Reginald in Russia and Other Sketches
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Saki (H.H. Munro) >> Reginald in Russia and Other Sketches
Vanessa began to arrive at the conclusion that a husband who added a
roving disposition to a settled income was a mixed blessing. It was
one thing to go to the end of the world; it was quite another thing
to make oneself at home there. Even respectability seemed to lose
some of its virtue when one practised it in a tent.
Bored and disillusioned with the drift of her new life, Vanessa was
undisguisedly glad when distraction offered itself in the person of
Mr. Dobrinton, a chance acquaintance whom they had first run against
in the primitive hostelry of a benighted Caucasian town. Dobrinton
was elaborately British, in deference perhaps to the memory of his
mother, who was said to have derived part of her origin from an
English governess who had come to Lemberg a long way back in the
last century. If you had called him Dobrinski when off his guard he
would probably have responded readily enough; holding, no doubt,
that the end crowns all, he had taken a slight liberty with the
family patronymic. To look at, Mr. Dobrinton was not a very
attractive specimen of masculine humanity, but in Vanessa's eyes he
was a link with that civilisation which Clyde seemed so ready to
ignore and forgo. He could sing "Yip-I-Addy" and spoke of several
duchesses as if he knew them--in his more inspired moments almost as
if they knew him. He even pointed out blemishes in the cuisine or
cellar departments of some of the more august London restaurants, a
species of Higher Criticism which was listened to by Vanessa in awe-
stricken admiration. And, above all, he sympathised, at first
discreetly, afterwards with more latitude, with her fretful
discontent at Clyde's nomadic instincts. Business connected with
oil-wells had brought Dobrinton to the neighbourhood of Baku; the
pleasure of appealing to an appreciative female audience induced him
to deflect his return journey so as to coincide a good deal with his
new aquaintances' line of march. And while Clyde trafficked with
Persian horse-dealers or hunted the wild grey pigs in their lairs
and added to his notes on Central Asian game-fowl, Dobrinton and the
lady discussed the ethics of desert respectability from points of
view that showed a daily tendency to converge. And one evening
Clyde dined alone, reading between the courses a long letter from
Vanessa, justifying her action in flitting to more civilised lands
with a more congenial companion.
It was distinctly evil luck for Vanessa, who really was thoroughly
respectable at heart, that she and her lover should run into the
hands of Kurdish brigands on the first day of their flight. To be
mewed up in a squalid Kurdish village in close companionship with a
man who was only your husband by adoption, and to have the attention
of all Europe drawn to your plight, was about the least respectable
thing that could happen. And there were international
complications, which made things worse. "English lady and her
husband, of foreign nationality, held by Kurdish brigands who demand
ransom" had been the report of the nearest Consul. Although
Dobrinton was British at heart, the other portions of him belonged
to the Habsburgs, and though the Habsburgs took no great pride or
pleasure in this particular unit of their wide and varied
possessions, and would gladly have exchanged him for some
interesting bird or mammal for the Schoenbrunn Park, the code of
international dignity demanded that they should display a decent
solicitude for his restoration. And while the Foreign Offices of
the two countries were taking the usual steps to secure the release
of their respective subjects a further horrible complication ensued.
Clyde, following on the track of the fugitives, not with any special
desire to overtake them, but with a dim feeling that it was expected
of him, fell into the hands of the same community of brigands.
Diplomacy, while anxious to do its best for a lady in misfortune,
showed signs of becoming restive at this expansion of its task; as a
frivolous young gentleman in Downing Street remarked, "Any husband
of Mrs. Dobrinton's we shall be glad to extricate, but let us know
how many there are of them." For a woman who valued respectability
Vanessa really had no luck.
Meanwhile the situation of the captives was not free from
embarrassment. When Clyde explained to the Kurdish headmen the
nature of his relationship with the runaway couple they were gravely
sympathetic, but vetoed any idea of summary vengeance, since the
Habsburgs would be sure to insist on the delivery of Dobrinton
alive, and in a reasonably undamaged condition. They did not object
to Clyde administering a beating to his rival for half an hour every
Monday and Thursday, but Dobrinton turned such a sickly green when
he heard of this arrangement that the chief was obliged to withdraw
the concession.
And so, in the cramped quarters of a mountain hut, the ill-assorted
trio watched the insufferable hours crawl slowly by. Dobrinton was
too frightened to be conversational, Vanessa was too mortified to
open her lips, and Clyde was moodily silent. The little Limberg
negociant plucked up heart once to give a quavering rendering of
"Yip-I-Addy," but when he reached the statement "home was never like
this" Vanessa tearfully begged him to stop. And silence fastened
itself with growing insistence on the three captives who were so
tragically herded together; thrice a day they drew near to one
another to swallow the meal that had been prepared for them, like
desert beasts meeting in mute suspended hostility at the drinking
pool, and then drew back to resume the vigil of waiting.
Clyde was less carefully watched than the others. "Jealousy will
keep him to the woman's side," thought his Kurdish captors. They
did not know that his wilder, truer love was calling to him with a
hundred voices from beyond the village bounds. And one evening,
finding that he was not getting the attention to which he was
entitled, Clyde slipped away down the mountain side and resumed his
study of Central Asian game-fowl. The remaining captives were
guarded henceforth with greater rigour, but Dobrinton at any rate
scarcely regretted Clyde's departure.
The long arm, or perhaps one might better say the long purse, of
diplomacy at last effected the release of the prisoners, but the
Habsburgs were never to enjoy the guerdon of their outlay. On the
quay of the little Black Sea port, where the rescued pair came once
more into contact with civilisation, Dobrinton was bitten by a dog
which was assumed to be mad, though it may only have been
indiscriminating. The victim did not wait for symptoms of rabies to
declare themselves, but died forthwith of fright, and Vanessa made
the homeward journey alone, conscious somehow of a sense of slightly
restored respectability. Clyde, in the intervals of correcting the
proofs of his book on the game-fowl of Central Asia, found time to
press a divorce suit through the Courts, and as soon as possible
hied him away to the congenial solitudes of the Gobi Desert to
collect material for a work on the fauna of that region. Vanessa,
by virtue perhaps of her earlier intimacy with the cooking rites of
the whiting, obtained a place on the kitchen staff of a West End
club. It was not brilliant, but at least it was within two minutes
of the Park.
THE BAKER'S DOZEN
Characters -
MAJOR RICHARD DUMBARTON
MRS. CAREWE
MRS. PALY-PAGET
Scene--Deck of eastward-bound steamer. Major Dumbarton seated on
deck-chair, another chair by his side, with the name "Mrs. Carewe"
painted on it, a third near by.
(Enter R. Mrs. Carewe, seats herself leisurely in her deck-chair,
the Major affecting to ignore her presence.)
Major (turning suddenly): Emily! After all these years! This is
fate!
Em.: Fate! Nothing of the sort; it's only me. You men are always
such fatalists. I deferred my departure three whole weeks, in order
to come out in the same boat that I saw you were travelling by. I
bribed the steward to put out chairs side by side in an unfrequented
corner, and I took enormous pains to be looking particularly
attractive this morning, and then you say "This is fate." I AM
looking particularly attractive, am I not?
Maj.: More than ever. Time has only added a ripeness to your
charms.
Em.: I knew you'd put it exactly in those words. The phraseology
of love-making is awfully limited, isn't it? After all, the chief
charm is in the fact of being made love to. You ARE making love to
me, aren't you?
Maj.: Emily dearest, I had already begun making advances, even
before you sat down here. I also bribed the steward to put our
seats together in a secluded corner. "You may consider it done,
sir," was his reply. That was immediately after breakfast.
Em.: How like a man to have his breakfast first. I attended to the
seat business as soon as I left my cabin.
Maj.: Don't be unreasonable. It was only at breakfast that I
discovered your blessed presence on the boat. I paid violent and
unusual attention to a flapper all through the meal in order to make
you jealous. She's probably in her cabin writing reams about me to
a fellow-flapper at this very moment.
Em.: You needn't have taken all that trouble to make me jealous,
Dickie. You did that years ago, when you married another woman.
Maj.: Well, you had gone and married another man--a widower, too,
at that.
Em.: Well, there's no particular harm in marrying a widower, I
suppose. I'm ready to do it again, if I meet a really nice one.
Maj.: Look here, Emily, it's not fair to go at that rate. You're a
lap ahead of me the whole time. It's my place to propose to you;
all you've got to do is to say "Yes."
Em.: Well, I've practically said it already, so we needn't dawdle
over that part.
Maj.: Oh, well -
(They look at each other, then suddenly embrace with considerable
energy.)
Maj.: We dead-heated it that time. (Suddenly jumping to his feet)
Oh, d--- I'd forgotten!
Em.: Forgotten what?
Maj.: The children. I ought to have told you. Do you mind
children?
Em.: Not in moderate quantities. How many have you got?
Maj. (counting hurriedly on his fingers): Five.
Em.: Five!
Maj. (anxiously): Is that too many?
Em.: It's rather a number. The worst of it is, I've some myself.
Maj.: Many?
Em.: Eight.
Maj.: Eight in six years! Oh, Emily!
Em.: Only four were my own. The other four were by my husband's
first marriage. Still, that practically makes eight.
Maj.: And eight and five make thirteen. We can't start our married
life with thirteen children; it would be most unlucky. (Walks up
and down in agitation.) Some way must be found out of this. If we
could only bring them down to twelve. Thirteen is so horribly
unlucky.
Em.: Isn't there some way by which we could part with one or two?
Don't the French want more children? I've often seen articles about
it in the FIGARO.
Maj.: I fancy they want French children. Mind don't even speak
French.
Em.: There's always a chance that one of them might turn out
depraved and vicious, and then you could disown him. I've heard of
that being done.
Maj.: But, good gracious, you've got to educate him first. You
can't expect a boy to be vicious till he's been to a good school.
Em.: Why couldn't he be naturally depraved. Lots of boys are.
Maj.: Only when they inherit it from depraved parents. You don't
suppose there's any depravity in me, do you?
Em.: It sometimes skips a generation, you know. Weren't any of
your family bad?
Maj.: There was an aunt who was never spoken of.
Em.: There you are!
Maj.: But one can't build too much on that. In mid-Victorian days
they labelled all sorts of things as unspeakable that we should
speak about quite tolerantly. I dare say this particular aunt had
only married a Unitarian, or rode to hounds on both sides of her
horse, or something of that sort. Anyhow, we can't wait
indefinitely for one of the children to take after a doubtfully
depraved great-aunt. Something else must be thought of.
Em.: Don't people ever adopt children from other families?
Maj.: I've heard of it being done by childless couples, and those
sort of people -
Em.: Hush! Some one's coming. Who is it?
Maj.: Mrs. Paly-Paget.
Em.: The very person!
Maj.: What, to adopt a child? Hasn't she got any?
Em.: Only one miserable hen-baby.
Maj.: Let's sound her on the subject.
(Enter Mrs. Paly-Paget, R.)
Ah, good morning. Mrs. Paly-Paget. I was just wondering at
breakfast where did we meet last?
Mrs. P.-P.: At the Criterion, wasn't it?
(Drops into vacant chair.)
Maj.: At the Criterion, of course.
Mrs. P.-P.: I was dining with Lord and Lady Slugford. Charming
people, but so mean. They took us afterwards to the Velodrome, to
see some dancer interpreting Mendelssohn's "song without clothes."
We were all packed up in a little box near the roof, and you may
imagine how hot it was. It was like a Turkish bath. And, of
course, one couldn't see anything.
Maj.: Then it was not like a Turkish bath.
Mrs. P.-P.: Major!
Em.: We were just talking of you when you joined us.
Mrs. P.-P.: Really! Nothing very dreadful, I hope.
Em.: Oh dear, no! It's too early on the voyage for that sort of
thing. We were feeling rather sorry for you.
Mrs. P.-P.: Sorry for me? Whatever for?
Maj.: Your childless hearth and all that, you know. No little
pattering feet.
Mrs. P.-P.: Major! How dare you? I've got my little girl, I
suppose you know. Her feet can patter as well as other children's.
Maj.: Only one pair of feet.
Mrs. P.-P.: Certainly. My child isn't a centipede. Considering
the way they move us about in those horrid jungle stations, without
a decent bungalow to set one's foot in, I consider I've got a
hearthless child, rather than a childless hearth. Thank you for
your sympathy all the same. I dare say it was well meant.
Impertinence often is.
Em.: Dear Mrs. Paly-Paget, we were only feeling sorry for your
sweet little girl when she grows older, you know. No little
brothers and sisters to play with.
Mrs. P.-P.: Mrs. Carewe, this conversation strikes me as being
indelicate, to say the least of it. I've only been married two and
a half years, and my family is naturally a small one.
Maj.: Isn't it rather an exaggeration to talk of one little female
child as a family? A family suggests numbers.
Mrs. P.-P.: Really, Major, you language is extraordinary. I dare
say I've only got a little female child, as you call it, at present
-
Maj.: Oh, it won't change into a boy later on, if that's what
you're counting on. Take our word for it; we've had so much more
experience in these affairs than you have. Once a female, always a
female. Nature is not infallible, but she always abides by her
mistakes.
Mrs. P.-P. (rising): Major Dumbarton, these boats are uncomfortably
small, but I trust we shall find ample accommodation for avoiding
each other's society during the rest of the voyage. The same wish
applies to you, Mrs. Carewe.
(Exit Mrs. Paly-Paget, L.)
Maj.: What an unnatural mother! (Sinks into chair.)
Em.: I wouldn't trust a child with any one who had a temper like
hers. Oh, Dickie, why did you go and have such a large family? You
always said you wanted me to be the mother of your children.
Maj.: I wasn't going to wait while you were founding and fostering
dynasties in other directions. Why you couldn't be content to have
children of your own, without collecting them like batches of
postage stamps I can't think. The idea of marrying a man with four
children!
Em.: Well, you're asking me to marry one with five.
Maj.: Five! (Springing to his feet) Did I say five?
Em.: You certainly said five.
Maj.: Oh, Emily, supposing I've miscounted them! Listen now, keep
count with me. Richard--that's after me, of course.
Em.: One.
Maj.: Albert-Victor--that must have been in Coronation year.
Em.: Two!
Maj.: Maud. She's called after -
Em.: Never mind who's she's called after. Three!
Maj.: And Gerald.
Em.: Four!
Maj.: That's the lot.
Em.: Are you sure?
Maj.: I swear that's the lot. I must have counted Albert-Victor as
two.
Em.: Richard!
Maj.: Emily!
(They embrace.)
THE MOUSE
Theodoric Voler had been brought up, from infancy to the confines of
middle age, by a fond mother whose chief solicitude had been to keep
him screened from what she called the coarser realities of life.
When she died she left Theodoric alone in a world that was as real
as ever, and a good deal coarser than he considered it had any need
to be. To a man of his temperament and upbringing even a simple
railway journey was crammed with petty annoyances and minor
discords, and as he settled himself down in a secondclass
compartment one September morning he was conscious of ruffled
feelings and general mental discomposure. He had been staying at a
country vicarage, the inmates of which had been certainly neither
brutal nor bacchanalian, but their supervision of the domestic
establishment had been of that lax order which invites disaster.
The pony carriage that was to take him to the station had never been
properly ordered, and when the moment for his departure drew near
the handy-man who should have produced the required article was
nowhere to be found. In this emergency Theodoric, to his mute but
very intense disgust, found himself obliged to collaborate with the
vicar's daughter in the task of harnessing the pony, which
necessitated groping about in an ill-lighted outhouse called a
stable, and smelling very like one--except in patches where it smelt
of mice. Without being actually afraid of mice, Theodoric classed
them among the coarser incidents of life, and considered that
Providence, with a little exercise of moral courage, might long ago
have recognised that they were not indispensable, and have withdrawn
them from circulation. As the train glided out of the station
Theodoric's nervous imagination accused himself of exhaling a weak
odour of stable-yard, and possibly of displaying a mouldy straw or
two on his usually well-brushed garments. Fortunately the only
other occupant of the compartment, a lady of about the same age as
himself, seemed inclined for slumber rather than scrutiny; the train
was not due to stop till the terminus was reached, in about an
hour's time, and the carriage was of the old-fashioned sort, that
held no communication with a corridor, therefore no further
travelling companions were likely to intrude on Theodoric's semi-
privacy. And yet the train had scarcely attained its normal speed
before he became reluctantly but vividly aware that he was not alone
with the slumbering lady; he was not even alone in his own clothes.
A warm, creeping movement over his flesh betrayed the unwelcome and
highly resented presence, unseen but poignant, of a strayed mouse,
that had evidently dashed into its present retreat during the
episode of the pony harnessing. Furtive stamps and shakes and
wildly directed pinches failed to dislodge the intruder, whose
motto, indeed, seemed to be Excelsior; and the lawful occupant of
the clothes lay back against the cushions and endeavoured rapidly to
evolve some means for putting an end to the dual ownership. It was
unthinkable that he should continue for the space of a whole hour in
the horrible position of a Rowton House for vagrant mice (already
his imagination had at least doubled the numbers of the alien
invasion). On the other hand, nothing less drastic than partial
disrobing would ease him of his tormentor, and to undress in the
presence of a lady, even for so laudable a purpose, was an idea that
made his eartips tingle in a blush of abject shame. He had never
been able to bring himself even to the mild exposure of open-work
socks in the presence of the fair sex. And yet--the lady in this
case was to all appearances soundly and securely asleep; the mouse,
on the other hand, seemed to be trying to crowd a Wanderjahr into a
few strenuous minutes. If there is any truth in the theory of
transmigration, this particular mouse must certainly have been in a
former state a member of the Alpine Club. Sometimes in its
eagerness it lost its footing and slipped for half an inch or so;
and then, in fright, or more probably temper, it bit. Theodoric was
goaded into the most audacious undertaking of his life. Crimsoning
to the hue of a beetroot and keeping an agonised watch on his
slumbering fellow-traveller, he swiftly and noiselessly secured the
ends of his railway-rug to the racks on either side of the carriage,
so that a substantial curtain hung athwart the compartment. In the
narrow dressing-room that he had thus improvised he proceeded with
violent haste to extricate himself partially and the mouse entirely
from the surrounding casings of tweed and halfwool. As the
unravelled mouse gave a wild leap to the floor, the rug, slipping
its fastening at either end, also came down with a heart-curdling
flop, and almost simultaneously the awakened sleeper opened her
eyes. With a movement almost quicker than the mouse's, Theodoric
pounced on the rug, and hauled its ample folds chin-high over his
dismantled person as he collapsed into the further corner of the
carriage. The blood raced and beat in the veins of his neck and
forehead, while he waited dumbly for the communication-cord to be
pulled. The lady, however, contented herself with a silent stare at
her strangely muffled companion. How much had she seen, Theodoric
queried to himself, and in any case what on earth must she think of
his present posture?
"I think I have caught a chill," he ventured desperately.
"Really, I'm sorry," she replied. "I was just going to ask you if
you would open this window."
"I fancy it's malaria," he added, his teeth chattering slightly, as
much from fright as from a desire to support his theory.
"I've got some brandy in my hold-all, if you'll kindly reach it down
for me," said his companion.
"Not for worlds--I mean, I never take anything for it," he assured
her earnestly.
"I suppose you caught it in the Tropics?"
Theodoric, whose acquaintance with the Tropics was limited to an
annual present of a chest of tea from an uncle in Ceylon, felt that
even the malaria was slipping from him. Would it be possible, he
wondered, to disclose the real state of affairs to her in small
instalments?
"Are you afraid of mice?" he ventured, growing, if possible, more
scarlet in the face.
"Not unless they came in quantities, like those that ate up Bishop
Hatto. Why do you ask?"
"I had one crawling inside my clothes just now," said Theodoric in a
voice that hardly seemed his own. "It was a most awkward
situation."
"It must have been, if you wear your clothes at all tight," she
observed; "but mice have strange ideas of comfort."
"I had to get rid of it while you were asleep," he continued; then,
with a gulp, he added, "it was getting rid of it that brought me to-
-to this."
"Surely leaving off one small mouse wouldn't bring on a chill," she
exclaimed, with a levity that Theodoric accounted abominable.
Evidently she had detected something of his predicament, and was
enjoying his confusion. All the blood in his body seemed to have
mobilised in one concentrated blush, and an agony of abasement,
worse than a myriad mice, crept up and down over his soul. And the,
as reflection began to assert itself, sheer terror took the place of
humiliation. With every minute that passed the train was rushing
nearer to the crowded and bustling terminus where dozens of prying
eyes would be exchanged for the one paralysing pair that watched him
from the further corner of the carriage. There was one slender
despairing chance, which the next few minutes must decide. His
fellow-traveller might relapse into a blessed slumber. But as the
minutes throbbed by that chance ebbed away. The furtive glance
which Theodoric stole at her from time to time disclosed only an
unwinking wakefulness.
"I think we must be getting near now," she presently observed.
Theodoric had already noted with growing terror the recurring stacks
of small, ugly dwellings that heralded the journey's end. The words
acted as a signal. Like a hunted beast breaking cover and dashing
madly towards some other haven of momentary safety he threw aside
his rug, and struggled frantically into his dishevelled garments.
He was conscious of dull surburban stations racing past the window,
of a choking, hammering sensation in his throat and heart, and of an
icy silence in that corner towards which he dared not look. Then as
he sank back in his seat, clothed and almost delirious, the train
slowed down to a final crawl, and the woman spoke.
"Would you be so kind," she asked, "as to get me a porter to put me
into a cab? It's a shame to trouble you when you're feeling unwell,
but being blind makes one so helpless at a railway station."