Produced by Al Haines. LOVE IN A BY CHRISTINE JOPE SLADE AUTHOR OF HODDER AND STOUGHTON LIMITED BY THE SAME AUTHOR THE KEYS OF HEAVEN HODDER & STOUGHTON, LTD. I I can't sleep. I should go simply potty lying down and trying to get quiet and peaceful. I'm going to write down all the absolutely mad, freakish things that have happened to-night, and hope that in doing so I shall perceive some sane and feasible method of escape. Diaries are useful sometimes; they keep your nerves from going absolutely to pieces with the sheer unexpectedness of life. Dad and mater were in a particularly horrid mood this evening. The C.O. had complained about the Y.M.C.A. hut in the camp, or something, and dinner was filthy, so the usual mutual recriminations took place. Rows always make me feel so frightfully sick. I've never enjoyed a really proper one, because I've always had to run away in the middle and be ill, and then of course I never feel equal to coming back and finishing it. I don't think any of the shabby Tommies' wives who come over on the paddle steamer on Sundays to visit their husbands at the camp live such a petty, sordid life as we do in our diggings. I hate dad when he gets red and shouts—I simply have to beat a retreat. I can quite understand why the men are in such a fearful funk of him. I have been terrified and appalled by him all my life, such is his effect on my temperament that I could do or say anything when he loses control and goes for me, tell any childish lies or make any excuses. My moral sense positively ceases to exist. I crept from them to-night and went for a walk by the sea. I am not afraid of the dark. I enjoy it. You can think so awfully well when there is nothing to distract your eyes, and the world feels so spacious after our digs. All my life I have felt there was never quite enough room for the three of us, dad, and the mater, and myself. I believe if we lived in St. Paul's together I should still feel overcrowded. I walked for a long time. It was a topping night, the air was as soft and warm as cotton-wool and the moon was on the sea. It was the sort of night that makes you want to do a frightful lot of good in the world, mother a lot of orphans or marry a man from St. Dunstan's. I could have cried because there was such a lot of sorrow and unhappiness in the world. You do feel like that sometimes out of doors. I went along keeping close to the cliff and not thinking, and then I suddenly realised that I was right under the lee of the big guns, and facing the big guns of the fort just across the water; and the searchlights over there suddenly started playing and picked me out. I got frightened, absolutely scared. I could have screamed. Every minute I expected to see those big guns fire; only the month before a German spy in woman's clothes had been found wandering just where I stood. I knew the marines behind the searchlights could see me quite clearly, probably even my white mackintosh. I had asked father to let me go to the fort. He wasn't keen. I'm twenty-three, but he pretends to himself that I'm not "out"—it saves dresses, so I never go anywhere. I was in an absolute panic, and I felt as if all the muscles of my knees had suddenly turned to water, which wibble-wobbled every time I moved them. I turned back; and those searchlights never left me alone, one steady bar of brilliant, dazzling light kept me focussed the whole time, and I could not see to walk in it. I felt as though every step might be a drop into space. It was a perfectly beastly experience, and every minute I expected the guns to belch out at me. I suppose I must have been crying. I seemed to have noticed myself making a funny little bleaty noise; I know I screamed when a very curt voice said: "What the devil are you doing here? You know perfectly well you aren't allowed!" "The searchlights!" I stammered. "The searchlights!" "Well, they probably think you're up to no good here." "I am Major Burbridge's daughter," I stammered; "and they'll fire!" "Probably," he said casually, "if they think you're spying." "But they mustn't!" "It would be a bore," the voice admitted lazily, "especially as I should be included in the result of their energies." It sounded as if he didn't care a hang whether he was or not. He came and stood in the dazzling white path of light the searchlight made, and I saw he was an officer. I had never seen him before, but there were dozens of officers I did not know. I only met those who came to the house to play auction with father and mother. "Please, please—make them go away," I pleaded, just like a kid surrounded by sheep or something. "To signal," he said thoughtfully, "would be to invoke the wrath of the gods at once. We are nearly out of the boundary. They can see I am an officer, they can probably see also who I am." The light remained unwaveringly upon us the whole time he was speaking. "If the gentleman behind them could be persuaded to believe we are but a couple of harmless lovers! I dare not wave or anything, because, although I am attached to the joy-spot, they might not recognise me; the sparkling intelligence behind the guns would immediately take it for the arranged signal to a sporty submarine. Would it annoy you fearfully if I made an effort, by exhibition, to show that we are harmless lovers who shun the light of publicity now being shed upon us? It is the only thing I can think of to persuade them to transfer their attentions." His voice sounded bored and mocking, and I thought he must be an elderly man. "Please," I said, "please make them go away." He moved to my other side and put his arm round me, then he turned for a minute so that his embracing arm must have been visible against my white mack to the men behind the searchlights. "Forgive me," he said perfunctorily. "I think the pantomime will have the desired effect on our friends yonder, and whether they know me or not they know they'll have a hot time to-morrow for playing the dickens with an amorous officer—the main thing is to get them to switch the light off us, isn't it?" I thrilled. I had always wondered, as every girl born wonders, what it was like to feel a man's arm round you. I liked it. I liked the cool, rather insolent, devil-may-care voice. I am always honest with myself, so I write these things quite honestly and frankly. I love reading, but I have never thought of love or romance as being even remotely connected with me. I have always been very interested in engaged couples and newly married people, but I think it is rather squashing to be the plain daughter of a pretty mother and a father who can't afford to give you nice clothes. I mean, it doesn't give you much chance. Suddenly, when I felt those arms round me—very limp and casual, it is true—I would have given the world to have been attractive and had an attractive personality and attractive frocks. I have tried very, very hard to be nice and useful and kind in my life, because I know I could never have the more alluring virtues; but it has been very, very dull. I do think clothes matter, and hair-waving, especially when your hair is straight like mine; and I do understand the girl who, when she was asked, "Which would you rather be, beautiful or good?" answered, "I would like to be born beautiful and grow good." I feel she must have been a relation of mine. The lights swished round. "That," said the officer, "has done the trick, Miss Burbridge, and here we are at the boundary." He removed his arms from me, and out of the darkness suddenly came my father's voice. "I had no idea you were in the habit of taking my daughter for walks, Captain Cromer. Your mother sent me to search for you, Pam. I am awaiting an explanation." "Oh—Captain Cromer—just—just——" "Yes," said my father, "I perceived it. I presume you have an explanation to make, sir? I have had the pleasure of watching you for the last ten minutes." "Yes," said my companion, "Miss Burbridge unfortunately got picked out by the searchlights, and we thought the guns——" "Pamela," said my father, "have you anything to say? If not——" "Yes," I said desperately. "Oh yes——" then the old sickening fear of my father, the terror that made me deceive and even lie in a sort of blind panic, rushed over me. "I presume there is some understanding, an engagement between you and Captain——" "Hullo! Major. Hullo! Captain Cromer. We've had a most entertaining time. We've been watching you through our glasses. If you will stand in the limelight——" came an unexpected voice behind father. It was the C.O. and his wife. "It brings back my own young days," said the C.O. with his jolly laugh. "I suppose we are the first to congratulate you young people," the C.O.'s wife said charmingly. "I couldn't help overhearing the word 'engagement.'" I looked at father. "Yes," I answered desperately. "You are—thank you very much." Later. I threw this on the top of the chest of drawers because mother came in to say "good night!" She has never done such a thing before. "What a dreadfully old-fashioned nighty you are wearing, Pam," she said. "It was one of yours," I answered. "I always have yours when you have done with them." "You must have some pretty new things now, dear," she said. She stayed and chatted for a few minutes, and then strayed out again, leaving an atmosphere of elegance and jasmine scent. I really am numbed mentally. My brain keeps taking records to-night, like a camera. It's a sort of human sensitised plate, but I don't feel anything, not even that it is really happening to me. When the C.O. and his wife made their appearance, we all turned and walked up the hill together; father and the Colonel and his wife walked on in front, and the man and I walked behind. The man bent his head quite close to my head and laughed. It was rather a beastly laugh, not villainy, just as if he didn't care whether an earthquake or the millennium started next minute. "Well," he said, "you seem to have had your innings, Miss Burbridge. Now I want mine." "I'll tell dad when I get home," I babbled foolishly. "I'll explain fully all about the searchlights and everything." I felt absolutely the same as I did when I sat down at my "maths." paper when I tried to matric., after having been awake all night with raging toothache. I felt I couldn't be decisive or adequate or even sensible, I couldn't deal efficiently with a fly that settled on my own nose. "The inopportune arrival of the Colonel and his wife have made it rather difficult to explain," he hazarded. "Don't you remember gracefully acknowledging our tender regard for each other, and equally gracefully accepting congratulations on existence of same?" He sounded all the time frightfully amused in a bored sort of manner. He had the most delightful kind of voice, frightfully deep and soft, and he drawled in a fascinating way. We walked, unconsciously, slower and slower, far behind the others, in the scent of the heather that clothed the hill. It was a wonderful night. It sort of caught you by the throat and made you ache for all the things you could never, never have; crave the deep friendships and wonderful love that would never come your way. "I am afraid I have been very stupid," I said. "I often am. You see, I am afraid of father." "He's a bully, a rotten bully," he said; and then: "I beg your pardon, Miss Burbridge—I shouldn't have said that." "It's just that he shouts, and I can't think when he shouts. I just say something that will make him stop shouting—anything." "It's funny my not meeting you before," he said. "I've met your mother scores of times. Of course, I've heard of you." He paused thoughtfully, as if he were trying to remember what he had heard. "I don't go about much," I put in. It seemed unnecessary to tell him I had no "glad rags." "Have you ever had a good time?" he demanded abruptly. "I don't think so," I answered, then sudden loyalty to my parents made me add: "I—I don't care for the sort of good time some girls have." "Rubbish!" he interrupted rudely. "Every girl likes a good time, and every girl will use a fellow to get one—his money, his influence, his friends, his admiration, his love—anything that adds to her rotten vanity and flatters her. There is no honour among women, they are all the same; there isn't a sport among them—not one; and the prettier a girl is the less of a sport she is." "I am plain enough to be a sport," I put in. "Yes," he acquiesced indifferently; then he suddenly swung round on me. "The real explanation of to-night is going to be damned awkward," he said curtly. "Do you realise that?" "Yes." "Then why explain? It suits me jolly well if you don't." "I must." "Why?" "Oh—because I must." "A fool reason." "We can't pretend to be engaged." "Why not? I think it would be rather a piquant relationship. It appeals to my debased sense of humour. It would at least have this Stirling advantage over the average engagement. We needn't be a couple of confounded hypocrites the whole time with each other. We have no mutual regard—we could at least reserve our self-respect by being honest; or perhaps the prospect of explaining to the inflammable Major, his Colonel, and the Colonel's lady, the circumstances that necessitated the loving embrace in which they found us to-night appeals to your sense of humour?" "Don't be a beast," I flashed out. "You perceive how charmingly natural we are already. I find it refreshing—and I intend to continue to refresh myself. Own honestly that you simply daren't explain. The Colonel is going back to the mess for bridge. When I arrive the entire mess will be in a position to congratulate me. Those officers who have charming wives in billets will carry back the glad tidings of our betrothal." "You must stop him!" I said. "Oh—please—please—do something! Where are they?" I searched the hill for the three figures. "They have considerately left us to our lovers' lingering. Your father is swollen with pride to-night." "Why?" "Because I am an excessively eligible young man—the sort of young man no one expected you to noose." "You are a horrible young man—perfectly beastly!" Yet I did not hate him, he was so frightfully exciting. I can't quite explain to myself what I felt about him. I could breakfast every morning in his company for a year and not know what I was eating once. I am quite sure of that. "I am not going to let you go," he said suddenly. "I have made up my mind about that. You are a present from the devil to the worst side of my nature. There, aren't you thrilled? Doesn't your foolish female heart flip-flap?" "No," I said stormily; "and I think you are talking like an idiot." "Delightful creature! Now, listen here, young spitfire, I'm going to give you a good time——" "I won't take it!" "You'll lap it up as a kitten laps up milk—that's all girls are for." "I am going back to explain to father and mother." "The thought of 'father' explaining to the C.O. and the mess fills me with pleasurable anticipation. Your own conduct alone will require all his ingenuity to explain; the natural and charming and quite unblushing way in which you accepted the very nice congratulations of Mrs. Walters and the Colonel requires quite a——" "I didn't know what I was doing." "That merely denotes you an idiot." "Where are we going?" I said, suddenly realising the pleasant wiry spring of the heather was gone from beneath my feet. He gripped my arm and laughed. "I am taking you to pay a little call," he said. II "It's Brennon House!" I protested. "You aren't going in here!" For answer he swung open the gate of the largest house in the neighbourhood, still keeping tight hold of my arm. "Why not?" he demanded coolly. "I have a book to return." "But it must be nearly ten." "Better late than never." "Besides—I don't know them—and I have my old mack on." I knew who lived there well enough. Mother had called. "It is an honour to know the Gilpins," he assured me. I knew that. I knew they were frightfully rich and aristocratic, and that half the officers were crazy about Grace Gilpin. All the most attractive ones used to live up at Brennon House playing tennis and boating on the artificial lake in the grounds; and they used to give weekly dances and have a coon orchestra from London, and they had amateur theatricals and no end of fun. Grace Gilpin had always seemed sort of unreal to me, like the princess in a fairy story. I had never seen her. "Please! Please!" I protested. "This is madness!" "It is delicious madness," he said softly. In the moonlight I could see the heavy, colourless heads of flowers; the scent of them, sweet and strange and all different, seemed to wave over us for a minute as we passed. "They'll be on the veranda," he said. "We'll go round." "You're not going in!" I said desperately. He stopped and looked down at me. "In six weeks I go to the front with my draft," he said. "And I hope to be killed. To-night has placed us both in the most extraordinary position. It's practically impossible for us, at the moment, to extricate ourselves. It just happens that fate has played into my hands in the rummiest way. I don't want to extricate myself. Six weeks is a very short time. I'm awfully rich. I'll give you a topping time, a time you'll remember all your life—if you won't try to extricate yourself for six weeks." "Pretend to be engaged to you?" "Why not? You've no one else in view at the moment. Everyone will envy you, and say sweet things to your face and nasty things behind your back. If you won't—I leave you to explain things to your people and the regiment and the wives of the regiment." "I can't!" "Precisely! Then why worry? What does our engagement demand of us? Civility and excessive courtesy in our bearing towards each other before people. And please"—he caught his breath sharply—"when we are alone we will have no horrible hypocrisy, no feminine flim-flam, no playing up and pretty lies and coquetries and deceits; nothing but the plain unvarnished truth and bare honesty; as we have no interest in each other, we can at least pay each other the compliment of behaving as if we were two men." "But," I began, dazed. He absolutely carries you off your feet. "Come on," he said curtly. We went through a sort of old-fashioned honeysuckle and jasmine pergola and came opposite a broad stoep, all hung with baskets of pink geraniums and ferns and pink Japanese lanterns with electric lights inside, and white wicker armchairs and big pink silk cushions and white tables. It was just like a theatrical scene. There was an awfully handsome middle-aged woman sitting at a table playing bridge with three elderly men, and someone inside the inner room was playing "Iolanthe." Everybody yelled, "Hello, Cromer!" and "Cheerio, Cromer!" A girl suddenly appeared from behind a huge flowering Dorothy Perkins in a white tub, and two or three officers and another girl in a bunchy mauve and silver gown fluttered up from a low pink divan. They stared at me, in my old mack, with well-bred curiosity, and I thought I looked like someone from the pit wandered on to a musical comedy scene. The music stopped, and a girl suddenly appeared at the french-windows. She was perfectly wonderful. She was awfully fair and tall and slender, and she had blue eyes the exact colour of her georgette gown. You could have cried over her, she was so lovely; and she had the sort of mouth that made you feel you simply couldn't go away until you had seen it smile. "Hullo! Cap.," she said; her voice was light and high and sweet, almost as if she were laughing at something. "I've brought your book back, Grace," he said; and then he took my hand. "Oh, Pam dear," he said—then to the handsome lady at the bridge table, "May I introduce my little fiancÉe—Miss Burbridge." I knew then; I just knew by the look in those very blue eyes. I quite understood why Captain Cromer was bitter, why he wanted a fiancÉe. He wanted to hit back. A sort of buzz of talk and teasing broke out all round me, and through it all I detected a vein of surprise. Grace Gilpin came down the veranda to shake hands. She walked wonderfully—just like an actress on the stage. "Why, you poor souls!" she said, lightly and gaily, "so it's raining"—and she looked at my old mack; then everybody looked at it. I felt suddenly as if I wanted to cry. "I made her put it on," I heard Captain Cromer say. "She is such a foolish little person. She doesn't take half enough care of herself"—and I knew that I could learn to love that man, that I was doing a crazy thing, and I was going to go on with it. III When I am with people I feel as if I am a fairy princess taking part in a fairy play, a wonderful and desirable and adorable person. It is a perfectly marvellous feeling; and when I am alone with Cheneston I feel as if he switched the limelight off with an impatient hand, and I was just a plain, shabby, silly kid. He has bought me an engagement ring—for the six weeks before he goes to the front. "Let us be as beastly orthodox as possible," he said as he popped it on. "Why don't you look after your nails—you've got decent hands." "What shall I do with it when——" "When you write and break off the engagement! Oh! keep it if you like." It is a platinum set with one glorious ruby, an enormous stone. You could almost warm yourself by the red there is in it. I love warm things, and glows and twinkles and brightness. I am waking up. I feel as if I were as covered with shutters as an old anchor with barnacles, and every morning when I wake up I find more shutters opened. I think Cheneston must be perfectly appallingly rich. He has a villa in Italy, and a little hut in Norway where he stays for the ski-ing season, and the white yacht Mellow Hours in the harbour is his. It's more fairy tale-y than ever. Mother and father are delighted at my engagement; but their surprise is rather humiliating, it does make me realise how awfully plain and dull I am. I haven't any parlour tricks or conversation, my tennis is rotten, I'm sick on the yacht, I swim like a mechanical toy, I haven't the foggiest idea how to play golf, and I'm never sure of my twinkle in jazzing—and Grace Gilpin does all these things absolutely toppingly. She's been trained to do them from quite a little kid. We seem to do everything in fours—I and Cheneston, and Grace Gilpin and a man called Markham, Walter Markham, who adores her. Cheneston is sweet to me when we're all together, but when he and I leave the others and are alone sometimes he hardly speaks. I imagine he is bored. I do love him so much, every day I seem to love him more and more and more. I suppose I ought to be ashamed and humiliated to write that down, because I simply bore him to tears; but I'm not, mine isn't a silly love—he's my very, very dear, the most wonderful man I have ever seen or known. Sometimes people say things that simply wring my heart. "I suppose you'll get married directly after the war?" the C.O.'s wife said. "Will you live in England?" "I—I don't know," I answered. "We shall winter in the South," said Cheneston; he glanced at Grace Gilpin and I knew she was listening. "We shall probably go to Norway for the sports, and spend the rest of the time in England." "It sounds like a fairy tale," said the C.O.'s wife. "I think it is," I broke in unexpectedly. Grace Gilpin turned in her chair and glanced at me. She was lovely; she wore cornflower blue crÊpe and white collar and cuffs. "I think Cheneston would be quite wonderful in the rÔle of a fairy prince," she said. He laughed, rose, and walked away. Going home he looked at me gravely. "I hope you're not getting romantic about our engagement. I don't mean anything rotten, child—but all that silly rubbish about fairy tales and fairy princes. I have only five weeks more—then I go to the front." "Did you care for Grace most frightfully?" I asked boldly. He looked down at me with slightly puzzled eyes. I can't describe his eyes exactly, they are hazel, and when he is going to laugh they laugh first; and they are hard and honest and straight. "I thought," he said. "I gave my very soul into her hands, to play with and laugh at—but I don't know. It doesn't hurt so much—as it did. Pam—I gave her everything that was best in me; and she encouraged me, she let me give, and when I had beggared myself—when I cared like hell—she flung my gifts back in my face and laughed. I wanted to humiliate her as she had humiliated me. I'm not a great man, Pam; she ground my pride and my love and my manhood under her heel—and I wanted to hit back." "And I afforded you the opportunity," I said very quietly. He looked out over the downs, his eyes were worried and troubled and his face was white. "I wouldn't hurt you for the world, Pam; I have been thinking over this make-believe engagement of ours, wondering if it could possibly hurt you in any single way. The only thing I can see is that it might keep off another man who might want to marry you—and there isn't one about. It simply amounts to this: I give you a good time, and you wear a ring I gave you. I wouldn't hurt you, Pam. Sometimes I could almost fancy you're not like other women—you're not a beastly little actress. I suppose I seem an awful cad sometimes. We can't cry off just now, kid; the Service makes prisoners of us all. I can't leave here, whatever happens, until I go to France with my battery in five weeks' time; and if we pretended things were broken off now our position would be intolerable. We've got to carry on. I'll make the next five weeks as pleasant as ever I can for you." Mother came out as we reached our gate, and Cheneston said good-bye. She looked at me curiously as we went inside. "You funny cold little thing," she said, "never a kiss." One of the things that makes me feel frightfully sick is the amount mother and father are spending on clothes for me. It's rather like an Arabian Nights dream to have a wardrobe full of perfectly adorable frocks, but I feel it's so unfair to let them spend all this money to get me settled when being settled is as remote as it ever has been. I try to accept the light and airy "take what the good gods give" philosophy, but I am too aware that it isn't the good gods, it's mother and father who give, on a Major's pay, fully believing their reward will be made concrete in "The Voice that breathed o'er Eden," and the disposing of a singularly plain and unexciting daughter to a handsome young man with pots of money. I would so like to be angry with someone for being plain, but I did it absolutely on my own, because mother is quite a beautiful person and father is frightfully aristocratic and romanish—they are both rather splendidly beaky, but mine is a pure and unadulterated snub. I suppose I have a petty, shallow nature, but I pine to be romantic and wonderful like Grace Gilpin, and simply draw people to me; no one but deaf old ladies who think I look kind and good ever ask to be introduced to me; and only chivalrous men who think I look tired and anÆmic and work for my living ever offer me seats in buses or tubes. Grace Gilpin takes her surroundings and uses them as a background—she is always to the fore. I sink into the background and become part of them. Yesterday we took out lunch on the links, caviare sandwiches and stuff, and Grace sat down by a flaming gorse-bush in a grey frock and a grey jersey. She just used that glorious bit of flame as an "effect." I sat on the other side, and they all nearly forgot me and went off without me. "I didn't see you," Walter Markham said. It's true; there are heaps of people in this life you don't see because of the more ornamental people. I would have given almost anything to have been born showy, so that people would look at me. I want Cheneston to look at me as he, and other men, look at Grace, as if she were a splendid vision vouchsafed to them for five minutes. I do love that man, and love isn't one bit what I thought it was. I always imagined it was a mixture of bubble and scorch, but it isn't—it's so sweet to love. I could be good! It makes me feel good right to my finger-nails, and full of that after-church-on-a-summer-Sunday evening-in-peace-time feeling; that's why I think that my love for the man isn't anything to be ashamed of or humiliated about. He doesn't love me, I know; but I have a conviction you can't grow unless you love, and I feel so much more use in the world since I've started growing. Loving Cheneston has made life perfectly wonderful for me. He doesn't know it and he never will, but he's shown me all the dear beauty of the world—and it is beautiful. Walter Markham is awfully nice to me; sometimes he leaves Grace Gilpin to Cheneston and walks with me, and he is teaching me tennis in the mornings before breakfast. He is much older than Cheneston, Grace, or I—he must be forty—and he is very rich. I wonder if Grace will marry him—or if she will marry Cheneston. Sometimes I think he will forget he is angry with her, and he will tell her how the mistaken idea of our "engagement" arose, and why he let it prosper—there is a frightful lot of the open-hearted, impetuous schoolboy about Cheneston. I don't think he is happy. If he made a clean breast of it to Grace we should have to break off our supposed "engagement," and mother would have to take me away—father couldn't leave. I can imagine what my life would be! I think they would pack me off as governess or companion to someone. I know if I don't marry by a certain age that will be my fate. Mother was perfectly honest about it—before Cheneston came along; now I am her dear little daughter, she looks at me in pleased bewilderment sometimes, as if wondering how so homely a hunter could have achieved such a sensational capture. They have never tried to equip me in any way. I was never given the opportunity to acquire any accomplishments. Old Giovanni taught me to sing—for love of his art. Mother laughed when she heard he was teaching me—she laughed because he was a funny, broken-down old Italian singer, and the boys used to pay him five shillings a night out of mess funds to come up and play to them in the evening when the regiment was stationed at Gilesworth and there was nothing on earth to do. Giovanni was a great teacher, and to him I owe to-night. I don't think I'll ever forget to-night. It was lovely! I wish I could tell Giovanni all about it, he would so understand. Once he was furious; he told mother I had an extraordinary voice, and mother laughed and said she did not doubt it. Cheneston used the words at the Gilpins' to-night. "You have an extraordinary voice, Pam!" he said, "amazing." Grace sings. Cheterton and Pouiluex of the Paris Conservatoire trained her voice. To-night we all went over to the Gilpins' for coffee—mother, father, Cheneston, and I—and when we arrived Grace was singing "Jeunesse," that funny little song about "taking your picture out of its frame, and out of my heart I have taken your name"—it wasn't very effective. It needs a lot of sorrow in the voice, and Grace's voice is full of light laughter; it was rather like a tom-tit trying to dance a minuet. I was feeling stirred up and rebellious. It seemed so hard that I had only a funny little face and homely little ways in which to express all the beautiful big, swishy feelings that were eating me up inside, and Grace was so lovely that she could express things she didn't really feel at all. It seemed so awfully unfair and rotten, just as if we were both trying to touch Cheneston's heart with the same melody, and she had a glorious grand to work on, and I just a little boarding-house upright. They had blue chinese lanterns with apple-blossom pattern on the stoep, and great copper bowls of larkspurs and pale pink carnations everywhere, and black cushions on all the white wicker chairs; and Grace wore black with an enormous blue sash. She was singing in the drawing-room, with Walter Markham turning over her music, and when she came out on to the stoep she said: "Surely, Pam, you play or something?" "I sing a little," I said. "Then do try," said she—you know the sort of woman who always asks another woman to "try" to sing. I went straight to the piano and I sang "Melisande in the Wood," accompanying myself. I think my voice has a funny register, it seems to surprise people. It's terrifically deep and strong and soft—almost "furry." It's rather disconcerting, because it doesn't sound as if it belonged to me at all; I am like a doll's house fitted with a church organ. I don't think I have ever sung as I did that night. I was pealing and ringing and chanting inside before ever I started, and all that was there in my heart seemed to rush into my voice. It was like some great big longing, hoping, sad she-spirit singing. When the last "sleep" had sort of slid away, I turned round; they were all in the room staring—just staring. Walter Markham came over to see me. "You are wonderful!" he said. "Pam—you are wonderful!" I looked at Cheneston, suddenly I felt as if I had taken control of my background. Cheneston's face was white. His face was the face of a discoverer. He bent over me. "You have an extraordinary voice, Pam," he said, "amazing—— But of course it lies—women use their singing voices to tell lies—wonderful, beautiful, sweet-sounding lies." "Sing again," Grace said. But I would not sing again; I had made my effect—I own it quite, quite honestly—I could have shrieked with triumph. So Grace sang. She sang "Rose in the Bud"—and it was like the trickling after the pour had ceased. I think they all felt it. They began to talk. Cheneston did not talk; he leant back against the black cushions and stared into the garden with a white face. |