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The Stampeding Of Lady Bastable
"It would be rather nice if you would put Clovis up for
another six days while I go up north to the MacGregors',"
said Mrs. Sangrail sleepily across the breakfast-table. It
was her invariable plan to speak in a sleepy, comfortable
voice whenever she was unusually keen about anything; it put
people off their guard, and they frequently fell in with her
wishes before they had realized that she was really asking
for anything. Lady Bastable, however, was not so easily
taken unawares; possibly she knew that voice and what it
betokened- at any rate, she knew Clovis.
She frowned at a piece of toast and ate it very slowly, as
though she wished to convey the impression that the process
hurt her more than it hurt the toast; but no extension of
hospitality on Clovis's behalf rose to her lips.
"It would be a great convenience to me," pursued Mrs.
Sangrail, abandoning the careless tone. "I particularly
don't want to take him to the MacGregors', and it will only
be for six days."
"It will seem longer," said Lady Bastable dismally.
"The last time he stayed here for a week-"
"I know," interrupted the other hastily, "but that was
nearly two years ago. He was younger then."
"But he hasn't improved," said her hostess; "it's no
use growing older if you only learn new ways of misbehaving
yourself."
Mrs. Sangrail was unable to argue the point; since Clovis
had reached the age of seventeen she had never ceased to
bewail his irrepressible waywardness to all her circle of
acquaintances, and a polite scepticism would have greeted
the slightest hint at a prospective reformation. She
discarded the fruitless effort at cajolery and resorted to
undisguised bribery.
"If you'll have him here for these six days I'll cancel
that outstanding bridge account."
It was only for forty-nine shillings, but Lady Bastable
loved shillings with a great, strong love. To lose money at
bridge and not to have to pay it was one of those rare
experiences which gave the card-table a glamour in her eyes
which it could never otherwise have possessed. Mrs.
Sangrail was almost equally devoted to her card winnings,
but the prospect of conveniently warehousing her offspring
for six days, and incidentally saving his railway fare to
the north, reconciled her to the sacrifice; when Clovis made
a belated appearance at the breakfast-table the bargain had
been struck.
"Just think," said Mrs. Sangrail sleepily; "Lady
Bastable has very kindly asked you to stay on here while I
go to the MacGregors'."
Clovis said suitable things in a highly unsuitable manner,
and proceeded to make punitive expeditions among the
breakfast dishes with a scowl on his face that would have
driven the purr out of a peace conference. The arrangement
that had been concluded behind his back was doubly
distasteful to him. In the first place, he particularly
wanted to teach the MacGregor boys, who could well afford
the knowledge, how to play poker-patience; secondly, the
Bastable catering was of the kind that is classified as a
rude plenty, which Clovis translated as a plenty that gives
rise to rude remarks. Watching him from behind
ostentatiously sleepy lids, his mother realized, in the
light of long experience, that any rejoicing over the
success of her manœuvre would be distinctly premature.
It was one thing to fit Clovis into a convenient niche of
the domestic jig-saw puzzle; it was quite another matter to
get him to stay there.
Lady Bastable was wont to retire in state to the
morning-room immediately after breakfast and spend a quiet
hour in skimming through the papers; they were there, so she
might as well get their money's worth out of them. Politics
did not greatly interest her, but she was obsessed with a
favourite foreboding that one of these days there would be a
great social upheaval, in which everybody would be killed by
everybody else. "It will come sooner than we think," she
would observe darkly; a mathematical expert of exceptionally
high powers would have been puzzled to work out the
approximate date from the slender and confusing groundwork
which this assertion afforded.
On this particular morning the sight of Lady Bastable
enthroned among her papers gave Clovis the hint towards
which his mind had been groping all breakfast time. His
mother had gone upstairs to supervise packing operations,
and he was alone on the ground-floor with his hostess-and
the servants. The latter were the key to the situation.
Bursting wildly into the kitchen quarters, Clovis screamed a
frantic though strictly non-committal summons: "Poor Lady
Bastable! In the morning-room! Oh, quick!" The next moment
the butler, cook, page-boy, two or three maids, and a
gardener who had happened to be in one of the outer kitchens
were following in a hot scurry after Clovis as he headed
back for the morning-room. Lady Bastable was roused from
the world of newspaper lore by hearing a Japanese screen in
the hall go down with a crash. Then the door leading from
the ball flew open and her young guest tore madly through
the room, shrieked at her in passing, "The jacquerie!
They're on us!" and dashed like an escaping hawk out
through the French window. The scared mob of servants burst
in on his heels, the gardener still clutching the sickle
with which he had been trimming hedges, and the impetus of
their headlong haste carried them, slipping and sliding,
over the smooth parquet flooring towards the chair where
their mistress sat in panic-stricken amazement. If she had
had a moment granted her for reflection she would have
behaved, as she afterwards explained, with considerable
dignity. It was probably the sickle which decided her, but
anyway she followed the lead that Clovis had given her
through the French window, and ran well and far across the
lawn before the eyes of her astonished retainers.
*
Lost dignity is not a possession which can be restored at
a moment's notice, and both Lady Bastable and the butler
found the process of returning to normal conditions almost as
painful as a slow recovery from drowning. A jacquerie, even
if carried out with the most respectful of intentions,
cannot fail to leave some traces of embarrassment behind it.
By lunch-time, however, decorum had reasserted itself with
enhanced rigour as a natural rebound from its recent
overthrow, and the meal was served in a frigid stateliness
that might have been framed on a Byzantine model. Half-way
through its duration Mrs. Sangrail was solemnly presented
with an envelope lying on a silver salver. It contained a
cheque for forty-nine shillings.
The MacGregor boys learned how to play poker-patience;
after all, they could afford to.
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