the
question. Horace nodded. Pinlow was wondering
how he could broach the subject. "Look here,
Callander," he said, after a while, "you're
not a bad little chap, though somewhat of a mug — I think I might
manage the
two thousand for you." "No, could you
really?" asked the delighted Horace. "My
dear fellow, you are really too good — I could pay you back, and give
you
interest; I want to do things on a business footing." "I can't do it
myself," Pinlow went on; "but I've got a
friend in the City who can manage these things — and please don't thank
me, for
I am going to ask you to do something for me." "If," said Horace,
speaking with pardonable emotion,
"there is anything in the world I can do, command me." "When are you going
to Wickham?" "On Monday; why?" "Do you know by what
train?" Horace shook his
head. "I can find out," he
said. "Could you telephone
to me here?" "Certainly." "Good. You will go
from London Bridge or Victoria — but stay,
you've got a car." "We're going by
train," said Horace, "the governor does
not like cross- country journeys by car." "Excellent! You must
let me know which station you are going from.
Find an excuse for going into the refreshment-room — I will 'phone you
which
one, and I will be there and I will give you something." "The money?" said
Horace eagerly, nodding his head. "Oh, hang! no, not
the money! but something which is worth money
to me." He pointed to the
shelf where the little box reposed. "That is the thing I
shall give you — that small box, and I shall
want you to put it into your pocket, and carry it till you come to
Wickham. And
when you are being shown Grey Timothy — that's a horse by the way — I
want you
to slip that box out of your pocket, take off the lid, and shake the
contents
on the nearest heap of refuse. If you can, open it inside the stable." "But I don't
understand," said Horace, and, indeed, his
bewilderment was plain; "you are not asking me to do something that is
wrong?" Pinlow turned a
shocked face to the young man. "My young friend,"
he said indignantly, "do you imagine
that I should ask you to do anything wrong? Sit down and I will tell
you all
about it." Horace sat and
Pinlow wandered about the room deep in thought; as well
he might be, for he had less than sixty seconds to invent a lie which
would be
at once plausible and convincing. "Inside that box,"
he said, "are a number of green
leaves. You are not superstitious, are you? That is because you are not
a
racing man, my dear Horace. Well, I am superstitious. My good luck has
invariably been associated with green, my unlucky number is ten. Inside
that
box are ten green leaves. You probably know the legend that if a man
leaves a
token of his bad luck in the vicinity of a man who is having all the
good luck,
the luck will turn." "But surely, my dear
Pinlow," expostulated Horace with a
tolerant smile, "you don't believe in that sort of thing?" Pinlow nodded sadly. "I do, most
emphatically," he said; "so much so that I was
thinking of paying a surreptitious visit to Wickham to leave my bad
luck
behind. Now, will you do this for me?" "Why, of course; but
let me take the box now." The other shook his
head. "That would not do,"
he said quickly. "I — I must keep
my bad luck by me as long as I can — till the very last moment, in
fact." Horace rose to go. "You may depend upon
me," he said good-humouredly,
"though really I thought better of you." "We all have our
little weaknesses," said his benefactor,
"and I shall depend upon you not to betray mine to a soul." "You may trust me,"
said Horace, in his magnanimity, and a
few minutes later was walking down Pall Mall, whistling a gay little
tune,
though the Sabbath bells cried shame upon his levity. Pinlow, watching from his window, was whistling cheerfully too. |