Big Game - A Story for Girls - Page 25/145

"Isn't this fun?" cried the vision. "Don't you feel quite frivolous and

Continental? Let's pretend we are a newly-married couple, and you adore

me, and can't deny a thing I ask! There was a blouse in Bond Street

this morning... Sweetest darling, wouldn't you like me to buy it to-

morrow, and show me off in it to your friends? I told them to send it

home on approval. I knew you couldn't bear to see your little girl

unhappy for the sake of four miserable guineas!"

This sort of treatment was very agreeable to a worn-out City man, and as

a pure matter of bargaining, the blouse was a cheap price to pay for the

refreshment of that cool, restful hour, and the pretty chatter which

smoothed the tired lines out of his face, and made him laugh and feel

young again.

Another night Mr Vane would be decoyed to a rendezvous at Earl's Court,

when Margot would wear the blouse, and insist upon turning round the

pearl band on her third finger, so as to imitate a wedding-ring, looking

at him in languishing fashion across the table the while, to the delight

of fellow-diners and his own mingled horror and amusement. Then they

would wander about beneath the glimmer of the fairy-lights, listening to

the band, as veritable a pair of lovers as any among the throng.

As summer approached, Mr Vane's thoughts turned to these happy

occasions, and it strengthened his indignation against his son to

realise that this year a cloud had arisen between himself and his

dearest daughter. Margot had openly ranked herself against him, which

was a bitter pill to swallow, and, so far from showing an inclination to

repent as the prescribed time drew to a close, the conspirators appeared

only to be the more determined. Long envelopes were continually being

dispatched to the post, to appear with astonishing dispatch on the

family breakfast-table. The pale, wrought look on Ronald's face as he

caught sight of them against the white cloth! No parent's heart could

fail to be wrung for the lad's misery; but the futility of it added to

the inward exasperation. Thousands of men walking the streets of London

vainly seeking for work, while this misguided youth scorned a safe and

secure position!

The pent-up irritation exploded one Sunday evening, when the presence of

Edith and her husband recalled the consciousness of yet another

disappointment. Mr Vane had made his own way, and, after the manner of

successful men, had little sympathy with failure. The presence of the

two pale, dejected-looking young men filled him with impatient wrath.

At the supper-table he was morose and irritable, until a chance remark

set the fuse ablaze.

"Yes, yes! You all imagine yourselves so clever nowadays that you can

afford to despise the experience of men who knew the world before you

were born! I can see you look at each other as I speak! I'm not blind!

I'm an out-of-date old fogey who doesn't know what he is talking about,

and hasn't even the culture to appreciate his own children. Because one

has composed a bundle of rhymes that no one will publish, he must needs

assume an attitude of forbearance with the man who supplies the bread

and butter! I've never been accustomed to regard failure as an instance

of superiority, but no doubt I am wrong--no doubt I am behind the

times--no doubt you are all condemning me in your minds as a blundering

old ignoramus! A father is nothing but a nuisance who must be tolerated

for the sake of what can be got out of him."