Miller, carrying his tweed cap in his hand, insisted upon a farewell.
“Sorry to have taken your guest away, Lady Jane,” he said. “It’s an important occasion, however. Would you like me to bring Dartrey over, if we are out this way before we go back?”
She shook her head.
“No, I don’t think so,” she answered quietly. “I might have an illusion dispelled. Thank you very much, all the same.”
Mr. Miller stepped into the car, a little discomfited. Tallente lingered on the step.
“You will let me know?” she begged.
“I will,” he promised. “It is probably just a visit of courtesy. Dartrey must feel that he has something to explain about Hellesfield.”
There was a moment’s curious lingering. Each seemed to seek in vain for a last word. They parted with a silent handshake. Tallente looked around at the corner of the avenue. She was still standing there, gazing after the car, slim, cool and stately. Miller waved his cap and she disappeared.
The car sped over the moorland. Miller, with his cap tucked into his pocket, leaned forward, taking deep gulps of the wonderful air.
“Marvellous!” he exclaimed. “Tallente, you ought to live for ever in such a spot!”
“What does Dartrey want to see me about?” his companion asked, a little abruptly.
Miller coughed, leaned back in his place and became impressive.
“Tallente,” he said, “I don’t know exactly what Dartrey is going to say to you. I only know this, that it is very possible he may make you, on behalf of all of us—the Democratic Party, that is to say—an offer which you will do well to consider seriously.”
“To join your ranks, I suppose?”
“I must not betray a confidence,” Miller continued cautiously. “At the same time, you know our power, you have insight enough to guess at our destiny. It is an absolute certainty that Dartrey, if he chooses, may be the next Prime Minister. You might have been in Horlock’s Cabinet but for an accident. It may be that you are destined to be in Dartrey’s.”
Tallente found his thoughts playing strange pranks with him. No man appreciated the greatness of Dartrey more than he. No man, perhaps, had a more profound conviction as to the truth and future of the principles of which he had become the spokesman. He realised the irresistible power of the new democracy. He was perfectly well aware that it was within Dartrey’s power to rule the country whenever he chose. Yet there seemed something shadowy about these things, something unpleasantly real and repulsive in the familiarity of his companion, in the thought of association with him, He battled with the idea, treated it as a prejudice, analysed it. From head to foot the man wore the wrong clothes in the wrong manner,—boots of a vivid shade of brown, thick socks without garters, an obviously ready-made suit of grey flannel, a hopeless tie, an unimaginable collar. Even his ready flow of speech suggested the gifts of the tubthumpers his indomitable persistence, a lack of sensibility. He knew his facts, knew all the stock arguments, was brimful of statistics, was argumentative, convincing, in his way sincere. Tallente acknowledged all these things and yet found himself wondering, with a grim sense of irony, how he could call a man “Comrade” with such finger nails!