Fenwick's Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Fenwick's Career.

Fenwick's Career eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 376 pages of information about Fenwick's Career.

The excitement with which Fenwick spoke made it evident that Watson had touched an extremely sore point.

Watson was silent a little, lit another cigarette, and then said, with a smile: 

‘Poor Madame de Pastourelles!’

Fenwick looked up with irritation.

‘What on earth do you mean?’

’I am wondering how she kept the peace between you—­her two great friends.’

‘She sees very little of Welby.’

‘Ah!  Since when?’

‘Oh! for a long time.  Of course they meet occasionally—­’

A big, kindly smile flickered over Watson’s face.

‘What—­was little Madame Welby jealous?’

‘She would be a great goose if she were,’ said Fenwick, turning aside to look through some sketches that lay on a chair beside him.

Watson shook his head, still smiling, then remarked: 

‘By the way, I understand she has become quite an invalid.’

‘Has she?’ said Fenwick.  ‘I know nothing of them.’

Watson began to talk of other things.  But as he and Fenwick discussed the pictures on the easels, or Fenwick’s own projects, as they talked of Manet, and Zola’s ‘L’Oeuvre,’ and the Goncourts, as they compared the state of painting in London and Paris, employing all the latest phrases, both of them astonishingly well informed as to men and tendencies—­Watson as an outsider, Fenwick as a passionate partisan, loathing the Impressionists, denouncing a show of Manet and Renoir recently opened at a Paris dealer’s—­Watson’s inner mind was really full of Madame de Pastourelles, and that salon of hers in the old Westminster house in Dean’s Yard, of which during so many years Fenwick had made one of the principal figures.  It should perhaps be explained that some two years after Fenwick’s arrival in London, Madame de Pastourelles had thought it best to establish a little menage of her own, distinct from the household in St. James’s Square.  Her friends and her stepmother’s were not always congenial to each other; and in many ways both Lord Findon and she were the happier for the change.  Her small panelled rooms had quickly become the meeting-place of a remarkable and attractive society.  Watson himself, indeed, had never been an habitue of that or any other drawing-room.  As he had told Lord Findon long ago, he was not for the world, nor the world for him.  But whereas his volatile lordship could never draw him from his cell, Lord Findon’s daughter was sometimes irresistible, and Watson’s great shaggy head and ungainly person was occasionally to be seen beside her fire, in the years before he left London.  He had, therefore, been a spectator of Fenwick’s gradual transformation at the hands of a charming woman; he had marked the stages of the process; and he knew well that it had never excited a shadow of scandal in the minds of any reasonable being.  All the same, the deep store of hidden sentiment which this queer idealist possessed had been touched by

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Fenwick's Career from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.