The Way To The Dairy
The Baroness and Clovis sat in a much-frequented corner of
the Park exchanging biographical confidences about the long
succession of passers-by.
"Who are those depressed-looking young women who have
just gone by?" asked the Baroness; "they have the air of
people who have bowed to destiny and are not quite sure
whether the salute will be returned."
"Those," said Clovis, "are the Brimley Bomefields. I
dare say you would look depressed if you had been through
their experiences."
"I'm always having depressing experiences," said the
Baroness, "but I never give them outward expression. It's
as bad as looking one's age. Tell me about the Brimley
Bomefields."
"Well," said Clovis, "the beginning of their tragedy
was that they found an aunt. The aunt had been there all
the time, but they had very nearly forgotten her existence
until a distant relative refreshed their memory, by
remembering her very distinctly in his will; it is wonderful
what the force of example will accomplish. The aunt, who
had been unobtrusively poor, became quite pleasantly rich,
and the Brimley Bomefields grew suddenly concerned at the
loneliness of her life and took her under their collective
wings. She had as many wings around her at this time as one
of those beast-things in Revelation."
"So far I don't see any tragedy from the Brimley
Bomefields' point of view," said the Baroness.
"We haven't got to it yet," said Clovis. "The aunt had
been used to living very simply, and had seen next to
nothing of what we should consider life, and her nieces
didn't encourage her to do much in the way of making a
splash with her money. Quite a good deal of it would come
to them at her death, and she was a fairly old woman, but
there was one circumstance which cast a shadow of gloom over
the satisfaction they felt in the discovery and acquisition
of this desirable aunt: she openly acknowledged that a
comfortable slice of her little fortune would go to a nephew
on the other side of her family. He was rather a deplorable
thing in rotters, and quite hopelessly top-hole in the way
of getting through money, but he had been more or less
decent to the old lady in her unremembered days, and she
wouldn't hear anything against him. At least, she wouldn't
pay any attention to what she did hear, but her nieces took
care that she should have to listen to a good deal in that
line. It seemed such a pity, they said among themselves,
that good money should fall into such worthless hands. They
habitually spoke of their aunt's money as 'good money,' as
though other people's aunts dabbled for the most part in
spurious currency.
"Regularly after the Derby, St. Leger, and other notable
racing events they indulged in audible speculations as to
how much money Roger had squandered in unfortunate betting
transactions.
" 'His travelling expenses must come to a big sum,' said
the eldest Brimley Bomefield one day; 'they say he attends
every race-meeting in England, besides others abroad. I
shouldn't wonder if he went all the way to India to see the
race for the Calcutta Sweepstake that one hears so much
about.'
" 'Travel enlarges the mind, my dear Christine,' said her
aunt.
" 'Yes, dear aunt, travel undertaken in the right
spirit,' agreed Christine; 'but travel pursued merely as a
means towards gambling and extravagant living is more likely
to contract the purse than to enlarge the mind. However, as
long as Roger enjoys himself, I suppose he doesn't care how
fast or unprofitably the money goes, or where he is to find
more. It seems a pity, that's all.'
"The aunt by that time had begun to talk of something
else, and it was doubtful if Christine's moralizing had been
even accorded a hearing. It was her remark, however--the
aunt's remark, I mean--about travel enlarging the mind,
that gave the youngest Brimley Bomefield her great idea for
the showing-up of Roger.
" 'If aunt could only be taken somewhere to see him
gambling and throwing away money,' she said, 'it would open
her eyes to his character more effectually than anything we
can say.'
" 'My dear Veronique,' said her sisters, 'we can't go
following him to race-meetings.'
" 'Certainly not to race-meetings,' said Veronique, 'but
we might go to some place where one can look on at gambling
without talking part in it.'
" 'Do you mean Monte Carlo?' they asked her, beginning to
jump rather at the idea.
" 'Monte Carlo is a long way off, and has a dreadful
reputation,' said Veronique; 'I shouldn't like to tell our
friends that we were going to Monte Carlo. But I believe
Roger usually goes to Dieppe about this time of year, and
some quite respectable English people go there, and the
journey wouldn't be expensive. If aunt could stand the
Channel crossing the change of scene might do her a lot of
good.'
"And that was how the fateful idea came to the Brimley
Bomefields.
"From the very first set-off disaster hung over the
expedition, as they afterwards remembered. To begin with,
all the Brimley Bomefields were extremely unwell during the
crossing, while the aunt enjoyed the sea air and made
friends with all manner of strange travelling companions.
Then, although it was many years since she had been on the
Continent, she had served a very practical apprenticeship
there as a paid companion, and her knowledge of colloquial
French beat theirs to a standstill. It became increasingly
difficult to keep under their collective wings a person who
knew what she wanted and was able to ask for it and to see
that she got it. Also, as far as Roger was concerned, they
drew Dieppe blank; it turned out that he was staying at
Pourville, a little watering-place a mile or two further
west. The Brimley Bomefields discovered that Dieppe was too
crowded and frivolous, and persuaded the old lady to migrate
to the comparative seclusion of Pourville.
" 'You won't find it dull, you know,' they assured her;
'there is a little casino attached to the hotel, and you can
watch the people dancing and throwing away their money at
petits chevaux.'
"It was just before petits chevaux had been supplanted
by boule.
"Roger was not staying in the same hotel, but they knew
that the casino would be certain of his patronage on most
afternoons and evenings.
"On the first evening of their visit they wandered into
the casino after a fairly early dinner, and hovered near the
tables. Bertie van Tahn was staying there at the time, and
he described the whole incident to me. The Brimley
Bomefields kept a furtive watch on the doors as though they
were expecting some one to turn up, and the aunt got more
and more amused and interested watching the little horses
whirl round and round the board.
" 'Do you know, poor little number eight hasn't won for
the last thirty-two times,' she said to Christine; 'I've
been keeping count. I shall really have to put five francs
on him to encourage him.'
" 'Come and watch the dancing, dear,' said Christine
nervously. It was scarcely a part of their strategy that
Roger should come in and find the old lady backing her fancy
at the petits chevaux table.
" 'Just wait while I put five francs on number eight,'
said the aunt, and in another moment her money was lying on
the table. The horses commenced to move round; it was a
slow race this time, and number eight crept up at the finish
like some crafty demon and placed his nose just a fraction
in front of number three, who had seemed to be winning
easily. Recourse had to be had to measurement, and the
number eight was proclaimed the winner. The aunt picked up
thirty-five francs. After that the Brimley Bomefields would
have had to have used concerted force to get her away from
the tables. When Roger appeared on the scene she was
fifty-two francs to the good; her nieces were hovering
forlornly in the background, like chickens that have been
hatched out by a duck and are despairingly watching their
parent disporting herself in a dangerous and uncongenial
element. The supper-party which Roger insisted on standing
that night in honour of his aunt and the three Miss Brimley
Bomefields was remarkable for the unrestrained gaiety of two
of the participants and the funereal mirthlessness of the
remaining guests.
" 'I do not think,' Christine confided afterwards to a
friend, who re-confided it to Bertie van Tahn, 'that I shall
ever be able to touch pāté de foie gras again. It
would bring back memories of that awful evening.'
"For the next two or three days the nieces made plans for
returning to England or moving on to some other resort where
there was no casino. The aunt was busy making a system for
winning at petits chevaux. Number eight, her first love,
had been running rather unkindly for her, and a series of
plunges on number five had turned out even worse.
" 'Do you know, I dropped over seven hundred francs at
the tables this afternoon,' she announced cheerfully at
dinner on the fourth evening of their visit.
" 'Aunt! Twenty-eight pounds! And you were losing last
night too.'
" 'Oh, I shall get it all back,' she said optimistically;
'but not here. These silly little horses are no good. I
shall go somewhere where one can play comfortably at
roulette. You needn't look so shocked. I've always felt
that, given the opportunity, I should be an inveterate
gambler, and now you darlings have put the opportunity in my
way. I must drink your very good healths. Waiter, a bottle
of Pontet Canet. Ah, it's number seven on the wine list;
I shall plunge on number seven tonight. It won four times
running this afternoon when I was backing that silly number
five.'
"Number seven was not in a winning mood that evening.
The Brimley Bomefields, tired of watching disaster from a
distance, drew near to the table where their aunt was now an
honoured habituée, and gazed mournfully at the successive
victories of one and five and eight and four, which swept
'good money' out of the purse of seven's obstinate backer.
The day's losses totalled something very near two thousand
francs.
" 'You incorrigible gamblers,' said Roger chaffingly to
them, when he found them at the tables.
" 'We are not gambling,' said Christine freezingly; 'we
are looking on.'
" 'I don't think,' said Roger knowingly; 'of course
you're a syndicate and aunt is putting the stakes on for all
of you. Any one can tell by your looks when the wrong horse
wins that you've got a stake on.'
"Aunt and nephew had supper alone that night, or at least
they would have if Bertie hadn't joined them; all the
Brimley Bomefields had headaches.
"The aunt carried them all off to Dieppe the next day and
set cheerily about the task of winning back some of her
losses. Her luck was variable; in fact, she had some fair
streaks of good fortune, just enough to keep her thoroughly
amused with her new distraction; but on the whole she was a
loser. The Brimley Bomefields had a collective attack of
nervous prostration on the day when she sold out a quantity
of shares in Argentine rails. 'Nothing will ever bring that
money back,' they remarked lugubriously to one another.
"Veronique at last could bear it no longer, and went
home; you see, it had been her idea to bring the aunt on
this disastrous expedition, and though the others did not
cast the fact verbally in her face, there was a certain
lurking reproach in their eyes which was harder to meet than
actual upbraidings. The other two remained behind,
forlornly mounting guard over their aunt until such time as
the waning of the Dieppe season should at last turn her in
the direction of home and safety. They made anxious
calculations as to how little 'good money' might, with
reasonable luck, be squandered in the meantime. Here,
however, their reckoning went far astray; the close of the
Dieppe season merely turned their aunt's thoughts in search
of some other convenient gambling resort. 'Show a cat the
way to the dairy--' I forget how the proverb goes on, but
it summed up the situation as far as the Brimley Bomefields'
aunt was concerned. She had been introduced to unexplored
pleasures, and found them greatly to her liking, and she was
in no hurry to forgo the fruits of her newly acquired
knowledge. You see, for the first time in her life the old
thing was thoroughly enjoying herself; she was losing money,
but she had plenty of fun and excitement over the process,
and she had enough left to do very comfortably on. Indeed,
she was only just learning to understand the art of doing
oneself well. She was a popular hostess, and in return her
fellow-gamblers were always ready to entertain her to
dinners and suppers when their luck was in. Her nieces, who
still remained in attendance on her, with the pathetic
unwillingness of a crew to leave a foundering treasure ship
which might yet be steered into port, found little pleasure
in these Bohemian festivities; to see 'good money' lavished
on good living for the entertainment of a nondescript circle
of acquaintances who were not likely to be in any way
socially useful to them, did not attune them to a spirit of
revelry. They contrived, whenever possible, to excuse
themselves from participation in their aunt's deplored
gaieties; the Brimley Bomefield headaches became famous.
"And one day the nieces came to the conclusion that, as
they would have expressed it, 'no useful purpose would be
served' by their continued attendance on a relative who had
so thoroughly emancipated herself from the sheltering
protection of their wings. The aunt bore the announcement
of their departure with a cheerfulness that was almost
disconcerting.
" 'It's time you went home and had those headaches seen
to by a specialist,' was her comment on the situation.
"The homeward journey of the Brimley Bomefields was a
veritable retreat from Moscow, and what made it the more
bitter was the fact that the Moscow, in this case, was not
overwhelmed with fire and ashes, but merely extravagantly
over-illuminated.
"From mutual friends and acquaintances they sometimes get
glimpses of their prodigal relative, who has settled down
into a confirmed gambling maniac, living on such salvage of
income as obliging moneylenders have left at her disposal.
"So you need not be surprised," concluded Clovis, "if
they do wear a depressed look in public."
"Which is Veronique?" asked the Baroness.
"The most depressed-looking of the three," said Clovis.
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