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"And Mama likes to sit in the drawing-room," said Hilda.
"In any case," Laurence said, indulgently, "I shouldn't feel at ease in the drawing-room. So I shall not disturb Mama. I had thought of suggesting that the children should be given another room in which to play, but to tell the truth I'm tired of moving furniture about. The fact is I miss my vicarage study: it was my own."
"Yes, n.o.body at the vicarage ever thought of interrupting him, you see,"
Edith explained.
"Well," said John, roused by the necessity of getting Joan started upon her journey to interview Robert de Baudricourt, "there are several empty bedrooms upstairs. One of them could be transformed into a study for Laurence."
"That means more arranging of furniture," Laurence objected.
"Then there's the garret," said John. "You'd find your bureau up there."
Laurence smiled in order to show how well he understood that the suggestion was only playfulness on John's side and how little he minded the good-natured joke.
"There is one room which might be made--ah--conducive to good work, though at present it is occupied by a quant.i.ty of apples; they, however, could easily be moved."
"But I moved them in there from what is now your room," Hilda protested.
"It is good for apples to be frequently moved," said Laurence, kindly.
"In fact, the oftener they are moved, the better. And this holds good equally for pippins, codlins, and russets. On the other hand it means I shall lose half a day's work, because even if I _could_ make a temporary beginning anywhere else, I should have to superintend the arrangement of the furniture."
"But I thought you didn't want to have any more furniture arranging to do," Hilda contested, acrimoniously. "There are two quite empty rooms at the other end of the pa.s.sage."
"Yes, but I like the room in which the apples are. John will appreciate my desire for a sympathetic milieu."
"Come, come, we will move the apples," John promised, hurriedly.
Better that the apples should roll from room to room eternally than that he should be driven into offering Laurence a corner of the library, for he suspected that notwithstanding the disclaimer this was his brother-in-law's real objective.
"It doesn't say anything about apples in the encyclopedia," muttered Harold in an aggrieved voice. _"Apoplexy treatment of, Apothecaries measure, Appet.i.te loss of. This may be due to general debility, irregularity in meals, overwork, want of exercise, constipation, and many other...."_
"Goodness gracious me, whatever has the boy got hold of?" exclaimed his grandmother.
"Grandmama, if you mix Lanoline with an equal quant.i.ty of Sulphur you can cure Itch," Harold went on with his spectacles glued to the page.
"And, oh, Grandmama, you know you told me not to make a noise the other day because your heart was weak. Well, you're suffering from flatulence. The encyclopedia says that many people who are suffering from flatulence think they have heart disease."
"Will no one stop the child?" Grandmama pleaded.
Laurence s.n.a.t.c.hed away the book from his nephew and put it in his pocket.
"That book is mine, I believe, Harold," he said, firmly, and not even Hilda dared protest, so majestic was Laurence and so much fluttered was poor Grandmama.
John seized the opportunity to make his escape; but when he was at last seated before his table the feet of the first act limped pitiably; Laurence had trodden with all his might upon their toes; his work that morning was chiropody, not composition, and bungling chiropody at that.
After lunch Laurence was solemnly inducted to his new study, and he may have been conscious of an ecclesiastical parallel in the manner of his taking possession, for he made a grave joke about it.
"Let us hope that I shall not be driven out of my new living by being too--ah--broad."
His wife did not realize that he was being droll and had drawn down her lips to an expression of pained sympathy, when she saw the others all laughing and Laurence smiling his acknowledgments; her desperate effort to change the contours of her face before Laurence noticed her failure to respond sensibly gave the impression that she had nearly swallowed a loose tooth.
"Perhaps you'd like me to bring up your tea, dear, so that you won't be disturbed?" she suggested.
"Ah, tea ..." murmured Laurence. "Let me see. It's now a quarter-past two. Tea is at half-past four. I will come down for half an hour. That will give me a clear two hours before dinner. If I allow a quarter of an hour for arranging my table, that will give me four hours in all.
Perhaps considering my strenuous morning four hours will be enough for the first day. I don't like the notion of working after dinner," he added to John.
"No?" queried John, doubtfully. He had hoped that his brother-in-law would feel inspired by the port: it was easy enough to avoid him in the afternoon, especially since on the first occasion that he had been taken for a drive in the new dogcart he had evidently been imbued with a detestation of driving that would probably last for the remainder of his life; in fact he was talking already of wanting to sell Primrose and the vicarage chaise.
"Though of course on some evenings I may not be able to help it," added Laurence. "I may _have_ to work."
"Of course you may," John a.s.sented, encouragingly. "I dare say there'll be evenings when the mere idea of waiting even for coffee will make you fidgety. You mustn't lose the mood, you know."
"No, of course, I appreciate that."
"There's nothing so easily lost as the creative gift, Balzac said."
"Did he?" Laurence murmured, anxiously. "But I promise you I shall let nothing interfere with me _if_--" the conjunction fizzed from his mouth like soda from a syphon, "_if_ I'm in the--ah--mood. The mood--yes--ah--precisely." His brow began to lower; the mood was upon him; and everybody stole quietly from the room. They had scarcely reached the head of the stairs when the door opened again and Laurence called after Edith: "I should prefer that whoever brings me news of tea merely knocks without coming in. I shall a.s.sume that a knock upon my door means tea. But I don't wish anybody to come in."
Laurence disappeared. He seemed under the influence of a strong mental aphrodisiac and was evidently guaranteeing himself against being discovered in an embarra.s.sing situation with his Muse.
"This is very good for me," thought John. "It has taught me how easily a man may make a confounded a.s.s of himself without anybody's raising a finger to warn him. I hope I didn't give that sort of impression to those two women on board. I shall have to watch myself very carefully in future."
At this moment Emily announced that Lawyer Deacle was waiting to see Mr.
Touchwood, which meant that the twenty-acre field was at last his. The legal formalities were complete; that very afternoon John had the pleasure of watching the fierce little Kerry cows munch the last gra.s.s they would ever munch in his field. But it was nearly dusk when they were driven home, and John lost five b.a.l.l.s in celebrating his triumph with a bra.s.sy.
Laurence appeared at tea in a velveteen coat, which probably provided the topic for the longest whisper that even Frida had ever been known to utter.
"Come, come, Frida," said her father. "You won't disturb us by saying aloud what you want to say." He had leaned over majestically to emphasize his rebuke and in doing so brushed with his sleeve Grandmama's wrist.
"Goodness, it's a cat," the old lady cried, with a shudder. "I shall have to go away from here, Johnnie, if you have a cat in the house. I'd rather have mice all over me than one of those horrid cats. Ugh! the nasty thing!"
She was not at all convinced of her mistake even when persuaded to stroke her son-in-law's coat.
"I hope it's been properly shooed out. Harold, please look well under all the chairs, there's a good boy."
During the next few days John felt that he was being in some indefinable way ousted by Laurence from the spiritual mastery of his own house. John was averse from according to his brother-in-law a greater forcefulness of character than he could ascribe to himself; if he had to admit that he really was being supplanted somehow, he preferred to search for the explanation in the years of theocratic prestige that gave a background to the all-pervasiveness of that sacerdotal personality. Yet ultimately the impression of his own relegation to a secondary place remained elusive and incommunicable. He could not for instance grumble that the times of the meals were being altered nor complain that in the smallest detail the domestic mechanism was being geared up or down to suit Laurence; the whole sensation was essentially of a spiritual eviction, and the nearest he could get to formulating his resentment (though perhaps resentment was too definite a word for this vague uneasiness) was his own gradually growing opinion that of all those at present under the Ambles roof Laurence was the most important. This loss of importance was bad for John's work, upon which it soon began to exert a discouraging influence, because he became doubtful of his own position, hypercritical of his talent, and timid about his social ability. He began to meditate the long line of failures to dramatize the immortal tale of Joan of Arc immortally, to see himself dangling at the end of this long line of inept.i.tudes and to ask himself whether bearing in mind the vastness of even our own solar system it was really worth while writing at all. It could not be due to anything or anybody but Laurence, this sense of his own futility; not even when a few years ago he had reached the conclusion that as a realistic novelist he was a failure had he been so profoundly conscious of his own insignificance in time and s.p.a.ce.
"I shall have to go away if I'm ever to get on with this play," he told himself.
Yet still so indefinite was his sense of subordinacy at Ambles that he accused his liver (an honest one that did not deserve the reproach) and bent over his table again with all the determination he could muster.
The concrete fact was still missing; his capacity for self-deception was still robust enough to persuade him that it was all a pa.s.sing fancy, and he might have gone plodding on at Ambles for the rest of the winter if one morning about a week after Laurence had begun to write, the door of his own library had not opened to the usurper, ma.n.u.script in hand.
"I don't like to interrupt you, my dear fellow.... I know you have your own work to consider ... but I'm anxious for your opinion--in fact I should like to read you my first act."
It was useless to resist: if it were not now, it would be later.
"With pleasure," said John. Then he made one effort. "Though I prefer reading to myself."
"That would involve waiting for the typewriter. Yes, my screed is--ah--difficult to make out. And I've indulged in a good many erasures and insertions. No, I think you'd better let me read it to you."