"And carry five," said Gradman to himself. "I forgot--Mr. Timothy's in

Consols; we shan't get more than two per cent. with this income tax. To

be on the safe side, say eight millions. Still, that's a pretty penny."

Soames rose and handed him the Will. "You're going into the City. Take

care of that, and do what's necessary. Advertise; but there are no

debts. When's the sale?"

"Tuesday week," said Gradman. "Life or lives in bein' and twenty-one

years afterward--it's a long way off. But I'm glad he's left it in the

family...."

The sale--not at Jobson's, in view of the Victorian nature of the

effects--was far more freely attended than the funeral, though not by

Cook and Smither, for Soames had taken it on himself to give them

their heart's desires. Winifred was present, Euphemia, and Francie,

and Eustace had come in his car. The miniatures, Barbizons, and J. R.

drawings had been bought in by Soames; and relics of no marketable value

were set aside in an off-room for members of the family who cared

to have mementoes. These were the only restrictions upon bidding

characterised by an almost tragic languor. Not one piece of furniture,

no picture or porcelain figure appealed to modern taste. The humming

birds had fallen like autumn leaves when taken from where they had not

hummed for sixty years. It was painful to Soames to see the chairs his

aunts had sat on, the little grand piano they had practically never

played, the books whose outsides they had gazed at, the china they had

dusted, the curtains they had drawn, the hearth-rug which had warmed

their feet; above all, the beds they had lain and died in--sold to

little dealers, and the housewives of Fulham. And yet--what could one

do? Buy them and stick them in a lumber-room? No; they had to go the way

of all flesh and furniture, and be worn out. But when they put up Aunt

Ann's sofa and were going to knock it down for thirty shillings, he

cried out, suddenly: "Five pounds!" The sensation was considerable, and

the sofa his.

When that little sale was over in the fusty saleroom, and those

Victorian ashes scattered, he went out into the misty October sunshine

feeling as if cosiness had died out of the world, and the board "To Let"

was up, indeed. Revolutions on the horizon; Fleur in Spain; no comfort

in Annette; no Timothy's on the Bayswater Road. In the irritable

desolation of his soul he went into the Goupenor Gallery. That chap

Jolyon's watercolours were on view there. He went in to look down his

nose at them--it might give him some faint satisfaction. The news had

trickled through from June to Val's wife, from her to Val, from Val to

his mother, from her to Soames, that the house--the fatal house at

Robin Hill--was for sale, and Irene going to join her boy out in British

Columbia, or some such place. For one wild moment the thought had come

to Soames: 'Why shouldn't I buy it back? I meant it for my!' No sooner

come than gone. Too lugubrious a triumph; with too many humiliating

memories for himself and Fleur. She would never live there after what

had happened. No, the place must go its way to some peer or profiteer.

It had been a bone of contention from the first, the shell of the feud;

and with the woman gone, it was an empty shell. "For Sale or To Let."

With his mind's eye he could see that board raised high above the ivied

wall which he had built.




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