<h2><SPAN name="III" id="III">III</SPAN><br/> THE HON. CLIVE TORBY</h2>
<p>He was now the only son of old Lord Dronda; his
elder brother had been killed at Mons early in
the war. He had been aware of his good looks ever
since he was a week old. Tom, the elder brother, had
been fat and plain; everyone had told him so. He did
not mind now, being dead. Clive was the happiest
fellow possible, even though he had lost an arm late in
'17. He had not minded that. It was his left arm, and
he could already do almost everything quite well without
it; women liked him all the better for having lost
it. He had always been perfectly satisfied with himself,
his looks, his home, his relations—everything. His
critics said that he was completely selfish, and had horrible
manners or no manners at all, but it was difficult
to underline his happy unconscious young innocence so
heavily. Certainly if, in the days before the war, you
stayed with his people, you found his indifference to
your personal needs rather galling—but "Tom looked
after all that," although Tom often did not because he
was absent-minded by nature and fond of fishing. The
fact is that poor Lady Dronda was to blame. She had
educated her children very badly, being so fond of
them and so proud of them that she gave in to them on
every opportunity. She was known amongst her friends<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span>
as "Poor Lady Dronda" because, being a sentimentalist
and rather stupid, life was perpetually disappointing
her. People never came up to her expectations, so she
put all her future into the hands of her sons, who, it
seemed, might in the end also prove disappointing.
The favourite word on her lips was, "Now tell me the
truth. The one thing I want to hear from my friends
is the truth." However, the truth was exactly what
she never did get, because it upset her so seriously and
made her so angry with the person who gave it her.
Tom being dead, she transformed him into an angel, and
told sympathetic acquaintances so often that she never
spoke of him that his name was rarely off her lips.
Nevertheless she was able to devote a great deal of
her time to Clive, who was now "All Her Life."</p>
<p>The results of this were two: first, that Clive,
although retaining all his original simple charm, was
more sure than ever before that he was perfect; secondly,
that he found his mother tiresome and, having
been brought up to think of nobody but himself, was
naturally as little at home as possible.</p>
<p>He took up his abode at Hortons, finding a little flat,
No. 11, on the second floor, that suited him exactly.
Into it he put his "few sticks of things," and the result
was a charming confusion of soda-water syphons and
silver photograph frames.</p>
<p>He very happily throughout the whole of 1918
resided there, receiving innumerable young women to
meals of different kinds, throwing the rooms open to
all his male acquaintances, and generally turning night
into day—with the caution that he must not annoy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span>
Mr. Nix, the manager, for whom he had the very greatest
respect. The odd thing was that with all his conceit
and bad manners, he was something of a hero. He had
received both the M.C. and the D.S.O., and was as good
an officer as the Guards could boast. This sounds conventional
and in the good old Ouida tradition, but his
heroism lay rather in the fact that he had positively
loathed the war. He hated the dirt, the blood, the confusion,
the losing of friends, what he called "the general
Hell." No one was more amusing and amiable
during his stay out there, and, to be Ouidaesque again
for a moment, he was adored by his men.</p>
<p>Nevertheless it was perhaps the happiest moment of
his life when he knew he was to lose his arm. "No
more going back to jolly old France for me, old bean,"
he wrote to a friend. "Now I'm going to enjoy
myself."</p>
<p>That was his rooted determination. He had not
gone through all that and been maimed for life for
nothing. He was going to enjoy himself. Yes, after
the war he would show them....</p>
<p>He showed them mainly at present by dancing all
hours of the day and night. He had danced before the
war like any other human being, and had faithfully
attended at Murray's and the Four Hundred and the
other places. But he did not know that he had very
greatly enjoyed it; he had gone in the main because
Miss Poppy Darling, who had just then caught his
attention, commanded him to do so. Now it was quite
another matter—he went simply for the dance itself.
He was not by nature a very introspective young man,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span>
and he did not think of himself as strange or odd or
indeed as anything definite at all; but it was perhaps
a little strange that he, who had been so carefully
brought up by his fond mother, should surrender to a
passion for tom-toms and tin kettles more completely
than he had ever surrendered to any woman. He did
not care with whom it was that he danced; a man would
have done as well. The point was that, when those
harsh and jarring noises began to beat and battle
through the air, his body should move and gyrate in
sympathy just as at that very moment perhaps, somewhere
in Central Africa, a grim and glistening savage
was turning monotonously beneath the glories of a full
moon. He danced all night and most of the day, with
the result that he had very little time for anything else.
Lady Dronda complained that he never wrote to her.
"Dear Mother," he replied on a postcard, "jolly busy.
Ever so much to do. See you soon."</p>
<p>Young men and young women came to luncheon and
dinner. He was happy and merry with them all. Even
Fanny, the portress downstairs, adored him. His smile
was irresistible.</p>
<p>The strangest fact of all, perhaps, was that the war
had really taught him nothing. He had for three years
been face to face with Reality, stared into her eyes,
studied her features, seeing her for quite the first time.</p>
<p>And his vision of her had made no difference to him
at all. He came back into this false world to find it
just exactly as he had left it. Reality slipped away
from him, and it was as though she had never been.
He was as sure as he had been four years before that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span>
the world was made only for him and his—and not so
much for his as for him. Had you asked he would not
have told you, because he was an Englishman and
didn't think it decent to boast—but you would have
seen it in his eyes that he really did believe that he was
vastly superior to more than three-quarters of the rest
of humanity—and this although he had gone to Eton
and had received therefore no education, although he
knew no foreign language, knew nothing about the
literature of his own or any other country, was trained
for no business and no profession, and could only spell
with a good deal of hit-and-miss result.</p>
<p>Moreover, when you faced him and thought of these
things, you yourself were not sure whether, after all,
he were not right. He was so handsome, so self-confident,
so fearless, so touching with his youth and his
armless sleeve, that you could not but wonder whether
the world, after all, was not made for such as he. The
old world perhaps—but the new one?...</p>
<p>Meanwhile Clive danced.</p>
<p>He flung himself into such an atmosphere of dancing
that he seemed to dance all his relations and acquaintances
into it with him. He could not believe that
everyone was not spending the time in dancing. Albert
Edward, whose official name was Banks, assured him
that he had no time for dancing.</p>
<p>"No time!" said Clive, greatly concerned. "Poor
devil! I don't know how you get along."</p>
<p>Albert Edward, who approved of the Hon. Clive
because of his pluck, his birth, his good looks, and his
generosity, only smiled.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Got to earn my living, sir," he said.</p>
<p>"Really, must you?" Clive was concerned. "Well,
it's a damned shame after all you've done over there."</p>
<p>"Someone's got to work still, I suppose, sir," said
Albert Edward; "and it's my belief that it's them that
works hardest now will reap the 'arvest soonest—that's
my belief."</p>
<p>"Really!" said Clive in politely interested tone.
"Well, Banks, if you want to know my idea, it is that it's
about time that some of us enjoyed ourselves—after all
we've been through. Let the old un's who've stayed
at home do the work."</p>
<p>"Yes, sir," said Albert Edward.</p>
<p>It did indeed seem a shame to Clive that anyone
should have to work at all—that nice girl Fanny, for
instance, who was portress downstairs, or that poor old
decrepit-looking thing who was night-porter and opened
the door for Clive at four in the morning.</p>
<p>He told Fanny what he thought. Fanny laughed.
"I love my work, sir," she said; "I wouldn't be without
it for anything."</p>
<p>"Wouldn't you really, now?" said Clive, staring at
her.</p>
<p>Dimly he perceived that these months after the
Armistice and during the early months of 1919 were a
queer time—no one seemed to know what was going to
happen. The state of the world was very uncomfortable
did one look into it too closely; even into the chaste
and decorous quarter of St. James's rumours of impending
revolution penetrated. People were unhappy—had
not enough to eat, had no roof over their heads,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
always one thing or another. The papers were beastly,
so Clive gave up looking at them, save only the <i>Sporting
Times</i>, and devoted his hours that were saved from dancing
to a little gentle betting, to wondering whether Joe
Beckett would beat Goddard, and when he had beaten
him to wondering whether he would beat Georges Carpentier,
and to playing a rubber or two of auction bridge
at White's, and to entertaining the ladies and gentlemen
already mentioned.</p>
<p>He was not, during this period, worrying at all about
money. He very seldom saw his old father, who never
came up to town and never wrote letters. Old Lord
Dronda, who was now nearly seventy, stayed at the
place in Hertfordshire—he loved cows and pigs and
horses, and Clive imagined him perfectly happy in the
midst of these animals.</p>
<p>He had an ample allowance, but was compelled to
reinforce it by writing cheques on his mother's account.
She had, when he lost his arm, given him an open
cheque-book on her bank. There was nothing too good
for such a hero. He did not naturally think about
money, he did not like to be bothered about it, but he
was vaguely rather proud of himself for keeping out of
the money-lenders' hands and not gambling more deeply
at bridge. Luckily, dancing left one little time for that—"Keeps
me out of mischief, jazzing does," he told
his friends. He had, in his room, a photograph of his
father—an old photograph, but like the old man still.
Lord Dronda was squarely built and had side-whiskers
and pepper-and-salt trousers. He looked like a prosperous
farmer. His thighs were thick, his nose square,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
and he wore a billycock a little on one side of his head.
Clive had not seen his father for so long a time that it
gave him quite a shock to come in one afternoon and
find the old man sitting under his photograph, a thick
stick in his hand and large gaiters above his enormous
boots. He was looking about him with a lost and bewildered
air and sitting on the very edge of the sofa.
His grey bowler was on the back of his head.</p>
<p>"Hullo, Guv'nor!" Clive cried. Clive was a little
bewildered at the sight of the old man. His plan had
been a nap before dressing for dinner. He had been
dancing until six that morning, and was naturally tired,
but he was a kindly man, and therefore nice to his
father.</p>
<p>"I'm delighted to see you!" he said. "But whatever
are you doing up here?"</p>
<p>The old man was not apparently greatly delighted
to see Clive. He was lost and bewildered, and seemed
to have trouble in finding his words. He stammered
and looked helplessly about him.</p>
<p>His son asked him whether he'd have any tea. No,
he wouldn't have any tea—no, nothing at all.</p>
<p>"The fact is," he brought out at last, "that Dronda's
to be sold, and I thought you ought to know."</p>
<p>Dronda to be sold! The words switched back before
Clive's eyes that figure of Reality that recently he had
forgotten. Dronda to be sold! He saw his own youth
coloured with the green of the lawns, the silver of the
lake, the deep red brick of the old house. Dronda to
be sold!</p>
<p>"But that's impossible, father!" he cried.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He found, however, that a great deal more than that
was possible. He had never possessed, as he had been
used sometimes proudly to boast, a very good head for
figures, and the old man had not a great talent for making
things clear, but the final point was that the Income
Tax and the general increased expenses of living had
made Dronda impossible.</p>
<p>"Also, my boy," Lord Dronda added, "all the money
you've been spending lately—your mother only confessed
to me last week. You'll have to get some work
and settle down at it. I'm sorry, but the old days are
gone."</p>
<p>I'm quite aware that this is not a very original story.
On how many occasions in how many novels has the
young heir to the entails been suddenly faced with poverty
and been compelled to sit down and work? Nine
times out of ten most nobly has he done it, and ten times
out of ten he has won the girl of his heart by so doing.</p>
<p>The only novelty here is the moment of the catastrophe.
Here was the very period towards which,
through years and years of discomfort and horror in
France, young Clive had been looking. "After the
war he would have the time of his life"; "after the war"
had arrived and Dronda was to be sold! His first impulse
was to abuse fate generally and his father in
particular. One glance at the old man checked that.
How funny he looked, sitting there on the edge of the
sofa, his thick stick between his knees, his hat tilted
back, and that air of bewildered perplexity on his
round face as of a baby confronted with his first
thunder-storm. His thick-set, rather stout body, his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>
side-whiskers, his rough red hands—all seemed to remove
him completely from the smart, slim, dark young
man who sat opposite him. Nevertheless Clive felt the
bond. He was suddenly in unison with his father as he
had never been, in all his life, with his mother. His
father and he had never had what one would call a
"heart-to-heart" conversation in their lives—they did
not have one now. They would have been bitterly distressed
at such an idea. All Clive said was:</p>
<p>"What a bore! I didn't know things were like that.
You ought to have told me."</p>
<p>To which Dronda replied, his eyes wistfully on his
son's empty sleeve:</p>
<p>"I didn't think it would get so bad. You'll have
to find some work. No need for us to bother your
mother about it."</p>
<p>The old man got up to go. His eyes moved uncomfortably
from one photograph to another. He pulled
at his high collar as though he felt the room close.</p>
<p>"Sure you won't have anything?" said Clive.</p>
<p>"No, thanks," said his father.</p>
<p>"Well, don't you worry. I'll get some work all right.
I'll have to pull my horns in a bit, though."</p>
<p>And that was positively all that was said. Dronda
went away, that puzzled, bewildered look still hovering
between his mouth and his eyes, his grey bowler still
a little to one side.</p>
<p>After he was gone Clive considered the matter.
Once the first shock was over things were really not so
bad. The loss of Dronda was horrible, of course, and
Clive thought of that as little as might be, but even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span>
there the war had made a difference, having shaken
everything, in its tempestuous course, to the ground,
so that one looked on nothing now as permanent. As
to work, Clive would not mind that at all. There was
quite a number of things that he would like to do.
There were all these new Ministries, for instance; he
thought of various friends that he had. He wrote
down the names of one or two. Or there was the City.
He had often fancied that he would like to go into the
City. You made money there, he understood, in simply
no time at all. And you needed no education....
He thought of one or two City men whom he
knew and wrote down their names.</p>
<p>One or two other things occurred to him. Before he
went out to dine he had written a dozen notes. He liked
to think that he could be prompt and business-like when
there was need.</p>
<p>During the next day or two he had quite a merry time
with his friends about the affair. He laughingly depicted
himself as a serious man of business, one of
those men whom you see in the cinemas, men who sit
at enormous desks and have big fists and Rolls-Royces.
He spent one especially jolly evening, first at Claridge's,
then "As you Were" at the Pavilion (Sir Billion de
Boost was what <i>he</i> would shortly be, he told his laughing
companion), then dancing. Oh, a delightful evening!
"My last kick!" he called it; and looking back
afterwards, he found that he had spoken more truly than
he knew.</p>
<p>His friends answered his notes and asked him to go
and see them. He went. There then began a very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span>
strange period of discovery. First he went to the
Labour Ministry and saw his old friend Reggie Burr.</p>
<p>Reggie looked most official in his room with his telephone
and things. Clive told him so. Reggie smiled,
but said that he was pressed for time and would Clive
just mind telling him what it was he wanted. Clive
found it harder to tell him than he had expected. He
was modest and uneloquent about his time in France,
and after that there really was not very much to say.
What had he done? What could he do?... Well,
not very much. He laughed. "I'm sure I'd fit into
something," he said.</p>
<p>"I'll let you know if there is anything," said Reggie
Burr.</p>
<p>And so it went on. It was <i>too</i> strange how definite
these men wanted him to be! As the days passed Clive
had the impression that the world was getting larger
and larger and emptier and emptier. It seemed as
though he could not touch boundaries nor horizons....
It was a new world, and he had no place in it....</p>
<p>The dancing suddenly receded, or rather was pushed
and huddled back, as the nurse in old days took one's
toys and crammed them into a corner. Clive found
it no longer amusing. He was puzzled, and dancing
did not help him to any discovery. He found that he
had nothing to say to his friends on these occasions. He
was aware that they were saying behind his back:
"What's come to Clive Toby?... Dull as ditchwater."</p>
<p>He went about with a bemused, blinded expression.
He was seeing himself for the first time. Hortons and
everything in it had quite a new life for him: Mr.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span>
Nix, Fanny, Albert Edward—all these people were
earning their living and earning it much more efficiently
than he seemed to be able to do. All the time
behind them seemed to stand that wistful figure of his
father. "I'd like to do something for the old man,"
he thought.</p>
<p>Down in the City his experiences were very strange.
The first three men whom he saw were very polite and
jolly, and said "they'd let him know if anything turned
up." They asked him what business experience he had
had, and then how much money he was prepared to
put into a "concern"; and when he had answered them
with a jolly laugh and said that he had had no experience,
but had no doubt that he "would shake down all
right," and that he had no money, but "really would
take his coat off and work," they smiled, and said that
"things were bad in the City just now, but they would
let him know."</p>
<p>They all liked him, he felt, and he liked them, and
that was as far as it went. But his experience with his
fourth friend was different. Sir James Maradick,
Bart., could scarcely be called a friend of his. He had
met him once at someone's house; Reggie Burr had
given him a note to him. He was a big broad man
somewhere near sixty, and he was as nice to Clive as
possible, but he didn't mince matters.</p>
<p>He had been given his Baronetcy for some fine organising
work that he had done in the war. Clive, who
did not think much about men as a rule, liked him better
than any man he'd ever met. "This fellow would
do for me," he thought.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The question, however, was whether Clive would do
for Maradick.</p>
<p>"What have you done?" Maradick asked.</p>
<p>"H'm. Eton and Oxford.... And what kind of
job are you looking for?"</p>
<p>Clive modestly explained—somewhere about six hundred
a year. He wanted to help the governor through
a stiff time.</p>
<p>Maradick smiled. That was very nice. Would
Clive mind Maradick speaking quite plainly? Not at
all. That was what Clive wanted.</p>
<p>Maradick then said that it was like a fairy-tale. He
had had, during the last fortnight, four fellows who
wanted jobs at anything from five hundred to a thousand
a year. All of them very modest. Hadn't had
any experience, but thought they could drop into it.
All of them done well in the war. All of them wanted
to keep their parents ... very creditable.</p>
<p>But there was another side to the question. Did
Clive know that there were hundreds of men ready to
come in at three hundred a year and less, men who
had been in the City since nine years old, men who had
the whole thing at their fingers' ends ... hundreds of
them ...?</p>
<p>"The world was made for you boys before the war.
You won't think me rude, will you? You went to
Eton and Oxford and learnt nothing at all, and then
waited for things to tumble into your hands. That's
why commercial Germany beat us all round the world.
Well, it won't be so any longer. The new world isn't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span>
made for you boys. You've got to win your way into
it."</p>
<p>"You're quite right," Clive blushed. "Thank you
very much."</p>
<p>Maradick looked at him, and his heart warmed to
him.</p>
<p>"Take my tip and do a working-man's job. What
about house-painting, for instance, or driving a taxi?
They're getting big money. Just for a bit—to try your
hand."</p>
<p>"Not a bad idea," said Clive. They shook hands in
a most friendly fashion. Maradick spoke to his partner
(at lunch) about him. "Nice boy," he said.
"We'll have him in here later."</p>
<p>Clive went back to Hortons and met there the temptation
of his life in the shape of his mother.</p>
<p>She was looking lovely in grey silk, Parma violets,
and a little black hat. She was in one of her most sentimental
moods. She cried a good deal and asked Clive
what he intended to do. When she asked him that,
what she really wanted was that he should say that he
loved her. This he did in a hurried fashion, because
he wanted to tell her about Maradick. She had, however,
her own things that she wanted to say, and these
were, in the main, that he was "her all," that it was
too awful about Dronda, that John (Lord Dronda) had
simply been losing thousands over his stupid old agriculture,
and, finally, that she had money of her own
on which dear Clive should live to the end of his days.
All this nonsense about his working, as though he hadn't<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>
done enough already with his poor arm and everything.
They should go away together and have a lovely time.</p>
<p>Clive was tempted. For ten minutes there raged a
fierce battle. He knew that what she said could be true
enough. That they could go away together and spend
money together, and that she would give him everything
that she had, and only want him in return to say over
and over again that he loved her. They would wander
about, and probably he would find some rich girl who
would marry him, and then he would live on her....</p>
<p>While he thought this out, words poured from his
mother's lips in tattered confusion. No words used by
his mother ever meant what she intended them to mean.
Nevertheless, the last question held the substance of
them all. "And you do really love me, Clive boy,
don't you?"</p>
<p>The "Clive boy" really settled it, although I hope and
believe that it would have been settled without that.
But he could not wander about Europe as "Clive
boy." ...</p>
<p>So he said: "Thanks, mother. You're a brick,
wantin' me to have everything and all that. But I
really won't. I'm going to settle down and work."</p>
<p>"Whatever at, you poor foolish darling?" asked his
mother.</p>
<p>"At anything I can get," he replied.</p>
<p>She left him at last, having cried just enough to
show her real emotion without damaging her unreal
complexion. Her Parma violets were also intact.</p>
<p>He was an unkind, ungrateful son, and her heart was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span>
broken, but at the same time he was "her all," and
would he lunch with her to-morrow at Claridge's?</p>
<p>This he said that he would do. "My last good meal,"
he murmured to himself rather histrionically.</p>
<p>His mother departed.</p>
<p>He had a bad quarter of an hour after she had gone.
The sacred precincts of Hortons contained at least one
honest soul that afternoon. He saw himself exactly as
he was—spoilt, useless, idle, and conceited. He swore
to himself that he would find work of some kind before
the day was done.</p>
<p>He went out. It was a lovely afternoon early in May.
Mr. Bottome, the newsagent, had fine copies of <i>Colour</i>
showing in his window, the top of Duke Street gazed
straight into the huge naked-looking statue of a horse
in the courtyard of the Academy. Everything seemed
to be having a spring cleaning.</p>
<p>He turned back and down into Jermyn Street. Next
to the Hamman Baths they were painting a house light
green. A nice young fellow in overalls stepped off a
ladder as Clive passed.</p>
<p>He smiled at Clive. Clive smiled back.</p>
<p>"Is that an easy job?" Clive asked him.</p>
<p>"Oh yes, sir," the young fellow answered.</p>
<p>"Could you manage it with one arm?" Clive asked.</p>
<p>"Why, yes," the man said.</p>
<p>"Could I pick it up quickly?"</p>
<p>"Lord, yes!"</p>
<p>"Will you teach me?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>A week later Mr. Nix, in a hurry as usual, was pattering
up Duke Street. Bottome's paper shop was having
a new coat of paint. A young workman in yellow
overalls perched on a ladder managed his brush adroitly
with one arm.</p>
<p>"Poor fellow!" said Mr. Nix, a compassionate man
always, but doubly so now because he had lost his son
in the war. "Left the other in France, I suppose."</p>
<p>The workman looked down, and revealed to the astonished
countenance of Mr. Nix the laughing eyes of his
late tenant, the Hon. Clive Torby.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span></p>
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