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He did not know the position of the dining room, nor did he want to. A servant seeing him, and taking it for granted that at this late hour he did not want to dress, opened a door.
Next minute he was seated alone at a large table, stared at by defunct Rochesters and their wives, and spreading his table napkin on his knees.
The dinner was excellent, though simple enough. English society has drifted a long way from the days when Lord Palmerston sat himself down to devour two helpings of turtle soup, the same of cod and oyster sauce, a huge plateful of York ham, a cut from the joint, a liberal supply of roast pheasant, to say nothing of kickshaws and sweets; the days when the inside of a n.o.bleman after dinner was a provision store floating in sherry, hock, champagne, old port, and punch.
Nothing acts more quickly upon the nervous system than food; before the roast chicken and salad were served, Jones found himself enjoying his dinner, and, more than that, enjoying his position.
The awful position of the morning had lost its terrors, the fog that had surrounded him was breaking. Wrecked on this strange, luxuriant, yet hostile coast, he had met the natives, fed with them, fought them, and measured their strength and cunning.
He was not afraid of them now. The members of the Senior Conservative Club Camp had left him unimpressed, and the wild beast Voles had bequeathed to him a lively contempt for the mental powers of the man he had succeeded.
Rightly or wrongly, all Lords caught a tinge of the lurid light that shewed up Rochester's want of vim and mental hitting power.
But he did not feel a contempt for Lords as such. He was longing to appreciate the fact that to be a Lord was to be a very great thing. Even a Lord who had let his estates run to ruin--like himself.
A single gla.s.s of iced champagne--he allowed himself only one--established this conviction in his mind, also the recognition that the flunkeys no longer oppressed him, they rather pleased him. They knew their work and performed it perfectly, they hung on his every word and movement.
Yesterday, sitting where he was, he would have been feeling out of place, and irritable and awkward. Even a few hours ago he would have felt oppressed and wanting to escape somewhere by himself. What lent him this new magic of a.s.surance and sense of mastery of his position?
Undoubtedly it was his battle with Voles.
Coffee was served to him in the smoking room, and there, sitting alone with a cigar, he began clearly and for the first time to envisage his plans for the future.
He could drop everything and run. Book a pa.s.sage for the United States, enter New York as Lord Rochester, just as a diver enters the sea, and emerge as Jones. He could keep the eight thousand pounds with a clear conscience--or couldn't he?
This point seemed a bit obscure.
He did not worry about it much. The main question had not to do with money. The main question was simply this, shall I be Victor Jones for the future, or shall I be the Earl of Rochester? The twenty-first Earl of Rochester?
Shall I clear out, or stick to my guns? Remain boss of this show and try and make something of the wreckage, or sneak off with nothing to show for the most amazing experience man ever underwent?
Rochester had sneaked off. He was a quitter. Jones had once read a story in the Popular Magazine, in which a Railway Manager had cast scorn on a ne'er-do-well. "G.o.d does surely hate a quitter," said the manager.
These words always remained with him. They had crystallised his sentiments in this respect: the quitter ranked in his mind almost with the sharper.
All the same the temptation to quit was strong, even though the temptation to stay was growing.
A loophole remained open to him. It was not necessary to decide at once; he could throw down his cards at any moment and rise from the table if the game was getting too much for him, or if he grew tired of it.
He saw difficult times ahead for him in the mess in which Rochester had left his affairs--that was, perhaps, his strongest incentive to remain.
He was roused from his reverie by voices in the hall. Loud cheery voices.
A knock came to the door and a servant announced: "Sir Hugh Spicer and Captain Stark to see you, my Lord." Jones sat up in his chair. "Show them in," said he.
The servant went out and returned ushering in a short bibulous looking young man in evening dress covered with a long fawn coloured overcoat; this gentleman was followed by a half bald, evil looking man of fifty or so, also in evening attire.
This latter wore a monocle in what Jones afterwards mentally called, "his twisted face."
"Look at him!" cried the young man, "sitting in his blessed arm chair and not dressed. Look at him!"
He lurched slightly as he spoke, and brought up at the table where he hit the inkstand with the cane he was carrying, sending inkpot and pens flying. Jones looked at him.
This was Hughie. Pillar of the Criterion bar, President of the Rag Tag Club, baronet and detrimental--and all at twenty three.
"Leave it alone, Hughie," said Stark, going to the silver cigar box and helping himself. "Less of that blessed cane, Hughie--why, Jollops, what ails you?"
He stared at Jones as he lit a cigar. Jones looked at him.
This was Spencer Stark, late Captain in His Majesty's Black Hussars, gambler, penniless, always well dressed, and always well fed--Terrible.
Just as beetles are beetles, whether dressed in tropical splendour or the funereal black of the English type, so are detrimentals detrimentals. Jones knew his men.
"I beg your pardon," said he, "did you mean that name for me?"
He rose as he spoke, and crossing to the bell rang it. They thought he was speaking in jest and ringing for drinks; they laughed, and Hughie began to yell, yell, and slash the table with his cane in time to what he was yelling.
This beast, who was never happy unless smashing gla.s.ses, making a noise or tormenting his neighbours, who had never been really sober for the s.p.a.ce of some five years, who had destroyed a fine estate, and broken his mother's heart, seemed now endeavouring to break his w.a.n.ghee cane on the table.
The noise was terrific.
The door opened and calves appeared.
"Throw that ruffian out," said Jones.
"Out with him," cried Hughie, throwing away his cane at this joke. "Come on, Stark, let's shove old Jollops out of doors."
He advanced to the merry attack, and Stark, livened up by the other, closed in, receiving a blow on the midriff that seated him in the fender.
The next moment Hughie found himself caught by a firm hand, that had somehow managed to insert itself between the back of his collar and his neck, gripping the collar.
Choking and crowing he was rushed out of the room and across the hall to the front door, a running footman preceding him. The door was opened and he was flung into the street.
The ejection of Stark was an easier matter. The hats and coats were flung out and the door shut finally.
"If either of those guys comes here again," said Jones to the acolyte, "call an officer--I mean a constable."
"Yes, my Lord."
"I wonder how many more people I will have to fling out of this house,"
said he to himself, as he returned to the smoking room. "My G.o.d, what a mess that chap Rochester must have made all round. Bar b.u.mmers like those! Heu!"
He ordered the ink to be cleared up, and then he sent for Mr. Church. He was excited.
"Church," said he. "I've shot out two more of that carrion. You know all the men I have been fool enough to know. If they come here again tell the servants not to let them in."
But he had another object in sending for Church. "Where's my cheque book?" he asked.
Church went to the bureau and opened a lower drawer.