In the huge, oak-panelled
hall of the Abbey, Sir Beverley Evesham sat alone.
A splendid fire of logs blazed
before him on the open hearth, and the light from a great
chandelier beat mercilessly down upon him. His hair was thick still
and silvery white. He had the shoulders of a strong man, albeit
they were slightly bowed. His face, clean-shaven, aristocratic, was
the colour of old ivory. The thin lips were quite bloodless. They
had a downward, bitter curve, as though they often sneered at life.
The eyes were keen as a bird's, stone-grey under overhanging black
brows.
He held a newspaper in one bony
hand, but he was not apparently reading, for his eyes were fixed.
The shining suits of armour standing like sentinels on each side of
the fireplace were not more rigid than he.
There came a slight sound from
the other end of the hall, and instantly and very sharply Sir
Beverley turned his head.
"Piers!"
Cheerily Piers' voice made
answer. He shut the door behind him and came forward as he spoke.
"Here I am, sir! I'm sorry I'm late. You shouldn't have waited. You
never ought to wait. I'm never in at the right time."
"Confound you, why aren't you
then?" burst forth Sir Beverley. "It's easy to say you're sorry,
isn't it?"
"Not always," said Piers.
He came to the old man, bent down
over him, slid a boyish arm around the bent shoulders. "Don't be
waxy!" he coaxed. "I couldn't help it this time."
"Get away, do!" said Sir
Beverley, jerking himself irritably from him. "I detest being pawed
about, as you very well know. In Heaven's name, have your tea, if
you want it! I shan't touch any. It's past my time."
"Oh, rot!" said Piers. "If you
don't, I shan't."
"Yes, you will." Sir Beverley
pointed an imperious hand towards a table on the other side of the
fire. "Go and get it and don't be a fool!"
"I'm not a fool," said
Piers.
"Yes, you are—a damn fool!" Sir
Beverley returned to his newspaper with the words. "And you'll
never be anything else!" he growled into the silence that succeeded
them.
Piers clattered the tea-things
and said nothing. There was no resentment visible upon his
sensitive, olive face, however. He looked perfectly contented. He
turned round after a few seconds with a cup of steaming tea in his
hand. He crossed the hearth and set it on the table at Sir
Beverley's elbow.
"That's just as you like it,
sir," he urged. "Have it—just to please me!"
"Take it away!" said Sir
Beverley, without raising his eyes.
"It's only ten minutes late after
all," said Piers, with all meekness. "I wish you hadn't waited,
though it was jolly decent of you. You weren't anxious of course?
You know I always turn up some time."
"Anxious!" echoed Sir Beverley.
"About a cub like you! You flatter yourself, my good Piers."
Piers laughed a little and
stooped over the blaze. Sir Beverley read on for a few moments,
then very suddenly and not without violence crumpled his paper and
flung it on the ground.
"Of all the infernal, ridiculous
twaddle!" he exclaimed. "Now what the devil have you done to
yourself? Been taking a water-jump?"
Piers turned round. "No, sir.
It's nothing. I shouldn't have come in in this state, only it was
late, and I thought I'd better report myself."
"Nothing!" repeated Sir Beverley.
"Why, you're drenched to the skin! Go and change! Go and change!
Don't stop to argue! Do you hear me, sir? Go and change!"
He shouted the last words, and
Piers flung round on his heel with a hint of impatience.
"And behave yourself!" Sir
Beverley threw after him. "If you think I'll stand any impertinence
from you, you were never more mistaken in your life. Be off with
you, you cheeky young hound! Don't let me see you again till you're
fit to be seen!"
Piers departed without a backward
look. His lips were slightly compressed as he went up the stairs,
but before he reached his own room they were softly
whistling.
Victor, the valet, who was busily
employed in laying out his evening clothes, received him with hands
upraised in horror.
"Ah, mais, Monsieur Pierre, how
you are wet!"
"Yes, I want a bath," said Piers.
"Get it quick! I must be down again in ten minutes. So scurry,
Victor, my lad!"
Victor was a cheery little
rotundity of five-and-fifty. He had had the care of Piers ever
since the first fortnight of that young man's existence, and he
worshipped him with a whole-hearted devotion that was in its way
sublime. In his eyes Piers could do no wrong. He was in fact dearer
to him than his own flesh and blood.
He prepared the bath with deft
celerity, and hastened back to assist in removing his young
master's boots. He exclaimed dramatically upon their soaked
condition, but Piers was in too great a hurry to give any details
regarding the cause of his plight. He whirled into the bathroom at
express speed, and was out again almost before Victor had had time
to collect his drenched garments.
Ten minutes after his departure
he returned to the hall, the gay whistle still on his lips, and
trod a careless measure to its tune as he advanced.
Sir Beverley got up stiffly from
his knees on the hearth-rug and turned a scowling face. "Well, are
you decent now?"
"Quite," said Piers. He smiled as
he said it, a boyish disarming smile. "Have you had your tea, sir?
Oh, I say what a brick you are! I didn't expect that."
His eyes, travelling downwards,
had caught sight of a cup pushed close to the blaze, and a plate of
crumpets beside it.
"Or deserve it," said Sir
Beverley grimly.
Piers turned impulsively and took
him by the shoulders. "You're a dear old chap!" he said. "Thanks
awfully!"
Against its will the hard old
mouth relaxed. "There, boy, there! What an infant you are! Sit down
and have it for goodness' sake! It'll be dinner-time before you've
done."
"You've had yours?" said
Piers.
"Oh, yes—yes!" Irritation made
itself heard again in Sir Beverley's voice; he freed himself from
his grandson's hold, though not urgently. "I'm not so keen on your
precious tea," he said, seating himself again. "It's only young
milksops like you that have made it fashionable. When I was
young—"
"Hullo!" broke in Piers. He had
picked up the cup of tea and was sniffing it suspiciously. "You've
been doctoring this!" he said.
"You drink it!" ordered Sir
Beverley peremptorily. "I'm not going to have you laid up with
rheumatic fever if I know it. Drink it, Piers! Do you hear?"
Piers looked for a moment as if
he were on the verge of rebellion, then abruptly he raised the cup
to his lips and drained it. He set it down with a shudder of
distaste.
"You might have let me have it
separately," he remarked. "Tea and brandy don't blend well. I shall
sleep like a hog after this. Besides, I shouldn't have had
rheumatic fever. It's not my way. Anything in the paper
to-night?"
"Yes," said Sir Beverley
disgustedly. "There's that prize-fight business."
"What's that?" Piers looked up
with quick interest.
"Surely you saw it!" returned Sir
Beverley. "That fellow Adderley—killed his man in a
wrestling-match. A good many people said it was done by a
foul."
"Adderley!" repeated Piers. "I
know him. He gave me some quite useful tips once. What happened?
It's the first I've heard of it."
"Well, he's a murderer," said Sir
Beverley. "And he deserves to be hanged. He killed his man,—whether
by a foul or not I can't say; but anyway he meant to kill him. It's
obvious on the face of it. But they chose to bring it in
manslaughter, and he's only got five years; while some brainless
fool must needs write an article a column and a half long to
protest against the disgraceful practice of permitting wrestling or
boxing matches, which are a survival of the Dark Ages and a
perpetual menace to our civilization! A survival of your
grandmother! A nice set of nincompoops the race will develop into
if such fools as that get their way! We're soft enough as it is,
Heaven knows. Why couldn't they hang the scoundrel as he deserved?
That's the surest way of putting an end to savagery. But to stop
the sport altogether! It would be tomfoolery!"
Piers picked up the paper from
the floor and smoothed it out. He proceeded to study it with drawn
brows, and Sir Beverley sat and watched him with that in his
stone-grey eyes which no one was ever allowed to see.
"Eat your crumpets, boy!" he said
at last.
"What?" Piers glanced up
momentarily. "Oh, all right, sir, in a minute. This is rather an
interesting case, what? You see, Adderley was a friend of
mine."
"When did you meet him?" demanded
Sir Beverley.
"I knew him in my school-days. He
spent a whole term in the neighbourhood. It was just before I left
for my year of travel. I got to know him rather well. He gave me
several hints on wrestling."
"Did he teach you how to break
your opponent's neck?" asked Sir
Beverley drily.
Piers made a slight, scarcely
perceptible movement of one hand. It clenched upon the paper he
held. "They were—worth knowing," he said, with his eyes upon the
sheet. "But I should have thought he was too old a hand himself to
get into trouble."
Sir Beverley grunted. Piers read
on. At the end of a lengthy pause he laid the paper aside. "I'm
beastly rude," he remarked. "Have a crumpet!"
"Eat 'em yourself!" said Sir
Beverley. "I hate 'em!"
Piers picked up the plate and
began to eat. He stared at the blaze as he did so, obviously lost
in thought.
"Don't dream!" said Sir Beverley
sharply.
He turned his eyes upon his
grandfather's face—those soft Italian eyes of his so suggestive of
hidden fire. "I wasn't—dreaming," he said slowly. "I wonder why you
think Adderley ought to be hanged."
"Because he's a murderer,"
snapped Sir Beverley.
"Yes; but—" said Piers, and
became silent as though he were following out some train of
thought.
"Go on, boy! Finish!" commanded
Sir Beverley. "I detest a sentence left in the middle."
"I was only thinking," said Piers
deliberately, "that hanging in my opinion is much the easier
sentence of the two. I should ask to be hanged if I were
Adderley."
"Would you indeed?" Sir Beverley
sounded supremely contemptuous.
But Piers did not seem to notice.
"Besides, there are so many murderers in the world," he said,
"though it's only the few who get punished. I'm sorry for the few
myself. Its damned bad luck, human nature being what it is."
"You don't know what you're
talking about," said Sir Beverley.
"All right; let's talk about
something else," said Piers. "Caesar had a glorious mill with that
Irish terrier brute at the Vicarage this afternoon. I couldn't
separate 'em, so I just joined in. We'd have been at it now if we
had been left to our own devices." He broke into his sudden boyish
laugh. "But a kind lady came out of the Vicarage garden and flung
the contents of a bedroom jug over the three of us. Rather plucky
of her, what? I'm afraid I wasn't over-complimentary at the moment,
but I've had time since to appreciate her tact and presence of
mind. I'm going over to thank her to-morrow."
"Who was it?" growled Sir
Beverley suspiciously. "Not that little white owl, Mrs.
Lorimer?"
"Mrs. Lorimer! Great Scott, no!
She'd have squealed and run to the Reverend Stephen for protection.
No, this was a woman, not an owl. Her name is Denys—Mrs. Denys she
was careful to inform me. They've started a mother's help at the
Vicarage. None too soon I should say. Who wouldn't be a mother's
help in that establishment?"
Sir Beverley uttered a dry laugh.
"Daresay she knows how to feather her own nest. Most of 'em
do."
"She knows how to keep her head
in an emergency, anyhow," remarked Piers.
"Feline instinct," jeered Sir
Beverley.
Piers looked across with a laugh
in his dark eyes. "And feline pluck, sir," he maintained.
Sir Beverley scowled at him. He
could never brook an argument. "Oh, get away, Piers!" he said. "You
talk like a fool."
Piers turned his whole attention
to devouring crumpets, and there fell a lengthy silence. He rose
finally to set down his empty plate and help himself to some more
tea.
"That stuff is poisonous by now,"
said Sir Beverley.
"It won't poison me," said
Piers.
He drank it, and returned to the
hearth-rug. "I suppose I may smoke?" he said, with a touch of
restraint.
Sir Beverley was lying back in
his chair, gazing straight up at him.
Suddenly he reached out a
trembling hand.
"You're a good boy, Piers," he
said. "You may do any damn thing you like."
Piers' eyes kindled in swift
response. He gripped the extended hand. "You're a brick, sir!" he
said. "Look here! Come along to the billiard-room and have a
hundred up! It'll give you an appetite for dinner."
He hoisted the old man out of his
chair before he could begin to protest. They stood together before
the great fire, and Sir Beverley straightened his stiff limbs. He
was half a head taller than his grandson.
"What a fellow it is!" he said
half laughing. "Why can't you sit still and be quiet? Don't you
want to read the paper? I've done with it."
"So have I," said Piers. He swept
it up with one hand as he spoke and tossed it recklessly on to the
blaze. "Come along, sir! We haven't much time."
"Now what did you do that for?"
demanded Sir Beverley, pausing. "Do you want to set the house on
fire? What did you do it for, Piers?"
"Because I was a fool," said
Piers with sudden, curious vehemence. "A damn fool sir, if you want
to know. But it's done now. Let it burn!"
The paper flared fiercely and
crumbled to ashes. Sir Beverley suffered himself to be drawn
away.
"You're a queer fellow, Piers,"
he said. "But, taking 'em altogether, I should say there are a good
many bigger fools in the world than you."
"Thank you, sir," said
Piers.