Iâm still uncertain: I think Helen. Yseutâs quite incapable of playing comedy, and anyway I dislike her so much I simply couldnât bear it. Thereâs one other girl, apart from the older women, but Iâm told she does such extraordinary things on the stage that I simply mustnât give her anything more than a bit part. Iâm giving Yseut a bit part too â only on in the first act. But,â he added maliciously, a little smile creasing the corners of his mouth, âI shall insist on her taking a curtain every night, so that she canât take off her make-up and go home.â
Nicholas whistled, took out a cigarette case, opened it, and balanced it on the table with a gesture of invitation. âYseut is really very unpopular,â he said. âIâve never met anyone who had a good word to say for her.â
Nigel, as he took a cigarette, flicked his lighter, and handed it round the little group, thought he saw a gleam of interest appear in Robertâs eye.
âWho in particular dislikes her?â Robert queried.
Nicholas shrugged. âMyself, for one, on more or less irrational grounds; though I have a friend whoâs making a bloody fool of himself over her. âI am as true as truthâs simplicity, and simpler than the infancy of truthâ â you know. Helen, for another â what a sister to have to drag about with one! Jean â oh, you donât know her of course; girl called Jean Whitelegge, because sheâs in love with the Troilus aforementioned â the humble village maiden waiting for her knight to stop fooling about with the wicked princess. Everyone in the company,because sheâs an intolerable little bitch. Sheila McGaw, because â Oh, God!â
He broke off abruptly. Looking up to see what had caused the interruption, Nigel saw Yseut come into the bar.
âTalk of the devil,â said Nicholas gloomily.
Nigel studied Yseut curiously as, with Donald Fellowes, she came into the bar, and was struck by her total lack of ret semblance to Helen. The brief interchange he had just heard interested him, though for the moment he was inclined to be no more than superciliously amused at the antagonism which the girl seemed to arouse. She looked a compound of negative qualities â conceit, selfishness, coquetry â and little more besides (later he was to appreciate malice as a positive quality). She was dressed very simply, in a blue sweater and blue slacks which set off the red of her hair. Nigel noticed the almost imperceptible traces of disagreeableness in her features, and sighed: but for that, a model whom Rubens, or Renoir, would have delighted to paint. Certainly, Nigel admitted to himself with perhaps a little more than mere scientific interest, she had a magnificent body.
By comparison, Donald Fellowes seemed uninteresting; he moved awkwardly, and with little address. Nigel thought he recognized him; but where on earth had he come across him before? He made a futile, indefinite attempt to summon up the memory of his acquaintance during his years at Oxford, and as always happens on these occasions, could not remember a single one â only a phantom pantomime of blank, indistinguishable masks. Fortunately the problem was solved for him by a gleam of recognition which appeared in Donaldâs eye. Nigel smiled feebly, foreseeing a certain amount of gaucherie and embarrassment in the near future; he never had the courage simply to tell people that he didnât remember them.
There followed the ceremony of mumblings, apologies and recognitions which always occurs when a group of people only partially acquainted are brought together, and a great and complicated manoeuvring of chairs. Nigel, about to go off once again to the bar, was forestalled by Nicholas, who as he ordered pink gins contemplated with unconcealed glee the extremely uncomfortable relationships which were likely to be established within the next few