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"I suppose so," he nodded, noticing the snowy neck which the new coiffure revealed. It was becoming evident to him that Dulcie had her own vanities--little pathetic vanities which touched him as he glanced at the reconstructed first communion dress and the drooping hyacinth pinned at the waist, and the cheap white slippers on a foot as slenderly constructed as her long and narrow hands.
"Did your mother die long ago, Dulcie?"
"Yes."
"In America?"
"In Ireland."
"You look like her, I fancy--" thinking of Soane.
"I don't know."
Barres had heard Soane hold forth in his cups on one or two occasions--nothing more than the vague garrulousness of a Celt made more loquacious by the whiskey of one Grogan--something about his having been a gamekeeper in his youth, and that his wife--"G.o.d rest her!"--might have held up her head with "anny wan o' thim in th' Big House."
Recollecting this, he idly wondered what the story might have been--a young girl's perverse infatuation for her father's gamekeeper, perhaps--a handsome, common, ignorant youth, reckless and irresponsible enough to take advantage of her--probably some such story--resembling similar histories of chauffeurs, riding-masters, grooms, and coachmen at home.
The Prophet came noiselessly into the studio, stopped at sight of his little mistress, twitched his tail reflectively, then leaped onto a carved table and calmly began his ablutions.
Barres got up and wound up the Victrola. Then he kicked aside a rug or two.
"This is to be a real party, you know," he remarked. "You don't dance, do you?"
"Yes," she said diffidently, "a little."
"Oh! That's fine!" he exclaimed.
Dulcie got off the sofa, shook out her reconstructed gown. When he came over to where she stood, she laid her hand in his almost solemnly, so overpowering had become the heavenly sequence of events.
For the rite of his hospitality had indeed become a rite to her. Never before had she stood in awe, enthralled before such an altar as this man's hearthstone. Never had she dreamed that he who so wondrously served it could look at such an offering as hers--herself.
But the miracle had happened; altar and priest were accepting her; she laid her hand, which trembled, in his; gave herself to his guidance and to the celestial music, scarcely seeing, scarcely hearing his voice.
"You dance delightfully," he was saying; "you're a born dancer, Dulcie. I do it fairly well myself, and I ought to know."
He was really very much surprised. He was enjoying it immensely. When the Victrola gave up the ghost he wound it again and came back to resume. Under his suggestions and tutelage, they tried more intricate steps, devious and ambitious, and Dulcie, unterrified by terpsich.o.r.ean complications, surmounted every one with his whispered coaching and expert aid.
Now it came to a point where time was not for him. He was too interested, enjoying it too genuinely.
Sometimes, when they paused to enable him to resurrect the defunct music in the Victrola, they laughed at the Prophet, who sat upon the ancient carved table, gravely surveying them. Sometimes they rested because he thought she ought to--himself a trifle pumped--only to find, to his amazement, that he need not be solicitous concerning her.
A tall and ancient clock ringing midnight from clear, uncompromising bells, brought Barres to himself.
"Good Lord!" he exclaimed, "this won't do! Dear child, I'm having a wonderful time, but I've got to deliver you to your father!"
He drew her arm through his, laughingly pretending horror and haste; she fled lightly along beside him as he whisked her through the hall and down the stairs.
A candle burned on the desk. Soane sat there, asleep, and odorous of alcohol, his flushed face buried in his arms.
But Soane was what is known as a "sob-souse"; never ugly in his cups, merely inclined to weep over the immemorial wrongs of Ireland.
He woke up when Barres touched his shoulder, rubbed his swollen eyes and black, curly head, gazed tragically at his daughter:
"G'wan to bed, ye little scut!" he said, getting to his feet with a terrific yawn.
Barres took her hand:
"We've had a wonderful party, haven't we, Sweetness?"
"Yes," whispered the child.
The next instant she was gone like a ghost, through the dusky, whitewashed corridor where distorted shadows trembled in the candlelight.
"Soane," said Barres, "this won't do, you know. They'll sack you if you keep on drinking."
The man, not yet forty, a battered, middle-aged by-product of hale and reckless vigour, pa.s.sed his hands over his temples with the dignity of a Hibernian Hamlet:
"The harp that wanst through Tara's halls--" he began; but memory failed; and two tears--by-products, also, of Grogan's whiskey--sparkled in his reproachful eyes.
"I'm merely telling you," remarked Barres. "We all like you, Soane, but the landlord won't stand for it."
"May G.o.d forgive him," muttered Soane. "Was there ever a landlord but he was a tyrant, too?"
Barres blew out the candle; a faint light above the Fu-dog outside, over the street door, illuminated the stone hall.
"You ought to keep sober for your little daughter's sake," insisted Barres in a low voice. "You love her, don't you?"
"I do that!" said Soane--"G.o.d bless her and her poor mother, who could hould up her pretty head with anny wan till she tuk up with th' like o' me!"
His brogue always increased in his cups; devotion to Ireland and a lofty scorn of landlords grew with both.
"You'd better keep away from Grogan's," remarked Barres.
"I had a bite an' a sup at Grogan's. Is there anny harrm in that, sorr?"
"Cut out the 'sup,' Larry. Cut out that gang of b.u.ms at Grogan's, too.
There are too many Germans hanging out around Grogan's these days. You Sinn Feiners or Clan-na-Gael, or whatever you are, had better manage your own affairs, anyway. The old-time Feinans stood on their own st.u.r.dy legs, not on German beer-skids."
"Wisha then, sorr, d'ye mind th' ould song they sang in thim days:
"_Then up steps Bonyparty An' takes me by the hand, And how is ould Ireland, And how does she shtand?
It's a poor, disthressed country As ever yet was seen, And they're hangin' men and women For the wearing of the green!_
_Oh, the wearing of the_----"
"That'll do," said Barres drily. "Do you want to wake the house? Don't go to Grogan's and talk about Ireland to any Germans. I'll tell you why: we'll probably be at war with Germany ourselves within a year, and that's a pretty good reason for you Irish to keep clear of all Germans. Go to bed!"