He dressed with great care, making himself neither
too young nor too old, very thankful that his hair
was still thick and smooth and had no grey in it.
Three times he went up to his picture-gallery.
If they had any knowledge at all, they must see at
once that his collection alone was worth at least
thirty thousand pounds. He minutely inspected,
too, the pretty bedroom overlooking the river where
they would take off their hats. It would be her
bedroom if—if the matter went through,
and she became his wife. Going up to the dressing-table
he passed his hand over the lilac-coloured pincushion,
into which were stuck all kinds of pins; a bowl of
pot-pourri exhaled a scent that made his head turn
just a little. His wife! If only the whole
thing could be settled out of hand, and there was
not the nightmare of this divorce to be gone through
first; and with gloom puckered on his forehead, he
looked out at the river shining beyond the roses and
the lawn. Madame Lamotte would never resist
this prospect for her child; Annette would never resist
her mother. If only he were free! He drove
to the station to meet them. What taste Frenchwomen
had! Madame Lamotte was in black with touches
of lilac colour, Annette in greyish lilac linen, with
cream coloured gloves and hat. Rather pale she
looked and Londony; and her blue eyes were demure.
Waiting for them to come down to lunch, Soames stood
in the open french-window of the diningroom moved by
that sensuous delight in sunshine and flowers and
trees which only came to the full when youth and beauty
were there to share it with one. He had ordered
the lunch with intense consideration; the wine was
a very special Sauterne, the whole appointments of
the meal perfect, the coffee served on the veranda
super-excellent. Madame Lamotte accepted creme
de menthe; Annette refused. Her manners were
charming, with just a suspicion of ‘the conscious
beauty’ creeping into them. ‘Yes,’
thought Soames, ‘another year of London and
that sort of life, and she’ll be spoiled.’
Madame was in sedate French raptures. “Adorable!
Le soleil est si bon! How everything is chic,
is it not, Annette? Monsieur is a real Monte
Cristo.” Annette murmured assent, with
a look up at Soames which he could not read.
He proposed a turn on the river. But to punt
two persons when one of them looked so ravishing on
those Chinese cushions was merely to suffer from a
sense of lost opportunity; so they went but a short
way towards Pangbourne, drifting slowly back, with
every now and then an autumn leaf dropping on Annette
or on her mother’s black amplitude. And
Soames was not happy, worried by the thought:
’How—when—where—can
I say—what?’ They did not yet even
know that he was married. To tell them he was
married might jeopardise his every chance; yet, if
he did not definitely make them understand that he
wished for Annette’s hand, it would be dropping
into some other clutch before he was free to claim
it.