Today | News | Books | Recipes Adventure | Science Fiction | Ghost stories | Poetry | Children | History Tales of the uneasyThe Project Gutenberg eBook of Tales of the uneasy This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: Tales of the uneasy Author: Violet Hunt Release date: May 4, 2026 [eBook #78605] Language: English Original publication: London: William Heinemann, 1911 Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78605 Credits: an anonymous Project Gutenberg volunteer *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TALES OF THE UNEASY *** Tales of the Uneasy By Violet Hunt Author of "White Rose of Weary Leaf," "The Wife of Altamont," etc. London William Heinemann 1911 [COPYRIGHT] _Copyright, London_, 1911, _by William Heinemann_ [DEDICATION] TO R.B. BYLES CONTENTS THE TELEGRAM THE OPERATION THE MEMOIR THE PRAYER THE COACH THE BLUE BONNET THE WITNESS THE BAROMETER THE TIGER-SKIN THE TELEGRAM Her mother was dead. Her life stood altered. She would be no poorer, it was not that. She was an orphan, and all her mother had had came to her. That meant seventy thousand pounds, plate, linen and the freehold of a fine old house in Lower Seymour Street, that they had moved into a year before the old lady died. Things were no more altered socially than they were altered pecuniarily, for the Damers' set naturally corresponded, as sets do, with their postal district, and Miss Alice Damer could therefore continue to command an entrance into the best circles. Only she realized that she must henceforth enjoy all these good things to the tune of a paid companion, having no poor and amenable relations handy whom she could draft into the household economy, and afterwards snub into a colourless, bare existence. She was thirty-five, and her years did not weigh on her, except mentally. The first faint physical signs of the debacle were, so far, evident to herself alone, and then only in moods of unusual depression. She was still young enough to need a companion. Her pretty red-gold hair was as red as gold, as pretty as ever, her visits to her dentist as few, her eyes as deep, and her step as elastic, although she had given up dancing. She had made this sacrifice more from a sense of fitness, as a concession to the needs of the young girls coming up all round her, and who deserved their turn on the floor, than of social necessity. As a matter of fact, she had never been really fond of that over-energetic, disordering form of amusement. She loved the world and going up and down in it immensely, and her way of enjoying parties was to sit out if it was a dance, away from the music if it was a concert, and in the back of the box if it was a play. She was a flirt. Not an outrageous, noisy, ill-bred flirt, but what is known as a quiet flirt, with many strong and efficient strings to her bow. Did one of them, being after all only catgut or mere man, snap occasionally--that is to say, get married out of the circle of her charm--Alice, in her quiet way, promptly renewed the string, and supplied herself with a new admirer, as good at fetching and carrying as the old. In her mind that was the chief use of admirers--to prevent one's _looking_ neglected--of course one never really was! She was a woman of many "affairs"; she liked living, not exactly in hot water, but in water at least warm, and was seldom seen talking to women, though she was quite nice to them, as intrusive but law-permitted aliens in the _pays du cœur_. None of her friends would have dared to ask her to a ladies' lunch, or any over-womaned party; a man had always to be "got for Alice," else she would have been hurt, and quite unable to play her part properly. She was unused to, unversed in her own sex. On the other hand, she played fair and never took other women's men, or encouraged their husbands to play the pretty game with her. People said _that_ for her, that she never made women unhappy, only men. She was never very sorry for a man's love-troubles, for she had a theory that a hopeless passion or two did a man no harm and that the more he proposed the merrier--for him. She never told any one how many offers she had refused. Men often did propose to her, and she refused them all, and boasted that she had never been engaged for even an hour, and that no man had ever kissed her. The bloom was not off Alice, unless so much mental coming and going in her courts had produced some such subtle effect. "Why should I marry?" she used to say to Everard Jenkyns (good old Welsh family), when he importuned her to relax her rule in his favour, and even go so far as making the vast experiment of marriage with him as her partner. "There is no earthly hurry." "No, but perhaps a heavenly one," he had inanely replied. "I may never marry at all. Girls, economically, don't need to marry as they used to, and at any rate I am independent so far as money goes." "So the way is clear for you to marry for love." "I don't think I shall ever fall in love." "Then take a man you like--and you like me?" Everard was not at that time sufficiently far gone in love to make him inattentive to, and unappreciative of the use and value of "cheek," in discussing such matters with his princess. "Yes, I like you; but, as you know, I don't love you. And I'm so made that I must be quite sure in my own mind that I am absolutely, positively incapable of loving madly before I let myself go with any one, even you. Don't you see, in the interests of morality, one must be sure of oneself, or there might be catastrophe, with a strong nature like mine?" "No," said Everard patiently and earnestly. "There would, I am sure, be no danger of that with you. Your husband might feel perfectly safe in your hands." "Thanks. Why do you say that?" "Because the power to flirt never implies the power to love, I am afraid." "Well, Everard, you can't say that I flirt with you!" she exclaimed noisily. "Oh, no. Your knowing that I am desperately, dully serious about you protects me a little, and you do pay me the doubtful compliment of taking no trouble to attract me. You honestly never put your best foot foremost with me, or pose like a heroine to your most humble valet." "Yes," Alice agreed, laughing a little bitterly. "I promise you never to encourage you in any way. I would let you see me with my hair in curlers, if I wore them! Anything to convince you of the purity of my intentions. I simply will not have you say that I lead you on or encourage you." "My God, Alice! I don't say it! I know well enough I am a d----d fool and have nothing whatever to go on." "A fool to love me?" "A fool because I am a lonely man and don't like being a lonely man, and |