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Flowering Wilderness eotc-2

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by John Galsworthy




  Flowering Wilderness

  ( End of the Chapter - 2 )

  John Galsworthy

  Flowering Wilderness

  CHAPTER 1

  In 1930, shortly after the appearance of the Budget, the eighth wonder of the world might have been observed in the neighbourhood of Victoria Station—three English people, of wholly different type, engaged in contemplating simultaneously a London statue. They had come separately, and stood a little apart from each other in the south-west corner of the open space clear of the trees, where the drifting late afternoon light of spring was not in their eyes. One of these three was a young woman of about twenty-six, one a youngish man of perhaps thirty-four, and one a man of between fifty and sixty. The young woman, slender and far from stupid-looking, had her head tilted slightly upward to one side, and a faint smile on her parted lips. The younger man, who wore a blue overcoat with a belt girt tightly round his thin middle, as if he felt the spring wind chilly, was sallow from fading sunburn; and the rather disdainful look of his mouth was being curiously contradicted by eyes fixed on the statue with real intensity of feeling. The elder man, very tall, in a brown suit and brown buckskin shoes, lounged, with his hands in his trouser pockets, and his long, weathered, good-looking face masked in a sort of shrewd scepticism.

  In the meantime the statue, which was that of Marshal Foch on his horse, stood high up among those trees, stiller than any of them.

  The youngish man spoke suddenly.

  “He delivered us.”

  The effect of this breach of form on the others was diverse; the elder man’s eyebrows went slightly up, and he moved forward as if to examine the horse’s legs. The young woman turned and looked frankly at the speaker, and instantly her face became surprised.

  “Aren’t you Wilfrid Desert?”

  The youngish man bowed.

  “Then,” said the young woman, “we’ve met. At Fleur Mont’s wedding. You were best man, if you remember, the first I’d seen. I was only sixteen. You wouldn’t remember me—Dinny Cherrell, baptized Elizabeth. They ran me in for bridesmaid at the last minute.”

  The youngish man’s mouth lost its disdain.

  “I remember your hair perfectly.”

  “Nobody ever remembers me by anything else.”

  “Wrong! I remember thinking you’d sat to Botticelli. You’re still sitting, I see.”

  Dinny was thinking: ‘His eyes were the first to flutter me. And they really are beautiful.’

  The said eyes had been turned again upon the statue.

  “He DID deliver us,” said Desert.

  “You were there, of course.”

  “Flying, and fed up to the teeth.”

  “Do you like the statue?”

  “The horse.”

  “Yes,” murmured Dinny, “it IS a horse, not just a prancing barrel, with teeth, nostrils and an arch.”

  “The whole thing’s workmanlike, like Foch himself.”

  Dinny wrinkled her brow.

  “I like the way it stands up quietly among those trees.”

  “How is Michael? You’re a cousin of his, if I remember.”

  “Michael’s all right. Still in the House; he has a seat he simply can’t lose.”

  “And Fleur?”

  “Flourishing. Did you know she had a daughter last year?”

  “Fleur? H’m! That makes two, doesn’t it?”

  “Yes; they call this one Catherine.”

  “I haven’t been home since 1927. Gosh! It’s a long time since that wedding.”

  “You look,” said Dinny, contemplating the sallow darkness of his face, “as if you had been in the sun.”

  “When I’m not in the sun I’m not alive.”

  “Michael once told me you lived in the East.”

  “Well, I wander about there.” His face seemed to darken still more, and he gave a little shiver. “Beastly cold, the English spring!”

  “And do you still write poetry?”

  “Oh! you know of that weakness?”

  “I’ve read them all. I like the last volume best.”

  He grinned. “Thank you for stroking me the right way; poets, you know, like it. Who’s that tall man? I seem to know his face.”

  The tall man, who had moved to the other side of the statue, was coming back.

  “Somehow,” murmured Dinny, “I connect him with that wedding, too.”

  The tall man came up to them.

  “The hocks aren’t all that,” he said.

  Dinny smiled.

  “I always feel so thankful I haven’t got hocks. We were just trying to decide whether we knew you. Weren’t you at Michael Mont’s wedding some years ago?”

  “I was. And who are you, young lady?”

  “We all met there. I’m his first cousin on his mother’s side, Dinny Cherrell. Mr. Desert was his best man.”

  The tall man nodded.

  “Oh! Ah! My name’s Jack Muskham, I’m a first cousin of his father’s.” He turned to Desert. “You admired Foch, it seems.”

  “I did.”

  Dinny was surprised at the morose look that had come on his face.

  “Well,” said Muskham, “he was a soldier all right; and there weren’t too many about. But I came here to see the horse.”

  “It is, of course, the important part,” murmured Dinny.

  The tall man gave her his sceptical smile.

  “One thing we have to thank Foch for, he never left us in the lurch.”

  Desert suddenly faced round:

  “Any particular reason for that remark?”

  Muskham shrugged his shoulders, raised his hat to Dinny, and lounged away.

  When he had gone there was a silence as over deep waters.

  “Which way were you going?” said Dinny at last.

  “Any way that you are.”

  “I thank you kindly, sir. Would an aunt in Mount Street serve as a direction?”

  “Admirably.”

  “You must remember her, Michael’s mother; she’s a darling, the world’s perfect mistress of the ellipse—talks in stepping stones, so that you have to jump to follow her.”

  They crossed the road and set out up Grosvenor Place on the Buckingham Palace side.

  “I suppose you find England changed every time you come home, if you’ll forgive me for making conversation?”

  “Changed enough.”

  “Don’t you ‘love your native land,’ as the saying is?”

  “She inspires me with a sort of horror.”

  “Are you by any chance one of those people who wish to be thought worse than they are?”

  “Not possible. Ask Michael.”

  “Michael is incapable of slander.”

  “Michael and all angels are outside the count of reality.”

  “No,” said Dinny, “Michael is very real, and very English.”

  “That is his contradictory trouble.”

  “Why do you run England down? It’s been done before.”

  “I never run her down except to English people.”

  “That’s something. But why to me?”

  Desert laughed.

  “Because you seem to be what I should like to feel that England is.”

  “Flattered and fair, but neither fat nor forty.”

  “What I object to is England’s belief that she is still ‘the goods.’”

  “And isn’t she, really?”

  “Yes,” said Desert, surprisingly, “but she has no reason to think so.”

  Dinny thought:

  ‘You’re perverse, brother Wilfrid, the young woman said,

  And your tongue is exceedingly wry;

  You do not look well when you stand on your head—

  Why
will you continually try?’

  She remarked, more simply:

  “If England is still ‘the goods,’ has no reason to think so and yet does, she would seem to have intuition, anyway. Was it by intuition that you disliked Mr. Muskham?” Then, looking at his face, she thought: ‘I’m dropping a brick.’

  “Why should I dislike him? He’s just the usual insensitive type of hunting, racing man who bores me stiff.”

  ‘That wasn’t the reason,’ thought Dinny, still regarding him. A strange face! Unhappy from deep inward disharmony, as though a good angel and a bad were for ever seeking to fire each other out; but his eyes sent the same thrill through her as when, at sixteen, with her hair still long, she had stood near him at Fleur’s wedding.

  “And do you really like wandering about in the East?”

  “The curse of Esau is on me.”

  ‘Some day,’ she thought, ‘I’ll make him tell me why. Only probably I shall never see him again.’ And a little chill ran down her back.

  “I wonder if you know my Uncle Adrian. He was in the East during the war. He presides over bones at a museum. You probably know Diana Ferse, anyway. He married her last year.”

  “I know nobody to speak of.”

  “Our point of contact, then, is only Michael.”

  “I don’t believe in contacts through other people. Where do you live, Miss Cherrell?”

  Dinny smiled.

  “A short biographical note seems to be indicated. Since the umpteenth century, my family has been ‘seated’ at Condaford Grange in Oxfordshire. My father is a retired General; I am one of two daughters; and my only brother is a married soldier just coming back from the Soudan on leave.”

  “Oh!” said Desert, and again his face had that morose look.

  “I am twenty-six, unmarried but with no children as yet. My hobby seems to be attending to other people’s business. I don’t know why I have it. When in Town I stay at Lady Mont’s in Mount Street. With a simple upbringing I have expensive instincts and no means of gratifying them. I believe I can see a joke. Now you?”

  Desert smiled and shook his head.

  “Shall I?” said Dinny. “You are the second son of Lord Mullyon, you had too much war; you write poetry; you have nomadic instincts and are your own enemy; the last item has the only news value. Here we are in Mount Street; do come in and see Aunt Em.”

  “Thank you—no. But will you lunch with me tomorrow and go to a matinée?”

  “I will. Where?”

  “Dumourieux’s, one-thirty.”

  They exchanged hand-grips and parted, but as Dinny went into her aunt’s house she was tingling all over, and she stood still outside the drawing-room to smile at the sensation.

  CHAPTER 2

  The smile faded off her lips under the fire of noises coming through the closed door.

  ‘My goodness!’ she thought: ‘Aunt Em’s birthday “pawty,” and I’d forgotten.’

  Someone playing the piano stopped, there was a rush, a scuffle, the scraping of chairs on the floor, two or three squeals, silence, and the piano-playing began again.

  ‘Musical chairs!’ she thought, and opened the door quietly. She who had been Diana Ferse was sitting at the piano. To eight assorted chairs, facing alternatively east and west, were clinging one large and eight small beings in bright paper hats, of whom seven were just rising to their feet and two still sitting on one chair. Dinny saw from left to right: Ronald Ferse; a small Chinese boy; Aunt Alison’s youngest, little Anne; Uncle Hilary’s youngest, Tony; Celia and Dingo (children of Michael’s married sister Celia Moriston); Sheila Ferse; and on the single chair Uncle Adrian and Kit Mont. She was further conscious of Aunt Em panting slightly against the fireplace in a large headpiece of purple paper, and of Fleur pulling a chair from Ronald’s end of the row.

  “Kit, get up! You were out.”

  Kit sat firm and Adrian rose.

  “All right, old man, you’re up against your equals now. Fire away!”

  “Keep your hands off the backs,” cried Fleur. “Wu Fing, you mustn’t sit till the music stops. Dingo, don’t stick at the end chair like that.”

  The music stopped. Scurry, hustle, squeals, and the smallest figure, little Anne, was left standing.

  “All right, darling,” said Dinny, “come here and beat this drum. Stop when the music stops, that’s right. Now again. Watch Auntie Di!”

  Again, and again, and again, till Sheila and Dingo and Kit only were left.

  ‘I back Kit,’ thought Dinny.

  Sheila out! Off with a chair! Dingo, so Scotch-looking, and Kit, so bright-haired, having lost his paper cap, were left padding round and round the last chair. Both were down; both up and on again, Diana carefully averting her eyes, Fleur standing back now with a little smile; Aunt Em’s face very pink. The music stopped, Dingo was down again; and Kit left standing, his face flushed and frowning.

  “Kit,” said Fleur’s voice, “play the game!”

  Kit’s head was thrown up and he rammed his hands into his pockets.

  ‘Good for Fleur!’ thought Dinny.

  A voice behind her said:

  “Your aunt’s purple passion for the young, Dinny, leads us into strange riots. What about a spot of quiet in my study?”

  Dinny looked round at Sir Lawrence Mont’s thin, dry, twisting face, whose little moustache had gone quite white, while his hair was still only sprinkled.

  “I haven’t done my bit, Uncle Lawrence.”

  “Time you learned not to. Let the heathen rage. Come down and have a quiet Christian talk.”

  Subduing her instinct for service with the thought: ‘I SHOULD like to talk about Wilfrid Desert!’ Dinny went.

  “What are you working on now, Uncle?”

  “Resting for the minute and reading the Memoirs of Harriette Wilson—a remarkable young woman, Dinny. In the days of the Regency there were no reputations in high life to destroy; but she did her best. If you don’t know about her, I may tell you that she believed in love and had a great many lovers, only one of whom she loved.”

  “And yet she believed in love?”

  “Well, she was a kind-hearted baggage, and the others loved her. All the difference in the world between her and Ninon de l’Enclos, who loved them all; both vivid creatures. A duologue between those two on ‘virtue’? It’s to be thought of. Sit down!”

  “While I was looking at Foch’s statue this afternoon, Uncle Lawrence, I met a cousin of yours, Mr. Muskham.”

  “Jack?”

  “Yes.”

  “Last of the dandies. All the difference in the world, Dinny, between the ‘buck,’ the ‘dandy,’ the ‘swell,’ the ‘masher,’ the ‘blood,’ the ‘knut,’ and what’s the last variety called?—I never know. There’s been a steady decrescendo. By his age Jack belongs to the ‘masher’ period, but his cut was always pure dandy—a dyed-inthe-wool Whyte Melville type. How did he strike you?”

  “Horses, piquet and imperturbability.”

  “Take your hat off, my dear. I like to see your hair.”

  Dinny removed her hat.

  “I met someone else there, too; Michael’s best man.”

  “What! Young Desert? He back again?” And Sir Lawrence’s loose-eyebrow mounted.

  A slight colour had stained Dinny’s cheeks.

  “Yes,” she said.

  “Queer bird, Dinny.”

  Within her rose a feeling rather different from any she had ever experienced. She could not have described it, but it reminded her of a piece of porcelain she had given to her father on his birthday, two weeks ago; a little china group, beautifully modelled, of a vixen and four fox cubs tucked in under her. The look on the vixen’s face, soft yet watchful, so completely expressed her own feeling at this moment.

  “Why queer?”

  “Tales out of school, Dinny. Still, to YOU—There’s no doubt in my mind that that young man made up to Fleur a year or two after her marriage. That’s what started him as a rolling stone.”

&nbs
p; Was that, then, what he had meant when he mentioned Esau? No! By the look of his face when he spoke of Fleur, she did not think so.

  “But that was ages ago,” she said.

  “Oh, yes! Ancient story; but one’s heard other things. Clubs are the mother of all uncharitableness.”

  The softness of Dinny’s feeling diminished, the watchfulness increased.

  “What other things?”

  Sir Lawrence shook his head.

  “I rather like the young man; and not even to you, Dinny, do I repeat what I really know nothing of. Let a man live an unusual life, and there’s no limit to what people invent about him. He looked at her rather suddenly; but Dinny’s eyes were limpid.

  “Who’s the little Chinese boy upstairs?”

  “Son of a former Mandarin, who left his family here because of the ructions out there—quaint little image. A likeable people, the Chinese. When does Hubert arrive?”

  “Next week. They’re flying from Italy. Jean flies a lot, you know.”

  “What’s become of her brother?” And again he looked at Dinny.

  “Alan? He’s out on the China station.”

  “Your aunt never ceases to bemoan your not clicking there.”

  “Dear Uncle, almost anything to oblige Aunt Em; but, feeling like a sister to him, the prayer-book was against me.”

  “I don’t want you to marry,” said Sir Lawrence, “and go out to some Barbary or other.”

  Through Dinny flashed the thought: ‘Uncle Lawrence is uncanny,’ and her eyes became more limpid than ever.

  “This confounded officialism,” he continued, “seems to absorb all our kith and kin. My two daughters, Celia in China, Flora in India; your brother Hubert in the Soudan; your sister Clare off as soon as she’s spliced—Jerry Corven’s been given a post in Ceylon. I hear Charlie Muskham’s got attached to Government House, Cape Town; Hilary’s eldest boy’s going into the Indian Civil, and his youngest into the Navy. Dash it all, Dinny, you and Jack Muskham seem to be the only pelicans in my wilderness. Of course there’s Michael.”

  “Do you see much of Mr. Muskham, then, Uncle?”

  “Quite a lot at ‘Burton’s,’ and he comes to me at ‘The Coffee House’; we play piquet—we’re the only two left. That’s in the illegitimate season—from now on I shall hardly see him till after the Cambridgeshire.”

 

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