<div><span class='pageno' title='282' id='Page_282'></span><h1>CHAPTER XIX</h1></div>
<p class='noindent'><span class='dropcap'>L</span><span class='sc'>UCILLA</span> kept her word. She was not a woman
of half measures. Just as she had set out, impelled
by altruistic fancy, to carry provincial
little Félise through part of a Riviera season, and had
thoroughly accomplished her object, so now she devoted
herself whole-heartedly to the guidance of Martin
through the Land of Egypt. In doing so she was
conscious of helping the world along. Hitherto it
was impeded in its progress by a mild, scholarly gentleman
wasting his potentialities in handing soup to
commercial travellers. These potentialities she had decided
to develop, so that in due season a new force
might be evolved which could give the old world a
shove. To express her motives in less universal terms,
she set herself the holiday task of making a man of
him. To herself she avowed her entire disinterestedness.
She had often thought of adopting and training
a child; but that would take a prodigiously long
time, and the child might complicate her future life.
On the other hand, with grown men and women, things
went more quickly. You could see the grass grow.
The swifter process appealed to her temperament.</p>
<p class='pindent'>First she incorporated him, without chance of escape,
in her own little coterie, the Dangerfields, and
the Watney-Holcombes, father, mother and daughter,
Americans who lived in Paris. They received him
guaranteed by Lucilla as an Englishman without guile,
with democratic American frankness. Of Mr. Dangerfield,
a grim-featured banker, possessing a dry, subrident
humour, Martin was somewhat afraid. But
with the Watney-Holcombes, cheery, pleasure-loving
folk, he was soon at his ease.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The only thing you mustn’t do,” said Lucilla, “is
to fall in love with Maisie”—Maisie was a slip of
a girl of nineteen, whom he regarded as an amusing
and precocious child—“There is already a young man
floating about in the smoke of St. Louis.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>It was an opportunity to make romantic repudiation,
to proclaim the faith by which he lived. But he had
not yet the courage. He laughed, and declared that
the smoky young man might sleep peacefully of nights.
The damsel herself took him as a new toy and played
with him harmlessly and, subtly inspired by Lucilla,
commanded her father, a chubby, innocent man, with
a face like a red, gold-spectacled apple, to bring Martin
from remote meal solitude and establish him permanently
at their table. Thus, Martin being an accepted
member of a joyous company, could go here, there and
everywhere with any one of them without furnishing
cause for gossip. Lucilla had a deft way of not putting
herself in the wrong with a censorious though
charming world. Under the nominal auspices of the
Dangerfields and the Watney-Holcombes, Martin
mingled with the best of Cairo society. He attended
race-meetings, golf-club teas, hotel balls and merry
little suppers. He went to a reception at the Agency
and shook hands with the great English ruler of
Egypt. He was swept away in automobiles to Helouan
and Heliopolis, to the Mena House to see the Pyramids
and the Sphinx both by daylight and by moonlight. A
young soldier discovering a bond in knowledge of
love of France invited him to Mess on a guest night.
Lucilla, ever watchful and tactful, saw that he went
in full dress, white tie and white waistcoat, and not
in dinner jacket. She pervaded his atmosphere, teaching
him, training him, opening up new vistas for his
mind and soul. Every encomium passed on him she
accepted as a tribute to herself. It was infinitely more
interesting than training a dog or a horse.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Martin, blissfully unaware of experiment, or even
of guidance, lived in a dream of delight. His goddess
seemed ever ready to hand. Together they visited
mosques and spent enchanted hours in the Bazaar.
She knew her way about the labyrinth, could even
speak a few words of Arabic. Supreme fair product
of the West she stood divinely pure amid the swarthy
vividness of the unalterable East. She was a flawless
jewel in the barbaric setting of those narrow
streets, filled with guttural noise, outlandish bustle
of camels and donkeys and white-clad men, smells of
hoary spiciness, colour from the tattered child’s purple
and scarlet to the yellow of the cinnamon pounded at
doorways in the three-foot mortars; those streets winding
in short joints, each given up to its particular industry—copper
beaters, brass-workers, leather-sellers,
workers in cedar and mother-of-pearl, sellers of cakes
and kabobs, all plying their trades in the frontless
caves that served as shops; streets so narrow and sunless
that one could see but a slit of blue above the latticed
fronts of the crazy houses. He loved to see her
deal with the supple Orientals. In bargaining she did
not haggle; with smiling majesty she paid into the
long slender palm a third, or a half or two-thirds of
the price demanded, according to her infallible sense
of values, and walked away serene possessor of the
merchandise. Lucilla, having a facile memory, had
not boasted in vain that she could play dragoman. He
found from the books that her archæological information
was correct; he drank in her wisdom.</p>
<p class='pindent'>For his benefit she ordained a general expedition to
Sakkara. One golden day the party took train to
Badrashen, whence, on donkeys, they plunged into the
desert. Riding in front with him, she was his for most
of that golden day; she discoursed on the colossal
statue, stretched by the wayside, of Rameses II, on the
step pyramid, on the beauties of the little tombs of
Thi and Ptah-hetep, whose sculptures and paintings
of the Vth Dynasty were alive, proceeding direct from
the soul of the artist and thus crying shame on the
conventional imitations of a thousand or two years
later with which most of the great monuments of
Egypt are adorned. And all she said was Holy Writ.
And at Mariette’s House where they lunched—the
bungalow pitched in the middle of the baking desert
and overlooking the crumbling brown masses of
tombs—he glanced around at their picnicking companions
and marvelled at her grace in eating a hard-boiled
egg. It was a noisy, excited party and it was
“Lucilla this,” and “Lucilla that,” all the time, for
there was hot argument.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t take any stock in bulls, so I’m not going
to see the Serapeum,” declared Miss Watney-Holcombe.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“But Lucilla says you’ve got to,” exclaimed Martin.
Then he realised that unconsciously he had used her
Christian name. He flushed and under cover of the
talk turned to her with an apology. He met laughing
eyes.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Scrubby little artists in Paris call me Lucilla without
the quiver of an eyelash.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What may be permissible to a scrubby little artist
in Paris,” said Martin, “mayn’t be permitted to one
who ought to know better.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She passed him a plate containing the last banana.
He declined with a courteous gesture.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Martin,” she said, deliberately dumping the fruit
in front of him, “if you don’t look out, you will die
of conscientiousness.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>During part of the blazing ride back to Badrashen
when the accidents of route and the vagrom whimsies
of donkeys brought him to the side of the dry Mr.
Dangerfield, he reflected on the attitude of men admitted
to the intimacy of goddesses and great queens.
What did Leicester call the august Elizabeth when she
deigned to lay aside her majesty? And what were the
sensations of Anchises, father of pious Æneas, when
he first addressed Venus by her <span class='it'>petit nom</span>?</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>“Well,” said Fortinbras, the next day, “and how is
my speculator in happiness getting on?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They were sitting on the terrace of Shepheard’s Hotel,
their usual midday meeting-place. Save on these
occasions the philosopher seemed to live dimly, in a
sort of Oriental twilight. Yet all that Martin had
seen (with the exception of the social moving-picture)
he had also seen and therefrom sucked vastly more
juice than the younger man. How and in what company
he had visited the various monuments he did not
say. It amused him to maintain his mysterious independence.
Very rarely, and only when compelled by
the imperious ruthlessness of Lucilla, did he otherwise
emerge from his obscurity than on these daily
visits to the famous terrace. There surrounded by
chatter in all tongues and by representatives of all
cities from Seattle round the earth’s girth to Tokio,
he loved to sit and watch the ever-shifting scene—the
traffic of all the centuries in the narrow street,
from the laden ass driven by a replica of one of Joseph’s
brethren to the modern Rolls-Royce sweeping
along with a fat and tarbushed dignitary of the court;
the ox-cart omnibus carrying its dingy load of veiled
women; the poor funeral procession, the coffin borne
on shoulders amid the perfunctory ululations of hired
mourners; on the footpaths the contrast of slave attended,
black-robed, trim-shod Egyptian ladies in
yashmaks and the frank summer-clad Western women;
Soudanese and Turks and Greeks and Jews and
straight, clear-eyed English officers, and German tourists
attired for the wilds of the Zambesi; and here and
there a Gordon Highlander swinging along in kilts and
white tunic; and lounging against the terrace balustrade,
the dragomen, flaunting villains gay in rainbow
robes, and the vendors of beads and fly-whisks and
postcards holding up their wares at arm’s height and
regarding prospective purchasers with the eyes of a
crumb-expectant though self-respecting dog who sits
on his tail by his master’s side; and, across the way,
the curio shops rich with the spoils of Samarcand.
From all this when alone he garnered the harvest of
a quiet eye. When Martin was with him, he shared
with his pupil the golden grain of the panorama.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How,” said he, “is my speculator in happiness getting
on?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The stock is booming,” replied Martin with a laugh.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What an education,” said Fortinbras, “is the society
of American men of substance!”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It pleases you to be ironical,” said Martin, “but you
speak literal truth. An American doesn’t set a man
down as a damned fool because he is ignorant of his
own particular line of business. Dangerfield, for instance,
who keeps a working balance of his soul locked
up in a safe in Wall Street, has explained to me the
New York Stock Exchange with the most courteous
simplicity.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And in return,” said Fortinbras, waving away a
seller of rhinoceros-horn amber, with the gesture of
a monarch dismissing his chamberlain, “you have
given him an exhaustive criticism, not untempered
with jaundice, of lower middle-class education in England.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Now, how the deuce,” said Martin, recklessly
throwing his half-finished cigarette over the balustrade—“How
the deuce did you know that?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>C’est mon secret</span>,” replied Fortinbras. “It is also
the secret of a dry and successful man like Mr. Dangerfield,
with whom I am sorry to have had no
more than ten minutes’ conversation. In those ten
minutes I discovered in him a lamentable ignorance
of the works of Chaucer, Cervantes and Tourguenieff,
but for my benefit he sized up in a few clattering epigrams
the essence of the Anglo-Saxon, Spanish and
Sclavonic races, and, for his own, was extracting
from me all I know about Tolstoi, when Lucilla called
me away to expound to his wife the French family
system. From which you will observe that the American
believes in a free exchange of knowledge as a
system of education. To revert to my original question,
however, you imagine that your present path is
strewn with roses?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I do,” said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“That’s all I desire to know, my dear fellow,” said
Fortinbras benevolently.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“And what about yourself?” asked Martin. “What
about your pursuit of happiness?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I am studying Arabic,” replied Fortinbras, “and
discussing philosophy with one Abu Mohammed, a
very learned Doctor of Theology, with a very long
white beard, from whose sedative companionship I
derive much spiritual anodyne.”</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>Soon after this the whole Semiramis party packed
up their traps and went by night train to Luxor.
There they settled down for a while and did the
things that the floating population of Luxor do. They
rode on donkeys and on camels and they drove in
carriages and sand-carts. They visited the Tombs of
the Kings and the Tombs of the Queens, and the
Tombs of the Ministers and Karnak and their own
private and particular Temple of Luxor. And Martin
amassed a vast amount of erudition and learned
to know gods and goddesses by their attitudes and
talked about them with casual intimacy. His nature
drank in all that there was of wonder and charm
in these relics of a colossal past like an insatiable
sponge; and in Upper Egypt the humble present is
but a relic of the past. The twentieth-century fellaheen
guiding the ox-drawn wooden plough might
have served for models of any bas-relief or painting
in any tomb of thousands of years ago. So too might
the half-naked men in the series of terraced trenches
draining water from the Nile by means of rude
wooden lever and bucket to irrigate the land. The
low mud houses of the villages were the same as
those which covering vast expanses on either side of
the river made up the mighty and populous city of
Thebes. And the peasantry purer in type than the
population of Cairo, which till then was all the Egypt
that Martin knew, were of the same race as those
warriors who gained vain victories for unsympathetic
Kings.</p>
<hr class='tbk'/>
<p class='pindent'>The ridgy, rocky, sandy desert, startlingly yellow
against the near-blue dome of sky. A group of donkeys,
donkey-boys, violently clad dragomen, one or
two black-robed, white-turbaned official guides, Europeans
as exotic to the scene as Esquimaux in Hyde
Park. An excavated descent to a hole surmounted by
a signboard as though it were the entrance to some
underground boozing-ken, an Egyptian soldier in
khaki and red tarbush. An inclined plane, then flight
after flight of wooden steps through painted chamber
after painted chamber, and at last, deep down in
the earth, lit by electric light, the heart of the tomb’s
poor mystery: the mummified body of a great King,
Amen-Hetep II, in an uncovered sandstone sarcophagus.
It is the world’s greatest monument to the
awful and futile vanity of man.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Thank God,” said Martin, as he came out with Lucilla
into the open air. “Thank God for the great
world and sunshine and life. The whole thing is fascinating,
is soul-racking, but I hate these people who
lived for nothing but death. I wanted to bash that
King’s face in. There was that poor devil of an
artist who spent his soul over those sculptures, going
at them hammer and chisel in the black bowels of
the earth with nothing but an oil-lamp on the scaffold
beside him, for years and years—and when he had
finished, calmly put to death by that brute lying there,
so that he should not glorify any other swollen-headed
worm of a tyrant.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They sat down on the sand in a triangular patch of
shade. Lucilla regarded him with approbation.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I love to hear you talk vehemently,” she remarked.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s because I have learned to feel vehemently,”
said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Since when?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Since I first met you,” said Martin, with sudden
daring.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It’s not my example you’ve been profiting by,” she
laughed. “You’ve never heard me raving at a poor
old mummy.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Cool and casual, she warded off the shaft of his
implied declaration. He had not another weapon to
hand. He said:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’ve said things equally violent when you have
felt deeply. That is your great power. You live
intensely. Everything you do you put your whole self
into. You have the faculty of making everybody
around you do the same.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>At that moment Mr. Watney-Holcombe appeared at
the mouth of the tomb, mopping his rubicund face.
At Lucilla he shook a playful fist.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Not another darned monument for me this day.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I don’t seem to have succeeded with him, anyway,”
she said in a low and ironical voice.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Martin, gentlest of creatures, felt towards Mr.
Watney-Holcombe for the moment as he had felt towards
Amen-Hetep. The rosy-faced gentleman sat
beside them and talked flippantly of gods and goddesses;
and soon the rest of the party joined them.
The opportunity for which Martin had waited so long,
of which he had dreamed the extravagant dreams of
an imaginative child, was gone. He would have to
wait yet further. But he had spoken as he had never
before dared to speak. He had told her unmistakably
that she had taught him to feel and to live. As
the other ladies approached he sprang to his feet and
held out a hand to aid the divinity to rise. She accepted
it frankly, nodded him pleasant thanks. The
pressure of her little moist palm kept him a-tingle for
long afterwards.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They had a gay and intimate ride home. The donkey
boys thwacked the donkeys so that they galloped
to the shattering of sustained conversation between
the riders. But in one breathing space, while they
jogged along side by side, she said:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“If I have done anything to help you on your
way, I regard it as a privilege.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’ve done everything for me,” said Martin.
“To whom else but you do I owe all this?” His gesture
embraced earth and sky.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I only made a suggestion,” said Lucilla.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’ve done infinitely more. Anybody giving advice
could say: ‘Go to Egypt.’ You said, ‘Come to
Egypt,’ and therein lies all the difference. You have
given me of yourself, so bountifully, so generously——”
He paused.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Go on,” she said. “I love to hear you talk.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But the donkey-boys perceiving Mr. Dangerfield
mounted on a fleet quadruped about to break through
the advance guard, thwacked the donkeys again, and
Martin, unless he shouted breathlessly, could not go
on talking.</p>
<p class='pindent'>That evening there was a dance at the Winter Palace
Hotel, where they were staying. Martin, on his
arrival at Cairo, had been as ignorant of dancing as
a giraffe; but Lucilla, Mrs. Dangerfield and Maisie
having commandeered the Watney-Holcombe’s private
sitting room at the Semiramis whenever it suited
them, had put him through a severe and summary
course. He threw himself devotedly into the new
delight. A lithe figure and a quick ear aided him.
Before he left Cairo he could dance one-steps and
two-steps with the best; and so a new joy was added
to his existence. And to him it was a joy infinitely
more sensuous and magnetic than to those who from
childhood have regarded dancing as a commonplace
social pleasure. To understand, you must put yourself
in the place of this undeveloped, finely tempered
man of thirty.</p>
<p class='pindent'>His arm was around the beloved body, his hand
clasped hers, the fragrance of her hair was in his
nostrils, their limbs moved in perfect unison with the
gay tune. His heart sang to the music, his feet were
winged with laughter. In young enjoyment, she said
with literal truthfulness:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You are a born dancer.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He glowed and murmured glad incoherencies of
acknowledgment.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You’re a born all sorts of other things, I believe,”
she said, “that only need bringing out. You have a
rhythmical soul.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>What she meant precisely she did not know, but it
sounded mighty fine in Martin’s ears. Ever since his
first interview with Fortinbras he had been curiously
interested in that vague organ and its evolution. Now
it was rhythmical. To explain herself she added: “It
is in harmony with the great laws of existence.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>A new light shone in his eyes and he held himself
proudly. He looked quite a gallant fellow, straight,
English, masterful. Her skirts swished the feet of a
couple of elderly English ladies sitting by the wall.
Her quick woman’s ears caught the remark: “What
a handsome couple.” She flushed and her eyes
sparkled into his. He replied to her psychological
dictum:</p>
<p class='pindent'>“At any rate it’s in harmony with the deepest of
them all.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What is that?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The fundamental law,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They danced the gay dance to the end. They
stopped breathless, and laughed into each other’s eyes.
She took his arm and they left the ball-room.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Unless you will dance with me again,” he said,
“this is my last dance to-night.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Why?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I leave you to guess,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“It was as near perfection as could be,” she admitted.
“I feel rather like that myself. Perhaps
more so; for I don’t want to spoil things even by
dancing with you again.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you really mean it?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She nodded frankly, intimately, deliciously.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Let us go outside, away from everybody,” he suggested.</p>
<p class='pindent'>They crossed the lounge and reached the Western
door. Both were living a little above themselves.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“When last we talked sense,” she said, “you spoke
about a fundamental law. Come and expound it to
me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>They stood on the terrace amid other flushed and
happy dancers.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Let us get away from these people.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Who know nothing of the fundamental law,” said
Lucilla.</p>
<p class='pindent'>So they went along a spur of the terrace, a sort of
rococo bastion guarding the entrance to the hotel, and
there they found solitude. They sat beneath the velvet,
star-hung sky. Fifty yards away flowed the Nile,
with now and then a flashing ripple. From a ghyassa
with ghostly white sail creeping down the river came
an Arab chant. The flowers of the bougainvillea on
the hotel porch gleamed dim and pale. A touch of
khamsin gave languor to the air. Lucilla drew off
her gloves, bade him put them down for her. He
preferred to keep them warm and fragrant, a part of
herself.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Now about this fundamental law,” she said in her
lazy contralto.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Her hand hung carelessly, temptingly over the arm
of her chair. Graciously she allowed him to take and
hold it.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Surely you know.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I want you to tell me, Mr. Philosopher.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He dallied with the adorable situation.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Since when have I become Master and you Pupil,
Lucilla?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Since you began, presumably to plunge deep into
profundities of wisdom where I can’t follow you. Behold
me at your feet.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>He moved his chair close to hers and she allowed
him to play with her slender fingers.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“The fundamental law of life,” said he, bending
towards her, “is love.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I wonder!” said Lucilla.</p>
<p class='pindent'>She lay in the long chair, her head against the
back. He drew her fingers to his lips.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m sure of it. I’m sure of it as I’m sure that
there’s a God in Heaven, as that,” he whispered, in
what the sophisticated may term an anti-climax,
“there’s a goddess on earth.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Who is the goddess?” she murmured.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You,” said he.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I like being called a goddess,” she said, “especially
after dancing the two-step. Hymns Ancient and
Modern.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Do you know what is the most ancient hymn in
the world?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Shall I tell you?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Am I not here to be instructed?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“You are beautiful and I love you. You are wonderful
and I love you. You are adorable and I love
you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“How did you learn to become so lyrical?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Martin knew not. He was embarked on the highest
adventure of his life. A super-Martin seemed to speak.
Her tone was playful, not ironical. It encouraged him
to flights more lyrical still. In the daylight of reason
what he said was amazing nonsense. Beneath the
Egyptian stars, in the atmosphere drowsy with the
scents of the East and the touch of khamsin it sounded
to receptive ears beautifully romantic. Through the
open door came the strains of an old-fashioned waltz,
perhaps meretricious, but in the exotic surroundings
sensuous and throbbing with passion. He bent over
her and now possessed both hands.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“All that I feel for you, all that you are to me,”
he said, concluding his rhapsody. Then, as she made
no reply, he asked: “You aren’t angry with me?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“I’m not a granite sphinx,” she said, in her low
voice. “No one has ever said things like that to me
before. I don’t say men haven’t tried. They have;
but they’ve always made themselves ridiculous. I’ve
always wanted to laugh at them.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Said Martin: “You are not laughing at me?”</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No,” she whispered. And after a long pause:
“No, I am not laughing at you.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>She turned her face to him. Her lips were very
near. Mortal man could have done neither more nor
less than that which Martin did. He kissed her. Then
he drew back shaken to the roots of his being. She
with closed eyes; he saw the rise and fall of her
bosom. The universe, earth and stars and the living
bit of the cosmos that was he, hung in breathless suspense.
Time stopped. There was no space.</p>
<p class='pindent'>He was holding her beloved hands so delicately and
adorably veined: before his eyes, in the dim light, were
her lips, slightly parted, which he had just kissed.</p>
<p class='pindent'>Presently she stirred, withdrew her hands, passed
them across her eyes and with dainty touches about
her hair, as she sat up. Time went on and there was
space again and the stars followed their courses. Martin
threw an arm round her.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“Lucilla,” he cried quiveringly.</p>
<p class='pindent'>But with a quick movement she eluded his embrace
and rose to her feet. She kept him off with a little
gesture.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“No, no, Martin. There has been enough foolishness
for one night.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>But Martin, man at last, caught her and crushed her
to him with all his young strength and kissed her, not
as worshipper kisses goddess, but as a man kisses
a woman.</p>
<p class='pindent'>At last she said, like millions of her sisters in
similar circumstances: “You’re hurting me.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Like millions of his brethren, he released her. She
panted for a moment. Then she said: “We must go
in. Let me go first. Give me a few minutes’ grace.
Good-night.”</p>
<p class='pindent'>Mortal gentleman and triumphant lover could do
no more or no less. She sped down the terrace and
disappeared. He waited, his soul aflame. When he
entered the lounge, she was not there. He saw the
Dangerfields and the Watney-Holcombes and one or
two others sitting in a group over straw-equipped
glasses. He knew that Lucilla was not in the dancing-room.
He knew that she had fled to solitude. Cheery
Watney-Holcombe catching sight of him, waved an
inviting hand. Martin, longing for the sweet loneliness
of the velvet night, did not dare refuse. His
wits were sharpened. Refusal would give cause for
intolerable gossip. He came forward.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“What have you done with Lucilla?” cried Mrs.
Dangerfield.</p>
<p class='pindent'>“She has gone to bed. We’ve had a heavy day.
She’s dead beat,” said Martin.</p>
<p class='pindent'>And thus he entered into the Kingdom of the Men
of the World.</p>
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