<h2><SPAN name="page87"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>A BREAD AND BUTTER MISS</h2>
<p>“Starling Chatter and Oakhill have both dropped back in
the betting,” said Bertie van Tahn, throwing the morning
paper across the breakfast table.</p>
<p>“That leaves Nursery Tea practically favourite,”
said Odo Finsberry.</p>
<p>“Nursery Tea and Pipeclay are at the top of the betting
at present,” said Bertie, “but that French horse, Le
Five O’Clock, seems to be fancied as much as
anything. Then there is Whitebait, and the Polish horse
with a name like some one trying to stifle a sneeze in church;
they both seem to have a lot of support.”</p>
<p>“It’s the most open Derby there’s been for
years,” said Odo.</p>
<p>“It’s simply no good trying to pick the winner on
form,” said Bertie; “one must just trust to luck and
inspiration.”</p>
<p>“The question is whether to trust to one’s own
inspiration, or somebody else’s. <i>Sporting
Swank</i> gives Count Palatine to win, and Le Five O’Clock
for a place.”</p>
<p>“Count Palatine—that adds another to our list of
perplexities. Good morning, Sir Lulworth; have you a fancy
for the Derby by any chance?”</p>
<p>“I don’t usually take much interest in turf
matters,” said Sir Lulworth, who had just made his
appearance, “but I always like to have a bet on the Guineas
and the Derby. This year, I confess, it’s rather
difficult to pick out anything that seems markedly better than
anything else. What do you think of Snow
Bunting?”</p>
<p>“Snow Bunting?” said Odo, with a groan,
“there’s another of them. Surely, Snow Bunting
has no earthly chance?”</p>
<p>“My housekeeper’s nephew, who is a shoeing-smith
in the mounted section of the Church Lads’ Brigade, and an
authority on horseflesh, expects him to be among the first
three.”</p>
<p>“The nephews of housekeepers are invariably
optimists,” said Bertie; “it’s a kind of
natural reaction against the professional pessimism of their
aunts.”</p>
<p>“We don’t seem to get much further in our search
for the probable winner,” said Mrs. de Claux; “the
more I listen to you experts the more hopelessly befogged I
get.”</p>
<p>“It’s all very well to blame us,” said
Bertie to his hostess; “you haven’t produced anything
in the way of an inspiration.”</p>
<p>“My inspiration consisted in asking you down for Derby
week,” retorted Mrs. de Claux; “I thought you and Odo
between you might throw some light on the question of the
moment.”</p>
<p>Further recriminations were cut short by the arrival of Lola
Pevensey, who floated into the room with an air of gracious
apology.</p>
<p>“So sorry to be so late,” she observed, making a
rapid tour of inspection of the breakfast dishes.</p>
<p>“Did you have a good night?” asked her hostess
with perfunctory solicitude.</p>
<p>“Quite, thank you,” said Lola; “I dreamt a
most remarkable dream.”</p>
<p>A flutter, indicative of general boredom; went round the
table. Other people’s dreams are about as universally
interesting as accounts of other people’s gardens, or
chickens, or children.</p>
<p>“I dreamt about the winner of the Derby,” said
Lola.</p>
<p>A swift reaction of attentive interest set in.</p>
<p>“Do tell us what you dreamt,” came in a
chorus.</p>
<p>“The really remarkable thing about it is that I’ve
dreamt it two nights running,” said Lola, finally deciding
between the allurements of sausages and kedgeree; “that is
why I thought it worth mentioning. You know, when I dream
things two or three nights in succession, it always means
something; I have special powers in that way. For instance,
I once dreamed three times that a winged lion was flying through
the sky and one of his wings dropped off, and he came to the
ground with a crash; just afterwards the Campanile at Venice fell
down. The winged lion is the symbol of Venice, you
know,” she added for the enlightenment of those who might
not be versed in Italian heraldry. “Then,” she
continued, “just before the murder of the King and Queen of
Servia I had a vivid dream of two crowned figures walking into a
slaughter-house by the banks of a big river, which I took to be
the Danube; and only the other day—”</p>
<p>“Do tell us what you’ve dreamt about the
Derby,” interrupted Odo impatiently.</p>
<p>“Well, I saw the finish of the race as clearly as
anything; and one horse won easily, almost in a canter, and
everybody cried out ‘Bread and Butter wins! Good old
Bread and Butter.’ I heard the name distinctly, and
I’ve had the same dream two nights running.”</p>
<p>“Bread and Butter,” said Mrs. de Claux,
“now, whatever horse can that point to? Why—of
course; Nursery Tea!”</p>
<p>She looked round with the triumphant smile of a successful
unraveller of mystery.</p>
<p>“How about Le Five O’Clock?” interposed Sir
Lulworth.</p>
<p>“It would fit either of them equally well,” said
Odo; “can you remember any details about the jockey’s
colours? That might help us.”</p>
<p>“I seem to remember a glimpse of lemon sleeves or cap,
but I can’t be sure,” said Lola, after due
reflection.</p>
<p>“There isn’t a lemon jacket or cap in the
race,” said Bertie, referring to a list of starters and
jockeys; “can’t you remember anything about the
appearance of the horse? If it were a thick-set animal,
this bread and butter would typify Nursery Tea; and if it were
thin, of course, it would mean Le Five O’Clock.”</p>
<p>“That seems sound enough,” said Mrs. de Claux;
“do think, Lola dear, whether the horse in your dream was
thin or stoutly built.”</p>
<p>“I can’t remember that it was one or the
other,” said Lola; “one wouldn’t notice such a
detail in the excitement of a finish.”</p>
<p>“But this was a symbolic animal,” said Sir
Lulworth; “if it were to typify thick or thin bread and
butter surely it ought to have been either as bulky and tubby as
a shire cart-horse; or as thin as a heraldic leopard.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid you are rather a careless
dreamer,” said Bertie resentfully.</p>
<p>“Of course, at the moment of dreaming I thought I was
witnessing a real race, not the portent of one,” said Lola;
“otherwise I should have particularly noticed all helpful
details.”</p>
<p>“The Derby isn’t run till to-morrow,” said
Mrs. de Claux; “do you think you are likely to have the
same dream again to-night? If so; you can fix your
attention on the important detail of the animal’s
appearance.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid I shan’t sleep at all
to-night,” said Lola pathetically; “every fifth night
I suffer from insomnia, and it’s due to-night.”</p>
<p>“It’s most provoking,” said Bertie;
“of course, we can back both horses, but it would be much
more satisfactory to have all our money on the winner.
Can’t you take a sleeping-draught, or something?”</p>
<p>“Oakleaves, soaked in warm water and put under the bed,
are recommended by some,” said Mrs. de Claux.</p>
<p>“A glass of Benedictine, with a drop of
eau-de-Cologne—” said Sir Lulworth.</p>
<p>“I have tried every known remedy,” said Lola, with
dignity; “I’ve been a martyr to insomnia for
years.”</p>
<p>“But now we are being martyrs to it,” said Odo
sulkily; “I particularly want to land a big coup over this
race.”</p>
<p>“I don’t have insomnia for my own
amusement,” snapped Lola.</p>
<p>“Let us hope for the best,” said Mrs. de Claux
soothingly; “to-night may prove an exception to the
fifth-night rule.”</p>
<p>But when breakfast time came round again Lola reported a blank
night as far as visions were concerned.</p>
<p>“I don’t suppose I had as much as ten
minutes’ sleep, and, certainly, no dreams.”</p>
<p>“I’m so sorry, for your sake in the first place,
and ours as well,” said her hostess; “do you think
you could induce a short nap after breakfast? It would be
so good for you—and you <i>might</i> dream something.
There would still be time for us to get our bets on.”</p>
<p>“I’ll try if you like,” said Lola; “it
sounds rather like a small child being sent to bed in
disgrace.”</p>
<p>“I’ll come and read the <i>Encyclopædia
Britannica</i> to you if you think it will make you sleep any
sooner,” said Bertie obligingly.</p>
<p>Rain was falling too steadily to permit of outdoor amusement,
and the party suffered considerably during the next two hours
from the absolute quiet that was enforced all over the house in
order to give Lola every chance of achieving slumber. Even
the click of billiard balls was considered a possible factor of
disturbance, and the canaries were carried down to the
gardener’s lodge, while the cuckoo clock in the hall was
muffled under several layers of rugs. A notice,
“Please do not Knock or Ring,” was posted on the
front door at Bertie’s suggestion, and guests and servants
spoke in tragic whispers as though the dread presence of death or
sickness had invaded the house. The precautions proved of
no avail: Lola added a sleepless morning to a wakeful night, and
the bets of the party had to be impartially divided between
Nursery Tea and the French Colt.</p>
<p>“So provoking to have to split out bets,” said
Mrs. de Claux, as her guests gathered in the hall later in the
day, waiting for the result of the race.</p>
<p>“I did my best for you,” said Lola, feeling that
she was not getting her due share of gratitude; “I told you
what I had seen in my dreams, a brown horse, called Bread and
Butter, winning easily from all the rest.”</p>
<p>“What?” screamed Bertie, jumping up from his sea,
“a <i>brown</i> horse! Miserable woman, you never
said a word about it’s being a brown horse.”</p>
<p>“Didn’t I?” faltered Lola; “I thought
I told you it was a brown horse. It was certainly brown in
both dreams. But I don’t see what the colour has got
to do with it. Nursery Tea and Le Five O’Clock are
both chestnuts.”</p>
<p>“Merciful Heaven! Doesn’t brown bread and
butter with a sprinkling of lemon in the colours suggest anything
to you?” raged Bertie.</p>
<p>A slow, cumulative groan broke from the assembly as the
meaning of his words gradually dawned on his hearers.</p>
<p>For the second time that day Lola retired to the seclusion of
her room; she could not face the universal looks of reproach
directed at her when Whitebait was announced winner at the
comfortable price of fourteen to one.</p>
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