<h2><span class='pageno' title='36' id='Page_36'></span>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>W</span><span class='sc'>HAT</span> Blaise Olifant told Olivia about his
prospective co-inhabitant of The Towers,
and what Rowington, the publisher, and one
or two others knew about him, amounted to the following:</p>
<p class='pindent'>One morning a motor-car, having the second-hand air
of a hiring garage and unoccupied save for the chauffeur,
drew up before the door of a great London publishing
house. The chauffeur stepped from his seat, collected a
brown-paper package from the interior, and entered.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Can I see a member of the firm?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The clerk in the enquiry office looked surprised.
Chauffeurs offering manuscripts on behalf of their employers
were plentiful as blackberries in September;
but chauffeurs demanding an interview with the august
heads of the house were rare as blackberries in March.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m afraid you can’t do that,” he replied civilly. “If
you leave it here, it will be all right. I’ll give you a receipt
which you can take back.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I want to explain,” said the chauffeur.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Scores of people weekly expressed the same desire. It
was the business of the clerk to suppress explanations.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s a manuscript to be submitted? Well, you must
tell the author——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am the author,” said the chauffeur.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Oh!” said the clerk, and his subconscious hand
pushed the manuscript a millimetre forward on the polished
mahogany counter.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The circumstances, you see, are exceptional.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>There being something exceptional in the voice and
manner of the chauffeur, the clerk regarded him for the
first time as a human being.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I quite see,” said he; “but the rules of the firm are
strict. If you will leave the manuscript, it will be read.
Oh, I give you my word of honour,” he smiled. “Everything
that comes in is read. We have a staff who do nothing
else. Is your name and address on it?” He began
to untie the string.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The name, but not the address.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>On the slip of paper which the clerk pushed across to
him he wrote:</p>
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<p class='line0'>Alexis Triona,</p>
<p class='line0'>   c/o John Briggs.</p>
<p class='line0'>      3 Cherbury Mews,</p>
<p class='line0'>         Surrey Gardens, W.</p>
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<p class='pindent'>The clerk scribbled an acknowledgment, the chauffeur
thrust it into his pocket, and, driving away, was lost in
the traffic of London.</p>
<p class='pindent'>A fortnight afterwards, Alexis Triona, who, together
with John Briggs, as one single and indissoluble chauffeur,
inhabited a little room over the garage in Cherbury
Mews, received a letter to the effect that the publishing
house, being interested in the MS. “<span class='it'>Through Blood and
Snow</span>,” which he had kindly submitted, would be glad if
he would call, with a view to publication. The result was
a second visit on the part of the chauffeur to the great
firm. The clerk welcomed him with a bland smile,
and showed him into a comfortably furnished room whose
thick Turkey carpet signified the noiseless mystery of
many discreet decades, and where a benevolent middle-aged
man in gold spectacles stood with his back to the
chimney-piece. He advanced with outstretched hand to
meet the author.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Mr. Triona? I’m glad to meet you. Won’t you sit
down?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He motioned to a chair by the tidy writing table, where
he sat and pulled forward the manuscript, which had
been placed there in readiness for the interview. He
said pleasantly:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well. Let us get to business at once. We should
like to publish your book.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>The slight quivering of sensitive nostrils alone betrayed
the author’s emotion.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m glad,” he replied. “I think it’s worth publishing.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Mr. Rowington tapped the MS. in front of him with
his forefinger. “Are these your own personal experiences?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“They are,” said the chauffeur.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Excuse my questioning you,” said the publisher. “Not
that it would greatly matter. But one likes to know.
We should be inclined to publish it, either as a work of
fiction or a work of fact; but the handling of it—the
method of publicity—would be different. Of course, you
see,” he went on benevolently, “a thing may be absolutely
true in essence, like lots of the brilliant little
war stories that have been written the past few years,
but not true in the actual historical sense. Now, your
book would have more value if we could say that it is
true in this actual historical sense, if we could say that
it’s an authentic record of personal experiences.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You can say that,” answered Triona quietly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>The publisher leaned back in his chair.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How a man could have gone through what you have
and remained sane passes understanding.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>For the first time the young man’s set features relaxed
into a smile.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I shouldn’t like to swear that I am sane,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’ve heard ex-prisoners say,” Mr. Rowington remarked,
“that six months’ solitary confinement under such
conditions”—he patted the manuscript—“is as much as
the human reason can stand.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“As soon as hunting and killing vermin ceases to be a
passionate interest in life,” said Triona.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They conversed for a while. Stimulated by the publisher’s
question, Triona supplemented details in the book,
described his final adventure, his landing penniless in
London, his search for work. At last, said he, he had
found a situation as chauffeur in the garage of a motor-hiring
company. The publisher glanced at the slip pinned
to the cover of the manuscript.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And John Briggs?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A pseudonym. Briggs was my mother’s name. I am
English on both sides, though my great-grandfather’s
people were Maltese. My father, however, was a naturalized
Russian. I’ve mentioned it in the book.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Quite so,” said the publisher. “I only wanted to get
things clear. And now as to terms. Have you any
suggestion?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Afterwards, Alexis Triona confessed to a wild impulse
to ask for a hundred pounds—outright sale—and to a
sudden lack of audacity which kept him silent. The
terms which the publisher proposed, when the royalty
system and the probabilities of such a book’s profits were
explained to him, made him gasp with wonder. And
when, in consideration, said the publisher, of his present
impecunious position, he was offered an advance in respect
of royalties exceeding the hundred pounds of his
crazy promptings, his heart thumped until it became an
all but intolerable pain.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you think,” he asked, amazed that his work should
have such market value, “that I could earn my living by
writing?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Undoubtedly.” The publisher beamed on the new
author. “You have the matter, you have the gift, the
style, the humour, the touch. I’m sure I could place
things for you. Indeed, it would be to our common advantage,
pending publication. Only, of course, you
mustn’t use any of the matter in the book. You quite
understand?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Alexis Triona understood. He went away dancing on
air. Write? His brain seethed with ideas. That the
written expression of them should open the gates of Fortune
was a new conception. He had put together the
glowing, vivid book impelled by strange, unknown forces.
It was, as he had confidently declared, worth publishing.
But the possible reward was beyond his dreams. And
he could see more visions. . . .</p>
<p class='pindent'>So he went back to his garage and drove idle people
to dinners and theatres, and in his scanty leisure wrote
strange romances of love and war in Circassia and Tartary,
and, through the agency of the powerful publishing
house, sold them to solid periodicals, until the public
mind became gradually familiarized with his name. It
was only when the book was published, and, justifying
the confidence of the great firm, blazed into popularity,
that Triona discarded his livery and all that appertained
to the mythical John Briggs and, arraying himself in the
garb of ordinary citizenship, entered—to use, with a
difference, the famous trope of a departed wit—a lion
into the den of London’s Daniels. For, in their hundreds,
they had come to judgment. But knowing very little of
the Imperial Russian Secret Service in Turkestan, or the
ways of the inhabitants of the Ural Mountains, or, at
that time, of Bolshevik horrors in the remote confines of
Asia, they tore each other to pieces, while the lion stepped,
with serene modesty, in the midst of them.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>It was at Oxford, whither the sudden wave of fame
had drifted him, that he met Blaise Olifant, who was
living in the house of his sister, the wife of a brilliant,
undomesticated and somewhat dissolute professor of political
economy. The Head of a College, interested in
Russia, had asked him down to dine and sleep. There
was a portentous dinner-party whose conglomerate brain
paralyzed the salmon and refroze the imported lamb.
They overwhelmed the guest of honour with their learning.
They all were bent on probing beneath the surface
of his thrilling personal adventures, which he narrated
from time to time with attractive modesty. The episode
of his reprieve when standing naked beside the steaming
chaldron in which he was to be boiled alive caused a
shuddering silence. Perhaps it was too realistic for a
conventional dinner-party, but he had discounted its
ghastliness by a smiling nonchalance, telling it as though
it had been an amusing misadventure of travel. Very
shortly afterwards Mrs. Head of College broke into a
disquisition on the continuity of Russian literature from
Sumakarov to Chekov. Triona, a profound student of
the subject, at last lost interest in the academic socialist
and threw up his hands.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My dear lady,” said he, “there is a theory in the
United States accounting for the continued sale of <span class='it'>Uncle
Tom’s Cabin</span>. They say immigrants buy it to familiarize
themselves with the negro question. Russian literature
has just as much to do with the Russia of to-day.
It’s as purely archæological as the literature of Ancient
Assyria.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Blaise Olifant, sitting opposite, sympathized with the
man of actualities set down in this polite academy. Once
he himself had regarded it as the ganglion of the Thought
of the Universe; but having recently seen something of
the said Universe he had modified his view. Why should
these folk not be content with a plain human story of
almost fantastic adventure, instead of worrying the unhappy
Soldier of Fortune with sociological and metaphysical
theories with which he had little time to concern
himself? Why embroil him in a discussion on the
League of Nations’ duty to Lithuania when he was anxious
to give them interesting pictures of Kurdish family
life? He looked round the table somewhat amusedly
at the elderly intellectuals of both sexes, and, forgetting
for a moment the intellectual years of quiet biological
research to which he was about to devote his life, drew
an unflattering contrast between the theorists and their
alien guest.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He liked the man. He liked the boyish, clean-shaven
face, the broad forehead marked by very thin horizontal
lines, the thin brown hair, parted carelessly at the side,
and left to do what it liked; the dark grey eyes that
sometimes seemed so calm beneath the heavy lids, and
yet were capable of sudden illumination; the pleasant,
humorous mouth, and the grotesque dimple of a hole in the
middle of a long chin. He pitied the man. He pitied
him for the hollows in his temples, for the swift flash
of furtive glances, for the great sinews that stood out in
his lean nervous hands, for the general suggestion of
shrunken muscularity in his figure. A stone, or two,
thought he, below his normal weight. He liked his
voice, its soft foreign intonation; he liked his modesty,
his careless air of the slim young man of no account; he
liked the courteous patience of his manner. He understood
his little nervous trick of plucking at his lips.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In the drawing-room after dinner Mrs. Head of College
said to him:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“A most interesting man—but I do wish he would
look you in the face when he speaks to you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Blaise Olifant suppressed a sigh. These good people
were hopeless. They knew nothing. They did not even
recognize the unmistakable brand of the prisoner who
has suffered agony of body and degradation of soul. No
man who has been a tortured slave regains, for years,
command of his eyes. Hundreds of such men had Olifant
seen, and the sight of them still made his heart ache.
He explained politely. And with a polite air of unconvinced
assent, the lady received his explanation.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He asked Triona to lunch the next day, and under the
warmth of his kindly sympathy Triona expanded. He
spoke of his boyhood in Moscow, where his father, a
naturalized Russian, carried on business as a stockbroker;
of his travels in England and France with his English
mother; of his English tutor; of his promising start in
life in a great Russian motor firm—an experience that
guaranteed his livelihood during his late refuge months
in London; of his military service; of his early war days
as a Russian officer; of the twists of circumstance that
sent him into the Imperial Secret Service; of incredible
wanderings to the frontiers of Thibet; of the Revolution;
of the murder of father and mother and the disappearance
of his fortune like a wisp of cloud evaporated by the
sun; of many strange and woeful things related in his
book; of his escape through Russia; of his creeping as a
stowaway into a Swedish timber boat; of his torpedoing
by a German submarine and his rescue by a British destroyer;
of his landing naked save for shirt and trousers,
sans money, sans papers, sans everything of value save
his English speech; of the Russian Society in London’s
benevolent aid; of the burning desire, an irresistible
flame, to set down on paper all that he had gone through;
of the intense nights spent over the book in his tiny ramshackle
room over the garage; and, lastly, of the astounding
luck that had been dealt him by the capricious Wheel
of Fortune.</p>
<p class='pindent'>In the presence of a sympathetic audience he threw
aside the previous evening’s cloak of modest impersonality.
He talked with a vivid picturesqueness that held
Olifant spellbound. The furtive look in his eyes disappeared.
They gleamed like compelling stars. His
face lost its ruggedness, transfigured by the born
narrator’s inspiration. Olifant’s sister, Mrs. Woolcombe,
a gentle and unassuming woman on whom the learning of
Oxford had weighed as heavily as the abominable conduct
of her husband, listened with the rapt attention of a
modern Desdemona. She gazed at him open eyed, half
stupefied as she had gazed lately at a great cinematograph
film which had held all London breathless.</p>
<p class='pindent'>When he had gone she turned to her brother, still under
the spell.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The boy’s a magician.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Blaise Olifant smiled. “The boy’s a man,” said he.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>Chance threw them together a while later in London.
There they met frequently, became friends. The quiet
sincerity of the soldier-scholar that was Blaise Olifant
seemed to strike some chord of soothing in the heart of
the young magician. Fundamentally ignorant of every
geological fact, Triona brought to Olifant’s banquet of
fossil solvents of the mystery of existence an insatiable
appetite for knowledge. He listened to reluctant lectures
on elementary phenomena such as ammonites, with the
same rapt attention as Olifant listened to his tales of
the old Empire of Prester John. The Freemasonry of
war, with its common experiences of peril and mutilation—once
Triona slipped off pump and sock and showed a
foot from which three toes had been shot away and an
ankle seared with the fester of fetters—formed a primary
bond of brotherhood. By the Freemasonry of intellect
they found themselves members of a Higher Chapter.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“London is wonderful,” said Triona one day. “London’s
appreciation of the poor thing I have done is enough
to turn anyone’s head. But while my head is being
turned, in the most delightful way in the world, I can’t
find time to do any work. And I must write in order to
live. Do you know a little quiet spot where I could stay
for the winter and write this precious novel of mine?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Blaise Olifant reflected for a moment.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I myself am looking for a sort of hermitage. In fact,
I’ve heard of one in Shropshire which I’m going to look
at next week. I want a biggish house,” he explained,
with a smile—“I’ve had enough of dug-outs and billets
in a farmhouse with a hole through the roof to last me
my natural life. So there would be room for a guest. If
you would care to come and stay with me, wherever I
pitch my comfortable tent, and carry on your job while
I carry on mine, you would be more than welcome.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“My dear fellow,” cried Triona, impulsively thrusting
out both hands to be shaken, “this is unheard-of generosity.
It means my soul’s salvation. Only the horrible
dread of loneliness—you know the old solitary prisoner’s
dread—has kept me from running down to some little
out-of-the-way place—say in Cornwall. I’ve shrunk
from it. But London is different. In my chauffeur’s
days it was different. I had always associates, fares, the
multitudinous sights and sounds of the vast city. But
solitude in a village! Frankly, I funked it. I’ve lived
so much alone that now I must talk. If I didn’t talk I
should go mad. Or rather I must feel that I can talk if
I want to. I keep hold of myself, however. If I bored
you with my loquacity you wouldn’t have made me your
delightful proposal.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Well, you’ll come, if I can get the right kind of
house?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“With all the gratitude in life,” cried Triona, his eyes
sparkling. “But not as your guest. Some daily, weekly,
monthly arrangement, so that we shall both be free—you
to kick me out—I to go——”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Just as you like,” laughed Olifant. “I only should
be pleased to have your company.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And God knows,” cried Triona, “what yours would be
to me.”</p>
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