setting planet shone through the red fog of the sunset glow. 'It was supposed not to be good for me to have much freedom of action. So at least I was told. But I have a suspicion that it was only unpleasing to other people.'
'I should have thought,' began Lingard, then hesitated and stopped. It seemed to him inconceivable that everybody should not have loved to make that woman happy. And he was impressed by the bitterness of her tone. Mrs. Travers did not seem curious to know what he wanted to say and after a time she added, 'I don't mean only when I was a child. I don't remember that very well. I daresay I was very objectionable as a child.'
Lingard tried to imagine her as a child. The idea was novel to him. Her perfection seemed to have come into the world complete, mature, and without any hesitation or weakness. He had nothing in his experience that could help him to imagine a child of that class. The children he knew played about the village street and ran on the beach. He had been one of them. He had seen other children, of course, since, but he had not been in touch with them except visually and they had not been English children. Her childhood, like his own, had been passed in England, and that very fact made it almost impossible for him to imagine it. He could not even tell whether it was in town or in the country, or whether as a child she had even seen the sea. And how could a child of that kind be objectionable? But he remembered that a child disapproved of could be very unhappy, and he said:
'I am sorry.'
Mrs. Travers laughed a little. Within the muslin cage forms had turned to blurred shadows. Amongst them the form of d'Alcacer arose and moved. The systematic or else the morbid dumbness of Mr. Travers bored and exasperated him, though, as a matter of fact, that gentleman's speeches had never had the power either to entertain or to soothe his mind.
'It's very nice of you. You have a great capacity for sympathy, but after all I am not certain on which side your sympathies lie. With me, or those much-tried people,' said Mrs. Travers.
'With the child,' said Lingard, disregarding the bantering tone. 'A child can have a very bad time of it all to itself.'
'What can you know of it?' she asked.
'I have my own feelings,' he answered in some surprise.
Mrs. Travers, with her back to him, was covered with confusion. Neither could she depict to herself his childhood as if he, too, had come into the world in the fullness of his strength and his purpose. She discovered a certain naiveness in herself and laughed a little. He made no sound.
'Don't be angry,' she said. 'I wouldn't dream of laughing at your feelings. Indeed your feelings are the most serious thing that ever came in my way. I couldn't help laughing at myself—at a funny discovery I made.'
'In the days of your childhood?' she heard Lingard's deep voice asking after a pause.
'Oh, no. Ages afterward. No child could have made that discovery. Do you know the greatest difference there is between us? It is this: That I have been living since my childhood in front of a show and that I never have been taken in for a moment by its tinsel and its noise or by anything that went on on the stage. Do you understand what I mean, Captain Lingard?'
There was a moment of silence. 'What does it matter? We are no children now.' There was an infinite gentleness in Lingard's deep tones. 'But if you have been unhappy then don't tell me that it has not been made up to you since. Surely you have only to make a sign. A woman like you.'
'You think I could frighten the whole world on to its knees?'
'No, not frighten.' The suggestion of a laugh in the deadened voice passed off in a catch of the breath. Then he was heard beginning soberly: 'Your husband. . . .' He hesitated a little and she took the opportunity to say coldly:
'His name is Mr. Travers.'
Lingard didn't know how to take it. He imagined himself to have been guilty of some sort of presumption. But how on earth was he to call the man? After all he was her husband. That idea was disagreeable to him because the man was also inimical in a particularly unreasonable and galling manner. At the same time he was aware that he didn't care a bit for his enmity and had an idea that he would not have cared for his friendship either. And suddenly he felt very much annoyed.
'Yes. That's the man I mean,' he said in a contemptuous tone. 'I don't particularly like the name and I am sure I don't want to talk about him more than I can help. If he hadn't been your husband I wouldn't have put up with his manners for an hour. Do you know what would have happened to him if he hadn't been your husband?'
'No,' said Mrs. Travers. 'Do you, Captain Lingard?'
'Not exactly,' he admitted. 'Something he wouldn't have liked, you may be sure.'
'While of course he likes this very much,' she observed. Lingard gave an abrupt laugh.
'I don't think it's in my power to do anything that he would like,' he said in a serious tone. 'Forgive me my frankness, Mrs. Travers, but he makes it very difficult sometimes for me to keep civil. Whatever I have had to put up with in life I have never had to put up with contempt.'
'I quite believe that,' said Mrs. Travers. 'Don't your friends call you King Tom?'
'Nobody that I care for. I have no friends. Oh, yes, they call me that . . .'
'You have no friends?'
'Not I,' he said with decision. 'A man like me has no chums.'
'It's quite possible,' murmured Mrs. Travers to herself.
'No, not even Jorgenson. Old crazy Jorgenson. He calls me King Tom, too. You see what that's worth.'
'Yes, I see. Or rather I have heard. That poor man has no tone, and so much depends on that. Now suppose I were to call you King Tom now and then between ourselves,' Mrs. Travers' voice proposed, distantly tentative in the night that invested her person with a colourless vagueness of form.
She waited in the stillness, her elbows on the rail and her face in her hands as if she had already forgotten what she had said. She heard at her elbow the deep murmur of: