The Talking-Out Of Tarrington
"Heavens!" exclaimed the aunt of Clovis, "here's some
one I know bearing down on us. I can't remember his name,
but he lunched with us once in Town. Tarrington--yes,
that's it. He's heard of the picnic I'm giving for the
Princess, and he'll cling to me like a lifebelt till I give
him an invitation; then he'll ask if he may bring all his
wives and mothers and sisters with him. That's the worst of
these small watering-places; one can't escape from
anybody."
"I'll fight a rearguard action for you if you like to do
a bolt now," volunteered Clovis; "you've a clear ten yards
start if you don't lose time."
The aunt of Clovis responded gamely to the suggestion, and
churned away like a Nile steamer, with a long brown ripple
of Pekingese spaniel trailing in her wake.
"Pretend you don't know him," was her parting advice,
tinged with the reckless courage of the non-combatant.
The next moment the overtures of an affably disposed
gentleman were being received by Clovis with a
"silent-upon-a-peak-in-Darien" stare which denoted an
absence of all previous acquaintance with the object
scrutinized.
"I expect you don't know me with my moustache," said the
new-comer; "I've only grown it during the last two
months."
"On the contrary," said Clovis, "the moustache is the
only thing about you that seemed familiar to me. I felt
certain that I had met it somewhere before."
"My name is Tarrington," resumed the candidate for
recognition.
"A very useful kind of name," said Clovis; "with a name
of that sort no one would blame you if you did nothing in
particular heroic or remarkable, would they? And yet if you
were to raise a troop of light horse in a moment of national
emergency, 'Tarrington's Light Horse' would sound quite
appropriate and pulse-quickening; whereas if you were called
Spoopin, for instance, the thing would be out of the
question. No one, even in a moment of national emergency,
could possibly belong to Spoopin's Horse."
The new-comer smiled weakly, as one who is not to be put
off by mere flippancy, and began again with patient
persistence:
"I think you ought to remember my name--"
"I shall," said Clovis, with an air of immense
sincerity. "My aunt was asking me only this morning to
suggest names for four young owls she's just had sent her as
pets. I shall call them all Tarrington; then if one or two
of them die or fly away, or leave us in any of the ways that
pet owls are prone to, there will be always one or two left
to carry on your name. And my aunt won't let me forget
it; she will always be asking 'Have the Tarringtons had
their mice?' and questions of that sort. She says if you
keep wild creatures in captivity you ought to see after
their wants, and of course she's quite right there."
"I met you at luncheon at your aunt's house once--"
broke in Mr. Tarrington, pale but still resolute.
"My aunt never lunches," said Clovis; "she belongs to
the National Anti-Luncheon League, which is doing quite a
lot of good work in a quiet, unobtrusive way. A
subscription of half a crown per quarter entitles you to go
without ninety-two luncheons."
"This must be something new," exclaimed Tarrington.
"It's the same aunt that I've always had," said Clovis
coldly.
"I perfectly well remember meeting you at a
luncheon-party given by your aunt," persisted Tarrington,
who was beginning to flush an unhealthy shade of mottled
pink.
"What was there for lunch?" asked Clovis.
"Oh, well, I don't remember that--"
"How nice of you to remember my aunt when you can no
longer recall the names of the things you ate. Now my
memory works quite differently. I can remember a menu long
after I've forgotten the hostess that accompanied it. When
I was seven years old I recollect being given a peach at a
garden-party by some Duchess or other; I can't remember a
thing about her, except that I imagine our acquaintance must
have been of the slightest, as she called me a 'nice little
boy,' but I have unfading memories of that peach. It was
one of those exuberant peaches that meet you halfway, so to
speak, and are all over you in a moment. It was a beautiful
unspoiled product of a hothouse, and yet it managed quite
successfully to give itself the airs of a compôte. You had
to bite it and imbibe it at the same time. To me there has
always been something charming and mystic in the thought of
that delicate velvet globe of fruit, slowly ripening and
warming to perfection through the long summer days and
perfumed nights, and then coming suddenly athwart my life in
the supreme moment of its existence. I can never forget it,
even if I wished to. And when I had devoured all that was
edible of it, there still remained the stone, which a
heedless, thoughtless child would doubtless have thrown
away; I put it down the neck of a young friend who was
wearing a very décolleté sailor suit. I told him it
was a scorpion, and from the way he wriggled and screamed he
evidently believed it, though where the silly kid imagined I
could procure a live scorpion at a garden-party I don't
know. Altogether, that peach is for me an unfading and
happy memory--"
The defeated Tarrington had by this time retreated out of
earshot, comforting himself as best he might with the
reflection that a picnic which included the presence of
Clovis might prove a doubtfully agreeable experience.
"I shall certainly go in for a Parliamentary career,"
said Clovis to himself as he turned complacently to rejoin
his aunt. "As a talker-out of inconvenient bills I should
be invaluable."
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