Then as he passed from
the portal, the priestess lifted her hands. "What a fish! Fast or loose,
what a fish!"
Above her Mammon glowed, behind her leered Priapus.
Through the sunny streets, Paliser drove to the Athenaeum, where
everybody was talking war. The general consensus of ignorance was quite
normal.
Lennox, seated with Jones at a window, was summarising his own point of
view. "In a day or two I shall run down to Mineola, Perhaps they will
take me on at the aviation field. Anyway I can try."
Jones crossed himself. He is signing his death-warrant, he thought. But
he said: "Take you, Icarus. They will fly away with you. You will become
a cavalier of the clouds, a toreador of the aerial arena, an archangel
soaring among the Eolian melodies of shrapnel. I envy, I applaud, but I
cannot emulate. The upper circles are reserved for youth and over musty
tomes I have squandered mine. I am thirty-two by the clock and I should
hie me to the grave-digger that he may take my measure. And yet if I
could--if I could!--I would like to be one of the liaison chaps and fall
if I must in a shroud of white swords."
Sombrely Lennox considered his friend. "Your shroud of white swords is
ridiculous."
Jones agreed with him. To change the subject, he rattled a paper. "Have
you seen this? There is an account here of a man who shot his girl. He
thought her untrue. Probably she was."
"Reason enough then," said Lennox, who latterly had become very
murderous.
"I wonder! Anyway, though the paper does not say so, that was not his
reason. The poor devil killed her not because she had been untrue, but
because he loved her. He killed the thing he loved the best out of sheer
affection. Unfortunately, for his virtues, he loved her innocently,
ignorantly, as most men do love, without any idea that the one affection
worth giving is a love that nothing can alter, a love that can not only
forgive but console."
"Is that what you call originality?" Lennox severely enquired. "If so, I
have never run across any of it in your books."
"Heaven forbid that you should, dear boy. I live by the sweat of my pen.
Originality never has, and never will make a best-seller."
It was while Jones was airing these platitudes that Paliser entered the
room. He approached the two men. Lennox at once got up, turned his back,
marched away.
A few days later, Jones, in reviewing the incident, wondered whether
Lennox could, even then, have suspected. But, at
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