<h2><SPAN name="chap02"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.<br/> Mr. Gillingham Gets Out at the Wrong Station</h2>
<p>Whether Mark Ablett was a bore or not depended on the point of view, but it may
be said at once that he never bored his company on the subject of his early
life. However, stories get about. There is always somebody who knows. It was
understood—and this, anyhow, on Mark’s own authority—that his
father had been a country clergyman. It was said that, as a boy, Mark had
attracted the notice, and patronage, of some rich old spinster of the
neighbourhood, who had paid for his education, both at school and university.
At about the time when he was coming down from Cambridge, his father had died;
leaving behind him a few debts, as a warning to his family, and a reputation
for short sermons, as an example to his successor. Neither warning nor example
seems to have been effective. Mark went to London, with an allowance from his
patron, and (it is generally agreed) made acquaintance with the money-lenders.
He was supposed, by his patron and any others who inquired, to be
“writing”; but what he wrote, other than letters asking for more
time to pay, has never been discovered. However, he attended the theatres and
music halls very regularly—no doubt with a view to some serious articles
in the “Spectator” on the decadence of the English stage.</p>
<p>Fortunately (from Mark’s point of view) his patron died during his third
year in London, and left him all the money he wanted. From that moment his life
loses its legendary character, and becomes more a matter of history. He settled
accounts with the money-lenders, abandoned his crop of wild oats to the
harvesting of others, and became in his turn a patron. He patronized the Arts.
It was not only usurers who discovered that Mark Ablett no longer wrote for
money; editors were now offered free contributions as well as free lunches;
publishers were given agreements for an occasional slender volume, in which the
author paid all expenses and waived all royalties; promising young painters and
poets dined with him; and he even took a theatrical company on tour, playing
host and “lead” with equal lavishness.</p>
<p>He was not what most people call a snob. A snob has been defined carelessly as
a man who loves a lord; and, more carefully, as a mean lover of mean
things—which would be a little unkind to the peerage if the first
definition were true. Mark had his vanities undoubtedly, but he would sooner
have met an actor-manager than an earl; he would have spoken of his friendship
with Dante—had that been possible—more glibly than of his
friendship with the Duke. Call him a snob if you like, but not the worst kind
of snob; a hanger-on, but to the skirts of Art, not Society; a climber, but in
the neighbourhood of Parnassus, not Hay Hill.</p>
<p>His patronage did not stop at the Arts. It also included Matthew Cayley, a
small cousin of thirteen, whose circumstances were as limited as had been
Mark’s own before his patron had rescued him. He sent the Cayley cousin
to school and Cambridge. His motives, no doubt, were unworldly enough at first;
a mere repaying to his account in the Recording Angel’s book of the
generosity which had been lavished on himself; a laying-up of treasure in
heaven. But it is probable that, as the boy grew up, Mark’s designs for
his future were based on his own interests as much as those of his cousin, and
that a suitably educated Matthew Cayley of twenty-three was felt by him to be a
useful property for a man in his position; a man, that is to say, whose
vanities left him so little time for his affairs.</p>
<p>Cayley, then, at twenty-three, looked after his cousin’s affairs. By this
time Mark had bought the Red House and the considerable amount of land which
went with it. Cayley superintended the necessary staff. His duties, indeed,
were many. He was not quite secretary, not quite land-agent, not quite
business-adviser, not quite companion, but something of all four. Mark leant
upon him and called him “Cay,” objecting quite rightly in the
circumstances to the name of Matthew. Cay, he felt was, above all, dependable;
a big, heavy-jawed, solid fellow, who didn’t bother you with unnecessary
talk—a boon to a man who liked to do most of the talking himself.</p>
<p>Cayley was now twenty-eight, but had all the appearance of forty, which was his
patron’s age. Spasmodically they entertained a good deal at the Red
House, and Mark’s preference—call it kindliness or vanity, as you
please—was for guests who were not in a position to repay his
hospitality. Let us have a look at them as they came down to that breakfast, of
which Stevens, the parlour-maid, has already given us a glimpse.</p>
<p>The first to appear was Major Rumbold, a tall, grey-haired, grey-moustached,
silent man, wearing a Norfolk coat and grey flannel trousers, who lived on his
retired pay and wrote natural history articles for the papers. He inspected the
dishes on the side-table, decided carefully on kedgeree, and got to work on it.
He had passed on to a sausage by the time of the next arrival. This was Bill
Beverly, a cheerful young man in white flannel trousers and a blazer.</p>
<p>“Hallo, Major,” he said as he came in, “how’s the
gout?”</p>
<p>“It isn’t gout,” said the Major gruffly.</p>
<p>“Well, whatever it is.”</p>
<p>The Major grunted.</p>
<p>“I make a point of being polite at breakfast,” said Bill, helping
himself largely to porridge. “Most people are so rude. That’s why I
asked you. But don’t tell me if it’s a secret. Coffee?” he
added, as he poured himself out a cup.</p>
<p>“No, thanks. I never drink till I’ve finished eating.”</p>
<p>“Quite right, Major; it’s only manners.” He sat down opposite
to the other. “Well, we’ve got a good day for our game. It’s
going to be dashed hot, but that’s where Betty and I score. On the fifth
green, your old wound, the one you got in that frontier skirmish in ’43,
will begin to trouble you; on the eighth, your liver, undermined by years of
curry, will drop to pieces; on the twelfth—”</p>
<p>“Oh, shut up, you ass!”</p>
<p>“Well, I’m only warning you. Hallo; good morning, Miss Norris. I
was just telling the Major what was going to happen to you and him this
morning. Do you want any assistance, or do you prefer choosing your own
breakfast?”</p>
<p>“Please don’t get up,” said Miss Norris. “I’ll
help myself. Good morning, Major.” She smiled pleasantly at him. The
Major nodded.</p>
<p>“Good morning. Going to be hot.”</p>
<p>“As I was telling him,” began Bill, “that’s
where—Hallo, here’s Betty. Morning, Cayley.”</p>
<p>Betty Calladine and Cayley had come in together. Betty was the
eighteen-year-old daughter of Mrs. John Calladine, widow of the painter, who
was acting hostess on this occasion for Mark. Ruth Norris took herself
seriously as an actress and, on her holidays, seriously as a golfer. She was
quite competent as either. Neither the Stage Society nor Sandwich had any
terrors for her.</p>
<p>“By the way, the car will be round at 10.30,” said Cayley, looking
up from his letters. “You’re lunching there, and driving back
directly afterwards. Isn’t that right?”</p>
<p>“I don’t see why we shouldn’t have—two rounds,”
said Bill hopefully.</p>
<p>“Much too hot in the afternoon,” said the Major. “Get back
comfortably for tea.”</p>
<p>Mark came in. He was generally the last. He greeted them and sat down to toast
and tea. Breakfast was not his meal. The others chattered gently while he read
his letters.</p>
<p>“Good God!” said Mark suddenly.</p>
<p>There was an instinctive turning of heads towards him. “I beg your
pardon, Miss Norris. Sorry, Betty.”</p>
<p>Miss Norris smiled her forgiveness. She often wanted to say it herself,
particularly at rehearsals.</p>
<p>“I say, Cay!” He was frowning to himself—annoyed, puzzled. He
held up a letter and shook it. “Who do you think this is from?”</p>
<p>Cayley, at the other end of the table, shrugged his shoulders. How could he
possibly guess?</p>
<p>“Robert,” said Mark.</p>
<p>“Robert?” It was difficult to surprise Cayley. “Well?”</p>
<p>“It’s all very well to say ‘well?’ like that,”
said Mark peevishly. “He’s coming here this afternoon.”</p>
<p>“I thought he was in Australia, or somewhere.”</p>
<p>“Of course. So did I.” He looked across at Rumbold. “Got any
brothers, Major?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Well, take my advice, and don’t have any.”</p>
<p>“Not likely to now,” said the Major.</p>
<p>Bill laughed. Miss Norris said politely: “But you haven’t any
brothers, Mr. Ablett?”</p>
<p>“One,” said Mark grimly. “If you’re back in time
you’ll see him this afternoon. He’ll probably ask you to lend him
five pounds. Don’t.”</p>
<p>Everybody felt a little uncomfortable.</p>
<p>“I’ve got a brother,” said Bill helpfully, “but I
always borrow from <i>him</i>.”</p>
<p>“Like Robert,” said Mark.</p>
<p>“When was he in England last?” asked Cayley.</p>
<p>“About fifteen years ago, wasn’t it? You’d have been a boy,
of course.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I remember seeing him once about then, but I didn’t know if
he had been back since.”</p>
<p>“No. Not to my knowledge.” Mark, still obviously upset, returned to
his letter.</p>
<p>“Personally,” said Bill, “I think relations are a great
mistake.”</p>
<p>“All the same,” said Betty a little daringly, “it must be
rather fun having a skeleton in the cupboard.”</p>
<p>Mark looked up, frowning.</p>
<p>“If you think it’s fun, I’ll hand him over to you, Betty. If
he’s anything like he used to be, and like his few letters have
been—well, Cay knows.”</p>
<p>Cayley grunted.</p>
<p>“All I knew was that one didn’t ask questions about him.”</p>
<p>It may have been meant as a hint to any too curious guest not to ask more
questions, or a reminder to his host not to talk too freely in front of
strangers, although he gave it the sound of a mere statement of fact. But the
subject dropped, to be succeeded by the more fascinating one of the coming
foursome. Mrs. Calladine was driving over with the players in order to lunch
with an old friend who lived near the links, and Mark and Cayley were remaining
at home—on affairs. Apparently “affairs” were now to include
a prodigal brother. But that need not make the foursome less enjoyable.</p>
<p class="p2">
At about the time when the Major (for whatever reasons) was fluffing his
tee-shot at the sixteenth, and Mark and his cousin were at their business at
the Red House, an attractive gentleman of the name of Antony Gillingham was
handing up his ticket at Woodham station and asking the way to the village.
Having received directions, he left his bag with the station-master and walked
off leisurely. He is an important person to this story, so that it is as well
we should know something about him before letting him loose in it. Let us stop
him at the top of the hill on some excuse, and have a good look at him.</p>
<p>The first thing we realize is that he is doing more of the looking than we are.
Above a clean-cut, clean-shaven face, of the type usually associated with the
Navy, he carries a pair of grey eyes which seem to be absorbing every detail of
our person. To strangers this look is almost alarming at first, until they
discover that his mind is very often elsewhere; that he has, so to speak, left
his eyes on guard, while he himself follows a train of thought in another
direction. Many people do this, of course; when, for instance, they are talking
to one person and trying to listen to another; but their eyes betray them.
Antony’s never did.</p>
<p>He had seen a good deal of the world with those eyes, though never as a sailor.
When at the age of twenty-one he came into his mother’s money, £400 a
year, old Gillingham looked up from the “Stockbreeders’
Gazette” to ask what he was going to do.</p>
<p>“See the world,” said Antony.</p>
<p>“Well, send me a line from America, or wherever you get to.”</p>
<p>“Right,” said Antony.</p>
<p>Old Gillingham returned to his paper. Antony was a younger son, and, on the
whole, not so interesting to his father as the cadets of certain other
families; Champion Birket’s, for instance. But, then, Champion Birket was
the best Hereford bull he had ever bred.</p>
<p>Antony, however, had no intention of going further away than London. His idea
of seeing the world was to see, not countries, but people; and to see them from
as many angles as possible. There are all sorts in London if you know how to
look at them. So Antony looked at them—from various strange corners; from
the view-point of the valet, the newspaper-reporter, the waiter, the
shop-assistant. With the independence of £400 a year behind him, he enjoyed it
immensely. He never stayed long in one job, and generally closed his connection
with it by telling his employer (contrary to all etiquette as understood
between master and servant) exactly what he thought of him. He had no
difficulty in finding a new profession. Instead of experience and testimonials
he offered his personality and a sporting bet. He would take no wages the first
month, and—if he satisfied his employer—double wages the second. He
always got his double wages.</p>
<p>He was now thirty. He had come to Woodham for a holiday, because he liked the
look of the station. His ticket entitled him to travel further, but he had
always intended to please himself in the matter. Woodham attracted him, and he
had a suit-case in the carriage with him and money in his pocket. Why not get
out?</p>
<p>The landlady of ‘The George’ was only too glad to put him up, and
promised that her husband would drive over that afternoon for his luggage.</p>
<p>“And you would like some lunch, I expect, sir.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but don’t give yourself any trouble about it. Cold
anything-you’ve-got.”</p>
<p>“What about beef, sir?” she asked, as if she had a hundred
varieties of meat to select from, and was offering him her best.</p>
<p>“That will do splendidly. And a pint of beer.”</p>
<p>While he was finishing his lunch, the landlord came in to ask about the
luggage. Antony ordered another pint, and soon had him talking.</p>
<p>“It must be rather fun to keep a country inn,” he said, thinking
that it was about time he started another profession.</p>
<p>“I don’t know about fun, sir. It gives us a living, and a bit
over.”</p>
<p>“You ought to take a holiday,” said Antony, looking at him
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Funny thing your saying that,” said the landlord, with a smile.
“Another gentleman, over from the Red House, was saying that only
yesterday. Offered to take my place an all.” He laughed rumblingly.</p>
<p>“The Red House? Not the Red House, Stanton?”</p>
<p>“That’s right, sir. Stanton’s the next station to Woodham.
The Red House is about a mile from here—Mr. Ablett’s.”</p>
<p>Antony took a letter from his pocket. It was addressed from “The Red
House, Stanton,” and signed “Bill.”</p>
<p>“Good old Bill,” he murmured to himself. “He’s getting
on.”</p>
<p>Antony had met Bill Beverley two years before in a tobacconist’s shop.
Gillingham was on one side of the counter and Mr. Beverley on the other.
Something about Bill, his youth and freshness, perhaps, attracted Antony; and
when cigarettes had been ordered, and an address given to which they were to be
sent, he remembered that he had come across an aunt of Beverley’s once at
a country-house. Beverley and he met again a little later at a restaurant. Both
of them were in evening-dress, but they did different things with their
napkins, and Antony was the more polite of the two. However, he still liked
Bill. So on one of his holidays, when he was unemployed, he arranged an
introduction through a mutual friend. Beverley was a little inclined to be
shocked when he was reminded of their previous meetings, but his uncomfortable
feeling soon wore off, and he and Antony quickly became intimate. But Bill
generally addressed him as “Dear Madman” when he happened to write.</p>
<p>Antony decided to stroll over to the Red House after lunch and call upon his
friend. Having inspected his bedroom which was not quite the lavender-smelling
country-inn bedroom of fiction, but sufficiently clean and comfortable, he set
out over the fields.</p>
<p>As he came down the drive and approached the old red-brick front of the house,
there was a lazy murmur of bees in the flower-borders, a gentle cooing of
pigeons in the tops of the elms, and from distant lawns the whir of a
mowing-machine, that most restful of all country sounds....</p>
<p>And in the hall a man was banging at a locked door, and shouting, “Open
the <i>door</i>, I say; open the <i>door!</i>”</p>
<p>“Hallo!” said Antony in amazement.</p>
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