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<h2> CHAPTER XIII </h2>
<p>During the next half-hour, Hamel was introduced to luxuries to which, in a
general way, he was entirely unaccustomed. One man-servant was busy
preparing his bath in a room leading out of his sleeping apartment, while
another brought him a choice of evening clothes and superintended his
disrobing. Hamel, always observant, studied his surroundings with keen
interest. He found himself in a queerly mixed atmosphere of luxurious
modernity and stately antiquity. His four-poster, the huge couch at the
foot of his bed, and all the furniture about the room, was of the Queen
Anne period. The bathroom which communicated with his apartment was the
latest triumph of the plumber’s art—a room with floor and walls of
white tiles, the bath itself a little sunken and twice the ordinary size.
He dispensed so far as he could with the services of the men and
descended, as soon as he was dressed, into the hall. Meekins was waiting
at the bottom of the stairs, dressed now in somber black.</p>
<p>“Mr. Fentolin will be glad if you will step into his room, sir,” he
announced, leading the way.</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin was seated in his chair, reading the Times in a corner of his
library. Shaped blocks had been placed behind and in front of the wheels
of his little vehicle, to prevent it from moving. A shaded reading-lamp
stood on the table by his side. He did not at once look up, and Hamel
glanced around with genuine admiration. The shelves which lined the walls
and the winged cases which protruded into the room were filled with books.
There was a large oak table with beautifully carved legs, piled with all
sorts of modern reviews and magazines. A log fire was burning in the big
oaken grate. The perfume from a great bowl of lavender seemed to mingle
curiously yet pleasantly with the half musty odour of the old
leather-bound volumes. The massive chimneypiece was of black oak, and
above it were carved the arms of the House of Fentolin. The walls were
oak-panelled to the ceiling.</p>
<p>“Refreshed, I hope, by your bath and change, my dear visitor?” the head of
the house remarked, as he laid down his paper. “Draw a chair up here and
join me in a glass of vermouth. You need not be afraid of it. It comes to
me from the maker as a special favour.”</p>
<p>Hamel accepted a quaintly-cut wine-glass full of the amber liquid. Mr.
Fentolin sipped his with the air of a connoisseur.</p>
<p>“This,” he continued, “is one of our informal days. There is no one in the
house save my sister-in-law, niece, and nephew, and a poor invalid
gentleman who, I am sorry to say, is confined to his bed. My sister-in-law
is also, I regret to say, indisposed. She desired me to present her
excuses to you and say how greatly she is looking forward to making your
acquaintance during the next few days.”</p>
<p>Hamel bowed.</p>
<p>“It is very kind of Mrs. Fentolin,” he murmured.</p>
<p>“On these occasions,” Mr. Fentolin continued, “we do not make use of a
drawing-room. My niece will come in here presently. You are looking at my
books, I see. Are you, by any chance, a bibliophile? I have a case of
manuscripts here which might interest you.”</p>
<p>Hamel shook his head.</p>
<p>“Only in the abstract, I fear,” he answered. “I have scarcely opened a
serious book since I was at Oxford.”</p>
<p>“What was your year?” Mr. Fentolin asked.</p>
<p>“Fourteen years ago I left Magdalen,” Hamel replied. “I had made up my
mind to be an engineer, and I went over to the Boston Institute of
Technology.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin nodded appreciatively.</p>
<p>“A magnificent profession,” he murmured. “A healthy one, too, I should
judge from your appearance. You are a strong man, Mr. Hamel.”</p>
<p>“I have had reason to be,” Hamel rejoined. “During nearly the whole of the
time I have been abroad, I have been practically pioneering. Building
railways in the far West, with gangs of Chinese and Italians and
Hungarians and scarcely a foreman who isn’t terrified of his job, isn’t
exactly drawing-room work.”</p>
<p>“You are going back there?” Mr. Fentolin asked, with interest.</p>
<p>Hamel shook his head.</p>
<p>“I have no plans,” he declared. “I have been fortunate enough, or shall I
some day say unfortunate enough, I wonder, to have inherited a large
legacy.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin smiled.</p>
<p>“Don’t ever doubt your good fortune,” he said earnestly. “The longer I
live—and in my limited way I do see a good deal of life—the
more I appreciate the fact that there isn’t anything in this world that
compares with the power of money. I distrust a poor man. He may mean to be
honest, but he is at all times subject to temptation. Ah! here is my
niece.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin turned towards the door. Hamel rose at once to his feet. His
surmise, then, had been correct. She was coming towards them very quietly.
In her soft grey dinner-gown, her brown hair smoothly brushed back, a
pearl necklace around her long, delicate neck, she seemed to him a very
exquisite embodiment of those memories which he had been carrying about
throughout the afternoon.</p>
<p>“Here, Mr. Hamel,” his host said, “is a member of my family who has been a
deserter for a short time. This is Mr. Richard Hamel, Esther; my niece,
Miss Esther Fentolin.”</p>
<p>She held out her hand with the faintest possible smile, which might have
been of greeting or recognition.</p>
<p>“I travelled for some distance in the train with Mr. Hamel this afternoon,
I think,” she remarked.</p>
<p>“Indeed?” Mr. Fentolin exclaimed. “Dear me, that is very interesting—very
interesting, indeed! Mr. Hamel, I am sure, did not tell you of his
destination?”</p>
<p>He watched them keenly. Hamel, though he scarcely understood, was quick to
appreciate the possible significance of that tentative question.</p>
<p>“We did not exchange confidences,” he observed. “Miss Fentolin only
changed into my carriage during the last few minutes of her journey.
Besides,” he continued, “to tell you the truth, my ideas as to my
destination were a little hazy. To come and look for some queer sort of
building by the side of the sea, which has been unoccupied for a dozen
years or so, scarcely seems a reasonable quest, does it?”</p>
<p>“Scarcely, indeed,” Mr. Fentolin assented. “You may thank me, Mr. Hamel,
for the fact that the place is not in ruins. My blatant trespassing has
saved you from that, at least. After dinner we must talk further about the
Tower. To tell you the truth, I have grown accustomed to the use of the
little place.”</p>
<p>The sound of the dinner gong boomed through the house. A moment later
Gerald entered, followed by a butler announcing dinner.</p>
<p>“The only remaining member of my family,” Mr. Fentolin remarked,
indicating his nephew. “Gerald, you will be pleased, I know, to meet Mr.
Hamel. Mr. Hamel has been a great traveller. Long before you can remember,
his father used to paint wonderful pictures of this coast.”</p>
<p>Gerald shook hands with his visitor. His face, for a moment, lighted up.
He was looking pale, though, and singularly sullen and dejected.</p>
<p>“There are two of your father’s pictures in the modern side of the gallery
up-stairs,” he remarked, a little diffidently. “They are great favourites
with everybody here.”</p>
<p>They all went in to dinner together. Meekins, who had appeared silently,
had glided unnoticed behind his master’s chair and wheeled it across the
hall.</p>
<p>“A partie carree to-night,” Mr. Fentolin declared. “I have a resident
doctor here, a very delightful person, who often dines with us, but
to-night I thought not. Five is an awkward number. I want to get to know
you better, Mr. Hamel, and quickly. I want you, too, to make friends with
my niece and nephew. Mr. Hamel’s father,” he went on, addressing the two
latter, “and your father were great friends. By-the-by, have I told you
both exactly why Mr. Hamel is a guest here to-night—why he came to
these parts at all? No? Listen, then. He came to take possession of the
Tower. The worst of it is that it belongs to him, too. His father bought
it from your father more years ago than we should care to talk about. I
have really been a trespasser all this time.”</p>
<p>They took their places at a small round table in the middle of the
dining-room. The shaded lights thrown downwards upon the table seemed to
leave most of the rest of the apartment in semi-darkness. The gloomy faces
of the men and women whose pictures hung upon the walls were almost
invisible. The servants themselves, standing a little outside the halo of
light, were like shadows passing swiftly and noiselessly back and forth.
At the far end of the room was an organ, and to the left a little balcony,
built out as though for an orchestra. Hamel looked about him almost in
wonderment. There was something curiously impressive in the size of the
apartment and its emptiness.</p>
<p>“A trespasser,” Mr. Fentolin continued, as he took up the menu and
criticised it through his horn-rimmed eyeglass, “that is what I have been,
without a doubt.”</p>
<p>“But for your interest and consequent trespass,” Hamel remarked, “I should
probably have found the roof off and the whole place in ruins.”</p>
<p>“Instead of which you found the door locked against you,” Mr. Fentolin
pointed out. “Well, we shall see. I might, at any rate, have lost the
opportunity of entertaining you here this evening. I am particularly glad
to have an opportunity of making you known to my niece and nephew. I think
you will agree with me that here are two young people who are highly to be
commended. I cannot offer them a cheerful life here. There is little
society, no gaiety, no sort of excitement. Yet they never leave me. They
seem to have no other interest in life but to be always at my beck and
call. A case, Mr. Hamel, of really touching devotion. If anything could
reconcile me to my miserable condition, it would be the kindness and
consideration of those by whom I am surrounded.”</p>
<p>Hamel murmured a few words of cordial agreement. Yet he found himself, in
a sense, embarrassed. Gerald was looking down upon his plate and his face
was hidden. Esther’s features had suddenly become stony and
expressionless. Hamel felt instinctively that something was wrong.</p>
<p>“There are compensations,” Mr. Fentolin continued, with the air of one
enjoying speech, “which find their way into even the gloomiest of lives.
As I lie on my back, hour after hour, I feel all the more conscious of
this. The world is a school of compensations, Mr. Hamel. The interests—the
mental interests, I mean—of unfortunate people like myself, come to
possess in time a peculiar significance and to yield a peculiar pleasure.
I have hobbies, Mr. Hamel. I frankly admit it. Without my hobbies, I
shudder to think what might become of me. I might become a selfish, cruel,
misanthropical person. Hobbies are indeed a great thing.”</p>
<p>The brother and sister sat still in stony silence. Hamel, looking across
the little table with its glittering load of cut glass and silver and
scarlet flowers, caught something in Esther’s eyes, so rarely expressive
of any emotion whatever, which puzzled him. He looked swiftly back at his
host. Mr. Fentolin’s face, at that moment, was like a beautiful cameo. His
expression was one of gentle benevolence.</p>
<p>“Let me be quite frank with you,” Mr. Fentolin murmured. “My occupation of
the Tower is one of these hobbies. I love to sit there within a few yards
of the sea and watch the tide come in. I catch something of the spirit, I
think, which caught your father, Mr. Hamel, and kept him a prisoner here.
In my small way I, too, paint while I am down there, paint and dream.
These things may not appeal to you, but you must remember that there are
few things left to me in life, and that those, therefore, which I can make
use of, are dear to me. Gerald, you are silent to-night. How is it that
you say nothing?”</p>
<p>“I am tired, sir,” the boy answered quietly.</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin nodded gravely.</p>
<p>“It is inexcusable of me,” he declared smoothly, “to have forgotten even
for a moment. My nephew, Mr. Hamel,” he went on, “had quite an exciting
experience last night—or rather a series of experiences. He was
first of all in a railway accident, and then, for the sake of a poor
fellow who was with him and who was badly hurt, he motored back here in
the grey hours of the morning and ran, they tell me, considerable risk of
being drowned on the marshes. A very wonderful and praiseworthy adventure,
I consider it. I trust that our friend up-stairs, when he recovers, will
be properly grateful.”</p>
<p>Gerald rose to his feet precipitately. The service of dinner was almost
concluded, and he muttered something which sounded like an excuse. Mr.
Fentolin, however, stretched out his hand and motioned him to resume his
seat.</p>
<p>“My dear Gerald!” he exclaimed reprovingly. “You would leave us so
abruptly? Before your sister, too! What will Mr. Hamel think of our
country ways? Pray resume your seat.”</p>
<p>For a moment the boy stood quite still, then he slowly subsided into his
chair. Mr. Fentolin passed around a decanter of wine which had been placed
upon the table by the butler. The servants had now left the room.</p>
<p>“You must excuse my nephew, if you please, Mr. Hamel,” he begged. “Gerald
has a boy’s curious aversion to praise in any form. I am looking forward
to hearing your verdict upon my port. The collection of wine and pictures
was a hobby of my grandfather’s, for which we, his descendants, can never
be sufficiently grateful.”</p>
<p>Hamel praised his wine, as indeed he had every reason to, but for a few
moments the smooth conversation of his host fell upon deaf ears. He looked
from the boy’s face, pale and wrinkled as though with some sort of
suppressed pain, to the girl’s still, stony expression. This was indeed a
house of mysteries! There was something here incomprehensible, some thing
about the relations of these three and their knowledge of one another,
utterly baffling. It was the queerest household, surely, into which any
stranger had ever been precipitated.</p>
<p>“The planting of trees and the laying down of port are two virtues in our
ancestors which have never been properly appreciated,” Mr. Fentolin
continued. “Let us, at any rate, free ourselves from the reproach of
ingratitude so far as regards my grandfather—Gerald Fentolin—to
whom I believe we are indebted for this wine. We will drink—”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin broke off in the middle of his sentence. The august calm of
the great house had been suddenly broken. From up-stairs came the tumult
of raised voices, the slamming of a door, the falling of something heavy
upon the floor. Mr. Fentolin listened with a grim change in his
expression. His smile had departed, his lower lip was thrust out, his
eyebrows met. He raised the little whistle which hung from his chain. At
that moment, however, the door was opened. Doctor Sarson appeared.</p>
<p>“I am sorry to disturb you, Mr. Fentolin,” he said, “but our patient is
becoming a little difficult. The concussion has left him, as I feared it
might, in a state of nervous excitability. He insists upon an interview
with you.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin backed his little chair from the table. The doctor came over
and laid his hand upon the handle.</p>
<p>“You will, I am sure, excuse me for a few moments, Mr. Hamel,” his host
begged. “My niece and nephew will do their best to entertain you. Now,
Sarson, I am ready.”</p>
<p>Mr. Fentolin glided across the dim, empty spaces of the splendid
apartment, followed by the doctor; a ghostly little procession it seemed.
The door was closed behind them. For a few moments a curious silence
ensued. Gerald remained tense and apparently suffering from some sort of
suppressed emotion. Esther for the first time moved in her place. She
leaned towards Hamel. Her lips were slowly parted, her eyes sought the
door as though in terror. Her voice, although save for themselves there
was no one else in the whole of that great apartment, had sunk to the
lowest of whispers.</p>
<p>“Are you a brave man, Mr. Hamel?” she asked.</p>
<p>He was staggered but he answered her promptly.</p>
<p>“I believe so.”</p>
<p>“Don’t give up the Tower—just yet. That is what—he has brought
you here for. He wants you to give it up and go back. Don’t!”</p>
<p>The earnestness of her words was unmistakable. Hamel felt the thrill of
coming events.</p>
<p>“Why not?”</p>
<p>“Don’t ask me,” she begged. “Only if you are brave, if you have feeling
for others, keep the Tower, if it be for only a week. Hush!”</p>
<p>The door had been noiselessly opened. The doctor appeared and advanced to
the table with a grave little bow.</p>
<p>“Mr. Fentolin,” he said, “has been kind enough to suggest that I take a
glass of wine with you. My presence is not needed up-stairs. Mr. Hamel,”
he added, “I am glad, sir, to make your acquaintance. I have for a long
time been a great admirer of your father’s work.”</p>
<p>He took his place at the head of the table and, filling his glass, bowed
towards Hamel. Once more Gerald and his sister relapsed almost
automatically into an indifferent and cultivated silence. Hamel found
civility towards the newcomer difficult. Unconsciously his attitude became
that of the other two. He resented the intrusion. He found himself
regarding the advent of Doctor Sarson as possessing some secondary
significance. It was almost as though Mr. Fentolin preferred not to leave
him alone with his niece and nephew.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, his voice, when he spoke, was clear and firm.</p>
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