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.

One day Welby was sitting beside his wife on the sheltered side of the Terrace, when Eugenie and Fenwick came in sight, emerging from the Hundred Steps.  Suddenly Welby bent over his wife.

‘Elsie!—­have you noticed anything?’

‘Noticed what?’

He motioned towards the distant figures.  His gesture was a little dry and hostile.

Elsie in amazement raised herself painfully on her elbow to look.

‘Eugenie!’ she said, breathlessly—­’Eugenie—­and Mr. Fenwick!’

Arthur Welby watched the transformation in her face.  It was the first time he had seen her look happy for months.

‘What an excellent thing!’ she cried; all flushed and vehement.  ‘Arthur, you know you said how lonely she must be!’

‘Is he worthy of her?’ he said, slowly, finding his words with difficulty.

’Well, of course, we don’t like him!—­but then Uncle Findon does.  And if he didn’t, it’s Eugenie that matters—­isn’t it?—­only Eugenie!  At her age, you can’t be choosing her husband for her!  Well, I never, never thought—­Eugenie’s so close!—­she’d make up her mind to marry anybody!’

And she rattled on, in so much excitement that Welby hastily and urgently impressed discretion upon her.

But when she and Eugenie next met, Eugenie was astonished by her gaiety and good temper—­her air of smiling mystery.  Madame de Pastourelles hoped it meant real physical improvement, and would have liked to talk of it to Arthur; but all talk between them grew rarer and more difficult.  Thus Eugenie’s walks with Fenwick through the enchanted lands that surround Versailles became daily more significant, more watched.  Lord Findon groaned in his sick-room, but still restrained himself.

It was a day—­or rather a night—­of late October—­a wet and windy night, when the autumn leaves were coming down in swirling hosts on the lawns and paths of Trianon.

Fenwick was hard at work, in the small apartment which he occupied on the third floor of the Hotel des Reservoirs.  It consisted of a sitting-room and two bedrooms looking on an inner cour.  One of the bedrooms he had turned into a sort of studio.  It was now full of drawings and designs for the sumptuous London ‘production’ on which he was engaged—­rooms at Versailles and Trianon—­views in the Trianon gardens—­fragments of decoration—­designs for stage grouping—­for the reproduction of one of the famous fetes de nuit in the gardens of the ’Hameau’—­studies of costume even.

His proud ambition hated the work; he thought it unworthy of him; only his poverty had consented.  But he kept it out of sight of his companions as much as he could, and worked as much as possible at night.

And here and there, amongst the rest, were the sketches and fragments, often the grandiose fragments, which represented his ’buried life’—­the life which only Eugenie de Pastourelles seemed now to have the power to evoke.  When some hours of other work had weakened the impulse received from her, he would look at these things sadly, and put them aside.

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Fenwick's Career from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.