The Four Feathers
E-text prepared by Suzanne Lybarger, Brian Janes, Mary Meehan, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/)
Lieutenant Sutch was the first of General Feversham's guests to reach Broad Place. He arrived about five o'clock on an afternoon of sunshine in mid June, and the old red-brick house, lodged on a southern slope of the Surrey hills, was glowing from a dark forest depth of pines with the warmth of a rare jewel. Lieutenant Sutch limped across the hall, where the portraits of the Fevershams rose one above the other to the ceiling, and went out on to the stone-flagged terrace at the back. There he found his host sitting erect like a boy, and gazing southward toward the Sussex Downs.
How's the leg? asked General Feversham, as he rose briskly from his chair. He was a small wiry man, and, in spite of his white hairs, alert. But the alertness was of the body. A bony face, with a high narrow forehead and steel-blue inexpressive eyes, suggested a barrenness of mind.
It gave me trouble during the winter, replied Sutch. But that was to be expected. General Feversham nodded, and for a little while both men were silent. From the terrace the ground fell steeply to a wide level plain of brown earth and emerald fields and dark clumps of trees. From this plain voices rose through the sunshine, small but very clear. Far away toward Horsham a coil of white smoke from a train snaked rapidly in and out amongst the trees; and on the horizon rose the Downs, patched with white chalk.
I thought that I should find you here, said Sutch.
It was my wife's favourite corner, answered Feversham in a quite emotionless voice. She would sit here by the hour. She had a queer liking for wide and empty spaces.
Yes, said Sutch. She had imagination. Her thoughts could people them.
General Feversham glanced at his companion as though he hardly understood. But he asked no questions. What he did not understand he habitually let slip from his mind as not worth comprehension. He spoke at once upon a different topic.
A. E. W. Mason
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THE FOUR FEATHERS
AUTHOR OF "MIRANDA OF THE BALCONY," "THE COURTSHIP OF MORRICE BUCKLER," ETC.
CONTENTS
A CRIMEAN NIGHT
CAPTAIN TRENCH AND A TELEGRAM
THE LAST RIDE TOGETHER
THE BALL AT LENNON HOUSE
THE PARIAH
HARRY FEVERSHAM'S PLAN
THE LAST RECONNAISSANCE
LIEUTENANT SUTCH IS TEMPTED TO LIE
AT GLENALLA
THE WELLS OF OBAK
DURRANCE HEARS NEWS OF FEVERSHAM
DURRANCE SHARPENS HIS WITS
DURRANCE BEGINS TO SEE
CAPTAIN WILLOUGHBY REAPPEARS
THE STORY OF THE FIRST FEATHER
CAPTAIN WILLOUGHBY RETIRES
THE MUSOLINE OVERTURE
THE ANSWER TO THE OVERTURE
MRS. ADAIR INTERFERES
WEST AND EAST
ETHNE MAKES ANOTHER SLIP
DURRANCE LETS HIS CIGAR GO OUT
MRS. ADAIR MAKES HER APOLOGY
ON THE NILE
LIEUTENANT SUTCH COMES OFF THE HALF-PAY LIST
GENERAL FEVERSHAM'S PORTRAITS ARE APPEASED
THE HOUSE OF STONE
PLANS OF ESCAPE
COLONEL TRENCH ASSUMES A KNOWLEDGE OF CHEMISTRY
THE LAST OF THE SOUTHERN CROSS
FEVERSHAM RETURNS TO RAMELTON
IN THE CHURCH AT GLENALLA
ETHNE AGAIN PLAYS THE MUSOLINE OVERTURE
THE END
THE COURTSHIP OF MAURICE BUCKLER