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I. — Introduces
The Callanders
Brian Pallard wrote
to his uncle: "Dear Uncle Peter, —
Though I have never seen you, I have heard my
father speak so highly of your many qualities that I am looking forward
to
seeing you and my cousins, on my visit to England. As you know, I was
born in
Kent, though everybody here regards me as Australian bred. Is that a
tribute to
my temporary sojourn at Oxford, or is it not? Anyway, I will let
you know just when I arrive. I am sending this to
your office, because I do not know your address. I have been having a
great
time in Melbourne. — Yours ever, Brian P." Mr Peter Callander
wrote back. It was a letter
carefully considered, and as carefully worded; every
comma was in its place, every 't' was crossed. It was the type of
letter you
might suppose that a conservative Englishman doing a conservative
business
would write. It was a letter
harmonizing with his correct frock-coat of conservative
cut, his plain trousers, his cloth spats and his heavy watch-guard. It
was a
letter one would expect from a thin-faced man with grey hair, straight
black
eyebrows, cold, suspicious eyes that queries your bona fides through
gold-rimmed glasses, and lips a trifle thin and tightly pressed. It ran: "Dear Sir, — I have
your letter (undated) addressed from the
Sporting Club of Melbourne, and I note its contents. I am gratified to
learn
that your poor father had so high an opinion of me, and I am sure no
man held
him in greater esteem than myself. I shall be glad to see you if you
will write
making an appointment, but I am a very busy man. Unfortunately, you
are not without fame — or perhaps I should say — notoriety.
The halfpenny press, in its anxiety to disseminate rather the
sensational than
the useful, has made no secret of your transactions on the Australian
turf.
Such head-lines as 'Pallard the Punter wins another fortune', or
'Pallard the
Punter's sensational bet', neither edify nor please me. Frankly, they
fill me
with a sense of humiliation and shame that one, who is my kinsman,
should have
so far descended the slippery path of Sin that ends in Ruin and
Despair, and
that one so gifted with Fortune should embark upon a gambler's career.
Of all
forms of gambling perhaps horse-racing is, to my mind, the most
abhorrent. That
so beautiful a creature as the horse — the friend of man — should be
debased so
that he becomes the enemy of man is at once pitiable and, I speak in
all
solemnity, degrading. I shall, as I say,
be prepared to meet you, but I regret that I am
unable to offer you the hospitality of a home which shelters my son,
untouched
by the world, and my daughter who has inherited all her father's
instinctive
distaste for those forms of amusement which appeal to you. Yours
very faithfully, Peter Callander." This letter, Mr
Callander read and approved, lifting his pen
deliberately to put a comma here and dot an 'i' there. When he had
finished it,
he folded it neatly and inserted it into an envelope. He licked the
envelope
down, stuck a stamp on the north-west corner, and rang his bell. "Post this," he
said. "Has Mr Horace called?" "Yes, sir," said the
clerk who had answered the summons;
"come and gone. He said he would call back — he has gone on to meet
Miss
Callander." "That will do, thank
you, Mr Russell," said Peter Callander,
with a courteous nod of his head. That was a trait in
which he took the greatest pride. He was an
intensely courteous man to his dependents. He invariably raised his hat
to the
salutation of the porter who guarded the entrance of Callander &
Callander's. The meanest office-boy that ever stole stamps was sure of
a kindly
nod and a friendly pat on the head. He addressed his junior clerks as
'Sir',
and carried with him that air of genial benevolence which so admirably
suits
white hair and plaid trousers. It is true that he
paid his clerks at a poorer rate and worked them
longer hours than any other employer of his standing in the City of
London. It
is true that he visited the office-boy, when his peculations were
discovered,
with the utmost rigour of the law, and was adamantine to the weeping
mother and
pleading father. It is equally true that he was always setting mean
traps to
test the honesty of the juniors to whom he said 'Sir'; but in all
things he was
courteous. Having disposed of
his immoral relative to his own satisfaction, Mr
Callander proceeded to deal with weightier matters, such as the
one-sixteenth
rise in Anglo-Japanese Rubbers, the report of the Siamese Railways, the
fluctuations of the Russian Threes, and the iniquitous rig in West
Suakim Gold
Syndicates, so ruthlessly, fearlessly, and disinterestedly exposed by
the
public-spirited editor of The Gold Share Review. It may be said that
this gentleman had persistently refrained from
publishing the advertisements of the W.S.G.S., because the syndicate
had so
persistently refrained from sending those advertisements to him. Mr Callander read
the slashing attack with peculiar pleasure. For one
reason, he hated doubledealing and trickery; for another reason, he had
sold
all his West Suakims before the depreciation had set in. He had finished the
review with a shake of his head, which signified
his complete agreement with the writer, and was noting down some
personal
transactions of the day in his private ledger — a little red book with
a Yale
lock — when his son was announced. He looked up with a smile of welcome. Horace Callander was
a slight young man of middle height, with a full,
effeminate chin, large eyes, well shaded with long lashes, a
well-proportioned
face, and a trim figure. He had as trim a moustache, so trim, in fact,
that it
had the appearance of having been painted on his face by Michael Angelo
— this
is the view of one who did not love Horace Callander. Symmetrical is the
word that described his appearance, deferential his
attitude. His voice was musical and well-pitched, being neither too
loud nor
too soft. The girl who entered
the room behind him — it would have struck the
observer as strange that this perfect young gentleman did not open the
door for
her and allow her to enter before him — was made on different lines. She was fair and
tall, taller than her brother. Her figure was slim,
and she moved with the freedom of one who loved the field and the road.
Her
head was well set on a pair of graceful shoulders and crowned with
magnificent
hair of that hue which halts midway between gold and russet-brown. Two
big grey
eyes set in a face of delicate colour; a pair of generous lips and a
straight
little nose, she resembled her brother only in respect to the quality
of her
voice. "Well, my dear?"
said Mr Callander. It was his son he
addressed in such tones of affectionate pride. "So you've been to fetch
this sister of yours? And how is Gladys, eh?" She bent down to
kiss his cheek, and he submitted to the indignity with
great resignation. It was his practice to address her always in the
third
person. It was a practice which had began in banter and ended by
becoming a
custom. "Dear Gladys was
annoyed," said Horace, with habitual
tenderness, "and really it is very distressing — " "Distressing!" She
did not wait for her father's invitation,
but seated herself in one of the luxurious arm-chairs of the room. "It
is
abominable that a man, having any pretensions to decency, should get
himself
talked about, and not only himself, but us!" Mr Callander looked
from one to the other in perplexity, and Horace
drew a neatly folded evening newspaper from his pocket. "It is Pallard," he
explained in a hushed voice. "Confound the
fellow!" gasped Mr Callander, "what has he
been doing — and, as you say, surely I am not mentioned?" He seized the paper
and wrenched it open. It was a common
evening paper published at a price which alone
proclaimed its infamy, and the news had evidently been extracted from a
morning
paper. Mr Callander gasped
again. In the most
prominent part of the front page, sandwiched between an
interesting inquest and the no less fascinating particulars of a
divorce case,
were the head-lines PALLARD
THE PUNTER'S PARTING COUP. And if this, and the
cablegram which followed, was not bad enough,
there was a subjoined paragraph: "Mr Brian Pallard,
who has made turf history in Australia, has
earned distinction in other branches of sport; he won the middle-weight
at the
Public Schools Competitions-Amateur light-weight; he is reported to be
enormously wealthy. He is a near relative of Mr P. Callander, of the
well-known
City firm of agents." "Infamous!" said Mr
Callander. He said it without heat, but
with great intensity. "I am not so sure that this isn't libellous,
Horace." Horace shook his
head doubtfully, thereby expressing his opinion that
he wasn't sure either. "It isn't
libellous," said the girl, her straight brows
puckered in a frown; "but it's awfully uncomfortable for us, father. I
wish these newspapers wouldn't publish such things." "It's a craze," said
Horace thoughtfully. "A man I know
in the City — you know, Willock, father — he's the president of our Art
Circle,
and knows all these journalist people." Mr Callander nodded his head.
"He says that things were awfully dull, and one of the big dailies was
struck with the idea of working the colonies up and all that sort of
thing. So
it cabled all its correspondents, and Pallard happened just then to be
the best
talked of man in Melbourne, so the correspondent wired about him." Mr Callander rose
from his desk, smoothing his coat. "It is simply
deplorable," he said. "Thank goodness he's
in Australia!" added his daughter with a
note of relief. Mr Callander looked
at her for a long time. "He's not in
Australia, or, at any rate, he won't be for long;
he's coming home." "Coming home!"
exclaimed Gladys in horror, and Horace allowed
himself to say, "Confound it!" "Yes, he's coming
home," said Mr Callander moodily. "I
had a letter from him only this morning — and can't you read? 'Parting
coup.
Expenses for his trip home' — that's England. All these Colonial
fellows call
England home." "Infernal cheek!"
murmured Horace. "Coming home?" said
the girl in distress. "Oh, surely
not!" "We can't know that
sort of man, father." Horace and his
proud parent smiled. "You shall not know
him, my dear," he said. "I shall
meet him here, alone." He waved his hand
round the room heroically. It was as though he
anticipated a worrying time with a tiger. "I know the kind of
person he is," he said. "I have to
meet all types. He is probably a stout, coarse, young man, with a loud
voice
and a louder suit — if you will forgive the vulgarism. I know these
hard-drinking, hard-swearing ruffians. I hate to say it of my own
sister's
child, but I must be just." He took his umbrella from the stand by the
wall, smoothed his glossy silk hat, and carefully adjusted it to his
head.
"Now, my dear, I am ready," he said. He took his son's
arm and walked to the door. It opened before he
reached it, and his confidential clerk handed him a telegram. "Excuse me," he
said, and opening it, read: "please contradict
statement in this morning's papers that I won
money yesterday at flemington. cable is a fake. i left melbourne weeks
ago." Mr Callander read
the wire again and groaned. It was inscribed,
"Handed in at Southampton Docks." Pallard the Punter
had arrived. |