s omen) . , . f :- .' GERALD HANBURY, BACHELOR. TOO MANY WOMEN A BACHELOR'S STORY SECOND EDITION NEW YORK FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY PUBLISHERS COPYRIGHT, 1910, BY FREDERICK A. STOKES COMPANY September, 1910 SRLg URL' CONTENTS MM JANUARY The Complete Bachelors i An Unconventional Friendship 8 The House Party at the Bellew? 15 Clive Massey, Englishman 25 FEBRUARY A Citizen of Bohemia 33 Lady Fullard plays the Part of Candid Friend . . 39 Dulcie and Mrs. Mallow hold their Own .... 45 A Theatrical Ball 50 MARCH The Offices of the "Evening Star" 61 Mr. and Mrs. Ponting-M allow at Home 66 Massey excites Suspicion and justifies it , 70 The Correspondence of a Comedy Queen .... 78 Steward Dines Out 85 'APRIL Mrs. Mallow checkmates 93 Cynthia Cochrane makes another Conquest .... 102 "A Young Man's Fancy" 113 MAY The Philosopher in Hyde Park ........ 125 " East of the Sun, West of the Moon" . ., .. , ; . 133 Massey champions the Stage . . . . . .- . :w 143 'A Dialogue at a Dance . . . .- . .-, . . . 149 JUNE The Capture of Major Griffiths ISS An 'Actress Interviewed 161 Family Cares !69 Miss Audrey Maitland goes to Royal Ascot and returns 176 CONTENTS PADS JULY A Festival in Bohemia .......;..,.. 189 Lords and Ladies 197 The Major Married 201 A Scene behind the Scenes , ; . 207 'AUGUST Mrs. Mallow is found out 221 The Parable of the Man who did 229 Romance and a Cricket Week 235 SEPTEMBER Steward makes a Confession of Faith 247 Ben Machree Lodge, Rosshire, N. B 256 George Burn's Escapade at Dieppe 269 OCTOBER The Progress of Mrs. Mallow 281 The Return of Major Griffiths 286 The Green-eyed Monster in Jermyn Street .... 294 A Crash in the Grecian Restaurant 300 NOVEMBER Steward tells an Old Tale 313 Cynthia Cochrane says Good-by 324 Back to Fleet Street 331 Two in a Fog 336 DECEMBER Hanbury v. Hanbury, Rev. Sturgis Intervening . . . 347 The Plight of a Fiance . , 354 A Bachelor Deceased 360 JANUARY Why do I keep single? Perhaps T love too many women too well, or, possibly, too many too little ! " JOHN OLIVER HOBBES, " The Ambassador," Act I. TOO MANY WOMEN Too Many Women JANUARY The Complete Bachelors 'An Unconventional Friend- ship The House Party at the Bellews' Clive Massey, Englishman MARRIAGE is a mug's game." George Burn screwed his eyeglass in with a grimace, and crossed his feet on the mantelpiece, as though he had said something clever. Archie Haines and myself exclaimed "Hear, hear!" We are both in the thirties, so we ought to have known better. At that moment the maid entered with a letter. " Another check from one of your Fleet Street pals, Hanbury?" asked Haines idly. I double the roles of barrister and " free lance " indifferently, yet Haines always talks as though I had found a gold mine. " No such luck," I replied, scrutinizing the envelope. " It's from my fond parent. Excuse me ! " and draw- ing out the contents I read the following: " MY DEAR GERALD : " We were glad to have news of you and your do- ings the other day, and to hear that you are making progress in that combination of law and literature which you call 'your profession.' But your mother and I are getting a little anxious about your future. You show no signs of settling down, although you are now at an age when most young men have undertaken TOO MANY WOMEN the responsibilities of marriage, and all tHat marriage means. (Nothing would give us greater pleasure than to hear you had concentrated your wandering affec- tions upon a particular object. I don't mean that you ought to propose to the first girl you meet, but I do think you should seriously contemplate matrimony. I offer you this intimate advice in your own interest. The middle-aged bachelor is a constant source of anxiety to himself and his friends, and I should be sorry to see you playing that unsatisfactory role. Moreover, the wider interests of life are not entered upon until one is married. " Your mother is the more concerned about you, as she thinks she notices a growing inclination on your part to frivolous self-indulgence. Let me say that I don't quite share her view, which is colored by her maternal anxiety, but I do think you want a little more ballast if your career is to be the successful one we have every reason to anticipate it will be. There is no better ballast than a wife. "YOUR AFFECTIONATE FATHER/' "George! Archie," I said, as I finished my private perusal of the document, " what clo you think of this ? " And I proceeded to repeat the contents aloud for my companions' benefit. George's only comment on my father's effusion was to whistle through his teeth, an objectionable habit which does not endear him to his friends. "A very proper letter/' remarked Haines. He is a stockbroker and enjoys his little joke. "It's a scandal, Hanbury, that you haven't long since recog- nized your responsibilities in the matter. You'll be getting gray-haired before you've found a wife." JANUARY 3 "I shall be gray-haired precious soon after I've found one," I retorted. "What about George, though ? Isn't he to be included in your indictment ? " " Oh, George ! " And Haines shrugged his shoulders. " George's heart is licensed to carry twelve inside. If Lady Lucy and the rest of them like to strap hang in his affections, it's no concern of ours. You're a respectable and responsible member of So- ciety. George isn't ! " George smiled fatuously. He positively reveled in his infamy. But if once the conversation gets on to George Burn and his escapades, it has a knack of staying there. This time I was determined it shouldn't. " Seriously," I said, " must I give up all this ? " and I waved my arm round the comfortable Jermyn Street room in which we sat, littered with the trophies of the bachelor from gun cases to pipe cleaners, "because my father thinks I want more ballast? Ballast!" "You needn't swear, HanEury!" interrupted Haines. " Think what you get in return ! " x " Five foot four of chiffon and lace, and a yard of milliner's bills every quarter," put in George, roused by the controversy from his reverie. " The fault I find with the whole system," he went on, " is that one never knows what one's getting. Put a wedding ring on a woman's finger, and you change her whole nature. The simple little girl from the vicarage, who ought to be a model of domesticity, makes a bee line for the Smart Set, while the fashionable young woman, who is to found a salon, and win her husband a place in the Cabinet, throws her curling tongs into the area, and becomes a District Visitor. Look at Basil ! " 4 TOO MANY WOMEN " Poor old Basil ! " Haines' voice had a reflective note of melancholy. " But then, what could you ex- pect from a fellow who thought all beautiful women were good, and whose idea of marriage was holding his wife's hand in the spare time he wasn't showing her off to an admiring world at the Carlton? Be- sides, Basil found his taste at twenty-eight wasn't quite the same as it had been three years earlier, and that he had nothing in common with his wife save selfishness and ignorance of life. He wanted to dine at home sometimes, but she didn't. He wanted to ask his own friends to shoot, but she had always filled the house with hers. Her notion of economy was to cut short her husband's cigars, and dock his wine bill. He thought he could retrench on his wife's dress al- lowance. As a consequence Basil lives at his club, and Mrs. B in her electric brougham." " And the best place for them," I said, as I got up from my chair by the fire, and crossing over to the American roll-top desk with its tangle of proofsheets and manuscripts, that are the heritage of the literary man, proceeded to seat myself in front of the neces- sary writing materials. " What shall I reply to my father?" George squirted some soda water into a glass. " Say his idea is all rot, and that you aren't * taking any.' " " Do put your suggestions in English, and not dialect!" George made a fresh start. " My dear Dad," he jdictated. I laid my pen down. " If you can't do better than that, you must leave it to Archie. Archie ? " And I turned to where Haines lay stretched at ease. JANUARY 5 "What line do you want me to take?" that in- dividual asked. "Tentative or abrupt, a gentle toy- ing with the proposal, or a stern rejection ? " " Please yourself," I said. " Only don't be too dramatic ! " Haines cleared his throat and began: "Your letter has come as a great surprise to me, but a wholesome one. I realize how little I have done to deserve your affection, and how ill I have requited it by my indolence and selfishness. I see things in their true light at last, and am prepared to meet your wishes in every way. 'Please put up my banns as soon as possible with any lady you like, and your choice in the matter shall be that of your repentant son, Gerald." " There's a model of filial obedience for you," and Haines looked at me for approval. " Why, you haven't taken a word of it down, Hanbury ! " " I could have done better for you than that," ex- claimed George. "My dear Archie," I said, "if you knew my father's taste in the fair sex you wouldn't leave the choice to him. Also you magnify my sense of duty. I may be thoughtless, but I'm not qualifying for an asylum just yet. Try again on the other tack." Haines assumed an expression of pained solicitude, but he obeyed. "Nothing could give me greater pleasure than to fall in with your and mother's idea. I know I have been an unsatisfactory son to you both " " Haines ! " I spoke sharply. " Not so much stress on the * unsatisfactory/ if you please ! I don't iwant lessons from you in how to behave to my peo- 6 TOO MANY WOMEN Haines, however, was wound up, and my admoni- tion passed unheeded. " and that I have caused you much anxiety in the past. For the future, it shall be my task to do all I can for you, to live within my allowance, to consort only with good companions, and generally to live a blameless life. But I regret I cannot obey you where marriage is concerned. I was born a bachelor " "Who ever heard of any one being born anything else ? " interrupted George, with an emphasis of scorn. " and a bachelor I shall remain, holding that with Woman 'distance lends enchantment to the view/ Your devoted son, Gerald." I rose and held out my hand to Haines. " Archie, there's a fortune awaiting you in the East as a pro- fessional letter writer, but you're of no use to me. I'll do the job for myself when you and George have gone." " Answer the confounded thing in any way you like, Hanbury," growled Haines, as the pair made a con- sorted raid on my whisky and cigarettes preparatory to departure. " You might display a little gratitude, anyhow." I held the door open. " I'm full of gratitude to you for showing me how not to do it. If I sent your precious letter I should be either married to a female who would have no thoughts above following the beagles, or find myself cut off with a shilling as a hypocrite." " You know nothing about diplomacy," retorted the retreating Haines. " You know less about my father." And the door closed on him. Then I sat down again and wrote this : JANUARY 7 " DEAR FATHER : " It's awfully good of you and mother to be so con- cerned about my prospects, professional and matri- monial. I'm not doing much in the way of bar work yet, as I don't possess the influence or ability which make for success on the part of the briefless barrister. If I do happen to meet the daughter of a leading so- licitor at a dance or elsewhere she's always so plain that I can't persuade myself to advance my legal pros- pects at the expense of my reputation as a man of taste. "As regards your advice that I should 'seriously contemplate matrimony,' I do contemplate it seriously, so seriously that I can't undertake it for the present. I've not got the qualities to make a woman happy. I am too particular about my meals, and I should in- sist upon smoking in the drawing-room. I should hate to shatter any young girl's ideals of my sex. If I married an unselfish woman, I'd make her miserable, if a selfish one, she'd make me miserable. Perhaps some day I may come across a good and beautiful girl who will look after me as a labor of love. I want too much supervision to marry any one who doesn't fully realize the responsibilities she is undertaking. "You say I show no signs of settling down. I should be false to my ambitions and ideals if I under- went the process of settling down that most married men undergo, the settling down that one sees in a pudding, into a solid and indigestible mass. I don't want my horizon limited by the four walls of a suburban villa. I am confident I can be successful on my own lines, but they are not the narrow gauge of married life. Of course, I am prepared to admit that my views may undergo a change. At present I am S TOO MANY WOMEN heart-whole, and likely to remain so. When I am mortally wounded in the duel of sex, my outcry will summon the only physician able to effect a cure, namely the rector of a fashionable church. " Please impress upon mother that what she thinks is self-indulgence is merely the necessary manifesta- tion of the artistic life. You might add that I am al- ways on the look-out for a cheaper cigar than a shill- ing Upman that is fit to smoke, but so far I haven't been able to find one. " Your affectionate son, "GERALD." After all, there are some things a man does best for himself. Whatever Haines may be able to do in the way of "bulling the market" and "selling a bear," he can't write letters. I am beginning to think that I haven't handled my acquaintance with Cynthia Cochrane with quite the sure touch I am accustomed to show. This morning I got the following note from her, written with a spluttering nib in her dressing-room at the " Alcazar " Theater : " DEAR OLD BOY : " I'm beginning to get a wee bit angry with you for not coming to look me up once last week. I don't like being neglected by my friends, and especially such an old one as you are. Do be a pal, Gerald, and come and see me! I've had the 'blues' lately, and you're the best person I know to chase them away. "Yours with love (if you want it), " CYNTHIA/' JANUARY 9 Cynthia was with a touring company at a Devon- shire seaside place when I first met her some nine years ago now. I was a member of what was, in Oxford language, called a " reading party," but which really proved an association of five undergraduates for golfing, fishing anything, in fact, rather than for the acquisition of sufficient legal knowledge to pass the examiners in the Honor School of Law. It was a windy morning on the Esplanade, and Miss Coch- rane's hat blew off just as she came abreast of George Burn and myself, who were sitting on the sea wall discussing her points. The hat was in a particularly frisky mood, and it gamboled and skipped down the stone causeway as if it were in training for the sprint at the 'Varsity sports. George and I gave it twenty yards start, and then raced after it like two gray- hounds slipped for the Waterloo Cup. George pos- sessed a better turn of speed than I did, but just as he reached the quarry it gave a swerve, and I pounced on it with such vigor that my fist went through the straw crown. What with George's language and Miss Cochrane's laughter when I brought the wreckage back, I lost my head and asked her to come to tea with us as a sign that I had her forgiveness. With a friend she came, and conquered, and the reading party took five stalls for the remaining nights of the Golden Belle. The climax of our hospitality was reached by a supper-party after the last performance on the Satur- day, and for which the local cellars and provision merchants' were ransacked for appropriate delicacies. To the hosts, whose hearts glowed with a delightful sense of Bohemian abandon, the festivity was a triumph, unclouded by the landlady's hair-net falling 10 TOO MANY WOMEN into the soup tureen, or the hired waiter's partiality for " bubbly water," indulged in behind the screen. As for our guests, we thought them peerless, although one of the ladies was old enough to be our mother, another's complexion ran into crimson streaks during the feast, and a third's conversational resources were limited to an explanation why she ought to have been the leading lady, from which position apparently some " envious cat " had ousted her. I was finally aroused, by her eternal iteration of this fact, to the point of telling her that any one with half an eye could see why she wasn't playing the "lead." Thereupon she relapsed into silence for the rest of the proceedings. We speeded the company away at midday on Sunday, and I was left with a signed photograph, and a scented lace handkerchief, to mark the episode. The mental stress of my " Schools," and the excite- ments of autumn sport, drove recollection of the affair from my thoughts. Following my golden rule, I made no attempt to correspond with Cynthia. I dis- courage casual correspondence between the sexes on the ground that the sentiments on the paper are never interpreted in the sense in which they were written. I don't like a girl reading between the lines, and then getting annoyed because one's actions don't come up to her imaginary standard. If I have anything to tell a woman, I'll unburden myself in speech. When I write, " I'm so sorry I shan't see you till Tuesday, as I am going out of town," it means what it says, and not "O my darling, how the hours will drag till I gaze into your eyes once more." And yet nine women out of ten would put the second construction on the simple sentence if one had paid them any atten- tions. I repeat that I had forgotten about Cynthia JANUARY 11 till a postcard suddenly announced the end of the tour and Cynthia's arrival in London. Since then my acquaintance has run the normal course of such friendships a Covent Garden ball together, motor drives to the Metropole at Brighton, and the Star and Garter at Richmond, lunches at the Trocadero and Pagani's, a never-to-be-forgotten din- ner at Kettner's and suppers galore. Cynthia would be away for months at a time on a tour, undergoing the nerve-destroying experiences of Sunday train jour- neys from one end of England and Scotland to the other, of incessant shiftings of wardrobes and para- phernalia from theater to theater, of the discomforts of theatrical lodgings but so soon as ever she came back I would always hear from her, and we picked up our friendship where it had dropped, the threads un- raveled by time. Cynthia's touring days ended eighteen months ago with the securing of a pantomime engagement at the Paddington " Grand," where the sale of her picture postcards representing her as Little Boy Blue broke all records. Her performance in the character was so superior to the general standard of " principal boys " that Mason of the " Alcazar " secured her on a three years' contract, and immediately cast her for an impor- tant part in his "new and original musical play." I expected that, with the rise in her fortunes and con- sequent demand for her company on the part of the numerous section of society which regards supper with stage favorites as a form of tonic, I should see less and less of Cynthia, but with a constancy that it is unusual to find across the footlights, she continued to accept my invitations, even at the expense of other folks'. The great bond between the actress and myself 12 TOO MANY WOMEN is that we take each other's friendship as a matter of course, our intimacy needing none of those forced displays of affection to keep it going which so many theatrical acquaintanceships require. I have begun of late, however, to notice a subtle change in Cynthia's outlook on the world. She is beginning to wonder whether the stage does not unfit its votaries for family life. Usually so independent, she now proclaims the fact that she is tired of wander- ing about on her own; ordinarily so ambitious, she hesitated for a long time before she decided to sign her contract with Mason, and gain the advertisement of the "Alcazar." I don't like those symptoms, nor the firm belief she professes in platonic friendship. Now, if I am certain of one thing it is that such a state of suspended animation in the affections is im- possible for men and women. There can be no stand- ing still in friendship between the sexes. Sooner or later one of the pair will cross the frontier dividing friendship from love. It was at the dinner at Kettner's, served in one of the cabinets particuliers for which that famous Bohemian restaurant is justly renowned, where the soft-tinted hangings on the walls, the antique, gold- embossed furniture, and the general atmosphere of mellow peace and seclusion brooding over the old- world surroundings fill the guests with a sense of curious expectation, as though of some cherished secret of existence about to be revealed, it was at Kettner's that Cynthia caused me serious embarrass- ment by bursting into floods of tears and sobbing out how unhappy she was. I look upon the emotions of theatrical ladies as part of the business so much stage thunder but a man's vanity is inclined to take the JANUARY 13 individual feelings he arouses as unique and lasting. Were a woman to say that she liked me, I should believe she was my devoted admirer, but should another of my sex be the object of her avowal, I should unhesitatingly call him conceited, if he treated the matter as anything more than the lightest bad- inage. Therefore I took the display as a personal compliment, dropped the air of amused and tolerant cynicism I adopt, as a rule, for my own protection, and did my best to console Cynthia, my sympathy taking the extremely ineffective form of stroking her hand and telling her that the waiter must not see her with red eyes, that a becoming hat was not improved by being crushed against a dress coat, and that the darkest clouds have a silver lining an irritating aphorism bearing, by the way, no relation to the facts of life. Amidst the storm of weeping, I gathered that nobody cared for her, that I was very unkind, and she wished we had never met. I pointed out that there was no logical connection between her premises and conclusion, also that it was absurd to say that nobody cared for her, because I did. I meant neither more nor less than that. I am quite fond of Cynthia in a way; she is amusing and lively, with a point of view of her own, her life of independent exertion having given her a broader outlook than that pos- sessed by the insipid damsels of society, who relapse into silence as soon as they have exhausted the topics of the ballroom floor and the latest engagement. I am fond of Cynthia in a way, but not a marrying way, merely one of good fellowship. Woman-like, Cynthia read a good deal more into my sympathetic efforts, for she took an unfair advantage of me by turning up her face to be kissed. I believe I possess 14 TOO MANY WOMEN self-control in no slight degree, but it doesn't survive a test such as Cynthia submitted to it. I give a pair of blue eyes, a rosebud mouth and a dimpled chin any- thing they ask. I kissed Cynthia and more than once. After that it was no good protesting that I only took a fatherly interest in the welfare of a charming young actress, so I threw myself with zest into the role of an ardent lover, but it wasn't till next morning, with a damp fog showing white against my window- panes, that I realized I had, perhaps, overacted the part Since that night I have taken to seeing Cynthia not more than once a week, on the theory that " absence does not make the heart grow fonder," although in her case the system can't be said to have yielded satis- factory results. I object to district messenger boys coming round before I am out of my bath with frantic notes ordering me to be at the Marble Arch in a " taxi " at three, " third tree from the left." I don't like to be told to "hurry up with the earrings you promised me, because Cissy is making all the girls green with jealousy over her pearl necklace." What's Hecuba to me, or I to Hecuba ? All the same I must settle up something, and quickly. The worst is that, while I can exercise com- mon sense over the affair here in my rooms, that quality is conspicuous by its absence when I meet the fair enemy face to face. Anyhow, in my sober mo- ments I agree with Steward, my old colleague on the Evening Star, who once said to me in a moment of confidence, " Half the crimes and all the follies of the world are due to women. The chief advantage of Fleet Street is that they are there kept at arm's length generally behind a typewriter. The only editor I JANUARY; is knew who tolerated them compounded with his credi- tors for seven shillings and sixpence in the pound, but he was mentally bankrupt years before he filed his petition." George Burn holds similar views, but more coarsely expressed : " Women are all right as orna- ments in a drawing-room, or for driving in a hansom with, but they are infernal nuisances as a perma- nency." As George has three unmarried sisters I dis- count his opinion. The problem of my relations with Cynthia must wait. I can't be bothered to do anything just yet until I've decided once and for all whether I shall change my tailor for the fellow in Seville Row whom Haines recommended. My last tail coat was nothing less than an outrage. Still, I might as well run round this afternoon and take the little girl out for a drive to cheer her up. After the good times we've had to- gether, I mustn't be too abrupt in my behavior to her. Besides, her eyes have just the shade of blue I can't resist What a pity it is that there aren't more hostesses like Mrs. Bellew ! If there were, I should never suffer the agonies of doubt and hesitation that rack me when- ever I receive country-house invitations, doubts as to whether the discomfort of packing, traveling, and the cancelling of other engagements by excuses more or less ingenious will be compensated for by pleasures equal to those I am leaving behind in my flat, and the dwellings of hospitable cockneys. But about South- lands there can be no misgivings. From the tea at one's bedside at 8 A. M. till the last " nightcap " be- fore turning in any time after midnight, everything is done that can make the bachelor rejoice, The 16 TOO MANY WOMEN valeting is perfection, the bath is laid on exactly right, the hot dishes and fresh toast at breakfast outlast the appetite of the most voracious, and the appearance of the most belated guest. There is none of the dra- gooning of visitors in the choice of the day's pro- gramme, too often indulged in from a mistaken sense of hospitality, so one can shoot, fish, ride, play be- zique, or " kiss-in-the-ring " with equal freedom. Old Bellew doesn't keep his best wine and cigars for the Lord-Lieutenant and the county bigwigs, but puts '92 Pommery, and Havanas of a crop which never knew the Yankee and his manures, before briefless barristers and newly gazetted subalterns. His wife exercises equal generosity and taste in the matter of the girls she has staying with her. When she marched into the Hunt ball the other night at the head of her forces, she was followed by the acknowledged belles of the evening. Dolly Thurston and Faith Bellew would hold their own in Belgrave Square, or at the Ritz. Down in Loamshire they made all the other women look guys. But the favors I have received from Mrs. Bellew, and the favors I hope to receive, cannot blind me to the fact that there is a serious flaw in her character, which, in many of my friends' eyes, would outweigh everything in her favor. She is a matrimonial harpy, and lives for little else than to find husbands for Faith and Sybil. Now, matchmaking ought to require a license from the State, just as much as the carrying of fire arms, for I fail to see why a person may, with impunity, wreck two lives, when, in the latter case, carelessness only involves injury to an individual. Mrs. Bellew finds an intrinsic merit in matrimony which justifies her in attacking the celibacy of every JANUARY 17, bachelor crossing her threshold, on behalf of her two " olive branches," who might be suitably left to grow alone for a few years before being grafted elsewhere. We owe more to the gardening propensities of Adam and Eve than is usually reckoned. Faith, the eldest of Mrs. Bellew's girls, has the sweet and unselfish temperament which so often goes with brown eyes and a black bow in the hair. A model daughter, she is prepared to fall in with any of her masterful mother's plans, and take a spouse with the same unquestioning belief in her parent's competency and goodness of heart as in nursery days she received a box of bricks. Sybil, on the other hand, is one of those big, healthy girls, with a complexion that defies the arts of the toilet table, a manner that her friends describe as " bright," and her critics as " boisterous," and not an ounce of sentiment in her. Knowing Mrs. Bellew's methods I kept wide awake the first night at Southlands, and soon discovered from the way in which his hostess drew him to her side throughout the evening, smiled sweetly when he upset the mint sauce over her flowered silk at dinner, and sent him into the hall with Faith while the rest of us thought of something, " animal, vegetable, or mineral," that Major Griffiths was her prospective victim. The Major gave the impression that he had been born with a grape in his mouth and vine leaves in his hair; not so much from what he said, though that was worth listening to after the ladies had left the room, but from what he did with the various vint- ages that appeared in generous sequence. He had reached that age when every mother thought he was bound to succumb to the charms of her own child, and he was what a Socialist orator would have called " one 18 TOO MANY WOMEN of the idle rich." His fellow clubmen were divided on the point as to whether Griffiths was single from choice, or from the disillusionment of an unsuccessful affaire du cceur in his more active and romantic days, but whatever the cause which had made shipwreck of his domestic ideals, leaving him at forty-five a dere- lict, to the casual observer his mental outlook was twofold. When he was not engaged in thinking of his next meal, he was wondering how soon he could get a bridge four going. But Mrs. Bellew must have looked upon such a diagnosis as superficial, or else had had the benefit of a moment's unguarded confidence from the Major on one of those occasions, such as tea and hot scones after a wet day's shooting, or supper- time at a dance, when the soul of man is expansive and communicative. She, at all events, had no doubts about her and Faith's capacity to capture that much- assaulted citadel, the Major's heart. Once, in the long ago, Mrs. Bellew cherished the notion of a hopeless affection on my part for Sybil, a delusion founded largely, I am convinced, on my outspoken admiration for the latter's prowess at center- half in a mixed hockey match against a neighboring house party. Sybil, still in the school-room, and with her hair flying wild, performed prodigies of skill on that particular occasion, and was largely instrumental for her side's success, but earnest concentration has failed to recall any remembrance that I incriminated myself very deeply, or uttered sentiments which could have been construed into a pledge in a court of law, even with a jury of susceptible tradesmen ready to stretch every point of the evidence in order to show their sympathy with the fair plaintiff. A long course of flippancy on my part, however, has saved me from JANUARY 19 having Mrs. Bellew take the field in force against my inaction, because nothing is so effective in counter- acting the schemes of matchmaking chaperones as the assumption of an air of irresponsibility. The toils that would capture a lion are harmless to a mouse, and the social jester forms one of the congregation at the wedding of the man who takes himself seriously. But on the occasion of my visit last week to Southlands for two balls, and a third shoot through the covers, I was compelled to see a good deal of Sybil, even at the risk of " reviving old desires," as Omar Khayyam says, in certain quarters, for the simple reason that there was no other young woman disengaged to re- ceive my attentions. Griffiths was forced by the un- obtrusive yet effectual surveillance of Mrs. Bellew to dance attendance on Faith at a time of life when the last thing he wanted to do was to dance at all. Dolly Thurston, who, with her mother, Lady Susan, was also staying in the house, had already found a kindred soul in Give Massey, still up at the 'Varsity and unable to resist the appeal which her soft fluffi- ness and gentle ways made to his young manhood, while he had roused the girl's sympathetic interest by his recital of episodes from his unhappy and murky past, a pastime in which youths of such a blameless type as Massey usually excel. Dolly shared each stand of Massey's during the cover shooting, played his accompaniments after tea, and challenged him to post-prandial picquet in the quietest corner of the back drawing-room. When Lady Susan took it into her head to unburden herself of the hopes and fears con- nected with the social future of her daughter, I was thoroughly competent to reassure her on that score. As Lady Susan was short-sighted, I didn't feel justi- 20 TOO MANY WOMEN fied in spoiling Dolly's week by supporting my general proposition as to the girl's ability to take care of herself, with a particular instance. Lady Susan, for all she talks about Dolly, knows very little con- cerning her, an ignorance she shares with several worldly matrons of my acquaintance. I did my best under the circumstances to please everybody. Sybil had supper and three dances with me at the Hunt Ball, I took her twice into dinner without a murmur, and read the Field from cover to cover so as to be more fully equipped with topics of conversation congenial to her cast of mind. In de- fiance of all my natural instincts, Massey was left in undisputed possession of Miss Thurston's society. Moreover, I turned a deaf ear to the Major's appeals that I should come to his assistance and take upon my shoulders a share of those obligations which the hostess had laid on his. " Hanbury," he said once, when he had outstayed the others in the smoking-room, "you'd enjoy a talk with Miss Bellew ; she's no end of a clever little thing." " That's why you are such pals," I replied. " Op- posite drawn to opposite." Griffiths, who had buried his nose in his tumbler, turned a doleful face upon me at the conclusion of the draught. "I'm not a lady's man," he remarked. "Don't understand 'em, or want to, but I can't quite tell Mrs. Bellew that. I'd take it as very friendly, Hanbury, if you'd play up to the girl a bit, and knock any ideas out of the mother's head"; and Griffiths mopped his fiery face with a fiery bandanna. I refused to undertake such a task, not out of an unfriendly spirit to Griffiths for I had the same JANUARY 31 feeling for him that I have for a newly born infant, genuine pity that such helpless innocence has been cast on a rough world but because I was on my good be- havior while under Mr. Bellew's roof. His high pheasants are not to be lightly cast away out of quix- otic sympathy for one of his wife's victims. As the week dragged on I use the word " dragged " advisedly, for " duty," in spite of the many laudatory attributes the evangelists and poets endow it with, is essentially its own reward, no " purse of fifty sovs." being added where it is concerned I wished myself back in London London, which held Cynthia Cochrane, George Burn, the Club, and all the unhallowed delights of bachelorhood, and away from Southlands with its managing mother, and its managed daughters, Griffiths, who drew the best stand of the best drive of the best day, and then missed the rocketing birds because he felt so down on his luck, as he explained to me later, Massey, who monopolized the really nice girl of the party without any regard for his seniors' points of view. An English country house, "replete with every modern convenience," as the advertisements describe it, and surrounded by well-stocked covers, is less than nothing if the com- pany assembled in it is composed of inharmonious elements, and inharmonious they certainly were at Southlands last week. I might have left without a single pleasant memory other than the wine and cigars, had I not on the fifth day, while sitting with the rest in the hall after lunch that meal having been par- taken of indoors, owing to rain making outside sport impossible taken occasion to draw attention to the gloom on Major Griffiths' face. "Did you see a ghost last night?" demanded 23 TOO MANY WOMEN Give Massey. Ttie Major had the ghost of his dead peace of mind but no one thought of that. Lady Susan surveyed the shrinking soldier through her lorgnon. Griffiths is a modest man, and the inter- est he was arousing effectually seakd his lips. I was minded to offer some plausible explanation of his silence. I turned to Lady Susan. " The Major has a guilty conscience. As you make your bed, so must you lie upon it." "I regard that remark as extremely indelicate," replied the lady so addressed, with hauteur. " I am not accustomed, Mr. Hanbury, to make beds." " You mistake me," I rejoined hastily, and stumbled from bad to worse, " I was referring to the Major's bed." " That will do ! " Laidy Susan drew herself up with* all the frigid dignity at her command. "I am not concerned in the slightest with Major Griffiths' prep- arations for the night. You have forgotten your- self, Mr. Hanbury." After which, of course, I was in disgrace witH the chaperones. As I might as well be hanged for a sheep as for a lamb though there's not much lamb about Lady Susan I became reckless, and started " fives " on the billiard table until a sheet of plate glass had been broken, and the ivory balls chipped in- several places. Then I instigated the Major to refuse Faith's invitation to learn a new Patience, and ensconced him peacefully with Ruff's Guide to the Turf, while Dolly Thurston and I played cat's-cradle to the huge dis- gust of Massey, who was too unsophisticated to con- ceal his feelings, whereas you might put me on the rack, and I would wear the same expression that I JANUARY 23 do at a performance of Wagner. But my crowning indiscretion came after a dinner at which the Major and I broke all records of joviality, owing to our being temporarily freed from our respective encumbrances, and reveling instead in the smiles, he of Sybil with her sporting tastes, I of Dolly, who was punishing Massey for a display of jealousy by appreciation of my vein of humor. When the male element was left to itself and Mr. Bellew's cigars, the Major mixed what he called a " stirrup cup " out of numerous liqueurs, and fortified by this I marched into the hall at 10.15 p. M. and proposed "dark room," a game I have never found to fail as a source of innocent amusement. It takes the form of clearing the largest available room of superfluous furniture, extinguishing every ray of light in it, and then setting the players in their stock- inged feet to escape noiselessly without being caught by one of their number, who delays his entrance in the first instance into the room until the others shall have concealed themselves in any recess that strikes the individual fancy. The last person caught takes on the duty of catcher in the next round. In spite of the remonstrances of the chaperones against so terrifying a form of entertainment, the Major was appointed catcher by general acclamation. His heavy breathing, as he crept round and round the big central table of the dining-room, cleared of its appointments for the purpose, in pursuit of a faintly rustling petticoat, materially assisted the intended vic- tims. Then he could be heard swearing softly to him- self as he ran from the sideboard into a screen, and thence cannoned off into the fire-irons, and his prog- ress was so audible that every one eluded his clutch save myself, who was preoccupied with my efforts to 24 TOO MANY WOMEN solve the problem whose hand it was I had found my- self holding for a brief period behind the window cur- tains. My turn as catcher ended in disaster and dis- grace, for I adopted the original plan of taking up my position full length under the table, from which point of vantage I seized the first available ankle. There was a scream and a plunging noise, followed by a con- fused uproar, during which, with the rushing as of a mighty wind, the whole human contents of the room fled from all points of the compass into the hall, to be met by the hostile public opinion of the outraged mothers, since the spoil of my ingenuous tactics proved to be Clive Massey, who, taking advantage of the op- portunities offered by the game to make his peace with Dolly Thurston, was interrupted by my assault at an inopportune moment, and found himself unable to avoid dragging her to the ground. We failed to clear ourselves of the suspicions rest- ing on us, individually and collectively. Dolly was packed off to bed like a naughty child, the Bellew girls came under their mother's displeasure for no other reason I could see than that they had not given cause for anxiety, and Clive and I were fixed with the cold- est looks, he because he was ineligible, and I for hav- ing dared to originate so compromising a game. Griffiths alone had indulgence extended to him, an illustration of the irony of fate, since he, above every- thing else, was anxious to get into Mrs. Bellew's bad books rather than endure the baleful geniality, which even his slow intuition told him boded no good for his continued independence. The sole satisfactory result traceable to the night's doings was the healing of the breach between Massey and myself, an outcome of his gratitude to me for giving him a chance of " letting JANUARY 25 bygones be bygones." I showed my intention of taking an interest in the affairs of a sportsman like himself by inviting him to look me up in Jermyn Street on his return to town. Clive Massey is one of those fresh, clean-limbed Englishmen, a sight of whom makes one feel proud to be their fellow countrymen. The product of public school and University, he and his kind dance, shoot, and hunt through life if the paternal income allows. If it doesn't, they gravitate into the Indian native cav- alry, or the South African mounted police, or turn their hands to any job they can find in any country on the globe. They have few brains of the quality en- abling them to pass examinations, and no ambitions, but put them in a tight place in an outpost of civiliza- tion, and they extricate themselves, and those depend- ing on them, with a robust common sense and an in- nate courage and resourcefulness that only emerge from beneath their stolidity and reserve under the stress of danger. All the pedagogues in the length and breadth of England, relying on the arts and en- ticements of written and oral questions, are powerless to extract from Massey & Co. any knowledge of the kind that would seat them in Whitehall at home, or in official posts abroad. Commercially their virtues are valueless, imperially and socially they are beyond price. Not that Massey will ever feel the absence of money-making talent. He is a ward of Chancery, with a substantial property accumulating, under care- ful and thrifty management, fat revenues against the day when he will come into his own, and, in the eyes of the law, reach man's estate. I never wish for a better companion at dinner than 26 TOO MANY WOMEN the fellow. He begins the meal with enthusiasm, and continues on that note till the end, unlike some men I know who get anecdotal, morose, or sleepy, when they have disposed of the last course. But Massey so bub- bles over with la joie de vivre, et de la bonne cuisine that he rouses the whole table to action. He possesses a healthy zest for amusement, and a frank enthusiasm for the enjoyments that life holds out to him, with a complete absence of that self-conscious cynicism that too often marks and mars the Oxford man. His com- pany unseats black care from behind the horseman's back, and drives misogynists to seek human friend- ship, and rejected lovers to try their fate again. I speak from recent experience, because he was my guest only the other night, having kept me to the in- vitation extended casually at Southlands as soon as he conveniently could, for I found, when he turned up, resplendent in a white waistcoat, that he had only been in town two days and was due back in Oxford on the morrow. He was so eager to keep the tryst that he arrived while I was completing my toilet, but his punctuality allowed me to take a hint from his cos- tume, and discard the smoking jacket I had contem- plated for full dress. I can read the signs of the times as well as any one, and Massey's general " get up " spelled two words, and two words only "The Em- pire." I know better than to confine an undergraduate indoors after 9.30 p. M., especially when his Alma Mater will claim him within twenty-four hours. Dinner provided the usual topics, the whereabouts of mutual friends, athletics, sport, and musical comedy. Mentally I went back ten years and saw myself again as a healthy animal, determined to have a good time while I was young, filled with a vague and restless JANUARY 27 curiosity concerning the world outside the University, which, from the magic environment of Oxford, ap- peared as " through a glass darkly." The gray walls and clustering pinnacles of that enchanted city once more surrounded me as I listened to Massey's cheerful chatter about the chances of the Boat Race, the beauty of the waitress in the " Cozy Corner " tearooms at Carfax, the best place to dine in town for 35. 6d., and so on. He was prepared to test any and every thing in his search for what he called " Life," and I gradu- ally gathered that he thought I might be instrumental in opening some doors for him. I felt so grateful for the sense of lightheartedness he inspired in me that I let him pursue his conversational thread unchecked, till, just when I had brewed the coffee in a scientific glass crucible that makes excellent stuff when it doesn't burst in the process, and fixed him up with a cigar about a foot long, he remarked abruptly, " I suppose you know a lot of people, Hanbury? I don't mean our sort, but actors, singers, and all that lot ? " "I meet them sometimes," I said carelessly. "They're awfully interesting, aren't they?" " Some of them are amusing enough." Massey took the plunge. " You might introduce me, if you run across any when I'm around." " I'll do anything I can, in my small way, of course," I replied. "When you mention actors, I conclude you mean the female of the species." " Anything that comes along will suit me," was Massey's guarded reply, but I could see fie was pleased. It was my turn to cross-examine him. " You seemed to be having a good time at tfie Bellews'. Miss Thurston's attractive, don't you think?" 38 TOO MANY WOMEN Miss Thurston's admirer blew a smoke ring, but vouchsafed no reply. " She's supposed to be half engaged to her cousin/' I went on, with studied calm. " That's the worst of relatives, they start at an unfair advantage with the use of the Christian name. It's to be hoped in her case the man won't foreclose on his mortgage just yet" Massey's cigar ash dropped on his trousers. Other- wise he displayed commendable self-control. " That yarn's not true," he said. " Miss Thurston told me herself that she had never cared for anybody, and that she would only marry some one she re- spected." " You've known her a long time ? " I queried, with a trace of malice. "No, not so very long," he reluctantly confessed. " In fact, I met her at Southlands for the first time, but we're the best of pals now. I don't take much to the mother, though." The picture of the lover in Keats' " Ode on a Gre- cian Urn " rose before me. " Forever wilt thou love, and she be fair! " I quoted under my breath, with this mental addition, "and like him you'll never get any forrader, my friend." Massey, under the combined influence of dinner, tobacco, and sentiment, had sunk into reverie, in which doubtless he was rehearsing the role of Young Lochinvar, a reverie which I forbore to shatter. Romantic dreams such as his are too fra- grant and rare to be lightly dispelled by the cold common sense of the worldly-wise. I could have en- lightened him as to his ladylove's inconstancy in the past, and exposed the absence of accurate perspective in her fancy picture of her future husband. But I JANUARY 29 refrained. Instead I gave my guest a quarter of an hour's grace, and then took him along to his chosen music hall, where a humorous fellow on the stage was breaking plates by the score. The sight restored Mas- sey to his true self ; he threw off a gravity unnatural to him, and dragged me up and down the promenade during half the ballet, greeting everybody by their Christian names, and generally behaving as though he were an admiral on his own quarter-deck. On our parting he assured me I was the best fellow he had ever met, and with the glow of this unsought- for compliment warming the cockles of my heart, I ended the second stage of a friendship that promised me instruction and entertainment. FEBRUARY " Marriage is to me apostasy, profanation of the sanctuary of my soul, violation of my manhood, sale of my birthright, shame- ful surrender, ignominious capitulation, acceptance of defeat. I shall decay like a thing that has served its purpose, and is done with; I shall change from a man with a future to a man with a past. . . . The young men will scorn me as one who has sold out; to the women I, who have always been an enigma and a possibility, shall be merely somebody else's property and damaged goods at that; a second-hand man at best." BERNARD SHAW, "Man and Superman," Act IV. FEBRUARY 'A Citizen of Bohemia Lady 'Fullard plays the 'part of Candid Friend Dulcie and Mrs. Mallow hold their own 'A Theatrical Ball 1WAS having an argument to-day with Haines about Bohemianism. He said that a Bohemian was a " blighter who never washed, ate with his fingers, and let his hair grow as long as Samson's." Haines is a master of forcible and picturesque speech, and as he warmed to his work he quite sur- passed himself. " I know the fellows," he continued. " They slouch about Soho with seedy squash hats, and seedier fur overcoats which they pinched from the last doss-house they slept in, looking like a mixture of Svengali and a ragpicker. When they feel hungry they drink absinthe, when they want money they write verses, or scrape a violin, with a sickly smile on their unshaven faces. I always give the chaps a wide berth." I sometimes think it's a pity that Archie Haines is a stockbroker, and not a leader writer. In the latter capacity he could make any Minister of Government uncomfortable by the vigor of his style and the force of his epithets. I told Haines that he was merely hanging a dog that had been given a bad name, and that his picture was entirely insular and fantastic. Bohemianism, I tried to show him, was a point of view, and not a question of dress or personal habits. True Bohemianism is a spirit of romance which turns even the ugliest environment into "a rose-red city, 33 34 TOO MANY WOMEN half as old as time " ; a sense of eternal youth gilding the present and future with the glow of radiant hope ; a kinship with those who add to the common stock of gayety, and good fellowship; a standard of artistic excellence which admits of no compromise in its ideals in short, a formula of life and conduct, complete and satisfying. I'm afraid, however, that Haines re- mained unconvinced. What started the discussion was the fact that, lunching in " The Cock " on Monday, I met Steward. After a Fleet Street crawl I had turned into the old place, settled myself behind one of the oak partitions, ordered the steak and kidney pudding that the habi- tues called for, and then, casting a look around at my neighbors, had seen the fellow grinning at me. Steward and I were sub-editors on the Evening Star together for six months in my newspaper days. In appearance he is about thirty-five years old, small, and pallid featured, with coal-black hair falling in all directions, piercing eyes masked behind heavy-rimmed spectacles, and a general air of activity and determina- tion. He began life selling papers, got a reputation as a smart lad, and was put in charge of the telephones at a newspaper office, a job he varied by fetching copy from the reporting staff at the Law Courts. A night school gave him a fair grounding of knowledge, which he supplemented by voracious reading until he knew the classical authors nearly by heart, and had accumu- lated a vast store of general information. Then he took to bringing in articles of various kinds of such high quality that they finally attracted the attention of the editor in chief, who promoted him first to the po- sition of a reporter, and then to the "desk," as a sub-editor. FEBRUARY 35 Having passed all his existence with the smell of printer's ink in his nostrils, Steward had the qualities of a journalist implanted in him, and his quickness of judgment and keen sense of the practical enabled him to turn his talents to the best advantage. He did some amazing things in the way of " scoops " while I was his colleague. His headlines were mas- terpieces of pithy compression, and he could fill the least inspired " copy " with a sparkle and dash that made it the most attractive item on the page. He would scent in a three-line paragraph from an un- known correspondent the story of the week. I shall never forget how one of the other "subs" took a telephone message about a body being found in a box in a London suburb, and was proceeding to make it into a small paragraph, when Steward, whose atten- tion had somehow been drawn to the matter, pounced upon the thing and from sheer instinct " splashed " the story on the last edition, gave it a bill, and sent out two reporters posthaste. Next day we had an exclusive column and a half of what proved to be the criminal cause celebre of the year. But above all, Steward never lost his head in one of the unforeseen crises that ever and again disturb editorial method and routine, and discover the weak places in the staff's ability to deal with emergencies. When a decision, in all probability involving war between England and another Power, came unex- pectedly into the office, Steward's coolness communi- cated itself to every one, from the man on the " stone " to the boy at the tape. He stopped the printing machines on the instant, although the elaborate time- table and organization for catching the trains over the country was thereby thrown out of gear, and him- 36 TOO MANY WOMEN self sent out, line by line, to the waiting compositors a masterly resume of the previous negotiations, and a summary of what the news meant to Europe. To the wild messages that came from the publishing depart- ment as to the meaning of the sudden dislocation of the day's arrangements, Steward gave replies that admitted of no questioning. The prestige and cir- culation of the Evening Star alike profited by the judgment displayed. So brilliant a journalist as Steward is certain to occupy an important editorial chair before long. But besides all this, Steward is a Bohemian to his finger-tips, by virtue of his intention to live his own life untramnreled by the conventional environment beloved of Englishmen, to which end he creates an atmosphere of his own in which to " see visions and dream dreams." A contemporary of mine at Oxford got the reputation of being a Bohemian because he usually sat in a dressing-gown, drank Benedictine after " Hall," read Verlaine, and possessed an en- graving of the " Blessed Damozel." Steward is not cast in that crude image. There is a robust common sense about his unconventionally which keeps him out of the blind alleys of morbid introspection, and sensualism, in which so many wander who profess Bohemianism either as an intellectual pose, or to excuse the gratification of vicious tastes. At his flat in Chancery Lane, in the only club he frequents, " The Savage," or in the particular restaurant in Rupert Street, Soho, where he may be found nightly, Steward wears the nimbus of the social saint. He radiates wit and originality, and stimulates even in his silences. To him no man is common or unclean, and no one's credentials for friendship are questioned who gives as FEBRUARY; 37 good measure as he receives, and when he is piped to, dances, when mourned to, weeps. The " chucker-out " at a West End music hall, the ring steward of an East End boxing-saloon, an Undersecretary of State, a cocktail mixer in an American bar, and the author of the most valuable copyright in Europe, are all Steward's friends. He is a genuine citizen of Bo- hemia. If there is a power which can strike off the fetters of hypocrisy and unctuous virtue in which Imagination and Thought are confined, Steward wields it. If there is an antidote to the compound of scandal and sport with which Society poisons its votaries, Steward can supply it. His presence is a tonic, and he knows the haunts and companions to banish dull care and duller ignorance. As Steward and myself ate our steak pudding and treacle roll he told me how he had come to write the lyrics for the new " Alcazar " musical play, The Bird in the Bush, the piece, by the way, in which Cynthia Cochrane made her debut under Mason's manage- ment. One of the journalist's gifts is the writing of light verse, and the Evening Star rarely appears with- out a neat specimen of his talent on a topic of the day. Mason, always on the lookout for fresh talent to keep the sacred lamp of burlesque burning, suggested to Steward, whose acquaintance he had made at a Sav- age Club Saturday night, that he should try his hand at some of the songs for the forthcoming piece, and so pleased was he with the offspring of Steward's muse, that he handed over the entire job to my friend, with the result that the latter is reaping the golden harvest which is the guerdon of successful authorship in that sphere. The best of Steward's fancies, and one which has already captivated play-going London, 88 TOO MANY WOMEN is the song sung by the " Star " to the limelight man. It runs as follows: In the morning I am peevish, with my nerves all on the jar, From the shopping and the popping in and out my motor car. In the afternoon I've problems that preoccupy my mind Is my figure quite de rigueur, are my curls all right behind? In the dusk a quiet rubber will my restless soul content; What with playing and with paying there's no time for sentiment ! But at night I move enraptured in your limelight's ardent glare, And my passion is a fashion that I beg of you to share. In the daylight I am thinking of my beauty's swift decay, And " affection " and " complexion " get in one another's way. In the twilight I am pensive, but it's not to do with love ; " Shall I dine in silk or satin ? " is the thought all thoughts above. In the lamplight I am troubled by a lot of different things : My digestion, Bertie's question "Will you have the furs or rings ? " In the limelight you may sue me, for my heart's no longer stone. If your notion is devotion, I'll be yours and yours alone. At the conclusion a terrific crash indicates that the object of the appeal has thrown discretion and duty to the winds and jumped down from his perch in the wings. A second later a stage hand rushes frantically forward and clasps the leading lady in an embrace, showing that her infatuation is returned. On the first night the success of the play was secured from that dramatic moment. Another original feature is the Limerick King, whose entrance is marked by a ballad beginning as follows : My name is O'Shaughnessy Brown, I own a large slice of the town. My ample resources Of motors and horses Confer on me social renown. I've a yacht tho' I can't stand the sea; I've a wife tho' we never agree ; I've a son in the Guards, Tho' his losses at cards Would pauperize all men but me. FEBRUARY 39 The papers are full of my name, My portraits are never the same: I'm taken on Friday With a duchess beside me; On Monday I pose with Hall Caine! The gentleman goes on to tell how he made his vast fortune by winning limerick competitions. The hold that the rhyming craze has on him is shown by the fact that he never opens his mouth in the course of the play without couching his remarks in the familiar meter which has brought him wealth. Steward gave me to understand that he had had a difficult task during rehearsals owing to the mutually conflicting views as to the " business " held by Mason, the composer of the music, and the leading perform- ers, male and female. But Steward was determined to have his own way, and neither the tears of the ladies, nor the declamations of the men proved effect- ive in moving him from the position he took up. Another item that I gleaned during lunch at the " Cock " was that Mason is giving a Shrove Tuesday dance for the members of his company to cheer things up before Lent, and Steward wants me to go as his guest. I have long since cut my wisdom-teeth on the Stage and its surroundings, but theatrical " hops " are usually amusing, and I have a mind to take Massey with me and try the " safety in numbers " theory on his present infatuation for Dolly Thurston. People never seem able to understand what I do with myself in town. If a man doesn't follow a hall-marked profession, such as soldiering, " bridge," or driving a motor, they always imagine that he possesses a large income and a taste for dissipation. When I told Mrs. Kyles that I " wrote things," she said " Really, how 40 TOO MANY WOMEN interesting," in a tone expressive of profound skep- ticism. But one must make allowances for Mrs. K , since she has been soured by her daughter Muriel, who, having " missed her market," as the say- ing is, has taken up philanthropy as an alternative occupation, and is rather trying at home. It did surprise me, however, that Lady Fullard should also harbor suspicions as to my way of life. Lady Fullard is the only one of my people's friends whom I have adopted as mine. Her house forms a sanctuary from social creditors, and her astringent remarks act as a tonic when my nervous system is ex- hausted by work and worry. We mutually respect each other, without having any tastes in common, for what interests can be shared by two people one of whom ends her day (under doctor's orders) at an hour when the other is just beginning his? "Don't you get very tired of doing nothing? " she inquired, after having rather treacherously asked me to tea. "You cruelly misjudge me, Lady Fullard," I pro- tested, " I'm a hard-working fellow. Why, this week I've done a column on ' How to Crease Trousers ' for the fashion page of the Whirlwind; ' Delia in the Cowshed ' for the Saturday Jujube; and ' Luncheon as a Fine Art ' in the Parthenon; far more exhausting brain work, mind you, than engrossing deeds in a solicitor's office, or pretending at being ' something in the City' when one is really nothing." Lady Fullard did not seem impressed. "Writing," she said in those cold, measured tones that always curdle my blood, " is merely another name for idleness. What you want, Mr. Hanbury, is to find a nice, sensible girl and settle down. It's very FEBRUARY 41 bad for a young man to wait too long. He gets spoiled and becomes unfit to make a good husband." " Father " I broke out, but checked myself, as I realized that though the voice was the voice of Jacob, the hands were the hands of Lady Fullard. " I am trying to make myself worthy," I continued nervously, " of that ordeal ideal, I mean, but it is bound to be a long process. I'm sorry you don't think much of my efforts." "I've been twice to the Savoy lately, Mr. Han- bury " Lady Fullard began, and my hopes beat high that this imposing matron was about to make a dramatic confession of frailty. " I understand," I interrupted, in order to soften the remorse I knew she must be feeling ; " but let him who is without offense cast the first stone." Lady Fullard took no more notice of my charitable intervention than to repeat her words. " I've been twice to the Savoy lately, and I've seen you there both times. Is that what you call making an effort?" It took me a minute to recover from the shock of Lady Fullard's oxymoron. "Well, one must accept some invitations," I re- torted, " and the Thurstons have asked me so often." " But on the last occasion you were alone with Mr. Haines." " I was giving him advice." "Giving him fiddlesticks," Lady Fullard snorted. "There was a Covent Garden ball that night." " Really, I didn't see you there," I said, with well- simulated surprise. "Which box were you in? Surely you were not the lady in the black domino who won a prize for the cake walk?" 42 TOO MANY WOMEN Lady Fullard grew scarlet. " Sir John told me what function you were bound for, Mr. Hanbury." " Could you persuade him to give a display of thougfht reading at the Cripples' Fete ? " I queried. " Sir John must have wonderful powers of second sight, for, as a matter of fact, I did look in to see an old friend of the family. The fact is, Lady Fullard, I'm giving myself every opportunity of finding out how unsatisfactory the world is for the unmarried man, and how none of its pleasures can equal those of home, sweet home. I go to the Savoy in order to persuade my stubborn bachelor instinct that the dinner there isn't half as good as what I might expect from a Kensington cook. I pay a visit to the stalls at a musical comedy so that I may see for myself how much nicer it would be to spend the evening by my own fireside in a room full of smoke from a defective grate, and my wife explaining to me how she can't possibly dress on 120 pounds a year." " When a young man," said my hostess, breaking in on my defense, "who is obviously fond of feminine society, you needn't pretend to be horrified ! makes mock of the solemnities of the married state, it usually means that there is a woman ineligible for presenta- tion at Court occupying his attention." Lady Fullard forestalled a violent outbreak on her hearer's part by raising her hand. "You don't re- quire to protest your innocence, Mr. Hanbury. But you can't go on enjoying yourself forever." Woman's intuition is man's worst enemy. Like a masked battery it makes his position untenable be- fore ever he knows that there is a foe about. For a quick-witted person, I was fairly nonplused. It was FEBRUARY 43 only the thought of Cynthia Cochrane that enabled me to recover my self-control. "I'm not enjoying myself," I stammered, "not here, at any rate. I imagined you had a better opin- ion of me, Lady Fullard, than to suspect me of such conduct as you have hinted at, and for which vicious hypocrisy is the only name." To cover my tracks I prepared to launch out on a virtuous homily. Lady Fullard cut me short. " I suspect you of nothing that I don't expect from other men. You're all alike!" "You mustn't judge us all from Sir John's stand- ard," I said, determined to get some of my own back. " I prefer not to discuss my husband." Lady Ful- lard's tones enforced obedience. Sir John, for all I knew, might have had a blame- less past, but I wasn't going to let his wife make grave insinuations against myself, and then ride scathless away on the high horse of marital loyalty so soon as reprisals were attempted. " It is more Christian," I admitted sympathetically, " to let bygones be bygones. Where we cannot speak well of a reputation we should hold our tongues about it, but I'm afraid the world, our world" I drawled my remarks with luscious emphasis " isn't so chari- table as you, dear Lady Fullard ! " Lady Fullard's hand trembled as she handled the tea things. If I had not known she had been well brought up I should have ducked to avoid the silver kettle being flung at my head. Lest primeval instinct should break through the thin veneer of civilization, which is all that separates any one of us from our primitive ancestors, I hurriedly continued "May I bring Mr. George Burn to see you? It 44 TOO MANY WOMEN would do him so much good to have the benefit of what you have just been telling me the bit about scoffing at marriage meaning a tea-shop girl in the background. He stands particularly in need of words of warning." Lady Fullard glanced at me with baffled fury. " I have heard of Mr. Burn as an idle young man for whom Satan finds more than the usual amount of mischief." " I don't know where you got your information about Satan and his Unemployed Scheme," I said, with a warmth of feeling I made no attempt to con- ceal, "but you've been totally misinformed about George Burn. He's the busiest fellow I know. Why, he gets through more tete-a-tetes than any three bachelors in May fair. What's the matter?" The clouds of displeasure had lifted from Lady Ful- lard's face, and she was smiling. "One can't be angry with you," she began in an indulgent voice. "You're inimitable. / heard about you at the Bellews'." " What did you hear about me ? " "Miss Thurston was telling me how badly you behaved." Dolly Thurston slandering me behind my back, and after I'd perjured myself to Lady Susan by telling her that her daughter was really serious-minded and that it was her partners who were responsible for that growing flightiness which her mother deplored Dolly who would make a Trappist monk break his vow of silence by her naughtiness ! " Miss Thurston doesn't know what good behavior is," I said, with quiet dignity, "and I haven't time to teach her. But I would place no reliance on the FEBRUARY 45 words of a young lady who turns the head of an undergraduate by giving him six dances as well as supper, corresponds with half the subalterns in the Guards, and cries until she is allowed a black evening frock." " You seem to take a great interest in Miss Thurs- ton's affairs," was Lady Fullard's comment " I am concerned with her moral character only," I replied. " I don't expect gratitude, but I did think she spoke the truth." Lady Fullard made a gesture of annoyance. "I've no patience with the young people of to-day. One's as bad as the other. Miss Thurston's a flirt and you are a philanderer, Mr. Hanbury. You'll suit one another admirably. Must you be going? Come in when you want any more lectures ! " I had risen at the moment that Lady Fullard de- livered herself of her amazing assumption. I am tolerably placid and amiable, but when the elderly wife of a knight, whose sharp tongue has earned a well-deserved unpopularity, and whose relations with her husband are notoriously humdrum, has the au- dacity to couple my name with that of a flighty and un- truthful minx, my patience is exhausted. I said good- by to Lady Fullard in tones suggestive of wounded pride. It will take a great deal more than an invita- tion to tea to make me darken her doors again. The first intimation I received that my mother had come up to town for a few days' shopping, bringing my sister Dulcie with her, was a note asking me to bring a man to dine at the Craven Hotel with them. As I am nothing if not prompt, I drew the Club at tea- 46 TOO MANY WOMEN time and got hold of George Burn. I thought it would stimulate Dulcie to meet the real thing for once, George being emphatically one of those fellows whom, from some attraction indefinable and indeed inexplic- able to the other members of his sex, no woman seems able to resist. Whether it is that he accords each one of them a deferential and admiring homage which makes his acquaintanceship a precious possession, to be guarded, if possible, from the rest of the world, whether he has been granted an insight into the mys- tery of the female mind and moods which places them at his mercy, or whether it is merely his good looks and the assured confidence with which he treats them, at any rate the fair creatures capitulate to him with- out any storming of their defenses on his part when to most of us they would oppose a stubborn resistance before the siege was raised, and the terms of sur- render concluded. Perhaps it is that the man strongly attracts women who is himself attracted by them, be- cause George is always in love, and with two or three damsels at a time. How he manages to prevent the strings of his various affaires from getting entangled I can't think. He reminds me of a juggler who keeps half a dozen glass balls in the air simultaneously with- out letting one fall. I know for a fact that, at the present time, George has romances with Lady Lucy Goring, although the Countess of Henley would have a fit if she knew of it ; Kitty Denver, the latest heiress from Carlton House Terrace, and to marry nobody under a duke; Mrs. T , who has separated from her husband and keeps an electric face massage estab- lishment in Bond Street ; and the leading " show girl " at the " Firefly " Theater, the much-sought-after sup- per companion of all the young " bloods " who are FEBRUARY 47 bent on taking the shortest cut to farming in Canada, or an appearance in the Bankruptcy Court. Dulcie deserves all that a brother can do for her. Her natural talents have lain fallow in the country amongst the chickens and dead leaves, that is all, but I have noticed on several occasions an aptitude for Society which should carry her far, if opportunity were to offer. It is because I backed George to draw out her undeveloped powers to the utmost that I in- vited him to meet my sister at dinner. Sure enough, I had no sooner introduced the pair than I saw with half an eye that Dulcie was going to be as amiable as she knew how, and very sweet she can be if she has any object to attain. When she wanted me to take her to Ascot last year, and get her vouchers for my club tent, she was all sunshine and smiles weeks be- fore. Another point in Dulcie's favor is that she al- ways does one credit, since she has the wisdom to stick to the style that suits her, and not to adopt an un- becoming mode of dress for no other reason than that the Maison This and That has decreed it shall be " the Fashion." In a white muslin and a sash Dulcie's artless simplicity is far more effective than if she were to adopt the expensive toilettes of London girls. The type that goes about in brilliant taffetas and satins, and spread-eagle hats, and puts great bunches of osprey feathers in its elaborate coiffures at night may be amusing for a bit, but in the course of nine seasons I have never met a man of judgment who contem- plated spending his life in its company. He will flirt and dance with it, talk with it in the Park on a fine evening, and act as its escort at a race-meeting or a play, but when it comes to marriage, he prefers the maiden whose ideals have not been withered by the 48 TOO MANY WOMEN breath of a London June, whose notion of domesticity is other than that of an endless round of country houses and fashionable restaurants, and whose modest extravagance is more in keeping with his income. The London bachelor may be self-indulgent, spoilt, cold-blooded frame the indictment as strongly as you like but he has the good sense to appreciate the virtues he does not possess, to know that a sinner should not mate with a sinner, but with a saint, and that while he will never be browbeaten and hen- pecked into affection and unselfishness, he can be turned into a model husband by innocence and devo- tion. Dulcie, in a pretty pink frock, with her dark hair free from all abominations of ribbons and roses, was an effective contrast to the overcurled and under- dressed damsels with whom George spends his time. From the moment that I saw her in the hall of the Craven I recognized that Dulcie was quite competent to hold her own, even against such a redoubtable foe as George. Besides ourselves there were the Ponting-Mallows, he an old friend of my people, a distinguished Indian official who had risen to be Lieutenant-Governor of his province, and who, just before leaving India on his pension, had married a lively little lady some thirty years his junior. The half-guinea dinner at the Craven is, in my humble opinion, the best in London. Mrs. Mallow, in black with silver round the corsage, and a bow to match half hidden in her hair, made it seem better than ever. I had often heard her described as " such a dear," though why her own sex should have des- ignated her thus, I couldn't make out, since it seemed FEBRUARY 49 *, so much" more appropriate the phrase should come from mine. Give a man or woman a good name and canonize them, and for Mrs. Ponting-Mallow the title must be a social gold mine, although I suspect she quarries a good deal besides precious metal out of it. My respected parents have always disapproved of her not for any defensible reason, but because the lady has too much hair and too little waist but Ponting- Mallow has been so lifelong a friend of theirs that they have been compelled to take the trimmings with the joint, and risk social indigestion. Conversation, in the ordinary sense of the term, was really superfluous with Mrs. Mallow. She put a three-volume novel into the movements of her eye- lashes as she took her soup, and the last act of a melo- drama was fully interpreted by the quiver of her lip as she conveyed to me, under cover of a babel of noise from surrounding tables, that she was misunderstood, a fact, as I assured her, the more remarkable in that she had expressive eyes. " You men are so hard on us," murmured the little lady, in the particular undertone which is patented for the transmission of sentiments to which the reply is prepaid. I took a gulp of champagne, heliographed for rein- forcements, and replied that her sex didn't often give us the chance of being tender. " Do you really mean that ? " asked the lady, lead- ing a black suit. Catching her eye I nearly revoked, but managed to discard. "What do you think?" " That you shouldn't say such things if you don't mean them." Mrs. Mallow was no novice at the game. 50 TOO MANY WOMEN I had to follow suit to the heart lying on the table. " I mean just what you want me to." Mrs. Mallow trumped what I regarded as my trick by a deep sigh. Before I had time to pay my losses, Mr. Mallow leaned across to his wife. "Julia," he asked, "where did we get that linoleum for the pantry ? " Evidently my mother and he were engrossed in details of household management. Our cards were effectually scattered. Still, as I was helping Julia Mallow into her cloak, I arranged to call and prescribe for her parrot, whose symptoms, disquieting to his mistress, appeared to me to point to habitual overfeeding. I saw Mrs. Mallow and her husband into their coupe with quite a sense of adven- ture, as I promised myself an intimate study at close quarters of an unusually fine specimen of the married minx. As I walked George down to the Club for a rubber, I listened for five minutes to a diatribe on the artificial- ity of London life, and the unsatisfactory nature of its female inhabitants, ending with a resolution on George's part to settle down in a hunting county, and have done with the place once and for all. I mentally marked up one to Dulcie's credit, and said " Yes " and "No" as my companion's pauses and intonation seemed to demand them. About Mrs. Mallow I kept my own counsel. George's sense of property is un- developed, and he has a poacher's instincts. " MY DEAR H , " Mason will be delighted if you will bring your friend Massey along on Tuesday. We fore- FEBRUARY 51 gather at Midnight, and our programme will be as follows 12 p.m. Stirrup cups. 12.5 ' The mazy." i. Refresh the inner man and woman. Consomme en tasse. Filets de sole frits. Poulets en cocotte. Cailles. G I aces. Cafe noir. Veuve Clicquot. 1900. Magnums. 2.15. Cake Walk Competition, for a diamond bracelet and gold cigarette case, pre- sented by Arthur Mason, Esq., J.P. 2.45. Speeches and thanks by the winner and her partner. 2.47. Loud and prolonged applause by the audience. 2.50. Ejection of the ' gentleman ' who throws rolls under the impression that they are confetti. 3. 'The Lancers.' 3.30. Sweep up the debris, which includes a ' transformation,' four sets of ' pin- curls,' one lock of golden hair, one black 'ditto/ one dozen bunches of artificial flowers, one set of false teeth, a gentleman's wig, three sovereigns, a powder puff, two lace handker- chiefs, and a petticoat. 3.34. Arrival of the Manager. 3.34^. Departure of the Manager. 52 TOO MANY WOMEN 4. Display by the comedians. 4.15. Rival entertainment by the vocalists. 4.20. 'Half-time' called. 4.30. Exit the Band, under protests. 4.35. Installation of amateur orchestra, bril- liant execution of the latest waltz. 5. Grand march past and finale. '5.25. Eggs and bacon at the 'Junior Turf Club/ 6. Bed. 12 a.m. Soda-water and dry toast. " Toujours a to\, "FRANK STEWARD." On the strength of this characteristic epistle, I dragged Massey away for a night from his studies at the University of Oxford, and chaperoned him to the festivity so graphically forecasted. Like Ceylon in the hymn, a theatrical dance is a place full of "spicy breezes" where "every woman pleases, and only man is vile." But the " Alcazar " show was "top-hole." Mason had supervised the general arrangements to some purpose. Festoons of colored lights hung across the ceiling, the corridors were tropical with palms, an excellent buffet stood just off the ballroom piled with vintage wines and the best articles of diet in the catering line; the finest orchestra in the country sat on a raised dais, and, to crown the edifice of hospitality, feather fans were pro- vided for the ladies, and buttonholes for the gentle- men. Mason and his leading lady received the guests, who were the fine flower of dramatic and critical Bo- hemia, with a sprinkling of the jeunesse -doree of So- ciety and high finance. FEBRUARY 53 In the throng was every fair face that fills its row of stalls nightly, and brings grist to the mills of the illustrated weeklies. Amongst the crowd of men were Guy Ranford, who is building up success as a play- wright on his theory that love is a disease only to be cured by matrimony; Lord Matheson, a Scotch peer just of age, and an earnest student of the drama from the level of the stage-box; Julius Pryce, the noted critic who tickles his paper with a pen and it laughs with a harvest of epigrams ; and Stringer, who refines sugar, but hasn't refined himself, and whose presence could only be explained on the ground that as he largely finances Mason he couldn't have been left out in the cold. "My word, Hanbury, I'm your debtor for life/' whispered Massey to me, as we made a tour of inspec- tion, clinging to each other for moral support amidst the blaze of youth and beauty. I steered him care- fully away from the heroine of the latest stage ro- mance, who was displaying her married charms in a setting of electric blue, but I had difficulty in repeat- ing the maneuver when he encountered a spoiled dar- ling, wearing flame-colored chiffon under a net of lace, who could have mounted to any step in the peer- age she wanted, and whom rumor said was on the point of obtaining 10,000 damages from the heir to a Marquisate. Just when Massey, in his excitement, was about to dispense with a personal introduction in order to secure himself a partner for the next dance, I ran across Drummond, whom I had scarcely seen since Oxford days. Drummond had nearly broken his mother's heart by throwing up his " cramming " for the Diplomatic Service, and joining a touring com- pany, in the two years of his association with which 54 TOO MANY WOMEN a first-hand acquaintance with life and a capacity for sleeping upright formed the credit side of his account with destiny. Now he was filling a dude part in The Cock and the Hen at the " Firefly," his not very am- bitious role consisting of saying "Ha, ha!" in the first act, and doing a Gollywog dance in the last. Drummond lost no time in introducing my exuberant companion to a tall girl in a harmony of green and gold that stopped short at the ankles. Her impudent good looks promised to keep Massey out of mischief elsewhere. In the absence of Cynthia Cochrane, who was to arrive in time for supper, I contented myself with a "dream" in black, whose dancing had all the char- acteristics of a nightmare, including the falling sensa- tion that precludes the awakening, for she caught her foot in a passing flounce and dragged me headlong to the destruction of several yards of expensive fabric, and " With ruin upon ruin, rout on rout, Confusion worse confounded," in the case of other couples who were involved in my calamity. Extrication of the victims proved a task of some difficulty, but it was expedited by the kindly interest of the whole assemblage, which stopped its various occupations of the moment to assist in the work of rescue, chanting the while in uproarious chorus the well-known refrain " You'll find about the hour of four 'A tangled mass upon the floor, And the sportsman underneath is Archie 1 " By trie time I had brushed the dust off my clothes, put on another collar in place of the one upon which FEBRUARY 55 a ton and a half of human beings had sat for what seemed to be half an hour, and generally made myself once more presentable, Cynthia had turned up, look- ing as fresh as paint and as pretty as a rose, although to my annoyance she insisted upon having a dance with Steward, whose determination to master every accomplishment in which he was deficient was only equaled by his inability to keep any sort of time what- ever, and his tendency to sudden attacks of giddiness, during which he had to be bodily upheld by his part- ner, or he would have sat down there and then. At one o'clock a general rush was made for supper, served in the big salon downstairs at three long tables. Steward had reserved places for Cynthia and myself alongside his, while opposite us was Massey, still loyal to " Green and Gold," and evidently finding no obstacle to reconciling his attachment to Dolly Thurston with a demonstration of affection toward the favorite of the moment. Cynthia and I sat for a moment spellbound by the crash of laughter and the roars of merriment which rose in a crescendo of sound to the distant roof. Few gayer sights could be im- agined than that presented by the great hall lit by every color of the rainbow, the jewels on the prettiest necks in the kingdom, in spite of all their glow and luster, flashing forth less brilliant lightnings than their owners' eyes. The supper itself lacked no feature that might make it memorable. The band in the balcony with its popular melodies sung in chorus by the revelers be- low; the "Widow" dry and iced to a nicety; the quails with their culinary escort of truffles and cocks- combs; the crackers; and the paper hats, modeled in the fashions of all ages and nations, which were 66 TOO MANY WOMEN brought round with the dessert, set flowing currents of gayety and excitement that swept away the canons and conventions of the everyday world, till, at the striking up of La Mattchiche, a personage, in the helmet of a Roman legionary, leaped on to the table in a frenzy of Bacchic mirth, and, with one foot on an epergne of fruit, and the other in a finger bowl, did a pas-seul to the envy, and, subsequently, to the discom- fort, of his neighbors. As a climax Mason was en- throned in state on the center of the festive board, while his guests marched past him with knives, forks, and spoons held at the salute. Once back in the ballroom I found myself forming one of a large group around two young gentlemen who, each with his hands clasped under a walking stick passed across his elbows and below his knees, were engaged in the thrilling pastime known as " cock- fighting." The " cake walk " competition which fol- lowed was the usual sort of thing, half graceful, half grotesque. Massey introduced a new figure by walk- ing on his hands, his lady holding him by the legs, but the prize went to Drummond and his partner, the pair accomplishing a remarkable combination of skill and neatness. Drummond's speech of thanks was short and to the point. "Messieurs et mesdames, ladies and gentlemen, fellow-creatures," he said, " my companion is tongue- tied, I am breathless, you are all nearly speechless. Art is long, life is short, and my powers of oratory less. We thank you." The Lancers were all that Steward had prophesied. I thought discretion the better part of valor, and sat out with Cynthia, with whom I should probably have stayed till we were swept out with the crumbs, had not FEBRUARY 57 a pink shoe hurtling past my head broken the thread of our conversation. I had the presence of mind to pocket it hastily as a trophy for my mantelpiece, and assume a look of anxious innocence which turned the band of searchers to disturb other couples. I'm afraid I can't qualify as an efficient chaperon, for I failed on my departure to find any trace of Massey, save his hat, which by inadvertence he had left on a chandelier in the ballroom. MARCH " We behold woman at work incessantly. One man is a fish to her hook; another a moth to her light. By the various arts at her disposal she will have us, unless early in life we tear away the creature's colored gauzes and penetrate to her absurdly simple mechanism. That done, we may, if we please, dominate her." GEORGE MEREDITH, "Lord Ormont and his Aminta." MARCH The Offices of the "Evening Star" Mr. and Mrs. Ponting-M allow at home Massey excites Suspi- cion and justifies it The Correspondence of a Comedy Queen Steward dines out EVER since I introduced George to Steward one night at "The Gourmet" in Lisle Street, Soho, where we had gone for a French dinner as a change from the unimaginative British menu at the Club, he has expressed a great admiration for the journalist, so that it was at his own request I took him round yesterday to the offices of the Evening Star to show him Steward in his element. I never set foot in Fleet Street without regretting I am no longer an inhabitant of that delectable land. The very atmosphere is electric with enticing whispers for youthful hope and spreading ambition. No Siren could play music half so entrancing to me as the roar of the printing presses and the bustle and stir in- cidental to the production of a newspaper. As we climbed the stairs to the sub-editors' room, the walls shaking and the building reverberating to the stress and labor of the great machines in the basement, George merely remarked that he pitied the poor devils who had to pass their lives in such a confounded din. To me the uproar was eloquent with a thousand memories of the days when I sat before piles of copy police court " flimsies," the latest divorce sensation, cuttings from the provincial Press, the unsolicited con- (U 63 TOO MANY WOMEN tributions of outside men, "penny-a-liners" anxious to increase their meager incomes by ungrammatical accounts of fires, street accidents, and the like. I saw myself once more with my coat off, my hair in the wild tangle that is the prerogative of the pressman, by my side a cup of tea and a plate of what was once hot buttered toast, while the eight tape machines round the room clicked out eternally the news of Par- liament, the Law Courts, and Sport to my indifferent ears. With all the strain and worry, the " bloomers " that, in spite of one's precautions, found their way into print, and the unforeseen descent of the editor in a whirlwind of vehemence and invective, to hurl over our devoted heads charges of incompetence and threats of dismissal, the life was worth living. One had one's fingers on the pulse of the world. In my heart of hearts I knew that journalism is the only career that attracts me. There is no other profession in which I would more willingly win my spurs. True, the prizes are for the few, and the majority of journalists plod along on modest incomes all their days. But I ask no editor's chair in which to sit in lonely splendor, approached by my subordinates only through the chill medium of the telephone, blue-pen- ciling in my Olympic wisdom their most cherished flights of fancy, and crushing their dearest schemes of circulating enterprise. Give me the rough and tumble of the fray, the tussle with the chief com- positor on the " stone " over the " make-up " of a page, the anxious consultation as to the story of the day, and what to bill on the last edition ! I prefer the sunshine and shadow of the world of men to any twi- light of the gods. 'After my accounts of the whirl of the journalistic MARCH 63 life, George was rather astonisHed at ttie Halcyon calm of the sub-editors' room of the Evening Star, a calm due to our arriving between two editions. The " Extra Special " was going through the press, and the "Late" had not yet been embarked upon. So Steward had his head in a bowl of vegetarian mess that he had a partiality for, the chief reporter was smoking a pipe in a corner, and spotting the winners for the next day's racing with the sporting editor, while the others, mostly new men since my time, with the exception of Woodward and Finch, were sprawling in various attitudes of relaxation and repose about the room. A knot of boys, employed to run errands, paste up the tape messages, and carry copy to the " comps " and proof readers, were scuffling on a long bench down the far wall, until shouted at by one of the staff, when they relapsed into a moment's tranquillity before starting their commotion afresh. The warm air was redolent of the pungent odors per- meating the newspaper office, and quivering with the clatter of the linotypes, which came through a thin par- tition like the crackle of musketry. Steward, who gave a touch of local color to the scene by the two-days' growth on his chin, received us heartily enough and did whatever was necessary in the way of introductions. The visitors to the Evening Star sub-editorial room are so numerous and peculiar in the course of the day that nothing can surprise its inmates, and even the Sand-jak of Novi-Bazar would be greeted with yawns. Yet George's immaculate "get-up" excited as much interest as was possible in the stolid nature of Finch, who, wearing a handker- chief in place of a collar, and with his shirt open at the neck, needed all the hints he could obtain from my; 64 TOO MANY WOMEN spruce friend for his own sartorial guidance. I ex- changed greetings with Woodward, a methodical fellow of mediocre ability, but who never made a mistake at the " desk," and kept his billet on the Evening Star while more brilliant men came and went, inquired after mutual acquaintances on the Press Club, and asked him to show George how things were done on the smartest evening paper in Great Britain. "What's on?" I asked of Steward, as Woodward complied with my request. " Nothing of interest, my son. Hewson's off on a story that may 'pan' out into a good murder, but people have grown so moral that we can't raise a yarn worth more than three ' sticks/ Now, if you'd start a Society scandal I'd play it up for all it was worth." Steward broke off abruptly, as though a thought had struck him, seized a pencil, ran his fingers through his hair, and scribbled away for a minute. Then he read out the following: "Society's Favorite Leads Popular Actress to the Altar " Where was Mr. Gerald Hanbury at twelve o'clock to-day? That is what the fashionable West End is asking, the ladies with sighs, the gentlemen with feel- ings of relief. " He was being married. " Who was he marrying a Princess of the Blood Royal? a Countess in her own right, a Transatlantic heiress? He was leading to the altar Miss Cynthia MARCH 65 Cochrane, the charming ' soubrette ' of the ' Firefly Theater/ " The ceremony took place in the Bodega. The bride, clad in clinging ' voile/ and a merino toque, was given away by her past. There was no best man, for, as Mr. Hanbury remarked to the officiating minister, ' There can be no better man than myself/ " The happy couple have left for their honeymoon at Clapham Junction, on credit. " No flowers, by request." " Hang you, Steward," I said, as everybody roared, " I didn't come to be insulted." Steward took a spoonful of his abominable diet, and called a boy. " Here," he exclaimed, " get this set up and bring me a proof. Mr. Hanbury wants a memento of his visit." I made a rush at the messenger, but he disappeared. I didn't know office boys could move so quickly. I was thinking of the effective retort which, how- ever, escaped me, when a pile of copy thrust into the central basket drew general attention. George Burn was wandering around the room like a lost soul, Steward was frowning over the illegible handwriting of an important member of the staff, every one was absorbed. I took up a reporter's notebook from the table, put down a paragraph, and, silently gesticulating to a boy, conveyed to him that I wished it put into type. The urchin grinned and went off. I leaned back nonchalantly and hummed a popular tune through my teeth. Ten minutes passed. George, who had finished his tour of inspection, whispered to me that he had to be 66 TOO MANY WOMEN at Rumpelmayer's at 5.15. I made no response. r A. pile of proofs was brought in and divided out amongst those at the table. A minute later and a big fleshy man opposite burst into a roar of laughter. Finch followed suit. Steward looked up angrily. "Can't you fellows find something else to do than to laugh like hyenas ? " " He's got even with you, Steward," spluttered the fat man, still shaking with mirth. " How's this ? " " The friends of Mr. Steward, the well-known journalist, will be pleased to hear that he changed his shirt to-day and put on another pair of cuffs. There is no truth in the rumor that he shaved. He did not. Appearances are often deceitful, but Mr. Steward has no appearance." Steward swept the litter in front of him into one mass and hurled it at my head. I dodged for the door. " We don't want your monkey tricks here, Han- bury," he shouted after my retreating form. I forbore to reply; but when, on opening the " Last " edition of the Evening Star, I saw my offend- ing paragraph in the " News of the Day " column, evidently slipped in by some mischief-loving "sub," I felt that I had got the best of the encounter. Mr. Ponting-Mallow is a bore. No self-respecting husband ought to be in his wife's boudoir after three o'clock, and yet, when I called at Porchester Terrace at tea time, I found him there, with an Indian cheroot in full blast, reading aloud an article from the Eastern Quarterly on "Suttee and Symbolism." Ponting^ MARCH 67 Mallow has revived the extinct fashion of side whisk- ers, much to the disparagement of his personal appear- ance, his complexion is as parched as his favorite delicacy Bombay duck and he preserves a military precision in his dress, for his frock coat is always but- toned as tight as a tunic, and his trousers might have been worn at the Brighton Pavilion under the Regency without exciting comment. Ponting-Mallow merely raised his eyebrows by way of greeting to me, and continued his reading: " To the early European observers the practice of suttee the immolation of bereaved wives on the funeral pyre of their departed lord and master ap- peared as nothing else than the rite of an ignorant and degraded Paganism, a superstition of which the origin might be traced to those savage times when the death of their natural protector left the widows an easy and immediate prey to the enemies swarming out- side. Scientific vision, however, cleared from the mists of prejudice, sees in the ceremony of suttee a noble tribute to the sanctity of marriage in the East, by its insistence on the indissoluble nature of the union, and the inability of the wife to look upon her- self in any other light than that of the natural com- plement of her husband." An involuntary exclamation of appreciation escaped from me. Mr. Mallow looked up. "A finely ex- pressed " here he paused, with an irritating trick he has when half-way through a sentence, as if anxious to let the weight of his words sink into his hearer's mind " er truth." "The practice seems well worth adopting here," I 68 TOO MANY WOMEN suggested, " with the addition of a pyre for widowers, so that they might also display a burning affection for the dear departed." " In the Buddhist faith, Hanbury," said my host, " the devotion of the husband to his wife's memory is presumed. He displays it best by er marrying again." " Most of us must be Buddhists then, without know- ing it," I responded. "It's very comforting to be able to have the sanction of religion to gratify one's own personal inclinations. But weren't the wives supposed to be capable of constancy?" "Easterns class women with animals in er pos- sessing no soul. The contact of Western civilization is gradually dispelling that idea." "Dispelling it? I should have thought it would have confirmed them in that belief. Give me charge of an Indian Johnny for a season, and I'd convince him of the unwisdom of modifying his original esti- mate of the sex." " Haven't women treated you kindly ? " asked Mrs. Mallow, with a pout that was meant expressly for my benefit. " They've led me a dog's life," I retorted. " Ha, ha, ha ! " croaked old Mallow in a fit of merri- ment, misplaced because a wise husband, conscious that the marriage of May and December can only be a success if the former may sometimes join hands with June, would have refrained from laughing at a young man who had come to reconcile a high-spirited and pretty woman to the incongruity of her position. I sympathized acutely with Mrs. Mallow's predica- ment in being wedded to a man in whose life she had so little share that she ought never to have come into MARCH 69 it. Mrs. Mallow and I exchanged a glance of disgust, a glance which Ponting-Mallow must have inter- cepted, for his mood underwent a swift transforma- tion. " Perhaps, Hanbury," he said, as he picked up the magazine from his knee, "when you have er finished your witticisms you will er allow me to continue ! " " On the contrary," exclaimed Mrs. Mallow, with a courage I admired, " I think you've read quite enough, and it is very kind of Mr. Hanbury to come in and amuse us." " My dear Julia," retorted Mr. Mallow, in his best courthouse manner, " I must ask you not to er contradict me in my own establishment." If the rift in the Ponting-Mallow lute widened any more, all other conversation would be engulfed in it, and my errand to Porchester Terrace remain unful- filled. But any frontal attack, with Ponting-Mallow as firmly entrenched in his chair as the Duke of Wel- lington in the lines of Torres Vedras, was doomed to failure. My eye fell on the parrot I had ostensibly come to prescribe for, and inspiration seized me. " Now, Polly, what do you think of it all?" As I asked the question the bird uttered a bubbling noise which might have been interpreted in any sense. I moved my left eyelid in an almost imperceptible wink at Mrs. Mallow, and continued: " There, he says he's awfully bored with us, and is simply longing to have you to himself ! " The faintest suspicion of a smile dimpled my host- ess's cheek, but her husband gave no sign that my words bore other than their surface meaning. I fidgeted, and upset a teacup, but that dense old Indian 70 TOO MANY WOMEN official, whose retirement from duty was obviously due to softening of the brain, made no movement of departure. He was only waiting for the door to close on me to inflict a further installment of " Suttee arid Symbolism " upon his martyr of a wife. How I hated his chutney skin and his idiotic magazine! In despair I once again apostrophized the parrot, who obligingly squawked in a piercing key. "Yes, he's saying that, if he were a human being instead of a green bird, he would take you to a matinee at Daly's." Mrs. Mallow bent her head as I made the audacious proposal on the bird's behalf, and I rose triumphantly. " I really must be going," I exclaimed, in anything but lugubrious tones, as I stood before the little lady, " but I hope to see you again at Daly's," I added under my breath. Then I flung a last word at Pont- ing-Mallow : " Good-by, sir. I think if I were a Mahatma or Brahmin, or whatever the fellows are called, I should be more occupied in keeping my wife's affections during my life than in procuring a theatrical and revolting exhibition of them after my death." " You'll teach us er many things, no doubt, when you are married," replied Ponting-Mallow, lighting another of his confounded cheroots. " And learn a few, too," he added as an afterthought. The sarcasm was wasted on me, for I had just caught Mrs. Mallow's eye, and when I catch an eye like hers I don't let it go easily. My considered judgment on Ponting-Mallow is this : He has all the characteristics of the louse without its pluck ! Clive Massey is beginning to be a source of anxiety MARCH 71 in many quarters. He is just the thoughtless, impul- sive soul whose welfare is a concern to everybody except himself. Anyhow, I see trouble ahead, and not upon unsubstantial evidence. The first hint came to me while I was leaning over the barrier at Princes' Skating Club the other Sunday, intent on watching an elderly lady doing outside-edge backward, and pick- ing herself up after each turn. For patience and pertinacity she was beating the record set up by Bruce and the spider. She had fallen into double figures when a well-known voice sounded just behind me. I turned around sharply to be confronted by Miss Dolly Thurston and her aunt, whose house in Cadogan Square is a favorite pied-a-terre of the former's when on the warpath in town. After the exchange of formal greetings, Miss Thurston dropped into con- fidential tones, meant for my ear alone. " Have you heard anything of Clive Massey lately? " she inquired, with a nonchalance that showed me how much importance she attached to my answer. " Mother asked him to come to a dance, and got no reply." " I've no more information than you have," I truth- fully said. After all, there was no reason to connect the incident of the "Alcazar" ball with Massey's shortcomings as a correspondent. " He's probably working hard," I went on reassur- ingly. " Hasn't he got an exam on this term ? " " Mr. Hanbury," and the emphasis in Dolly Thur- ston's voice rebuked my suggestion, "you don't look after your friends very well. Clive has scarcely been in Oxford at all. He finds London a pleasanter place." "Isn't it?" I asked, with engaging innocence. I wasn't going to let the girl see I suspected anything. 72 TOO MANY WOMEN " Mr. Hanbury, dive's getting into mischief. Sybil Bellew passed him in Piccadilly when he was walking with a stage person, and he wouldn't look at Sy- bil." A girl of Dolly's age doesn't concern herself with the moral welfare of an undergraduate except for the best of reasons or the worst it all depends on one's point of view toward the institution of marriage. Massey must have made an impression at Southlands. I paid Miss Thurston the compliment of taking her seriously. " I'll find out everything there is to know. But young men will be young men." "Can they only be young men with the help of young women?" asked Dolly Thurston, with an un- expected flash of wit, turning her head away a moment later, as she realized the boldness of her comment. Red-hot on the scent of an opportunity for the display of my diplomatic gifts, I forbore to reply, and rushed away with an abruptness that must have astonished my companion. I like to be in the front line of battle on all occasions. In the next few days, from various sources, I gleaned the following facts bearing on "L'Affaire Massey " : 1. Massey had been seen lunching with a vision in brick-red, and a hat festooned with cherries "a ballet girl with a bally orchard on her head," as my informant phrased it. 2. The 'Varsity Notes in a certain flippant weekly contained the following cryptic sentence: " A popular member of the cast of the forth- coming O. U. D. S. performance of The Merry MARCH 73 Wives of Windsor is doing most of his re- hearsing in town, though opinion is divided as to whether he is rehearsing for a breach of promise case or a Registrar's Office." 3. A mutual friend of George Burn and Massey had accompanied the latter to buy a necklace of uncut turquoises, which rumor said might be seen nightly on the stage of the " Firefly " Theater during one of the most popular num- bers in The Cock and the Hen. 4. The hall porter at the Club had been heard to declare to one of his satellites that Mr. Mas- sey's young woman must be very fond of him, to write so many letters, and send them all round by special messenger with instructions to await reply. In this emergency I decided to look up Drummond, a thing easier said than done, however. If I called round at his rooms he was invariably out, if I sent up for him at the " Firefly " he was either " on in front " or absent with a cold, and his club in Leicester Square seemed to serve no other purpose for him than to act as a place where he might call for his letters. But I finally ran him to earth there one afternoon about four, to find he had just finished what he called "a light lunch after a wet night." Judging from the array of empty oyster shells, the skeleton of what looked like a shark, but turned out to be a sole, the two grilled bones that might have belonged to the mammoth they dug up in Siberia the other day, and the bottle of "pop" turned upside down to prove its emptiness, any lightness Drummond had derived from the meal could only have gone to his head. 74 TOO MANY WOMEN From the glimpse I had caught of Drummond at the " Alcazar " ball, I was under the impression he had scarcely changed at all from his Oxford days, but in the cold light of the day that filtered through the diamond-paned windows I saw that Drummond's com- plexion was pasty, from the nightly "make-up" of paint and powder, that his hair was thinner on the top than would have been the case had he led a more normal existence, and that he wore a scarlet knitted waistcoat picked out with green spots, a watchchain of plaited hair ending in a bunch of seals, and a pair of patent leather boots with white kid " uppers." The conversation, from my point of view, took a little time to get under weigh, because Drummond overflowed with embarrassing cordiality, and I was introduced forthwith to the other occupants of the half dining, half smoking room, that formed the chief part of the club premises, and plied with questions as to my opinion of this piece and that in which the pres- ent company were individually appearing, for the feed- ing of whose vanity I scattered fulsome eulogies of plays I hadn't seen and didn't want to. When I got Drummond to myself I asked him for particulars of the girl he had introduced Massey to at the ball. "Alice Howard, you mean," said Drummond, " she's in our show. She's got a nineteen-inch waist, and takes * threes ' in shoes." " I don't want her measurements. What's she like to talk to?" "Saucy, very saucy." Drummond's voice had a reminiscent note. " Long eyelashes, and a short memory, narrow face and broad humor. She talks about * her dear mother in the country,' and you think of your dear father in the city. She * simply loves MARCH 75 animals/ and only rides in motors. SHe says she's devoted to her art, yet she's quite artless. She * knows all the ropes/ and has one of pearls. Oh, Lordie, she's a handful!" " After that, I should know Her anywhere," I ex- claimed approvingly. " Whom has she got in tow at present ? " " Don't ask me," was Drummond's weary rejoinder. " I can't keep pace with all the highfliers in our show. There's always some new boy being trotted out for my benefit when I stand ' right center ' before the old rag falls on the tableau of the market place. If it isn't a photo of * darling Bobbie ' at the wheel of a Panhard, grinning like an ape at the ten-guinea hat in the foreground he hasn't paid for yet, it's sure to be ' a duck of a bracelet * from some other silly juggins, upon the costliness of which I'm expected to make appropriate comment. I rather fancy Alice has a fresh 'flame/ At least I dimly recollect being shown a bangle, or necklace, or something. But I'm fed up with all their goings-on. When it comes to the Maiden Selling Plate I'm one of the ' also-rans/ ' At the conclusion of this brilliant impromptu Drum- mond flicked a speck of dust off one polished boot, drew the knees of his trousers carefully up to avoid bagging, undid the last two buttons of his waistcoat, and shut his eyes. As I reached the door he began to snore. He had earned his nap. The sequel was that Haines and myself got stalls at the " Firefly," and went to judge the case upon its merits or rather, hers. We both spotted the young woman as soon as she came on for the song and dance, " The Boy was Black, and so the Girl looked Blue," which has helped to give The Cock and the 76 TOO MANY WOMEN Hen a thirteen months' run. Alice Howard, wearing a short costume of black and white lozenges, her unbraided hair tied with pink ribbon, looked the very picture of designing innocence. The necklace was there, reinforced by other jewelry in the shape of a locket on a long gold chain, four bracelets, and a mass of rings. She moved as though it was an awful bore having to come on at all, and went through the inane gyrations expected of the chorus with complete in- difference. We both agreed that she was a highly dangerous combination of attractions. Massey, in my rooms, had talked about life. The term " life " in the mouth of inexperienced people like himself is in- variably a euphemism for " Woman," and to a super- ficial observer Miss Howard offered plenty of unde- veloped territory for the explorer. It was this sense of the unknown in her acquaintance that would ap- peal to the venturesome in Massey's character. Of course Drummond caught sight of me a few minutes later, but our attention was diverted from his pantomimic gestures of welcome by the interest Miss Howard displayed in the occupant of the stage box on the right, but whose identity was concealed from Haines and myself by our position in the stalls, until in the " foyer " during the interval we discovered Mas- sey. The latter seemed somewhat abashed at the en- counter. " Hello, here alone ? " I exclaimed cheerily. " The other man fell through at the last moment," said Massey, with a hypocritical smirk. " Where are you sitting? " I continued. " I haven't seen any signs of you." " I'm in a box." Haines intervened. "I didn't know you were a MARCH 77 millionaire, but if you're the fellow that Flossie of the Ringlets has been staring at all the time, you've made a conquest!" Massey modestly disclaimed any responsibility, and began a movement of retreat. " You'll come on to supper with us ? " The ques- tion was mine. "Awfully sorry, old fellow, but I'm engaged." " We shall probably see you at ' the Roman's ' then," I said, drawing my bow at a venture. Massey gave a start of surprise and annoyance. Evidently his rendezvous with Alice Howard had been antici- pated. He would have to make other arrangements. The plot thickened. " I've got to write a note," he broke out. " See you fellows another time," and he rushed off. Haines and I looked at one another. "Why on earth are we bothering about the fellow?" I asked. " It's no business of ours." " I rather like his young woman," Haines retorted candidly, "and you enjoy playing the heavy father, Hanbury. That's why we're going to see this thing through." So we returned to our seats when the bell rang, to resume our Vigilance Committee work in the interests of Massey, I suppose. Haines fixed his opera glass on Miss Howard so persistently that Drummond, in a convenient interlude in the cafe scene, pointed out to her the interest she was arousing, only to be rewarded for his pains by the haughty toss of a fair head, an indifference on the lady's part which did not last, for she took a careful survey of Haines a moment later, and cast a glance in his direction whenever she made an entrance. Haines' dress clothes are a model of 78 TOO MANY WOMEN tailoring, and he believes in a carnation as a button- hole, so he deserved scrutiny. I could fancy Alice Howard spoiling the jealous Massey's supper with talk of a rival admirer. I certainly gave her no credit for caring a rap about our young friend, or, indeed, about anybody, for a heart would merely have got in the way of her professional career. Haines wanted to draw the various supper haunts for the pair, but I put a stop to his malicious project. Massey deserved a run for his money, and I was grateful to him for giving our set conversational open- ings that would last at least a month. Confined to my Jermyn Street rooms by a heavy cold, and as bad a spell of raw weather as March can show, a fit of tidying up seized me yesterday, but I never got beyond the drawer into which Cynthia Cochrane's correspondence had been thrust, for open- ing one envelope to see whether or not it was worth keeping, I became so interested that I went on from sheet to sheet, and letter to letter, until the afternoon had gone, and the zeal for destruction evaporated. Extending over the nine years during which Cynthia and I have maintained friendship, the letters chronicle a record of sunshine and storm, and, if fate should ever intervene to sever my relations with the actress, they will serve to keep for me a golden memory. I little thought when, as a happy undergraduate, I chased a flying hat down an esplanade it would lead to a sentimental impasse with a woman destined for high honors in a profession in which success is al- ways hardly won. For if Cynthia's letters show me one thing it is that the stage is conquered by some- thing more than the possession of two rows of white MARCH 79 teeth and an Odol smile. When a drawing-room darling, sitting on a Louis Seize chair, in a lace frock trimmed with baby ribbon, talks about " going on the stage," she pictures herself walking on in the limelight to the soft strains of the orchestra, clad in the latest creation of Reville and Rossiter, with all her friends in the stalls applauding till their gloves split, and the rest of the company spellbound at her loveliness and grace. Then the actor-manager will lead her three times before the curtain for a further salvo from the audience, when she will be free to drive away in an electric brougham, upholstered in white satin, to sup with the Duke of Magenta Stretlitz, who will offer her the strawberry leaves directly the poulet au diable has been served on gold plate. As every girl I know cherishes this modest ambition, I often have occasion to recall the realities of theatrical life as depicted by Cynthia's pen. The earliest epistles dealt with Cynthia's experi- ences on tour, the following being sent one September from a holiday resort just big enough to boast a pier pavilion, and to hold a troupe of White Coons as well as the Golden Belle company: " I've risen to 3O/- a week on the salary list, and I'm going strong. Thanks to the billstickers, and the enterprise of the advance agent, the house has been full every night, and the manager as cheerful as a cherub, such a contrast from our last stopping place, where he swore the whole time, and sacked a girl be- cause she kissed the stage carpenter during the setting of the baronial hall. " My chance seems a long time in coming, but as fortune, they say, knocks at every one's door once in 80 TOO MANY WOMEN a lifetime, he is bound to rattle on my bit of oak sooner or later, and I shan't keep him waiting longer than it takes to jump into the hall and raise the latch. I know I could do better than Grace Western, who is only playing the lead because her boy is rich, and backing her. She'll exhaust even the boss's patience, though, if she continues to carry on with a fresh fel- low in every town and to fill the local papers with paragraphs about 'What the Little Bird Saw.' If the little bird saw half of Grace's goings-on he'd molt all his feathers, and take to blinkers. "We are having the best of times, picnics, tea parties, and gayeties without end. Indeed, without such intervals of calm as we get at places like this, no one could stand the racket and rush of touring. Why, I haven't slept so well for months ! " Then there is another in a different key, when Cynthia was in a northern manufacturing town dur- ing a bleak February. " I've never been in a more horrible place. It rains all day, and I sit wondering what sins I've committed to deserve such punishment. The ' digs ' are no better a frowzy landlady, who is rarely sober, the mirror patched with brown paper, candle grease every- where, and the food brought up on dishes that look as though they hadn't been washed since the last tenant went. When I complained, the woman said that actresses couldn't pick and choose their lodgings, but must be thankful to find the people who would take them in at all. That's the sort of thing that makes me want to chuck the stage for good and all. " Things aren't going smoothly in the show either. MARCH 81 The box office grumbles at the takings, everybody feels ' down in the mouth,' and the manager thinks I'm * stuck up ' because I won't let him make love to me. Still, it will be all the same a hundred years hence ! " We are due in the suburbs in five weeks, hurrah ! Then, my dear, you shall give me supper, and we'll do a ' Covent Garden ' together and I'll forget that men can be cads, and women wanton." Ambition to succeed kept Cynthia loyal to the pro- fession, she had pluck and faith in herself, and she pulled through where a girl with less talent or deter- mination would have retired into private life, and a hat shop. From my privileged position behind the scenes I saw how hard was the fight. "I've rehearsed from 9 till 3" (so ran one letter), "put in an evening performance from 7.30-10.30, saved a pal from making a fool of herself with a man who ought to have known better, and now I'm writing to you in order to let myself talk to somebody who does believe in me. When I become a * star ' won't I be good to my understudy, my word ! and to all the girls who are trying to live on less than 2 a week, and sending home a postal order to their mothers as well ! I respect success more than ever now I realize how hardly it is won, and how for one victor there are ten vanquished." Cynthia got her foot on the ladder, which was to reach to the stage of the "Alcazar," by an incident described as follows by my lively correspondent: " Grace Western has done for herself at last. Three 83 TOO MANY WOMEN nights ago she came on 'full of corn,' according to the expressive vocabulary of the scene shifters, and cheeked the management right and left. So, at the end. of a performance in which the gallery pelted our leading lady with pronouns and paper pellets, Grace was officially informed that, as her home circle must be pining for the return of its brightest ornament, she had better catch the night express. And now rumor runs that her Crcesus isn't taking any more of Grace because she smacked his face on the arrival platform of St. Pancras for not having already horse- whipped the London impresario of the Golden Belle on .her behalf. "I am playing second lead on the strength of the vacancy ; and what follows ? " From that moment Cynthia Cochrane never looked back. She went from second to lead, from the prov- inces to London pantomime, and thence to the " Alcazar," and the glory of capital letters on the play- bills. It was with the pantomime engagement at the Pad- dington "Grand," now nearly two years ago, that Jimmy Berners appeared on the scene. Cynthia, of course, has had hosts of admirers besides " yours truly," but to their advances and attentions she has presented an innocence and resoluteness baffling the most persistent and infatuated. In many ways Cyn- thia, from the point of view of the stage, is peculiar. She has always refused to acknowledge that the sign- ing of a contract gives her agent any right to sup with her, and, if her attention has been drawn to the fact that the same stall has been occupied night after night by the same individual gazing at her with MARCH 83 vacuous admiration, Cynthia has attributed the phenomenon to the drawing powers of the piece itself. But Jimmy Berners stood in a category by himself. Jimmy Berners was a city solicitor, with a very large practice built up on his shrewdness, and a capital which he continually increased by his capacity for successful speculation. Excluded from the social circles, he would fain have moved in through his strongly marked Hebraic features, and the racial habits he failed to divest himself of, Berners betook himself to a free-and-easy sphere where a gentleman is permitted to wear a red silk handkerchief tucked into his evening dress waistcoat and present any lady with an article of jewelry at short notice. Proceed- ing behind the scenes at the Paddington " Grand " on one occasion, he had met Miss Cochrane, and, struck by her superiority to her surroundings, at once re- solved to better the acquaintance. Cynthia had drawn me a portrait of him at the time. " Such a quaint creature came to see Cissie the other night ('my latest mash,' she introduced him as), a regular Aaron, with a buttonhole as big as a cauli- flower and a nose to match, his coat pinched in at the waist as though his five feet of height had been six, an amber-topped cane in his hand to make him look a * Percy/ and a bouquet for Cissie that must have cost pounds and pounds. He stared so much at me that she got quite angry and called me a * poaching cat/ Fancy me taking anything away from Cissie even her reputation ! " It wasn't a case of Cynthia taking Jimmy Berners away from any one, but of Jimmy Berners throwing 84, TOO MANY WOMEN himself at Cynthia's head. He put a car at her dis- posal, and when she removed to the "Alcazar" in the spring he followed, and leased a box, which was the nearest point he could get to her. The competi- tion at the " Alcazar " proved rather severe for Jimmy. Weighed in the managerial balance, he had been found wanting, and the stage door closed to him, until he had followed a private tip and invested a couple of thousand pounds in the shares of the theater. Cynthia's attitude toward her persistent admirer was one of pity. "He's so unfitted" (she wrote to me once), "for the role he's taken up of breaking the hearts of ac- tresses. Those of us who do possess that unfashion- able commodity will not barter it away to a Frog Prince. Still, Jimmy is a good sort, however ridic- ulous he may be." In his own eyes, Jimmy Berners was not in the least bit ridiculous. He was in deadly earnest, and at last forced Cynthia to acknowledge as much, by offer- ing her his hand (" Such a hand," as Cynthia said, "all rings and fat!"). A refusal couched in such terms as might least hurt his feelings had been to no purpose, for the unabashed Berners still remained in attendance and his car nightly stopped the way at 11.30 outside the "Alcazar" stage door. Although I should be driven off with contumely amidst a shower of scent bottles, powder puffs, slippers and lingerie, were I to say so in the dressing- rooms of the " Alcazar," I would advise a lady of the chorus to marry Jimmy Berners before Lord Fitz- noodle. In spite of his sallow skin, Jimmy is a MARCH 85 " white man," and if his blood isn't blue there's plenty of it. But I should feel some hesitation in urging my point of view upon Cynthia herself. It would look remarkably as though I were using Jimmy as a cat's- paw to draw my chestnuts out of the fire. I would willingly pay the price of a massive silver candelabra, or a set of hand-painted doilies, to see Cynthia happily settled in life with a husband she could respect, even if she couldn't love him. Besides, the number of wives I know whose hearts had been given else- where when they married another, and now are so fond of their second best choices that they won't even let them out of their sight to attend the funeral of an old friend on New Year's Eve, or escort the governess to church, shows that there should be every hope for Cynthia. Marriage is like dipping into a lucky-bag the smaller the hand the woman has, the less chance is there of her drawing out the stuffed monkey, or the doll which squeaks. All my friends say that I spend my days in the hopeless task of trying to combine the two opposite worlds of Society and Bohemia; and they warn me against incurring social pains and penalties for attempting to reconcile such extremes of existence. They would, in effect, imprison me within the narrow confines of a particular rank in life, on the assump- tion, I suppose, that any one adventurous enough to stray beyond the pale of the environment into which he was born, to encounter other humanities and creeds, will return from his pilgrimage across that borderland in revolt against the code ruling his former state, and import alien ideas shocking to the tastes and habits current there. But eccentricity is not 86 TOO MANY WOMEN originality, just as to be unconventional does not necessarily involve an appearance in the divorce court. I have no patience with the man or woman who willfully offend the susceptibilities of friends in order to proclaim their freedom from prejudice, and assert independence. It may seem a strange thing to say, but if I were a married man anxious to prove my belief that the wedding service was the fetich of a decadent civilization, I wouldn't take " Number Two"*' to supper at the Savoy. In the same way were I more in sympathy with the politics of the New Cut .than of Mayfair, I would prefer not to wave the Red Flag at a Park Lane dinner table. When I'm in Rome I do as the Romans do, even though the toga doesn't suit my figure, and makes walkfng diffic'ult. . " // faut souffrir pour etre belle," and to have a good time. All the same .there isno triumph so great as the attain- ment of the apparently impossible, the founding of a salon/ say, on the ruins of the old ' regime. Any hostess can get -dukes to meg t dukes ; the problem is to introduce dukes to dustmen. All of which is a mere literary prelude to the an- nouncement that Steward dined with me the other night to meet the Bellews. I had seen the Southlands' motor standing in Bond Street, and remembering the social obligations under 'which she had laid me, I waited till Mrs. B came out of her jeweler's, and invited her and a daughter for the following evening. Mrs. Bellew has always prided herself on keeping an open mind, which, in practice, takes the form of com- bining the position of Dame President of the local Primrose League Habitation with the Chairmanship of a Browning Society in Pont Street, and of letting her girls read anything they like. MARCH 87 Philosophers and wise men through the ages have endeavored to locate the seat of the soul in the human body, but without success. I know exactly where it lies, so I ordered the following menu. I flatter myself that the author of The Gourmet's Guide to Europe couldn't beat it. Bisque d'Ecrevisses. Sole aux Crevettes. Perdreau Casserole. Salade. daces Orange. Friandises. Mrs.! Bellew was obviously disconcerted by Steward's turn-down collars, and " made-up " white tie, but His tactful manner, and appropriate choice of an introductory topic dispelled her doubts, till the aroma of the crayfish soup put her quite at her ease. The fact that he was the librettist of the " Alcazar " musical play gave my old Fleet Street colleague a glamour in the eyes of Sybil Bellew, and mafte her ply him with erudite questions on the \vays of the stage, in the framing of which she showed an alarm- ing knowledge of the contemporary French drama, and the latest cause celebre. As a type of precocious maidenhood she was new to Steward, and I could see that he was making a study of her, while he displayed an unwonted deferential manner, addressing her as " my dear young lady." Her mother was a couple of courses in getting her bearings right. Mrs. Bellew only enters on conversational duels as a principal, never a second, however unequal her powers be to sustain the position. She feels she owes it as a duty to her sex and class never to acknowledge intellectual inferiority, either in monologue or repartee. Per- sonally, I gibber at her. She mistakes nonsense for 88 TOO MANY WOMEN cleverness, just as with some people a catch phrase like " I don't think " passes for humor. Steward early won Mrs. Bellew's respect by defin- ing a Conservative as " a Liberal with a public-school education," and held her attentive to his speculation as to the most appetizing culinary description in litera- ture, which he decided in favor of the hermit's venison pasty in Ivanhoe. We progressed through a variety of topics, comprising the rival merits of Nikisch and Mottl as conductors, the best wine to drink with fish, when " rose du Barry " would come in again as the fashionable color, the place of the nude in art (during which discussion I tactfully engaged Sybil Bellew in a verbal sparring match), and the Negro Problem in the States. By the time the last-named subject was under dis- cussion Mrs. Bellew had thoroughly aroused Steward's sense of mischief. He had talked his best to uncom- prehending ears, and to find the conversation con- tinually turned from the point at issue by fatuous feminine interjections. No one likes to have his sallies spoiled by another's density, least of all Steward. Needless to say, Mrs. Bellew was enjoying herself hugely. She was meeting on equal terms, so she imagined, a stimulating wit and raconteur, and giving a Roland for his Oliver. She introduced the Negro Problem to our notice apropos of the bunches of mus- catel and black grapes that the waiter had placed before us, the kind of association of ideas to which she was liable. Steward had suggested that the solution would only come from the negro race itself, when Mrs. Bel- lew remarked, with an air of engaging originality, ".White is white, and black is black, you know." " But the whiteness of the white is not equal to the MARCH 89 blackness of the black," Steward replied, with admir- able gravity. " How do you make that out ? " queried the lady in a puzzled voice. "When I was a child," he said, "I had a negro ' mammy ' for a nurse." "That does make a difference, of course." Mrs. Bellew was trying to regain her hold over the con- versation. " The black pigment in the skin of the negro," con- tinued the unabashed journalist, " is responsible not only for his racial characteristics, but also for the essential qualities differentiating him from the Euro- pean-bred American. The Greeks attributed definite action to the bile present in the human body, speaking of * black care ' and * black jealousy/ physical and mental conditions which they thought arose directly from that secretion. Now, if scientists could only extract the coloring matter from the skin of the negro, there would be no such problem as we have been speak- ing of." Mrs. Bellew's face lighted up intelligently. Her expression had been very downcast a moment before. "In other words, if the negroes could be made white, there would be no longer any blacks to have a problem?" " You take my meaning exactly." Steward didn't turn a hair as he said it. I burst out into explosive laughter. Mrs. Bellew looked at me in astonishment. Like a drowning man I clutched at a straw a cheese straw, and simulated a paroxysm of choking. Mrs. Bellew must have suspected the violence of my gurglings, for she rose with a heightened color. 90 TOO MANY WOMEN "Shall we go into the lounge?" she asked. "It's getting rather hot in here." We moved accordingly. Even then Steward was not to be restrained from explaining to Mrs. Bellew, who was prepared to believe anything that fell from his lips, that the first violin was a leader of the Camorra who had murdered a Neapolitan bishop, but had had his appeal against extradition allowed. He also pointed out an elderly gentleman across the hall as the most vitriolic and celebrated dramatic critic of the day. Then he described how the reporters of his paper sat transcribing their copy with pannikins of absinthe before them, and how the staff of the postal district in which the " Alcazar " was situated had had to be strengthened to deal with the extra work en- tailed by the proposals of marriage that poured in for the chorus of the Bird in the Bush. Steward, in short, tore the veil from Mrs. Bellew's eyes, and showed her a London more wonderful than the Bagdad of the Caliph. " It's been the most enjoyable of evenings," sHe ex- claimed, on parting. " I didn't know you had such entertaining friends as Mr. Steward." "I didn't know it myself," I replied, "until to- night." Steward was thoroughly pleased with the whole thing. "East of Trafalgar Square," he told me, " one's sense of perspective is apt to get distorted." " You mean," I interrupted, " your sense of humor is apt to get out of control west of it. It's not your fault that I'm still on Mrs. Bellew's visiting list." But Steward wouldn't see it in that light, and began to talk of missionary work amongst the aristocracy. I know one thing. I should precious soon organize a massacre of the converts. APRIL 'For one woman who inspires us with worthy ideas there are a hundred who cause us to make fools of ourselves" NAPOLEON BONAPARTE. APRIL 1 Mrs. Mallow checkmates Cynthia Cochrane makes another Conquest "A Young Man's Fancy" I HAVE no intention of calling at Porchester Ter- race again, but I will say this for my short acquaint- ance with Mrs. Ponting-Mallow it has taught me that a pretty woman is a law unto herself. If she likes to darken her eyebrows, powder her face thickly against the rigors of an English spring, and go about with individuals other than her husband announcing that she is determined at all costs " to be in things," who is to say her nay? No man, certainly; and for the opinion, good, bad or indifferent, of her own sex Julia Mallow doesn't care one straw. " Women are such cats," the lady once remarked to me, but she used the phrase in forgetfulness of the fact that she herself concealed the sharpest of sharp claws, and was not slow to bare them against the reputation of a rival. Where I was to blame was not in making a fool of myself a person who isn't guilty of that in his youth is laying up the dullest of dull old ages for himself but in thinking that nobody would see me doing it I had been under the impression that the invitation conveyed through the medium of the parrot when I had found myself in the boudoir at Porchester Terrace between Mr. Mallow and the deep sea had been an invitation to a matinee at Daly's, and a matinee only. Mrs. Ponting-Mallow, however, took it to include lunch before, tea afterward, and then a long hansom 93 94 TOO MANY WOMEN drive back across the Park, in spite of my obvious reluctance to go so far out of my way. "And when are you coming again to let a quiet little mouse thank you for taking it out to see life?" asked the lady, as I was bidding her good-by on the doorstep, with an arch and fantastic playfulness that I was quite unable to parry. I had had a full five hours of Mrs. Mallow's artificial curls and conversation, been enlightened on the rami- fications of her various male friendships, entrusted with confidences on her social ambitions, her husband's shortcomings, her season's gowns, her old grievances, and her new cook, and I was in as urgent need of an armchair, a cigar, and a string of oaths, as a man with a bullet through the head is of surgical treatment. So, clutching the area rail, I murmured incoherently something about its being "no kindness at all, only a pleasure." That little woman displayed the ruthless cruelty of Nana Sahib, and asked me to call the following after- noon. I replied that I was engaged. Would the day after that suit me? It wouldn't. Then Sunday? I should be out of town. " Are you tired of me already? " pouted Mrs. Mal- low, speaking the true word in jest. "How can you think of such a thing? " I hastened to protest, with the hypocrisy demanded by politeness. " I'll come to tea to-morrow, if I may." The tea wasn't such an ordeal as I had anticipated. Mrs. Ponting-Mallow at home took on a quieter tone than when abroad and bent on impressing her neigh- bors in theater and restaurant. Being less intent on pleasing, she pleased the more. Also, she had the tact to efface herself, and allow me to talk, with the APRIL 95 added flattery of seeming to seelc my advice on the subject of Ponting-Mallow. I told my hostess that all husbands were trying, since only the weaker specimens of my sex surrendered the right of the bachelor to express admiration of beauty wherever found. I hadn't meant that remark as a compliment to Mrs. Mallow, but she took it as one. " If you were married you wouldn't be having tea in my boudoir. Aren't you pleased that you are still single ? " she said, and smiled at me. Certainly it was a new sensation to meet a woman who gave one a lead over conversational fences as Mrs. Mallow did. But I wasn't out to take risks that afternoon or any afternoon where she was concerned. I began to be a little frightened of the lady. She put on the ingenue air as crudely as she did the powder on her nose. " I don't see what being married has to do with it," I replied, with gross inconsistency, in my anxiety to disarm the compliment. " Mayn't a man and a woman have tea together? " " Of course ; there's no harm in it ! " Mrs. Mallow gave me a look that belied her words. " That is, if people are sensible." I held my peace, not that my feelings were very peaceful. Quite the reverse. "Are you sensible, Mr. Hanbury?" The lady cleared the obstacle with one question. " I wasn't when I promised to come to tea, but I'm going to begin to be sensible now." With this I got up. " Surely you're not going yet ? " Mrs. Mallow struck a note of annoyance that was out of place in a 96 TOO MANY WOMEN frivolous conversation. " Ponting won't be back from the club for hours." " I deeply regret Having to leave you alone for so long," I said, with mock gravity, " but duty calls me away." It did, duty to Ponting ; although* that wouldn't have worried me if duty to an absentee husband hadn't also coincided with my duty to myself. Mrs. Pont ing-Mallow actually stamped her foot. " It's too silly of you behaving like this. I thought we were going to be such friends." " So we are," I replied, " in this way." And I shook her hand in token of departure. " Oh, you know what I mean." Mrs. Mallow tossed her fair head with the petulance of a spoiled child. I looked past the artificially darkened line of her brows straight into her eyes. " Frankly, I do," I said, " but we'll play the game by my rules, or not at "all." Every man gets the luck he deserves. At the end of the street I met Ponting-Mallow. That was to have been the end of Madame Mallow, so far as I was concerned, since enough is as good as a feast, and I had no mind to take up the role of " lap- dog " assigned to me. It was sheer ill-fortune, there- fore, that not ten days later I should have found the lady at a subscription dance in Kensington, and that she should have nodded instant and cordial recognition from the arm of her partner of the moment. By all the canons of convention, and on the strength of such knowledge of the sex as is contained in the line, " Hell knows no fury like a woman scorned," I ought to have received the cut direct, and a contemptuous curl of the lip from Julia Mallow. "Confound it all! " I muttered. APRIL 97 Haines, whose new-born enthusiasm for the " light fantastic " had been responsible for my presence there that night, caught the exclamation. " What's up ? " he asked, interested. "That!" and I pointed out Mrs. Mallow as she swung past us. "The very pretty little woman in the creme de menthe costume, who gave you the glad eye ? " Was I after all in danger of throwing away the pearl of great price ? " Is she very pretty? " I asked. " Not so dusty ! " replied Haines, who is wont to sacrifice lucidity of expression in order to indulge his fondness for verbal eccentricities. " The other day," I explained, " I gave Mrs. Pont- ing-Mallow * No ' for an answer when she wanted ' Yes,' and if I retract there'll be the devil to pay. She's married." "The devil is a lenient creditor," retorted Haines, with a pungent wit. " We all have our little accounts with him." " I can't afford a hundred per cent for the loan. Besides, I've got no security to offer." Haines turned an amused look on me. " Security, Hanbury ? Surely you of all people don't want security? 'Nothing venture, nothing have/ you know ! " " If that's your opinion, Archie," I whispered hur- riedly, " I'm going to introduce you, for here she comes." As Mrs. Mallow, en route for the cool corridor of the hotel, passed through the doorway against which Haines and myself stood, I waylaid her and effected my purpose. " How strange to meet you here ! " remarked the 98 lady, while Haines bent gallantly over her programme. The epithet jarred on me. Why not " pleasant," or even "charming"? Haines was quite right Julia Mallow was pretty, and the vivid green of her dress suited her admirably. Was it still too late to be friends again just friends? I compromised with my con- science, and booked a dance. Then, leaving Haines to his own resources, I went to smoke a cigarette and analyze my feelings. The process took some time. When I retraced my steps to the scene of action I did so with the conviction that Haines had accurately gauged the situation. I had been far too precipitate in reading a woman's motives. Tied to a bear of a husband, Mrs. Mallow had only wished congenial com- panionship from me, and a spice of that chivalrous sympathy which a man should always be ready to extend to beauty in distress. I was prepared to offer the fullest reparation in my power. The refrain of " Kiss again with tears " kept running through my mind, as though in some way it was applicable to the situation. I couldn't see the connection. Mrs. Mal- low might. I determined to ask her. I met Mrs. Ponting-Mallow and Haines descending the stairs, as the waltz my waltz struck up. They looked extremely pleased with themselves too pleased. "You'll come and call, won't you?" Mrs. Mallow said, as I appeared. Haines overdid the enthusiasm in his reply. Before I could stay him he was lost in the crowd pressing into the ballroom. " Is there a convenient sofa upstairs?" I asked my partner. " I suppose we're not going to dance this ? " Mrs. Mallow gave me a curious glance. " Oh, yes, we are," she replied. " Every bar of it." APRIL; 99 I put all the appeal I was capable of into my voice. " Won't you sit it out ? I've got so much to say to you about the other afternoon." I faltered in spite of myself. "I insist upon dancing 1 . It will save you making conversation to me." Before I could probe the inward meaning of her remark Julia Mallow had dragged me into the current, and for twelve minutes by the clock I twisted and turned round that infernal room, till my collar melted and my hair stood on end. Ever and again my partner would turn up her face to smile at me, till I knew that Tantalus had had a pretty rotten time of it in Hades. But even the agony of the dance was preferable to the tortures Mrs. Mallow inflicted on me during the interval which followed. Refusing to sit in any less conspicuous spot than the big hall of the hotel, the lady seemed possessed by a mocking spirit. I could neither make her become serious herself, nor take me seriously. So soon as ever I approached topics which promised well for an explanation on my part as to my previous attitude toward her, Mrs. Mallow steered the conversation on to the shallows, to wreck it com- pletely on such a subject as the rival merits of Dandy Dinmonts and bobtailed sheep dogs for keeping down rats. " I can't make you out at all," I said, disgust at Mrs. Mallow's conduct my prevailing sentiment, as I escorted her back at the summons of the band. " Once I was under the impression that we got on rather well together." " We all form wrong judgments at times, Mr. Han- bury. Now I made a mistake about you." "A mistake?" I repeated it feebly. 100 TOO MANY WOMEN .. Yes!" Mrs. Mallow gave a malicious emphasis to the simple affirmative. "Your man-o'-the-world air deceived me. I didn't really mean to frighten you, though." In a whirl of amazement I stopped dead. " I fright- ened? .What at?" " At a married woman. That makes all the differ- ence to you, doesn't it ? " Mrs. Mallow slipped from my side. When I had recovered sufficiently from the stormy emotions she had aroused to look around me, it was to see her dancing with Haines. Scorned and supplanted, I shook the dust of that ballroom from my feet and left. When I next saw Haines he was eating crumpets in the club. I pounced on him in feverish curiosity and taxed him with contriving the mystery of Mrs. Mal- low's callousness. Haines received the assault with the surprise of an innocent person, but his first words convicted him. " Thank me," he said, " for saving you from your worse self. You as good as told me that you wanted rescuing from the machinations of a woman, old fel- low, so I did the trick." " It was a trick," I retorted, " and a dirty one." " Come now, Hanbury, my friend, be just if you can't be generous." And Haines carefully brushed the crumbs off his coat. " You were hovering on the brink of temptation, I only pushed you back into safety." " I don't want safety." That was the truth ; I didn't. "I knew that, but you've got it now, in spite of yourself. I gained you a moral victory at the cost APRIL 101 of a defeat to your pride. I pictured you to the lady as a diffident Don Juan, a * fain-would-I-rise-but-that- I-fear-to-fall' sort of person, forever tiptoeing along the pleasant paths of dalliance, but never coming to grips with the realities of temptation." "Anything more?" I put the question in rising indignation at the monstrous part Haines had played. " Lots ! " Haines spoke cheerfully. " I laid the paint on thick. I told Mrs. Mallow that your brag- gadocio air was only an affectation, a mask concealing a cherub's face. Mrs. Mallow doesn't want cherubs at any price, so you got the chuck." " And you told all this infernal pack of lies in order that you might take my place ? " Haines raised a warning hand. " Steady there, Hanbury, I wouldn't advise my worst enemy to play number three at Porchester Terrace." " Hello ! " I exclaimed. " How did your call go off?" " It didn't." Haines' words had the ring of sincerity about them. "That husband of hers smoked like a chimney all the time, and read an article on the sources of the Brahmaputra when he wasn't scrapping with his wife over the silliest of details. I was bored stiff. Not for all the smiles in the world would I go there again. You're welcome to the billet so far as I'm concerned." "What about 'nothing venture, nothing have,' Archie?" After the way he had treated me I was justified in quoting Haines against himself to his own discomfiture. " India has much to answer for when it sends men home with no livers." The remark sounded irrele- vant, but I knew what Archie Haines meant. 102 TOO MANY WOMEN "And when they have young wives as well," I added, "the practice becomes a positive scandal." Then we clinked teacups to the death and burial of Ponting-Mallow, C.S.I. The problem of dealing with his widow was left till the hypothesis material- ized. James Berners, solicitor, has a lot to learn if he thinks that, on the strength of an old friend like myself having presented Miss Cynthia Cochrane, of the " Alcazar," with a pair of earrings, he is justified in sending a diamond " dog-collar " on his own be- half. An individual who is described to his face as " silly old Gerald " is on a very different footing from one to whom the formal title of " Mr. Berners " is accorded. Berners' offering had been returned by the next post, but Cynthia had been ill-advised enough to dispatch it with a note suggesting that there must have been some mistake on the part of the shop, and ending with the Parthian shot of congratulations to Jimmy on his, doubtless, forthcoming marriage to the lady for whom the jewelry was really intended. " Now you've let yourself in for a dose of Berners with a vengeance," I told Cynthia, when she had fin- ished her account of the incident, on the morning after. Cynthia threw away her cigarette end and lit another. " I couldn't resist giving Jimmy a dig," she said. " That sound a dangerous game to play with a man who hasn't an ounce of humor in him, or he wouldn't be still hanging round the * Alcazar/ If Berners could be laughed out of constancy, it would have been long ago. His persistency and obtuseness will remove far more rooted objections to his company than you APRIL 103 entertain. Mark my words, Cynthia," and I shook a warning finger at the girl; "he'll be round here precious soon to explain that your letter was written under a complete misapprehension, and that his present was for your slender neck. What's more, if you aren't careful, he'll try to clasp it there him- self." Cynthia's adorable little face wreathed itself in smiles at the absurdity of my suggestion. Her merri- ment died away in a frown as the door-handle rattled, as only the door handle in flats can, and in walked Berners himself. James Berners was wrapped in a fur coat, the im- possible collar of which was formed of two seal skins, others giving each sleeve the appearance of muffs. On his head at an angle of forty-five degrees was set a Tyrolese hat, with a cloak-room ticket stuck in the band, while a shock of black, shiny curls created the impression that Nature at his birth had supplied him with lamb's wool instead of hair. He carried an ivory- topped cane in his hand, a cauliflower or was it a tomato? in his buttonhole, and a cigar, in an amber holder, stuck out from the middle of his pale face, with its high cheekbones, and broad-based nose, like the horn of a rhinoceros. He had but to show himself out-of-doors to become another Joshua, and make every living thing in his immediate neighborhood stand still in amazement. In this emergency Cynthia Cochrane showed the stuff she was made of. She forestalled any remarks on the part of the apparition by rapidly conveying to Berners that he needn't have troubled to come round so early to apologize for the jeweler's stupidity, that she quite understood the annoyance he was feeling, 104. TOO MANY WOMEN that she wished him every happiness in his future life, that it was no use his taking off his coat because she was just going out herself to do some shopping, and that the weather was warm for the time of the year, but that one could never be too careful. It was masterly, and not a Chancellery in Europe but could have profited by the exhibition of diplomacy. Then, however, Cynthia marred the excellence of her performance by checking me in the act of insti- tuting a tactful retreat in order to introduce me to Berners. A friend of mine had consulted Jimmy Berners in a case of blackmail, and I had, on one occa- sion, inadvertently gone off with an umbrella of his from the " Alcazar" and failed to return it because the handle pleased me. But as these two facts even taken together hardly constituted acquaintanceship, I swallowed my scruples and submitted to the for- mality for Cynthia's sake. I grasped a fat, flabby hand, fringed with onyx signet rings, and remarked that I had often heard of him from Cynthia Miss Cochrane, as I corrected it to, lest Berners might copy me in this, as well as in earrings. While Cynthia had been speaking, Berners had never taken his gaze off her, and so manifestly was he under the spell of her presence that he barely gave me the courtesy of a glance lest he should lose a single gesture or expression of his adored one. Such dumb devotion was touching, but it had the disad- vantage of preventing the intruder from realizing that he was as unwelcome a visitor as his diamonds had been. " You mustn't let me waste any more of your time," remarked Cynthia impatiently, after Berners had stood in the open door for a full five minutes, as motionless APRIL 105 as a wooden Highlander outside a tobacconist's, and it became evident he had no intention of leaving the flat of his own initiative. " I suppose you've got your car waiting below ? " she asked. Some hidden spring in Berners' memory was touched by this question, for he advanced into the room, put his hat on the table, and spoke for the first time. " My dear Miss Cochrane," he began, " your send- ing back the little gift " (I liked that, when at least two hundred of the "best" had gone to its purchase!) " has given me the pleasure of coming round in person to explain." Jimmy spoke with an exaggerated care and pre- cision, as though he was struggling to avoid falling into the vulgar colloquialisms more natural to him. His coarse, vigorous self, in its trappings of luxury and wealth, created the effect of a pebble set in gold. From Cynthia's own account he was none the less likable, an excellent companion, shrewd and enter- taining. Only where she was concerned did his wits desert him, to give an impression of folly. And certainly he was doing a very foolish thing at that moment. " There was no mistake, my dear Miss Cochrane," Berners continued, in what was meant to be a honied voice, but which only succeeded in being insinuating; " there was no mistake ; " and diving into his pocket he produced the identical box in which the ill-omened jewelry had arrived. Cynthia sounded a note which I had never heard from her before. "If there was no mistake I should be very angry 106 TOO MANY WOMEN indeed, Mr. Berners, so angry that you would never speak to me again." Berners' sallow countenance turned even paler, and took on a look of genuine alarm. His hand, clasping the box of jewelry, hovered nervously on the edge of his pocket, and then vanished into its capacious depths. His thoughtless attack on his loved one's self-respect had been repulsed with heavy loss. With its defeat, and the distress so evident in the enemy's demeanor, Cynthia's kind heart relented. "I was sure, Mr. Berners, there must have been something wrong somewhere," she said, holding out her hand. "I don't allow anybody to insult me in that way. If you want to remain friends with me you must never give me anything except the loan of your motor car sometimes." Her strange visitor underwent a complete trans- formation. From the depths of despair he scaled the heights of joy, as, taking Cynthia's outstretched fin- gers, he wrung them. " The car that's it," Berners almost shouted. " It's waiting outside. Come along to lunch at Brighton. That's really what I came round for." The ready hypocrisy was forgiven for the sake of the good nature prompting the request. Cynthia clapped her hands with the enthusiasm of a child. " Oh, Mr. Berners," she cried, " how simply delight- ful of you. And, of course, you mean Gerald Han- bury to come too. He will behave quite nicely, and try to be amusing." Thus prompted, Berners extended his invitation to myself not in a very pressing manner. That could hardly be expected. " I shan't go without you, sir," said Cynthia, turn- APRIL 107 ing to where I stood, reluctant to accept grudging hospitality, and not particularly attracted by the pros- pect of Berners at close quarters for the best part of a day. " You've simply got to come. You wouldn't be so selfish as to deprive me of a treat. Yes, of course, he'll be overjoyed to accept, Mr. Berners. Thank you ever so much. Say ' Thank you,' Gerald." I said, " Thank you." Cynthia departed to the neighboring room, where to a running commentary of delighted exclamations she effected her toilet, and, as we judged by our sense of hearing, threw her wardrobe into a wild tangle in the search for necessary garments, finally reappearing in a sable coat and toque, with a white motor veil wrapped over her head, through which her eyes sparkled like two stars seen through the mists of night. The vision of Cynthia, and her radiant spirits, ban- ished every scruple as to the wisdom of my taking part in an expedition headed by Jimmy Berners. I forgot his vulgarity, and his overcoat, in the overflow- ing gayety of the prettiest girl in the world. To the echo of Cynthia's laughter, and the music of her voice, I climbed into Berners' car, and was whirled away to Brighton with Beauty and the Beast. Once free of London, Berners offended me less. He couldn't help his personal appearance, although a shrewd person, such as he was reputed to be, ought to have toned down its effect by a quiet mode of dress, rather than have heightened it by cramming on to his person as much of his wealth as he conveniently could. While Jimmy directed his conversation to his fair neighbor I was content to turn my attention to the scenery, looking its best on a perfect spring day, and 108 TOO MANY WOMEN hold Cynthia's hand under the rug, only speaking when she drew me into their idle chatter, or when an assumption by Berners of undue proprietorship over the girl led me to a vigorous assertion of my rights, and a forcible explanation to him of the inferior posi- tion he occupied in her estimation. But with this one exception the sixty miles was covered amicably enough, Cynthia and Berners gossiping on the stage and its concerns, and retailing an endless succession of theatrical anecdotes that would have proved the ruin of the editor who printed them, and made the fortune of any counsel specializing in the law of libel. Still, I for one was glad when we reached the sea, and the car came to a standstill before the glass and iron- wrought portal of the Cosmopolitan Hotel. Cynthia, I have an idea, was of the same way of thinking, for she squeezed my hand, and whispered, " So that's over," as we disposed of our wraps before proceeding to the sumptuous lunch which Berners had had the forethought to order by telegraph before leaving town, and to which, it is superfluous to add, we did the full- est justice. It must have been half-past two before the ices had followed the rest of the good things, and we were free to stroll into the great lounge for coffee and cigars. No sooner had we set foot in the wilderness of palms, marble-topped tables, red plush settees, and Persian rugs, crowded with a typical selection of those who think Brighton and the Cosmopolitan the only place in which to spend a week-end, than my heart sank to my boots, and would have gone even lower were such a feat possible. For there, inside the central cluster of tropical plants, from which she could command every one and every thing, was seated, beyond all APRIL 109 manner of doubt, the rotund and majestic form of Lady Fullard, her gaze riveted and for this small mercy I was devoutly thankful on the contents of the daily paper the advertisement columns, probably, in search of a new domestic, since Lady F 's un- controllable temper and sarcastic wit keep her fre- quently occupied in that direction. Sir John sat by her, and his health was responsible, no doubt, for the amazing phenomenon of his wife's presence at the Cosmopolitan of all places. They must have lunched upstairs privately, for there had been no sign of them in the restaurant. Why couldn't the tiresome old man have looked after his ailments better, and spared a worthy young man acute mental torment? So I thought, as I looked around for a secluded table out of the Fullards* range. A sense of what sort of tale Lady Fullard would tell of my association with a per- son of Berners' stamp, who looked like a son of Shy- lock and the Queen of Sheba, dressed as a combina- tion of stage coster and a millionaire from the Far West, with his crimson waistcoat, check suit, and the precious stones he scattered over his tie and fingers, brought out all the coward in me. I made for a shel- tered corner in an alcove, Cynthia following obedi- ently enough. But Berners was up in arms at once. He had come to Brighton with Cynthia to be seen, and he wasn't going to hide his light under any bushel. He protested, and loudly, that " it was a bit thick to come all the way from town to see the swells, and then creep behind a whacking great palm." Suspecting that there was a method in my madness, Cynthia Cochrane backed up my choice of a resting- place, but nothing would satisfy Jimmy Berners, whose obstinacy grew with every persuasive word addressed 110 TOO MANY WOMEN him, but that we should sit out in the open, where Lady Fullard would have seen me one moment, and invented a string of innuendos and hypotheses about my companions the next. But all chance of our carry- ing the day with Berners was lost when a group of persons in the distance, whom I instantly recognized as Mason, the proprietor of the " Alcazar," with some members of his company, caught sight of Cynthia Cochrane, and signified, by violent gestures, that she and her friends should join forces with their party. Cynthia could hardly refuse to sit with her own mana- ger, even for my sake. " Go along to Mason," I whispered to her, " and take him my love. I'm going into the hall to wait for you. There are some people I know sitting by, and I daren't face the music with that," and I pointed sur- reptitiously to Berners, who with his hands in the armholes of his waistcoat displaying a yard of the gold cable he used as a watchchain, was standing jealously by till my secret colloquy was ended. I reached the front hall by a circuitous and stealthy route, and began a comprehensive study of the time- tables, steamship guides, and excursion notices hang- ing on the walls, until I knew exactly the number of times one changed between Dunfermline and Killaloe, and the cost to a farthing of every circular tour in the ynited Kingdom. I was beginning to go over the west-coast watering places and their lists of attrac- tions, for the third time, when a sudden end was put to my researches. Lady Fullard swept out of the lounge. I tried to hide my head in a guide-book. Vain folly ! "Is that you, Mr. Hanbury?" she asked, raising her glasses to survey me the better. APRIL 111 I would have denied the fact if I could, but I couldn't. Lady Fullard knew I wasn't a twin. " Are you staying here ? " Lady Fullard went on. "Only for the day." I saw she was about to ask another question. A courage born of despair rose in me. "By myself," I added. " My tonsils are a little weak and require sea air." I gave a feeble cough to prove the truth of my as- sertion. Tonsils, I believe, were to be found in one's throat. Or was it jonquils? The doubt con- fused me. " My mother," I said, " wished to be remembered to you. I must go off and fetch her ; good-by." " But a moment ago you had come down here alone, Mr. Hanbury ! " pursued Lady Fullard, with un< feminine logic. " When I said I was in Brighton alone," I stam- mered, " I meant I was with my mother." "What do you mean, Mr. Hanbury?" The waiter, coming up to Lady Fullard, saved me from an answer, which, for the life of me, I was un- able to frame. I felt grateful to him. A second later I could have slain the idiot, as he held out a silver salver upon which lay a gold net purse containing a powder puff. It was Cynthia's. " This was found under your chair, madame," the man explained. Lady Fullard glared menacingly at him. The fellow paused with a puzzled expression. " Weren't you lunching with this gentleman ? " and he turned inquiringly to me. What a question to ask ! "Gerald, where are you?" rang out in Cynthia's clear tones. " Hurrah, there's my purse, I thought TOO MANY WOMEN you had it, Gerald. I beg your pardon," an'd catching sight of Lady Fullard the girl stopped short. Cynthia Cochrane made a perfect picture, her cheeks flushed with health and happiness, her eyes flashing the most dangerous of glances, distinction and grace in every line and pose of her figure. Even Lady Ful- lard's grim features relaxed. As for me, I didn't care what happened. "Lady Fullard," I explained, "may I introduce Miss Cynthia Cochrane of the * Alcazar,' one of my oldest friends! Cynthia, this is Lady Fullard, who lectures me, disapproves of my goings-on, and thinks I'm an idle scapegrace! Tell her I'm not as bad as all that." For a moment the two women faced each other in an embarrassed silence, then Lady Fullard took Cyn- thia's hand in hers and patted it. " I'm glad to have met you, my dear," she said, almost tenderly. " I thought what unusual ability you showed when I saw your performance the other night. I'm sure you're as good as you're pretty. Friendship with you won't do Gerald Hanbury any harm." Cynthia's exuberant spirits had given place to a more subdued mood as the elder woman was speaking. " Thank you for saying such good things," she said softly. " People aren't always so sympathetic to those of us on the stage as you are. I'm very grateful to you, not only for my own sake, but for Gerald's as well, dear Lady Fullard." A wave of appreciation for Lady Fullard's action overwhelmed me. " I'll never forget your saying that to Cynthia," I muttered, my voice unaccountably gone; "you're a brick!" 'APRIU 113 " I must go back to Sir John," remarked Lady Ful- lard, with a touch of inconsequence that was the truest tact. " He'll think I've got lost," and with a parting smile at Cynthia she moved away. When she had passed out of sight I turned to Cynthia, her gayety evaporated, her head downcast. " My dearest Cynthia," I said in the steadiest tone I could command, "you'll never score a bigger triumph than you have just won." And if she lives to be a hundred she never will. A successful son, I take it, falls in with his parents' wishes, when they coincide with his own, and conceals any divergence of opinion that may disclose itself be- tween the generations, by saying little though he may think the more. If so I am a failure. I went down to spend Easter at home, knowing very well that I was giving hostages by affording my father and mother the opportunity they had long awaited for personally pressing on me their views as to my future, matri- monial and professional, and which my talents as an elusive letter writer had hitherto postponed. But I stood sorely in need of a spell of quiet after my anxious time with Mrs. Ponting-Mallow, and the charm of the country in April called me with an insistence which I, hardened Cockney though I was, could not disregard. It is easy to be wise after the event, but, had I known what was in store for me by the domestic hearth, I would have shrunk to a shadow on the flagstones of London before accepting the treacherous hospitality of my parents. My father is an easy-going country gentleman, ready to let things slide if he can thereby escape an argu- ment in political phraseology a " peace at any price " TOO MANY WOMEN man. On his own initiative he would never have sent the ultimatum of January last, with its reflections on my bachelor state, since his cause of complaint against me is my taste for literature. My father's outlook on life is that of the dweller on the soil. The growth of social forces seeking to break the spell cast by the land over its occupants fills his kindly soul with fear lest he and his should be torn from their ancient seat. The part played by the Press in hastening this divorce between the land of England and its owners has im- bued him with a hatred of journalism and all its works. That his only son should have joined the forces of the enemy has been the severest trial of his middle age. Moreover, the profession of letters is associated in my father's mind with disreputable surroundings. He labels any one who dips a pen into an inkpot as an outsider, and a slouch hat, unshaven cheeks, and ram- shackle costume as inseparable features to his con- ception of a journalist as to Haines' idea of a Bohe- mian. My father's idea of success is peculiarly his own. If he is to acknowledge ability it must proceed along recognized lines. Thus he sets his seal of apprecia- tion on the position of a Steward of the Jockey Club, and withholds it from George Meredith's. "Any boy can write," is his point of view, " since it only means thinking of the proper words; but it takes a man to judge a horse." And in the same way, a deputy-lieutenant looms larger in his eyes than the Member of Parliament for the county. Whatever error in birth or upbringing went to the endowing of me with the temperament of a Bohemian, my father, at any rate, is not responsible for it. I am, and al- ways shall remain, a problem to him ; although I doubt whether I shall justify the suspicion he harbors that, APRIL 115 when, in the fullness of time, I succeeded to the Place and its acres, I shall cut down the trees in the park to make paper pulp with, and erect a printing machine in the musicians' gallery. Pride of ancestry is not weakened by being planted alongside the modern spirit in the soul of a man. I will never degrade the herit- age handed down to me by the long line of Hanburys, dead and gone, whose portraits keep ceaseless vigil, from the walls of my home, over the fortunes of their latest descendant. I have noticed that fathers never dictate to daughters in the way that mothers do to sons. A man realizes that his womankind can manage much better for them- selves than on any advice he is competent to offer. But a woman is always prepared to lay down laws of conduct for a sex whose standards are as remote from hers as the customs of the Fijians from those of the natives of Lapland. My mother's amiable theory is that once get me married, and every anxiety on her and her husband's part of which I am the cause will be removed. To her marriage is an institution which strains one's nature free of impurities. A man goes into it riotous, extravagant, self-indulgent: he comes out a churchwarden, carrying the offertory bag. Setting out with this goal in sight, my mother dur- ing the whole of my stay at Easter let no oppor- tunity pass of airing her views. No allusion was too slight, no occasion inappropriate for her to read me a homily on the virtues acquired by " double harness," and the vices accruing from single-blessedness. The number of promising careers amongst our acquaint- ances shattered by the latter state of affairs filled me with surprise. People I had never suspected of pos- sessing any brains apparently would have been in the 116 TOO MANY WOMEN forefront of their professions had they only married in their twenties. Even our solicitor was quoted as a potential President of the Law Society but for his confirmed bachelor instincts, which had kept him in a small country town because the hunting was good. I knew for a fact that the man had run away with a client's wife when still articled, so he had shown good intentions which might have been allowed to discount his later bachelor behavior. When I laid stress on this point in his favor my mother's only form of argu- ment was to rebuke me for my bad taste. So like a woman to shirk the issue on a question of morality! But if my Easter troubles had ended there I shouldn't have minded. A violent acquiescence in those prejudices which he disguises to himself as " patriot- ism " will always turn my father's thoughts from my concerns, and I can generally silence my mother for a time by a feigned surrender. I had, however, other things on my mind, beginning with George Burn, who was with us, in compliance with my sister Dulcie's request that I would bring some man to balance an old school friend of hers, Miss Audrey Maitland by name, who was staying over the holidays. I obeyed the more willingly for George's own sake. For the last two months George has been steering an erratic course between Lady Lucy Goring and Kitty Denver, the Transatlantic heiress, and I owed it to him to give him a change of diet. It is a great fault of George's that he can do nothing by halves. He must not only devour the oyster, but the shell as well. And he was aided in his inclination for Dulcie's very attractive company by the development of quite a new side to her character, a tendency to feminine deceit, coupled with a masculine directness of action when it served APRIL 117 her purpose. The first we knew of a picnic in the pine woods was Dulcie's luncheon announcement that Audrey Maitland and myself had planned it the night before. Besides the awkward assumption of intimacy it raised between us two, whoever heard of a picnic in April, and in a pine wood of all places, where the " needles " spike every portion of one's anatomy, and form undesirable ingredients of the salad and the pudding? When the event came off Dulcie made no attempt at diplomatic evasion of the duties of chaper- onage devolving on her, but disappeared with George " to look for nests," leaving Miss Maitland and myself to clear away the debris of lunch, and bore each other with abstract topics of the kind indulged in by the Sunday papers "Is love at first sight possible, or desirable ? " and " Do red-haired girls make the best wives?" On another occasion, when Miss Maitland was lying down with a headache, Dulcie invited me to motor over to pay a call some ten miles away with so touching an exhibition of sisterly solicitude that I threw up an expedition I had planned with the keeper, only to discover too late that I was expected to drive the car, while she sat behind with George. I gave them the worst jolting they're ever likely to have in their lives. The onlooker, they say, sees most of the game, but I was puzzled to know what the game was, and espe- cially the part George was playing in it. Full of spir- its and bubbling over with vivacity in the company of the ladies, George in the smoking-room was to all intents and purposes dumb. After one cigarette he would wander away on some vague errand or other, muttering an explanation of which nobody caught the purport. The errand always seemed to end up near 118 TOO MANY WOMEN Dulcie. His sense of humor deserted him, too, and he became a fierce champion of the rights of women, interspersing his argument with a mass of irrelevant observations about the unappreciativeness of brothers, and the curse of inappropriate flippancy. In short, George's behavior was a powerful plea for the adop- tion by Western Europe of the Oriental custom of keeping women in strict seclusion. But, besides the effect which it might Have on Dulcie's impressionable and untried feelings, George's conduct had a more serious side. His defection left me stranded. Rather than become a target for my parents' arguments, I gave Miss Audrey Maitland the benefit of my society for more hours than I care to confess. I had been seriously annoyecl at finding I was ex- pected to play host to a girl friend of Dulcie's, when I had hoped for a week's peace from the sex, and I had resolved to do as little as I conveniently could in the " squire of dames " line, and leave the visitor to find her chief companionship in her workbox and the piano. Upon reading Dulcie's letter, I made up my mind to dislike Miss Maitland, and it was just as well I settled that much beforehand, or, upon being intro- duced in the hall, I might have been tempted into a contrary opinion. Audrey Maitland had the oval face of a Botticelli, a rosebud mouth round which the dimples lurked, a coquettish turn of the head, and shapely figure held erect, a frankness of manner that suggested the most agreeable companionship, and a trick of raising the eyes when she answered a question that made one want to ask several more. I was so prepossessed in the girl's favor that I only just stopped myself in time from offering to show her the APRIL 119 stables. Instead, I looked over her head (it barely reached my shoulder) to inquire whether the tap in the bathroom was in working order. That Miss Maitland giggled showed she had a sense of humor I can forgive much for a sense of humor much, yes, but not a lowering of my own standard of self-respect. To employ a military metaphor, I re- tired in disorder from the encounter. Beauty and brains don't usually go together, but Audrey Maitland was as intelligent as she was good- looking. She had more than a nodding acquaintance with the great classical authors, and took a real in- terest in the affairs of the world, in contrast to Dulcie, who never opens a paper from one year's end to the other. But Miss Maitland wasn't in the least bit a " bluestocking/' nor an intellectual poseur; her tastes in art and literature being her own, and not some one's else. In fact, she won my respect by telling me that she thought Ruskin a bore, and that the place of honor on her shelves was held by Tom Jones. We all, even the youngest of us, are liable to make mistakes, and the first evening at dinner I concluded that, because in a pale blue dress and with a fillet of ribbon across her forehead she looked a fit subject for a sonnet, I could unload any nonsense on to Miss Maitland. Under cover of the butler's clattering the fish knives together on the sideboard I said something about country air suiting the complexion. " I suppose," remarked Miss Maitland, " you begin by telling every girl that she looks nice." "If I can," I replied. "You don't give my sex much credit for intelli- gence." "Because if I draw a conversational check on in- 120 TOO MANY WOMEN telligence it is invariably returned to me marked ' No account/ I don't put you in that category." " You've merely varied the form of compliment to suit the situation. I think compliments silly." " So do I, only it's the fashion to pay them." " You say that," remarked Miss Maitland, " so that I may admire your candor. I believe you're one of those men who make love to every woman they meet." The insinuation stung, and I laid myself out dur- ing the next week to prove to the girl its falsity. I call most of Dulcie's friends by their Christian names, but " Audrey " never crossed my lips. I may have thought of Miss Maitland as " Audrey " once or twice, once certainly when I was shaving, for I came down with a gash across my cheek as " wide as a church door," but I was punctilious in keeping up the out- ward forms of distant acquaintanceship, a task made the more difficult through George's occupation with Dulcie. Even when it poured with rain the whole of one day I never suggested " cat's-cradle " or picquet, lest she might have suspected me of getting up a flirtation. It is true that we did stay up over the billiard-room fire the last night, till my mother sent her maid down to ask my companion when she was coming up to bed. As it was only 12.30 it struck me as unnecessary surveillance, but I daren't object, and then have my romantic tendencies flung in my face. For two hours that evening I sat in an armchair on the opposite side of the hearth, and left the choice of topics to the lady, severe self-discipline on my part, the more so as black suited Audrey Maitland to perfection, and she had had the forethought (to call it " coquetry" would be treating her as she treated me) APRIL 121 to put a red pompon in her hair. We wasted an hour and a half of precious solitude before a gorgeous wood fire, which invited the building of cloud castles wasted it in cold-blooded common sense. I got more and more incoherent in my replies, till Miss Maitland gave up her struggle to interest me in rational sub- jects, and we both stared into the flames in silence. " There was once a little man," I suddenly began, " who lived in the heart of a log all by himself, happy and free from care, until his home was put on a big hearth and burned to ashes. He found himself all of a sudden by the side of a lovely flame quivering with beautiful colors, and glowing with passion. Then his heart beat furiously, for he had never looked on anything so entrancing. ' Who are you ? ' asked the little man, as the flame gently caressed his cheek. ' I am the soul of the log in which you dwelt/ replied the flame. -'Come into my embrace/ Whereupon she folded him in her arms, and he passed away with her up the chimney in a puff of smoke." "Which being interpreted means ? "queried Miss Maitland, in a drowsy voice. "That as I can't find happiness up the chimney like my friend, I must look for it here." To which inanity Miss Maitland's reply ought to have been interesting had not the maid aforesaid ap- peared on the scene and saved the situation. Traveling back to town next morning by the early train, George had the effrontery to tell me that Dulcie and he thought I had seemed " rather gone " on the girl. In a few pointed words I explained to George how unfavorably his conduct must strike any unprej- udiced observer. Not only had he flirted abomina- bly with the sister of his best friend, but he had left 122 TOO MANY WOMEN that best friend to meet temptation single-handed. But George, like the crafty criminal he is, reserved his defense, and read the Morning Post. Easter, from every point of view, had been a com- plete failure. MAY Woman is a comedy, which the wise critic hisses off the stage" "The Commonplace Book" of Archie Haines. MAY The Philosopher in Hyde Park "East of the Sun, West of the Moon" Massey champions the Stage A Dialogue at a Dance THE London season has begun in earnest, and the air is charged with the electricity gen- erated from the crowds of fashionable folk flowing in carriages and on foot from Hyde Park down Pic- cadilly and through the Squares, filling the clubs and restaurants all day with well-dressed idlers, occupying at night every stall and box at the theaters, and then filing up endless staircases amidst roses and smilax to shake hands with bediamonded hostesses, and dance till dawn. This is the time of year when the man about town, discarding the garb of the shires or the links, puts on a tail-coat and sits in the Park morning and evening ; when his cab fares amount to a small fortune per diem; when his valet takes in a constant stream of parcels full of the latest things in suits and hosiery; when his letter box is crammed with dance cards from hostesses he has never heard of, but who " request the pleasure of his company " ; when he raises his hat at intervals of half a minute from morn to eve in greeting to his numerous acquaintances; when he eats his weight daily in salmon mayonnaise and gooseberry tart. George Burn holds the theory that the whole machinery of season entertainments works to only one, end the introducing of the eligible bachelor to 124 126 TOO MANY WOMEN the marriageable maid. According to him, a Hostess dispenses indiscriminate hospitality in order to obtain a background against which she can the most effect- ively display her daughter. She scatters four hundred invitations for a ball to secure the presence of some half a dozen individuals in her house. Personally I am indifferent to the motives which have procured my attendance at any function so long as the food is good, for it is a poor heart that never rejoices in quails and plovers' eggs. But I believe there is something in George's idea. Anyhow, he ought to know, for he has been the object of goodness knows how many match-making mammas, although he's barely twenty- eight. George was enlarging on the tHeme to me the other morning in the Park the place above all others where the preliminary skirmishing takes place, and the outposts of the rival forces of bachelors and ma- trons first sight one another. " If I were a Society mother," remarked George, " I would guarantee to get my daughter off my hands in a single season." This was George Burn in a new role with a venge- ance. " Well ? " I asked encouragingly. George saluted a passing dowager, and proceeded : " On three mornings in the week I should take the dear thing in the simplest toilette up and down the Row from 11.15 to 12.30 not oftener, mind you, otherwise she'd get the reputation of being a Park * hack.' The men with neither birth nor ' brass ' behind them I'd just nod to, but wouldn't I smile on a parti? I'd flatter him till he was in the seventh heaven of gratified vanity, and then I'd disappear to MAY 127 greet an imaginary friend, leaving him to enHow my girl with all the charms he had discovered in her mother." Here George's attention wandere3 for a moment to Lady Lucy Goring under the Countess's escort. Lady Henley is blissfully ignorant of George's exist- ence, so the latter had to be content with a stolen glance. " You had just left your daughter alone," I ven- tured to remind him. " Only for five minutes," replied George, acting the careful chaperon to perfection. " The roses in the girl's cheeks should not waste their sweetness on the desert air of female luncheon parties and after- noon * At Homes/ where the only men present are either prehistoric, or married, or both. Her freshness should be preserved for the functions frequented by bachelors. As for chaperoning at balls, I'd see everything without being seen." " Quite right, your motto being ' I'm tHere, if I'm wanted,' " and I patted George's knee. " The modern Jason wants to win his Golden Fleece without en- countering the dragon on guard. Go ahead ! " " I'd trust my charge's good sense not to give sup- per to a penniless subaltern, nor to encourage atten- tions from a man who wouldn't pass muster in the Royal Enclosure at Ascot, and I'd spend my time tell- ing those ladies who had announced themselves in the Morning Post as forthcoming hostesses, how pretty their daughters were. Above all, I would never pose before the eyes of a critical world as my girl's rival for its admiration. I'd wear black velvet to set off her white frock, and let my tiara draw attention to her unadorned wealth of hair." 128 TOO MANY WOMEN " What about the entertaining you would do ? " I asked, chiefly to prevent George from catching sight of Miss Kitty Denver, who, with only a maid in attend- ance, was coming our way. That young woman had not made the journey from Carlton House Terrace for nothing. " Oh, the usual things," remarked my unsuspecting companion. "A couple of Saturday dinner dances, to which the most exclusive woman of my acquaint- ance should bring on her party of young people, half a dozen Sunday lunches for a favored few, a very small and select musical ' At Home/ a table at the Eton and Harrow match to collect autumn invita- tions at. And I tell you," exclaimed George, " my success with my eldest daughter would so smooth the path of her sisters, that from St. George's, Han- over Square, to Holy Trinity, Sloane Street, the bells of the fashionable churches should ring out in my praise." " Hello ! " I said in astonishment at George's temerity. " Have you got more daughters coming out?" "Lots," he replied wildly. "There's Kitty Den- ver; I must go and walk with her." " And run into the arms of Lucy Goring farther down, and make her so jealous that Lady Henley will probably discover the whole affair?" " Not much," said the irresponsible George, as he prepared to leave, in spite of my warning. "I shall keep my weather-eye open, and dodge around a tree trunk on some excuse or other when I'm in the danger zone, or else drag Kitty off to the Serpentine. I've run the pair too long together to be caught out now. So long." And with a wink worthy of the rejure- MAY 129 nated Faust, George was gone to his gambling with loaded dice. But if George, with all his knowledge of the work- ing of the female mind, is eminently capable of look- ing after himself, there is one of my friends who isn't Major Griffiths. Mrs. Bellew's arrival in town at all, with the fall in agricultural rents having halved her husband's in- come, goes far to substantiate George Burn's view of the Season as a matrimonial agency. Yesterday, in the Park, I was just recovering from the shock of learning that my favorite partner of last year had got engaged without my leave to a staff officer in Cairo, and the Major was pouring into my ear his hopes of pulling off a "double event" in the Derby and Oaks, when the good lady, with Faith and Sybil Bellew, descended on us in a whirlwind of chiffon and lace. Like the friend I am, I at once tried to head Mrs. Bellew off on to small talk and scandal, but she was not to be turned from her purpose by trivialities, that purpose being the securing of the Major for a theater party. Now Griffiths has an abhorrence of such evenings, for he objects to the substitution of a hurried meal, with little port and less cigar, for his club house dinner and the comfortable hour and a half following. In plays his taste runs to a party of four men at a musical comedy with a pretty chorus, rather than to a representation of simple English life during which he is flanked by an ingenue and her mother. He likes to spend the intervals between the acts in the company of liqueur-brandies, not of ladies. Mrs. Bellew showed no mercy, however, to the Major's improvised excuses. " I simply insist upon your coming," she said, with 130 TOO MANY WOMEN an affectation of playfulness that ill-conceale'd the determination beneath. " It will take you away from your horrid club." Some women Mrs. Bellew is one of them resent the bachelor's club, for the same reason that huntsmen do a fox's earth because it lets the hard-pressed quarry escape. The Major's club wasn't "horrid." As a matter of fact, it was mine also. I told Mrs. Bellew as much. "We can't have you interfering," she replied. " You're a hardened sinner." " In what respect ? " I asked, aggrieved. " We all know that you run away from our society to play billiards." I do nothing of the sort, but Mrs. Bellew has never forgiven me for spoiling her plans over Sybil. " But the Major," the lady went on, " is so good- natured that he won't think of disappointing us." Mrs. Bellew could only descend to flattery of set purpose. I began to perceive how accurately George had dissected a mother's mind. The Major, meanwhile, stood by, like a naughty schoolboy, shuffling his feet. With all our boasted superiority of sex, what children we are where women are concerned. There was the Major, a blustering soldier with a record of distinguished service behind him, as helpless as a newborn infant before Mrs. Bellew. He didn't want to accept her invitation, she knew that he didn't want to accept it, and yet in spite of his protests that he was dining that night with an old friend, that he was under doctor's orders not to stay up after ten o'clock, and that he had to be in Ireland on business, Griffiths was forced to submit to the dictation of a woman, five feet four inches in MAY 131 height, whom he could have swung over his shoulder with ease, had such a monstrous notion ever occurred to him. Her task accomplished, Mrs. Bellew swept on down the Row in insolent triumph, leaving the Major mopping his brow, and myself chuckling at his discomfiture. All the same, if Mrs. Bellew succeeds in marrying the Major to Faith, it will be a public scandal. What the poor fellow wants, but what apparently he can't get, is to be left alone. He is about as much domesti- cated as a lynx, a talent for brewing punch and bluff- ing at poker being slight foundations on which to build up married happiness. If Mrs. Bellew must find a partner for her daughter, in heaven's name let her get some one nearer the girl's age, and leave a whisky-and-water-worn veteran in peace! With men like George Burn and the Major causing me so much anxious thought, I make it a rule to go into the background during the Season, and play the part of spectator of the " great game." One keeps out of danger oneself, and sees all sorts of funny things. As a result, I can forecast most of the So- ciety engagements that take people by such surprise in the autumn, and I'd guarantee to draw up the cause list of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty division of the High Court of Justice with accuracy, merely by keeping my eyes "skinned" from the beginning of May to the end of July. When a married woman night after night makes her home in ballrooms, she can't have a particularly happy one of her own ; when a girl's face lights up with animation as a certain part- ner claims a dance, I'm not astonished when I fall over her foot in the darkest corner of the conservatory about 3 A. M. 132 TOO MANY WOMEN My observation has led me to draw up a short list of rules for dancing men and debutantes respectively : RULES FOR DANCING MEN If you are introduced to the belle of the ball, or the most sought-after heiress of the day, don't grumble if you can't get supper with her at the first time of asking. She probably has other partners besides yourself. N.B. If you are in the Household Cavalry or heir to a peerage, this advice can be neglected. When you have exhausted the topics of " the floor," "the band," and the theaters she has seen, a good question to put is "Do you believe in love at first sight?" You are unlikely to meet a girl who has no views on this subject, and it also has the advantage of leading on to other matters of interest. The aphorism " Women are like nettles ; they need grasping firmly," is a dangerous one to act upon in- discriminately if you want invitations. " Qu\ em- brasse, s'embarrasse," as Haines says. Don't despise debutantes. They will grow into women probably pretty ones. Never specialize. Other women don't like it. Never compete. It ruffles the hair. Also, if you supplant all your rivals, you find yourself loaded with unpleasant responsibilities. If you don't know your host, shake hands with all the waiters. It will save you missing him. Women prefer a rat-catcher who makes love to them to an Adonis who doesn't. Join the ranks of the rat-catchers. Should a chaperon accost you with "I want to introduce you to a charming girl," demur until the MAY 133 girl in question has been pointed out. Your ideas of charm probably differ. RULES FOR DEBUTANTES Never let one man monopolize you. It's awkward for you when he doesn't happen to be present. Always tear up your programme. It saves the memory and your reputation for truthfulness. Go back to your chaperon between the waltzes. It is a pity to make her climb the back stairs in search of you. Cultivate dimples. They are irresistible. Should a partner tear your dress, smile sweetly and say, " It doesn't matter, it's only an old rag." He will think what an unspoiled, simple nature you have, and probably propose. If your powers of conversation should fail, use your eyes. Their eloquence is unmatched. Don't dance only with soldiers. Civilians cause much less anxiety to their wives. To be smart one needn't necessarily say things that make other people smart. When a man pays you open compliments you may be quite certain he thinks you a fool. Cut his next dance; he will deserve it. Haines is no exception to the rule that Londoners know very little about their own city, for when I last suggested taking him to the Soho haunts of my news- paper days, he asked whether he hadn't better leave his watch and chain at home and take a knuckle- duster. Haines and his kind, if by any chance they are compelled to cross a line drawn from Oxford 134 TOO MANY WOMEN Street to Trafalgar Square, do so with an acute sense of discomfort at their surroundings, and a desire to return with all speed to the familiar landmarks of the fountain in Piccadilly Circus, or the arch on Con- stitution Hill. They hurry down the Strand like fugi- tives from justice, intent only on transacting the busi- ness which has compelled them to traverse pavements crowded with men and women of unknown aspect, and ignorant that the most delectable spots imagina- ble lie beyond the arbitrary boundary set up by Fash- ion. The strange domain spreading around Covent Garden and behind Leicester Square is a No Man's Land, a literary and artistic Alsatia, comparable in its diversity with the Latin Quarter alone. One door in a narrow street admits you to the meeting place of a select coterie of authors and actors, where one may hear the best of conversation and mimicry; by enter- ing another, you can get the finest French cooking for a few pence- dandelion salad, kidneys that melt in the mouth, an omelette aux -fines herbes worthy of Paillard's, and eat the whole in a cosmopolitan com- pany ranging in status from a comedian at the music hall around the corners, to a mannequin at Lucille's. Haines, perhaps, is hardly the person to appreciate the pleasures of Bohemia, since socially he is a materialist, a believer in the cutlet for cutlet principle of existence, and gives dinners to be dined, calls to be asked again, making it his rule to see the " tat " in prospect before he offers the "tit." He has a frank contempt, which he shares with my father, for all the artistic fraternity. So far as he is concerned, the world of ideas does not exist. He recognizes no success but the worldly one; to form any value of a reputation he must translate it into pounds, shillings MAY 135 and pence. Dante to him is a grim figure crowned with bay -leaves, whose meeting with Beatrice forms the subject of a famous picture; Shakespeare is a dramatist whose plays are acted at His Majesty's Theater. Archie Haines is an invaluable tonic to a fellow like myself, for his attitude toward life knocks all the conceit out of one. When a morning's inspira- tion has filled me with a hope that I may some day achieve a measure of fame, Haines' question. " Been scribbling lately, old man ? " reduces my work to its proper proportions. But this Philistinism has not prevented Haines from breaking his orthodoxy on occasions, and accompany- ing me to Roche's and " the Gourmet," rambling at all hours of the day and night through the strange, ghost-ridden purlieus of Covent Garden and the Strand. We have lunched at the Yorick Club, and supped at the Beefsteak, and in the space of eight hours have seen more of mankind than could have been compassed by eight months of our customary routine of hunting, shooting, dancing, and love- making. It was a stroke of luck that led me to run into Steward the other night outside the stage door of the " Alcazar " when Haines happened to be with me, because I should never "of malice aforethought " have arranged a meeting between persons of such antago- nistic intellectual standpoints. Haines was taken at a disadvantage owing to the green felt hat and flannel suit he had put on in deference to my objection to his original choice of dress clothes and an opera hat for a tour of the town, so instead of assuming a "Weary Willie " expression of well-bred superciliousness, he returned Steward's greeting with warmth, and showed 136 TOO MANY WOMEN no sign of astonishment wh'en Mason, the lessee and manager of the "Alcazar," loomed up out of the shadows masking the stage entrance in his massive dignity of rings and shirt-studs, and genially shook hands all round without any formality of introduction. "We're just off to my place for a business chat," Steward remarked to me, " but you and your friend won't be in the way if you care to come round too." Haines gave me a wireless telegraphic dig in the ribs to signify his assent, so we all linked arms and stormed Steward's rooms in style. The seal of that extraordinary man's originality was stamped over his abode. A common, self-con- tained flat had been transformed into something un- like anything Haines had ever seen. The hall was spanned by one of those arches of Moorish fretwork in which hung a heavy curtain of Eastern stuff glitter- ing with a shower of golden sequins. Across one wall stretched a rug of brilliant coloring, the product, so Mason assured me, of the Shah's own factory in Teheran; on the other the only ornament was an exquisite reproduction of a Holy Family by Murillo, before which burned a row of candles in an enamel setting. The pulses of Steward's visitors quickened in response to the cunning suggestion of mystery he had contrived to convey by his scheme of decoration. The first object that caught the eye as the door of the sitting-room opened was a bronze replica of the life- size head of the Caesar from the Vatican, placed on an ebony pedestal to let the representation of immortal majesty command the senses. Across the mantelpiece ran a fine Flaxman plaque, while in front of the fire- place stood a club fender, the seat upholstered in dark red morocco to match the prevailing tint of the room. MAY 137 Bookcases spread around three-quarters of the wall space, ending in a large bow window before which velvet curtains fell. An old oak knee-desk had been drawn aside from its usual place of honor by the window, to make way for a supper table laden with sandwiches and fruit, displayed on cut glass and silver dishes of quite unusual workmanship. A profusion of long, low-lying armchairs showed that the presiding deity of this combination of luxury and comfort was a man. Steward had given character to the chamber by some unexpected touches. On the walls were posters by Willette and Dudley Hardy, a framed " Contents Bill" of the Evening Star announcing the relief of Mafeking, and menus of Savage Club guest nights. A shelf held the gloves with which Jake Peters won the world's heavy-weight championship in Chicago, and a mummied cat, unearthed in making the Law Courts' excavations. On the cottage grand piano, a pair of stuffed bantam cocks crowed dumb defiance at each other, and raised their steel-shod spurs for battle. Well-controlled eccentricity, bizarre common sense, were the impressions given by this remarkable apart- ment, the effect of which was heightened by the con- trasted simplicity of the bedroom opening out of it, in which the only furniture were a camp bed and a Service chest of drawers. I waved my hand with a showman's gesture for Haines' benefit. " This is the real thing, my young friend. On the right" (here I indicated Caesar) "you will observe the death-mask of our host's maternal grandfather; on the left is a frugal meal provided on the principle that c better is a dinner of herbs where love is, than 138 TOO MANY WOMEN a stalled ox and hatred therewith/ All the proceeds of writing a few catchy lyrics for the light opera stage!" Haines' disconcern at the difference between his idea of a literary den and the reality was comical. His gaze wandered round and round the room. " It certainly seems a paying job," he remarked at length. " Never forget, my dear fellow," came the voice of Mason from the recesses of the armchair in which he had sunk with a cigar, " that if the rewards of theat- rical management and authorship are sometimes great, so are the responsibilities. There is the popular taste to gauge, the welfare of the profession to secure, the artistic standards to be maintained. The talents to win success " But here Steward, who had just donned a purple-lined smoking jacket, cut the impre- sario short. " None of that, Mason. If you want to get out the Vox humana stop, you don't do it here. I don't much mind looking at you, but I'm hanged if I'll listen to you elevating the masses. What about those new songs? I've got the idea for one number, just the thing for the chorus of * flappers.' It begins ' Oh, the " dolce far niente " When the maiden isn't twenty.' It wants a slap-dash accompaniment on these lines," and, going to the piano, Steward thumped out a suc- cession of tuneful chords, till the fighting cocks rocked again. A sudden burst of sound from the hall inter- rupted the improvisation, the door flew open, and a woman's voice exclaimed, " You are enjoying your- selves. I thought you told Kit and me, Mr. Steward, MAY 139 we should be the only guests, and we find the place overflowing." I turned in alarm. "Well, I'm damned," I said feebly, and fell into a chair. It was Cynthia Cynthia in a crimson opera cloak, and wearing my earrings. Her face lit up with" smiles. "Why, if it isn't dear old Gerald! 'Gerald, I am glad to see you." Steward surveyed us with an amused expression. " Right again, it is dear old Gerald, and that's dear old Haines, and in that chair, trying to attract your attention with a fat forefinger, is dear old Mason." Cynthia turned to her companion, none other than the " Alcazar " leading lady. " Is he often taken like this? " and she pointed to her host. Then she placed one hand on my 'head and gently stroked it. " Don't be absurd, Mr. Steward, I've known this boy for years." " That's no reason why you should ruffle my hair ! " I spoke gruffly. " Diddums didn't like it," mimicked Steward. Haines and Mason both laughed. I sprang to my feet. "If you've no sense of the ridiculous, Miss Cochrane, I have. Please to remem- ber that you are in the presence of strangers." Cynthia made a face at me an outrageous action on her part. " Gerald, they're not strangers. I've had tea with Mr. Mason heaps of times, and your friend there has such a nice face I couldn't feel strange with him." "That's right," broke in Haines enthusiastically. " You come and have a sandwich with me, and we'll forget that dignified dog, Hanbury ! " 140 TOO MANY WOMEN " When it comes to sandwiches, I've got no dig- nity," I shouted, and made for the table. " Here's a toast ! " and I filled a glass with champagne, the rest of the company following suit. "Man and the con- fusion of Woman." " I call that downright ungallant," growled Steward, munching a lobster patty. " Gerald doesn't mean all the nasty things he says," Cynthia made reply in those caressing tones of hers. A mist swept across my sight, but with an effort I brushed it away. " I'll give you another toast," I said. " Miss Coch- rane the confusion of all of us." Every glass was drained. Silence ensued for a space while we de- voured the good things Steward had provided. " Some one play something," Mason began at last, producing a large case of cigars from his pocket. " We've got a ' premiere danseuse ' here, and the op- portunity is not to be missed." Now Haines, for all his Philistinism, has an incom- parable knack of taking the poorest tune, supplying the rhythm, and swing it lacks, and weaving a har- mony of sound to set lame folks dancing, and dumb folks singing. From a merry jingle he will swing into a " can-can," thence into a " tarantella," turn that fierce, passionate music into the dreamiest waltz, from which he will glide into the sobbing refrain of a Neapolitan love song. On this occasion he seated himself at the piano, flourished his hands about in caricature of a famous maestro, ran up and down the scales lightly once or twice with a tantalizing mastery of touch, as a preliminary to the most seduc- tive melody it had ever been the lot of any of us to hear. To the echo of the silvery notes all of us in our MAY 141 several ways paid homage; Mason's eyes closed in reverie, Steward's keen expression relaxed in a far- away vision of the Palace Beautiful, Kit of the " Al- cazar," whose soul was in her feet, beat soft time to the magical music, while Cynthia and myself sat before the wreckage of the supper lost in daydreams. " Great Scott, the fellow can play ! " muttered Mason, half to us, half to himself, and dissolved the spell which bound the room. The time quickened, and a wicked little note crept into the soft bars of the treble to wake our slumbering selves responsive to its call. A dry whisper of enticement ran round the circle as the power of the chords gripped it, giv- ing to each one the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil. The sins of all the cities stalked in our midst Haines was unlocking doors that are best kept bolted and barred. "Stop that infernal noise," shouted Steward in a harsh voice I scarcely recognized as his, " before you drive us mad. Play something that Kit can dance to." The rebuke was effectual. The dreadful music changed to the glory and sunshine of a Southern Car- nival. In our ears rang the shouts of the masquerad- ers, in our nostrils rose the scent of the perfumed South, for Steward had placed a lighted pastille on a shovel, filling the air with aromatic odors. I hastily cleared a wide space free of chairs and et ceteras as Kit rose to her feet and began to dance, slowly, almost mechanically, in obedience to the fascination of the music, with no volition of her own to direct her move- ments. I believe she was in a species of hypnotic trance, or she would never have done what she did, for although I have seen gipsies in Seville, Dervishes 142 TOO MANY WOMEN __ in Algiers, Tziganes in Budapest, and the most renowned "ballerinas" of Paris and St. Petersburg, Kit of the " Alcazar " surpassed them all at the bid- ding of Haines. He, equally, was under some spell, for he left the rank of tolerable musicians he occupies ordinarily and became inspired. In a mist of sound, Kit hovered and swayed to the call of the measure, floating in the eddying fumes of the pastille. She alternately pirouetted and sank, her feet flickered now high, now low, till she appeared no longer a woman, but a phantom in the moonbeams. Mason sat bolt upright staring at her as if thunderstruck at the quali- ties he had never seen displayed on the stage of the " Alcazar," and which, if he could conjure up in the future, would mean a fortune to the pair. At the last, when the piano was rising to a crescendo of sav- age frenzy, Steward tore off his smoking jacket and flung himself into the circle, capering and leaping with a demoniac possession, lashed out of his ordered self by the wild bars throbbing with passion and abandon. With one final effort he spun his partner round at giddy speed, to hurl her into one chair and himself into another, as the music stopped with a crash. Haines rose with a streaming forehead. "The devil's in here to-night," he said shortly. Mason cast an apprehensive glance around, Cynthia gave a shudder and gripped my hand. The environ- ment created by Steward for his own delight was, I felt convinced, the force that oppressed us. His mag- netic personality, translated into concrete form in his flat and its contents, carried us, like the Wild Ass's Skin of Balzac's romance, to a region outside ordinary human existence. No sound from the world came through the heavy curtains ; nothing in our surround- MAY 143 ings reminded us of it. The somber coloring of the walls, the gleam of old silver on the table, the strange relics, the fantastic objects on every hand, conveyed the certainty that there convention was unknown, its code unrecognized. If the devil was in the room, as Haines suggested, he would find himself in a spot as unearthly as his own abode. " There are no devils except those we raise for our- selves," Steward replied, with grim intensity. A sob broke from Kit, who was in the full flood of reaction from an excitement which had overtaxed her strength. " Don't frighten the ladies with extracts from your Bohemian philosophy," I exclaimed, with an effort at jocularity. " They're more than half persuaded that you practice the Black Art." Mason came forward. " I'm going to take them home in my car," he said, with a gesture toward Kit and Cynthia, who was bending over her. Then he turned to Haines. " I'll give you a box for my show with pleasure, sir, whenever you care for one. You knock spots off any ivory thumper I've ever listened to, and you've given me a better opinion of my lead- ing lady than I've ever had reason to hold before." Haines flushed at the compliment, but remained silent. He was a little unstrung by the sensations of the night. To tell the truth, I was precious glad myself to be out in the street at the end of it all. Steward's taste for the fantastic wants tempering with fresh air. As for his mummied cat the sooner it is cremated the better ! I had forgotten all about the part I had unwittingly played in the affair of Clive Massey, undergraduate, 144 TOO MANY WOMEN and Alice Howard, of the " Firefly " Theater, till the following letter, bearing the Oxford postmark, recalled the whole business to my memory : " DEAR HANBURY : "I hope you won't think it odd of me to ask you to lend me 20. I'll take it as a very friendly act if you will, because I can't go to my people, as they will be sure to ask questions which I shan't be able to an- swer and respect a third person's confidences. You are a man of the world and will understand. " Yours ever, "CLIVE MASSEY." I felt pleased with my reply : "DEARM.: "The money is yours. Come and gnaw a bone ches moi and Sunday, and meet a pal of mine, Drum- mond, who is playing at the * Firefly ' and is full of fun. " Yours, till hell freezes, "G. H." I knew that last touch would fetch Massey as no other inducement could, and sure enough he accepted, with many protestations of gratitude, by return of post, forgetting, in his haste, to stamp the envelope, and mulcting me accordingly for the luxury of obtain- ing a reply. Drummond turned up first in my rooms, magnifi- cent as usual, the details of his costume bearing the same relation of civilian dress that objects seen under the microscope do to the ordinary unmagnified world. MAY 145 His coat was too pinched at the waist, the pattern of his trousers was too stripy, and his tie was a huge " four-in-hand " sticking out an inch from his neck, carrying a fox's head in brilliants as a centerpiece. I took advantage of Drummond's punctuality to run over the salient points of " L' Affaire Massey " for his benefit, hinting that if he could contrive to disillusion- ize Massey about the constancy of coryphees I, and many others, would be duly grateful. The culprit arrived twenty-five minutes late, with a hair-bracelet on his left wrist, a suspicion of powder on the sleeve of his coat, and a preoccupied spirit that took no interest in Middlesex v. Surrey at the Oval, when that topic was broached to break an awkward silence. I never saw symptoms I liked less in a youth of twenty-one. In desperation I unmasked my batteries, and asked Drummond whether the Cock and the Hen was in for a long run at the " Firefly." With the scent red-hot, Massey gave tongue, like a well-trained hound, proceeding to enlighten us on such intimate points of the piece as the new dresses for the " Bombay " number, the choice of another understudy for the soubrette part, the rumor circu- lating about such and such an individual in the cast. " You might be there yourself," said Drummond, "you've got all the latest tips. Here's one for you hot from the oven steer clear of stage ladies. The Sirens weren't in it with them; I know." And he slapped his breast dramatically. Massey leaned across the table, and put his sleeve in the custard. " You've met the wrong sort, then. There are girls with ideals, with ambitions to leave this world a little better than they found it." 146 TOO MANY WOMEN "Yes, and themselves a great deal tetter off. There's one girl in our show," began Drummond, clearing his throat, "who is a born actress off the stage, whatever she may be on it. She looks a simple little thing, yet she makes others look a jolly sight simpler before she's done with them. She meets a fel- low 'rolling in it* and she tells him she despises money. Of course he sets about spending as much as possible on this rare flower of unworldly virtue. An- other Johnny learns that the beautiful creature with the soulful eyes can't afford a heart amidst the temp- tations of the theater. * Men are so cruel/ she lisps. * They never think of the damage they do.' He comes to the conclusion that she loves him for himself alone. But she never lets him alone." Drummond paused for a moment to pull his cuffs straight. " Then she strikes a chivalrous man like you, mon ami, and she works the ' ideals ' touch, talks about the struggle for success, tells you that she finds your society so precious to her in helping her to be true to her best self."-- >Here Massey gave a jump as if he had been sitting on a " live " rail. " She yarns you all this over five-pound luncheons, and four- pound suppers, and motor car trips that cost you a ' tenner.' As the door closes on your retreating form after a long day together, she sits down and writes to another ' boy ' what a mug you are, and will he take her down the river for a change. When your account is overdrawn, and you have borrowed all the money you can from friends, Miss Alice Howard says ' Good- by/ and some other fellow sits in the stall you have warmed so long." Drummond had most certainly hit several nails very hard on the head, for Massey's face was a study. It MAY 147 got more and more flushed as the graphic description proceeded until it was nearly purple with astonish- ment or rage I couldn't make out which and its possessor finally scattered all doubts by striking the table such a blow that the glasses skipped in all direc- tions. " My God ! " he shouted. " No wonder the stage is criticised as a profession for girls, when the base gossip of the ' wings ' is repeated to damage a woman's character by men like you/' Drummond's lips tightened, but he only shrugged his shoulders. Massey's torrent of melodramatic speech rushed on. " You don't know Miss Howard. I have that honor. She's the sweetest, dearest, honestest little woman in the world. The things she's gone through would knock the stuffing out of most men. A wid- owed mother is kept from want by her sacrifices. Alice is quite right when she says that the curse of the profession is the malice and jealousy of rivals. I understand her. Men like you never will. She's above you." " Her father is a * bookie/ and alive and kicking, if you want to know," Drummond replied, in as calm a voice as he could command ; " but I don't suppose you do. And look here, if you are going to champion the cause of every actress who lets you spend money on her, you've got your work cut out. Also, you needn't be rude in the process." Massey was too enraged to accept any evidence against the woman who had cast a spell over his young affections. After all, I don't think at his age I should have listened to Drummond's indictment in a becom- ing spirit, especially as in several particulars its truth 148 TOO MANY WOMEN had caught Massey " on the raw." But I was scarcely prepared for " Sir Galahad's " attitude to myself. " I won't take your money, Hanbury," he said. " Your invitation was nothing but a * plant ' to insult Miss Howard." I felt justifiably annoyed. "Don't be absurd, Massey; Miss Howard may be an angel from heaven, for all I know. Perhaps it would be a good thing if she had wings to fly away from the impressionable front row of the stalls. But you've no right to quarrel with your friends because you happen to be in love with a chorus girl." " My only friends are Alice's," Massey replied sententiously. Drummond whistled through his teeth. "Then you've a queer visiting list, beginning with the King of the Kaffir Market, down to the latest subaltern in the ' Blues/ ' "Shut up," I interrupted. "You've given the fellow quite a big enough dose for one day." " Mr. Drummond's opinions are of no interest to me," said Massey, picking up his hat and umbrella, and he went with no more ceremony than a District Visitor from a cottage. I was the first to recover the power of speech. " I'm going into action straight away. Do you happen to know Miss Howard's address ? " Drummond produced a crushed leather pocket- book, and consulted its pages. "Number 14. Uni- versity Mansions," he read out, and I jotted down the particulars on my cuff. " 'Ware wire, Hanbury," Drummond went on, " and look out when you come to the water-jump, it's devilish deep and the landing's bad on the other side." MAY 149 " 1*11 keep a good grip on the filly's mouth," I said. " Thanks, old man. I may want your help by and by." "It's yours for the asking," and so saying Drum- mond took himself off. I reached for a pipe. As the smoke wreaths rose around my head, I sketched out my plans. Heaven spare me from another ball like the Bra- tons' ! I fought my way up the stairs by dint of a quarter of an hour's vigorous elbow work, only to have my toes stamped to a jelly and receive several knockout blows in the chest from couples going through the farce of waltzing. The friends I did see I couldn't reach through the crush. If I had reached them I wouldn't have heard their voices in the uproar. Lady Braton, at the head of the stairs, was tossed hither and thither by the flood of her guests, two- thirds of whom she had never seen before, and who, on their part, didn't care if they never saw her again. Their names had been put on somebody's list to receive invitations, so they came, chattering in loud tones about their own affairs, impartially ready to criticise the hostess's diamonds, or the supper.- The 'debutante daughter of the house stood by her mother's side, with a large bouquet in her hand to distinguish her from other girls, frightened by the whirl of strange faces surging past her, feeling as though she was at some masquerade. Lady Braton had preferred to ask strangers to her own friends, because the latter were not smart enough, and she wanted the dancing set to come and invite Miss Braton back in turn to their own entertainments. The bargain was perfectly well understood. " To-night you are eating my cutlets," Lady Braton said in effect to every one as she shook hands, a set smile of welcome frozen on her face. "When you are grilling cutlets of your own in the next two months, think of my daughter and myself, and let us join you in picking the bones clean." And to the credit of the majority, let it be said, they would answer the appeal. As for myself I never touch cutlets, so I merely felt angry at being made to waste a summer's night in overheated rooms, when I might have been sleeping peacefully, or listening to George's latest romantic exploit. The crowd annoyed me. I was jammed against the wall by First and Second Secretaries to different Embassies, who regaled themselves by scandalous little stories in French about the people present. I learned that " The Captain " called twice a day at the corner house in Charles Street, and that the tall blonde, who was being chaperoned by the Dowager Marchioness of Pendinning, had begun her season as a brunette. When I escaped by main force from my compromising position, it was to fall (liter- ally so) into the arms of a woman I can't stand, be- cause she will always ask me to eat a plain dinner and meet a plain daughter. One can carry asceticism too far, so I make a point of refusing. Dancing was out of the question. I looked around for a supper partner. Molly Hargreaves was no good, for she looked on appetite in a man as a sign of vulgarity, and only nibbled at a quail herself; Hester Vaughan was sure to be waiting for that fellow in the 3rd Bat- talion. I had just fixed on a maiden whose avoirdu- pois promised well, when Audrey Maitland brushed MAY 151 past me. All thoughts of food vanished. I secured the next dance, and steered her on to the balcony. There was an irresistible challenge to me in the poise of Miss Maitland's head with its crown of Titian red curls, in the grace with which she leaned over the balustrade watching the square below, in the soft tones of her voice which woke an answering echo in me. I struggled hard against the attraction she radiated, for I feel nothing but contempt for the man who suc- cumbs to the fascination of a woman, and proves false to the independence which is the birthright of his sex. " You haven't much to say to me, now I have given you a dance," said my partner, destroying the barrier of silence I had erected between us as safeguard. "I was thinking of a topic." " That's not a very courteous reply." " I'm sick to death of courtesy," I said. " It's only mistaken for weakness. Give me the good old days when we seized the women we wanted, threw them across our saddlebows, and rode off in triumph." "Mr. Hanbury!" " I mean every word of it." " You're a barbarian." " We all are," I replied with emphasis. " Scratch the clancing man " Miss Maitland drew back in dis- gust "and you find the savage," I continued placidly. "We're all stained with woad, really, and we've only left our clubs in the cloakroom." " Where do women come in this refined theory of yours?" Miss Maitland said icily. "You don't put them in a very high category if you imagine they submit to the brutality of your sex." "Bless your heart, they much prefer to be driven TOO MANY WOMEN i than to