<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> HIS PEOPLE</h2>
<p>It so happened that his people in Leicestershire were thinking of him. They had
been talking about him at the very time of the boy’s inconceivable
meanderings in Hyde Park. And two of them were at it still.</p>
<p>On a terrace outside lighted windows a powerful young fellow, in a butterfly
collar and a corded smoking jacket, was walking up and down with a tall girl
not unlike him in the face; but their faces were only to be seen in glimpses as
they passed the drawing-room windows, and at not less regular intervals when a
red light in the sky, the source of which was concealed by the garden foliage,
became positively brilliant. The air was sweet with the scent of honeysuckle
and musk-roses and mown grass; midges fretted in and out of the open windows.
But for the lurid lighting of the sky, with its Cyclopean suggestion of some
mammoth forge, you were in the heart of England undefiled.</p>
<p>“It’s no use our talking about Tony,” the tall girl said.
“I think you’re frightfully down on him; we shall never
agree.”</p>
<p>“Not as long as you make a fool of the fellow,” said the blunt
young man.</p>
<p>“Tony’s no fool,” remarked Lettice Upton, irrelevantly
enough.</p>
<p>“You know what I mean,” snapped her brother Horace.
“He’s being absolutely spoilt, and you’re at the bottom of
it.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t give him asthma!”</p>
<p>“Don’t be childish, Letty.”</p>
<p>“But that’s what’s spoiling his life.”</p>
<p>“I wasn’t talking about his life. I don’t believe it,
either.”</p>
<p>“You think he enjoys his bad nights?”</p>
<p>“I think he scores by them. He’d tell you himself that he never
even thinks of getting up to first school now.”</p>
<p>“Would you if you’d been sitting up half the night with
asthma?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps not; but I don’t believe that happens so often as you
think.”</p>
<p>“It happens often enough to justify him in making one good night pay for
two or three bad ones.”</p>
<p>“I don’t call that playing the game. I call it shamming.”</p>
<p>“Well, if it is, he makes up for it. They were doing Ancient Greek
Geography in his form at early school last term. Tony tackled it in his spare
time, and got most marks in the exam.”</p>
<p>“Beastly young swot!” quoth his elder brother. “I’m
glad he didn’t buck to me about that.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think there’s much danger of his bucking to
you,” said Lettice, smiling in the red light. She did not add as her
obvious reason that Horace, like many another athletic young man, was quite
incapable of sympathising with the non-athletic type. But he guessed that she
meant something of the sort, and having sensibilities of his own, and a good
heart somewhere in his mesh of muscles, he felt hurt. “I looked after him
all right,” said Horace, “the one term we were there together. So
did Fred for the next year. But it’s rather rough on Fred and myself, who
were both something in the school at his age, to hear and see for ourselves
that Tony’s nobody even in the house!”</p>
<p>Lettice slipped a sly hand under the great biceps of her eldest brother.</p>
<p>“But don’t you see, old boy, that it makes it the worse for Tony
that you and Fred were what you were at school? They measure him by the
standard you two set up; it’s natural enough, but it isn’t
fair.”</p>
<p>“He needn’t be a flyer at games,” said Horace, duly softened
by a little flattery. “But he might be a tryer!”</p>
<p>“Wait till we get a little more breath into his body.”</p>
<p>“A bag of oxygen wouldn’t make him a cricketer.”</p>
<p>“Yet he’s so keen on cricket!”</p>
<p>“I wish he wasn’t so keen; he thinks and talks more about it than
Fred or I did when we were in the eleven, yet he never looked like making a
player.”</p>
<p>“I should say he thinks and talks more about most things; it’s his
nature, just as it’s Fred’s and yours to be men of action.”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m glad he’s not allowed to cumber the crease this
season,” said Horace, bowling his cigarette-end into the darkness with a
distinct swerve in the air. “To have him called our ‘pocket
edition,’ on the cricket-field of all places, is a bit too thick.”</p>
<p>Lettice withdrew her sympathetic hand.</p>
<p>“He’s as good a sportsman as either of you, at heart,” she
said warmly. “And I hope he may make you see it before this
doctor’s done with him!”</p>
<p>“This doctor!” jeered Horace, quick to echo her change of tone as
well. “You mean the fool who wanted to send that kid round the world on
his own?”</p>
<p>“He’s no fool, Horace, and you know nothing whatever about
him.”</p>
<p>“No; but I know something about our Tony! If he took the least care of
himself at home, there might be something to be said for letting him go; but
he’s the most casual young hound I ever struck.”</p>
<p>“I know he’s casual.”</p>
<p>Lettice made the admission with reluctance; next moment she was sorry her sense
of fairness had so misled her.</p>
<p>“Besides,” said Horace, “he wouldn’t be cured if he
could. Think what he’d miss!”</p>
<p>“Oh, if you’re coming back to that, there’s no more to be
said.”</p>
<p>And the girl halted at the lighted windows.</p>
<p>“But I do come back to it. Isn’t he up in town at this moment under
this very doctor of yours?”</p>
<p>“He’s not my doctor.”</p>
<p>“But you first heard about him; you’re the innovator of the family,
Letty, so it’s no use trying to score off me. Isn’t Tony up in
London to-night?”</p>
<p>“I believe he is.”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll tell you what he’s doing at this moment,”
cried Horace, with egregious confidence, as he held his watch to the windows.
“It’s after eleven; he’s in the act of struggling out of some
theatre, where the atmosphere’s so good for asthma!” Lettice left
the gibe unanswered. It was founded on recent fact which she had been the first
to deplore when Tony made no secret of it in the holidays; indeed, she was by
no means blind to his many and obvious failings; but they interested her more
than the equally obvious virtues of her other brothers, whose unmeasured
objurgations drove her to the opposite extreme in special pleading. She tried
to believe that there was more in her younger brother than in any of them, and
would often speak up for him as though she had succeeded. It may have been
merely a woman’s weakness for the weak, but Lettice had taught herself to
believe in Tony. And perhaps of all his people she was the only one who could
have followed his vagaries of that night without thinking the worse of him.</p>
<p>But she had no more to say to Horace about the matter, and would have gone
indoors without another word if Mr. Upton had not come out hastily at that
moment. He had been looking for her everywhere, he declared with some asperity.
Her mother could not sleep, and wished to see her; otherwise it was time they
were all in bed, and what there was to talk about till all hours was more than
he could fathom. So he saw the pair before him through the lighted rooms, a
heavy man with a flaming neck and a smouldering eye. Horace would be heavy,
too, when his bowling days were over. The girl was on finer lines; but she
looked like a woman at her worst; tired, exasperated, and clearly older than
her brother, but of other clay.</p>
<p>That young man smoked a last cigarette in his father’s library, and
unhesitatingly admitted the subject of dissension and dissent upon the terrace.</p>
<p>“I said he wasn’t doing much good there,” he added,
“and I don’t think he is. Letty stood up for him, as she always
does.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean that he’s doing any harm?” asked Mr. Upton
plainly.</p>
<p>“Not for a moment. I never said there was any harm in Tony. I—I
sometimes wish there was more!”</p>
<p>“More manhood, I suppose you’d call it?”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton spoke with a disconcerting grimness.</p>
<p>“More go about him,” said Horace. He could not say as much to his
father as he had to Letty. That was evident. But he was not the boy to bolt
from his guns.</p>
<p>“Yet you know how much he has to take all that out of him?”
continued Mr. Upton, with severity.</p>
<p>“I know,” said Horace hastily, “and of course that’s
really why he’s doing no good; but I must say that doctor of his
doesn’t seem to be doing him any either.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton got excitedly to his feet, and Horace made up his mind to the
downright snub that he deserved. But by a lucky accident Horace had turned the
wrath that had been gathering against himself into quite another quarter.</p>
<p>“I agree with you there!” cried his father vehemently. “I
don’t believe in the man myself; but he was recommended by the surgeon
who has done so much for your poor mother, so what could one do but give him a
trial? The lad wasn’t having a fair chance at school. This looked like
one. But I dislike his going up to town so often, and I dislike the letters the
man writes me about him. He’d have me take him away from school
altogether, and pack him off to Australia in a sailing ship. But what’s
to be done with a boy like that when we get him back again? He’d be too
old to go to another school, and too young for the University: no use at the
works, and only another worry to us all.”</p>
<p>Mr. Upton spoke from the full heart of an already worried man, not with
intentional unkindness, but yet with that unimaginative want of sympathy which
is often the instinctive attitude of the sound towards the unsound. He hated
sickness, and seemed at present surrounded by it. His wife had taken ill the
year before, had undergone a grave operation in the winter, and was still a
great anxiety to him. But that was another and a far more serious matter; he
had patience and sympathy enough with his wife. The case of the boy was very
different. Himself a man of much bodily and mental vigour, Mr. Upton expected
his own qualities of his own children; he had always resented their apparent
absence in his youngest born. The others were good specimens; why should Tony
be a weakling? Was he such a weakling as was made out? Mr. Upton was often
sceptical on the point; but then he had always heard more about the asthma than
he had seen for himself. If the boy was not down to breakfast in the holidays,
he was supposed to have had a bad night; yet later in the day he would be as
bright as anybody, at times indeed the brightest of the party. That, however,
was usually when Lettice drew him out in the absence of the two athletes; he
was another creature then, excitable, hilarious, and more capable of taking the
busy man out of himself than any of his other children. But Lettice overdid
matters; she made far too much of the boy and his complaint, and was inclined
to encourage him in random remedies. Cigarettes at his age, even if said to be
cigarettes for asthma, suggested a juvenile pose to the man who had never
studied that disorder. The specialist in London seemed another mistake on the
part of that managing Lettice, who had quite assumed the family lead of late.
And altogether Mr. Upton, though he saw the matter from a different point of
view, was not far from agreeing with his eldest son about his youngest.</p>
<p>And what chance was there for a boy whose own father thought he posed, whose
brothers considered him a bit of a malingerer, and his schoolfellows “a
conscientious ass,” while his sister spoilt him for <i>un enfant
incompris?</i> You may say it would have taken a miracle to make an ordinary
decent fellow of him. Well, it was a night of strange happenings to the boy and
his people; perhaps it was the one authentic type of miracle that capped all in
the morning.</p>
<p>The father had gone to bed at midnight, after an extra allowance of
whisky-and-water to take the extra worry off his mind; it did so for a few
hours only to stretch him tragically awake in the early morning. The birds were
singing down in Leicestershire as in Hyde Park. The morning sun was slanting
over town and country, and the father’s thoughts were with his tiresome
son in town. Suddenly a shrill cry came from the adjoining room.</p>
<p>In a trice the wakeful man was at his sick wife’s side, supporting her in
bed as she sat up wildly staring, trembling in his arms.</p>
<p>“Tony!” she gasped. “My Tony!”</p>
<p>“I was just thinking of him!” he cried. “What about him,
dear?”</p>
<p>“I saw him,” she quavered. “I saw him plainer than I see you
now. And I’m almost positive I heard—a shot!”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />