He nodded and walked away before Bateman could say another word.
“We don’t take refusals in Tahiti,” laughed Edward.
“Besides, you’ll get the best dinner on the island.”
“What did he mean by saying his wife was a good cook?
I happen to know his wife’s in Geneva.”
“That’s a long way off for a wife, isn’t it?” said Edward.
“And it’s a long time since he saw her.
I guess it’s another wife he’s talking about.”
For some time Bateman was silent.
His face was set in grave lines.
But looking up he caught the amused look in Edward’s eyes, and he flushed darkly.
“Arnold Jackson is a despicable rogue,” he said.
“I greatly fear he is,” answered Edward, smiling.
“I don’t see how any decent man can have anything to do with him.”
“Perhaps I’m not a decent man.”
“Do you see much of him, Edward?”
“Yes, quite a lot.
He’s adopted me as his nephew.”
Bateman leaned forward and fixed Edward with his searching eyes.
“Do you like him?”
“Very much.”
“But don’t you know, doesn’t everyone here know, that he’s a forger and that he’s been a convict?
He ought to be hounded out of civilised society.”
Edward watched a ring of smoke that floated from his cigar into the still, scented air.
“I suppose he is a pretty unmitigated rascal,” he said at last.
“And I can’t flatter myself that any repentance for his misdeeds offers one an excuse for condoning them.
He was a swindler and a hypocrite.
You can’t get away from it.
I never met a more agreeable companion.
He’s taught me everything I know.”
“What has he taught you?” cried Bateman in amazement.
“How to live.”
Bateman broke into ironical laughter.
“A fine master.
Is it owing to his lessons that you lost the chance of making a fortune and earn your living now by serving behind a counter in a ten cent store?”
“He has a wonderful personality,” said Edward, smiling good-naturedly.
“Perhaps you’ll see what I mean to-night.”
“I’m not going to dine with him if that’s what you mean.
Nothing would induce me to set foot within that man’s house.”
“Come to oblige me, Bateman.
We’ve been friends for so many years, you won’t refuse me a favour when I ask it.”
Edward’s tone had in it a quality new to Bateman.
Its gentleness was singularly persuasive.
“If you put it like that, Edward, I’m bound to come,” he smiled.
Bateman reflected, moreover, that it would be as well to learn what he could about Arnold Jackson.
It was plain that he had a great ascendency over Edward, and if it was to be combated it was necessary to discover in what exactly it consisted.
The more he talked with Edward the more conscious he became that a change had taken place in him.
He had an instinct that it behooved him to walk warily, and he made up his mind not to broach the real purport of his visit till he saw his way more clearly.
He began to talk of one thing and another, of his journey and what he had achieved by it, of politics in Chicago, of this common friend and that, of their days together at college.
At last Edward said he must get back to his work and proposed that he should fetch Bateman at five so that they could drive out together to Arnold Jackson’s house.