Sir Lawrence was at the sideboard in the dining-room, extracting a crumbled cork.
“Lafite ‘65. Goodness knows what it’ll be like. Decant it very gently, Blore. What do you say, Adrian, warm it a little or no?”
“I should say no, if it’s that age.”
“I agree.”
Dinner began in silence. Adrian was thinking of Dinny, Dinny of Clare, and Sir Lawrence of the claret.
“French art,” said Lady Mont.
“Ah!” said Sir Lawrence: “that reminds me, Em; some of old Forsyte’s pictures are going to be lent. Considering he died saving them, they owe it to him.”
Dinny looked up.
“Fleur’s father? Was he a nice man, Uncle?”
“Nice?” repeated Sir Lawrence: “It’s not the word. Straight, yes: careful, yes—too careful for these times. He got a picture on his head, you know, in the fire—poor old chap. He knew something about French art, though. This exhibition that’s coming would have pleased him.”
“There’ll be nothing in it to touch ‘The Birth of Venus,’” said Adrian.
Dinny gave him a pleased look.
“That was divine,” she said.
Sir Lawrence cocked his eyebrow.
“I’ve often thought of going into the question: Why a nation ceases to be poetic. The old Italians—and look at them now!”
“Isn’t poetry an effervescence, Uncle? Doesn’t it mean youth, or at least enthusiasm?”
“The Italians were never young, and they’re enthusiastic enough now. When we were in Italy last May you should have seen the trouble they took over our passports.”
“Touchin’!” agreed Lady Mont.
“It’s only a question,” said Adrian, “of the means of expression. In the fourteenth century the Italians were expressing themselves in daggers and verse, in the fifteenth and sixteenth in poison, sculpture and painting, in the seventeenth in music, in the eighteenth in intrigue, in the nineteenth in rebellion, and in the twentieth their poetry is spelled in wireless and rules.”
“I did get so tired,” murmured Lady Mont, “of seein’ rules I couldn’t read.”
“You were fortunate, my dear; I could.”
“There’s one thing about the Italians,” continued Adrian; “century by century they throw up really great men of one sort or another. Is that climate, blood, or scenery, Lawrence?”
Sir Lawrence shrugged. “What do you think of the claret? Put your nose to it, Dinny. Sixty years ago, you two young women wouldn’t be here, and Adrian and I would be soppy about it. It’s as near perfect as makes no matter.”
Adrian sipped and nodded.
“Absolutely prime!”
“Well, Dinny?”
“I’m sure it’s perfect, dear—wasted on me.”
“Old Forsyte would have appreciated this; he had wonderful sherry. Do you get the bouquet, Em?”
Lady Mont, who was holding her glass with her elbow on the table, moved her nostrils delicately.
“Such nonsense,” she murmured, “almost any flower beats it.”
The remark caused complete silence.
Dinny’s eyes were the first to come to the level.
“How are Boswell and Johnson, Auntie?”
“I was tellin’ Adrian: Boswell’s taken to rollin’ the stone terrace, and Johnson’s lost his wife—poor thing. He’s a different man. Whistles all the time. His tunes ought to be collected.”
“Survivals of old England?”
“No, modern—he just wanders.”
“Talking of survivals,” said Sir Lawrence, “did you ever read Ask Mamma, Dinny?”
“No; who wrote it?”
“Surtees. You should. It’s a corrective.”
“Of what, Uncle?”
“Modernity.”
Lady Mont lowered her glass; it was empty.
“So wise of them to be stoppin’ this picture exhibition at 1900. D’you remember, Lawrence—in Paris, all those wiggly things we saw, and so much yellow and light blue—scrolls and blobs and faces upside-down? Dinny, we’d better go up.”
And when presently Blore brought the message—Would Miss Dinny go down to the study? She murmured:
“It’s about Jerry Corven. Don’t encourage your Uncle—he thinks he can do good, but he can’t.”…
“Well, Dinny?” said Sir Lawrence: “I always like talking to Adrian; he’s a well-tempered fellow with a mind of his own. I told Clare I would see Corven, but it’s no good seeing him without knowing what one wants to say. And not much then, I’m afraid. What do YOU think?”
Dinny, who had seated herself on the edge of her chair, set her elbows on her knees. It was an attitude from which Sir Lawrence augured ill.
“Judging from what he said to me today, Uncle Lawrence, his mind’s made up. Either Clare must go back to him or he’ll try to divorce her.”
“How will your people feel about that?”
“Very badly.”
“You know there’s a young man hanging round?”
“Yes.”
“He hasn’t a bean.”
Dinny smiled. “We’re used to that.”
“I know, but no beans when you’re out of bounds is serious. Corven might claim damages, he looks a vindictive sort of chap.”
“D’you really think he would? It’s very bad form, nowadays, isn’t it?”
“Form matters very little when a man’s monkey is up. I suppose you couldn’t get Clare to apply the closure to young Croom?”
“I’m afraid Clare will refuse to be dictated to about whom she sees. She thinks the break-up is entirely Jerry’s fault.”
“I,” said Sir Lawrence, emitting a slow puff, “am in favour of having Corven watched while he’s over here, and collecting a shot, if possible, to fire across his bows, but she doesn’t like the idea of that.”
“She believes in his career, and doesn’t want to spoil it. Besides, it’s so revolting.”
Sir Lawrence shrugged.
“What would you? The law’s the law. He belongs to Burton’s. Shall I waylay him there and appeal to him to leave her here quietly, and see if absence will make her heart grow fond again?”
Dinny wrinkled her brows.
“It might be worth trying, but I don’t believe he’ll budge.”
“What line are you going to take yourself?”
“Back Clare in whatever she does or doesn’t do.”
Sir Lawrence nodded, having received the answer he expected.
CHAPTER 10
The quality which from time immemorial has made the public men of England what they are, tempted so many lawyers into Parliament, caused so many divines to put up with being bishops, floated so many financiers, saved so many politicians from taking thought for the morrow, and so many judges from the pangs of remorse, was present in Eustace Dornford to no small degree. Put more shortly, he had an excellent digestion; could eat and drink at all times without knowing anything about it afterwards. He was an indefatigably hard worker even at play; and there was in him just that added fund of nervous energy which differentiates the man who wins the long jump from the man who loses it. And now, though his practice was going up by leaps and bounds since, two years ago, he had taken silk, he had stood for Parliament. And yet he was the last sort of man to incur the epithet ‘go-getter.’ His pale-brown, hazel-eyed, well-featured face had a considerate, even a sensitive look, and a pleasant smile. He had kept a little fine dark moustache, and his wig had not yet depleted his natural hair, which was dark and of rather curly texture. After Oxford he had eaten dinners and gone into the Chambers of a well-known Common Law Junior. Being a subaltern in the Shropshire Yeomanry when the war broke out, he had passed into the Cavalry, and not long after into the trenches, where he had known better luck than most people. His rise at the Bar after the war had been rapid. Solicitors liked him. He never fell foul of judges, and as a cross-examiner stood out, because he almost seemed to regret the points he scored. He was a Roman Catholic, from breeding rather than observance. Finally, he was fastidious in matters of sex, and his presence at a dinner-table on circuit had, if not a silencing, at least a moderating effect on tongues.
He occupied in Harcourt Buildings a commodious set of chambers designed for life as well as learning. Early every morning, wet or fine, he went for a ride in the Row, having already done at least two hours’ work on his cases. By ten o’clock, bathed, breakfasted, and acquainted with the morning’s news, he was ready for the Courts. When at four those Courts rose, he was busy again till half-past six on his cases. The evenings, hitherto free, would now be spent at the House: and since it would be seldom that he could go to bed without working an hour or so on some case or other, his sleep was likely to be curtailed from six hours to five, or even four.