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- Title: Bealby; A Holiday
- Author: H. G. Wells
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- Language: English
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- BEALBY
- A HOLIDAY
- BY
- H. G. WELLS
- AUTHOR OF “THE WIFE OF SIR ISAAC HARMAN,” ETC.
- New York
- THE MACMILLAN COMPANY
- 1915
- _All rights reserved_
- COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY P. F. COLLIER & SON.
- COPYRIGHT, 1915,
- BY H. G. WELLS.
- Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1915.
- Reprinted March, 1915. April, 1915. May, 1915. July, 1915. August, 1915.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- CONTENTS
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. YOUNG BEALBY GOES TO SHONTS 1
- II. A WEEK-END AT SHONTS 22
- III. THE WANDERERS 56
- IV. THE UNOBTRUSIVE PARTING 95
- V. THE SEEKING OF BEALBY 131
- VI. BEALBY AND THE TRAMP 190
- VII. THE BATTLE OF CRAYMINSTER 226
- VIII. HOW BEALBY EXPLAINED 263
- BEALBY
- CHAPTER I
- YOUNG BEALBY GOES TO SHONTS
- § 1
- The cat is the offspring of a cat and the dog of a dog, but butlers and
- lady’s maids do not reproduce their kind. They have other duties.
- So their successors have to be sought among the prolific, and
- particularly among the prolific on great estates. Such are gardeners,
- but not under-gardeners, gamekeepers, and coachmen—but not lodge people,
- because their years are too great and their lodges too small. And among
- those to whom this opportunity of entering service came was young
- Bealby, who was the stepson of Mr. Darling, the gardener of Shonts.
- Everyone knows the glories of Shonts. Its façade. Its two towers. The
- great marble pond. The terraces where the peacocks walk and the lower
- lake with the black and white swans. The great park and the avenue. The
- view of the river winding away across the blue country. And of the
- Shonts Velasquez—but that is now in America. And the Shonts Rubens,
- which is in the National Gallery. And the Shonts porcelain. And the
- Shonts past history; it was a refuge for the old faith; it had priest’s
- holes and secret passages. And how at last the Marquis had to let Shonts
- to the Laxtons—the Peptonized Milk and Baby Soother people—for a long
- term of years. It was a splendid chance for any boy to begin his
- knowledge of service in so great an establishment, and only the natural
- perversity of human nature can explain the violent objection young
- Bealby took to anything of the sort. He did. He said he did not want to
- be a servant, and that he would not go and be a good boy and try his
- very best in that state of life to which it had pleased God to call him
- at Shonts. On the contrary.
- He communicated these views suddenly to his mother as she was preparing
- a steak and kidney pie in the bright little kitchen of the gardener’s
- cottage. He came in with his hair all ruffled and his face hot and
- distinctly dirty, and his hands in his trousers pockets in the way he
- had been repeatedly told not to.
- “Mother,” he said, “I’m not going to be a steward’s boy at the house
- anyhow, not if you tell me to, not till you’re blue in the face. So
- that’s all about it.”
- This delivered, he remained panting, having no further breath left in
- him.
- His mother was a thin firm woman. She paused in her rolling of the dough
- until he had finished, and then she made a strong broadening sweep of
- the rolling pin, and remained facing him, leaning forward on that
- implement with her head a little on one side.
- “You will do,” she said, “whatsoever your father has said you will do.”
- “’E isn’t my father,” said young Bealby.
- His mother gave a snapping nod of the head expressive of extreme
- determination.
- “Anyhow I ain’t going to do it,” said young Bealby, and feeling the
- conversation was difficult to sustain he moved towards the staircase
- door with a view to slamming it.
- “You’ll do it,” said his mother, “right enough.”
- “You see whether I do,” said young Bealby, and then got in his door-slam
- rather hurriedly because of steps outside.
- Mr. Darling came in out of the sunshine a few moments later. He was a
- large, many-pocketed, earthy-whiskered man with a clean-shaven
- determined mouth, and he carried a large pale cucumber in his hand.
- “I tole him,” he said.
- “What did he say?” asked his wife.
- “Nuthin’,” said Mr. Darling.
- “’E says ’e won’t,” said Mrs. Darling.
- Mr. Darling regarded her thoughtfully for a moment.
- “I never see such a boy,” said Mr. Darling. “Why—’e’s _got_ to.”
- § 2
- But young Bealby maintained an obstinate fight against the inevitable.
- He had no gift of lucid exposition. “I ain’t going to be a servant,” he
- said. “I don’t see what right people have making a servant of me.”
- “You got to be something,” said Mr. Darling.
- “Everybody’s got to be something,” said Mrs. Darling.
- “Then let me be something else,” said young Bealby.
- “_I_ dessay you’d like to be a gentleman,” said Mr. Darling.
- “I wouldn’t mind,” said young Bealby.
- “You got to be what your opportunities give you,” said Mr. Darling.
- Young Bealby became breathless. “Why shouldn’t I be an engine driver?”
- he asked.
- “All oily,” said his mother. “And getting yourself killed in an
- accident. And got to pay fines. You’d _like_ to be an engine driver.”
- “Or a soldier.”
- “Oo!—a Swaddy!” said Mr. Darling decisively.
- “Or the sea.”
- “With that weak stummik of yours,” said Mrs. Darling.
- “Besides which,” said Mr. Darling, “it’s been arranged for you to go up
- to the ’ouse the very first of next month. And your box and everything
- ready.”
- Young Bealby became very red in the face. “I won’t go,” he said very
- faintly.
- “You will,” said Mr. Darling, “if I ’ave to take you by the collar and
- the slack of your breeches to get you there.”
- § 3
- The heart of young Bealby was a coal of fire within his breast
- as—unassisted—he went across the dewy park up to the great house,
- whither his box was to follow him.
- He thought the world a “rotten show.”
- He also said, apparently to two does and a fawn, “If you think I’m going
- to stand it, you know, you’re JOLLY-well mistaken.”
- I do not attempt to justify his prejudice against honourable usefulness
- in a domestic capacity. He had it. Perhaps there is something in the air
- of Highbury, where he had spent the past eight years of his life, that
- leads to democratic ideals. It is one of those new places where estates
- seem almost forgotten. Perhaps too there was something in the Bealby
- strain....
- I think he would have objected to any employment at all. Hitherto he had
- been a remarkably free boy with a considerable gusto about his freedom.
- Why should that end? The little village mixed school had been a soft job
- for his Cockney wits, and for a year and a half he had been top boy. Why
- not go on being top boy?
- Instead of which, under threats, he had to go across the sunlit corner
- of the park, through that slanting morning sunlight which had been so
- often the prelude to golden days of leafy wanderings! He had to go past
- the corner of the laundry where he had so often played cricket with the
- coachman’s boys (already swallowed up into the working world), he had to
- follow the laundry wall to the end of the kitchen, and there, where the
- steps go down and underground, he had to say farewell to the sunlight,
- farewell to childhood, boyhood, freedom. He had to go down and along the
- stone corridor to the pantry, and there he had to ask for Mr. Mergleson.
- He paused on the top step and looked up at the blue sky across which a
- hawk was slowly drifting. His eyes followed the hawk out of sight beyond
- a cypress bough, but indeed he was not thinking about the hawk, he was
- not seeing the hawk; he was struggling with a last wild impulse of his
- ferial nature. “Why not sling it?” his ferial nature was asking. “Why
- not even now—_do a bunk_?”
- It would have been better for him perhaps and better for Mr. Mergleson
- and better for Shonts if he had yielded to the whisper of the Tempter.
- But his heart was heavy within him, and he had no lunch. And never a
- penny. One can do but a very little bunk on an empty belly! “Must” was
- written all over him. He went down the steps.
- The passage was long and cool and at the end of it was a swing door.
- Through that and then to the left, he knew one had to go, past the
- stillroom and so to the pantry. The maids were at breakfast in the
- stillroom with the door open. The grimace he made in passing was
- intended rather to entertain than to insult, and anyhow a chap must do
- something with his face. And then he came to the pantry and into the
- presence of Mr. Mergleson.
- Mr. Mergleson was in his shirt-sleeves and generally dishevelled, having
- an early cup of tea in an atmosphere full of the bleak memories of
- overnight. He was an ample man with a large nose, a vast under lip and
- mutton-chop side-whiskers. His voice would have suited a succulent
- parrot. He took out a gold watch from his waistcoat pocket and regarded
- it. “Ten minutes past seven, young man,” he said, “isn’t seven o’clock.”
- Young Bealby made no articulate answer.
- “Just stand there for a minute,” said Mr. Mergleson, “and when I’m at
- libbuty I’ll run through your duties.” And almost ostentatiously he gave
- himself up to the enjoyment of his cup of tea.
- Three other gentlemen in deshabille sat at table with Mr. Mergleson.
- They regarded young Bealby with attention, and the youngest, a
- red-haired, barefaced youth in shirt-sleeves and a green apron was moved
- to a grimace that was clearly designed to echo the scowl on young
- Bealby’s features.
- The fury that had been subdued by a momentary awe of Mr. Mergleson
- revived and gathered force. Young Bealby’s face became scarlet, his eyes
- filled with tears and his mind with the need for movement. After all,—he
- wouldn’t stand it. He turned round abruptly and made for the door.
- “Where’n earth you going to?” cried Mr. Mergleson.
- “He’s shy!” cried the second footman.
- “Steady on!” cried the first footman and had him by the shoulder in the
- doorway.
- “Lemme _go_!” howled the new recruit, struggling. “I won’t be a blooming
- servant. I won’t.”
- “Here!” cried Mr. Mergleson, gesticulating with his teaspoon, “bring ’im
- to the end of the table there. What’s this about a blooming servant?”
- Bealby, suddenly blubbering, was replaced at the end of the table.
- “May I ask what’s this about a blooming servant?” asked Mr. Mergleson.
- Sniff and silence.
- “Did I understand you to say that you ain’t going to be a blooming
- servant, young Bealby?”
- “Yes,” said young Bealby.
- “Thomas,” said Mr. Mergleson, “just smack ’is ’ed. Smack it rather
- ’ard....”
- Things too rapid to relate occurred. “So you’d _bite_, would you?” said
- Thomas....
- “Ah!” said Mr. Mergleson. “_Got_ ’im! That one!” ...
- “Just smack ’is ’ed once more,” said Mr. Mergleson....
- “And now you just stand there, young man, until I’m at libbuty to attend
- to you further,” said Mr. Mergleson, and finished his tea slowly and
- eloquently....
- The second footman rubbed his shin thoughtfully.
- “If I got to smack ’is ’ed much,” he said, “’e’d better change into his
- slippers.”
- “Take him to ’is room,” said Mr. Mergleson getting up. “See ’e washes
- the grief and grubbiness off ’is face in the handwash at the end of the
- passage and make him put on his slippers. Then show ’im ’ow to lay the
- table in the steward’s room.”
- § 4
- The duties to which Bealby was introduced struck him as perplexingly
- various, undesirably numerous, uninteresting and difficult to remember,
- and also he did not try to remember them very well because he wanted to
- do them as badly as possible and he thought that forgetting would be a
- good way of starting at that. He was beginning at the bottom of the
- ladder; to him it fell to wait on the upper servants, and the green
- baize door at the top of the service staircase was the limit of his
- range. His room was a small wedge-shaped apartment under some steps
- leading to the servants’ hall, lit by a window that did not open and
- that gave upon the underground passage. He received his instructions in
- a state of crumpled mutinousness, but for a day his desire to be
- remarkably impossible was more than counterbalanced by his respect for
- the large able hands of the four man-servants, his seniors, and by a
- disinclination to be returned too promptly to the gardens. Then in a
- tentative manner he broke two plates and got his head smacked by Mr.
- Mergleson himself. Mr. Mergleson gave a staccato slap quite as powerful
- as Thomas’s but otherwise different. The hand of Mr. Mergleson was large
- and fat and he got his effects by dash, Thomas’s was horny and lingered.
- After that young Bealby put salt in the teapot in which the housekeeper
- made tea. But that he observed she washed out with hot water before she
- put in the tea. It was clear that he had wasted his salt, which ought to
- have gone into the kettle.
- Next time,—the kettle.
- Beyond telling him his duties almost excessively nobody conversed with
- young Bealby during the long hours of his first day in service. At
- midday dinner in the servants’ hall, he made one of the kitchen-maids
- giggle by pulling faces intended to be delicately suggestive of Mr.
- Mergleson, but that was his nearest approach to disinterested human
- intercourse.
- When the hour for retirement came,—“Get out of it. Go to bed, you dirty
- little Kicker,” said Thomas. “We’ve had about enough of you for one
- day”—young Bealby sat for a long time on the edge of his bed weighing
- the possibilities of arson and poison. He wished he had some poison.
- Some sort of poison with a medieval manner, poison that hurts before it
- kills. Also he produced a small penny pocket-book with a glazed black
- cover and blue edges. He headed one page of this “Mergleson” and entered
- beneath it three black crosses. Then he opened an account to Thomas, who
- was manifestly destined to be his principal creditor. Bealby was not a
- forgiving boy. At the village school they had been too busy making him a
- good Churchman to attend to things like that. There were a lot of
- crosses for Thomas.
- And while Bealby made these sinister memoranda downstairs Lady
- Laxton—for Laxton had bought a baronetcy for twenty thousand down to the
- party funds and a tip to the whip over the Peptonized Milk
- flotation—Lady Laxton, a couple of floors above Bealby’s ruffled head
- mused over her approaching week-end party. It was an important week-end
- party. The Lord Chancellor of England was coming. Never before had she
- had so much as a member of the Cabinet at Shonts. He was coming, and do
- what she would she could not help but connect it with her very strong
- desire to see the master of Shonts in the clear scarlet of a Deputy
- Lieutenant. Peter would look so well in that. The Lord Chancellor was
- coming, and to meet him and to circle about him there were Lord John
- Woodenhouse and Slinker Bond, there were the Countess of Barracks and
- Mrs. Rampound Pilby, the novelist, with her husband Rampound Pilby,
- there was Professor Timbre, the philosopher, and there were four smaller
- (though quite good) people who would run about very satisfactorily among
- the others. (At least she thought they would run about very
- satisfactorily amongst the others, not imagining any evil of her cousin
- Captain Douglas.)
- All this good company in Shonts filled Lady Laxton with a pleasant
- realization of progressive successes but at the same time one must
- confess that she felt a certain diffidence. In her heart of hearts she
- knew she had not made this party. It had happened to her. How it might
- go on happening to her, she did not know, it was beyond her control. She
- hoped very earnestly that everything would pass off well.
- The Lord Chancellor was as big a guest as any she had had. One must grow
- as one grows, but still,—being easy and friendly with him would be, she
- knew, a tremendous effort. Rather like being easy and friendly with an
- elephant. She was not good at conversation. The task of interesting
- people taxed her and puzzled her....
- It was Slinker Bond, the whip, who had arranged the whole
- business—after, it must be confessed, a hint from Sir Peter. Laxton had
- complained that the government were neglecting this part of the country.
- “They ought to show up more than they do in the county,” said Sir Peter,
- and added almost carelessly, “I could easily put anybody up at Shonts.”
- There were to be two select dinner parties and a large but still select
- Sunday lunch to let in the countryside to the spectacle of the Laxtons
- taking their (new) proper place at Shonts....
- It was not only the sense of her own deficiencies that troubled Lady
- Laxton; there were also her husband’s excesses. He had—it was no use
- disguising it—rather too much the manner of an employer. He had a way of
- getting, how could one put it?—_confident_ at dinner and Mergleson
- seemed to _delight_ in filling up his glass. Then he would contradict a
- good deal.... She felt that Lord Chancellors however are the sort of men
- one doesn’t contradict....
- Then the Lord Chancellor was said to be interested in philosophy—a
- difficult subject. She had got Timbre to talk to him upon that. Timbre
- was a professor of philosophy at Oxford, so that was sure to be all
- right. But she wished she knew one or two good safe things to say in
- philosophy herself. She had long felt the need of a secretary, and now
- she felt it more than ever. If she had a secretary, she could just tell
- him what it was she wanted to talk about and he could get her one or two
- of the right books and mark the best passages and she could learn it all
- up.
- She feared—it was a worrying fear—that Laxton would say right out and
- very early in the week-end that he didn’t believe in philosophy. He had
- a way of saying he “didn’t believe in” large things like that,—art,
- philanthropy, novels, and so on. Sometimes he said, “I don’t believe in
- all this”—art or whatever it was. She had watched people’s faces when he
- had said it and she had come to the conclusion that saying you don’t
- believe in things isn’t the sort of thing people say nowadays. It was
- wrong, somehow. But she did not want to tell Laxton directly that it was
- wrong. He would remember if she did, but he had a way of taking such
- things rather badly at the time.... She hated him to take things badly.
- “If one could invent some little hint,” she whispered to herself.
- She had often wished she was better at hints.
- She was, you see, a gentlewoman, modest, kindly. Her people were quite
- good people. Poor, of course. But she was not clever, she was anything
- but clever. And the wives of these captains of industry need to be very
- clever indeed if they are to escape a magnificent social isolation. They
- get the titles and the big places and all that sort of thing; people
- don’t at all intend to isolate them, but there is nevertheless an
- inadvertent avoidance....
- Even as she uttered these words, “If one could invent some little hint,”
- Bealby down there less than forty feet away through the solid floor
- below her feet and a little to the right was wetting his stump of pencil
- as wet as he could in order to ensure a sufficiently emphatic fourteenth
- cross on the score sheet of the doomed Thomas. Most of the other
- thirteen marks were done with such hard breathing emphasis that the
- print of them went more than halfway through that little blue-edged
- book.
- § 5
- The arrival of the week-end guests impressed Bealby at first merely as a
- blessed influence that withdrew the four men-servants into that unknown
- world on the other side of the green baize door, but then he learnt that
- it also involved the appearance of five new persons, two valets and
- three maids, for whom places had to be laid in the steward’s room.
- Otherwise Lady Laxton’s social arrangements had no more influence upon
- the mind of Bealby than the private affairs of the Emperor of China.
- There was something going on up there, beyond even his curiosity. All he
- heard of it was a distant coming and going of vehicles and some slight
- talk to which he was inattentive while the coachman and grooms were
- having a drink in the pantry—until these maids and valets appeared. They
- seemed to him to appear suddenly out of nothing, like slugs after rain,
- black and rather shiny, sitting about inactively and quietly consuming
- small matters. He disliked them, and they regarded him without affection
- or respect.
- Who cared? He indicated his feeling towards them as soon as he was out
- of the steward’s room by a gesture of the hand and nose venerable only
- by reason of its antiquity.
- He had things more urgent to think about than strange valets and maids.
- Thomas had laid hands on him, jeered at him, inflicted shameful
- indignities on him and he wanted to kill Thomas in some frightful
- manner. (But if possible unobtrusively.)
- If he had been a little Japanese boy, this would have been an entirely
- honourable desire. It would have been Bushido and all that sort of
- thing. In the gardener’s stepson however it is—undesirable....
- Thomas, on the other hand, having remarked the red light of revenge in
- Bealby’s eye and being secretly afraid, felt that his honour was
- concerned in not relaxing his persecutions. He called him “Kicker” and
- when he did not answer to that name, he called him “Snorter,” “Bleater,”
- “Snooks,” and finally tweaked his ear. Then he saw fit to assume that
- Bealby was deaf and that ear-tweaking was the only available method of
- address. This led on to the convention of a sign language whereby ideas
- were communicated to Bealby by means of painful but frequently quite
- ingeniously symbolical freedoms with various parts of his person. Also
- Thomas affected to discover uncleanliness in Bealby’s head and succeeded
- after many difficulties in putting it into a sinkful of lukewarm water.
- Meanwhile young Bealby devoted such scanty time as he could give to
- reflection to debating whether it is better to attack Thomas suddenly
- with a carving knife or throw a lighted lamp. The large pantry inkpot of
- pewter might be effective in its way, he thought, but he doubted whether
- in the event of a charge it had sufficient stopping power. He was also
- curiously attracted by a long two-pronged toasting-fork that hung at the
- side of the pantry fireplace. It had _reach_....
- Over all these dark thoughts and ill-concealed emotions Mr. Mergleson
- prevailed, large yet speedy, speedy yet exact, parroting orders and
- making plump gestures, performing duties and seeing that duties were
- performed.
- Matters came to a climax late on Saturday night at the end of a trying
- day, just before Mr. Mergleson went round to lock up and turn out the
- lights.
- Thomas came into the pantry close behind Bealby, who, greatly belated
- through his own inefficiency, was carrying a tray of glasses from the
- steward’s room, applied an ungentle hand to his neck, and ruffled up his
- back hair in a smart and painful manner. At the same time Thomas
- remarked, “Burrrrh!”
- Bealby stood still for a moment and then put down his tray on the table
- and, making peculiar sounds as he did so, resorted very rapidly to the
- toasting fork.... He got a prong into Thomas’s chin at the first prod.
- How swift are the changes of the human soul! At the moment of his thrust
- young Bealby was a primordial savage; so soon as he saw this incredible
- piercing of Thomas’s chin—for all the care that Bealby had taken it
- might just as well have been Thomas’s eye—he moved swiftly through the
- ages and became a simple Christian child. He abandoned violence and
- fled.
- The fork hung for a moment from the visage of Thomas like a twisted
- beard of brass, and then rattled on the ground.
- Thomas clapped his hand to his chin and discovered blood.
- “You little—!” He never found the right word (which perhaps is just as
- well); instead he started in pursuit of Bealby.
- Bealby—in his sudden horror of his own act—and Thomas fled headlong into
- the passage and made straight for the service stairs that went up into a
- higher world. He had little time to think. Thomas with a red-smeared
- chin appeared in pursuit. Thomas the avenger. Thomas really roused.
- Bealby shot through the green baize door and the pursuing footman pulled
- up only just in time not to follow him.
- Only just in time. He had an instinctive instant anxious fear of great
- dangers. He heard something, a sound as though the young of some very
- large animal had squeaked feebly. He had a glimpse of something black
- and white—and large....
- Then something, some glass thing, smashed.
- He steadied the green baize door which was wobbling on its brass hinges,
- controlled his panting breath and listened.
- A low rich voice was—ejaculating. It was not Bealby’s voice, it was the
- voice of some substantial person being quietly but deeply angry. They
- were the ejaculations restrained in tone but not in quality of a ripe
- and well-stored mind,—no boy’s thin stuff.
- Then very softly Thomas pushed open the door—just widely enough to see
- and as instantly let it fall back into place.
- Very gently and yet with an alert rapidity he turned about and stole
- down the service stairs.
- His superior officer appeared in the passage below.
- “Mr. Mergleson,” he cried, “I say—Mr. Mergleson.”
- “What’s up?” said Mr. Mergleson.
- “He’s gone!”
- “Who?”
- “Bealby.”
- “Home?” This almost hopefully.
- “No.”
- “Where?”
- “Up there! I think he ran against somebody.”
- Mr. Mergleson scrutinized his subordinate’s face for a second. Then he
- listened intently; both men listened intently.
- “Have to fetch him out of that,” said Mr. Mergleson, suddenly preparing
- for brisk activity.
- Thomas bent lower over the banisters.
- “_The Lord Chancellor!_” he whispered with white lips and a sideways
- gesture of his head.
- “What about ’im?” said Mergleson, arrested by something in the manner of
- Thomas.
- Thomas’s whisper became so fine that Mr. Mergleson drew nearer to catch
- it and put up a hand to his ear. Thomas repeated the last remark. “He’s
- just through there—on the landing—cursing and swearing—’orrible
- things—more like a mad turkey than a human being.”
- “Where’s Bealby?”
- “He must almost ’ave run into ’im,” said Thomas after consideration.
- “But now—where is he?”
- Thomas pantomimed infinite perplexity.
- Mr. Mergleson reflected and decided upon his line. He came up the
- service staircase, lifted his chin and with an air of meek officiousness
- went through the green door. There was no one now on the landing, there
- was nothing remarkable on the landing except a broken tumbler, but
- half-way up the grand staircase stood the Lord Chancellor. Under one arm
- the great jurist carried a soda water syphon and he grasped a decanter
- of whisky in his hand. He turned sharply at the sound of the green baize
- door and bent upon Mr. Mergleson the most terrible eyebrows that ever,
- surely! adorned a legal visage. He was very red in the face and
- savage-looking.
- “Was it _you_,” he said with a threatening gesture of the decanter, and
- his voice betrayed a noble indignation, “Was it _you_ who slapped me
- behind?”
- “Slapped you behind, me lord??”
- “Slapped me _behind_. Don’t I speak—plainly?”
- “I—such a libbuty, me lord!”
- “Idiot! I ask you a plain question—”
- With almost inconceivable alacrity Mr. Mergleson rushed up three steps,
- leapt forward and caught the syphon as it slipped from his lordship’s
- arm.
- He caught it, but at a price. He overset and, clasping it in his hands,
- struck his lordship first with the syphon on the left shin and then
- butted him with a face that was still earnestly respectful in the knees.
- His lordship’s legs were driven sideways, so that they were no longer
- beneath his centre of gravity. With a monosyllabic remark of a
- topographical nature his lordship collapsed upon Mr. Mergleson. The
- decanter flew out of his grasp and smashed presently with emphasis upon
- the landing below. The syphon, escaping from the wreckage of Mr.
- Mergleson and drawn no doubt by a natural affinity, rolled noisily from
- step to step in pursuit of the decanter....
- It was a curious little procession that hurried down the great staircase
- of Shonts that night. First the whisky like a winged harbinger with the
- pedestrian syphon in pursuit. Then the great lawyer gripping the great
- butler by the tails of his coat and punching furiously. Then Mr.
- Mergleson trying wildly to be respectful—even in disaster. First the
- Lord Chancellor dived over Mr. Mergleson, grappling as he passed, then
- Mr. Mergleson, attempting explanations, was pulled backwards over the
- Lord Chancellor; then again the Lord Chancellor was for a giddy but
- vindictive moment uppermost; a second rotation and they reached the
- landing.
- Bang! There was a deafening report—
- CHAPTER II
- A WEEK-END AT SHONTS
- § 1
- The week-end visit is a form of entertainment peculiar to Great Britain.
- It is a thing that could have been possible only in a land essentially
- aristocratic and mellow, in which even the observance of the sabbath has
- become mellow. At every London terminus on a Saturday afternoon the
- outgoing trains have an unusually large proportion of first class
- carriages, and a peculiar abundance of rich-looking dressing-bags
- provoke the covetous eye. A discreet activity of valets and maids
- mingles with the stimulated alertness of the porters. One marks
- celebrities in gay raiment. There is an indefinable air of distinction
- upon platform and bookstall. Sometimes there are carriages reserved for
- especially privileged parties. There are greetings.
- “And so _you_ are coming too!”
- “No, this time it is Shonts.”
- “The place where they found the Rubens. Who _has_ it now?” ...
- Through this cheerfully prosperous throng went the Lord Chancellor with
- his high nose, those eyebrows of his which he seemed to be able to furl
- or unfurl at will and his expression of tranquil self-sufficiency. He
- was going to Shonts for his party and not for his pleasure, but there
- was no reason why that should appear upon his face. He went along
- preoccupied, pretending to see nobody, leaving to others the
- disadvantage of the greeting. In his right hand he carried a small
- important bag of leather. Under his left arm he bore a philosophical
- work by Doctor MacTaggart, three illustrated papers, the _Fortnightly
- Review_, the day’s _Times_, the _Hibbert Journal_, _Punch_ and two blue
- books. His Lordship never quite knew the limits set to what he could
- carry under his arm. His man, Candler, followed therefore at a suitable
- distance with several papers that had already been dropped, alert to
- retrieve any further losses.
- At the large bookstall they passed close by Mrs. Rampound Pilby who,
- according to her custom, was feigning to be a member of the general
- public and was asking the clerk about her last book. The Lord Chancellor
- saw Rampound Pilby hovering at hand and deftly failed to catch his eye.
- He loathed the Rampound Pilbys. He speculated for a moment what sort of
- people could possibly stand Mrs. Pilby’s vast pretensions—even from
- Saturday to Monday. One dinner party on her right hand had glutted him
- for life. He chose a corner seat, took possession of both it and the
- seat opposite it in order to have somewhere to put his feet, left
- Candler to watch over and pack in his hand luggage and went high up the
- platform, remaining there with his back to the world—rather like a
- bigger more aquiline Napoleon—in order to evade the great novelist.
- In this he was completely successful.
- He returned however to find Candler on the verge of a personal conflict
- with a very fair young man in grey. He was so fair as to be almost an
- albino, except that his eyes were quick and brown; he was blushing the
- brightest pink and speaking very quickly.
- “These two places,” said Candler, breathless with the badness of his
- case, “are engaged.”
- “Oh ve-_very_ well,” said the very fair young man with his eyebrows and
- moustache looking very pale by contrast, “have it so. But do permit me
- to occupy the middle seat of the carriage. With a residuary interest in
- the semi-gentleman’s place.”
- “You little know, young man, _whom_ you are calling a semi-gentleman,”
- said Candler, whose speciality was grammar.
- “Here he is!” said the young gentleman.
- “Which place will you have, my Lord?” asked Candler, abandoning his case
- altogether.
- “Facing,” said the Lord Chancellor slowly unfurling the eyebrows and
- scowling at the young man in grey.
- “Then I’ll have the other,” said the very fair young man talking very
- glibly. He spoke with a quick low voice, like one who forces himself to
- keep going. “You see,” he said, addressing the great jurist with the
- extreme familiarity of the courageously nervous, “I’ve gone into this
- sort of thing before. First, mind you, I have a far look for a vacant
- corner. I’m not the sort to spoil sport. But if there isn’t a vacant
- corner I look for traces of a semi-gentleman. A semi-gentleman is one
- who has a soft cap and not an umbrella—his friend in the opposite seat
- has the umbrella—or he has an umbrella and not a soft cap, or a
- waterproof and not a bag, or a bag and not a waterproof. And a half
- interest in a rug. That’s what I call a semi-gentleman. You see the
- idea. Sort of divided beggar. Nothing in any way offensive.”
- “Sir,” said the Lord Chancellor, interrupting in a voice of concentrated
- passion, “I don’t care a _rap_ what you call a semi-gentleman. _Will_
- you get out of my way?”
- “Just as you please,” said the very fair young gentleman, and going a
- few paces from the carriage door he whistled for the boy with the
- papers. He was bearing up bravely.
- “_Pink ’un?_” said the very fair young gentleman almost breathlessly.
- “_Black and White._ What’s all these others? _Athenæum?_ _Sporting and
- Dramatic?_ Right O. And—Eh! What? Do I _look_ the sort that buys a
- _Spectator_? You don’t know! My dear boy, where’s your _savoir faire_?”
- § 2
- The Lord Chancellor was a philosopher and not easily perturbed. His
- severe manner was consciously assumed and never much more than
- skin-deep. He had already furled his eyebrows and dismissed his
- vis-a-vis from his mind before the train started. He turned over the
- _Hibbert Journal_, and read in it with a large tolerance.
- Dimly on the outskirts of his consciousness the very fair young man
- hovered, as a trifling annoyance, as something pink and hot rustling a
- sheet of a discordant shade of pink, as something that got in the way of
- his legs and whistled softly some trivial cheerful air, just to show how
- little it cared. Presently, very soon, this vague trouble would pass out
- of his consciousness altogether....
- The Lord Chancellor was no mere amateur of philosophy. His activities in
- that direction were a part of his public reputation. He lectured on
- religion and æsthetics. He was a fluent Hegelian. He spent his holidays,
- it was understood, in the Absolute—at any rate in Germany. He would
- sometimes break into philosophy at dinner tables and particularly over
- the desert and be more luminously incomprehensible while still
- apparently sober, than almost anyone. An article in the Hibbert caught
- and held his attention. It attempted to define a new and doubtful
- variety of Infinity. You know, of course, that there are many sorts and
- species of Infinity, and that the Absolute is just the king among
- Infinities as the lion is king among the Beasts....
- “I say,” said a voice coming out of the world of Relativity and coughing
- the cough of those who break a silence, “you aren’t going to Shonts, are
- you?”
- The Lord Chancellor returned slowly to earth.
- “Just seen your label,” said the very fair young man. “You see,—_I’m_
- going to Shonts.”
- The Lord Chancellor remained outwardly serene. He reflected for a
- moment. And then he fell into that snare which is more fatal to great
- lawyers and judges perhaps than to any other class of men, the snare of
- the crushing repartee. One had come into his head now,—a beauty.
- “Then we shall meet there,” he said in his suavest manner.
- “Well—rather.”
- “It would be a great pity,” said the Lord Chancellor with an effective
- blandness, using a kind of wry smile that he employed to make things
- humorous, “it would be a great pity, don’t you think, to anticipate that
- pleasure.”
- And having smiled the retort well home with his head a little on one
- side, he resumed with large leisurely movements the reading of his
- _Hibbert Journal_.
- “Got me there,” said the very fair young man belatedly, looking boiled
- to a turn, and after a period of restlessness settled down to an
- impatient perusal of _Black and White_.
- “There’s a whole blessed week-end of course,” the young man remarked
- presently without looking up from his paper and apparently pursuing some
- obscure meditations....
- A vague uneasiness crept into the Lord Chancellor’s mind as he continued
- to appear to peruse. Out of what train of thought could such a remark
- arise? His weakness for crushing retort had a little betrayed him....
- It was, however, only when he found himself upon the platform of
- Chelsome, which as everyone knows is the station for Shonts, and
- discovered Mr. and Mrs. Rampound Pilby upon the platform, looking
- extraordinarily like a national monument and its custodian, that the
- Lord Chancellor, began to realize that he was in the grip of fate, and
- that the service he was doing his party by week-ending with the Laxtons
- was likely to be not simply joyless but disagreeable.
- Well, anyhow, he had MacTaggart, and he could always work in his own
- room....
- § 3
- By the end of dinner the Lord Chancellor was almost at the end of his
- large but clumsy endurance; he kept his eyebrows furled only by the most
- strenuous relaxation of his muscles, and within he was a sea of silent
- blasphemies. All sorts of little things had accumulated....
- He exercised an unusual temperance with the port and old brandy his host
- pressed upon him, feeling that he dared not relax lest his rage had its
- way with him. The cigars were quite intelligent at any rate, and he
- smoked and listened with a faintly perceptible disdain to the
- conversation of the other men. At any rate Mrs. Rampound Pilby was out
- of the room. The talk had arisen out of a duologue that had preceded the
- departure of the ladies, a duologue of Timbre’s, about apparitions and
- the reality of the future life. Sir Peter Laxton, released from the eyes
- of his wife, was at liberty to say he did not believe in all this stuff;
- it was just thought transference and fancy and all that sort of thing.
- His declaration did not arrest the flow of feeble instances and
- experiences into which such talk invariably degenerates. His Lordship
- remained carelessly attentive, his eyebrows unfurled but drooping, his
- cigar upward at an acute angle; he contributed no anecdotes, content now
- and then to express himself compactly by some brief sentence of pure
- Hegelian—much as a Mahometan might spit.
- “Why! come to that, they say Shonts is haunted,” said Sir Peter. “I
- suppose we could have a ghost here in no time if I chose to take it on.
- Rare place for a ghost, too.”
- The very fair young man of the train had got a name now and was Captain
- Douglas. When he was not blushing too brightly he was rather good
- looking. He was a distant cousin of Lady Laxton’s. He impressed the Lord
- Chancellor as unabashed. He engaged people in conversation with a
- cheerful familiarity that excluded only the Lord Chancellor, and even at
- the Lord Chancellor he looked ever and again. He pricked up his ears at
- the mention of ghosts, and afterwards when the Lord Chancellor came to
- think things over, it seemed to him that he had caught a curious glance
- of the Captain’s bright little brown eye.
- “What sort of ghost, Sir Peter? Chains? Eh? No?”
- “Nothing of that sort, it seems. I don’t know much about it, I wasn’t
- sufficiently interested. No, sort of spook that bangs about and does you
- a mischief. What’s its name? Plundergeist?”
- “Poltergeist,” the Lord Chancellor supplied carelessly in the pause.
- “Runs its hand over your hair in the dark. Taps your shoulder. All
- nonsense. But we don’t tell the servants. Sort of thing I don’t believe
- in. Easily explained,—what with panelling and secret passages and
- priests’ holes and all that.”
- “Priests’ holes!” Douglas was excited.
- “Where they hid. Perfect rabbit warren. There’s one going out from the
- drawing-room alcove. Quite a good room in its way. But you know,”—a note
- of wrath crept into Sir Peter’s voice,—“they didn’t treat me fairly
- about these priests’ holes. I ought to have had a sketch and a plan of
- these priests’ holes. When a chap is given possession of a place, he
- ought to be given possession. Well! I don’t know where half of them are
- myself. That’s not possession. Else we might refurnish them and do them
- up a bit. I guess they’re pretty musty.”
- Captain Douglas spoke with his eye on the Lord Chancellor. “Sure there
- isn’t a murdered priest in the place, Sir Peter?” he asked.
- “Nothing of the sort,” said Sir Peter. “I don’t believe in these
- priests’ holes. Half of ’em never had priests in ’em. It’s all pretty
- tidy rot I expect—come to the bottom of it....”
- The conversation did not get away from ghosts and secret passages until
- the men went to the drawing-room. If it seemed likely to do so Captain
- Douglas pulled it back. He seemed to delight in these silly particulars;
- the sillier they were the more he was delighted.
- The Lord Chancellor was a little preoccupied by one of those irrational
- suspicions that will sometimes afflict the most intelligent of men. Why
- did Douglas want to know all the particulars about the Shonts ghosts?
- Why every now and then did he glance with that odd expression at one’s
- face,—a glance half appealing and half amused. Amused! It was a strange
- fancy, but the Lord Chancellor could almost have sworn that the young
- man was laughing at him. At dinner he had had that feeling one has at
- times of being talked about; he had glanced along the table to discover
- the Captain and a rather plain woman, that idiot Timbre’s wife she
- probably was, with their heads together looking up at him quite
- definitely and both manifestly pleased by something Douglas was telling
- her....
- What was it Douglas had said in the train? Something like a threat. But
- the exact words had slipped the Lord Chancellor’s memory....
- The Lord Chancellor’s preoccupation was just sufficient to make him a
- little unwary. He drifted into grappling distance of Mrs. Rampound
- Pilby. Her voice caught him like a lasso and drew him in.
- “Well, and _how_ is Lord Moggeridge now?” she asked.
- What on earth is one to say to such an impertinence?
- She was always like that. She spoke to a man of the calibre of Lord
- Bacon as though she was speaking to a schoolboy home for the holidays.
- She had an invincible air of knowing all through everybody. It gave
- rather confidence to her work than charm to her manner.
- “Do you still go on with your philosophy?” she said.
- “No,” shouted the Lord Chancellor, losing all self-control for the
- moment and waving his eyebrows about madly, “no, I go _off_ with it.”
- “For your vacations? Ah, Lord Moggeridge, how I envy you great lawyers
- your long vacations. _I_—never get a vacation. Always we poor authors
- are pursued by our creations, sometimes it’s typescript, sometimes it’s
- proofs. Not that I really complain of proofs. I confess to a weakness
- for proofs. Sometimes, alas! it’s criticism. Such _undiscerning_
- criticism!...”
- The Lord Chancellor began to think very swiftly of some tremendous lie
- that would enable him to escape at once without incivility from Lady
- Laxton’s drawing-room. Then he perceived that Mrs. Rampound Pilby was
- asking him; “Is that _the_ Captain Douglas, or his brother, who’s in
- love with the actress woman?”
- The Lord Chancellor made no answer. What he thought was “Great Silly
- Idiot! How should _I_ know?”
- “I think it must be _the_ one,—the one who had to leave Portsmouth in
- disgrace because of the ragging scandal. He did nothing there, they say,
- but organize practical jokes. Some of them were quite subtle practical
- jokes. He’s a cousin of our hostess; that perhaps accounts for his
- presence....”
- The Lord Chancellor’s comment betrayed the drift of his thoughts. “He’d
- better not try that sort of thing on here,” he said. “I
- abominate—clowning.”
- Drawing-room did not last very long. Even Lady Laxton could not miss the
- manifest gloom of her principal guest, and after the good-nights and
- barley water and lemonade on the great landing Sir Peter led Lord
- Moggeridge by the arm—he hated being led by the arm—into the small but
- still spacious apartment that was called the study. The Lord Chancellor
- was now very thirsty; he was not used to abstinence of any sort; but Sir
- Peter’s way of suggesting a drink roused such a fury of resentment in
- him that he refused tersely and conclusively. There was nobody else in
- the study but Captain Douglas, who seemed to hesitate upon the verge of
- some familiar address, and Lord Woodenhouse, who was thirsty, too, and
- held a vast tumbler of whisky and soda, with a tinkle of ice in it, on
- his knee in a way annoying to a parched man. The Lord Chancellor helped
- himself to a cigar and assumed the middle of the fireplace with an air
- of contentment, but he could feel the self-control running out of the
- heels of his boots.
- Sir Peter, after a quite unsuccessful invasion of his own hearthrug—the
- Lord Chancellor stood like a rock—secured the big arm-chair, stuck his
- feet out towards his distinguished guest and resumed a talk that he had
- been holding with Lord Woodenhouse about firearms. Mergleson had as
- usual been too attentive to his master’s glass, and the fine edge was
- off Sir Peter’s deference. “I always have carried firearms,” he said,
- “and I always shall. Used properly they are a great protection. Even in
- the country how are you to know who you’re going to run up
- against—anywhen?”
- “But you might shoot and hit something,” said Douglas.
- “Properly used, I said—properly used. Whipping out a revolver and
- shooting _at_ a man, that’s not properly used. Almost as bad as pointing
- it at him—which is pretty certain to make him fly straight at you. If
- he’s got an ounce of pluck. But _I_ said properly used and I _mean_
- properly used.”
- The Lord Chancellor tried to think about that article on Infinities,
- while appearing to listen to this fool’s talk. He despised revolvers.
- Armed with such eyebrows as his it was natural for him to despise
- revolvers.
- “Now, I’ve got some nice little barkers upstairs,” said Sir Peter. “I’d
- almost welcome a burglar, just to try them.”
- “If you shoot a burglar,” said Lord Woodenhouse abruptly, with a gust of
- that ill-temper that was frequent at Shonts towards bedtime, “when he’s
- not attacking you, it’s murder.”
- Sir Peter held up an offensively pacifying hand. “I know _that_,” he
- said; “you needn’t tell me _that_.”
- He raised his voice a little to increase his already excessive
- accentuations. “_I_ said properly used.”
- A yawn took the Lord Chancellor unawares and he caught it dexterously
- with his hand. Then he saw Douglas hastily pull at his little blond
- moustache to conceal a smile,—grinning ape! What was there to smile at?
- The man had been smiling all the evening.
- Up to something?
- “Now let me _tell_ you,” said Sir Peter, “let me _tell_ you the proper
- way to use a revolver. You whip it out and _instantly_ let fly at the
- ground. You should never let anyone see a revolver ever before they hear
- it—see? You let fly at the ground first off, and the concussion stuns
- them. It doesn’t stun you. _You_ expect it, _they_ don’t. See? There you
- are—five shots left, master of the situation.”
- “I think, Sir Peter, I’ll bid you good-night,” said the Lord Chancellor,
- allowing his eye to rest for one covetous moment on the decanter, and
- struggling with the devil of pride.
- Sir Peter made a gesture of extreme friendliness from his chair,
- expressive of the Lord Chancellor’s freedom to do whatever he pleased at
- Shonts. “I may perhaps tell you a little story that happened once in
- Morocco.”
- “My eyes won’t keep open any longer,” said Captain Douglas suddenly,
- with a whirl of his knuckles into his sockets, and stood up.
- Lord Woodenhouse stood up too.
- “You see,” said Sir Peter, standing also but sticking to his subject and
- his hearer. “This was when I was younger than I am now, you must
- understand, and I wasn’t married. Just mooching about a bit, between
- business and pleasure. Under such circumstances one goes into parts of a
- foreign town where one wouldn’t go if one was older and wiser....”
- Captain Douglas left Sir Peter and Woodenhouse to it.
- He emerged on the landing and selected one of the lighted candlesticks
- upon the table. “Lord!” he whispered. He grimaced in soliloquy and then
- perceived the Lord Chancellor regarding him with suspicion and disfavour
- from the ascending staircase. He attempted ease. For the first time
- since the train incident he addressed Lord Moggeridge.
- “I gather, my lord,—don’t believe in ghosts?” he said.
- “No, Sir,” said the Lord Chancellor, “I don’t.”
- “They won’t trouble me to-night.”
- “They won’t trouble any of us.”
- “Fine old house anyhow,” said Captain Douglas.
- The Lord Chancellor disdained to reply. He went on his way upstairs.
- § 4
- When the Lord Chancellor sat down before the thoughtful fire in the fine
- old panelled room assigned to him he perceived that he was too disturbed
- to sleep. This was going to be an infernal week-end. The worst week-end
- he had ever had. Mrs. Rampound Pilby maddened him; Timbre, who was a
- Pragmatist—which stands in the same relation to a Hegelian that a small
- dog does to a large cat—exasperated him; he loathed Laxton, detested
- Rampound Pilby and feared—as far as he was capable of fearing
- anything—Captain Douglas. There was no refuge, no soul in the house to
- whom he could turn for consolation and protection from these others.
- Slinker Bond could talk only of the affairs of the party, and the Lord
- Chancellor, being Lord Chancellor, had long since lost any interest in
- the affairs of the party; Woodenhouse could talk of nothing. The women
- were astonishingly negligible. There were practically no pretty women.
- There ought always to be pretty young women for a Lord Chancellor,
- pretty _young_ women who can at least seem to listen....
- And he was atrociously thirsty.
- His room was supplied only with water,—stuff you use to clean your
- teeth—and nothing else....
- No good thinking about it....
- He decided that the best thing he could do to compose himself before
- turning in would be to sit down at the writing-table and write a few
- sheets of Hegelian—about that Infinity article in the Hibbert. There is
- indeed no better consolation for a troubled mind than the Hegelian
- exercises; they lift it above—everything. He took off his coat and sat
- down to this beautiful amusement, but he had scarcely written a page
- before his thirst became a torment. He kept thinking of that great
- tumbler Woodenhouse had held,—sparkling, golden, cool—and stimulating.
- What he wanted was a good stiff whisky and a cigar, one of Laxton’s
- cigars, the only good thing in his entertainment so far.
- And then Philosophy.
- Even as a student he had been a worker of the Teutonic type,—never
- abstemious.
- He thought of ringing and demanding these comforts, and then it occurred
- to him that it was a little late to ring for things. Why not fetch them
- from the study himself?...
- He opened his door and looked out upon the great staircase. It was a
- fine piece of work, that staircase. Low, broad, dignified....
- There seemed to be nobody about. The lights were still on. He listened
- for a little while, and then put on his coat and went with a soft
- swiftness that was still quite dignified downstairs to the study, the
- study redolent of Sir Peter.
- He made his modest collection.
- Lord Moggeridge came nearer to satisfaction as he emerged from the study
- that night at Shonts than at any other moment during this ill-advised
- week-end. In his pocket were four thoroughly good cigars. In one hand he
- held a cut glass decanter of whisky. In the other a capacious tumbler.
- Under his arm, with that confidence in the unlimited portative power of
- his arm that nothing could shake, he had tucked the syphon. His soul
- rested upon the edge of tranquillity like a bird that has escaped the
- fowler. He was already composing his next sentence about that new
- variety of Infinity....
- Then something struck him from behind and impelled him forward a couple
- of paces. It was something hairy, something in the nature, he thought
- afterwards, of a worn broom. And also there were two other things softer
- and a little higher on each side....
- Then it was he made that noise like the young of some large animal.
- He dropped the glass in a hasty attempt to save the syphon....
- “What in the name of Heaven—?” he cried, and found himself alone.
- “Captain Douglas!”
- The thought leapt to his mind.
- But indeed, it was not Captain Douglas. It was Bealby. Bealby in panic
- flight from Thomas. And how was Bealby to know that this large, richly
- laden man was the Lord Chancellor of England? Never before had Bealby
- seen anyone in evening dress except a butler, and so he supposed this
- was just some larger, finer kind of butler that they kept upstairs. Some
- larger, finer kind of butler blocking the path of escape. Bealby had
- taken in the situation with the rapidity of a hunted animal. The massive
- form blocked the door to the left....
- In the playground of the village school Bealby had been preëminent for
- his dodging; he moved as quickly as a lizard. His little hands, his
- head, poised with the skill of a practised butter, came against that
- mighty back, and then Bealby had dodged into the study....
- But it seemed to Lord Moggeridge, staggering over his broken glass and
- circling about defensively, that this fearful indignity could come only
- from Captain Douglas. Foolery.... Blup, blup.... Sham Poltergeist.
- Imbeciles....
- He said as much, believing that this young man and possibly confederates
- were within hearing; he said as much—hotly. He went on to remark of an
- unphilosophical tendency about Captain Douglas generally, and about army
- officers, practical joking, Laxton’s hospitalities, Shonts.... Thomas,
- you will remember, heard him....
- Nothing came of it. No answer, not a word of apology.
- At last in a great dudgeon and with a kind of wariness about his back,
- the Lord Chancellor, with things more spoilt for him than ever, went on
- his way upstairs.
- When the green baize door opened behind him, he turned like a shot, and
- a large foolish-faced butler appeared. Lord Moggeridge, with a
- sceptre-like motion of the decanter, very quietly and firmly asked him a
- simple question and then, then the lunatic must needs leap up three
- stairs and dive suddenly and upsettingly at his legs.
- Lord Moggeridge was paralyzed with amazement. His legs were struck from
- under him. He uttered one brief topographical cry.
- (To Sir Peter unfortunately it sounded like “Help!”)
- For a few seconds the impressions that rushed upon Lord Moggeridge were
- too rapid for adequate examination. He had a compelling fancy to kill
- butlers. Things culminated in a pistol shot. And then he found himself
- sitting on the landing beside a disgracefully dishevelled manservant,
- and his host was running downstairs to them with a revolver in his hand.
- On occasion Lord Moggeridge could produce a tremendous voice. He did so
- now. For a moment he stared panting at Sir Peter, and then emphasized by
- a pointing finger came the voice. Never had it been so charged with
- emotion.
- “What does this _mean_, you, Sir?” he shouted. “What does this mean?”
- It was exactly what Sir Peter had intended to say.
- § 5
- Explanations are detestable things.
- And anyhow it isn’t right to address your host as “You, Sir.”
- § 6
- Throughout the evening the persuasion had grown in Lady Laxton’s mind
- that all was not going well with the Lord Chancellor. It was impossible
- to believe he was enjoying himself. But she did not know how to give
- things a turn for the better. Clever women would have known, but she was
- so convinced she was not clever that she did not even try.
- Thing after thing had gone wrong.
- How was she to know that there were two sorts of philosophy,—quite
- different? She had thought philosophy was philosophy. But it seemed that
- there were these two sorts, if not more; a round large sort that talked
- about the Absolute and was scornfully superior and rather irascible, and
- a jabby-pointed sort that called people “Tender” or “Tough,” and was
- generally much too familiar. To bring them together was just mixing
- trouble. There ought to be little books for hostesses explaining these
- things....
- Then it was extraordinary that the Lord Chancellor, who was so
- tremendously large and clever, wouldn’t go and talk to Mrs. Rampound
- Pilby, who was also so tremendously large and clever. Repeatedly Lady
- Laxton had tried to get them into touch with one another. Until at last
- the Lord Chancellor had said distinctly and deliberately, when she had
- suggested his going across to the eminent writer, “God forbid!” Her
- dream of a large clever duologue that she could afterwards recall with
- pleasure was altogether shattered. She thought the Lord Chancellor
- uncommonly hard to please. These weren’t the only people for him. Why
- couldn’t he chat party secrets with Slinker Bond or say things to Lord
- Woodenhouse? You could say anything you liked to Lord Woodenhouse. Or
- talk with Mr. Timbre. Mrs. Timbre had given him an excellent opening;
- she had asked, “Wasn’t it a dreadful anxiety always to have the Great
- Seal to mind?” He had simply _grunted_.... And then why did he keep on
- looking so _dangerously_ at Captain Douglas?...
- Perhaps to-morrow things would take a turn for the better....
- One can at least be hopeful. Even if one is not _clever_ one can be
- that....
- From such thoughts as these it was that this unhappy hostess was roused
- by a sound of smashing glass, a rumpus, and a pistol shot.
- She stood up, she laid her hand on her heart, she said “_Oh!_” and
- gripped her dressing-table for support....
- After a long time and when it seemed that it was now nothing more than a
- hubbub of voices, in which her husband’s could be distinguished clearly,
- she crept out very softly upon the upper landing.
- She perceived her cousin, Captain Douglas, looking extremely fair
- and frail and untrustworthy in a much too gorgeous kimono
- dressing-gown of embroidered Japanese silk. “I can assure you, my
- lord,” he was saying in a strange high-pitched deliberate voice,
- “on—my—word—of—honour—as—a—soldier, that I know absolutely nothing
- about it.”
- “Sure it wasn’t all imagination, my lord?” Sir Peter asked with his
- inevitable infelicity....
- She decided to lean over the balustrading and ask very quietly and
- clearly:
- “Lord Moggeridge, please! is anything the matter?”
- § 6
- All human beings are egotists, but there is no egotism to compare with
- the egotism of the very young.
- Bealby was so much the centre of his world that he was incapable of any
- interpretation of this shouting and uproar, this smashing of decanters
- and firing of pistol shots, except in reference to himself. He supposed
- it to be a Hue and Cry. He supposed that he was being hunted—hunted by a
- pack of great butlers hounded on by the irreparably injured Thomas. The
- thought of upstairs gentlefolks passed quite out of his mind. He
- snatched up a faked Syrian dagger that lay, in the capacity of a paper
- knife, on the study table, concealed himself under the chintz valance of
- a sofa, adjusted its rumpled skirts neatly, and awaited the issue of
- events.
- For a time events did not issue. They remained talking noisily upon the
- great staircase. Bealby could not hear what was said, but most of what
- was said appeared to be flat contradiction.
- “Perchance,” whispered Bealby to himself, gathering courage, “perchance
- we have eluded them.... A breathing space....”
- At last a woman’s voice mingled with the others and seemed a little to
- assuage them....
- Then it seemed to Bealby that they were dispersing to beat the house for
- him. “Good-night _again_ then,” said someone.
- That puzzled him, but he decided it was a “blind.” He remained very,
- very still.
- He heard a clicking in the apartment—the blue parlour it was
- called—between the study and the dining-room. Electric light?
- Then some one came into the study. Bealby’s eye was as close to the
- ground as he could get it. He was breathless, he moved his head with an
- immense circumspection. The valance was translucent but not transparent,
- below it there was a crack of vision, a strip of carpet, the castors of
- chairs. Among these things he perceived feet—not ankles, it did not go
- up to that, but just feet. Large flattish feet. A pair. They stood
- still, and Bealby’s hand lighted on the hilt of his dagger.
- The person above the feet seemed to be surveying the room or reflecting.
- “Drunk!... Old fool’s either drunk or mad! That’s about the truth of
- it,” said a voice.
- Mergleson! Angry, but parroty and unmistakable.
- The feet went across to the table and there were faint sounds of
- refreshment, discreetly administered. Then a moment of profound
- stillness....
- “Ah!” said the voice at last, a voice renewed.
- Then the feet went to the passage door, halted in the doorway. There was
- a double click. The lights went out. Bealby was in absolute darkness.
- Then a distant door closed and silence followed upon the dark....
- Mr. Mergleson descended to a pantry ablaze with curiosity.
- “The Lord Chancellor’s going dotty,” said Mr. Mergleson, replying to the
- inevitable question. “_That’s_ what’s up.” ...
- “I tried to save the blessed syphon,” said Mr. Mergleson, pursuing his
- narrative, “and ’e sprang on me like a leppard. I suppose ’e thought I
- wanted to take it away from ’im. ’E’d broke a glass already. ’_Ow_,—I
- _don’t_ know. There it was, lying on the landing....”
- “’Ere’s where ’e bit my ’and,” said Mr. Mergleson....
- A curious little side-issue occurred to Thomas. “Where’s young Kicker
- all this time?” he asked.
- “Lord!” said Mr. Mergleson, “all them other things; they clean drove ’im
- out of my ’ed. I suppose ’e’s up there, hiding somewhere....”
- He paused. His eye consulted the eye of Thomas.
- “’E’s got behind a curtain or something,” said Mr. Mergleson....
- “Queer where ’e can ’ave got to,” said Mr. Mergleson....
- “Can’t be bothered about ’im,” said Mr. Mergleson.
- “I expect he’ll sneak down to ’is room when things are quiet,” said
- Thomas, after reflection.
- “No good going and looking for ’im now,” said Mr. Mergleson. “Things
- upstairs,—they _got_ to settle down....”
- But in the small hours Mr. Mergleson awakened and thought of Bealby and
- wondered whether he was in bed. This became so great an uneasiness that
- about the hour of dawn he got up and went along the passage to Bealby’s
- compartment. Bealby was not there and his bed had not been slept in.
- That sinister sense of gathering misfortunes which comes to all of us at
- times in the small hours, was so strong in the mind of Mr. Mergleson
- that he went on and told Thomas of this disconcerting fact. Thomas woke
- with difficulty and rather crossly, but sat up at last, alive to the
- gravity of Mr. Mergleson’s mood.
- “If ’e’s found hiding about upstairs after all this upset,” said Mr.
- Mergleson, and left the rest of the sentence to a sympathetic
- imagination.
- “Now it’s light,” said Mr. Mergleson after a slight pause, “I think we
- better just go round and ’ave a look for ’im. Both of us.”
- So Thomas clad himself provisionally, and the two man-servants went
- upstairs very softly and began a series of furtive sweeping
- movements—very much in the spirit of Lord Kitchener’s historical
- sweeping movements in the Transvaal—through the stately old rooms in
- which Bealby must be lurking....
- § 8
- Man is the most restless of animals. There is an incessant urgency in
- his nature. He never knows when he is well off. And so it was that
- Bealby’s comparative security under the sofa became presently too
- irksome to be endured. He seemed to himself to stay there for ages, but
- as a matter of fact, he stayed there only twenty minutes. Then with eyes
- tempered to the darkness he first struck out an alert attentive head,
- then crept out and remained for the space of half a minute on all fours
- surveying the indistinct blacknesses about him.
- Then he knelt up. Then he stood up. Then with arms extended and cautious
- steps he began an exploration of the apartment.
- The passion for exploration grows with what it feeds upon. Presently
- Bealby was feeling his way into the blue parlour and then round by its
- shuttered and curtained windows to the dining-room. His head was now
- full of the idea of some shelter, more permanent, less pervious to
- housemaids, than that sofa. He knew enough now of domestic routines to
- know that upstairs in the early morning was much routed by housemaids.
- He found many perplexing turns and corners, and finally got into the
- dining-room fireplace where it was very dark and kicked against some
- fire-irons. That made his heart beat fast for a time. Then groping on
- past it, he found in the darkness what few people could have found in
- the day, the stud that released the panel that hid the opening of the
- way that led to the priest hole. He felt the thing open, and halted
- perplexed. In that corner there wasn’t a ray of light. For a long time
- he was trying to think what this opening could be, and then he concluded
- it was some sort of back way from downstairs.... Well, anyhow it was all
- exploring. With an extreme gingerliness he got himself through the
- panel. He closed it almost completely behind him.
- Careful investigation brought him to the view that he was in a narrow
- passage of brick or stone that came in a score of paces to a spiral
- staircase going both up and down. Up this he went, and presently
- breathed cool night air and had a glimpse of stars through a narrow
- slit-like window almost blocked by ivy. Then—what was very
- disagreeable—something scampered.
- When Bealby’s heart recovered he went on up again.
- He came to the priest hole, a capacious cell six feet square with a
- bench bed and a little table and chair. It had a small door upon the
- stairs that was open and a niche cupboard. Here he remained for a time.
- Then restlessness made him explore a cramped passage, he had to crawl
- along it for some yards, that came presently into a curious space with
- wood on one side and stone on the other. Then ahead, most blessed thing!
- he saw light.
- He went blundering toward it and then stopped appalled. From the other
- side of this wooden wall to the right of him had come a voice.
- “Come in!” said the voice. A rich masculine voice that seemed scarcely
- two yards away.
- Bealby became rigid. Then after a long interval he moved—as softly as he
- could.
- The voice soliloquized.
- Bealby listened intently, and then when all was still again crept
- forward two paces more towards the gleam. It was a peephole.
- The unseen speaker was walking about. Bealby listened, and the sound of
- his beating heart mingled with the pad, pad, of slippered footsteps.
- Then with a brilliant effort his eye was at the chink. All was still
- again. For a time he was perplexed by what he saw, a large pink shining
- dome, against a deep greenish grey background. At the base of the dome
- was a kind of interrupted hedge, brown and leafless....
- Then he realized that he was looking at the top of a head and two
- enormous eyebrows. The rest was hidden....
- Nature surprised Bealby into a penetrating sniff.
- “Now,” said the occupant of the room, and suddenly he was standing
- up—Bealby saw a long hairy neck sticking out of a dressing-gown—and
- walking to the side of the room. “I won’t stand it,” said the great
- voice, “I won’t stand it. Ape’s foolery!”
- Then the Lord Chancellor began rapping at the panelling about his
- apartment.
- “Hollow! It all sounds hollow.”
- Only after a long interval did he resume his writing....
- All night long that rat behind the wainscot troubled the Lord
- Chancellor. Whenever he spoke, whenever he moved about, it was still;
- whenever he composed himself to write it began to rustle and blunder.
- Again and again it sniffed,—an annoying kind of sniff. At last the Lord
- Chancellor gave up his philosophical relaxation and went to bed, turned
- out the lights and attempted sleep, but this only intensified his sense
- of an uneasy, sniffing presence close to him. When the light was out it
- seemed to him that this Thing, whatever it was, instantly came into the
- room and set the floor creaking and snapping. A Thing perpetually
- attempting something and perpetually thwarted....
- The Lord Chancellor did not sleep a wink. The first feeble infiltration
- of day found him sitting up in bed, wearily wrathful.... And now surely
- someone was going along the passage outside!
- A great desire to hurt somebody very much seized upon the Lord
- Chancellor. Perhaps he might hurt that dismal _farceur_ upon the
- landing! No doubt it was Douglas sneaking back to his own room after the
- night’s efforts.
- The Lord Chancellor slipped on his dressing-gown of purple silk. Very
- softly indeed did he open his bedroom door and very warily peep out. He
- heard the soft pad of feet upon the staircase.
- He crept across the broad passage to the beautiful old balustrading.
- Down below he saw Mergleson—Mergleson again!—in a shameful
- deshabille—going like a snake, like a slinking cat, like an assassin,
- into the door of the study. Rage filled the great man’s soul. Gathering
- up the skirts of his dressing-gown he started in a swift yet noiseless
- pursuit.
- He followed Mergleson through the little parlour and into the
- dining-room, and then he saw it all! There was a panel open, and
- Mergleson very cautiously going in. Of course! They had got at him
- through the priest hole. They had been playing on his nerves. All night
- they had been doing it—no doubt in relays. The whole house was in this
- conspiracy.
- With his eyebrows spread like the wings of a fighting cock the Lord
- Chancellor in five vast noiseless strides had crossed the intervening
- space and gripped the butler by his collarless shirt as he was
- disappearing. It was like a hawk striking a sparrow. Mergleson felt
- himself clutched, glanced over his shoulder and, seeing that fierce
- familiar face again close to his own, pitiless, vindictive, lost all
- sense of human dignity and yelled like a lost soul....
- § 9
- Sir Peter Laxton was awakened from an uneasy sleep by the opening of the
- dressing-room door that connected his room with his wife’s.
- He sat up astonished and stared at her white face, its pallor
- exaggerated by the cold light of dawn.
- “Peter,” she said, “I’m sure there’s something more going on.”
- “Something more going on?”
- “Something—shouting and swearing.”
- “You don’t mean—?”
- She nodded. “The Lord Chancellor,” she said, in an awe-stricken whisper.
- “He’s at it again. Downstairs in the dining-room.”
- Sir Peter seemed disposed at first to receive this quite passively. Then
- he flashed into extravagant wrath. “I’m _damned_,” he cried, jumping
- violently out of bed, “if I’m going to stand this! Not if he was a
- hundred Lord Chancellors! He’s turning the place into a bally lunatic
- asylum. _Once_—one might excuse. But to start in again.... _What’s
- that?_”
- They both stood still listening. Faintly yet quite distinctly came the
- agonized cry of some imperfectly educated person,—“’Elp!”
- “Here! Where’s my trousers?” cried Sir Peter. “He’s murdering Mergleson.
- There isn’t a moment to lose.”
- § 10
- Until Sir Peter returned Lady Laxton sat quite still just as he had left
- her on his bed, aghast.
- She could not even pray.
- The sun had still to rise; the room was full of that cold weak inky
- light, light without warmth, knowledge without faith, existence without
- courage, that creeps in before the day. She waited.... In such a mood
- women have waited for massacre....
- Downstairs a raucous shouting....
- She thought of her happy childhood upon the Yorkshire wolds, before the
- idea of week-end parties had entered her mind. The heather. The little
- birds. Kind things. A tear ran down her cheek....
- § 11
- Then Sir Peter stood before her again, alive still, but breathless and
- greatly ruffled.
- She put her hands to her heart. She would be brave.
- “Yes,” she said. “Tell me.”
- “He’s as mad as a hatter,” said Sir Peter.
- She nodded for more. She knew that.
- “Has he—_killed_ anyone?” she whispered.
- “He looked uncommonly like trying,” said Sir Peter.
- She nodded, her lips tightly compressed.
- “Says Douglas will either have to leave the house or he does.”
- “But—Douglas!”
- “I know, but he won’t hear a word.”
- “But _why_ Douglas?”
- “I tell you he’s as mad as a hatter. Got persecution mania. People
- tapping and bells ringing under his pillow all night—that sort of
- idea.... And furious. I tell you,—he frightened me. He was _awful_. He’s
- given Mergleson a black eye. Hit him, you know. With his fist. Caught
- him in the passage to the priest hole—how they got there _I_ don’t
- know—and went for him like a madman.”
- “But what has Douglas done?”
- “I know. I asked him, but he won’t listen. He’s just off his head....
- Says Douglas has got the whole household trying to work a ghost on him.
- I tell you—he’s off his nut.”
- Husband and wife looked at each other....
- “Of course if Douglas didn’t mind just going off to oblige me,” said Sir
- Peter at last....
- “It might calm him,” he explained.... “You see, it’s all so infernally
- awkward....”
- “Is he back in his room?”
- “Yes. Waiting for me to decide about Douglas. Walking up and down.”
- For a little while their minds remained prostrate and inactive.
- “I’d been so looking forward to the lunch,” she said with a joyless
- smile. “The county—”
- She could not go on.
- “You know,” said Sir Peter, “one thing,—I’ll see to it myself. I won’t
- have him have a single drop of liquor more. If we have to search his
- room.”
- “What I shall say to him at breakfast,” she said, “I don’t know.”
- Sir Peter reflected. “There’s no earthly reason why you should be
- brought into it at all. Your line is to know nothing about it. _Show_
- him you know nothing about it. Ask him—ask him if he’s had a good
- night....”
- CHAPTER III
- THE WANDERERS
- § 1
- Never had the gracious eastward face of Shonts looked more beautiful
- than it did on the morning of the Lord Chancellor’s visit. It glowed as
- translucent as amber lit by flames, its two towers were pillars of pale
- gold. It looked over its slopes and parapets upon a great valley of
- mist-barred freshness through which the distant river shone like a snake
- of light. The south-west façade was still in the shadow, and the ivy
- hung from it darkly greener than the greenest green. The stained-glass
- windows of the old chapel reflected the sunrise as though lamps were
- burning inside. Along the terrace a pensive peacock trailed his sheathed
- splendours through the dew.
- Amidst the ivy was a fuss of birds.
- And presently there was pushed out from amidst the ivy at the foot of
- the eastward tower a little brownish buff thing, that seemed as natural
- there as a squirrel or a rabbit. It was a head,—a ruffled human head. It
- remained still for a moment contemplating the calm spaciousness of
- terrace and garden and countryside. Then it emerged further and rotated
- and surveyed the house above it. Its expression was one of alert
- caution. Its natural freshness and innocence were a little marred by an
- enormous transverse smudge, a bar-sinister of smut, and the elfin
- delicacy of the left ear was festooned with a cobweb—probably a genuine
- antique. It was the face of Bealby.
- He was considering the advisability of leaving Shonts—for good.
- Presently his decision was made. His hands and shoulders appeared
- following his head, and then a dusty but undamaged Bealby was running
- swiftly towards the corner of the shrubbery. He crouched lest at any
- moment that pursuing pack of butlers should see him and give tongue. In
- another moment he was hidden from the house altogether, and rustling his
- way through a thicket of budding rhododendra. After those dirty passages
- the morning air was wonderfully sweet—but just a trifle hungry.
- Grazing deer saw Bealby fly across the park, stared at him for a time
- with great gentle unintelligent eyes, and went on feeding.
- They saw him stop ever and again. He was snatching at mushrooms, that he
- devoured forthwith as he sped on.
- On the edge of the beech-woods he paused and glanced back at Shonts.
- Then his eyes rested for a moment on the clump of trees through which
- one saw a scrap of the head gardener’s cottage, a bit of the garden
- wall....
- A physiognomist might have detected a certain lack of self-confidence in
- Bealby’s eyes.
- But his spirit was not to be quelled. Slowly, joylessly perhaps, but
- with a grave determination, he raised his hand in that prehistoric
- gesture of the hand and face by which youth, since ever there was youth,
- has asserted the integrity of its soul against established and
- predominant things.
- “_Ketch_ me!” said Bealby.
- § 2
- Bealby left Shonts about half-past four in the morning. He went westward
- because he liked the company of his shadow and was amused at first by
- its vast length. By half-past eight he had covered ten miles, and he was
- rather bored by his shadow. He had eaten nine raw mushrooms, two green
- apples and a quantity of unripe blackberries. None of these things
- seemed quite at home in him. And he had discovered himself to be wearing
- slippers. They were stout carpet slippers, but still they were
- slippers,—and the road was telling on them. At the ninth mile the left
- one began to give on the outer seam. He got over a stile into a path
- that ran through the corner of a wood, and there he met a smell of
- frying bacon that turned his very soul to gastric juice.
- He stopped short and sniffed the air—and the air itself was sizzling.
- “Oh, Krikey,” said Bealby, manifestly to the Spirit of the World. “This
- is a bit too strong. I wasn’t thinking much before.”
- Then he saw something bright yellow and bulky just over the hedge.
- From this it was that the sound of frying came.
- He went to the hedge, making no effort to conceal himself. Outside a
- great yellow caravan with dainty little windows stood a largish dark
- woman in a deerstalker hat, a short brown skirt, a large white apron and
- spatterdashes (among other things), frying bacon and potatoes in a
- frying pan. She was very red in the face, and the frying pan was
- spitting at her as frying pans do at a timid cook....
- Quite mechanically Bealby scrambled through the hedge and drew nearer
- this divine smell. The woman scrutinized him for a moment, and then
- blinking and averting her face went on with her cookery.
- Bealby came quite close to her and remained, noting the bits of potato
- that swam about in the pan, the jolly curling of the rashers, the
- dancing of the bubbles, the hymning splash and splutter of the happy
- fat....
- (If it should ever fall to my lot to be cooked, may I be fried in
- potatoes and butter. May I be fried with potatoes and good butter made
- from the milk of the cow. God send I am spared boiling; the prison of
- the pot, the rattling lid, the evil darkness, the greasy water....)
- “I suppose,” said the lady prodding with her fork at the bacon, “I
- suppose you call yourself a Boy.”
- “Yes, miss,” said Bealby.
- “Have you ever fried?”
- “I could, miss.”
- “Like this?”
- “Better”
- “Just lay hold of this handle—for it’s scorching the skin off my face I
- am.” She seemed to think for a moment and added, “entirely.”
- In silence Bealby grasped that exquisite smell by the handle, he took
- the fork from her hand and put his hungry eager nose over the seething
- mess. It wasn’t only bacon; there were onions, onions giving it—an
- _edge_! It cut to the quick of appetite. He could have wept with the
- intensity of his sensations.
- A voice almost as delicious as the smell came out of the caravan window
- behind Bealby’s head.
- “_Ju_-dy!” cried the voice.
- “Here!—I mean,—it’s here I am,” said the lady in the deerstalker.
- “Judy—you didn’t take my stockings for your own by any chance?”
- The lady in the deerstalker gave way to delighted horror. “Sssh,
- Mavourneen!” she cried—she was one of that large class of amiable women
- who are more Irish than they need be—“there’s a Boy here!”
- § 3
- There was indeed an almost obsequiously industrious and obliging Boy. An
- hour later he was no longer a Boy but _the_ Boy, and three friendly
- women were regarding him with a merited approval.
- He had done the frying, renewed a waning fire with remarkable skill and
- dispatch, reboiled a neglected kettle in the shortest possible time,
- laid almost without direction a simple meal, very exactly set out
- campstools and cleaned the frying pan marvellously. Hardly had they
- taken their portions of that appetizing savouriness, than he had whipped
- off with that implement, gone behind the caravan, busied himself there,
- and returned with the pan—glittering bright. Himself if possible
- brighter. One cheek indeed shone with an animated glow.
- “But wasn’t there some of the bacon and stuff left?” asked the lady in
- the deerstalker.
- “I didn’t think it was wanted, Miss,” said Bealby. “So I cleared it up.”
- He met understanding in her eye. He questioned her expression.
- “Mayn’t I wash up for you, miss?” he asked to relieve the tension.
- He washed up, swiftly and cleanly. He had never been able to wash up to
- Mr. Mergleson’s satisfaction before, but now he did everything Mr.
- Mergleson had ever told him. He asked where to put the things away and
- he put them away. Then he asked politely if there was anything else he
- could do for them. Questioned, he said he liked doing things. “You
- haven’t,” said the lady in the deerstalker, “a taste for cleaning
- boots?”
- Bealby declared he had.
- “Surely,” said a voice that Bealby adored, “’tis an angel from heaven.”
- He had a taste for cleaning boots! This was an extraordinary thing for
- Bealby to say. But a great change had come to him in the last half-hour.
- He was violently anxious to do things, any sort of things, servile
- things, for a particular person. He was in love.
- The owner of the beautiful voice had come out of the caravan, she had
- stood for a moment in the doorway before descending the steps to the
- ground and the soul of Bealby had bowed down before her in instant
- submission. Never had he seen anything so lovely. Her straight slender
- body was sheathed in blue; fair hair, a little tinged with red, poured
- gloriously back from her broad forehead, and she had the sweetest eyes
- in the world. One hand lifted her dress from her feet; the other rested
- on the lintel of the caravan door. She looked at him and smiled.
- So for two years she had looked and smiled across the footlights to the
- Bealby in mankind. She had smiled now on her entrance out of habit. She
- took the effect upon Bealby as a foregone conclusion.
- Then she had looked to make sure that everything was ready before she
- descended.
- “How good it smells, Judy!” she had said.
- “I’ve had a helper,” said the woman who wore spats.
- That time the blue-eyed lady had smiled at him quite definitely....
- The third member of the party had appeared unobserved; the irradiations
- of the beautiful lady had obscured her. Bealby discovered her about. She
- was bareheaded; she wore a simple grey dress with a Norfolk jacket, and
- she had a pretty clear white profile under black hair. She answered to
- the name of “Winnie.” The beautiful lady was Madeleine. They made little
- obscure jokes with each other and praised the morning ardently. “This is
- the best place of all,” said Madeleine.
- “All night,” said Winnie, “not a single mosquito.”
- None of these three ladies made any attempt to conceal the sincerity of
- their hunger or their appreciation of Bealby’s assistance. How good a
- thing is appreciation! Here he was doing, with joy and pride and an
- eager excellence, the very services he had done so badly under the
- cuffings of Mergleson and Thomas....
- § 4
- And now Bealby, having been regarded with approval for some moments and
- discussed in tantalizing undertones, was called upon to explain himself.
- “Boy,” said the lady in the deerstalker, who was evidently the leader
- and still more evidently the spokeswoman of the party, “come here.”
- “Yes, miss.” He put down the boot he was cleaning on the caravan step.
- “In the first place, know by these presents, I am a married woman.”
- “Yes, miss.”
- “And miss is not a seemly mode of address for me.”
- “No, miss. I mean—” Bealby hung for a moment and by the happiest of
- accidents, a scrap of his instruction at Shonts came up in his mind.
- “No,” he said, “your—ladyship.”
- A great light shone on the spokeswoman’s face. “Not yet, my child,” she
- said, “not yet. He hasn’t done his duty by me. I am—a simple Mum.”
- Bealby was intelligently silent.
- “Say—Yes, Mum.”
- “Yes, Mum,” said Bealby and everybody laughed very agreeably.
- “And now,” said the lady, taking pleasure in her words, “know by these
- presents—By the bye, what is your name?”
- Bealby scarcely hesitated. “Dick Mal-travers, Mum,” he said and almost
- added, “The Dauntless Daredevil of the Diamond-fields Horse,” which was
- the second title.
- “Dick will do,” said the lady who was called Judy, and added suddenly
- and very amusingly: “You may keep the rest.”
- (These were the sort of people Bealby liked. The _right_ sort.)
- “Well, Dick, we want to know, have you ever been in service?”
- It was sudden. But Bealby was equal to it. “Only for a day or two,
- miss—I mean, Mum,—just to be useful.”
- “_Were_ you useful?”
- Bealby tried to think whether he had been, and could recall nothing but
- the face of Thomas with the fork hanging from it. “I did my best, Mum,”
- he said impartially.
- “And all that is over?”
- “Yes, Mum.”
- “And you’re at home again and out of employment?”
- “Yes, Mum.”
- “Do you live near here?”
- “No—leastways, not very far.”
- “With your father.”
- “Stepfather, Mum. I’m a Norfan.”
- “Well, how would you like to come with us for a few days and help with
- things? Seven-and-sixpence a week.”
- Bealby’s face was eloquent.
- “Would your stepfather object?”
- Bealby considered. “I don’t think he would,” he said.
- “You’d better go round and ask him.”
- “I—suppose—yes,” he said.
- “And get a few things.”
- “Things, Mum?”
- “Collars and things. You needn’t bring a great box for such a little
- while.”
- “Yes, Mum....”
- He hovered rather undecidedly.
- “Better run along now. Our man and horse will be coming presently. We
- shan’t be able to wait for you long....”
- Bealby assumed a sudden briskness and departed.
- At the gate of the field he hesitated almost imperceptibly and then
- directed his face to the Sabbath stillness of the village.
- Perplexity corrugated his features. The stepfather’s permission
- presented no difficulties, but it was more difficult about the luggage.
- A voice called after him.
- “Yes, Mum?” he said attentive and hopeful. Perhaps—somehow—they wouldn’t
- want luggage.
- “You’ll want Boots. You’ll have to walk by the caravan, you know. You’ll
- want some good stout Boots.”
- “All right, Mum,” he said with a sorrowful break in his voice. He waited
- a few moments but nothing more came. He went on—very slowly. He had
- forgotten about the boots.
- That defeated him....
- It is hard to be refused admission to Paradise for the want of a
- hand-bag and a pair of walking-boots....
- § 5
- Bealby was by no means certain that he was going back to that caravan.
- He wanted to do so quite painfully, but—
- He’d just look a fool going back without boots and—nothing on earth
- would reconcile him to the idea of looking a fool in the eyes of that
- beautiful woman in blue.
- “Dick,” he whispered to himself despondently, “Daredevil Dick!” (A more
- miserable-looking face you never set eyes on.) “It’s all up with your
- little schemes, Dick, my boy. You _must_ get a bag—and nothing on earth
- will get you a bag.”
- He paid little heed to the village through which he wandered. He knew
- there were no bags there. Chance rather than any volition of his own
- guided him down a side path that led to the nearly dry bed of a little
- rivulet, and there he sat down on some weedy grass under a group of
- willows. It was an untidy place that needed all the sunshine of the
- morning to be tolerable; one of those places where stinging nettles take
- heart and people throw old kettles, broken gallipots, jaded gravel,
- grass cuttings, rusty rubbish, old boots—.
- For a time Bealby’s eyes rested on the objects with an entire lack of
- interest.
- Then he was reminded of his not so very remote childhood when he had
- found an old boot and made it into a castle....
- Presently he got up and walked across to the rubbish heap and surveyed
- its treasures with a quickened intelligence. He picked up a widowed boot
- and weighed it in his hand.
- He dropped it abruptly, turned about and hurried back into the village
- street.
- He had ideas, two ideas, one for the luggage and one for the boots....
- If only he could manage it. Hope beat his great pinions in the heart of
- Bealby.
- Sunday! The shops were shut. Yes, that was a fresh obstacle. He’d
- forgotten that.
- The public-house stood bashfully open, the shy uninviting openness of
- Sunday morning before closing time, but public-houses, alas! at all
- hours are forbidden to little boys. And besides he wasn’t likely to get
- what he wanted in a public-house; he wanted a shop, a general shop. And
- here before him was the general shop—and its door ajar! His desire
- carried him over the threshold. The Sabbatical shutters made the place
- dark and cool, and the smell of bacon and cheese and chandleries, the
- very spirit of grocery, calm and unhurried, was cool and Sabbatical,
- too, as if it sat there for the day in its best clothes. And a pleasant
- woman was talking over the counter to a thin and worried one who carried
- a bundle.
- Their intercourse had a flavour of emergency, and they both stopped
- abruptly at the appearance of Bealby.
- His desire, his craving was now so great that it had altogether subdued
- the natural wiriness of his appearance. He looked meek, he looked good,
- he was swimming in propitiation and tender with respect. He produced an
- effect of being much smaller. He had got nice eyes. His movements were
- refined and his manners perfect.
- “Not doing business to-day, my boy,” said the pleasant woman.
- “Oh, _please_ ’m,” he said from his heart.
- “Sunday, you know.”
- “Oh, _please_ ’m. If you could just give me a nold sheet of paper ’m,
- please.”
- “What for?” asked the pleasant woman.
- “Just to wrap something up ’m.”
- She reflected, and natural goodness had its way with her.
- “A nice _big_ bit?” said the woman.
- “Please ’m.”
- “Would you like it brown?”
- “Oh, _please_ ’m.”
- “And you got some string??
- “Only cottony stuff,” said Bealby, disembowelling a trouser pocket. “Wiv
- knots. But I dessay I can manage.”
- “You’d better have a bit of good string with it, my dear,” said the
- pleasant woman, whose generosity was now fairly on the run, “Then you
- can do your parcel up nice and tidy....”
- § 6
- The white horse was already in the shafts of the caravan, and William, a
- deaf and clumsy man of uncertain age and a vast sharp nosiness, was
- lifting in the basket of breakfast gear and grumbling in undertones at
- the wickedness and unfairness of travelling on Sunday, when Bealby
- returned to gladden three waiting women.
- “Ah!” said the inconspicuous lady, “I knew he’d come.”
- “Look at his poor little precious parsivel,” said the actress.
- Regarded as luggage it was rather pitiful; a knobby, brown paper parcel
- about the size—to be perfectly frank—of a tin can, two old boots and
- some grass, very carefully folded and tied up,—and carried gingerly.
- “But—” the lady in the deerstalker began, and then paused.
- “Dick,” she said, as he came nearer, “where’s your boots?”
- “Oh please, Mum,” said the dauntless one, “they was away being mended.
- My stepfather thought perhaps you wouldn’t mind if I didn’t have boots.
- He said perhaps I might be able to get some more boots out of my
- salary....”
- The lady in the deerstalker looked alarmingly uncertain and Bealby
- controlled infinite distresses.
- “Haven’t you got a mother, Dick?” asked the beautiful voice suddenly.
- Its owner abounded in such spasmodic curiosities.
- “She—last year....” Matricide is a painful business at any time. And
- just as you see, in spite of every effort you have made, the jolliest
- lark in the world slipping out of your reach. And the sweet voice so
- sorry for him! So sorry! Bealby suddenly veiled his face with his elbow
- and gave way to honourable tears....
- A simultaneous desire to make him happy, help him to forget his loss,
- possessed three women....
- “That’ll be all right, Dick,” said the lady in the deerstalker, patting
- his shoulder. “We’ll get you some boots to-morrow. And to-day you must
- sit up beside William and spare your feet. You’ll have to go to the inns
- with him....”
- “It’s wonderful, the elasticity of youth,” said the inconspicuous lady
- five minutes later. “To see that boy now, you’d never imagine he’d had a
- sorrow in the world.”
- “Now get up there,” said the lady who was the leader. “We shall walk
- across the fields and join you later. You understand where you are to
- wait for us, William?”
- She came nearer and shouted, “You understand, William?”
- William nodded ambiguously. “’Ent a _Vool_,” he said.
- The ladies departed. “_You’ll_ be all right, Dick,” cried the actress
- kindly.
- He sat up where he had been put, trying to look as Orphan Dick as
- possible after all that had occurred.
- § 7
- “Do you know the wind on the heath—have you lived the Gypsy life? Have
- you spoken, wanderers yourselves, with ‘Romany chi and Romany chal’ on
- the wind-swept moors at home or abroad? Have you tramped the broad
- highways, and, at close of day, pitched your tent near a running stream
- and cooked your supper by starlight over a fire of pinewood? Do you know
- the dreamless sleep of the wanderer at peace with himself and all the
- world?”
- For most of us the answer to these questions of the Amateur Camping Club
- is in the negative.
- Yet every year the call of the road, the Borrovian glamour, draws away a
- certain small number of the imaginative from the grosser comforts of a
- complex civilization, takes them out into tents and caravans and
- intimate communion with nature, and, incidentally, with various
- ingenious appliances designed to meet the needs of cooking in a breeze.
- It is an adventure to which high spirits and great expectations must be
- brought, it is an experience in proximity which few friendships
- survive—and altogether very great fun.
- The life of breezy freedom resolves itself in practice chiefly into
- washing up and an anxious search for permission to camp. One learns how
- rich and fruitful our world can be in bystanders, and how easy it is to
- forget essential groceries....
- The heart of the joy of it lies in its perfect detachment. There you are
- in the morning sunlight under the trees that overhang the road, going
- whither you will. Everything you need you have. Your van creaks along at
- your side. You are outside inns, outside houses, a home, a community, an
- _imperium in imperio_. At any moment you may draw out of the traffic
- upon the wayside grass and say, “Here—until the owner catches us at
- it—is home!” At any time—subject to the complaisance of William and your
- being able to find him—you may inspan and go onward. The world is all
- before you. You taste the complete yet leisurely insouciance of the
- snail.
- And two of those three ladies had other satisfactions to supplement
- their pleasures. They both adored Madeleine Philips. She was not only
- perfectly sweet and lovely, but she was known to be so; she had that
- most potent charm for women, prestige. They had got her all to
- themselves. They could show now how false is the old idea that there is
- no friendship nor conversation among women. They were full of wit and
- pretty things for one another and snatches of song in between. And they
- were free too from their “menfolk.” They were doing without them. Dr.
- Bowles, the husband of the lady in the deerstalker, was away in Ireland,
- and Mr. Geedge, the lord of the inconspicuous woman, was golfing at
- Sandwich. And Madeleine Philips, it was understood, was only too glad to
- shake herself free from the crowd of admirers that hovered about her
- like wasps about honey....
- Yet after three days each one had thoughts about the need of helpfulness
- and more particularly about washing-up, that were better left unspoken,
- that were indeed conspicuously unspoken beneath their merry give and
- take, like a black and silent river flowing beneath a bridge of ivory.
- And each of them had a curious feeling in the midst of all this fresh
- free behaviour, as though the others were not listening sufficiently, as
- though something of the effect of them was being wasted. Madeleine’s
- smiles became rarer; at times she was almost impassive, and Judy
- preserved nearly all her wit and verbal fireworks for the times when
- they passed through villages.... Mrs. Geedge was less visibly affected.
- She had thoughts of writing a book about it all, telling in the gayest,
- most provocative way, full of the quietest quaintest humour, just how
- jolly they had been. Menfolk would read it. This kept a little thin
- smile upon her lips....
- As an audience William was tough stuff. He pretended deafness; he never
- looked. He did not want to look. He seemed always to be holding his nose
- in front of his face to prevent his observation—as men pray into their
- hats at church. But once Judy Bowles overheard a phrase or so in his
- private soliloquy. “Pack o’ wimmin,” William was saying. “Dratted
- petticoats. _Dang_ ’em. That’s what I say to ’um. _Dang_ ’em!”
- As a matter of fact, he just fell short of saying it to them. But his
- manner said it....
- You begin to see how acceptable an addition was young Bealby to this
- company. He was not only helpful, immensely helpful, in things material,
- a vigorous and at first a careful washer-up, an energetic boot-polisher,
- a most serviceable cleaner and tidier of things, but he was also belief
- and support. Undisguisedly he thought the caravan the loveliest thing
- going, and its three mistresses the most wonderful of people. His alert
- eyes followed them about full of an unstinted admiration and interest;
- he pricked his ears when Judy opened her mouth, he handed things to Mrs.
- Geedge. He made no secret about Madeleine. When she spoke to him, he
- lost his breath, he reddened and was embarrassed....
- They went across the fields saying that he was the luckiest of finds. It
- was fortunate his people had been so ready to spare him. Judy said boys
- were a race very cruelly maligned; see how _willing_ he was! Mrs. Geedge
- said there was something elfin about Bealby’s little face; Madeleine
- smiled at the thought of his quaint artlessness. She knew quite clearly
- that he’d die for her....
- § 8
- There was a little pause as the ladies moved away.
- Then William spat and spoke in a note of irrational bitterness.
- “Brasted Voolery,” said William, and then loudly and fiercely, “Cam up,
- y’ode Runt you.”
- At these words the white horse started into a convulsive irregular
- redistribution of its feet, the caravan strained and quivered into
- motion and Bealby’s wanderings as a caravanner began.
- For a time William spoke no more, and Bealby scarcely regarded him. The
- light of strange fortunes and deep enthusiasm was in Bealby’s eyes....
- “One Thing,” said William, “they don’t ’ave the Sense to lock anythink
- up—whatever.”
- Bealby’s attention was recalled to the existence of his companion.
- William’s face was one of those faces that give one at first the
- impression of a solitary and very conceited nose. The other features are
- entirely subordinated to that salient effect. One sees them later. His
- eyes were small and uneven, his mouth apparently toothless, thin-lipped
- and crumpled, with the upper lip falling over the other in a manner
- suggestive of a meagre firmness mixed with appetite. When he spoke he
- made a faint slobbering sound. “Everyfink,” he said, “behind there.”
- He became confidential. “I been _in_ there. I larked about wiv their
- Fings.”
- “They got some choc’late,” he said, lusciously. “Oo Fine!”
- “All sorts of Fings.”
- He did not seem to expect any reply from Bealby.
- “We going far before we meet ’em?” asked Bealby.
- William’s deafness became apparent.
- His mind was preoccupied by other ideas. One wicked eye came close to
- Bealby’s face. “We going to ’ave a bit of choc’late,” he said in a wet
- desirous voice.
- He pointed his thumb over his shoulder at the door. “_You_ get it,” said
- William with reassuring nods and the mouth much pursed and very oblique.
- Bealby shook his head.
- “It’s in a little dror, under ’er place where she sleeps.”
- Bealby’s head-shake became more emphatic.
- “_Yus_, I tell you,” said William.
- “No,” said Bealby.
- “Choc’late, I tell you,” said William, and ran the tongue of appetite
- round the rim of his toothless mouth.
- “Don’t want choc’late,” said Bealby, thinking of a large lump of it.
- “Go on,” said William. “Nobody won’t see you....”
- “_Go_ it!” said William....
- “You’re afraid,” said William....
- “Here, _I_’ll go,” said William, losing self-control. “You just ’old
- these reins.”
- Bealby took the reins. William got up and opened the door of the
- caravan. Then Bealby realized his moral responsibility—and, leaving the
- reins, clutched William firmly by his baggy nether garments. They were
- elderly garments, much sat upon. “Don’t be a Vool,” said William
- struggling. “Leago my slack.”
- Something partially gave way, and William’s head came round to deal with
- Bealby.
- “What you mean pullin’ my cloes orf me?”
- “That,”—he investigated. “Take me a Nour to sew up.”
- “I ain’t going to steal,” shouted Bealby into the ear of William.
- “Nobody arst you to steal—”
- “Nor you neither,” said Bealby.
- The caravan bumped heavily against a low garden wall, skidded a little
- and came to rest. William sat down suddenly. The white horse, after a
- period of confusion with its legs, tried the flavour of some overhanging
- lilac branches and was content.
- “Gimme those reins,” said William. “You be the Brastedest Young
- Vool....”
- “Sittin’ ’ere,” said William presently, “chewin’ our teeth, when we
- might be eatin’ choc’late....”
- “I ’ent got no use for _you_,” said William, “blowed if I ’ave....”
- Then the thought of his injuries returned to him.
- “I’d make you sew ’em up yourself, darned if I wount—on’y you’d go
- running the brasted needle into me.... Nour’s work there is—by the feel
- of it.... Mor’n nour.... Goddobe done, too.... All I got....”
- “I’ll give you Sumpfin, you little Beace, ’fore I done wi’ you.”
- “I wouldn’t steal ’er choc’lates,” said young Bealby, “not if I was
- starving.”
- “Eh?” shouted William.
- “_Steal!_” shouted Bealby.
- “I’ll steal ye, ’fore I done with ye,” said William. “Tearin’ my cloes
- for me.... Oh! Cam _up_, y’old Runt. We don’t want _you_ to stop and
- lissen. Cam _up_, I tell you!”
- § 8
- They found the ladies rather, it seemed, by accident than design,
- waiting upon a sandy common rich with purple heather and bordered by
- woods of fir and spruce. They had been waiting some time, and it was
- clear that the sight of the yellow caravan relieved an accumulated
- anxiety. Bealby rejoiced to see them. His soul glowed with the pride of
- chocolate resisted and William overcome. He resolved to distinguish
- himself over the preparation of the midday meal. It was a pleasant
- little island of green they chose for their midday pitch, a little patch
- of emerald turf amidst the purple, a patch already doomed to removal, as
- a bare oblong and a pile of rolled-up turfs witnessed. This pile and a
- little bank of heather and bramble promised shelter from the breeze, and
- down the hill a hundred yards away was a spring and a built-up pool.
- This spot lay perhaps fifty yards away from the high road and one
- reached it along a rutty track which had been made by the turf cutters.
- And overhead was the glorious sky of an English summer, with great
- clouds like sunlit, white-sailed ships, the Constable sky. The white
- horse was hobbled and turned out to pasture among the heather, and
- William was sent off to get congenial provender at the nearest public
- house. “William!” shouted Mrs. Bowles as he departed, shouting
- confidentially into his ear, “Get your clothes mended.”
- “Eh?” said William.
- “Mend your clothes.”
- “Yah! ’E did that,” said William viciously with a movement of
- self-protection, and so went.
- Nobody watched him go. Almost sternly they set to work upon the luncheon
- preparation as William receded. “William,” Mrs. Bowles remarked, as she
- bustled with the patent cooker, putting it up wrong way round so that
- afterwards it collapsed, “William—takes offence. Sometimes I think he
- takes offence almost too often.... Did you have any difficulty with him,
- Dick?”
- “It wasn’t anything, miss,” said Bealby meekly.
- Bealby was wonderful with the firelighting, and except that he cracked a
- plate in warming it, quite admirable as a cook. He burnt his fingers
- twice—and liked doing it; he ate his portion with instinctive modesty on
- the other side of the caravan and he washed up—as Mr. Mergleson had
- always instructed him to do. Mrs. Bowles showed him how to clean knives
- and forks by sticking them into the turf. A little to his surprise these
- ladies lit and smoked cigarettes. They sat about and talked
- perplexingly. Clever stuff. Then he had to get water from the
- neighbouring brook and boil the kettle for an early tea. Madeleine
- produced a charmingly bound little book and read in it, the other two
- professed themselves anxious for the view from a neighbouring hill. They
- produced their sensible spiked walking sticks such as one does not see
- in England; they seemed full of energy. “You go,” Madeleine had said,
- “while I and Dick stay here and make tea. I’ve walked enough to-day....”
- So Bealby, happy to the pitch of ecstacy, first explored the wonderful
- interior of the caravan,—there was a dresser, a stove, let-down chairs
- and tables and all manner of things,—and then nursed the kettle to the
- singing stage on the patent cooker while the beautiful lady reclined
- close at hand on a rug.
- “Dick!” she said.
- He had forgotten he was Dick.
- “Dick!”
- He remembered his personality with a start. “Yes, miss!” He knelt up,
- with a handful of twigs in his hand and regarded her.
- “_Well_, Dick,” she said.
- He remained in flushed adoration. There was a little pause and the lady
- smiled at him an unaffected smile.
- “What are you going to be, Dick, when you grow up?”
- “I don’t know, miss. I’ve wondered.”
- “What would you like to be?”
- “Something abroad. Something—so that you could see things.”
- “A soldier?”
- “Or a sailor, miss.”
- “A sailor sees nothing but the sea.”
- “I’d rather be a sailor than a common soldier, miss.”
- “You’d like to be an officer?”
- “Yes, miss—only—”
- “One of my very best friends is an officer,” she said, a little
- irrelevantly it seemed to Bealby.
- “I’d be a Norficer like a shot,” said Bealby, “if I ’ad ’arf a chance,
- miss.”
- “Officers nowadays,” she said, “have to be very brave, able men.”
- “I know, miss,” said Bealby modestly....
- The fire required attention for a little while....
- The lady turned over on her elbow. “What do you think you are _likely_
- to be, Dick!” she asked.
- He didn’t know.
- “What sort of man is your stepfather?”
- Bealby looked at her. “He isn’t much,” he said.
- “What is he?”
- Bealby hadn’t the slightest intention of being the son of a gardener.
- “’E’s a law-writer.”
- “What! in that village.”
- “’E ’as to stay there for ’is ’ealth, miss,” he said. “Every summer. ’Is
- ’ealth is very pre-precocious, miss....”
- He fed his fire with a few judiciously administered twigs.
- “What was your own father, Dick?”
- With that she opened a secret door in Bealby’s imagination. All
- stepchildren have those dreams. With him they were so frequent and vivid
- that they had long since become a kind of second truth. He coloured a
- little and answered with scarcely an interval for reflection. “’E passed
- as Mal-travers,” he said.
- “Wasn’t that his name?”
- “I don’t rightly know, miss. There was always something kep’ from me. My
- mother used to say, ‘Artie,’ she used to say: ‘there’s things that some
- day you must know, things that concern you. Things about your farver.
- But poor as we are now and struggling.... Not yet.... Some day you shall
- know truly—_who you are_.’ That was ’ow she said it, miss.”
- “And she died before she told you?”
- He had almost forgotten that he had killed his mother that very morning.
- “Yes, miss,” he said.
- She smiled at him and something in her smile made him blush hotly. For a
- moment he could have believed she understood. And indeed, she did
- understand, and it amused her to find this boy doing—what she herself
- had done at times—what indeed she felt it was still in her to do. She
- felt that most delicate of sympathies, the sympathy of one rather
- over-imaginative person for another. But her next question dispelled his
- doubt of her though it left him red and hot. She asked it with a
- convincing simplicity.
- “Have you any idea, Dick, have you any guess or suspicion, I mean, who
- it is you really are?”
- “I wish I had, miss,” he said. “I suppose it doesn’t matter, really—but
- one can’t help wondering....”
- How often he had wondered in his lonely wanderings through that dear
- city of day-dreams where all the people one knows look out of windows as
- one passes and the roads are paved with pride! How often had he decided
- and changed and decided again!
- § 9
- Now suddenly a realization of intrusion shattered this conversation. A
- third person stood over the little encampment, smiling mysteriously and
- waving a cleek in a slow hieratic manner through the air.
- “De licious lill’ corn’,” said the newcomer in tones of benediction.
- He met their enquiring eyes with a luxurious smile, “Licious,” he said,
- and remained swaying insecurely and failing to express some imperfectly
- apprehended deep meaning by short peculiar movements of the cleek.
- He was obviously a golfer astray from some adjacent course—and he had
- lunched.
- “Mighty Join you,” he said, and then very distinctly in a full large
- voice, “Miss Malleleine Philps.” There are the penalties of a public and
- popular life.
- “He’s _drunk_,” the lady whispered. “Get him to go away, Dick. I can’t
- endure drunken men.”
- She stood up and Bealby stood up. He advanced in front of her, slowly
- with his nose in the air, extraordinarily like a small terrier smelling
- at a strange dog.
- “I said Mighty Join you,” the golfer repeated. His voice was richly
- excessive. He was a big heavy man with a short-cropped moustache, a
- great deal of neck and dewlap and a solemn expression.
- “Prup. Be’r. Introzuze m’self,” he remarked. He tried to indicate
- himself by waving his hand towards himself, but finally abandoned the
- attempt as impossible. “Ma’ Goo’ Soch’l Poshishun,” he said.
- Bealby had a disconcerting sense of retreating footsteps behind him. He
- glanced over his shoulder and saw Miss Philips standing at the foot of
- the steps that led up to the fastnesses of the caravan. “Dick,” she
- cried with a sharp note of alarm in her voice, “get rid of that man.”
- A moment after Bealby heard the door shut and a sound of a key in its
- lock. He concealed his true feelings by putting his arms akimbo,
- sticking his legs wider apart and contemplating the task before him with
- his head a little on one side. He was upheld by the thought that the
- yellow caravan had a window looking upon him....
- The newcomer seemed to consider the ceremony of introduction completed.
- “_I_ done care for goff,” he said, almost vaingloriously.
- He waved his cleek to express his preference. “Natua,” he said with a
- satisfaction that bordered on fatuity.
- He prepared to come down from the little turfy crest on which he stood
- to the encampment.
- “’Ere!” said Bealby. “This is Private.”
- The golfer indicated by solemn movements of the cleek that this was
- understood but that other considerations overrode it.
- “You—You got to go!” cried Bealby in a breathless squeak. “You get out
- of here.”
- The golfer waved an arm as who should say, “You do not understand, but I
- forgive you,” and continued to advance towards the fire. And then
- Bealby, at the end of his tact, commenced hostilities.
- He did so because he felt he had to do something, and he did not know
- what else to do.
- “Wan’ nothin’ but frenly conversation sushus custm’ry webred peel,” the
- golfer was saying, and then a large fragment of turf hit him in the
- neck, burst all about him and stopped him abruptly.
- He remained for some lengthy moments too astonished for words. He was
- not only greatly surprised, but he chose to appear even more surprised
- than he was. In spite of the brown-black mould upon his cheek and brow
- and a slight displacement of his cap, he achieved a sort of dignity. He
- came slowly to a focus upon Bealby, who stood by the turf pile grasping
- a second missile. The cleek was extended sceptre-wise.
- “Replace the—Divot.”
- “You go orf,” said Bealby. “I’ll chuck it if you don’t. I tell you
- fair.”
- “Replace the—DIVOT,” roared the golfer again in a voice of extraordinary
- power.
- “You—you go!” said Bealby.
- “Am I t’ask you. Third time. Reshpect—Roos.... Replace the Divot.”
- It struck him fully in the face.
- He seemed to emerge through the mould. He was blinking but still
- dignified. “Tha’—was intentional,” he said.
- He seemed to gather himself together....
- Then suddenly and with a surprising nimbleness he discharged himself at
- Bealby. He came with astonishing swiftness. He got within a foot of him.
- Well, it was for Bealby that he had learnt to dodge in the village
- playground. He went down under the golfer’s arm and away round the end
- of the stack, and the golfer with his force spent in concussion remained
- for a time clinging to the turf pile and apparently trying to remember
- how he got there. Then he was reminded of recent occurrences by a shrill
- small voice from the other side of the stack.
- “You gow away!” said the voice. “Can’t you see you’re annoying a lady?
- You gow away.”
- “Nowish—’noy anyone. Pease wall wirl.”
- But this was subterfuge. He meant to catch that boy. Suddenly and rather
- brilliantly he turned the flank of the turf pile and only a couple of
- loose turfs at the foot of the heap upset his calculations. He found
- himself on all fours on ground from which it was difficult to rise. But
- he did not lose heart. “Boy—hic—scow,” he said, and became for a second
- rush a nimble quadruped.
- Again he got quite astonishingly near to Bealby, and then in an instant
- was on his feet and running across the encampment after him. He
- succeeded in kicking over the kettle, and the patent cooker, without any
- injury to himself or loss of pace, and succumbed only to the sharp turn
- behind the end of the caravan and the steps. He hadn’t somehow thought
- of the steps. So he went down rather heavily. But now the spirit of a
- fine man was roused. Regardless of the scream from inside that had
- followed his collapse, he was up and in pursuit almost instantly. Bealby
- only escaped the swiftness of his rush by jumping the shafts and going
- away across the front of the caravan to the turf pile again. The golfer
- tried to jump the shafts too, but he was not equal to that. He did in a
- manner jump. But it was almost as much diving as jumping. And there was
- something in it almost like the curvetting of a Great Horse....
- When Bealby turned at the crash, the golfer was already on all fours
- again and trying very busily to crawl out between the shaft and the
- front wheel. He would have been more successful in doing this if he had
- not begun by putting his arm through the wheel. As it was, he was trying
- to do too much; he was trying to crawl out at two points at once and
- getting very rapidly annoyed at his inability to do so. The caravan was
- shifting slowly forward....
- It was manifest to Bealby that getting this man to go was likely to be a
- much more lengthy business than he had supposed.
- He surveyed the situation for a moment, and then realizing the
- entanglement of his opponent, he seized a camp-stool by one leg, went
- round by the steps and attacked the prostrate enemy from the rear with
- effectual but inconclusive fury. He hammered....
- “Steady on, young man,” said a voice, and he was seized from behind. He
- turned—to discover himself in the grip of a second golfer....
- _Another!_ Bealby fought in a fury of fear....
- He bit an arm—rather too tweedy to feel much—and got in a couple of
- shinners—alas! that they were only slippered shinners!—before he was
- overpowered....
- A cuffed, crumpled, disarmed and panting Bealby found himself watching
- the careful extraction of the first golfer from the front wheel. Two
- friends assisted that gentleman with a reproachful gentleness, and his
- repeated statements that he was all right seemed to reassure them
- greatly. Altogether there were now four golfers in the field, counting
- the pioneer.
- “He was after this devil of a boy,” said the one who held Bealby.
- “Yes, but how did he get here?” asked the man who was gripping Bealby.
- “Feel better now?” said the third, helping the first comer to his
- uncertain feet. “Let me have your cleek o, man.... You won’t want your
- cleek....”
- Across the heather, lifting their heads a little, came Mrs. Bowles and
- Mrs. Geedge, returning from their walk. They were wondering whoever
- their visitors could be.
- And then like music after a dispute came Madeleine Philips, a beautiful
- blue-robed thing, coming slowly with a kind of wonder on her face, out
- of the caravan and down the steps. Instinctively everybody turned to
- her. The drunkard with a gesture released himself from his supporter and
- stood erect. His cap was replaced upon him—obliquely. His cleek had been
- secured.
- “I heard a noise,” said Madeleine, lifting her pretty chin and speaking
- in her sweetest tones. She looked her enquiries....
- She surveyed the three sober men with a practised eye. She chose the
- tallest, a fair, serious-looking young man standing conveniently at the
- drunkard’s elbow.
- “Will you please take your friend away,” she said, indicating the
- offender with her beautiful white hand.
- “Simly,” he said in a slightly subdued voice, “simly coring.”
- Everybody tried for a moment to understand him.
- “Look here, old man, you’ve got no business here,” said the fair young
- man. “You’d better come back to the club house.”
- The drunken man stuck to his statement. “Simly coring,” he said a little
- louder.
- “I _think_,” said a little bright-eyed man with a very cheerful yellow
- vest, “I _think_ he’s apologizing. I _hope_ so.”
- The drunken man nodded his head. That among other matters.
- The tall young man took his arm, but he insisted on his point. “Simly
- coring,” he said with emphasis. “If—if—done _wan’_ me to cor. Notome.
- Nottot.... Mean’ say. Nottot tat-tome. Nottotome. Orny way—sayin’
- not-ome. No wish ’trude. No wish ’all.”
- “Well, then, you see, you’d better come away.”
- “I _ars’_ you—are you _tome_? Miss—Miss Pips.” He appealed to Miss
- Philips.
- “If you’d answer him—” said the tall young man.
- “No, sir,” she said with great dignity and the pretty chin higher than
- ever. “I am _not_ at home.”
- “Nuthin’ more t’ say then,” said the drunken man, and with a sudden
- stoicism he turned away.
- “Come,” he said, submitting to support.
- “Simly orny arfnoon cor,” he said generally and permitted himself to be
- led off.
- “Orny frenly cor....”
- For some time he was audible as he receded, explaining in a rather
- condescending voice the extreme social correctness of his behaviour.
- Just for a moment or so there was a slight tussle, due to his desire to
- return and leave cards....
- He was afterwards seen to be distributing a small handful of visiting
- cards amidst the heather with his free arm, rather in the manner of a
- paper chase—but much more gracefully....
- Then decently and in order he was taken out of sight....
- § 10
- Bealby had been unostentatiously released by his captor as soon as Miss
- Philips appeared, and the two remaining golfers now addressed themselves
- to the three ladies in regret and explanation.
- The man who had held Bealby was an aquiline grey-clad person with a
- cascade moustache and wrinkled eyes, and for some obscure reason he
- seemed to be amused; the little man in the yellow vest, however, was
- quite earnest and serious enough to make up for him. He was one of those
- little fresh-coloured men whose faces stick forward openly. He had open
- projecting eyes, an open mouth, his cheeks were frank to the pitch of
- ostentation, his cap was thrust back from his exceptionally open
- forehead. He had a chest and a stomach. There, too, he held out. He
- would have held out anything. His legs leant forward from the feet. It
- was evidently impossible for a man of his nature to be anything but
- clean shaved....
- “Our fault entirely,” he said. “Ought to have looked after him. Can’t
- say how sorry and ashamed we are. Can’t say how sorry we are he caused
- you any inconvenience.”
- “Of course,” said Mrs. Bowles, “our boy-servant ought not to have pelted
- him.”
- “He didn’t exactly _pelt_ him, dear,” said Madeleine....
- “Well, anyhow our friend ought not to have been off his chain. It was
- our affair to look after him and we didn’t....
- “You see,” the open young man went on, with the air of lucid
- explanation, “he’s our worst player. And he got round in a hundred and
- twenty-seven. And beat—somebody. And—it’s upset him. It’s not a bit of
- good disguising that we’ve been letting him drink.... We have. To begin
- with, we encouraged him.... We oughtn’t to have let him go. But we
- thought a walk alone might do him good. And some of us were a bit off
- him. Fed up rather. You see he’d been singing, would go on singing....”
- He went on to propitiations. “Anything the club can do to show how we
- regret.... If you would like to pitch—later on in our rough beyond the
- pinewoods.... You’d find it safe and secluded.... Custodian—most civil
- man. Get you water or anything you wanted. Especially after all that has
- happened....”
- Bealby took no further part in these concluding politenesses. He had a
- curious feeling in his mind that perhaps he had not managed this affair
- quite so well as he might have done. He ought to have been more tactful
- like, more persuasive. He was a fool to have started chucking.... Well,
- well. He picked up the overturned kettle and went off down the hill to
- get water....
- What had she thought of him?...
- In the meantime one can at least boil kettles.
- § 11
- One consequence of this little incident of the rejoicing golfer was that
- the three ladies were no longer content to dismiss William and Bealby at
- nightfall and sleep unprotected in the caravan. And this time their
- pitch was a lonely one with only the golf club house within call. They
- were inclined even to distrust the golf club. So it was decided, to his
- great satisfaction, that Bealby should have a certain sleeping sack Mrs.
- Bowles had brought with her and that he should sleep therein between the
- wheels.
- This sleeping sack was to have been a great feature of the expedition,
- but when it came to the test Judy could not use it. She had not
- anticipated that feeling of extreme publicity the open air gives one at
- first. It was like having all the world in one’s bedroom. Every night
- she had relapsed into the caravan.
- Bealby did not mind what they did with him so long as it meant sleeping.
- He had had a long day of it. He undressed sketchily and wriggled into
- the nice woolly bag and lay for a moment listening to the soft bumpings
- that were going on overhead. _She_ was there. He had the instinctive
- confidence of our sex in women, and here were three of them. He had a
- vague idea of getting out of his bag again and kissing the underside of
- the van that held this dear beautiful creature....
- He didn’t....
- Such a lot of things had happened that day—and the day before. He had
- been going without intermission, it seemed now for endless hours. He
- thought of trees, roads, dew-wet grass, frying-pans, pursuing packs of
- gigantic butlers hopelessly at fault,—no doubt they were hunting
- now—chinks and crannies, tactless missiles flying, bursting, missiles it
- was vain to recall. He stared for a few seconds through the wheel spokes
- at the dancing, crackling fire of pine-cones which it had been his last
- duty to replenish, stared and blinked much as a little dog might do and
- then he had slipped away altogether into the world of dreams....
- § 12
- In the morning he was extraordinarily hard to wake....
- “Is it after sleeping all day ye’d be?” cried Judy Bowles, who was
- always at her most Irish about breakfast time.
- CHAPTER IV
- THE UNOBTRUSIVE PARTING
- § 1
- Monday was a happy day for Bealby.
- The caravan did seventeen miles and came to rest at last in a sloping
- field outside a cheerful little village set about a green on which was a
- long tent professing to be a theatre.... At the first stopping-place
- that possessed a general shop Mrs. Bowles bought Bealby a pair of boots.
- Then she had a bright idea. “Got any pocket money, Dick?” she asked.
- She gave him half a crown, that is to say she gave him two shillings and
- sixpence, or five sixpences or thirty pennies—according as you choose to
- look at it—in one large undivided shining coin.
- Even if he had not been in love, here surely was incentive to a generous
- nature to help and do distinguished services. He dashed about doing
- things. The little accident on Sunday had warned him to be careful of
- the plates, and the only flaw upon a perfect day’s service was the
- dropping of an egg on its way to the frying pan for supper. It remained
- where it fell and there presently he gave it a quiet burial. There was
- nothing else to be done with it....
- All day long at intervals Miss Philips smiled at him and made him do
- little services for her. And in the evening, after the custom of her
- great profession when it keeps holiday, she insisted on going to the
- play. She said it would be the loveliest fun. She went with Mrs. Bowles
- because Mrs. Geedge wanted to sit quietly in the caravan and write down
- a few little things while they were still fresh in her mind. And it
- wasn’t in the part of Madeleine Philips not to insist that both William
- and Bealby must go too; she gave them each a shilling—though the prices
- were sixpence, threepence, two-pence and a penny—and Bealby saw his
- first real play.
- It was called _Brothers in Blood, or the Gentleman Ranker_. There was a
- poster—which was only very slightly justified by the performance—of a
- man in khaki with a bandaged head proposing to sell his life dearly over
- a fallen comrade.
- One went to the play through an open and damaged field gate and across
- trampled turf. Outside the tent were two paraffin flares illuminating
- the poster and a small cluster of the impecunious young. Within on grass
- that was worn and bleached were benches, a gathering audience, a piano
- played by an off-hand lady, and a drop scene displaying the Grand Canal,
- Venice. The Grand Canal was infested by a crowded multitude of zealous
- and excessive reflections of the palaces above and by peculiar
- crescentic black boats floating entirely out of water and having no
- reflections at all. The off-hand lady gave a broad impression of the
- wedding march in Lohengrin, and the back seats assisted by a sort of
- gastric vocalization called humming and by whistling between the teeth.
- Madeleine Philips evidently found it tremendous fun, even before the
- curtain rose.
- And then—illusion....
- The scenery was ridiculous; it waved about, the actors and actresses
- were surely the most pitiful of their tribe and every invention in the
- play impossible, but the imagination of Bealby, like the loving kindness
- of God, made no difficulties; it rose and met and embraced and gave life
- to all these things. It was a confused story in the play, everybody was
- more or less somebody else all the way through, and it got more confused
- in Bealby’s mind, but it was clear from the outset that there was vile
- work afoot, nets spread and sweet simple people wronged. And never were
- sweet and simple people quite so sweet and simple. There was the
- wrongful brother who was weak and wicked and the rightful brother who
- was vindictively, almost viciously, good, and there was an ingrained
- villain who was a baronet, a man who wore a frock coat and a silk hat
- and carried gloves and a stick in every scene and upon all
- occasions—that sort of man. He looked askance, always. There was a dear
- simple girl, with a vast sweet smile, who was loved according to their
- natures by the wrongful and the rightful brother, and a large wicked
- red-clad, lip-biting woman whose passions made the crazy little stage
- quiver. There was a comic butler—very different stuff from old
- Mergleson—who wore an evening coat and plaid trousers and nearly choked
- Bealby. Why weren’t all butlers like that? Funny. And there were
- constant denunciations. Always there were denunciations going on or
- denunciations impending. That took Bealby particularly. Never surely in
- all the world were bad people so steadily and thoroughly scolded and
- told what. Everybody hissed them; Bealby hissed them. And when they were
- told what, he applauded. And yet they kept on with their wickedness to
- the very curtain. They retired—askance to the end. Foiled but pursuing.
- “A time will come,” they said.
- There was a moment in the distresses of the heroine when Bealby dashed
- aside a tear. And then at last most wonderfully it all came right. The
- company lined up and hoped that Bealby was satisfied. Bealby wished he
- had more hands. His heart seemed to fill his body. Oh _prime! prime!..._
- And out he came into the sympathetic night. But he was no longer a
- trivial Bealby; his soul was purged, he was a strong and silent man,
- ready to explode into generous repartee or nerve himself for high
- endeavour. He slipped off in the opposite direction from the caravan
- because he wanted to be alone for a time and _feel_. He did not want to
- jar upon a sphere of glorious illusion that had blown up in his mind
- like a bubble....
- He was quite sure that he had been wronged. Not to be wronged is to
- forego the first privilege of goodness. He had been deeply wronged by a
- plot,—all those butlers were in the plot or why should they have chased
- him,—he was much older than he really was, it had been kept from him,
- and in truth he was a rightful earl. “Earl Shonts,” he whispered; and
- indeed, why not? And Madeleine too had been wronged; she had been
- reduced to wander in this uncomfortable caravan; this Gipsy Queen; she
- had been brought to it by villains, the same villains who had wronged
- Bealby....
- Out he went into the night, the kindly consenting summer night, where
- there is nothing to be seen or heard that will contradict these
- delicious wonderful persuasions.
- He was so full of these dreams that he strayed far away along the dark
- country lanes and had at last the utmost difficulty in finding his way
- back to the caravan. And when ultimately he got back after hours and
- hours of heroic existence it did not even seem that they had missed him.
- It did not seem that he had been away half an hour.
- § 2
- Tuesday was not so happy a day for Bealby as Monday.
- Its shadows began when Mrs. Bowles asked him in a friendly tone when it
- was clean-collar day.
- He was unready with his answer.
- “And don’t you ever use a hair brush, Dick?” she asked. “I’m sure now
- there’s one in your parcel.”
- “I do use it _sometimes_, Mum,” he admitted.
- “And I’ve never detected you with a toothbrush yet. Though that perhaps
- is extreme. And Dick—soap? I think you’d better be letting me give you a
- cake of soap.”
- “I’d be very much obliged, Mum.”
- “I hardly dare hint, Dick, at a clean handkerchief. Such things are
- known.”
- “If you wouldn’t mind—when I’ve got the breakfast things done, Mum....”
- The thing worried him all through breakfast. He had not
- expected—personalities from Mrs. Bowles. More particularly personalities
- of this kind. He felt he had to think hard.
- He affected modesty after he had cleared away breakfast and carried off
- his little bundle to a point in the stream which was masked from the
- encampment by willows. With him he also brought that cake of soap. He
- began by washing his handkerchief, which was bad policy because that
- left him no dry towel but his jacket. He ought, he perceived, to have
- secured a dish-cloth or a newspaper. (This he must remember on the next
- occasion.) He did over his hands and the more exposed parts of his face
- with soap and jacket. Then he took off and examined his collar. It
- certainly was pretty bad....
- “Why!” cried Mrs. Bowles when he returned, “that’s still the same
- collar.”
- “They all seem to’ve got crumpled ’m,” said Bealby.
- “But are they all as dirty?”
- “I ’ad some blacking in my parcel,” said Bealby, “and it got loose, Mum.
- I’ll have to get another collar when we come to a shop.”
- It was a financial sacrifice, but it was the only way, and when they
- came to the shop Bealby secured a very nice collar indeed, high with
- pointed turn-down corners, so that it cut his neck all round, jabbed him
- under the chin and gave him a proud upcast carriage of the head that led
- to his treading upon and very completely destroying a stray plate while
- preparing lunch. But it was more of a man’s collar, he felt, than
- anything he had ever worn before. And it cost sixpence halfpenny, six
- dee and a half.
- (I should have mentioned that while washing up the breakfast things he
- had already broken the handle off one of the breakfast cups. Both these
- accidents deepened the cloud upon his day.)
- And then there was the trouble of William. William having meditated upon
- the differences between them for a day had now invented an activity. As
- Bealby sat beside him behind the white horse he was suddenly and
- frightfully pinched. _Gee!_ One wanted to yelp.
- “Choc’late,” said William through his teeth and very very savagely.
- “_Now_ then.”
- After William had done that twice Bealby preferred to walk beside the
- caravan. Thereupon William whipped up the white horse and broke records
- and made all the crockery sing together and forced the pace until he was
- spoken to by Mrs. Bowles....
- It was upon a Bealby thus depressed and worried that the rumour of
- impending “men-folk” came. It began after the party had stopped for
- letters at a village post office; there were not only letters but a
- telegram, that Mrs. Bowles read with her spats far apart and her head on
- one side. “Ye’d like to know about it,” she said waggishly to Miss
- Philips, “and you just shan’t.”
- She then went into her letters.
- “You’ve got some news,” said Mrs. Geedge.
- “I have that,” said Mrs. Bowles, and not a word more could they get from
- her....
- “I’ll keep my news no longer,” said Mrs. Bowles, lighting her cigarette
- after lunch as Bealby hovered about clearing away the banana skins and
- suchlike vestiges of dessert. “To-morrow night as ever is, if so be we
- get to Winthorpe-Sutbury, there’ll be Men among us.”
- “But Tom’s not coming,” said Mrs. Geedge.
- “He asked Tim to tell me to tell you.”
- “And you’ve kept it these two hours, Judy.”
- “For your own good and peace of mind. But now the murther’s out. Come
- they will, your Man and my Man, pretending to a pity because they can’t
- do without us. But like the self-indulgent monsters they are, they must
- needs stop at some grand hotel, Redlake he calls it, the Royal, on the
- hill above Winthorpe-Sutbury. The Royal! The very name describes it.
- Can’t you see the lounge, girls, with its white cane chairs? And
- saddlebacks! No other hotel it seems is good enough for them, and we if
- you please are asked to go in and have—what does the man call it—the
- ‘comforts of decency’—and let the caravan rest for a bit.”
- “Tim promised me I should run wild as long as I chose,” said Mrs.
- Geedge, looking anything but wild.
- “They’re after thinking we’ve had enough of it,” said Mrs. Bowles.
- “It sounds like that.”
- “Sure I’d go on like this for ever,” said Judy. “’Tis the Man and the
- House and all of it that oppresses me. Vans for Women....”
- “Let’s not go to Winthorpe-Sutbury,” said Madeleine.
- (The first word of sense Bealby had heard.)
- “Ah!” said Mrs. Bowles archly, “who knows but what there’ll be a Man for
- you? Some sort of Man anyhow.”
- (Bealby thought that a most improper remark.)
- “I want no man.”
- “Ah!”
- “Why do you say _Ah_ like that?”
- “Because I mean _Ah_ like that.”
- “Meaning?”
- “Just that.”
- Miss Philips eyed Mrs. Bowles and Mrs. Bowles eyed Miss Philips.
- “Judy,” she said, “you’ve got something up your sleeve.”
- “Where it’s perfectly comfortable,” said Mrs. Bowles.
- And then quite maddeningly, she remarked, “Will you be after washing up
- presently, Dick?” and looked at him with a roguish quiet over her
- cigarette. It was necessary to disabuse her mind at once of the idea
- that he had been listening. He took up the last few plates and went off
- to the washing place by the stream. All the rest of that conversation
- _had_ to be lost.
- Except that as he came back for the Hudson’s soap he heard Miss Philips
- say, “Keep your old Men. I’ll just console myself with Dick, my dears.
- Making such a Mystery!”
- To which Mrs. Bowles replied darkly, “She _little_ knows....”
- A kind of consolation was to be got from that.... But what was it she
- little knew?...
- § 3
- The men-folk when they came were nothing so terrific to the sight as
- Bealby had expected. And thank Heaven there were only two of them and
- each assigned. Something he perceived was said about someone else, he
- couldn’t quite catch what, but if there was to have been someone else,
- at any rate there now wasn’t. Professor Bowles was animated and Mr.
- Geedge was gracefully cold, they kissed their wives but not offensively,
- and there was a chattering pause while Bealby walked on beside the
- caravan. They were on the bare road that runs along the high ridge above
- Winthorpe-Sutbury, and the men had walked to meet them from some hotel
- or other—Bealby wasn’t clear about that—by the golf links. Judy was the
- life and soul of the encounter, and all for asking the men what they
- meant by intruding upon three independent women who, sure-alive, could
- very well do without them. Professor Bowles took her pretty calmly, and
- seemed on the whole to admire her.
- Professor Bowles was a compact little man wearing spectacles with
- alternative glasses, partly curved, partly flat; he was hairy and
- dressed in that sort of soft tweedy stuff that ravels out—he seemed to
- have been sitting among thorns—and baggy knickerbockers with straps and
- very thick stockings and very sensible, open air, in fact quite
- mountainous, boots. And yet though he was short and stout and active he
- had a kind of authority about him, and it was clear that for all her
- persuasiveness his wife merely ran over him like a creeper without
- making any great difference to him. “I’ve found,” he said, “the perfect
- place for your encampment.” She had been making suggestions. And
- presently he left the ladies and came hurrying after the caravan to take
- control.
- He was evidently a very controlling person.
- “Here, you get down,” he said to William. “That poor beast’s got enough
- to pull without _you_.”
- And when William mumbled he said, “Hey?” in such a shout that William
- for ever after held his peace.
- “Where d’you come from, you boy, you?” he asked suddenly, and Bealby
- looked to Mrs. Bowles to explain.
- “Great silly collar you’ve got,” said the Professor, interrupting her
- reply. “Boy like this ought to wear a wool shirt. Dirty too. Take it
- off, boy. It’s choking you. Don’t you _feel_ it?”
- Then he went on to make trouble about the tackle William had rigged to
- contain the white horse.
- “This harness makes me sick,” said Professor Bowles. “It’s worse than
- Italy....”
- “Ah!” he cried and suddenly darted off across the turf, going
- inelegantly and very rapidly, with peculiar motions of the head and neck
- as he brought first the flat and then the curved surface of his glasses
- into play. Finally he dived into the turf, remained scrabbling on all
- fours for a moment or so, became almost still for the fraction of a
- minute and then got up and returned to his wife, holding in an exquisite
- manner something that struggled between his finger and his thumb.
- “That’s the third to-day,” he said, triumphantly. “They swarm here. It’s
- a migration.”
- Then he resumed his penetrating criticism of the caravan outfit.
- “That boy,” he said suddenly with his glasses oblique, “hasn’t taken off
- his collar yet.”
- Bealby revealed the modest secrets of his neck and pocketed the
- collar....
- Mr. Geedge did not appear to observe Bealby. He was a man of the
- super-aquiline type with a nose like a rudder, he held his face as if it
- was a hatchet in a procession, and walked with the dignity of a man of
- honour. You could see at once he was a man of honour. Inflexibly,
- invincibly, he was a man of honour. You felt that anywhen, in a fire, in
- an earthquake, in a railway accident when other people would be running
- about and doing things he would have remained—a man of honour. It was
- his pride rather than his vanity to be mistaken for Sir Edward Grey. He
- now walked along with Miss Philips and his wife behind the disputing
- Bowleses, and discoursed in deep sonorous tones about the healthiness of
- healthy places and the stifling feeling one had in towns when there was
- no air.
- § 4
- The Professor was remarkably active when at last the point he had
- chosen for the encampment was reached. Bealby was told to “look alive”
- twice, and William was assigned to his genus and species; “The man’s
- an absolute idiot,” was the way the Professor put it. William just
- shot a glance at him over his nose. The place certainly commanded a
- wonderful view. It was a turfy bank protected from the north and south
- by bushes of yew and the beech-bordered edge of a chalk pit; it was
- close beside the road, a road which went steeply down the hill into
- Winthorpe-Sutbury, with that intrepid decision peculiar to the
- hill-roads of the south of England. It looked indeed as though you
- could throw the rinse of your teacups into the Winthorpe-Sutbury
- street; as if you could jump and impale yourself upon the church
- spire. The hills bellied out east and west and carried hangers, and
- then swept round to the west in a long level succession of
- projections, a perspective that merged at last with the general
- horizon of hilly bluenesses, amidst which Professor Bowles insisted
- upon a “sapphire glimpse” of sea. “The Channel,” said Professor
- Bowles, as though that made it easier for them. Only Mr. Geedge
- refused to see even that mitigated version of the sea. There was
- something perhaps bluish and level, but he was evidently not going to
- admit it was sea until he had paddled in it and tested it in every way
- known to him....
- “Good _Lord_!” cried the Professor. “What’s the man doing now?”
- William stopped the struggles and confidential discouragements he was
- bestowing upon the white horse and waited for a more definite reproach.
- “Putting the caravan alongside to the sun! Do you think it will ever get
- cool again? And think of the blaze of the sunset—through the glass of
- that door!”
- William spluttered. “If I put’n tother way—goo runnin’ down t’hill
- like,” said William.
- “Imbecile!” cried the Professor. “Put something under the wheels.
- _Here!_” He careered about and produced great grey fragments of a
- perished yew tree. “Now then,” he said. “Head up hill.”
- William did his best.
- “Oh! _not_ like that! Here, _you_!”
- Bealby assisted with obsequious enthusiasm.
- It was some time before the caravan was adjusted to the complete
- satisfaction of the Professor. But at last it was done, and the end door
- gaped at the whole prospect of the Weald with the steps hanging out
- idiotically like a tongue. The hind wheels were stayed up very cleverly
- by lumps of chalk and chunks of yew, living and dead, and certainly the
- effect of it was altogether taller and better. And then the preparations
- for the midday cooking began. The Professor was full of acute ideas
- about camping and cooking, and gave Bealby a lively but instructive
- time. There was no stream handy, but William was sent off to the hotel
- to fetch a garden water-cart that the Professor with infinite foresight
- had arranged should be ready.
- The Geedges held aloof from these preparations,—they were unassuming
- people; Miss Philips concentrated her attention upon the Weald—it seemed
- to Bealby a little discontentedly—as if it was unworthy of her—and Mrs.
- Bowles hovered smoking cigarettes over her husband’s activities, acting
- great amusement.
- “You see it pleases me to get Himself busy,” she said. “You’ll end a
- Camper yet, Darlint, and us in the hotel.”
- The Professor answered nothing, but seemed to plunge deeper into
- practicality.
- Under the urgency of Professor Bowles Bealby stumbled and broke a glass
- jar of marmalade over some fried potatoes, but otherwise did well as a
- cook’s assistant. Once things were a little interrupted by the Professor
- going off to catch a cricket, but whether it was the right sort of
- cricket or not he failed to get it. And then with three loud reports—for
- a moment Bealby thought the mad butlers from Shonts were upon him with
- firearms—Captain Douglas arrived and got off his motor bicycle and left
- it by the roadside. His machine accounted for his delay, for those were
- the early days of motor bicycles. It also accounted for a black smudge
- under one of his bright little eyes. He was fair and flushed, dressed in
- oilskins and a helmet-shaped cap and great gauntlets that made him, in
- spite of the smudge, look strange and brave and handsome, like a
- Crusader—only that he was clad in oilskin and not steel, and his
- moustache was smaller than those Crusaders wore; and when he came across
- the turf to the encampment Mrs. Bowles and Mrs. Geedge both set up a cry
- of “A-_Ah_!” and Miss Philips turned an accusing face upon those two
- ladies. Bealby knelt with a bunch of knives and forks in his hand,
- laying the cloth for lunch, and when he saw Captain Douglas approaching
- Miss Philips, he perceived clearly that that lady had already forgotten
- her lowly adorer, and his little heart was smitten with desolation. This
- man was arrayed like a chivalrous god, and how was a poor Bealby, whose
- very collar, his one little circlet of manhood, had been reft from him,
- how was he to compete with this tremendousness? In that hour the
- ambition for mechanism, the passion for leather and oilskin, was sown in
- Bealby’s heart.
- “I told you not to come near me for a month,” said Madeleine, but her
- face was radiant.
- “These motor bicycles—very difficult to control,” said Captain Douglas,
- and all the little golden-white hairs upon his sunlit cheek glittered in
- the sun.
- “And besides,” said Mrs. Bowles, “it’s all nonsense.”
- The Professor was in a state of arrested administration; the three
- others were frankly audience to a clearly understood scene.
- “You ought to be in France.”
- “I’m not in France.”
- “I sent you into exile for a month,” and she held out a hand for the
- captain to kiss.
- He kissed it.
- Someday, somewhere, it was written in the book of destiny Bealby should
- also kiss hands. It was a lovely thing to do.
- “Month! It’s been years,” said the captain. “Years and years.”
- “Then you ought to have come back before,” she replied and the captain
- had no answer ready....
- § 5
- When William arrived with the water-cart, he brought also further proofs
- of the Professor’s organizing ability. He brought various bottles of
- wine, red Burgundy and sparkling hock, two bottles of cider, and
- peculiar and meritorious waters; he brought tinned things for _hors
- d’œuvre_; he brought some luscious pears. When he had a moment with
- Bealby behind the caravan he repeated thrice in tones of hopeless
- sorrow, “They’ll eat um all. I _knows_ they’ll eat um all.” And then
- plumbing a deeper deep of woe, “Ef they _don’t_ they’ll count um. Ode
- Goggles’ll bag um.... E’s a _bagger_, ’e is.”
- It was the brightest of luncheons that was eaten that day in the
- sunshine and spaciousness above Winthorpe-Sutbury. Everyone was gay, and
- even the love-torn Bealby, who might well have sunk into depression and
- lethargy, was galvanized into an activity that was almost cheerful by
- flashes from the Professor’s glasses. They talked of this and that;
- Bealby hadn’t much time to attend, though the laughter that followed
- various sallies from Judy Bowles was very tantalizing, and it had come
- to the pears before his attention wasn’t so much caught as felled by the
- word “Shonts.”... It was as if the sky had suddenly changed to
- vermilion. _All these people were talking of Shonts!..._
- “Went there,” said Captain Douglas, “in perfect good faith. Wanted to
- fill up Lucy’s little party. One doesn’t go to Shonts nowadays for idle
- pleasure. And then—I get ordered out of the house, absolutely Told to
- Go.”
- (This man had been at Shonts!)
- “That was on Sunday morning?” said Mrs. Geedge.
- “On Sunday morning,” said Mrs. Bowles suddenly, “we were almost within
- sight of Shonts.”
- (This man had been at Shonts even at the time when Bealby was there!)
- “Early on Sunday morning. Told to go. I was fairly flabbergasted. What
- the deuce is a man to do? Where’s he to go? Sunday? One doesn’t go to
- places, Sunday morning. There I’d been sleeping like a lamb all night
- and suddenly in came Laxton and said, ‘Look here, you know,’ he said,
- ‘you’ve got to oblige me and pack your bag and go. Now.’ ‘Why?’ said I.
- ‘Because you’ve driven the Lord Chancellor stark staring mad!’”
- “But how?” asked the Professor, almost angrily, “how? I don’t see it.
- Why should he ask you to go?”
- “_I_ don’t know!” cried Captain Douglas.
- “Yes, but—!” said the Professor, protesting against the unreasonableness
- of mankind.
- “I’d had a word or two with him in the train. Nothing to speak of. About
- occupying two corner seats—always strikes me as a cad’s trick—but on my
- honour I didn’t rub it in. And then he got it into his head we were
- laughing at him at dinner—we were a bit, but only the sort of thing one
- says about anyone—way he works his eyebrows and all that—and then he
- thought I was ragging him.... I _don’t_ rag people. Got it so strongly
- he made a row that night. Said I’d made a ghost slap him on his back.
- Hang it!—what _can_ you say to a thing like that? In my room all the
- time.”
- “You suffer for the sins of your brother,” said Mrs. Bowles.
- “Heavens!” cried the captain, “I never thought of that! Perhaps he
- mistook me....”
- He reflected for a moment and continued his narrative. “Then in the
- night, you know, he heard noises.”
- “They always do,” said the Professor nodding confirmation.
- “Couldn’t sleep.”
- “A sure sign,” said the Professor.
- “And finally he sallied out in the early morning, caught the butler in
- one of the secret passages—”
- “How did the butler get into the secret passage?”
- “Going round, I suppose. Part of his duties.... Anyhow he gave the poor
- beggar an awful doing—awful—_brutal_—black eye,—all that sort of thing;
- man much too respectful to hit back. Finally declared I’d been getting
- up a kind of rag,—squaring the servants to help and so forth.... Laxton,
- I fancy, half believed it.... Awkward thing, you know, having it said
- about that you ragged the Lord Chancellor. Makes a man seem a sort of
- mischievous idiot. Injures a man. Then going away, you see, seems a kind
- of admission....”
- “Why did you go?”
- “Lucy,” said the captain compactly. “Hysterics.”
- “Shonts would have burst,” he added, “if I hadn’t gone.”
- Madeleine was helpful. “But you’ll have to do _something_ further,” she
- said.
- “What is one to _do_?” squealed the captain.
- “The sooner you get the Lord Chancellor certified a lunatic,” said the
- Professor soundly, “the better for your professional prospects.”
- “He went on pretty bad after I’d gone.”
- “You’ve heard”
- “Two letters. I picked ’em up at Wheatley Post Office this morning. You
- know he hadn’t done with that butler. Actually got out of his place and
- scruffed the poor devil at lunch. Shook him like a rat, she says. Said
- the man wasn’t giving him anything to drink—nice story, eh? Anyhow he
- scruffed him until things got broken....
- “I had it all from Minnie Timbre—you know, used to be Minnie Flax.” He
- shot a propitiating glance at Madeleine. “Used to be neighbours of ours,
- you know, in the old time. Half the people, she says, didn’t know what
- was happening. Thought the butler was apoplectic and that old Moggeridge
- was helping him stand up. Taking off his collar. It was Laxton thought
- of saying it was a fit. Told everybody, she says. Had to tell ’em
- Something, I suppose. But she saw better and she thinks a good many
- others did. Laxton ran ’em both out of the room. Nice scene for Shonts,
- eh? Thundering awkward for poor Lucy. Not the sort of thing the county
- expected. Has her both ways. Can’t go to a house where the Lord
- Chancellor goes mad. One alternative. Can’t go to a house where the
- butler has fits. That’s the other. See the dilemma?...”
- “I’ve got a letter from Lucy, too. It’s here”—he struggled—“See? Eight
- sheets—pencil. No Joke for a man to read that. And she writes worse than
- any decent self-respecting illiterate woman has a right to do. Quivers.
- Like writing in a train. Can’t read half of it. But _she’s_ got
- something about a boy on her mind. Mad about a boy. Have I taken away a
- boy? They’ve lost a boy. Took him in my luggage, I suppose. She’d better
- write to the Lord Chancellor. Likely as not he met him in some odd
- corner and flew at him. Smashed him to atoms. Dispersed him. Anyhow
- they’ve lost a boy.”
- He protested to the world. “_I_ can’t go hunting lost boys for Lucy.
- I’ve done enough coming away as I did....”
- Mrs. Bowles held out an arresting cigarette.
- “What sort of boy was lost?” she asked.
- “_I_ don’t know. Some little beast of a boy. I daresay she’d only
- imagined it. Whole thing been too much for her.”
- “Read that over again,” said Mrs. Bowles, “about losing a boy. We’ve
- found one.”
- “That _little_ chap?”
- “We found that boy”—she glanced over her shoulder, but Bealby was
- nowhere to be seen—“on Sunday morning near Shonts. He strayed into us
- like a lost kitten.”
- “But I thought you said you knew his father, Judy,” objected the
- Professor.
- “Didn’t verify,” said Mrs. Bowles shortly, and then to Captain Douglas,
- “read over again what Lady Laxton says about him....”
- § 6
- Captain Douglas struggled with the difficulties of his cousin’s
- handwriting.
- Everybody drew together over the fragments of the dessert with an eager
- curiosity, and helped to weigh Lady Laxton’s rather dishevelled
- phrases....
- § 7
- “We’ll call the principal witness,” said Mrs. Bowles at last, warming to
- the business. “Dick!”
- “Di-ick!”
- “_Dick!_”
- The Professor got up and strolled round behind the caravan. Then he
- returned. “No boy there.”
- “He _heard_!” said Mrs. Bowles in a large whisper and making round
- wonder-eyes.
- “She _says_,” said Douglas, “that the chances are he’s got into the
- secret passages....”
- The Professor strolled out to the road and looked up it and then down
- upon the roofs of Winthorpe-Sutbury. “No,” he said. “He’s mizzled.”
- “He’s only gone away for a bit,” said Mrs. Geedge. “He does sometimes
- after lunch. He’ll come back to wash up.”
- “He’s probably taking a snooze among the yew bushes before facing the
- labours of washing up,” said Mrs. Bowles. “He _can’t_ have mizzled. You
- see — in there — He can’t by any chance have taken his luggage!”
- She got up and clambered—with a little difficulty because of its
- piled-up position, into the caravan. “It’s all right,” she called out of
- the door. “His little parsivel is still here.”
- Her head disappeared again.
- “I don’t think he’d go away like this,” said Madeleine. “After all, what
- is there for him to go to—even if he is Lady Laxton’s missing boy....”
- “I don’t believe he heard a word of it,” said Mrs. Geedge....
- Mrs. Bowles reappeared, with a curious-looking brown paper parcel in her
- hand. She descended carefully. She sat down by the fire and held the
- parcel on her knees. She regarded it and her companions waggishly and
- lit a fresh cigarette. “Our link with Dick,” she said, with the
- cigarette in her mouth.
- She felt the parcel, she poised the parcel, she looked at it more and
- more waggishly. “I _wonder_,” she said.
- Her expression became so waggish that her husband knew she was committed
- to behaviour of the utmost ungentlemanliness. He had long ceased to
- attempt restraint in these moods. She put her head on one side and tore
- open the corner of the parcel just a little way.
- “A tin can,” she said in a stage whisper.
- She enlarged the opening. “Blades of grass,” she said.
- The Professor tried to regard it humorously. “Even if you have ceased to
- be decent you can still be frank.... I think, now, my dear, you might
- just straightforwardly undo the parcel.”
- She did. Twelve unsympathetic eyes surveyed the evidences of Bealby’s
- utter poverty.
- “He’s coming,” cried Madeleine suddenly.
- Judy repacked hastily, but it was a false alarm.
- “I said he’d mizzled,” said the Professor.
- “And without washing up!” wailed Madeleine, “I couldn’t have thought it
- of him....”
- § 8
- But Bealby had not “mizzled,” although he was conspicuously not in
- evidence about the camp. There was neither sight nor sound of him for
- all the time they sat about the vestiges of their meal. They talked of
- him and of topics arising out of him, and whether the captain should
- telegraph to Lady Laxton, “Boy practically found.” “I’d rather just find
- him,” said the captain, “and anyhow until we get hold of him we don’t
- know it’s her particular boy.” Then they talked of washing-up and how
- detestable it was. And suddenly the two husbands, seeing their
- advantage, renewed their proposals that the caravanners should put up at
- the golflinks hotel, and have baths and the comforts of civilization for
- a night or so—and anyhow walk thither for tea. And as William had now
- returned—he was sitting on the turf afar off smoking a nasty-looking
- short clay pipe—they rose up and departed. But Captain Douglas and Miss
- Philips for some reason did not go off exactly with the others, but
- strayed apart, straying away more and more into a kind of solitude....
- First the four married people and then the two lovers disappeared over
- the crest of the downs....
- § 9
- For a time, except for its distant sentinel, the caravan seemed
- absolutely deserted, and then a clump of bramble against the wall of the
- old chalk pit became agitated and a small rueful disillusioned
- white-smeared little Bealby crept back into the visible universe again.
- His heart was very heavy.
- The time had come to go.
- And he did not want to go. He had loved the caravan. He had adored
- Madeleine.
- He would go, but he would go beautifully—touchingly.
- He would wash up before he went, he would make everything tidy, he would
- leave behind him a sense of irreparable loss....
- With a mournful precision he set about this undertaking. If Mergleson
- could have seen, Mergleson would have been amazed....
- He made everything look wonderfully tidy.
- Then in the place where she had sat, lying on her rug, he found her
- favourite book, a small volume of Swinburne’s poems very beautifully
- bound. Captain Douglas had given it to her.
- Bealby handled it with a kind of reverence. So luxurious it was, so
- unlike the books in Bealby’s world, so altogether of her quality....
- Strange forces prompted him. For a time he hesitated. Then decision came
- with a rush. He selected a page, drew the stump of a pencil from his
- pocket, wetted it very wet and, breathing hard, began to write that
- traditional message, “Farewell. Remember Art Bealby.”
- To this he made an original addition: “I washt up before I went.”
- Then he remembered that so far as this caravan went he was not Art
- Bealby at all. He renewed the wetness of his pencil and drew black lines
- athwart the name of “Art Bealby” until it was quite unreadable; then
- across this again and pressing still deeper so that the subsequent pages
- re-echoed it he wrote these singular words “Ed rightful Earl Shonts.”
- Then he was ashamed, and largely obliterated this by still more forcible
- strokes. Finally above it all plainly and nakedly he wrote “Dick
- Mal-travers....”
- He put down the book with a sigh and stood up.
- Everything was beautifully in order. But could he not do something yet?
- There came to him the idea of wreathing the entire camping place with
- boughs of yew. It would look lovely—and significant. He set to work. At
- first he toiled zealously, but yew is tough to get and soon his hands
- were painful. He cast about for some easier way, and saw beneath the
- hind wheels of the caravan great green boughs—one particularly a
- splendid long branch.... It seemed to him that it would be possible to
- withdraw this branch from the great heap of sticks and stones that
- stayed up the hind wheels of the caravan. It seemed to him that that was
- so. He was mistaken, but that was his idea.
- He set to work to do it. It was rather more difficult to manage than he
- had supposed; there were unexpected ramifications, wider resistances.
- Indeed, the thing seemed rooted.
- Bealby was a resolute youngster at bottom.
- He warmed to his task.... He tugged harder and harder....
- § 10
- How various is the quality of humanity!
- About Bealby there was ever an imaginative touch; he was capable of
- romance, of gallantries, of devotion. William was of a grosser clay,
- slave of his appetites, a materialist. Such men as William drive one to
- believe in born inferiors, in the existence of a lower sort, in the
- natural inequality of men.
- While Bealby was busy at his little gentle task of reparation, a task
- foolish perhaps and not too ably conceived, but at any rate morally
- gracious, William had no thought in the world but the satisfaction of
- those appetites that the consensus of all mankind has definitely
- relegated to the lower category. And which Heaven has relegated to the
- lower regions of our frame. He came now slinking towards the vestiges of
- the caravanners’ picnic, and no one skilled in the interpretation of the
- human physiognomy could have failed to read the significance of the
- tongue tip that drifted over his thin oblique lips. He came so softly
- towards the encampment that Bealby did not note him. Partly William
- thought of remnants of food, but chiefly he was intent to drain the
- bottles. Bealby had stuck them all neatly in a row a little way up the
- hill. There was a cider bottle with some heel-taps of cider, William
- drank that; then there was nearly half a bottle of hock and William
- drank that, then there were the drainings of the Burgundy and
- Apollinaris. It was all drink to William.
- And after he had drained each bottle William winked at the watching
- angels and licked his lips, and patted the lower centres of his being
- with a shameless base approval. Then fired by alcohol, robbed of his
- last vestiges of self-control, his thoughts turned to the delicious
- chocolates that were stored in a daintily beribboned box in the little
- drawers beneath the sleeping bunk of Miss Philips. There was a new
- brightness in his eye, a spot of pink in either cheek. With an
- expression of the lowest cunning he reconnoitred Bealby.
- Bealby was busy about something at the back end of the caravan, tugging
- at something.
- With swift stealthy movements of an entirely graceless sort, William got
- up into the front of the caravan.
- Just for a moment he hesitated before going in. He craned his neck to
- look round the side at the unconscious Bealby, wrinkled the vast nose
- into an unpleasant grimace and then—a crouching figure of appetite—he
- crept inside.
- Here they were! He laid his hand in the drawer, halted listening....
- What was that?...
- Suddenly the caravan swayed. He stumbled, and fear crept into his craven
- soul. The caravan lurched. It was moving.... Its hind wheels came to the
- ground with a crash....
- He took a step doorward and was pitched sideways and thrown upon his
- knees.... Then he was hurled against the dresser and hit by a falling
- plate. A cup fell and smashed and the caravan seemed to leap and
- bound....
- Through the little window he had a glimpse of yew bushes hurrying
- upward. The caravan was going down hill....
- “Lummy!” said William, clutching at the bunks to hold himself
- upright....
- “Ca-arnt be that drink!” said William, aspread and aghast....
- He attempted the door.
- “Crikey! Here! Hold in! My shin!” ... “’Tis thut Brasted Vool of a Boy!”
- “....” said William. “....——....
- [Illustration: —— —— ——.” “——.”]
- § 11
- The caravan party soon came to its decision. They would stay the night
- in the hotel. And so as soon as they had had some tea they decided to go
- back and make William bring the caravan and all the ladies’ things round
- to the hotel. With characteristic eagerness, Professor Bowles led the
- way.
- And so it was Professor Bowles who first saw the release of the caravan.
- He barked. One short sharp bark. “Whup!” he cried, and very quickly,
- “Whatstheboydoing?”
- Then quite a different style of noise, with the mouth open “Wha—hoop!”
- Then he set off running very fast down towards the caravan, waving his
- arms and shouting as he ran, “Yaaps! You _Idiot_. Yaaps!”
- The others were less promptly active.
- Down the slope they saw Bealby, a little struggling active Bealby,
- tugging away at a yew branch until the caravan swayed with his efforts,
- and then—then there was a movement as though the thing tossed its head
- and reared, and a smash as the heap of stuff that stayed up its hind
- wheels collapsed....
- It plunged like a horse with a dog at its heels, it lurched sideways,
- and then with an air of quiet deliberation started down the grass slope
- to the road and Winthorpe-Sutbury....
- Professor Bowles sped in pursuit like the wind, and Mrs. Bowles after a
- gasping moment set off after her lord, her face round and resolute. Mr.
- Geedge followed at a more dignified pace, making the only really sound
- suggestion that was offered on the occasion. “Hue! Stop it!” cried Mr.
- Geedge, for all the world like his great prototype at the Balkan
- Conference. And then like a large languid pair of scissors he began to
- run. Mrs. Geedge after some indefinite moments decided to see the humour
- of it all, and followed after her lord, in a fluttering rush, emitting
- careful little musical giggles as she ran, giggles that she had learnt
- long ago from a beloved schoolfellow. Captain Douglas and Miss Philips
- were some way behind the others, and the situation had already developed
- considerably before they grasped what was happening. Then obeying the
- instincts of a soldier the captain came charging to support the others,
- and Miss Madeleine Philips after some wasted gestures realized that
- nobody was looking at her, and sat down quietly on the turf until this
- paralyzing state of affairs should cease.
- The caravan remained the centre of interest.
- Without either indecent haste or any complete pause it pursued its way
- down the road towards the tranquil village below. Except for the
- rumbling of its wheels and an occasional concussion it made very little
- sound: once or twice there was a faint sound of breaking crockery from
- its interior and once the phantom of an angry yell, but that was all.
- There was an effect of discovered personality about the thing. This
- vehicle, which had hitherto been content to play a background part, a
- yellow patch amidst the scenery, was now revealing an individuality. It
- was purposeful and touched with a suggestion of playfulness, at once
- kindly and human; it had its thoughtful instants, its phases of quick
- decision, yet never once did it altogether lose a certain mellow
- dignity. There was nothing servile about it; never for a moment, for
- example, did it betray its blind obedience to gravitation. It was rather
- as if it and gravitation were going hand in hand. It came out into the
- road, butted into the bank, swept round, meditated for a full second,
- and then shafts foremost headed downhill, going quietly faster and
- faster and swaying from bank to bank. The shafts went before it like
- arms held out....
- It had a quality—as if it were a favourite elephant running to a beloved
- master from whom it had been over-long separated. Or a slightly
- intoxicated and altogether happy yellow guinea-pig making for some
- coveted food....
- At a considerable distance followed Professor Bowles, a miracle of
- compact energy, running so fast that he seemed only to touch the ground
- at very rare intervals....
- And then, dispersedly, in their order and according to their natures,
- the others....
- There was fortunately very little on the road.
- There was a perambulator containing twins, whose little girl guardian
- was so fortunate as to be high up on the bank gathering blackberries.
- A ditcher, ditching.
- A hawker lost in thought.
- His cart, drawn by a poor little black screw of a pony and loaded with
- the cheap flawed crockery that is so popular among the poor.
- A dog asleep in the middle of the village street.... Amidst this choice
- of objects the caravan displayed a whimsical humanity. It reduced the
- children in the perambulator to tears, but passed. It might have reduced
- them to a sort of red-currant jelly. It lurched heavily towards the
- ditcher and spared him, it chased the hawker up the bank, it whipped off
- a wheel from the cart of crockery (which after an interval of
- astonishment fell like a vast objurgation) and then it directed its
- course with a grim intentness towards the dog.
- It just missed the dog.
- He woke up not a moment too soon. He fled with a yelp of dismay.
- And then the caravan careered on a dozen yards further, lost energy
- and—the only really undignified thing in its whole career—stood on its
- head in a wide wet ditch. It did this with just the slightest lapse into
- emphasis. _There!_ It was as if it gave a grunt—and perhaps there was
- the faintest suggestion of William in that grunt—and then it became
- quite still....
- For a time the caravan seemed finished and done. Its steps hung from its
- upper end like the tongue of a tired dog. Except for a few minute noises
- as though it was scratching itself inside, it was as inanimate as death
- itself.
- But up the hill road the twins were weeping, the hawker and the ditcher
- were saying raucous things, the hawker’s pony had backed into the ditch
- and was taking ill-advised steps, for which it was afterwards to be
- sorry, amidst his stock-in-trade, and Professor Bowles, Mrs. Bowles, Mr.
- Geedge, Captain Douglas and Mrs. Geedge were running—running—one heard
- the various patter of their feet.
- And then came signs of life at the upward door of the caravan, a hand,
- an arm, an active investigating leg seeking a hold, a large nose, a
- small intent vicious eye; in fact—William.
- William maddened.
- Professor Bowles had reached the caravan. With a startling agility he
- clambered up by the wheels and step and confronted the unfortunate
- driver. It was an occasion for mutual sympathy rather than anger, but
- the Professor was hasty, efficient and unsympathetic with the lower
- classes, and William’s was an ill-regulated temperament.
- “You consummate _ass_!” began Professor Bowles....
- When William heard Professor Bowles say this, incontinently he smote him
- in the face, and when Professor Bowles was smitten in the face he
- grappled instantly and very bravely and resolutely with William.
- For a moment they struggled fearfully, they seemed to be endowed
- instantaneously with innumerable legs, and then suddenly they fell
- through the door of the caravan into the interior, their limbs seemed to
- whirl for a wonderful instant and then they were swallowed up....
- The smash was tremendous. You would not have thought there was nearly so
- much in the caravan still left to get broken....
- A healing silence....
- At length smothered noises of still inadequate adjustment within....
- The village population in a state of scared delight appeared at a score
- of points and converged upon the catastrophe. Sounds of renewed
- dissension between William and the Professor inside the rearing yellow
- bulk, promised further interests and added an element of mystery to this
- manifest disaster.
- § 12
- As Bealby, still grasping his great branch of yew, watched these events,
- a sense of human futility invaded his youthful mind. For the first time
- he realized the gulf between intention and result. He had meant so
- well....
- He perceived it would be impossible to explain....
- The thought of even attempting to explain things to Professor Bowles was
- repellent to him....
- He looked about him with round despairful eyes. He selected a direction
- which seemed to promise the maximum of concealment with the minimum of
- conversational possibility, and in that direction and without needless
- delay he set off, eager to turn over an entirely fresh page in his
- destiny as soon as possible....
- To get away, the idea possessed all his being.
- From the crest of the downs a sweet voice floated after his retreating
- form and never overtook him.
- “Di-ick!”
- § 13
- Then presently Miss Philips arose to her feet, gathered her skirts in
- her hand and with her delicious chin raised and an expression of
- countenance that was almost businesslike, descended towards the
- gathering audience below. She wore wide-flowing skirts and came down the
- hill in Artemesian strides.
- It was high time that somebody looked at her.
- CHAPTER V
- THE SEEKING OF BEALBY
- § 1
- On the same Monday evening that witnessed Bealby’s first experience of
- the theatre, Mr. Mergleson, the house steward of Shonts, walked slowly
- and thoughtfully across the corner of the park between the laundry and
- the gardens. His face was much recovered from the accidents of his
- collision with the Lord Chancellor, resort to raw meat in the kitchen
- had checked the development of his injuries, and only a few contusions
- in the side of his face were more than faintly traceable. And suffering
- had on the whole rather ennobled than depressed his bearing. He had a
- black eye, but it was not, he felt, a common black eye. It came from
- high quarters and through no fault of Mr. Mergleson’s own. He carried it
- well. It was a fruit of duty rather than the outcome of wanton
- pleasure-seeking or misdirected passion.
- He found Mr. Darling in profound meditation over some peach trees
- against the wall. They were not doing so well as they ought to do and
- Mr. Darling was engaged in wondering why.
- “Good evening, Mr. Darling,” said Mr. Mergleson.
- Mr. Darling ceased rather slowly to wonder and turned to his friend.
- “Good evening, Mr. Mergleson,” he said. “I don’t quite like the look of
- these here peaches, _blowed_ if I do.”
- Mr. Mergleson glanced at the peaches, and then came to the matter that
- was nearest his heart.
- “You ’aven’t I suppose seen anything of your stepson these last two
- days, Mr. Darling?”
- “Naturally _not_,” said Mr. Darling, putting his head on one side and
- regarding his interlocutor. “Naturally not,—I’ve left that to you, Mr.
- Mergleson.”
- “Well, that’s what’s awkward,” said Mr. Mergleson, and then, with a
- forced easiness, “You see, I ain’t seen ’im either.”
- “No!”
- “No. I lost sight of ’im—” Mr. Mergleson appeared to reflect—“late on
- Sattiday night.”
- “’Ow’s that, Mr. Mergleson?”
- Mr. Mergleson considered the difficulties of lucid explanation. “We
- missed ’im,” said Mr. Mergleson simply, regarding the well-weeded garden
- path with a calculating expression and then lifting his eyes to Mr.
- Darling’s with an air of great candour. “And we continue to miss him.”
- “_Well!_” said Mr. Darling. “That’s rum.”
- “Yes,” said Mr. Mergleson.
- “It’s decidedly rum,” said Mr. Darling.
- “We thought ’e might be ’iding from ’is work. Or cut off ’ome.”
- “You didn’t send down to ask.”
- “We was too busy with the week-end people. On the ’ole we thought if ’e
- _’ad_ cut ’ome, on the ’ole, ’e wasn’t a very serious loss. ’E got in
- the way at times.... And there was one or two things ’appened—... Now
- that they’re all gone and ’e ’asn’t turned up—Well, I came down, Mr.
- Darling, to arst you. Where’s ’e gone?”
- “’E ain’t come ’ere,” said Mr. Darling surveying the garden.
- “I ’arf expected ’e might and I ’arf expected ’e mightn’t,” said Mr.
- Mergleson with the air of one who had anticipated Mr. Darling’s answer
- but hesitated to admit as much.
- The two gentlemen paused for some seconds and regarded each other
- searchingly.
- “Where’s ’e _got_ to?” said Mr. Darling.
- “Well,” said Mr. Mergleson, putting his hands where the tails of his
- short jacket would have been if it hadn’t been short, and looking
- extraordinarily like a parrot in its more thoughtful moods, “to tell you
- the truth, Mr. Darling, I’ve ’ad a dream about ’im—and it worries me. I
- got a sort of ideer of ’im as being in one of them secret passages.
- ’Iding away. There was a guest, well, I say it with all respec’ but
- _anyone_ might ’ave ’id from ’im.... S’morning soon as the week-end ’ad
- cleared up and gone ’ome, me and Thomas went through them passages as
- well as we could. Not a trace of ’im. But I still got that ideer. ’E was
- a wriggling, climbing,—enterprising sort of boy.”
- “I’ve checked ’im for it once or twice,” said Mr. Darling with the red
- light of fierce memories gleaming for a moment in his eyes.
- “’E might even,” said Mr. Mergleson, “well, very likely ’ave got ’imself
- jammed in one of them secret passages....”
- “Jammed,” repeated Mr. Darling.
- “Well—got ’imself somewhere where ’e can’t get out. I’ve ’eard tell
- there’s walled-up dungeons.”
- “They say,” said Mr. Darling, “there’s underground passages to the Abbey
- ruins—three good mile away.”
- “Orkward,” said Mr. Mergleson....
- “Drat ’is eyes!” said Mr. Darling, scratching his head. “What does ’e
- mean by it?”
- “We can’t leave ’im there,” said Mr. Mergleson.
- “I knowed a young devil once what crawled up a culvert,” said Mr.
- Darling. “’Is father ’ad to dig ’im out like a fox.... Lord! ’ow ’e
- walloped ’im for it.”
- “Mistake to ’ave a boy in so young,” said Mr. Mergleson.
- “It’s all very awkward,” said Mr. Darling, surveying every aspect of the
- case. “You see—. ’Is mother sets a most estrordinary value on ’im. Most
- estrordinary.”
- “I don’t know whether she oughtn’t to be told,” said Mr. Mergleson. “I
- was thinking of that.”
- Mr. Darling was not the sort of man to meet trouble half-way. He shook
- his head at that. “Not yet, Mr. Mergleson. I don’t think yet. Not until
- everything’s been tried. I don’t think there’s any need to give her
- needless distress,—none whatever. If you don’t mind I think I’ll come up
- to-night—nineish say—and ’ave a talk to you and Thomas about it—a quiet
- talk. Best to begin with a _quiet_ talk. It’s a dashed rum go, and me
- and you we got to think it out a bit.”
- “That’s what _I_ think,” said Mr. Mergleson with unconcealed relief at
- Mr. Darling’s friendliness. “That’s exactly the light, Mr. Darling, in
- which it appears to me. Because, you see—if ’e’s all right and in the
- ’ouse, why doesn’t ’e come for ’is vittels?”
- § 2
- In the pantry that evening the question of telling someone was discussed
- further. It was discussed over a number of glasses of Mr. Mergleson’s
- beer. For, following a sound tradition, Mr. Mergleson brewed at Shonts,
- and sometimes he brewed well and sometimes he brewed ill, and sometimes
- he brewed weak and sometimes he brewed strong, and there was no monotony
- in the cups at Shonts. This was sturdy stuff and suited Mr. Darling’s
- mood, and ever and again with an author’s natural weakness and an
- affectation of abstraction Mr. Mergleson took the jug out empty and
- brought it back foaming.
- Henry, the second footman, was disposed to a forced hopefulness so as
- not to spoil the evening, but Thomas was sympathetic and distressed. The
- red-haired youth made cigarettes with a little machine, licked them and
- offered them to the others, saying little, as became him. Etiquette
- deprived him of an uninvited beer, and Mr. Mergleson’s inattention
- completed what etiquette began.
- “I can’t bear to think of the poor little beggar, stuck head foremost
- into some cobwebby cranny, blowed if I can,” said Thomas, getting help
- from the jug.
- “He was an interesting kid,” said Thomas in a tone that was frankly
- obituary. “He didn’t like his work, one could see that, but he was
- lively—and I tried to help him along all I could, when I wasn’t too busy
- myself.”
- “There was something sensitive about him,” said Thomas.
- Mr. Mergleson sat with his arms loosely thrown out over the table.
- “What we got to do is to tell someone,” he said, “I don’t see ’ow I can
- put off telling ’er ladyship—after to-morrow morning. And then—’eaven
- ’elp us!”
- “’Course _I_ got to tell _my_ missis,” said Mr. Darling, and poured in a
- preoccupied way, some running over.
- “We’ll go through them passages again now before we go to bed,” said Mr.
- Mergleson, “far as we can. But there’s ’oles and chinks on’y a boy could
- get through.”
- “_I_ got to tell the missis,” said Mr. Darling. “That’s what’s worrying
- me....”
- As the evening wore on there was a tendency on the part of Mr. Darling
- to make this the refrain of his discourse. He sought advice. “’Ow’d you
- tell the missis?” he asked Mr. Mergleson, and emptied a glass to control
- his impatience before Mr. Mergleson replied.
- “I shall tell ’er ladyship, just simply, the fact. I shall say, your
- ladyship, here’s my boy gone and we don’t know where. And as she arsts
- me questions so shall I give particulars.”
- Mr. Darling reflected and then shook his head slowly.
- “’Ow’d _ju_ tell the missis?” he asked Thomas.
- “Glad I haven’t got to,” said Thomas. “_Poor_ little beggar.”
- “Yes, but ’ow _would_ you tell ’er?” Mr. Darling said, varying the
- accent very carefully.
- “I’d go to ’er and I’d pat her back and I’d say, ‘bear up,’ see, and
- when she asked what for, I’d just tell her what for—gradual like.”
- “You don’t know the missis,” said Mr. Darling. “Henry, ’ow’d _ju_ tell
- ’er?”
- “Let ’er find out,” said Henry. “Wimmin do.”
- Mr. Darling reflected, and decided that too was unworkable.
- “’Ow’d _you_?” he asked with an air of desperation of the red-haired
- youth.
- The red-haired youth remained for a moment with his tongue extended,
- licking the gum of a cigarette paper, and his eyes on Mr. Darling. Then
- he finished the cigarette slowly, giving his mind very carefully to the
- question he had been honoured with. “I think,” he said, in a low serious
- voice, “I should say, just simply, Mary—or Susan—or whatever her name
- is.”
- “Tilda,” supplied Mr. Darling.
- “‘Tilda,’ I should say. ‘The Lord gave and the Lord ’ath taken away.
- Tilda!—’e’s gone.’ Somethin’ like that.”
- The red-haired boy cleared his throat. He was rather touched by his own
- simple eloquence.
- Mr. Darling reflected on this with profound satisfaction for some
- moments. Then he broke out almost querulously, “Yes, but brast
- him!—_where’s_ ’e gone?”
- “Anyhow,” said Mr. Darling, “I ain’t going to tell ’er, not till the
- morning. I ain’t going to lose my night’s rest if I _have_ lost my
- stepson. Nohow. Mr. Mergleson, I _must_ say, I don’t think I ever _’ave_
- tasted better beer. Never. It’s—it’s famous beer.”
- He had some more....
- On his way back through the moonlight to the gardens Mr. Darling was
- still unsettled as to the exact way of breaking things to his wife. He
- had come out from the house a little ruffled because of Mr. Mergleson’s
- opposition to a rather good idea of his that he should go about the
- house and “holler for ’im a bit. He’d know my voice, you see. Ladyship
- wouldn’t mind. Very likely ’sleep by now.” But the moonlight dispelled
- his irritation.
- How was he to tell his wife? He tried various methods to the listening
- moon.
- There was for example the off-hand newsy way. “You know tha’ boy yours?”
- Then a pause for the reply. Then, “’E’s toley dis’peared.”
- Only there are difficulties about the word totally.
- Or the distressed impersonal manner. “Dre’fle thing happen’d. Dre’fle
- thing. Tha’ poo’ lill’ chap, Artie—toley dis’peared.”
- Totally again.
- Or the personal intimate note. “Dunno wha’ you’ll say t’me, Tilda, when
- you hear what-togottasay. Thur’ly bad news. Seems they los’ our Artie up
- there—clean los’ ’im. Can’t fine ’im nowhere tall.”
- Or the authoritative kindly. “Tilda—you go’ control yourself. Go’ show
- whad you made of. Our boy—’e’s—hic—_los’_.”
- Then he addressed the park at large with a sudden despair. “Don’ care
- wha’ I say, she’ll blame it on to me. I _know_ ’er!”
- After that the enormous pathos of the situation got hold of him. “Poor
- lill’ chap,” he said. “Poor lill’ fell’,” and shed a few natural tears.
- “Loved ’im jessis mione son.”
- As the circumambient night made no reply he repeated the remark in a
- louder, almost domineering tone....
- He spent some time trying to climb the garden wall because the door did
- not seem to be in the usual place. (Have to enquire about that in the
- morning. Difficult to see everything is all right when one is so
- bereaved). But finally he came on the door round a corner.
- He told his wife merely that he intended to have a peaceful night, and
- took off his boots in a defiant and intermittent manner.
- The morning would be soon enough.
- She looked at him pretty hard, and he looked at her ever and again, but
- she never made a guess at it.
- Bed.
- § 3
- So soon as the week-enders had dispersed and Sir Peter had gone off to
- London to attend to various matters affecting the peptonizing of milk
- and the distribution of baby soothers about the habitable globe, Lady
- Laxton went back to bed and remained in bed until midday on Tuesday.
- Nothing short of complete rest and the utmost kindness from her maid
- would, she felt, save her from a nervous breakdown of the most serious
- description. The festival had been stormy to the end. Sir Peter’s
- ill-advised attempts to deprive Lord Moggeridge of alcohol had led to a
- painful struggle at lunch, and this had been followed by a still more
- unpleasant scene between host and guest in the afternoon. “This is an
- occasion for tact,” Sir Peter had said and had gone off to tackle the
- Lord Chancellor, leaving his wife to the direst, best founded
- apprehensions. For Sir Peter’s tact was a thing by itself, a mixture of
- misconception, recrimination and familiarity that was rarely well
- received....
- She had had to explain to the Sunday dinner party that his lordship had
- been called away suddenly. “Something connected with the Great Seal,”
- Lady Laxton had whispered in a discreet mysterious whisper. One or two
- simple hearers were left with the persuasion that the Great Seal had
- been taken suddenly unwell—and probably in a slightly indelicate manner.
- Thomas had to paint Mergleson’s eye with grease-paint left over from
- some private theatricals. It had been a patched-up affair altogether,
- and before she retired to bed that night Lady Laxton had given way to
- her accumulated tensions and wept.
- There was no reason whatever why to wind up the day Sir Peter should
- have stayed in her room for an hour saying what he thought of Lord
- Moggeridge. She felt she knew quite well enough what he thought of Lord
- Moggeridge, and on these occasions he always used a number of words that
- she did her best to believe, as a delicately brought up woman, were
- unfamiliar to her ears....
- So on Monday, as soon as the guests had gone, she went to bed again and
- stayed there, trying as a good woman should to prevent herself thinking
- of what the neighbours could be thinking—and saying—of the whole affair,
- by studying a new and very circumstantial pamphlet by Bishop Fowle on
- social evils, turning over the moving illustrations of some recent
- antivivisection literature and re-reading the accounts in the morning
- papers of a colliery disaster in the north of England.
- To such women as Lady Laxton, brought up in an atmosphere of refinement
- that is almost colourless, and living a life troubled only by small
- social conflicts and the minor violence of Sir Peter, blameless to the
- point of complete uneventfulness, and secure and comfortable to the
- point of tedium, there is something amounting to fascination in the
- wickedness and sufferings of more normally situated people, there is a
- real attraction and solace in the thought of pain and stress, and as her
- access to any other accounts of vice and suffering was restricted she
- kept herself closely in touch with the more explicit literature of the
- various movements for human moralization that distinguish our age, and
- responded eagerly and generously to such painful catastrophes as enliven
- it. The counterfoils of her cheque book witnessed to her gratitude for
- these vicarious sensations. She figured herself to herself in her day
- dreams as a calm and white and shining intervention checking and
- reproving amusements of an undesirable nature, and earning the tearful
- blessings of the mangled by-products of industrial enterprise.
- There is a curious craving for entire reality in the feminine
- composition, and there were times when in spite of these feasts of
- particulars, she wished she could come just a little nearer to the heady
- dreadfulnesses of life than simply writing a cheque against it. She
- would have liked to have actually _seen_ the votaries of evil blench and
- repent before her contributions, to have, herself, unstrapped and
- revived and pitied some doomed and chloroformed victim of the so-called
- “scientist,” to have herself participated in the stretcher and the
- hospital and humanity made marvellous by enlistment under the red-cross
- badge. But Sir Peter’s ideals of womanhood were higher than his
- language, and he would not let her soil her refinement with any vision
- of the pain and evil in the world. “Sort of woman they want up there is
- a Trained Nurse,” he used to say when she broached the possibility of
- _going_ to some famine or disaster. “_You_ don’t want to go prying, old
- girl....”
- She suffered, she felt, from repressed heroism. If ever she was to shine
- in disaster that disaster, she felt, must come to her, she might not go
- to meet it, and so you realize how deeply it stirred her, how it
- brightened her and uplifted her to learn from Mr. Mergleson’s halting
- statements that perhaps, that probably, that almost certainly, a painful
- and tragical thing was happening even now within the walls of Shonts,
- that there was urgent necessity for action—if anguish was to be
- witnessed before it had ended, and life saved.
- She clasped her hands; she surveyed her large servitor with agonized
- green-grey eyes.
- “Something must be done at once,” she said. “Everything possible must be
- done. Poor little Mite!”
- “Of course, my lady, ’e _may_ ’ave run away!”
- “Oh no!” she cried, “he hasn’t run away. He hasn’t run away. How can you
- be so _wicked_, Mergleson. Of course he hasn’t run away. He’s there now.
- And it’s too dreadful.”
- She became suddenly very firm and masterful. The morning’s colliery
- tragedy inspired her imagination.
- “We must get pick-axes,” she said. “We must organize search parties. Not
- a moment is to be lost, Mergleson—not a moment.... Get the men in off
- the roads. Get everyone you can....”
- And not a moment was lost. The road men were actually at work in Shonts
- before their proper dinner-hour was over.
- They did quite a lot of things that afternoon. Every passage attainable
- from the dining-room opening was explored, and where these passages gave
- off chinks and crannies they were opened up with a vigour which Lady
- Laxton had greatly stimulated by an encouraging presence and liberal
- doses of whisky. Through their efforts a fine new opening was made into
- the library from the wall near the window, a hole big enough for a man
- to fall through, because one did, and a great piece of stonework was
- thrown down from the Queen Elizabeth tower, exposing the upper portion
- of the secret passage to the light of day. Lady Laxton herself and the
- head housemaid went round the panelling with a hammer and a chisel, and
- called out “Are you there?” and attempted an opening wherever it sounded
- hollow. The sweep was sent for to go up the old chimneys outside the
- present flues. Meanwhile Mr. Darling had been set with several of his
- men to dig for, discover, pick up and lay open the underground passage
- or disused drain, whichever it was, that was known to run from the
- corner of the laundry towards the old ice-house, and that was supposed
- to reach to the abbey ruins. After some bold exploratory excavations
- this channel was located and a report sent at once to Lady Laxton.
- It was this and the new and alarming scar on the Queen Elizabeth tower
- that brought Mr. Beaulieu Plummer post-haste from the estate office up
- to the house. Mr. Beaulieu Plummer was the Marquis of Cranberry’s estate
- agent, a man of great natural tact, and charged among other duties with
- the task of seeing that the Laxtons did not make away with Shonts during
- the period of their tenancy. He was a sound compact little man, rarely
- out of extreme riding breeches and gaiters, and he wore glasses, that
- now glittered with astonishment as he approached Lady Laxton and her
- band of spade workers.
- At his approach Mr. Darling attempted to become invisible, but he was
- unable to do so.
- “Lady Laxton,” Mr. Beaulieu Plummer appealed, “may I ask—?”
- “Oh Mr. Beaulieu Plummer, I’m so _glad_ you’ve come. A little
- boy—suffocating! I can hardly _bear_ it.”
- “Suffocating!” cried Mr. Beaulieu Plummer, “_where_?” and was in a
- confused manner told.
- He asked a number of questions that Lady Laxton found very tiresome. But
- how did she _know_ the boy was in the secret passage? Of course she
- knew; was it likely she would do all this if she didn’t know? But
- mightn’t he have run away? How could he when he was in the secret
- passages? But why not first scour the countryside? By which time he
- would be smothered and starved and dead!...
- They parted with a mutual loss of esteem, and Mr. Beaulieu Plummer,
- looking very serious indeed, ran as fast as he could straight to the
- village telegraph-office. Or to be more exact, he walked until he
- thought himself out of sight of Lady Laxton and then he took to his
- heels and ran. He sat for some time in the parlour post office spoiling
- telegraph forms, and composing telegrams to Sir Peter Laxton and Lord
- Cranberry.
- He got these off at last, and then drawn by an irresistible fascination
- went back to the park and watched from afar the signs of fresh
- activities on the part of Lady Laxton.
- He saw men coming from the direction of the stables with large rakes.
- With these they dragged the ornamental waters.
- Then a man with a pick-axe appeared against the skyline and crossed the
- roof in the direction of the clock tower, bound upon some unknown but
- probably highly destructive mission.
- Then he saw Lady Laxton going off to the gardens. She was going to
- console Mrs. Darling in her trouble. This she did through nearly an hour
- and a half. And on the whole it seemed well to Mr. Beaulieu Plummer that
- so she should be occupied....
- It was striking five when a telegraph boy on a bicycle came up from the
- village with a telegram from Sir Peter Laxton.
- “Stop all proceedings absolutely,” it said, “until I get to you.”
- Lady Laxton’s lips tightened at the message. She was back from much
- weeping with Mrs. Darling and altogether finely strung. Here she felt
- was one of those supreme occasions when a woman must assert herself. “A
- matter of life or death,” she wired in reply, and to show herself how
- completely she overrode such dictation as this she sent Mr. Mergleson
- down to the village public-house with orders to engage anyone he could
- find there for an evening’s work on an extraordinarily liberal overtime
- scale.
- After taking this step the spirit of Lady Laxton quailed. She went and
- sat in her own room and quivered. She quivered but she clenched her
- delicate fist.
- She would go through with it, come what might, she would go on with the
- excavation all night if necessary, but at the same time she began a
- little to regret that she had not taken earlier steps to demonstrate the
- improbability of Bealby having simply run away. She set to work to
- repair this omission. She wrote off to the Superintendent of Police in
- the neighbouring town, to the nearest police magistrate, and then on the
- off chance to various of her week-end guests, including Captain Douglas.
- If it was true that he had organized the annoyance of the Lord
- Chancellor (and though she still rejected that view she did now begin to
- regard it as a permissible hypothesis), then he might also know
- something about the mystery of this boy’s disappearance.
- Each letter she wrote she wrote with greater fatigue and haste than its
- predecessor and more illegibly.
- Sir Peter arrived long after dark. He cut across the corner of the park
- to save time, and fell into one of the trenches that Mr. Darling had
- opened. This added greatly to the _éclat_ with which he came into the
- hall.
- Lady Laxton withstood him for five minutes and then returned abruptly to
- her bedroom and locked herself in, leaving the control of the operations
- in his hands....
- “If he’s not in the house,” said Sir Peter, “all this is thunderin’
- foolery, and if he’s in the house he’s dead. If he’s dead he’ll smell in
- a bit and then’ll be the time to look for him. Somethin’ to go upon
- instead of all this blind hacking the place about. No wonder they’re
- threatenin’ proceedings....”
- § 4
- Upon Captain Douglas Lady Laxton’s letter was destined to have a very
- distracting effect. Because, as he came to think it over, as he came to
- put her partly illegible allusions to secret passages and a missing boy
- side by side with his memories of Lord Moggeridge’s accusations and the
- general mystery of his expulsion from Shonts, it became more and more
- evident to him that he had here something remarkably like a clue,
- something that might serve to lift the black suspicion of irreverence
- and levity from his military reputation. And he had already got to the
- point of suggesting to Miss Philips that he ought to follow up and
- secure Bealby forthwith, before ever they came over the hill crest to
- witness the disaster to the caravan.
- Captain Douglas, it must be understood, was a young man at war within
- himself.
- He had been very nicely brought up, firstly in a charming English home,
- then in a preparatory school for selected young gentlemen, then in a
- good set at Eton, then at Sandhurst, where the internal trouble had
- begun to manifest itself. Afterwards the Bistershires.
- There were three main strands in the composition of Captain Douglas. In
- the first place, and what was peculiarly his own quality, was the
- keenest interest in the _why_ of things and the _how_ of things and the
- general mechanism of things. He was fond of clocks, curious about
- engines, eager for science; he had a quick brain and nimble hands. He
- read Jules Verne and liked to think about going to the stars and making
- flying machines and submarines—in those days when everybody knew quite
- certainly that such things were impossible. His brain teemed with larval
- ideas that only needed air and light to become active full-fledged
- ideas. There he excelled most of us. In the next place, but this second
- strand was just a strand that most young men have, he had a natural keen
- interest in the other half of humanity, he thought them lovely,
- interesting, wonderful, and they filled him with warm curiosities and
- set his imagination cutting the prettiest capers. And in the third
- place, and there again he was ordinarily human, he wanted to be liked,
- admired, approved, well thought of.... And so constituted he had passed
- through the educational influence of that English home, that preparatory
- school, the good set at Eton, the Sandhurst discipline, the Bistershire
- mess....
- Now the educational influence of the English home, the preparatory
- school, the good set at Eton and Sandhurst in those days—though
- Sandhurst has altered a little since—was all to develop that third chief
- strand of his being to the complete suppression of the others, to make
- him look well and unobtrusive, dress well and unobtrusively, behave well
- and unobtrusively, carry himself well, play games reasonably well, do
- nothing else well, and in the best possible form. And the two brothers
- Douglas, who were really very much alike, did honestly do their best to
- be such plain and simple gentlemen as our country demands, taking
- pretentious established things seriously, and not being odd or
- intelligent—in spite of those insurgent strands.
- But the strands were in them. Below the surface the disturbing impulses
- worked and at last forced their way out....
- In one Captain Douglas, as Mrs. Rampound Pilby told the Lord Chancellor,
- the suppressed ingenuity broke out in disconcerting mystifications and
- practical jokes that led to a severance from Portsmouth, in the other
- the pent-up passions came out before the other ingredients in an
- uncontrollable devotion to the obvious and challenging femininity of
- Miss Madeleine Philips.... His training had made him proof against
- ordinary women, deaf as it were to their charms, but she—she had
- penetrated. And impulsive forces that have been pent up—go with a bang
- when they go....
- The first strand in the composition of Captain Douglas has still to be
- accounted for, the sinister strain of intelligence and inventiveness and
- lively curiosity. On that he had kept a warier hold. So far that had not
- been noted against him. He had his motor bicycle, it is true, at a time
- when motor bicycles were on the verge of the caddish; to that extent a
- watchful eye might have found him suspicious; that was all that showed.
- I wish I could add it was all that there was, but other things—other
- things were going on. Nobody knew about them. But they were going on
- more and more.
- He read books.
- Not decent fiction, not official biographies about other fellows’
- fathers and all the old anecdotes brought up to date and so on, but
- books with ideas,—you know, philosophy, social philosophy, scientific
- stuff, all that rot. _The sort of stuff they read in mechanics’
- institutes._
- He thought. He could have controlled it. But he did not attempt to
- control it. He _tried_ to think. He knew perfectly well that it wasn’t
- good form, but a vicious attraction drew him on.
- He used to sit in his bedroom-study at Sandhurst, with the door locked,
- and write down on a bit of paper what he really believed and why. He
- would cut all sorts of things to do this. He would question—things no
- properly trained English gentleman ever questions.
- And—he experimented.
- This you know was long before the French and American aviators. It was
- long before the coming of that emphatic lead from abroad without which
- no well-bred English mind permits itself to stir. In the darkest secrecy
- he used to make little models of cane and paper and elastic in the hope
- that somehow he would find out something about flying. Flying—that
- dream! He used to go off by himself to lonely places and climb up as
- high as he could and send these things fluttering earthward. He used to
- moon over them and muse about them. If anyone came upon him suddenly
- while he was doing these things, he would sit on his model, or pretend
- it didn’t belong to him, or clap it into his pocket, whichever was most
- convenient, and assume the vacuous expression of a well-bred gentleman
- at leisure—and so far nobody had caught him. But it was a dangerous
- practice.
- And finally, and this now is the worst and last thing to tell of his
- eccentricities, he was keenly interested in the science of his
- profession and intensely ambitious.
- He thought—though it wasn’t his business to think, the business of a
- junior officer is to obey and look a credit to his regiment—that the
- military science of the British army was not nearly so bright as it
- ought to be, and that if big trouble came there might be considerable
- scope for an inventive man who had done what he could to keep abreast
- with foreign work, and a considerable weeding out of generals whose
- promotion had been determined entirely by their seniority, amiability
- and unruffled connubial felicity. He thought that the field artillery
- would be found out—there was no good in making a fuss about it
- beforehand—that no end of neglected dodges would have to be picked up
- from the enemy, that the transport was feeble, and a health
- service—other than surgery and ambulance—an unknown idea, but he saw no
- remedy but experience. So he worked hard in secret; he worked almost as
- hard as some confounded foreigner might have done; in the belief that
- after the first horrid smash-up there might be a chance to do things.
- Outwardly of course he was sedulously all right. But he could not quite
- hide the stir in his mind. It broke out upon his surface in a chattering
- activity of incompleted sentences which he tried to keep as decently
- silly as he could. He had done his utmost hitherto to escape the
- observation of the powers that were. His infatuation for Madeleine
- Philips had at any rate distracted censorious attention from these
- deeper infamies....
- And now here was a crisis in his life. Through some idiotic entanglement
- manifestly connected with this missing boy, he had got tarred by his
- brother’s brush and was under grave suspicion for liveliness and
- disrespect.
- The thing might be his professional ruin. And he loved the suppressed
- possibilities of his work beyond measure.
- It was a thing to make him absent-minded even in the company of
- Madeleine.
- § 5
- Not only were the first and second strands in the composition of Captain
- Douglas in conflict with all his appearances and pretensions, but they
- were also in conflict with one another.
- He was full of that concealed resolve to do and serve and accomplish
- great things in the world. That was surely purpose enough to hide behind
- an easy-going unpretending gentlemanliness. But he was also tremendously
- attracted by Madeleine Philips, more particularly when she was not
- there.
- A beautiful woman may be the inspiration of a great career. This,
- however, he was beginning to find was not the case with himself. He had
- believed it at first and written as much and said as much, and said it
- very variously and gracefully. But becoming more and more distinctly
- clear to his intelligence was the fact that the very reverse was the
- case. Miss Madeleine Philips was making it very manifest to Captain
- Douglas that she herself was a career; that a lover with any other
- career in view need not—as the advertisements say—apply.
- And the time she took up!
- The distress of being with her!
- And the distress of _not_ being with her!
- She was such a proud and lovely and entrancing and distressing being to
- remember, and such a vain and difficult thing to be with.
- She knew clearly that she was made for love, for she had made herself
- for love; and she went through life like its empress with all mankind
- and numerous women at her feet. And she had an ideal of the lover who
- should win her which was like a oleographic copy of a Laszlo portrait of
- Douglas greatly magnified. He was to rise rapidly to great things, he
- was to be a conqueror and administrator, while attending exclusively to
- her. And incidentally she would gather desperate homage from all other
- men of mark, and these attentions would be an added glory to her love
- for him. At first Captain Douglas had been quite prepared to satisfy all
- these requirements. He had met her at Shorncliffe, for her people were
- quite good military people, and he had worshipped his way straight to
- her feet. He had made the most delightfully simple and delicate love to
- her. He had given up his secret vice of thinking for the writing of
- quite surprisingly clever love-letters, and the little white paper
- models had ceased for a time to flutter in lonely places.
- And then the thought of his career returned to him, from a new aspect,
- as something he might lay at her feet. And once it had returned to him
- it remained with him.
- “Some day,” he said, “and it may not be so very long, some of those
- scientific chaps will invent flying. Then the army will have to take it
- up, you know.”
- “I should _love_,” she said, “to soar through the air.”
- He talked one day of going on active service. How would it affect them
- if he had to do so? It was a necessary part of a soldier’s lot.
- “But I should come too!” she said. “I should come with you.”
- “It might not be altogether convenient,” he said, for already he had
- learnt that Madeleine Philips usually travelled with quite a large
- number of trunks and considerable impressiveness.
- “Of course,” she said, “it would be splendid! How could I let you go
- alone. You would be the great general and I should be with you always.”
- “Not always very comfortable,” he suggested.
- “Silly boy!—I shouldn’t mind _that_! How little you know me! Any
- hardship!”
- “A woman—if she isn’t a nurse—”
- “I should come dressed as a man. I would be your groom....”
- He tried to think of her dressed as a man, but nothing on earth could
- get his imagination any further than a vision of her dressed as a
- Principal Boy. She was so delightfully and valiantly not virile; her
- hair would have flowed, her body would have moved, a richly fluent
- femininity—visible through any disguise.
- § 6
- That was in the opening stage of the controversy between their careers.
- In those days they were both acutely in love with each other. Their
- friends thought the spectacle quite beautiful; they went together so
- well. Admirers, fluttered with the pride of participation, asked them
- for week-ends together; those theatrical week-ends that begin on Sunday
- morning and end on Monday afternoon. She confided widely.
- And when at last there was something like a rupture it became the
- concern of a large circle of friends.
- The particulars of the breach were differently stated. It would seem
- that looking ahead he had announced his intention of seeing the French
- army manœuvres just when it seemed probable that she would be out of an
- engagement.
- “But I ought to see what they are doing,” he said. “They’re going to try
- those new dirigibles.”
- Then should she come?
- He wanted to whisk about. It wouldn’t be any fun for her. They might get
- landed at nightfall in any old hole. And besides people would talk—
- Especially as it was in France. One could do unconventional things in
- England one couldn’t in France. Atmosphere was different.
- For a time after that halting explanation she maintained a silence. Then
- she spoke in a voice of deep feeling. She perceived, she said, that he
- wanted his freedom. She would be the last person to hold a reluctant
- lover to her side. He might go—to _any_ manœuvres. He might go if he
- wished round the world. He might go away from her for ever. She would
- not detain him, cripple him, hamper a career she had once been assured
- she inspired....
- The unfortunate man, torn between his love and his profession, protested
- that he hadn’t meant _that_.
- Then what _had_ he meant?
- He realized he had meant something remarkably like it and he found great
- difficulty in expressing these fine distinctions....
- She banished him from her presence for a month, said he might go to his
- manœuvres—with her blessing. As for herself, that was her own affair.
- Some day perhaps he might know more of the heart of a woman.... She
- choked back tears—very beautifully, and military science suddenly became
- a trivial matter. But she was firm. He wanted to go. He must go. For a
- month anyhow.
- He went sadly....
- Into this opening breach rushed friends. It was the inestimable triumph
- of Judy Bowles to get there first. To begin with, Madeleine confided in
- her, and then, availing herself of the privilege of a distant
- cousinship, she commanded Douglas to tea in her Knightsbridge flat and
- had a good straight talk with him. She liked good straight talks with
- honest young men about their love affairs; it was almost the only form
- of flirtation that the Professor, who was a fierce, tough,
- undiscriminating man upon the essentials of matrimony, permitted her.
- And there was something peculiarly gratifying about Douglas’s
- complexion. Under her guidance he was induced to declare that he could
- not live without Madeleine, that her love was the heart of his life,
- without it he was nothing and with it he could conquer the world....
- Judy permitted herself great protestations on behalf of Madeleine, and
- Douglas was worked up to the pitch of kissing her intervening hand. He
- had little silvery hairs, she saw, all over his temples. And he was such
- a simple perplexed dear. It was a rich deep beautiful afternoon for
- Judy.
- And then in a very obvious way Judy, who was already deeply in love with
- the idea of a caravan tour and the “wind on the heath” and the “Gipsy
- life” and the “open road” and all the rest of it, worked this charming
- little love difficulty into her scheme, utilized her reluctant husband
- to arrange for the coming of Douglas, confided in Mrs. Geedge....
- And Douglas went off with his perplexities. He gave up all thought of
- France, week-ended at Shonts instead, to his own grave injury, returned
- to London unexpectedly by a Sunday train, packed for France and started.
- He reached Rheims on Monday afternoon. And then the image of Madeleine,
- which always became more beautiful and mysterious and commanding with
- every mile he put between them, would not let him go on. He made
- unconvincing excuses to the _Daily Excess_ military expert with whom he
- was to have seen things. “There’s a woman in it, my boy, and you’re a
- fool to go,” said the _Daily Excess_ man, “but of course you’ll go, and
- I for one don’t blame you—” He hurried back to London and was at Judy’s
- trysting-place even as Judy had anticipated.
- And when he saw Madeleine standing in the sunlight, pleased and proud
- and glorious, with a smile in her eyes and trembling on her lips, with a
- strand or so of her beautiful hair and a streamer or so of delightful
- blue fluttering in the wind about her gracious form, it seemed to him
- for the moment that leaving the manœuvres and coming back to England was
- quite a right and almost a magnificent thing to do.
- § 7
- This meeting was no exception to their other meetings.
- The coming to her was a crescendo of poetical desire, the sight of her a
- climax, and then—an accumulation of irritations. He had thought being
- with her would be pure delight, and as they went over the down straying
- after the Bowles and the Geedges towards the Redlake Hotel he already
- found himself rather urgently asking her to marry him and being annoyed
- by what he regarded as her evasiveness.
- He walked along with the restrained movement of a decent Englishman; he
- seemed as it were to gesticulate only through his clenched teeth, and
- she floated beside him, in a wonderful blue dress that with a wonderful
- foresight she had planned for breezy uplands on the basis of
- Botticelli’s _Primavera_. He was urging her to marry him soon; he needed
- her, he could not live in peace without her. It was not at all what he
- had come to say; he could not recollect that he had come to say
- anything, but now that he was with her it was the only thing he could
- find to say to her.
- “But, my dearest boy,” she said, “how are we to marry? What is to become
- of _your_ career and _my_ career?”
- “I’ve _left_ my career!” cried Captain Douglas with the first clear note
- of irritation in his voice.
- “Oh! don’t let us quarrel,” she cried. “Don’t let us talk of all those
- _distant_ things. Let us be happy. Let us enjoy just this lovely day and
- the sunshine and the freshness and the beauty.... Because you know we
- are snatching these days. We have so few days together. Each—each must
- be a gem.... Look, dear, how the breeze sweeps through these tall dry
- stems that stick up everywhere—low broad ripples.”
- She was a perfect work of art, abolishing time and obligations.
- For a time they walked in silence. Then Captain Douglas said, “All very
- well—beauty and all that—but a fellow likes to know where he is.”
- She did not answer immediately, and then she said, “I believe you are
- angry because you have come away from France.”
- “Not a bit of it,” said the Captain stoutly. “I’d come away from
- anywhere to be with you.”
- “I wonder,” she said.
- “Well,—haven’t I?”
- “I wonder if you ever are with me.... Oh!—I know you _want_ me. I know
- you desire me. But the real thing, the happiness,—love. What is anything
- to love—anything at all?”
- In this strain they continued until their footsteps led them through the
- shelter of a group of beeches. And there the gallant captain sought
- expression in deeds. He kissed her hands, he sought her lips. She
- resisted softly.
- “No,” she said, “only if you love me with all your heart.”
- Then suddenly, wonderfully, conqueringly she yielded him her lips.
- “Oh!” she sighed presently, “if only you understood.”
- And leaving speech at that enigma she kissed again....
- But you see now how difficult it was under these mystically loving
- conditions to introduce the idea of a prompt examination and dispatch of
- Bealby. Already these days were consecrated....
- And then you see Bealby vanished—going seaward....
- Even the crash of the caravan disaster did little to change the
- atmosphere. In spite of a certain energetic quality in the Professor’s
- direction of the situation—he was a little embittered because his thumb
- was sprained and his knee bruised rather badly and he had a slight
- abrasion over one ear and William had bitten his calf—the general
- disposition was to treat the affair hilariously. Nobody seemed really
- hurt except William,—the Professor was not so much hurt as annoyed,—and
- William’s injuries though striking were all superficial, a sprained jaw
- and grazes and bruises and little things like that; everybody was
- heartened up to the idea of damages to be paid for; and neither the
- internal injuries to the caravan nor the hawker’s estimate of his
- stock-in-trade proved to be as great as one might reasonably have
- expected. Before sunset the caravan was safely housed in the
- Winthorpe-Sutbury public house, William had found a congenial corner in
- the bar parlour, where his account of an inside view of the catastrophe
- and his views upon Professor Bowles were much appreciated, the hawker
- had made a bit extra by carting all the luggage to the Redlake Royal
- Hotel and the caravanners and their menfolk had loitered harmoniously
- back to this refuge. Madeleine had walked along the road beside Captain
- Douglas and his motor bicycle, which he had picked up at the now
- desolate encampment.
- “It only remains,” she said, “for that thing to get broken.”
- “But I may want it,” he said.
- “No,” she said, “Heaven has poured us together and now He has smashed
- the vessels. At least He has smashed one of the vessels. And look!—like
- a great shield, there is the moon. It’s the Harvest Moon, isn’t it?”
- “No,” said the Captain, with his poetry running away with him. “It’s the
- Lovers’ Moon.”
- “It’s like a benediction rising over our meeting.”
- And it was certainly far too much like a benediction for the Captain to
- talk about Bealby.
- That night was a perfect night for lovers, a night flooded with a kindly
- radiance, so that the warm mystery of the centre of life seemed to lurk
- in every shadow and hearts throbbed instead of beating and eyes were
- stars. After dinner every one found wraps and slipped out into the
- moonlight; the Geedges vanished like moths; the Professor made no secret
- that Judy was transfigured for him. Night works these miracles. The only
- other visitors there, a brace of couples, resorted to the boats upon the
- little lake.
- Two enormous waiters removing the coffee cups from the small tables upon
- the verandah heard Madeleine’s beautiful voice for a little while and
- then it was stilled....
- § 8
- The morning found Captain Douglas in a state of reaction. He was anxious
- to explain quite clearly to Madeleine just how necessary it was that he
- should go in search of Bealby forthwith. He was beginning to realize now
- just what a chance in the form of Bealby had slipped through his
- fingers. He had dropped Bealby and now the thing to do was to pick up
- Bealby again before he was altogether lost. Her professional life
- unfortunately had given Miss Philips the habit of never rising before
- midday, and the Captain had to pass the time as well as he could until
- the opportunity for his explanation came.
- A fellow couldn’t go off without an explanation....
- He passed the time with Professor Bowles upon the golf links.
- The Professor was a first-rate player and an unselfish one; he wanted
- all other players to be as good as himself. He would spare no pains to
- make them so. If he saw them committing any of the many errors into
- which golfers fall, he would tell them of it and tell them why it was an
- error and insist upon showing them just how to avoid it in future. He
- would point out any want of judgment, and not confine himself, as so
- many professional golf teachers do, merely to the stroke. After a time
- he found it necessary to hint to the Captain that nowadays a military
- man must accustom himself to self-control. The Captain kept Pishing and
- Tushing, and presently, it was only too evident, swearing softly; his
- play got jerky, his strokes were forcible without any real strength,
- once he missed the globe altogether and several times he sliced badly.
- The eyes under his light eyelashes were wicked little things.
- He remembered that he had always detested golf.
- And the Professor. He had always detested the Professor.
- And his caddie; at least he would have always detested his caddie if he
- had known him long enough. His caddie was one of those maddening boys
- with no expression at all. It didn’t matter what he did or failed to do,
- there was the silly idiot with his stuffed face, unmoved. Really, of
- course overjoyed—but apparently unmoved....
- “Why did I play it that way?” the Captain repeated. “Oh! because I like
- to play it that way.”
- “_Well_,” said the Professor. “It isn’t a recognized way anyhow....”
- Then came a moment of evil pleasures.
- He’d sliced. Old Bowles had sliced. For once in a while he’d muffed
- something. Always teaching others and here he was slicing! Why,
- sometimes the Captain didn’t slice!...
- He’d get out of that neatly enough. Luck! He’d get the hole yet. What a
- bore it all was!...
- Why couldn’t Madeleine get up at a decent hour to see a fellow? Why must
- she lie in bed when she wasn’t acting? If she had got up all this
- wouldn’t have happened. The shame of it! Here he was, an able-bodied
- capable man in the prime of life and the morning of a day playing this
- blockhead’s game—!
- Yes—blockhead’s game!
- “You play the like,” said the Professor.
- “_Rather_,” said the Captain and addressed himself to his stroke.
- “That’s not your ball,” said the Professor.
- “Similar position,” said the Captain.
- “You know, you might _win_ this hole,” said the Professor.
- “Who cares?” said the Captain under his breath and putted extravagantly.
- “That saves me,” said the Professor, and went down from a distance of
- twelve yards.
- The Captain, full of an irrational resentment, did his best to halve the
- hole and failed.
- “You ought to put in a week at nothing but putting,” said the Professor.
- “It would save you at least a stroke a hole. I’ve noticed that on almost
- every green, if I haven’t beaten you before I pull up in the putting.”
- The Captain pretended not to hear and said a lot of rococo things inside
- himself.
- It was Madeleine who had got him in for this game. A beautiful healthy
- girl ought to get up in the mornings. Mornings and beautiful healthy
- girls are all the same thing really. She ought to be _dewy_—positively
- dewy.... There she must be lying, warm and beautiful in bed—like
- Catherine the Great or somebody of that sort. No. It wasn’t right. All
- very luxurious and so on but not _right_. She ought to have understood
- that he was bound to fall a prey to the Professor if she didn’t get up.
- Golf! Here he was, neglecting his career; hanging about on these
- _beastly_ links, all the sound men away there in France—it didn’t do to
- think of it!—and he was playing this retired tradesman’s consolation!
- (Beastly the Professor’s legs looked from behind. The uglier a man’s
- legs are the better he plays golf. It’s almost a law.)
- That’s what it was, a retired tradesman’s consolation. A decent British
- soldier has no more business to be playing golf than he has to be
- dressing dolls. It’s a game at once worthless and exasperating. If a man
- isn’t perfectly fit he cannot play golf, and when he is perfectly fit he
- ought to be doing a man’s work in the world. If ever anything deserved
- the name of vice, if ever anything was pure, unforgivable dissipation,
- surely golf was that thing....
- And meanwhile that boy was getting more and more start. Anyone with a
- ha’porth of sense would have been up at five and after that brat—might
- have had him bagged and safe and back to lunch. _Ass_ one was at times!
- “You’re here, sir,” said the caddie.
- The captain perceived he was in a nasty place, open green ahead but with
- some tumbled country near at hand and to the left, a rusty old gravel
- pit, furze at the sides, water at the bottom. Nasty attractive hole of a
- place. Sort of thing one gets into. He must pull himself together for
- this. After all, having undertaken to play a game one must play the
- game. If he hit the infernal thing, that is to say the ball, if he hit
- the ball so that if it didn’t go straight it would go to the right
- rather—clear of the hedge it wouldn’t be so bad to the right. Difficult
- to manage. Best thing was to think hard of the green ahead, a long way
- ahead,—with just the slightest deflection to the right. Now then,—heels
- well down, club up, a good swing, keep your eye on the ball, keep your
- eye on the ball, keep your eye on the ball just where you mean to hit
- it—far below there and a little to the right—and _don’t_ worry....
- _Rap._
- “In the pond I _think_, sir.”
- “The water would have splashed if it had gone in the pond,” said the
- Professor. “It must be over there in the wet sand. You hit it pretty
- hard, I thought.”
- Search. The caddie looked as though he didn’t care whether he found it
- or not. _He_ ought to be interested. It was his profession, not just his
- game. But nowadays everybody had this horrid disposition towards
- slacking. A Tired generation we are. The world is too much with us. Too
- much to think about, too much to do, Madeleines, army manœuvres, angry
- lawyers, lost boys—let alone such exhausting foolery as this game....
- “_Got_ it, sir!” said the caddie.
- “Where?”
- “Here, sir! Up in the bush, sir!”
- It was resting in the branches of a bush two yards above the slippery
- bank.
- “I doubt if you can play it,” said the Professor, “but it will be
- interesting to try.”
- The Captain scrutinized the position. “I can play it,” he said.
- “You’ll slip, I’m afraid,” said the Professor.
- They were both right. Captain Douglas drove his feet into the steep
- slope of rusty sand below the bush, held his iron a little short and
- wiped the ball up and over and as he found afterwards out of the rough.
- All eyes followed the ball except his. The Professor made sounds of
- friendly encouragement. But the Captain was going—going. He was on all
- fours, he scrabbled handfuls of prickly gorse, of wet sand. His feet,
- his ankles, his calves slid into the pond. How much more? No. He’d
- reached the bottom. He proceeded to get out again as well as he could.
- Not so easy. The bottom of the pond sucked at him....
- When at last he rejoined the other three his hands were sandy red, his
- knees were sandy red, his feet were of clay, but his face was like the
- face of a little child. Like the face of a little fair child after it
- has been boiled red in its bath and then dusted over with white powder.
- His ears were the colour of roses, Lancaster roses. And his eyes too had
- something of the angry wonder of a little child distressed....
- “I was afraid you’d slip into the pond,” said the Professor.
- “I didn’t,” said the Captain.
- “!”
- “I just got in to see how deep it was and cool my feet—I hate warm
- feet.”
- He lost that hole but he felt a better golfer now, his anger he thought
- was warming him up so that he would presently begin to make strokes by
- instinct, and do remarkable things unawares. After all there is
- something in the phrase “getting one’s blood up.” If only the Professor
- wouldn’t dally so with his ball and let one’s blood get down again.
- Tap!—the Professor’s ball went soaring. Now for it. The Captain
- addressed himself to his task, altered his plans rather hastily, smote
- and topped the ball.
- The least one could expect was a sympathetic silence. But the Professor
- thought fit to improve the occasion.
- “You’ll never drive,” said the Professor; “you’ll never drive with that
- _irritable_ jerk in the middle of the stroke. You might just as well
- smack the ball without raising your club. If you think—”
- The Captain lost his self-control altogether.
- “Look here,” he said, “if _you_ think that _I_ care a single rap about
- how I hit the ball, if you think that I really want to win and do well
- at this beastly, silly, elderly, childish game—.”
- He paused on the verge of ungentlemanly language.
- “If a thing’s worth doing at all,” said the Professor after a pause for
- reflection, “it’s worth doing well.”
- “Then it isn’t worth doing at all. As this hole gives you the game—if
- you don’t mind—”
- The Captain’s hot moods were so rapid that already he was acutely
- ashamed of himself.
- “O _certainly_, if you wish it,” said the Professor.
- With a gesture the Professor indicated the altered situation to the
- respectful caddies and the two gentlemen turned their faces towards the
- hotel.
- For a time they walked side by side in silence, the caddies following
- with hushed expressions.
- “Splendid weather for the French manœuvres,” said the Captain presently
- in an off-hand tone, “that is to say if they are getting this weather.”
- “At present there are a series of high pressure systems over the whole
- of Europe north of the Alps,” said the Professor. “It is as near set
- fair as Europe can be.”
- “Fine weather for tramps and wanderers,” said the Captain after a
- further interval.
- “There’s a drawback to everything,” said the Professor. “But it’s very
- lovely weather.”
- § 9
- They got back to the hotel about half-past eleven and the Captain went
- and had an unpleasant time with one of the tyres of his motor bicycle
- which had got down in the night. In replacing the tyre he pinched the
- top of one of his fingers rather badly. Then he got the ordnance map of
- the district and sat at a green table in the open air in front of the
- hotel windows and speculated on the probable flight of Bealby. He had
- been last seen going south by east. That way lay the sea, and all boy
- fugitives go naturally for the sea.
- He tried to throw himself into the fugitive’s mind and work out just
- exactly the course Bealby _must_ take to the sea.
- For a time he found this quite an absorbing occupation.
- Bealby probably had no money or very little money. Therefore he would
- have to beg or steal. He wouldn’t go to the workhouse because he
- wouldn’t know about the workhouse, respectable poor people never know
- anything about the workhouse, and the chances were he would be both too
- honest and too timid to steal. He’d beg. He’d beg at front doors because
- of dogs and things, and he’d probably go along a high road. He’d be more
- likely to beg from houses than from passers-by, because a door is at
- first glance less formidable than a pedestrian and more accustomed to
- being addressed. And he’d try isolated cottages rather than the village
- street doors, an isolated wayside cottage is so much more confidential.
- He’d ask for food—not money. All that seemed pretty sound.
- Now this road on the map—into it he was bound to fall and along it he
- would go begging. No other?... No.
- In the fine weather he’d sleep out. And he’d go—ten, twelve,
- fourteen—thirteen, thirteen miles a day.
- So now, he ought to be about here. And to-night,—here.
- To-morrow at the same pace,—here.
- But suppose he got a lift!...
- He’d only get a slow lift if he got one at all. It wouldn’t make much
- difference in the calculation....
- So if to-morrow one started and went on to these cross roads marked
- _Inn_, just about twenty-six miles it must be by the scale, and beat
- round it one ought to get something in the way of tidings of Mr. Bealby.
- Was there any reason why Bealby shouldn’t go on south by east and
- seaward?...
- None.
- And now there remained nothing to do but to explain all this clearly to
- Madeleine. And why didn’t she come down? Why didn’t she come down?
- But when one got Bealby what would one do with him?
- Wring the truth out of him—half by threats and half by persuasion.
- Suppose after all he hadn’t any connexion with the upsetting of Lord
- Moggeridge? He had. Suppose he hadn’t. He had. He had. He had.
- And when one had the truth?
- Whisk the boy right up to London and confront the Lord Chancellor with
- the facts. But suppose he wouldn’t be confronted with the facts. He was
- a touchy old sinner....
- For a time Captain Douglas balked at this difficulty. Then suddenly
- there came into his head the tall figure, the long moustaches of that
- kindly popular figure, his adopted uncle Lord Chickney. Suppose he took
- the boy straight to Uncle Chickney, told him the whole story. Even the
- Lord Chancellor would scarcely refuse ten minutes to General Lord
- Chickney....
- The clearer the plans of Captain Douglas grew the more anxious he became
- to put them before Madeleine—clearly and convincingly....
- Because first he had to catch his boy....
- Presently, as Captain Douglas fretted at the continued eclipse of
- Madeleine, his thumb went into his waistcoat pocket and found a piece of
- paper. He drew it out and looked at it. It was a little piece of stiff
- note-paper cut into the shape of a curved V rather after the fashion of
- a soaring bird. It must have been there for months. He looked at it. His
- care-wrinkled brow relaxed. He glanced over his shoulder at the house
- and then held this little scrap high over his head and let go. It
- descended with a slanting flight curving round to the left and then came
- about and swept down to the ground to the right.... Now why did it go
- like that? As if it changed its mind. He tried it again. Same result....
- Suppose the curvature of the wings was a little greater? Would it make a
- more acute or a less acute angle? He did not know.... Try it.
- He felt in his pocket for a piece of paper, found Lady Laxton’s letter,
- produced a stout pair of nail scissors in a sheath from a waistcoat
- pocket, selected a good clear sheet, and set himself to cut out his
- improved V....
- As he did so his eyes were on V number one, on the ground. It would be
- interesting to see if this thing turned about to the left again. If in
- fact it would go on zig-zagging. It ought, he felt, to do so. But to
- test that one ought to release it from some higher point so as to give
- it a longer flight. Stand on the chair?...
- Not in front of the whole rotten hotel. And there was a beastly looking
- man in a green apron coming out of the house,—the sort of man who looks
- at you. He might come up and watch; these fellows are equal to anything
- of that sort. Captain Douglas replaced his scissors and scraps in his
- pockets, leaned back with an affectation of boredom, got up, lit a
- cigarette—sort of thing the man in the green apron would think all
- right—and strolled off towards a clump of beech trees, beyond which were
- bushes and a depression. There perhaps one might be free from
- observation. Just try these things for a bit. That point about the angle
- was a curious one; it made one feel one’s ignorance not to know that....
- § 10
- The ideal King has a careworn look, he rules, he has to do things, but
- the ideal Queen is radiant happiness, tall and sweetly dignified, simply
- she has to be things. And when at last towards midday Queen Madeleine
- dispelled the clouds of the morning and came shining back into the world
- that waited outside her door, she was full of thankfulness for herself
- and for the empire that was given her. She knew she was a delicious and
- wonderful thing, she knew she was well done, her hands, the soft folds
- of her dress as she held it up, the sweep of her hair from her forehead
- pleased her, she lifted her chin but not too high for the almost
- unenvious homage in the eyes of the housemaid on the staircase. Her
- descent was well timed for the lunch gathering of the hotel guests;
- there was “_Ah!_—here she comes at last!” and there was her own
- particular court out upon the verandah before the entrance, Geedge and
- the Professor and Mrs. Bowles—and Mrs. Geedge coming across the
- lawn,—and the lover?
- She came on down and out into the sunshine. She betrayed no surprise.
- The others met her with flattering greetings that she returned
- smilingly. But the lover—?
- He was not there!
- It was as if the curtain had gone up on almost empty stalls.
- He ought to have been worked up and waiting tremendously. He ought to
- have spent the morning in writing a poem to her or in writing a
- delightful poetical love letter she could carry away and read or in
- wandering alone and thinking about her. He ought to be feeling now like
- the end of a vigil. He ought to be standing now, a little in the
- background and with that pleasant flush of his upon his face and that
- shy, subdued, reluctant look that was so infinitely more flattering than
- any boldness of admiration. And then she would go towards him, for she
- was a giving type, and hold out both hands to him, and he, as though he
- couldn’t help it, in spite of all his British reserve, would take one
- and hesitate—which made it all the more marked—and kiss it....
- Instead of which he was just not there....
- No visible disappointment dashed her bravery. She knew that at the
- slightest flicker Judy and Mrs. Geedge would guess and that anyhow the
- men would guess nothing. “I’ve rested,” she said, “I’ve rested
- delightfully. What have you all been doing?”
- Judy told of great conversations, Mr. Geedge had been looking for
- trout in the stream, Mrs. Geedge with a thin little smile said she
- had been making a few notes and—she added the word with
- deliberation—“observations,” and Professor Bowles said he had had a
- round of golf with the Captain. “And he lost?” asked Madeleine.
- “He’s careless in his drive and impatient at the greens,” said the
- Professor modestly.
- “And then?”
- “He vanished,” said the Professor, recognizing the true orientation of
- her interest.
- There was a little pause and Mrs. Geedge said, “You know—” and stopped
- short.
- Interrogative looks focussed upon her.
- “It’s so odd,” she said.
- Curiosity increased.
- “I suppose one ought not to say,” said Mrs. Geedge, “and yet—why
- shouldn’t one?”
- “Exactly,” said Professor Bowles, and every one drew a little nearer to
- Mrs. Geedge.
- “One can’t help being amused,” she said. “It was so—extraordinary.”
- “Is it something about the Captain?” asked Madeleine.
- “Yes. You see,—he didn’t see me.”
- “Is he—is he writing poetry?” Madeleine was much entertained and
- relieved at the thought. That would account for everything. The poor
- dear! He hadn’t been able to find some rhyme!
- But one gathered from the mysterious airs of Mrs. Geedge that he was not
- writing poetry. “You see,” she said, “I was lying out there among the
- bushes, just jotting down a few little things,—and he came by. And he
- went down into the hollow out of sight.... And what do you think he is
- doing? You’d never guess? He’s been at it for twenty minutes.”
- They didn’t guess.
- “He’s playing with little bits of paper—Oh! like a kitten plays with
- dead leaves. He throws them up—and they flutter to the ground—and then
- he pounces on them.”
- “But—” said Madeleine. And then very brightly, “let’s go and see!”
- She was amazed. She couldn’t understand. She hid it under a light
- playfulness, that threatened to become distraught. Even when presently,
- after a very careful stalking of the dell under the guidance of Mrs.
- Geedge, with the others in support, she came in sight of him, she still
- found him incredible. There was her lover, her devoted lover, standing
- on the top bar of a fence, his legs wide apart and his body balanced
- with difficulty, and in his fingers poised high was a little scrap of
- paper. This was the man who should have been waiting in the hall with
- feverish anxiety. His fingers released the little model and down it went
- drifting....
- He seemed to be thinking of nothing else in the world. She might never
- have been born!...
- Some noise, some rustle, caught his ear. He turned his head quickly,
- guiltily, and saw her and her companions.
- And then he crowned her astonishment. No lovelight leapt to his eyes; he
- uttered no cry of joy. Instead he clutched wildly at the air, shouted,
- “Oh _damn_!” and came down with a complicated inelegance on all fours
- upon the ground.
- He was angry with her—angry; she could see that he was extremely angry.
- § 11
- So it was that the incompatibilities of man and woman arose again in the
- just recovering love dream of Madeleine Philips. But now the discord was
- far more evident than it had been at the first breach.
- Suddenly her dear lover, her flatterer, her worshipper, had become a
- strange averted man. He scrabbled up two of his paper scraps before he
- came towards her, still with no lovelight in his eyes. He kissed her
- hand as if it was a matter of course and said almost immediately: “I’ve
- been hoping for you all the endless morning. I’ve had to amuse myself as
- best I can.” His tone was resentful. He spoke as if he had a claim upon
- her—upon her attentions. As if it wasn’t entirely upon his side that
- obligations lay.
- She resolved that shouldn’t deter her from being charming.
- And all through the lunch she was as charming as she could be, and under
- such treatment that rebellious ruffled quality vanished from his manner,
- vanished so completely that she could wonder if it had really been
- evident at any time. The alert servitor returned.
- She was only too pleased to forget the disappointment of her descent and
- forgive him, and it was with a puzzled incredulity that she presently
- saw his “difficult” expression returning. It was an odd little knitting
- of the brows, a faint absentmindedness, a filming of the brightness of
- his worship. He was just perceptibly indifferent to the charmed and
- charming things she was saying.
- It seemed best to her to open the question herself. “Is there something
- on your mind, Dot?”
- “Dot” was his old school nickname.
- “Well, no—not exactly on my mind. But—. It’s a bother of course. There’s
- that confounded boy....”
- “Were you trying some sort of divination about him? With those pieces of
- paper?”
- “No. That was different. That was—just something else. But you see that
- boy—. Probably clear up the whole of the Moggeridge bother—and you know
- it _is_ a bother. Might turn out beastly awkward....”
- It was extraordinarily difficult to express. He wanted so much to stay
- with her and he wanted so much to go.
- But all reason, all that was expressible, all that found vent in words
- and definite suggestions, was on the side of an immediate pursuit of
- Bealby. So that it seemed to her he wanted and intended to go much more
- definitely than he actually did.
- That divergence of purpose flawed a beautiful afternoon, cast chill
- shadows of silence over their talk, arrested endearments. She was
- irritated. About six o’clock she urged him to go; she did not mind,
- anyhow she had things to see to, letters to write, and she left him with
- an effect of leaving him for ever. He went and overhauled his motor
- bicycle thoroughly and then an aching dread of separation from her
- arrested him.
- Dinner, the late June sunset and the moon seemed to bring them together
- again. Almost harmoniously he was able to suggest that he should get up
- very early the next morning, pursue and capture Bealby and return for
- lunch.
- “You’d get up at dawn!” she cried. “But how perfectly Splendid the
- midsummer dawn must be.”
- Then she had an inspiration. “Dot!” she cried, “I will get up at dawn
- also and come with you.... Yes, but as you say he cannot be more than
- thirteen miles away we’d catch him warm in his little bed somewhere. And
- the freshness! The dewy freshness!”
- And she laughed her beautiful laugh and said it would be “Such _Fun_!”
- entering as she supposed into his secret desires and making the most
- perfect of reconciliations. They were to have tea first, which she would
- prepare with the caravan lamp and kettle. Mrs. Geedge would hand it over
- to her.
- She broke into song. “A Hunting we will go-ooh,” she sang. “A Hunting we
- will go....”
- But she could not conquer the churlish underside of the Captain’s nature
- even by such efforts. She threw a glamour of vigour and fun over the
- adventure, but some cold streak in his composition was insisting all the
- time that as a boy hunt the attempt failed. Various little delays in her
- preparations prevented a start before half-past seven, he let that weigh
- with him, and when sometimes she clapped her hands and ran—and she ran
- like a deer, and sometimes she sang, he said something about going at an
- even pace.
- At a quarter past one Mrs. Geedge observed them returning. They were
- walking abreast and about six feet apart, they bore themselves grimly,
- after the manner of those who have delivered ultimata, and they
- conversed no more....
- In the afternoon Madeleine kept her own room, exhausted, and Captain
- Douglas sought opportunities of speaking to her in vain. His face
- expressed distress and perplexity, with momentary lapses into wrathful
- resolution, and he evaded Judy and her leading questions and talked
- about the weather with Geedge. He declined a proposal of the Professor’s
- to go round the links, with especial reference to his neglected putting.
- “You ought to, you know,” said the Professor.
- About half-past three, and without any publication of his intention,
- Captain Douglas departed upon his motor bicycle....
- Madeleine did not reappear until dinner-time, and then she was clad in
- lace and gaiety that impressed the naturally very good observation of
- Mrs. Geedge as unreal.
- § 12
- The Captain, a confusion of motives that was as it were a mind returning
- to chaos, started. He had seen tears in her eyes. Just for one instant,
- but certainly they were tears. Tears of vexation. Or sorrow? (Which is
- the worse thing for a lover to arouse, grief or resentment?) But this
- boy must be caught, because if he was not caught a perpetually
- developing story of imbecile practical joking upon eminent and
- influential persons would eat like a cancer into the Captain’s career.
- And if his career was spoilt what sort of thing would he be as a lover?
- Not to mention that he might never get a chance then to try flying for
- military purposes.... So anyhow, anyhow, this boy must be caught. But
- quickly, for women’s hearts are tender, they will not stand exposure to
- hardship. There is a kind of unreasonableness natural to goddesses.
- Unhappily this was an expedition needing wariness, deliberation, and one
- brought to it a feverish hurry to get back. There must be self-control.
- There must be patience. Such occasions try the soldierly quality of a
- man....
- It added nothing to the Captain’s self-control that after he had
- travelled ten miles he found he had forgotten his quite indispensable
- map and had to return for it. Then he was seized again with doubts
- about his inductions and went over them again, sitting by the
- roadside. (There must be patience.) ... He went on at a pace of
- thirty-five miles an hour to the inn he had marked upon his map as
- Bealby’s limit for the second evening. It was a beastly little inn, it
- stewed tea for the Captain atrociously and it knew nothing of Bealby.
- In the adjacent cottages also they had never heard of Bealby. Captain
- Douglas revised his deductions for the third time and came to the
- conclusion that he had not made a proper allowance for Wednesday
- afternoon. Then there was all Thursday, and the longer, lengthening
- part of Friday. He might have done thirty miles or more already. And
- he might have crossed this corner—inconspicuously.
- Suppose he hadn’t after all come along this road!
- He had a momentary vision of Madeleine with eyes brightly tearful. “You
- left me for a Wild Goose Chase,” he fancied her saying....
- One must stick to one’s job. A soldier more particularly must stick to
- his job. Consider Balaclava....
- He decided to go on along this road and try the incidental cottages that
- his reasoning led him to suppose were the most likely places at which
- Bealby would ask for food. It was a business demanding patience and
- politeness.
- So a number of cottagers, for the greater part they were elderly women
- past the fiercer rush and hurry of life, grandmothers and ancient dames
- or wives at leisure with their children away at the Council schools, had
- a caller that afternoon. Cottages are such lonely places in the daytime
- that even district visitors and canvassers are godsends and only tramps
- ill received. Captain Douglas ranked high in the scale of visitors.
- There was something about him, his fairness, a certain handsomeness, his
- quick colour, his active speech, which interested women at all times,
- and now an indefinable flow of romantic excitement conveyed itself to
- his interlocutors. He encountered the utmost civility everywhere; doors
- at first tentatively ajar opened wider at the sight of him and there was
- a kindly disposition to enter into his troubles lengthily and
- deliberately. People listened attentively to his demands, and before
- they testified to Bealby’s sustained absence from their perception they
- would for the most part ask numerous questions in return. They wanted to
- hear the Captain’s story, the reason for his research, the relationship
- between himself and the boy, they wanted to feel something of the
- sentiment of the thing. After that was the season for negative facts.
- Perhaps when everything was stated they might be able to conjure up what
- he wanted. He was asked in to have tea twice, for he looked not only
- pink and dusty, but dry, and one old lady said that years ago she had
- lost just such a boy as Bealby seemed to be—“Ah! not in the way _you_
- have lost him”—and she wept, poor old dear! and was only comforted after
- she had told the Captain three touching but extremely lengthy and
- detailed anecdotes of Bealby’s vanished prototype.
- (Fellow cannot rush away, you know; still all this sort of thing,
- accumulating, means a confounded lot of delay.)
- And then there was a deaf old man.... A very, very tiresome deaf old man
- who said at first he _had_ seen Bealby....
- After all the old fellow was deaf....
- The sunset found the Captain on a breezy common forty miles away from
- the Redlake Royal Hotel and by this time he knew that fugitive boys
- cannot be trusted to follow the lines even of the soundest inductions.
- This business meant a search.
- Should he pelt back to Redlake and start again more thoroughly on the
- morrow?
- A moment of temptation.
- If he did he knew she wouldn’t let him go.
- _No!_
- NO!
- He must make a sweeping movement through the country to the left, trying
- up and down the roads that, roughly speaking, radiated from Redlake
- between the twenty-fifth and the thirty-fifth milestone....
- It was night and high moonlight when at last the Captain reached
- Crayminster, that little old town decayed to a village, in the Crays
- valley. He was hungry, dispirited, quite unsuccessful, and here he
- resolved to eat and rest for the night.
- He would have a meal, for by this time he was ravenous, and then go and
- talk in the bar or the tap about Bealby.
- Until he had eaten he felt he could not endure the sound of his own
- voice repeating what had already become a tiresome stereotyped formula;
- “You haven’t I suppose seen or heard anything during the last two days
- of a small boy—little chap of about thirteen—wandering about? He’s a
- sturdy resolute little fellow with a high colour, short wiry hair,
- rather dark....”
- The White Hart at Crayminster, after some negotiations, produced mutton
- cutlets and Australian hock. As he sat at his meal in the small
- ambiguous respectable dining-room of the inn—adorned with framed and
- glazed beer advertisements, crinkled paper fringes and insincere
- sporting prints—he became aware of a murmurous confabulation going on in
- the bar parlour. It must certainly he felt be the bar parlour....
- He could not hear distinctly, and yet it seemed to him that the
- conversational style of Crayminster was abnormally rich in expletive.
- And the tone was odd. It had a steadfast quality of commination.
- He brushed off a crumb from his jacket, lit a cigarette and stepped
- across the passage to put his hopeless questions.
- The talk ceased abruptly at his appearance.
- It was one of those deep-toned bar parlours that are so infinitely more
- pleasant to the eye than the tawdry decorations of the genteel
- accommodation. It was brown with a trimming of green paper hops and it
- had a mirror and glass shelves sustaining bottles and tankards. Six or
- seven individuals were sitting about the room. They had a numerous
- effect. There was a man in very light floury tweeds, with a floury bloom
- on his face and hair and an anxious depressed expression. He was clearly
- a baker. He sat forward as though he nursed something precious under the
- table. Next him was a respectable-looking, regular-featured fair man
- with a large head, and a ruddy-faced butcher-like individual smoked a
- clay pipe by the side of the fireplace. A further individual with an
- alert intrusive look might have been a grocer’s assistant associating
- above himself.
- “Evening,” said the Captain.
- “Evening,” said the man with the large hand guardedly.
- The Captain came to the hearthrug with an affectation of ease.
- “I suppose,” he began, “that you haven’t any of you seen anything of a
- small boy, wandering about. He’s a little chap about thirteen. Sturdy,
- resolute-looking little fellow with a high colour, short wiry hair,
- rather dark....”
- He stopped short, arrested by the excited movements of the butcher’s
- pipe and by the changed expressions of the rest of the company.
- “We—we seen ’im,” the man with the big head managed to say at last.
- “We seen ’im all right,” said a voice out of the darkness beyond the
- range of the lamp.
- The baker with the melancholy expression interjected, “I don’t care if I
- don’t ever see ’im again.”
- “Ah!” said the Captain, astonished to find himself suddenly beyond
- hoping on a hot fresh scent. “Now all that’s very interesting. Where did
- you see him?”
- “Thunderin’ vicious little varmint,” said the butcher. “Owdacious.”
- “Mr. Benshaw,” said the voice from the shadows, “’E’s arter ’im now with
- a shot gun loaded up wi’ oats. ’E’ll pepper ’im if ’e gets ’im, Bill
- will, you bet your ’at. And serve ’im jolly well right _tew_.”
- “I doubt,” said the baker, “I doubt if I’ll ever get my stummik—not
- thoroughly proper again. It’s a Blow I’ve ’ad. ’E give me a Blow. Oh!
- Mr. ’Orrocks, _could_ I trouble you for another thimbleful of brandy?
- Just a thimbleful neat. It eases the ache....”
- CHAPTER VI
- BEALBY AND THE TRAMP
- § 1
- Bealby was loth to leave the caravan party even when by his own gross
- negligence it had ceased to be a caravan party. He made off regretfully
- along the crest of the hills through bushes of yew and box until the
- clamour of the disaster was no longer in his ears. Then he halted for a
- time and stood sorrowing and listening and then turned up by a fence
- along the border of a plantation and so came into a little overhung
- road.
- His ideas of his immediate future were vague in the extreme. He was a
- receptive expectation. Since his departure from the gardener’s cottage
- circumstances had handed him on. They had been interesting but unstable
- circumstances. He supposed they would still hand him on. So far as he
- had any definite view about his intentions it was that he was running
- away to sea. And that he was getting hungry.
- It was also, he presently discovered, getting dark very gently and
- steadily. And the overhung road after some tortuosities expired suddenly
- upon the bosom of a great grey empty common with distant mysterious
- hedges.
- It seemed high time to Bealby that something happened of a comforting
- nature.
- Always hitherto something or someone had come to his help when the world
- grew dark and cold, and given him supper and put him or sent him to bed.
- Even when he had passed a night in the interstices of Shonts he had
- known there was a bed at quite a little distance under the stairs. If
- only that loud Voice hadn’t shouted curses whenever he moved he would
- have gone to it. But as he went across this common in the gloaming it
- became apparent that this amiable routine was to be broken. For the
- first time he realized the world could be a homeless world.
- And it had become very still.
- Disagreeably still, and full of ambiguous shadows.
- That common was not only an unsheltered place, he felt, but an
- unfriendly place, and he hurried to a gate at the further end. He kept
- glancing to the right and to the left. It would be pleasanter when he
- had got through that gate and shut it after him.
- In England there are no grey wolves.
- Yet at times one thinks of wolves, grey wolves, the colour of twilight
- and running noiselessly, almost noiselessly, at the side of their prey
- for quite a long time before they close in on it.
- In England, I say, there are no grey wolves.
- Wolves were extinguished in the reign of Edward the Third; it was in the
- histories, and since then no free wolf has trod the soil of England;
- only menagerie captives.
- Of course there may be _escaped_ wolves!
- Now the gate!—sharp through it and slam it behind you, and a little
- brisk run and so into this plantation that slopes down hill. This is a
- sort of path; vague, but it must be a path. Let us hope it is a path.
- _What was that among the trees?_
- It stopped, surely it stopped, as Bealby stopped. Pump, pump—. Of
- course! that was one’s heart.
- Nothing there! Just fancy. Wolves live in the open; they do not come
- into woods like this. And besides, there are no wolves. And if one
- shouts—even if it is but a phantom voice one produces, they go away.
- They are cowardly things—really. Such as there aren’t.
- And there is the power of the human eye.
- Which is why they stalk you and watch you and evade you when you look
- and creep and creep and creep behind you!
- Turn sharply.
- Nothing.
- How this stuff rustled under the feet! In woods at twilight, with
- innumerable things darting from trees and eyes watching you everywhere,
- it would be pleasanter if one could walk without making quite such a
- row. Presently, surely, Bealby told himself, he would come out on a high
- road and meet other people and say “good-night” as they passed. Jolly
- other people they would be, answering, “Good-night.” He was now going at
- a moistening trot. It was getting darker and he stumbled against things.
- When you tumble down wolves leap. Not of course that there _are_ any
- wolves.
- It was stupid to keep thinking of wolves in this way. Think of something
- else. Think of things beginning with a B. Beautiful things, boys, beads,
- butterflies, bears. The mind stuck at bears. _Are there such things as
- long grey bears?_ Ugh! Almost endless, noiseless bears?...
- It grew darker until at last the trees were black. The night was
- swallowing up the flying Bealby and he had a preposterous persuasion
- that it had teeth and would begin at the back of his legs....
- § 2
- “Hi!” cried Bealby weakly, hailing the glow of the fire out of the
- darkness of the woods above.
- The man by the fire peered at the sound; he had been listening to the
- stumbling footsteps for some time, and he answered nothing.
- In another minute Bealby had struggled through the hedge into the
- visible world and stood regarding the man by the fire. The phantom
- wolves had fled beyond Sirius. But Bealby’s face was pale still from the
- terrors of the pursuit and altogether he looked a smallish sort of small
- boy.
- “Lost?” said the man by the fire.
- “Couldn’t find my way,” said Bealby.
- “Anyone with you?”
- “No.”
- The man reflected. “Tired?”
- “Bit.”
- “Come and sit down by the fire and rest yourself.
- “I won’t ’urt you,” he added as Bealby hesitated.
- So far in his limited experience Bealby had never seen a human
- countenance lit from behind by a flickering red flame. The effect he
- found remarkable rather than pleasing. It gave this stranger the most
- active and unstable countenance Bealby had ever seen. The nose seemed to
- be in active oscillation between pug and Roman, the eyes jumped out of
- black caves and then went back into them, the more permanent features
- appeared to be a vast triangle of neck and chin. The tramp would have
- impressed Bealby as altogether inhuman if it had not been for the smell
- of cooking he diffused. There were onions in it and turnips and
- pepper—mouth-watering constituents, testimonials to virtue. He was
- making a stew in an old can that he had slung on a cross stick over a
- brisk fire of twigs that he was constantly replenishing.
- “I won’t ’urt you, darn you,” he repeated. “Come and sit down on these
- leaves here for a bit and tell me all abart it.”
- Bealby did as he was desired. “I got lost,” he said, feeling too
- exhausted to tell a good story.
- The tramp, examined more closely, became less pyrotechnic. He had a
- large loose mouth, a confused massive nose, much long fair hair, a broad
- chin with a promising beard and spots—a lot of spots. His eyes looked
- out of deep sockets and they were sharp little eyes. He was a lean man.
- His hands were large and long and they kept on with the feeding of the
- fire as he sat and talked to Bealby. Once or twice he leant forward and
- smelt the pot judiciously, but all the time the little eyes watched
- Bealby very closely.
- “Lose yer collar?” said the tramp.
- Bealby felt for his collar. “I took it orf,” he said.
- “Come far?”
- “Over there,” said Bealby.
- “Where?”
- “Over there.”
- “What place?”
- “Don’t know the name of it.”
- “Then it ain’t your ’ome?”
- “No.”
- “You’ve run away,” said the man.
- “Pr’aps I ’ave,” said Bealby.
- “Pr’aps you ’ave! Why pr’aps? You _’ave_! What’s the good of telling
- lies abart it? When’d you start?”
- “Monday,” said Bealby.
- The tramp reflected. “Had abart enough of it?”
- “Dunno,” said Bealby truthfully.
- “Like some soup?”
- “Yes.”
- “’Ow much?”
- “I could do with a lot,” said Bealby.
- “Ah yah! I didn’t mean that. I meant, ’ow much for some? ’Ow much will
- you pay for a nice, nice ’arf can of soup? I ain’t a darn charity. See?”
- “Tuppence,” said Bealby.
- The tramp shook his head slowly from side to side and took out the
- battered iron spoon he was using to stir the stuff and tasted the soup
- lusciously. It was—jolly good soup and there were potatoes in it.
- “Thrippence,” said Bealby.
- “’Ow much you got?” asked the tramp.
- Bealby hesitated perceptibly. “Sixpence,” he said weakly.
- “It’s sixpence,” said the tramp. “Pay up.”
- “’Ow big a can?” asked Bealby.
- The tramp felt about in the darkness behind him and produced an empty
- can with a jagged mouth that had once contained, the label witnessed—I
- quote, I do not justify—‘_Deep Sea Salmon_.’ “That,” he said, “and this
- chunk of bread.... Right enough?”
- “You _will_ do it?” said Bealby.
- “Do I look a swindle?” cried the tramp, and suddenly a lump of the
- abundant hair fell over one eye in a singularly threatening manner.
- Bealby handed over the sixpence without further discussion. “I’ll treat
- you fairly, you see,” said the tramp, after he had spat on and pocketed
- the sixpence, and he did as much. He decided that the soup was ready to
- be served and he served it with care. Bealby began at once. “There’s a
- nextry onion,” said the tramp, throwing one over. “It didn’t cost me
- much and I gives it you for nothin’. That’s all right, eh? Here’s
- ’ealth!”
- Bealby consumed his soup and bread meekly with one eye upon his host. He
- would, he decided, eat all he could and then sit a little while, and
- then get this tramp to tell him the way to—anywhere else. And the tramp
- wiped soup out of his can with gobbets of bread very earnestly and
- meditated sagely on Bealby.
- “You better pal in with me, matey, for a bit,” he said at last. “You
- can’t go nowhere else—not to-night.”
- “Couldn’t I walk perhaps to a town or sumpthing?”
- “These woods ain’t safe.”
- “’Ow d’you mean?”
- “Ever ’eard tell of a gurrillia?—sort of big black monkey thing.”
- “Yes,” said Bealby faintly.
- “There’s been one loose abart ’ere—oh week or more. Fact. And if you
- wasn’t a grown up man quite and going along in the dark, well—’e might
- say something _to_ you.... Of course ’e wouldn’t do nothing where there
- was a fire or a man—but a little chap like you. I wouldn’t like to let
- you do it, ’strewth I wouldn’t. It’s risky. Course I don’t want to
- _keep_ you. There it is. You go if you like. But I’d rather you didn’t.
- ’Onest.”
- “Where’d he come from?” asked Bealby.
- “M’nagery,” said the tramp.
- “’E very near bit through the fist of a chap that tried to stop ’im,”
- said the tramp.
- Bealby after weighing tramp and gorilla very carefully in his mind
- decided he wouldn’t and drew closer to the fire—but not too close—and
- the conversation deepened.
- § 3
- It was a long and rambling conversation and the tramp displayed himself
- at times as quite an amiable person. It was a discourse varied by
- interrogations, and as a thread of departure and return it dealt with
- the life of the road and with life at large and—life, and with matters
- of ‘must’ and ‘may.’
- Sometimes and more particularly at first Bealby felt as though a
- ferocious beast lurked in the tramp and peeped out through the fallen
- hank of hair and might leap out upon him, and sometimes he felt the
- tramp was large and fine and gay and amusing, more particularly when he
- lifted his voice and his bristling chin. And ever and again the talker
- became a nasty creature and a disgusting creature, and his red-lit face
- was an ugly creeping approach that made Bealby recoil. And then again he
- was strong and wise. So the unstable needle of a boy’s moral compass
- spins.
- The tramp used strange terms. He spoke of the ‘deputy’ and the
- ‘doss-house,’ of the ‘spike’ and ‘padding the hoof,’ of ‘screevers’ and
- ‘tarts’ and ‘copper’s narks.’ To these words Bealby attached such
- meanings as he could, and so the things of which the tramp talked
- floated unsurely into his mind and again and again he had to readjust
- and revise his interpretations. And through these dim and fluctuating
- veils a new side of life dawned upon his consciousness, a side that was
- strange and lawless and dirty—in every way dirty—and dreadful
- and—attractive. That was the queer thing about it, that attraction. It
- had humour. For all its squalor and repulsiveness it was lit by defiance
- and laughter, bitter laughter perhaps, but laughter. It had a gaiety
- that Mr. Mergleson for example did not possess, it had a penetration,
- like the penetrating quality of onions or acids or asafœtida, that made
- the memory of Mr. Darling insipid.
- The tramp assumed from the outset that Bealby had ‘done something’ and
- run away, and some mysterious etiquette prevented his asking directly
- what was the nature of his offence. But he made a number of insidious
- soundings. And he assumed that Bealby was taking to the life of the road
- and that, until good cause to the contrary appeared, they were to remain
- together. “It’s a tough life,” he said, “but it has its points, and you
- got a toughish look about you.”
- He talked of roads and the quality of roads and countryside. This was a
- good countryside; it wasn’t overdone and there was no great hostility to
- wanderers and sleeping out. Some roads—the London to Brighton for
- example, if a chap struck a match, somebody came running. But here
- unless you went pulling the haystacks about too much they left you
- alone. And they weren’t such dead nuts on their pheasants, and one had a
- chance of an empty cowshed. “If I’ve spotted a shed or anything with a
- roof to it I stay out,” said the tramp, “even if it’s raining cats and
- dogs. Otherwise it’s the doss-’ouse or the ‘spike.’ It’s the rain is the
- worst thing—getting wet. You haven’t been wet yet, not if you only
- started Monday. Wet—with a chilly wind to drive it. Gaw! I been blown
- out of a holly hedge. You _would_ think there’d be protection in a holly
- hedge....
- “Spike’s the last thing,” said the tramp. “I’d rather go bare-gutted to
- a doss-’ouse anywhen. Gaw!—you’ve not ’ad your first taste of the spike
- yet.”
- But it wasn’t heaven in the doss-houses. He spoke of several of the
- landladies in strange but it would seem unflattering terms. “And there’s
- always such a blamed lot of washing going on in a doss-’ouse. Always
- washing they are! One chap’s washing ’is socks and another’s washing ’is
- shirt. Making a steam drying it. Disgustin’. Carn’t see what they want
- with it all. Barnd to git dirty again....”
- He discoursed of spikes, that is to say of work-houses, and of masters.
- “And then,” he said, with revolting yet alluring adjectives, “there’s
- the bath.”
- “That’s the worst side of it,” said the tramp.... “’Owever, it doesn’t
- always rain, and if it doesn’t rain, well, you can keep yourself dry.”
- He came back to the pleasanter aspects of the nomadic life. He was all
- for the outdoor style. “Ain’t we comfortable ’ere?” he asked. He
- sketched out the simple larcenies that had contributed and given zest to
- the evening’s meal. But it seemed there were also doss-houses that had
- the agreeable side. “Never been in one!” he said. “But where you been
- sleeping since Monday?”
- Bealby described the caravan in phrases that seemed suddenly thin and
- anæmic to his ears.
- “You hit it lucky,” said the tramp. “If a chap’s a kid he strikes all
- sorts of luck of that sort. Now ef _I_ come up against three ladies
- travellin’ in a van—think they’d arst me in? Not it!”
- He dwelt with manifest envy on the situation and the possibilities of
- the situation for some time. “You ain’t dangerous,” he said; “that’s
- where you get in....”
- He consoled himself by anecdotes of remarkable good fortunes of a
- kindred description. Apparently he sometimes travelled in the company of
- a lady named Izzy Berners—“a fair scorcher, been a regular, slap-up
- circus actress.” And there was also “good old Susan.” It was a little
- difficult for Bealby to see the point of some of these flashes by a
- tendency on the part of the tramp while his thoughts turned on these
- matters to adopt a staccato style of speech, punctuated by brief, darkly
- significant guffaws. There grew in the mind of Bealby a vision of the
- doss-house as a large crowded place, lit by a great central fire, with
- much cooking afoot and much jawing and disputing going on, and then “me
- and Izzy sailed in....”
- The fire sank, the darkness of the woods seemed to creep nearer. The
- moonlight pierced the trees only in long beams that seemed to point
- steadfastly at unseen things, it made patches of ashen light that looked
- like watching faces. Under the tramp’s direction Bealby skirmished round
- and got sticks and fed the fire until the darkness and thoughts of a
- possible gorilla were driven back for some yards and the tramp
- pronounced the blaze a “fair treat.” He had made a kind of bed of leaves
- which he now invited Bealby to extend and share, and lying feet to the
- fire he continued his discourse.
- He talked of stealing and cheating by various endearing names; he made
- these enterprises seem adventurous and facetious; there was it seemed a
- peculiar sort of happy find one came upon called a “flat,” that it was
- not only entertaining but obligatory to swindle. He made fraud seem so
- smart and bright at times that Bealby found it difficult to keep a firm
- grasp on the fact that it was—fraud....
- Bealby lay upon the leaves close up to the prone body of the tramp, and
- his mind and his standards became confused. The tramp’s body was a dark
- but protecting ridge on one side of him; he could not see the fire
- beyond his toes but its flickerings were reflected by the tree stems
- about them, and made perplexing sudden movements that at times caught
- his attention and made him raise his head to watch them.... Against the
- terrors of the night the tramp had become humanity, the species, the
- moral basis. His voice was full of consolation; his topics made one
- forget the watchful silent circumambient. Bealby’s first distrusts
- faded. He began to think the tramp a fine, brotherly, generous fellow.
- He was also growing accustomed to a faint something—shall I call it an
- olfactory bar—that had hitherto kept them apart. The monologue ceased to
- devote itself to the elucidation of Bealby; the tramp was lying on his
- back with his fingers interlaced beneath his head and talking not so
- much to his companion as to the stars and the universe at large. His
- theme was no longer the wandering life simply but the wandering life as
- he had led it, and the spiritedness with which he had led it and the
- real and admirable quality of himself. It was that soliloquy of
- consolation which is the secret preservative of innumerable lives.
- He wanted to make it perfectly clear that he was a tramp by choice. He
- also wanted to make it clear that he was a tramp and no better because
- of the wicked folly of those he had trusted and the evil devices of
- enemies. In the world that contained those figures of spirit; Isopel
- Berners and Susan, there was also it seemed a bad and spiritless person,
- the tramp’s wife, who had done him many passive injuries. It was clear
- she did not appreciate her blessings. She had been much to blame.
- “Anybody’s opinion is better than ’er ’usband’s,” said the tramp.
- “Always ’as been.” Bealby had a sudden memory of Mr. Darling saying
- exactly the same thing of his mother. “She’s the sort,” said the tramp,
- “what would rather go to a meetin’ than a music ’all. She’d rather drop
- a shilling down a crack than spend it on anything decent. If there was a
- choice of jobs going she’d ask which ’ad the lowest pay and the longest
- hours and she’d choose _that_. She’d feel safer. She was born scared.
- When there wasn’t anything else to do she’d stop at ’ome and scrub the
- floors. Gaw! it made a chap want to put the darn’ pail over ’er ’ed,
- so’s she’d get enough of it....
- “I don’t hold with all this crawling through life and saying _Please_,”
- said the tramp. “I say it’s _my_ world just as much as it’s _your_
- world. You may have your ’orses and carriages, your ’ouses and country
- places and all that and you may think Gawd sent me to run abart and work
- for you; but _I_ don’t. See?”
- Bealby saw.
- “I seek my satisfactions just as you seek your satisfactions, and if you
- want to get me to work you’ve jolly well got to make me. I don’t choose
- to work. I choose to keep on my own and a bit loose and take my chance
- where I find it. You got to take your chances in this world. Sometimes
- they come bad and sometimes they come good. And very often you can’t
- tell which it is when they ’ave come....”
- Then he fell questioning Bealby again and then he talked of the
- immediate future. He was beating for the seaside. “Always something
- doing,” he said. “You got to keep your eye on for cops; those seaside
- benches, they’re ’ot on tramps—give you a month for begging soon as look
- at you—but there’s flats dropping sixpences thick as flies on a sore
- ’orse. You want a there for all sorts of jobs. You’re just the chap for
- it, matey. Saw it soon’s ever I set eyes on you....”
- He made projects....
- Finally he became more personal and very flattering.
- “Now you and me,” he said, suddenly shifting himself quite close to
- Bealby, “we’re going to be downright pals. I’ve took a liking to you. Me
- and you are going to pal together. See?”
- He breathed into Bealby’s face, and laid a hand on his knee and squeezed
- it, and Bealby, on the whole, felt honoured by his protection....
- § 4
- In the unsympathetic light of a bright and pushful morning the tramp was
- shorn of much of his overnight glamour. It became manifest that he was
- not merely offensively unshaven, but extravagantly dirty. It was not
- ordinary rural dirt. During the last few days he must have had dealings
- of an intimate nature with coal. He was taciturn and irritable, he
- declared that this sleeping out would be the death of him and the
- breakfast was only too manifestly wanting in the comforts of a refined
- home. He seemed a little less embittered after breakfast, he became even
- faintly genial, but he remained unpleasing. A distaste for the tramp
- arose in Bealby’s mind and as he walked on behind his guide and friend,
- he revolved schemes of unobtrusive detachment.
- Far be it from me to accuse Bealby of ingratitude. But it is true that
- that same disinclination which made him a disloyal assistant to Mr.
- Mergleson was now affecting his comradeship with the tramp. And he was
- deceitful. He allowed the tramp to build projects in the confidence of
- his continued adhesion, he did not warn him of the defection he
- meditated. But on the other hand Bealby had acquired from his mother an
- effective horror of stealing. And one must admit, since the tramp
- admitted it, that the man stole.
- And another little matter had at the same time estranged Bealby from the
- tramp and linked the two of them together. The attentive reader will
- know that Bealby had exactly two shillings and twopence-halfpenny when
- he came down out of the woods to the fireside. He had Mrs. Bowles’
- half-crown and the balance of Madeleine Philips’ theatre shilling, minus
- sixpence halfpenny for a collar and sixpence he had given the tramp for
- the soup overnight. But all this balance was now in the pocket of the
- tramp. Money talks and the tramp had heard it. He had not taken it away
- from Bealby, but he had obtained it in this manner: “We two are pals,”
- he said, “and one of us had better be Treasurer. That’s Me. I know the
- ropes better. So hand over what you got there, matey.”
- And after he had pointed out that a refusal might lead to Bealby’s
- evisceration the transfer occurred. Bealby was searched, kindly but
- firmly....
- It seemed to the tramp that this trouble had now blown over completely.
- Little did he suspect the rebellious and treacherous thoughts that
- seethed in the head of his companion. Little did he suppose that his
- personal appearance, his manners, his ethical flavour—nay, even his
- physical flavour—were being judged in a spirit entirely unamiable. It
- seemed to him that he had obtained youthful and subservient
- companionship, companionship that would be equally agreeable and useful;
- he had adopted a course that he imagined would cement the ties between
- them; he reckoned not with ingratitude. “If anyone arsts you who I am,
- call me uncle,” he said. He walked along, a little in advance, sticking
- his toes out right and left in a peculiar wide pace that characterized
- his walk, and revolving schemes for the happiness and profit of the day.
- To begin with—great draughts of beer. Then tobacco. Later perhaps a
- little bread and cheese for Bealby. “You can’t come in ’ere,” he said at
- the first public house. “You’re under age, me boy. It ain’t my doing,
- matey; it’s ’Erbert Samuel. You blame ’im. ’E don’t objec’ to you going
- to work for any other Mr. Samuel there may ’appen to be abart or
- anything of that sort, that’s good for you, that is; but ’e’s most
- particular you shouldn’t go into a public ’ouse. So you just wait abart
- outside ’ere. _I’ll_ ’ave my eye on you.”
- “You going to spend my money?” asked Bealby.
- “I’m going to ration the party,” said the tramp.
- “You—you got no right to spend my money,” said Bealby.
- “I—’Ang it!—I’ll get you some acid drops,” said the tramp in tones of
- remonstrance. “I tell you, blame you,—it’s ‘Erbert Samuel.’ I can’t ’elp
- it! I can’t fight against the lor.”
- “You haven’t any right to spend my money,” said Bealby.
- “_Downt_ cut up crusty. ’Ow can _I_ ’elp it?”
- “I’ll tell a policeman. You gimme back my money and lemme go.”
- The tramp considered the social atmosphere. It did not contain a
- policeman. It contained nothing but a peaceful kindly corner public
- house, a sleeping dog and the back of an elderly man digging.
- The tramp approached Bealby in a confidential manner. “’Oo’s going to
- believe you?” he said. “And besides, ’ow did you come by it?
- “Moreover, _I_ ain’t going to spend _your_ money. I got money of my own.
- _’Ere!_ See?” And suddenly before the dazzled eyes of Bealby he held and
- instantly withdrew three shillings and two coppers that seemed familiar.
- He had had a shilling of his own....
- Bealby waited outside....
- The tramp emerged in a highly genial mood, with acid drops, and a short
- clay pipe going strong. “’Ere,” he said to Bealby with just the faintest
- flavour of magnificence over the teeth-held pipe and handed over not
- only the acid drops but a virgin short clay. “Fill,” he said, proffering
- the tobacco. “It’s yours jus’ much as it’s mine. Be’r not let ’Erbert
- Samuel see you, though; that’s all. ’E’s got a lor abart it.”
- Bealby held his pipe in his clenched hand. He had already smoked—once.
- He remembered it quite vividly still, although it had happened six
- months ago. Yet he hated not using that tobacco. “No,” he said, “I’ll
- smoke later.”
- The tramp replaced the screw of red Virginia in his pocket with the air
- of one who has done the gentlemanly thing....
- They went on their way, an ill-assorted couple.
- All day Bealby chafed at the tie and saw the security in the tramp’s
- pocket vanish. They lunched on bread and cheese and then the tramp had a
- good sustaining drink of beer for both of them and after that they came
- to a common where it seemed agreeable to repose. And after a due meed of
- repose in a secluded hollow among the gorse the tramp produced a pack of
- exceedingly greasy cards and taught Bealby to play Euchre. Apparently
- the tramp had no distinctive pockets in his tail coat, the whole lining
- was one capacious pocket. Various knobs and bulges indicated his cooking
- tin, his feeding tin, a turnip and other unknown properties. At first
- they played for love and then they played for the balance in the tramp’s
- pocket. And by the time Bealby had learnt Euchre thoroughly, that
- balance belonged to the tramp. But he was very generous about it and
- said they would go on sharing just as they had done. And then he became
- confidential. He scratched about in the bagginess of his garment and
- drew out a little dark blade of stuff, like a flint implement, regarded
- it gravely for a moment and held it out to Bealby. “Guess what this is.”
- Bealby gave it up.
- “Smell it.”
- It smelt very nasty. One familiar smell indeed there was with a
- paradoxical sanitary quality that he did not quite identify, but that
- was a mere basis for a complex reek of acquisitions. “What is it?” said
- Bealby.
- “_Soap!_”
- “But what’s it for?”
- “I thought you’d arst that.... What’s soap usually for?”
- “Washing,” said Bealby guessing wildly.
- The tramp shook his head. “Making a foam,” he corrected. “That’s what I
- has my fits with. See? I shoves a bit in my mouth and down I goes and I
- rolls about. Making a sort of moaning sound. Why, I been given brandy
- often—neat brandy.... It isn’t always a cert—nothing’s absolutely a
- cert. I’ve ’ad some let-downs.... Once I was bit by a nasty little
- dog—that brought me to pretty quick—and once I ’ad an old gentleman go
- through my pockets. ‘Poor chap!’ ’e ses, ‘very likely ’e’s destitoot,
- let’s see if ’e’s _got_ anything.’... I’d got all sorts of things, I
- didn’t want _’im_ prying about. But I didn’t come to sharp enough to
- stop ’im. Got me into trouble that did....
- “It’s an old lay,” said the tramp, “but it’s astonishing ’ow it’ll go in
- a quiet village. Sort of amuses ’em. Or dropping suddenly in front of a
- bicycle party. Lot of them old tricks are the best tricks, and there
- ain’t many of ’em Billy Bridget don’t know. That’s where you’re lucky to
- ’ave met me, matey. Billy Bridget’s a ’ard man to starve. And I know the
- ropes. I know what you _can_ do and what you can’t do. And I got a
- feeling for a policeman—same as some people ’ave for cats. I’d know if
- one was ’idden in the room....”
- He expanded into anecdotes and the story of various encounters in which
- he shone. It was amusing and it took Bealby on his weak side. Wasn’t he
- the Champion Dodger of the Chelsome playground?
- The tide of talk ebbed. “Well,” said the tramp, “time we was up and
- doing....”
- They went along shady lanes and across an open park and they skirted a
- breezy common from which they could see the sea. And among other things
- that the tramp said was this, “Time we began to forage a bit.”
- He turned his large observant nose to the right of him and the left.
- § 5
- Throughout the afternoon the tramp discoursed upon the rights and wrongs
- of property, in a way that Bealby found very novel and unsettling. The
- tramp seemed to have his ideas about owning and stealing arranged quite
- differently from those of Bealby. Never before had Bealby thought it
- possible to have them arranged in any other than the way he knew. But
- the tramp contrived to make most possession seem unrighteous and honesty
- a code devised by those who have for those who haven’t. “They’ve just
- got ’old of it,” he said. “They want to keep it to themselves.... Do I
- look as though I’d stole much of anybody’s? It isn’t me got ’old of this
- land and sticking up my notice boards to keep everybody off. It isn’t me
- spends my days and nights scheming ’ow I can get ’old of more and more
- of the stuff....
- “I don’t _envy_ it ’em,” said the tramp. “Some ’as one taste and some
- another. But when it comes to making all this fuss because a chap who
- _isn’t_ a schemer ’elps ’imself to a mäthful,—well, it’s Rot....
- “It’s them makes the rules of the game and nobody ever arst me to play
- it. I don’t blame ’em, mind you. Me and you might very well do the same.
- But brast me if I see where the sense of _my_ keeping the rules comes
- in. This world ought to be a share out, Gawd meant it to be a share out.
- And me and you—we been done out of our share. That justifies us.”
- “It isn’t right to steal,” said Bealby.
- “It isn’t right to steal—certainly. It isn’t right—but it’s universal.
- Here’s a chap here over this fence, ask ’im where ’e got ’is land.
- Stealing! What you call stealing, matey, _I_ call restitootion. You
- ain’t probably never even ’eard of socialism.”
- “I’ve ’eard of socialists right enough. Don’t believe in Gawd and
- ’aven’t no morality.”
- “Don’t you believe it. Why!—’Arf the socialists are parsons. What I’m
- saying _is_ socialism—practically. _I’m_ a socialist. I know all abart
- socialism. There isn’t nothing you can tell me abart socialism. Why!—for
- three weeks I was one of these here Anti-Socialist speakers. Paid for
- it. And I tell you there ain’t such a thing as property left; it’s all a
- blooming old pinch. Lords, commons, judges, all of them, they’re just a
- crew of brasted old fences and the lawyers getting in the stuff. Then
- you talk to me of stealing! _Stealing!_”
- The tramp’s contempt and his intense way of saying ‘stealing’ were very
- unsettling to a sensitive mind.
- They bought some tea and grease in a village shop and the tramp made tea
- in his old tin with great dexterity and then they gnawed bread on which
- two ounces of margarine had been generously distributed. “Live like
- fighting cocks, we do,” said the tramp wiping out his simple cuisine
- with the dragged-out end of his shirt sleeve. “And if I’m not very much
- mistaken we’ll sleep to-night on a nice bit of hay....”
- But these anticipations were upset by a sudden temptation, and instead
- of a starry summer comfort the two were destined to spend a night of
- suffering and remorse.
- A green lane lured them off the road, and after some windings led them
- past a field of wire-netted enclosures containing a number of perfect
- and conceited-looking hens close beside a little cottage, a vegetable
- garden and some new elaborate outhouses. It was manifestly a poultry
- farm, and something about it gave the tramp the conviction that it had
- been left, that nobody was at home.
- These realizations are instinctive, they leap to the mind. He knew it,
- and an ambition to know further what was in the cottage came with the
- knowledge. But it seemed to him desirable that the work of exploration
- should be done by Bealby. He had thought of dogs, and it seemed to him
- that Bealby might be unembarrassed by that idea. So he put the thing to
- Bealby. “Let’s have a look round ere,” he said. “You go in and see
- what’s abart....”
- There was some difference of opinion. “I don’t ask you to take
- anything,” said the tramp.... “Nobody won’t catch you.... I tell you
- nobody won’t catch you.... I tell you there ain’t nobody here to catch
- you.... Just for the fun of seeing in. I’ll go up by them outhouses. And
- I’ll see nobody comes.... Ain’t afraid to go up a garden path, are
- you?... I tell you, I don’t want you to steal.... You ain’t got much
- guts to funk a thing like that.... I’ll be abät too.... Thought you’d be
- the very chap for a bit of scarting.... Thought Boy Scarts was all the
- go nowadays.... Well, if you ain’t afraid you’d do it.... Well, why
- didn’t you say you’d do it at the beginning?...”
- Bealby went through the hedge and up a grass track between poultry runs,
- made a cautious inspection of the outhouses and then approached the
- cottage. Everything was still. He thought it more plausible to go to the
- door than peep into the window. He rapped. Then after an interval of
- stillness he lifted the latch, opened the door and peered into the room.
- It was a pleasantly furnished room, and before the empty summer
- fireplace a very old white man was sitting in a chintz-covered
- arm-chair, lost it would seem in painful thought. He had a peculiar grey
- shrunken look, his eyes were closed, a bony hand with the shiny texture
- of alabaster gripped the chair arm.... There was something about him
- that held Bealby quite still for a moment.
- And this old gentleman behaved very oddly.
- His body seemed to crumple into his chair, his hands slipped down from
- the arms, his head nodded forwards and his mouth and eyes seemed to open
- together. And he made a snoring sound....
- For a moment Bealby remained rigidly agape and then a violent desire to
- rejoin the tramp carried him back through the hen runs....
- He tried to describe what he had seen.
- “Asleep with his mouth open,” said the tramp. “Well, that ain’t anything
- so wonderful! You _got_ anything? That’s what I want to know.... Did
- anyone ever see such a boy? ’Ere! I’ll go....
- “You keep a look out here,” said the tramp.
- But there was something about that old man in there, something so
- strange and alien to Bealby, that he could not remain alone in the
- falling twilight. He followed the cautious advances of the tramp towards
- the house. From the corner by the outhouses he saw the tramp go and peer
- in at the open door. He remained for some time peering, his head hidden
- from Bealby....
- Then he went in....
- Bealby had an extraordinary desire that somebody else would come. His
- soul cried out for help against some vaguely apprehended terror. And in
- the very moment of his wish came its fulfilment. He saw advancing up the
- garden path a tall woman in a blue serge dress, hatless and hurrying and
- carrying a little package—it was medicine—in her hand. And with her came
- a big black dog. At the sight of Bealby the dog came forward barking and
- Bealby after a moment’s hesitation turned and fled.
- The dog was quick. But Bealby was quicker. He went up the netting of a
- hen run and gave the dog no more than an ineffectual snap at his heels.
- And then dashing from the cottage door came the tramp. Under one arm was
- a brass-bound workbox and in the other was a candlestick and some
- smaller articles. He did not instantly grasp the situation of his treed
- companion, he was too anxious to escape the tall woman, and then with a
- yelp of dismay he discovered himself between woman and dog. All too late
- he sought to emulate Bealby. The workbox slipped from under his arm, the
- rest of his plunder fell from him, for an uneasy moment he was clinging
- to the side of the swaying hen run and then it had caved in and the dog
- had got him.
- The dog bit, desisted and then finding itself confronted by two men
- retreated. Bealby and the tramp rolled and scrambled over the other side
- of the collapsed netting into a parallel track and were halfway to the
- hedge before the dog,—but this time in a less vehement fashion,—resumed
- his attack.
- He did not close with them again and at the hedge he halted altogether
- and remained hacking the gloaming with his rage.
- The woman it seemed had gone into the house, leaving the tramp’s
- scattered loot upon the field of battle.
- “This means mizzle,” said the tramp, leading the way at a trot.
- Bealby saw no other course but to follow.
- He had a feeling as though the world had turned against him. He did not
- dare to think what he was nevertheless thinking of the events of these
- crowded ten minutes. He felt he had touched something dreadful; that the
- twilight was full of accusations.... He feared and hated the tramp now,
- but he perceived something had linked them as they had not been linked
- before. Whatever it was they shared it.
- § 6
- They fled through the night; it seemed to Bealby for interminable hours.
- At last when they were worn out and footsore they crept through a gate
- and found an uncomfortable cowering place in the corner of a field.
- As they went they talked but little, but the tramp kept up a constant
- muttering to himself. He was troubled by the thought of hydrophobia.
- “I know I’ll ’ave it,” he said, “I know I’ll get it.”
- Bealby after a time ceased to listen to his companion. His mind was
- preoccupied. He could think of nothing but that very white man in the
- chair and the strange manner of his movement.
- “Was ’e awake when you saw ’im?” he asked at last.
- “Awake—who?”
- “That old man.”
- For a moment or so the tramp said nothing. “’E wasn’t awake, you young
- silly,” he said at last.
- “But—wasn’t he?”
- “Why!—don’t you know! ’E’d croaked,—popped off the ’ooks—very moment you
- saw ’im.”
- For a moment Bealby’s voice failed him.
- Then he said quite faintly, “You mean—he’d —. Was dead?”
- “Didn’t you know?” said the tramp. “Gaw! What a kid you are!”
- In that manner it was Bealby first saw a dead man. Never before had he
- seen anyone dead. And after that for all the night the old white man
- pursued him, with strange slowly-opening eyes, and a head on one side
- and his mouth suddenly and absurdly agape....
- All night long that white figure presided over seas of dark dismay. It
- seemed always to be there, and yet Bealby thought of a score of other
- painful things. For the first time in his life he asked himself, “Where
- am I going? What am I drifting to?” The world beneath the old man’s
- dominance was a world of prisons.
- Bealby believed he was a burglar and behind the darkness he imagined the
- outraged law already seeking him. And the terrors of his associate
- reinforced his own.
- He tried to think what he should do in the morning. He dreaded the dawn
- profoundly. But he could not collect his thoughts because of the tramp’s
- incessant lapses into grumbling lamentation. Bealby knew he had to get
- away from the tramp, but now he was too weary and alarmed to think of
- running away as a possible expedient. And besides there was the matter
- of his money. And beyond the range of the tramp’s voice there were
- darknesses which to-night at least might hold inconceivable forms of
- lurking evil. But could he not appeal to the law to save him? Repent?
- Was there not something called turning King’s Evidence?
- The moon was no comfort that night. Across it there passed with
- incredible slowness a number of jagged little black clouds, blacker than
- any clouds Bealby had ever seen before. They were like velvet palls,
- lined with snowy fur. There was no end to them. And one at last most
- horribly gaped slowly and opened a mouth....
- § 7
- At intervals there would be uncomfortable movements and the voice of the
- tramp came out of the darkness beside Bealby lamenting his approaching
- fate and discoursing—sometimes with violent expressions—on watch-dogs.
- “I know I shall ’ave ’idrophobia,” said the tramp. “I’ve always ’ad a
- disposition to ’idrophobia. Always a dread of water—and now it’s got me.
- “Think of it!—keeping a beast to set at a ’uman being. Where’s the
- brotherhood of it? Where’s the law and the humanity? Getting a animal to
- set at a brother man. And a poisoned animal, a animal with death in his
- teeth. And a ’orrible death too. Where’s the sense and brotherhood?
- “Gaw! when I felt ’is teeth coming through my träsers—!
- “Dogs oughtn’t to be allowed. They’re a noosance in the towns and a
- danger in the country. They oughtn’t to be allowed anywhere—not till
- every blessed ’uman being ’as got three square meals a day. Then if you
- like, keep a dog. And see ’e’s a clean dog....
- “Gaw! if I’d been a bit quicker up that ’en roost—!
- “I ought to ’ave landed ’im a kick.
- “It’s a man’s duty to ’urt a dog. When ’e sees a dog ’e ought to ’urt
- ’im. It’s a natural ’atred. If dogs were what they ought to be, if dogs
- understood ’ow they’re situated, there wouldn’t be a dog go for a man
- ever.
- “And if one did they’d shoot ’im....
- “After this if ever I get a chance to land a dog a oner with a stone
- I’ll land ’im one. I been too sorft with dogs....”
- Towards dawn Bealby slept uneasily, to be awakened by the loud snorting
- curiosity of three lively young horses. He sat up in a blinding sunshine
- and saw the tramp looking very filthy and contorted, sleeping with his
- mouth wide open and an expression of dismay and despair on his face.
- § 8
- Bealby took his chance to steal away next morning while the tramp was
- engaged in artificial epilepsy.
- “I feel like fits this morning,” said the tramp. “I could do it well. I
- want a bit of human kindness again. After that brasted dog.
- “I expect soon I’ll ’ave the foam all right withat any soap.”
- They marked down a little cottage before which a benevolent-looking
- spectacled old gentleman in a large straw hat and a thin alpaca jacket
- was engaged in budding roses. Then they retired to prepare. The tramp
- handed over to Bealby various compromising possessions, which might
- embarrass an afflicted person under the searching hands of charity.
- There was for example the piece of soap after he had taken sufficient
- for his immediate needs, there was ninepence in money, there were the
- pack of cards with which they had played Euchre, a key or so and some
- wires, much assorted string, three tins, a large piece of bread, the end
- of a composite candle, a box of sulphur matches, list slippers, a pair
- of gloves, a clasp knife, sundry grey rags. They all seemed to have the
- distinctive flavour of the tramp....
- “If you do a bunk with these,” said the tramp. “By Gawd—.”
- He drew his finger across his throat.
- (King’s Evidence.)
- Bealby from a safe distance watched the beginnings of the fit and it
- impressed him as a thoroughly nasty kind of fit. He saw the elderly
- gentleman hurry out of the cottage and stand for a moment looking over
- his little green garden gate, surveying the sufferings of the tramp with
- an expression of intense yet discreet commiseration. Then suddenly he
- was struck by an idea; he darted in among his rose bushes and reappeared
- with a big watering-can and an enormous syringe. Still keeping the gate
- between himself and the sufferer he loaded his syringe very carefully
- and deliberately....
- Bealby would have liked to have seen more but he felt his moment had
- come. Another instant and it might be gone again. Very softly he dropped
- from the gate on which he was sitting and made off like a running
- partridge along the hedge of the field.
- Just for a moment did he halt—at a strange sharp yelp that came from the
- direction of the little cottage. Then his purpose of flight resumed its
- control of him.
- He would strike across country for two or three miles, then make for the
- nearest police station and give himself up. (Loud voices. Was that the
- tramp murdering the benevolent old gentleman in the straw hat or was it
- the benevolent old gentleman in the straw hat murdering the tramp? No
- time to question. Onward, Onward!) The tramp’s cans rattled in his
- pocket. He drew one out, hesitated a moment and flung it away and then
- sent its two companions after it....
- He found his police station upon the road between Someport and
- Crayminster, a little peaceful rural station, a mere sunny cottage with
- a blue and white label and a notice board covered with belated bills
- about the stealing of pheasants’ eggs. And another bill—.
- It was headed MISSING and the next most conspicuous words were £5 REWARD
- and the next ARTHUR BEALBY.
- He was fascinated. So swift, so terribly swift is the law. Already they
- knew of his burglary, of his callous participation in the robbing of a
- dead man. Already the sleuths were upon his trail. So surely did his
- conscience strike to this conclusion that even the carelessly worded
- offer of a reward that followed his description conveyed no different
- intimation to his mind. “To whomsoever will bring him back to Lady
- Laxton, at Shonts near Chelsmore,” so it ran.
- “And out of pocket expenses.”
- And even as Bealby read this terrible document, the door of the police
- station opened and a very big pink young policeman came out and stood
- regarding the world in a friendly, self-approving manner. He had
- innocent, happy, blue eyes; thus far he had had much to do with order
- and little with crime; and his rosebud mouth would have fallen open, had
- not discipline already closed it and set upon it the beginnings of a
- resolute expression that accorded ill with the rest of his open
- freshness. And when he had surveyed the sky and the distant hills and
- the little rose bushes that occupied the leisure of the force, his eyes
- fell upon Bealby....
- Indecision has ruined more men than wickedness. And when one has slept
- rough and eaten nothing and one is conscious of a marred unclean
- appearance, it is hard to face one’s situations. What Bealby had
- intended to do was to go right up to a policeman and say to him, simply
- and frankly: “I want to turn King’s Evidence, please. I was in that
- burglary where there was a dead old man and a workbox and a woman and a
- dog. I was led astray by a bad character and I did not mean to do it.
- And really it was him that did it and not me.”
- But now his tongue clove to the roof of his mouth, he felt he could not
- speak, could not go through with it. His heart had gone down into his
- feet. Perhaps he had caught the tramp’s constitutional aversion to the
- police. He affected not to see the observant figure in the doorway. He
- assumed a slack careless bearing like one who reads by chance idly. He
- lifted his eyebrows to express unconcern. He pursed his mouth to whistle
- but no whistle came. He stuck his hands into his pockets, pulled up his
- feet as one pulls up plants by the roots and strolled away.
- He quickened his stroll as he supposed by imperceptible degrees. He
- glanced back and saw that the young policeman had come out of the
- station and was reading the notice. And as the young policeman read he
- looked ever and again at Bealby like one who checks off items.
- Bealby quickened his pace and then, doing his best to suggest by the
- movements of his back a more boyish levity quite unconnected with the
- law, he broke into a trot.
- Then presently he dropped back into a walking pace, pretended to see
- something in the hedge, stopped and took a sidelong look at the young
- policeman.
- He was coming along with earnest strides; every movement of his
- suggested a stealthy hurry!
- Bealby trotted and then becoming almost frank about it ran. He took to
- his heels.
- From the first it was not really an urgent chase; it was a stalking
- rather than a hunt, because the young policeman was too young and shy
- and lacking in confidence really to run after a boy without any definite
- warrant for doing so. When anyone came along he would drop into a smart
- walk and pretend not to be looking at Bealby but just going somewhere
- briskly. And after two miles of it he desisted, and stood for a time
- watching a heap of mangold wurzel directly and the disappearance of
- Bealby obliquely, and then when Bealby was quite out of sight he turned
- back thoughtfully towards his proper place.
- On the whole he considered he was well out of it. He might have made a
- fool of himself....
- And yet,—five pounds reward!
- CHAPTER VII
- THE BATTLE OF CRAYMINSTER
- § 1
- Bealby was beginning to realize that running away from one’s situation
- and setting up for oneself is not so easy and simple a thing as it had
- appeared during those first days with the caravan. Three things he
- perceived had arisen to pursue him, two that followed in the daylight,
- the law and the tramp, and a third that came back at twilight, the
- terror of the darkness. And within there was a hollow faintness, for the
- afternoon was far advanced and he was extremely hungry. He had dozed
- away the early afternoon in the weedy corner of a wood. But for his
- hunger I think he would have avoided Crayminster.
- Within a mile of that place he had come upon the ‘Missing’ notice again
- stuck to the end of a barn. He had passed it askance, and then with a
- sudden inspiration returned and tore it down. Somehow with the daylight
- his idea of turning King’s Evidence against the tramp had weakened. He
- no longer felt sure.
- Mustn’t one wait and be asked first to turn King’s Evidence?
- Suppose they said he had merely confessed....
- The Crayminster street had a picturesque nutritious look. Half-way down
- it was the White Hart with cyclist club signs on its walls and geraniums
- over a white porch, and beyond a house being built and already at the
- roofing pitch. To the right was a baker’s shop diffusing a delicious
- suggestion of buns and cake and to the left a little comfortable
- sweetstuff window and a glimpse of tables and a board: ‘Teas.’ Tea! He
- resolved to break into his ninepence boldly and generously. Very likely
- they would boil him an egg for a penny or so. Yet on the other hand if
- he just had three or four buns, soft new buns. He hovered towards the
- baker’s shop and stopped short. That bill was in the window!
- He wheeled about sharply and went into the sweetstuff shop and found a
- table with a white cloth and a motherly little woman in a large cap.
- Tea? He could have an egg and some thick bread and butter and a cup of
- tea for fivepence. He sat down respectfully to await her preparations.
- But he was uneasy.
- He knew quite well that she would ask him questions. For that he was
- prepared. He said he was walking from his home in London to Someport to
- save the fare. “But you’re so dirty!” said the motherly little woman. “I
- sent my luggage by post, ma’m, and I lost my way and didn’t get it. And
- I don’t much mind, ma’m, if you don’t. Not washing....”
- All that he thought he did quite neatly. But he wished there was not
- that bill in the baker’s window opposite and he wished he hadn’t quite
- such a hunted feeling. A faint claustrophobia affected him. He felt the
- shop might be a trap. He would be glad to get into the open again. Was
- there a way out behind if for example a policeman blocked the door? He
- hovered to the entrance while his egg was boiling and then when he saw a
- large fat baker surveying the world with an afternoon placidity upon his
- face, he went back and sat by the table. He wondered if the baker had
- noted him.
- He had finished his egg; he was drinking his tea with appreciative
- noises, when he discovered that the baker _had_ noted him. Bealby’s
- eyes, at first inanely open above the tilting tea cup, were suddenly
- riveted on something that was going on in the baker’s window. From where
- he sat he could see that detestable bill, and then slowly, feeling about
- for it, he beheld a hand and a floury sleeve. The bill was drawn up and
- vanished and then behind a glass shelf of fancy bread and a glass shelf
- of buns something pink and indistinct began to move jerkily.... It was a
- human face and it was trying to peer into the little refreshment shop
- that sheltered Bealby....
- Bealby’s soul went faint.
- He had one inadequate idea. “Might I go out,” he said, “by your back
- way?”
- “There isn’t a back way,” said the motherly little woman. “There’s a
- yard—.”
- “If I might,” said Bealby, and was out in it.
- No way at all! High walls on every side. He was back like a shot in the
- shop, and now the baker was half-way across the road. “Fivepence,” said
- Bealby and gave the little old woman sixpence. “Here,” she cried, “take
- your penny!”
- He did not wait. He darted out of the door.
- The baker was all over the way of escape. He extended arms that seemed
- abnormally long and with a weak cry Bealby found himself trapped.
- Trapped, but not hopelessly. He knew how to do it. He had done it in
- milder forms before, but now he did it with all his being. Under the
- diaphragm of the baker smote Bealby’s hard little head, and instantly he
- was away running up the quiet sunny street. Man when he assumed the
- erect attitude made a hostage of his belly. It is a proverb among the
- pastoral Berbers of the Atlas mountains that the man who extends his
- arms in front of an angry ram is a fool.
- It seemed probable to Bealby that he would get away up the street. The
- baker was engaged in elaborately falling backward, making the most of
- sitting down in the road, and the wind had been knocked out of him so
- that he could not shout. He emitted “Stop him!” in large whispers. Away
- ahead there were only three builder’s men sitting under the wall beyond
- the White Hart, consuming tea out of their tea cans. But the boy who was
- trimming the top of the tall privet hedge outside the doctor’s saw the
- assault of the baker and incontinently uttered the shout that the baker
- could not. Also he fell off his steps with great alacrity and started in
- pursuit of Bealby. A young man from anywhere—perhaps the grocer’s
- shop—also started for Bealby. But the workmen were slow to rise to the
- occasion. Bealby could have got past them. And then, abruptly at the
- foot of the street ahead the tramp came into view, a battered
- disconcerting figure. His straw-coloured hat which had recently been
- wetted and dried in the sun was a swaying mop. The sight of Bealby
- seemed to rouse him from some disagreeable meditations. He grasped the
- situation with a terrible quickness. Regardless of the wisdom of the
- pastoral Berbers he extended his arms and stood prepared to intercept.
- Bealby thought at the rate of a hundred thoughts to the minute. He
- darted sideways and was up the ladder and among the beams and rafters of
- the unfinished roof before the pursuit had more than begun. “Here, come
- off that,” cried the foreman builder, only now joining in the hunt with
- any sincerity. He came across the road while Bealby regarded him
- wickedly from the rafters above. Then as the good man made to ascend
- Bealby got him neatly on the hat, it was a bowler hat, with a tile. This
- checked the advance. There was a disposition to draw a little off and
- look up at Bealby. One of the younger builders from the opposite
- sidewalk got him very neatly in the ribs with a stone. But two other
- shots went wide and Bealby shifted to a more covered position behind the
- chimney stack.
- From here, however, he had a much less effective command of the ladder,
- and he perceived that his tenure of the new house was not likely to be a
- long one.
- Below, men parleyed. “Who _is_ ’e?” asked the foreman builder. “Where’d
- ’e come from?” “’E’s a brasted little thief,” said the tramp. “’E’s one
- of the wust characters on the road.” The baker was recovering his voice
- now. “There’s a reward out for ’im,” he said, “and ’e butted me in the
- stummick.”
- “’Ow much reward?” asked the foreman builder.
- “Five pound for the man who catches him.”
- “’Ere!” cried the foreman builder in an arresting voice to the tramp.
- “Just stand away from that ladder....”
- Whatever else Bealby might or might not be, one thing was very clear
- about him and that was that he was a fugitive. And the instinct of
- humanity is to pursue fugitives. Man is a hunting animal, enquiry into
- the justice of a case is an altogether later accretion to his complex
- nature, and that is why, whatever you are or whatever you do, you should
- never let people get you on the run. There is a joy in the mere fact of
- hunting, the sight of a scarlet coat and a hound will brighten a whole
- village, and now Crayminster was rousing itself like a sleeper who wakes
- to sunshine and gay music. People were looking out of windows and coming
- out of shops, a policeman appeared and heard the baker’s simple story, a
- brisk hatless young man in a white apron and with a pencil behind his
- ear became prominent. Bealby, peeping over the ridge of the roof, looked
- a thoroughly dirty and unpleasant little creature to all these people.
- The only spark of human sympathy for him below was in the heart of the
- little old woman in the cap who had given him his breakfast. She
- surveyed the roof of the new house from the door of her shop, she hoped
- Bealby wouldn’t hurt himself up there, and she held his penny change
- clutched in her hand in her apron pocket with a vague idea that perhaps
- presently if he ran past she could very quickly give it him.
- § 2
- Considerable delay in delivering the assault on the house was caused by
- the foreman’s insistence that he alone should ascend the ladder to
- capture Bealby. He was one of those regular-featured men with large
- heads who seem to have inflexible backbones, he was large and fair and
- full with a sweetish chest voice and in all his movements authoritative
- and deliberate. Whenever he made to ascend he discovered that people
- were straying into his building, and he had to stop and direct his men
- how to order them off. Inside his large head he was trying to arrange
- everybody to cut off Bealby’s line of retreat without risking that
- anybody but himself should capture the fugitive. It was none too easy
- and it knitted his brows. Meanwhile Bealby was able to reconnoitre the
- adjacent properties and to conceive plans for a possible line of escape.
- He also got a few tiles handy against when the rush up the ladder came.
- At the same time two of the younger workmen were investigating the
- possibility of getting at him from inside the house. There was still no
- staircase, but there were ways of clambering. They had heard about the
- reward and they knew that they must do this before the foreman realized
- their purpose, and this a little retarded them. In their pockets they
- had a number of stones, ammunition in reserve, if it came again to
- throwing.
- Bealby was no longer fatigued nor depressed; anxiety for the future was
- lost in the excitement of the present, and his heart told him that, come
- what might, getting on to the roof was an extraordinarily good dodge.
- And if only he could bring off a certain jump he had in mind, there were
- other dodges—....
- In the village street an informal assembly of leading citizens, a little
- recovered now from their first nervousness about flying tiles, discussed
- the problem of Bealby. There was Mumby, the draper and vegetarian, with
- the bass voice and the big black beard. He advocated the fire engine. He
- was one of the volunteer fire brigade and never so happy as when he was
- wearing his helmet. He had come out of his shop at the shouting. Schocks
- the butcher, and his boy were also in the street. Schocks’s yard, with
- its heap of manure and fodder, bounded the new house on the left. Rymell
- the vet emerged from the billiard room of the White Hart, and with his
- head a little on one side was watching Bealby and replying attentively
- to the baker, who was asking him a number of questions that struck him
- as irrelevant. All the White Hart people were in the street.
- “I suppose, Mr. Rymell,” said the baker, “there’s a mort of dangerous
- things in a man’s belly round about ’is Stummick?”
- “Tiles,” said Mr. Rymell. “Loose bricks. It wouldn’t do if he started
- dropping those.”
- “I was saying, Mr. Rymell,” said the baker, after a pause for digestion,
- “is a man likely to be injured badly by a Blaw in his stummick?”
- Mr. Rymell stared at him for a moment with unresponsive eyes. “More
- likely to get you in the head,” he said, and then, “Here! What’s that
- fool of a carpenter going to do?”
- The tramp was hovering on the outskirts of the group of besiegers,
- vindictive but dispirited. He had been brought to from his fit and given
- a shilling by the old gentleman, but he was dreadfully wet between his
- shirt—he wore a shirt, under three waistcoats and a coat—and his skin,
- because the old gentleman’s method of revival had been to syringe him
- suddenly with cold water. It had made him weep with astonishment and
- misery. Now he saw no advantage in claiming Bealby publicly. His part,
- he felt, was rather a waiting one. What he had to say to Bealby could be
- best said without the assistance of a third person. And he wanted to
- understand more of this talk about a reward. If there was a reward out
- for Bealby—
- “That’s not a bad dodge!” said Rymell, changing his opinion of the
- foreman suddenly as that individual began his ascent of the ladder with
- a bricklayer’s hod carried shield-wise above his head. He went up with
- difficulty and slowly because of the extreme care he took to keep his
- head protected. But no tiles came. Bealby had discovered a more
- dangerous attack developing inside the house and was already in retreat
- down the other side of the building.
- He did a leap that might have hurt him badly, taking off from the corner
- of the house and jumping a good twelve feet on to a big heap of straw in
- the butcher’s yard. He came down on all fours and felt a little jarred
- for an instant, and then he was up again and had scrambled up by a heap
- of manure to the top of the butcher’s wall. He was over that and into
- Maccullum’s yard next door before anyone in the front of the new house
- had realized that he was in flight. Then one of the two workmen who had
- been coming up inside the house saw him from the oblong opening that was
- some day to be the upstairs bedroom window, and gave tongue.
- It was thirty seconds later, and after Bealby had vanished from the
- butcher’s wall that the foreman, still clinging to his hod, appeared
- over the ridge of the roof. At the workman’s shout the policeman, who
- with the preventive disposition of his profession, had hitherto been
- stopping anyone from coming into the unfinished house, turned about and
- ran out into its brick and plaster and timber-littered backyard,
- whereupon the crowd in the street realizing that the quarry had gone
- away and no longer restrained, came pouring partly through the house and
- partly round through the butcher’s gate into his yard.
- Bealby had had a check.
- He had relied upon the tarred felt roof of the mushroom shed of
- Maccullum the tailor and breeches-maker to get him to the wall that gave
- upon Mr. Benshaw’s strawberry fields and he had not seen from his roof
- above the ramshackle glazed outhouse which Maccullum called his workroom
- and in which four industrious tailors were working in an easy
- dishabille. The roof of the shed was the merest tarred touchwood, it had
- perished as felt long ago, it collapsed under Bealby, he went down into
- a confusion of mushrooms and mushroom-bed, he blundered out trailing
- mushrooms and spawn and rich matter, he had a nine-foot wall to
- negotiate and only escaped by a hair’s-breadth from the clutch of a
- little red-slippered man who came dashing out from the workroom. But by
- a happy use of the top of the dustbin he did just get away over the wall
- in time, and the red-slippered tailor, who was not good at walls, was
- left struggling to imitate an ascent that had looked easy enough until
- he came to try it.
- For a moment the little tailor struggled alone and then both Maccullum’s
- little domain and the butcher’s yard next door and the little patch of
- space behind the new house, were violently injected with a crowd of
- active people, all confusedly on the Bealby trail. Someone, he never
- knew who, gave the little tailor a leg-up and then his red slippers
- twinkled over the wall and he was leading the hunt into the market
- gardens of Mr. Benshaw. A collarless colleague in list slippers and
- conspicuous braces followed. The policeman, after he had completed the
- wreck of Mr. Maccullum’s mushroom shed, came next, and then Mr.
- Maccullum, with no sense of times and seasons, anxious to have a
- discussion at once upon the question of this damage. Mr. Maccullum was
- out of breath and he never got further with this projected conversation
- than “Here!” This he repeated several times as opportunity seemed to
- offer. The remaining tailors got to the top of the wall more sedately
- with the help of the Maccullum kitchen steps and dropped; Mr. Schocks
- followed, breathing hard, and then a fresh jet of humanity came
- squirting into the gardens through a gap in the fence at the back of the
- building site. This was led by the young workman who had first seen
- Bealby go away. Hard behind him came Rymell, the vet, the grocer’s
- assistant, the doctor’s page-boy and, less briskly, the baker. Then the
- tramp. Then Mumby and Schocks’s boy. Then a number of other people. The
- seeking of Bealby had assumed the dimensions of a Hue and Cry.
- The foreman with the large head and the upright back was still on the
- new roof; he was greatly distressed at the turn things had taken and
- shouted his claims to a major share in the capture of Bealby, mixed with
- his opinions of Bealby and a good deal of mere swearing, to a sunny but
- unsympathetic sky....
- § 3
- Mr. Benshaw was a small holder, a sturdy English yeoman of the new
- school. He was an Anti-Socialist, a self-helper, an independent-spirited
- man. He had a steadily growing banking account and a plain but sterile
- wife, and he was dark in complexion and so erect in his bearing as to
- seem a little to lean forward. Usually he wore a sort of grey
- gamekeeper’s suit with brown gaiters (except on Sundays when the coat
- was black), he was addicted to bowler hats that accorded ill with his
- large grave grey-coloured face, and he was altogether a very sound
- strong man. His bowler hats did but accentuate that. He had no time for
- vanities, even the vanity of dressing consistently. He went into the
- nearest shop and just bought the cheapest hat he could, and so he got
- hats designed for the youthful and giddy, hats with flighty crowns and
- flippant bows and amorous brims that undulated attractively to set off
- flushed and foolish young faces. It made his unrelenting face look
- rather like the Puritans under the Stuart monarchy.
- He was a horticulturist rather than a farmer. He had begun his career in
- cheap lodgings with a field of early potatoes and cabbages, supplemented
- by employment, but with increased prosperity his area of cultivation had
- extended and his methods intensified. He now grew considerable
- quantities of strawberries, raspberries, celery, seakale, asparagus,
- early peas, late peas, and onions, and consumed more stable manure than
- any other cultivator within ten miles of Crayminster. He was beginning
- to send cut flowers to London. He had half an acre of glass and he was
- rapidly extending it. He had built himself a cottage on lines of austere
- economy, and a bony-looking dwelling house for some of his men. He also
- owned a number of useful sheds of which tar and corrugated iron were
- conspicuous features. His home was furnished with the utmost
- respectability, and notably joyless even in a countryside where gaiety
- is regarded as an impossible quality in furniture. He was already in a
- small local way a mortgagee. Good fortune had not turned the head of Mr.
- Benshaw nor robbed him of the feeling that he was a particularly
- deserving person, entitled to a preferential treatment from a country
- which in his plain unsparing way he felt that he enriched.
- In many ways he thought that the country was careless of his needs. And
- in none more careless than in the laws relating to trespass. Across his
- dominions ran three footpaths, and one of these led to the public
- elementary school. That he should have to maintain this latter—and if he
- did not keep it in good order the children spread out and made parallel
- tracks among his cultivations—seemed to him a thing almost intolerably
- unjust. He mended it with cinders, acetylene refuse, which he believed
- and hoped to be thoroughly bad for boots, and a peculiarly slimy chalky
- clay, and he put on a board at each end “Keep to the footpaths,
- Trespassers will be prosecuted, by Order,” which he painted himself to
- save expense when he was confined indoors by the influenza. Still more
- unjust it would be, he felt, for him to spend money upon effective
- fencing, and he could find no fencing cheap enough and ugly enough and
- painful enough and impossible enough to express his feelings in the
- matter. Every day the children streamed to and fro, marking how his
- fruits ripened and his produce became more esculent. And other people
- pursued these tracks; many, Mr. Benshaw was convinced, went to and fro
- through his orderly crops who had no business whatever, no honest
- business, to pass that way. Either, he concluded, they did it to annoy
- him, or they did it to injure him. This continual invasion aroused in
- Mr. Benshaw all that stern anger against unrighteousness latent in our
- race which more than any other single force has made America and the
- Empire what they are to-day. Once already he had been robbed—a raid upon
- his raspberries—and he felt convinced that at any time he might be
- robbed again. He had made representations to the local authority to get
- the footpath closed, but in vain. They defended themselves with the
- paltry excuse that the children would then have to go nearly a mile
- round to the school.
- It was not only the tyranny of these footpaths that offended Mr.
- Benshaw’s highly developed sense of Individual Liberty. All round his
- rather straggling dominions his neighbours displayed an ungenerous
- indisposition to maintain their fences to his satisfaction. In one or
- two places, in abandonment of his clear rights in the matter, he had, at
- his own expense, supplemented these lax defences with light barbed wire
- defences. But it was not a very satisfactory sort of barbed wire. He
- wanted barbed wire with extra spurs like a fighting cock; he wanted
- barbed wire that would start out after nightfall and attack passers-by.
- This boundary trouble was universal; in a way it was worse than the
- footpaths which after all only affected the Cage Fields where his
- strawberries grew. Except for the yard and garden walls of Maccullum and
- Schocks and that side, there was not really a satisfactory foot of
- enclosure all round Mr. Benshaw. On the one side rats and people’s dogs
- and scratching cats came in, on the other side rabbits. The rabbits were
- intolerable and recently there had been a rise of nearly thirty per cent
- in the price of wire netting.
- Mr. Benshaw wanted to hurt rabbits; he did not want simply to kill them,
- he wanted so to kill them as to put the fear of death into the burrows.
- He wanted to kill them so that scared little furry survivors with their
- tails as white as ghosts would go lolloping home and say, “I say, you
- chaps, we’d better shift out of this. We’re up against a Strong
- Determined Man....”
- I have made this lengthy statement of Mr. Benshaw’s economic and moral
- difficulties in order that the reader should understand the peculiar
- tension that already existed upon this side of Crayminster. It has been
- necessary to do so now because in a few seconds there will be no further
- opportunity for such preparations.
- There had been trouble, I may add very hastily, about the shooting of
- Mr. Benshaw’s gun; a shower of small shot had fallen out of the twilight
- upon the umbrella and basket of old Mrs. Frobisher. And only a week ago
- an unsympathetic bench after a hearing of over an hour and in the face
- of overwhelming evidence had refused to convict little Lucy Mumby, aged
- eleven, of stealing fruit from Mr. Benshaw’s fields. She had been caught
- red-handed....
- At the very moment that Bealby was butting the baker in the stomach, Mr.
- Benshaw was just emerging from his austere cottage after a wholesome but
- inexpensive high tea in which he had finished up two left-over cold
- sausages, and he was considering very deeply the financial side of a
- furious black fence that he had at last decided should pen in the school
- children from further depredations. It should be of splintery tarred
- deal, and high, with well-pointed tops studded with sharp nails, and he
- believed that by making the path only two feet wide, a real saving of
- ground for cultivation might be made and a very considerable discomfort
- for the public arranged, to compensate for his initial expense. The
- thought of a narrow lane which would in winter be characterized by an
- excessive slimness and from which there would be no lateral escape was
- pleasing to a mind by no means absolutely restricted to considerations
- of pounds, shillings and pence. In his hand after his custom he carried
- a hoe, on the handle of which feet were marked, so that it was available
- not only for destroying the casual weed but also for purposes of
- measurement. With this he now checked his estimate and found that here
- he would reclaim as much as three feet of trodden waste, here a full
- two.
- Absorbed in these calculations, he heeded little the growth of a certain
- clamour from the backs of the houses bordering on the High Street. It
- did not appear to concern him and Mr. Benshaw made it almost
- ostentatiously his rule to mind his own business. His eyes remained
- fixed on the lumpy, dusty, sunbaked track, that with an intelligent
- foresight he saw already transformed into a deterrent slough of despond
- for the young....
- Then quite suddenly the shouting took on a new note. He glanced over his
- shoulder almost involuntarily and discovered that after all this uproar
- was his business. Amazingly his business. His mouth assumed a
- Cromwellian fierceness. His grip tightened on his hoe. That anyone
- should dare! But it was impossible!
- His dominions were being invaded with a peculiar boldness and violence.
- Ahead of everyone else and running with wild wavings of the arms across
- his strawberries was a small and very dirty little boy. He impressed Mr.
- Benshaw merely as a pioneer. Some thirty yards behind him was a little
- collarless, short-sleeved man in red slippers running with great
- effrontery and behind him another still more denuded lunatic, also in
- list slippers and with braces—braces of inconceivable levity. And then
- Wiggs, the policeman, hotly followed by Mr. Maccullum. Then more
- distraught tailors and Schocks the butcher. But a louder shout heralded
- the main attack, and Mr. Benshaw turned his eyes—already they were
- slightly blood-shot eyes—to the right, and saw, pouring through the
- broken hedge, a disorderly crowd, Rymell whom he had counted his friend,
- the grocer’s assistant, the doctor’s boy, some strangers—Mumby!
- At the sight of Mumby, Mr. Benshaw leapt at a conclusion. He saw it all.
- The whole place was rising against him; they were asserting some
- infernal new right-of-way. Mumby—Mumby had got them to do it. All the
- fruits of fifteen years of toil, all the care and accumulation of Mr.
- Benshaw’s prime, were to be trampled and torn to please a draper’s
- spite!...
- Sturdy yeoman as Mr. Benshaw was he resolved instantly to fight for his
- liberties. One moment he paused to blow the powerful police whistle he
- carried in his pocket and then rushed forward in the direction of the
- hated Mumby, the leader of trespassers, the parent and abetter and
- defender of the criminal Lucy. He took the hurrying panting man almost
- unawares, and with one wild sweep of the hoe felled him to the earth.
- Then he staggered about and smote again, but not quite in time to get
- the head of Mr. Rymell.
- This whistle he carried was part of a systematic campaign he had
- developed against trespassers and fruit stealers. He and each of his
- assistants carried one, and at the first shrill note—it was his
- rule—everyone seized on every weapon that was handy and ran to pursue
- and capture. All his assistants were extraordinarily prompt in
- responding to these alarms, which were often the only break in long days
- of strenuous and strenuously directed toil. So now with an astonishing
- promptitude and animated faces men appeared from sheds and greenhouses
- and distant patches of culture, hastening to the assistance of their
- dour employer.
- It says much for the amiable relations that existed between employers
- and employed in those days before Syndicalism became the creed of the
- younger workers that they did hurry to his assistance.
- But many rapid things were to happen before they came into action. For
- first a strange excitement seized upon the tramp. A fantastic delusive
- sense of social rehabilitation took possession of his soul. Here he was
- pitted against a formidable hoe-wielding man, who for some inscrutable
- reason was resolved to cover the retreat of Bealby. And all the world,
- it seemed, was with the tramp and against this hoe-wielder. All the
- tremendous forces of human society, against which the tramp had
- struggled for so many years, whose power he knew and feared as only the
- outlaw can, had suddenly come into line with him. Across the
- strawberries to the right there was even a policeman hastening to join
- the majority, a policeman closely followed by a tradesman of the
- blackest, most respectable quality. The tramp had a vision of himself as
- a respectable man heroically leading respectable people against
- outcasts. He dashed the lank hair from his eyes, waved his arms
- laterally, and then with a loud strange cry flung himself towards Mr.
- Benshaw. Two pairs of superimposed coat-tails flapped behind him. And
- then the hoe whistled through the air and the tramp fell to the ground
- like a sack.
- But now Schocks’s boy had grasped his opportunity. He had been working
- discreetly round behind Mr. Benshaw, and as the hoe smote he leapt upon
- that hero’s back and seized him about the neck with both arms and bore
- him staggering to the ground, and Rymell, equally quick, and used to the
- tackling of formidable creatures, had snatched and twisted away the hoe
- and grappled Mr. Benshaw almost before he was down. The first of Mr.
- Benshaw’s helpers to reach the fray found the issue decided, his master
- held down conclusively and a growing circle trampling down a wide area
- of strawberry plants about the panting group....
- Mr. Mumby, more frightened than hurt, was already sitting up, but the
- tramp with a glowing wound upon his cheekbone and an expression of
- astonishment in his face, lay low and pawed the earth.
- “What d’you mean,” gasped Mr. Rymell, “hitting people about with that
- hoe?”
- “What d’you mean,” groaned Mr. Benshaw, “running across my
- strawberries?”
- “We were going after that boy.”
- “Pounds and pounds’ worth of damage. Mischief and wickedness.... Mumby!”
- Mr. Rymell, suddenly realizing the true values of the situation,
- released Mr. Benshaw’s hands and knelt up. “Look here, Mr. Benshaw,” he
- said, “you seem to be under the impression we are trespassing.”
- Mr. Benshaw, struggling into a sitting position was understood to
- enquire with some heat what Mr. Rymell called it. Schocks’s boy picked
- up the hat with the erotic brim and handed it to the horticulturist
- silently and respectfully.
- “We were not trespassing,” said Mr. Rymell. “We were following up that
- boy. _He_ was trespassing, if you like.... By the bye,—where _is_ the
- boy? Has anyone caught him?”
- At the question, attention which had been focussed upon Mr. Benshaw and
- his hoe, came round. Across the field in the direction of the sunlit
- half acre of glass the little tailor was visible standing gingerly and
- picking up his red slippers for the third time—they would come off in
- that loose good soil, everybody else had left the trail to concentrate
- on Mr. Benshaw—and Bealby—. Bealby was out of sight. He had escaped,
- clean got away.
- “What boy?” asked Mr. Benshaw.
- “Ferocious little beast who’s fought us like a rat. Been committing all
- sorts of crimes about the country. Five pounds reward for him.”
- “Fruit stealing?” asked Mr. Benshaw.
- “Yes,” said Mr. Rymell, chancing it.
- Mr. Benshaw reflected slowly. His eyes surveyed his trampled crops.
- “Gooo _Lord_!” he cried. “Look at those strawberries!” His voice
- gathered violence. “And that lout there!” he said. “Why!—he’s lying on
- them! That’s the brute who went for me!”
- “You got him a pretty tidy one side the head!” said Maccullum.
- The tramp rolled over on some fresh strawberries and groaned pitifully.
- “He’s hurt,” said Mr. Mumby.
- The tramp flopped and lay still.
- “Get some water!” said Rymell, standing up.
- At the word water, the tramp started convulsively, rolled over and sat
- up with a dazed expression.
- “No water,” he said weakly. “No more water,” and then catching Mr.
- Benshaw’s eye he got rather quickly to his feet.
- Everybody who wasn’t already standing was getting up, and everyone now
- was rather carefully getting himself off any strawberry plant he had
- chanced to find himself smashing in the excitement of the occasion.
- “That’s the man that started in on me,” said Mr. Benshaw. “What’s he
- doing here? Who is he?”
- “Who are _you_, my man? What business have you to be careering over this
- field?” asked Mr. Rymell.
- “I was only ’elping,” said the tramp.
- “Nice help,” said Mr. Benshaw.
- “I thought that boy was a thief or something.”
- “And so you made a rush at me.”
- “I didn’t exactly—sir—I thought you was ’elping ’im.”
- “You be off, anyhow,” said Mr. Benshaw. “Whatever you thought.”
- “Yes, you be off!” said Mr. Rymell.
- “That’s the way, my man,” said Mr. Benshaw. “We haven’t any jobs for
- you. The sooner we have you out of it the better for everyone. Get right
- on to the path and keep it.” And with a desolating sense of exclusion
- the tramp withdrew. “There’s pounds and pounds’ worth of damage here,”
- said Mr. Benshaw. “This job’ll cost me a pretty penny. Look at them
- berries there. Why, they ain’t fit for jam! And all done by one
- confounded boy.” An evil light came into Mr. Benshaw’s eyes. “You leave
- him to me and my chaps. If he’s gone up among those sheds there—we’ll
- settle with him. Anyhow there’s no reason why my fruit should be
- trampled worse than it has been. Fruit stealer, you say, he is?”
- “They live on the country this time of year,” said Mr. Mumby.
- “And catch them doing a day’s work picking!” said Mr. Benshaw. “I know
- the sort.”
- “There’s a reward of five pounds for ’im already,” said the baker....
- § 4
- You perceive how humanitarian motives may sometimes defeat their own
- end, and how little Lady Laxton’s well-intentioned handbills were
- serving to rescue Bealby. Instead, they were turning him into a scared
- and hunted animal. In spite of its manifest impossibility he was
- convinced that the reward and this pursuit had to do with his burglary
- of the poultry farm, and that his capture would be but the preliminary
- to prison, trial and sentence. His one remaining idea was to get away.
- But his escape across the market gardens had left him so blown and
- spent, that he was obliged to hide up for a time in this perilous
- neighbourhood, before going on. He saw a disused-looking shed in the
- lowest corner of the gardens behind the greenhouses, and by doubling
- sharply along a hedge he got to it unseen. It was not disused—nothing in
- Mr. Benshaw’s possession ever was absolutely disused, but it was filled
- with horticultural lumber, with old calcium carbide tins, with broken
- wheelbarrows and damaged ladders awaiting repair, with some ragged
- wheeling planks and surplus rolls of roofing felt. At the back were some
- unhinged shed doors leaning against the wall, and between them Bealby
- tucked himself neatly and became still, glad of any respite from the
- chase.
- He would wait for twilight and then get away across the meadows at the
- back and then go—He didn’t know whither. And now he had no confidence in
- the wild world any more. A qualm of home-sickness for the compact little
- gardener’s cottage at Shonts, came to Bealby. Why, as a matter of fact,
- wasn’t he there now?
- He ought to have tried more at Shonts.
- He ought to have minded what they told him and not have taken up a
- toasting fork against Thomas. Then he wouldn’t now have been a hunted
- burglar with a reward of five pounds on his head and nothing in his
- pocket but threepence and a pack of greasy playing cards, a box of
- sulphur matches and various objectionable sundries, none of which were
- properly his own.
- If only he could have his time over again!
- Such wholesome reflections occupied his thoughts until the onset of the
- dusk stirred him to departure. He crept out of his hiding-place and
- stretched his limbs which had got very stiff, and was on the point of
- reconnoitring from the door of the shed when he became aware of stealthy
- footsteps outside.
- With the quickness of an animal he shot back into his hiding-place. The
- footsteps had halted. For a long time it seemed the unseen waited,
- listening. Had he heard Bealby?
- Then someone fumbled with the door of the shed; it opened, and there was
- a long pause of cautious inspection.
- Then the unknown had shuffled into the shed and sat down on a heap of
- matting.
- “_Gaw!_” said a voice.
- The tramp’s!
- “If ever I struck a left-handed Mascot it was that boy,” said the tramp.
- “The little _swine_!”
- For the better part of two minutes he went on from this mild beginning
- to a descriptive elaboration of Bealby. For the first time in his life
- Bealby learnt how unfavourable was the impression he might leave on a
- fellow creature’s mind.
- “Took even my matches!” cried the tramp, and tried this statement over
- with variations.
- “First that old fool with his syringe!” The tramp’s voice rose in angry
- protest. “Here’s a chap dying epilepsy on your doorstep and all you can
- do is to squirt cold water at him! Cold water! Why you might _kill_ a
- man doing that! And then say you’d thought’d bring ’im ränd! Bring ’im
- ränd! You be jolly glad I didn’t stash your silly face in. You
- [misbegotten] old fool! What’s a shilling for wetting a man to ’is skin.
- Wet through I was. Running inside my shirt,—dripping.... And then the
- blooming boy clears!
- “_I_ don’t know what boys are coming to!” cried the tramp. “These board
- schools it is. Gets ’old of everything ’e can and bunks! Gaw! if I get
- my ’ands on ’im, I’ll show ’im. I’ll—”
- For some time the tramp revelled in the details, for the most part
- crudely surgical, of his vengeance upon Bealby....
- “Then there’s that dog bite. ’Ow do I know ’ow that’s going to turn ät?
- If I get ’idrophobia, blowed if I don’t _bite_ some of ’em. ’Idrophobia.
- Screaming and foaming. Nice death for a man—my time o’ life! Bark I
- shall. Bark and bite.
- “And this is your world,” said the tramp. “This is the world you put
- people into and expect ’em to be ’appy....
- “I’d like to bite that dough-faced fool with the silly ’at. I’d enjoy
- biting _’im_. I’d spit it out but I’d bite it right enough. Wiping abät
- with ’is _’O. Gaw!_ Get off my ground! Be orf with you. Slash. ’E ought
- to be shut up.
- “Where’s the justice of it?” shouted the tramp. “Where’s the right and
- the sense of it? What ’ave _I_ done that I should always get the under
- side? Why should _I_ be stuck on the under side of everything? There’s
- worse men than me in all sorts of positions.... Judges there are.
- ’Orrible Kerecters. Ministers and people. I’ve read abät ’em in the
- papers....
- “It’s we tramps are the scapegoats. Somebody’s got to suffer so as the
- police can show a face. Gaw! Some of these days I’ll do something. I’ll
- do something. You’ll drive me too far with it, I tell you—”
- He stopped suddenly and listened. Bealby had creaked.
- “Gaw! What can one do?” said the tramp after a long interval.
- And then complaining more gently, the tramp began to feel about to make
- his simple preparations for the night.
- “’Unt me out of this, I expect,” said the tramp. “And many sleeping in
- feather beds that ain’t fit to ’old a candle to me. Not a hordinary
- farthing candle....”
- § 5
- The subsequent hour or so was an interval of tedious tension for Bealby.
- After vast spaces of time he was suddenly aware of three vertical
- threads of light. He stared at them with mysterious awe, until he
- realized that they were just the moonshine streaming through the cracks
- of the shed.
- The tramp tossed and muttered in his sleep.
- Footsteps?
- Yes—Footsteps.
- Then voices.
- They were coming along by the edge of the field, and coming and talking
- very discreetly.
- “Ugh!” said the tramp, and then softly, “what’s that?” Then he too
- became noiselessly attentive.
- Bealby could hear his own heart beating.
- The men were now close outside the shed. “He wouldn’t go in there,” said
- Mr. Benshaw’s voice. “He wouldn’t dare. Anyhow we’ll go up by the glass
- first. I’ll let him have the whole barrelful of oats if I get a glimpse
- of him. If he’d gone away they’d have caught him in the road....”
- The footsteps receded. There came a cautious rustling on the part of the
- tramp and then his feet padded softly to the door of the shed. He
- struggled to open it and then with a jerk got it open a few inches; a
- great bar of moonlight leapt and lay still across the floor of the shed.
- Bealby advanced his head cautiously until he could see the black obscure
- indications of the tramp’s back as he peeped out.
- “_Now_,” whispered the tramp and opened the door wider. Then he ducked
- his head down and darted out of sight, leaving the door open behind him.
- Bealby questioned whether he should follow. He came out a few steps and
- then went back at a shout from away up the garden. “There he goes,”
- shouted a voice, “in the shadow of the hedge.”
- “Look out, Jim!”—_Bang_—and a yelp.
- “Stand away! I’ve got another barrel!”
- _Bang._
- Then silence for a time, and then the footsteps coming back.
- “That ought to teach him,” said Mr. Benshaw. “First time, I got him
- fair, and I think I peppered him a bit the second. Couldn’t see very
- well, but I heard him yell. He won’t forget that in a hurry. Not him.
- There’s nothing like oats for fruit stealers. Jim, just shut that door,
- will you? That’s where he was hiding....”
- It seemed a vast time to Bealby before he ventured out into the summer
- moonlight, and a very pitiful and outcast little Bealby he felt himself
- to be.
- He was beginning to realize what it means to go beyond the narrow
- securities of human society. He had no friends, no friends at all....
- He caught at and arrested a sob of self-pity.
- Perhaps after all it was not so late as Bealby had supposed. There were
- still lights in some of the houses and he had the privilege of seeing
- Mr. Benshaw going to bed with pensive deliberation. Mr. Benshaw wore a
- flannel night-shirt and said quite a lengthy prayer before extinguishing
- his candle. Then suddenly Bealby turned nervously and made off through
- the hedge. A dog had barked.
- At first there were nearly a dozen lighted windows in Crayminster. They
- went out one by one. He hung for a long time with a passionate
- earnestness on the sole surviving one, but that too went at last. He
- could have wept when at last it winked out. He came down into the marshy
- flats by the river, but he did not like the way in which the water
- sucked and swirled in the vague moonlight; also he suddenly discovered a
- great white horse standing quite still in the misty grass not thirty
- yards away; so he went up to and crossed the high road and wandered up
- the hillside towards the allotments, which attracted him by reason of
- the sociability of the numerous tool sheds. In a hedge near at hand a
- young rabbit squealed sharply and was stilled. Why?
- Then something like a short snake scrabbled by very fast through the
- grass.
- Then he thought he saw the tramp stalking him noiselessly behind some
- currant bushes. That went on for some time, but came to nothing.
- Then nothing pursued him, nothing at all. The gap, the void, came after
- him. The bodiless, the faceless, the formless; these are evil hunters in
- the night....
- What a cold still _watching_ thing moonlight can be!...
- He thought he would like to get his back against something solid, and
- found near one of the sheds a little heap of litter. He sat down against
- good tarred boards, assured at least that whatever came must come in
- front. Whatever he did, he was resolved, he would not shut his eyes.
- That would be fatal....
- He awoke in broad daylight amidst a cheerful uproar of birds.
- § 6
- And then again flight and pursuit were resumed.
- As Bealby went up the hill away from Crayminster he saw a man standing
- over a spade and watching his retreat and when he looked back again
- presently this man was following. It was Lady Laxton’s five pound reward
- had done the thing for him.
- He was half minded to surrender and have done with it, but jail he knew
- was a dreadful thing of stone and darkness. He would make one last
- effort. So he beat along the edge of a plantation and then crossed it
- and forced his way through some gorse and came upon a sunken road, that
- crossed the hill in a gorse-lined cutting. He struggled down the steep
- bank. At its foot, regardless of him, unaware of him, a man sat beside a
- motor bicycle with his fists gripped tight and his head downcast,
- swearing. A county map was crumpled in his hand. “Damn!” he cried, and
- flung the map to the ground and kicked it and put his foot on it.
- Bealby slipped, came down the bank with a run and found himself in the
- road within a couple of yards of the blond features and angry eyes of
- Captain Douglas. When he saw the Captain and perceived himself
- recognized, he flopped down—a done and finished Bealby....
- § 7
- He had arrived just in time to interrupt the Captain in a wild and
- reprehensible fit of passion.
- The Captain imagined it was a secret fit of passion. He thought he was
- quite alone and that no one could hear him or see him. So he had let
- himself shout and stamp, to work off the nervous tensions that tormented
- him beyond endurance.
- In the direst sense of the words the Captain was in love with Madeleine.
- He was in love quite beyond the bounds set by refined and decorous
- people to this dangerous passion. The primordial savage that lurks in so
- many of us was uppermost in him. He was not in love with her prettily or
- delicately, he was in love with her violently and vehemently. He wanted
- to be with her, he wanted to be close to her, he wanted to possess her
- and nobody else to approach her. He was so inflamed now that no other
- interest in life had any importance except as it aided or interfered
- with this desire. He had forced himself in spite of this fever in his
- blood to leave her to pursue Bealby, and now he was regretting this
- firmness furiously. He had expected to catch Bealby overnight and bring
- him back to the hotel in triumph. But Bealby had been elusive. There she
- was, away there, hurt and indignant—neglected!
- “A laggard in love,” cried the Captain, “a dastard in war! God!—I run
- away from everything. First I leave the manœuvres, then her. Unstable as
- water thou shalt not prevail. Water! What does the confounded boy
- matter? What does he matter?
- “And there she is. Alone! She’ll flirt—naturally she’ll flirt. Don’t I
- deserve it? Haven’t I asked for it? Just the one little time we might
- have had together! I fling it in her face. You fool, you laggard, you
- dastard! And here’s this map!”
- A breathing moment.
- “How the _devil_,” cried the Captain, “am I to find the little beast on
- this map?
- “And twice he’s been within reach of my hand!
- “No decision!” cried the Captain. “No instant grip! What good is a
- soldier without it? What good is any man who will not leap at
- opportunity? I ought to have chased out last night after that fool and
- his oats. Then I might have had a chance!
- “Chuck it! Chuck the whole thing! Go back to her. Kneel to her, kiss
- her, compel her!
- “And what sort of reception am I likely to get?”
- He crumpled the flapping map in his fist.
- And then suddenly out of nowhere Bealby came rolling down to his feet, a
- dishevelled and earthy Bealby. But Bealby.
- “Good Lord!” cried the Captain, starting to his feet and holding the map
- like a sword sheath.
- “What do you want?”
- For a second Bealby was a silent spectacle of misery.
- “Oooh! I want my _breckfuss_,” he burst out at last, reduced to tears.
- “Are you young Bealby?” asked the Captain, seizing him by the shoulder.
- “They’re after me,” cried Bealby. “If they catch me they’ll put me in
- prison. Where they don’t give you anything. It wasn’t me did it—and I
- ’aven’t had anything to eat—not since yesterday.”
- The Captain came rapidly to a decision. There should be no more
- faltering. He saw his way clear before him. He would act—like a
- whistling sword. “Here! jump up behind,” he said ... “hold on tight to
- me....”
- § 8
- For a time there was a more than Napoleonic swiftness in the Captain’s
- movements. When Bealby’s pursuer came up to the hedge that looks down
- into the sunken road, there was no Bealby, no Captain, nothing but a
- torn and dishevelled county map, an almost imperceptible odour of petrol
- and a faint sound—like a distant mowing machine—and the motor bicycle
- was a mile away on the road to Beckinstone. Eight miles, eight rather
- sickening miles, Bealby did to Beckinstone in eleven minutes, and there
- in a little coffee house he was given breakfast with eggs and bacon and
- marmalade (Prime!), and his spirit was restored to him while the Captain
- raided a bicycle and repairing shop and negotiated the hire of an
- experienced but fairly comfortable wickerwork trailer. And so, to London
- through the morning sunshine, leaving tramps, pursuers, policemen,
- handbills, bakers, market gardeners, terrors of the darkness and
- everything upon the road behind—and further behind and remote and
- insignificant—and so to the vanishing point.
- Some few words of explanation the Captain had vouchsafed, and that was
- all.
- “Don’t be afraid about it,” he said. “Don’t be in the least bit afraid.
- You tell them about it, just simply and truthfully, exactly what you
- did, exactly how you got into it and out of it and all about it.”
- “You’re going to take me up to a Magistrate, sir?”
- “I’m going to take you up to the Lord Chancellor himself.”
- “And then they won’t do anything?”
- “Nothing at all, Bealby; you trust me. All you’ve got to do is to tell
- the simple truth....”
- It was pretty rough going in the trailer, but very exciting. If you
- gripped the sides very hard, and sat quite tight, nothing very much
- happened and also there was a strap across your chest. And you went past
- everything. There wasn’t a thing on the road the Captain didn’t pass,
- lowing deeply with his great horn when they seemed likely to block his
- passage. And as for the burglary and everything, it would all be
- settled....
- The Captain also found that ride to London exhilarating. At least he was
- no longer hanging about; he was getting to something. He would be able
- to go back to her—and all his being now yearned to go back to her—with
- things achieved, with successes to show. He’d found the boy. He would go
- straight to dear old uncle Chickney, and uncle Chickney would put things
- right with Moggeridge, the boy would bear his testimony, Moggeridge
- would be convinced and all would be well again. He might be back with
- Madeleine that evening. He would go back to her, and she would see the
- wisdom and energy of all he had done, and she would lift that dear chin
- of hers and smile that dear smile of hers and hold out her hand to be
- kissed and the lights and reflections would play on that strong soft
- neck of hers....
- They buzzed along stretches of common and stretches of straight-edged
- meadowland, by woods and orchards, by pleasant inns and slumbering
- villages and the gates and lodges of country houses.
- These latter grew more numerous, and presently they skirted a town, and
- then more road, more villages and at last signs of a nearness to London,
- more frequent houses, more frequent inns, hoardings and advertisements,
- an asphalted sidewalk, lamps, a gasworks, laundries, a stretch of
- suburban villadom, a suburban railway station, a suburbanized old town,
- an omnibus, the head of a tramline, a stretch of public common thick
- with noticeboards, a broad pavement, something-or-other parade, with a
- row of shops....
- London.
- CHAPTER VIII
- HOW BEALBY EXPLAINED
- § 1
- Lord Chickney was only slightly older than Lord Moggeridge, but he had
- not worn nearly so well. His hearing was not good, though he would never
- admit it, and the loss of several teeth greatly affected his
- articulation. One might generalize and say that neither physically nor
- mentally do soldiers wear so well as lawyers. The army ages men sooner
- than the law and philosophy; it exposes them more freely to germs, which
- undermine and destroy, and it shelters them more completely from
- thought, which stimulates and preserves. A lawyer must keep his law
- highly polished and up-to-date or he hears of it within a fortnight, a
- general never realizes he is out of training and behind the times until
- disaster is accomplished. Since the magnificent retreat from
- Bondy-Satina in eighty-seven and his five weeks defence of Barrowgast
- (with the subsequent operations) the abilities of Lord Chickney had
- never been exercised seriously at all. But there was a certain
- simplicity of manner and a tall drooping grizzled old-veteran
- picturesqueness about him that kept him distinguished; he was easy to
- recognize on public occasions on account of his long moustaches, and so
- he got pointed out when greater men were ignored. The autograph
- collectors adored him. Every morning he would spend half an hour writing
- autographs, and the habit was so strong in him that on Sundays, when
- there was no London post and autograph writing would have been wrong
- anyhow, he filled the time in copying out the epistle and gospel for the
- day. And he liked to be well in the foreground of public affairs—if
- possible wearing his decorations. After the autographs he would work,
- sometimes for hours, for various patriotic societies and more
- particularly for those which would impose compulsory training upon every
- man, woman and child in the country. He even belonged to a society for
- drilling the butchers’ ponies and training big dogs as scouts. He did
- not understand how a country could be happy unless every city was
- fortified and every citizen wore side-arms, and the slightest error in
- his dietary led to the most hideous nightmares of the Channel Tunnel or
- reduced estimates and a land enslaved. He wrote and toiled for these
- societies, but he could not speak for them on account of his teeth. For
- he had one peculiar weakness; he had faced death in many forms but he
- had never faced a dentist. The thought of dentists gave him just the
- same sick horror as the thought of invasion.
- He was a man of blameless private life, a widower and childless. In
- later years he had come to believe that he had once been very deeply in
- love with his cousin, Susan, who had married a rather careless husband
- named Douglas; both she and Douglas were dead now, but he maintained a
- touching affection for her two lively rather than satisfying sons. He
- called them his nephews, and by the continuous attrition of affection he
- had become their recognized uncle. He was glad when they came to him in
- their scrapes, and he liked to be seen about with them in public places.
- They regarded him with considerable confidence and respect and an
- affection that they sometimes blamed themselves for as not quite warm
- enough for his merits. But there is a kind of injustice about affection.
- He was really gratified when he got a wire from the less discreditable
- of these two bright young relations, saying, “Sorely in need of your
- advice. Hope to bring difficulties to you to-day at twelve.”
- He concluded very naturally that the boy had come to some crisis in his
- unfortunate entanglement with Madeleine Philips, and he was flattered by
- the trustfulness that brought the matter to him. He resolved to be
- delicate but wily, honourable, strictly honourable, but steadily,
- patiently separative. He paced his spacious study with his usual
- morning’s work neglected, and rehearsed little sentences in his mind
- that might be effective in the approaching interview. There would
- probably be emotion. He would pat the lad on his shoulder and be himself
- a little emotional. “I understand, my boy,” he would say, “I understand.
- “Don’t forget, my boy, that I’ve been a young man too.”
- He would be emotional, he would be sympathetic, but also he must be a
- man of the world. “Sort of thing that won’t do, you know, my boy; sort
- of thing that people will _not_ stand.... A soldier’s wife has to be a
- soldier’s wife and nothing else.... Your business is to serve the king,
- not—not some celebrity. Lovely, no doubt. I don’t deny the charm of
- her—but on the hoardings, my boy.... Now don’t you think—don’t you
- _think_?—there’s some nice pure girl somewhere, sweet as violets, new as
- the dawn, and ready to be _yours_; a girl, I mean, a maiden fancy free,
- not—how shall I put it?—a woman of the world. Wonderful, I admit—but
- seasoned. Public. My dear, dear boy, I knew your mother when she was a
- girl, a sweet pure girl—a thing of dewy freshness. Ah! Well I remember
- her! All these years, my boy—Nothing. It’s difficult....”
- Tears stood in his brave old blue eyes as he elaborated such phrases. He
- went up and down mumbling them through the defective teeth and the long
- moustache and waving an eloquent hand.
- § 2
- When Lord Chickney’s thoughts had once started in any direction it was
- difficult to turn them aside. No doubt that concealed and repudiated
- deafness helped his natural perplexity of mind. Truth comes to some of
- us as a still small voice, but Lord Chickney needed shouting and prods.
- And Douglas did not get to him until he was finishing lunch. Moreover,
- it was the weakness of Captain Douglas to talk in jerky fragments and
- undertones, rather than clearly and fully in the American fashion. “Tell
- me all about it, my boy,” said Lord Chickney. “Tell me all about it.
- Don’t apologize for your clothes. I understand. Motor bicycle and just
- come up. But have you had any lunch, Eric?”
- “Alan, uncle,—not Eric. My brother is Eric.”
- “Well, I called him Alan. Tell me all about it. Tell me what has
- happened. What are you thinking of doing? Just put the positions before
- me. To tell you the truth I’ve been worrying over this business for some
- time.”
- “Didn’t know you’d heard of it, uncle. He can’t have talked about it
- already. Anyhow,—you see all the awkwardness of the situation. They say
- the old chap’s a thundering spiteful old devil when he’s roused—and
- there’s no doubt he was roused.... Tremendously....”
- Lord Chickney was not listening very attentively. Indeed he was also
- talking. “Not clear to me there was another man in it,” he was saying.
- “That makes it more complicated, my boy, makes the row acuter. Old
- fellow, eh? Who?”
- They came to a pause at the same moment.
- “You speak so indistinctly,” complained Lord Chickney. “_Who_ did you
- say?”
- “I thought you understood. Lord Moggeridge.”
- “Lord—! Lord Moggeridge! My dear Boy! But how?”
- “I thought you understood, uncle.”
- “He doesn’t want to marry her! Tut! Never! Why, the man must be sixty if
- he’s a day....”
- Captain Douglas regarded his distinguished uncle for a moment with
- distressed eyes. Then he came nearer, raised his voice and spoke more
- deliberately.
- “I don’t know whether you quite understand, uncle. I am talking about
- this affair at Shonts last week-end.”
- “My dear boy, there’s no need for you to shout. If only you don’t mumble
- and clip your words—and turn head over heels with your ideas. Just tell
- me about it plainly. Who is Shonts? One of those Liberal peers? I seem
- to have heard the name....”
- “Shonts, uncle, is the house the Laxtons have; you know,—Lucy.”
- “Little Lucy! I remember her. Curls all down her back. Married
- the milkman. But how does _she_ come in, Alan? The story’s
- getting—complicated. But that’s the worst of these infernal
- affairs,—they always do get complicated. Tangled skeins—
- “‘Oh what a tangled web we weave,
- When first we venture to deceive.’
- “And now, like a sensible man, you want to get out of it.”
- Captain Douglas was bright pink with the effort to control himself and
- keep perfectly plain and straightforward. His hair had become like tow
- and little beads of perspiration stood upon his forehead.
- “I spent last week-end at Shonts,” he said. “Lord Moggeridge, also
- there, week-ending. Got it into his head that I was pulling his leg.”
- “Naturally, my boy, if he goes philandering. At his time of life. What
- else can he expect?”
- “It wasn’t philandering.”
- “Fine distinctions. Fine distinctions. Go on—anyhow.”
- “He got it into his head that I was playing practical jokes upon him.
- Confused me with Eric. It led to a rather first-class row. I had to get
- out of the house. Nothing else to do. He brought all sorts of
- accusations—”
- Captain Douglas stopped short. His uncle was no longer attending to him.
- They had drifted to the window of the study and the general was staring
- with an excitement and intelligence that grew visibly at the spectacle
- of Bealby and the trailer outside. For Bealby had been left in the
- trailer, and he was sitting as good as gold waiting for the next step in
- his vindication from the dark charge of burglary. He was very
- travel-worn and the trailer was time-worn as well as travel-worn, and
- both contrasted with the efficient neatness and newness of the motor
- bicycle in front. The contrast had attracted the attention of a tall
- policeman who was standing in a state of elucidatory meditation
- regarding Bealby. Bealby was not regarding the policeman. He had the
- utmost confidence in Captain Douglas, he felt sure that he would
- presently be purged of all the horror of that dead old man and of the
- brief unpremeditated plunge into crime, but still for the present at any
- rate he did not feel equal to staring a policeman out of countenance....
- From the window the policeman very largely obscured Bealby....
- Whenever hearts are simple there lurks romance. Age cannot wither nor
- custom stale her infinite diversity. Suddenly out of your low kindly
- diplomacies, your sane man-of-the-world intentions, leaps the
- imagination like a rocket, flying from such safe securities bang into
- the sky. So it happened to the old general. He became deaf to everything
- but the appearances before him. The world was jewelled with dazzling and
- delightful possibilities. His face was lit by a glow of genuine romantic
- excitement. He grasped his nephew’s arm. He pointed. His grizzled cheeks
- flushed.
- “That isn’t,” he asked with something verging upon admiration in his
- voice and manner, “a Certain Lady in disguise?”
- § 3
- It became clear to Captain Douglas that if ever he was to get to Lord
- Moggeridge that day he must take his uncle firmly in hand. Without even
- attempting not to appear to shout he cried, “That is a little Boy. That
- is my Witness. It is Most Important that I should get him to Lord
- Moggeridge to tell his Story.”
- “What story?” cried the old commander, pulling at his moustache and
- still eyeing Bealby suspiciously....
- It took exactly half an hour to get Lord Chickney from that enquiry to
- the telephone and even then he was still far from clear about the matter
- in hand. Captain Douglas got in most of the facts, but he could not
- eliminate an idea that it all had to do with Madeleine. Whenever he
- tried to say clearly that she was entirely outside the question, the
- general patted his shoulder and looked very wise and kind and said, “My
- dear Boy, I quite understand; I _quite_ understand. Never mention a
- lady. _No._”
- So they started at last rather foggily—so far as things of the mind
- went, though the sun that day was brilliant—and because of engine
- trouble in Port Street the general’s hansom reached Tenby Little Street
- first and he got in a good five minutes preparing the Lord Chancellor
- tactfully and carefully before the bicycle and its trailer came upon the
- scene....
- § 4
- Candler had been packing that morning with unusual solicitude for a
- week-end at Tulliver Abbey. His master had returned from the catastrophe
- of Shonts, fatigued and visibly aged and extraordinarily cross, and
- Candler looked to Tulliver Abbey to restore him to his former self.
- Nothing must be forgotten; there must be no little hitches, everything
- from first to last must go on oiled wheels, or it was clear his Lordship
- might develop a desperate hostility to these excursions, excursions
- which Candler found singularly refreshing and entertaining during the
- stresses of the session. Tulliver Abbey was as good a house as Shonts
- was bad; Lady Checksammington ruled with the softness of velvet and the
- strength of steel over a household of admirably efficient domestics, and
- there would be the best of people there, Mr. Evesham perhaps, the
- Loopers, Lady Privet, Andreas Doria and Mr. Pernambuco, great silken
- mellow personages and diamond-like individualities, amidst whom Lord
- Moggeridge’s mind would be restfully active and his comfort quite
- secure. And as far as possible Candler wanted to get the books and
- papers his master needed into the trunk or the small valise. That habit
- of catching up everything at the last moment and putting it under his
- arm and the consequent need for alert picking up, meant friction and
- nervous wear and tear for both master and man.
- Lord Moggeridge rose at half-past ten—he had been kept late overnight by
- a heated discussion at the Aristotelian—and breakfasted lightly upon a
- chop and coffee. Then something ruffled him; something that came with
- the letters. Candler could not quite make out what it was, but he
- suspected another pamphlet by Dr. Schiller. It could not be the chop,
- because Lord Moggeridge was always wonderfully successful with chops.
- Candler looked through the envelopes and letters afterwards and found
- nothing diagnostic, and then he observed a copy of _Mind_ torn across
- and lying in the waste-paper basket.
- “When I went out of the room,” said Candler, discreetly examining this.
- “Very likely it’s that there Schiller after all.”
- But in this Candler was mistaken. What had disturbed the Lord Chancellor
- was a coarsely disrespectful article on the Absolute by a Cambridge
- Rhodes scholar, written in that flighty facetious strain that spreads
- now like a pestilence over modern philosophical discussion. “Does the
- Absolute, on Lord Moggeridge’s own showing, mean anything more than an
- eloquent oiliness uniformly distributed through space?” and so on.
- Pretty bad!
- Lord Moggeridge early in life had deliberately acquired a quite
- exceptional power of mental self-control. He took his perturbed mind now
- and threw it forcibly into the consideration of a case upon which he had
- reserved judgment. He was to catch the 3.35 at Paddington, and at two he
- was smoking a cigar after a temperate lunch and reading over the notes
- of this judgment. It was then that the telephone bell became audible,
- and Candler came in to inform him that Lord Chickney was anxious to see
- him at once upon a matter of some slight importance.
- “Slight importance?” asked Lord Moggeridge.
- “Some slight importance, my lord.”
- “Some? Slight?”
- “’Is Lordship, my lord, mumbles rather now ’is back teeth ’ave gone,”
- said Candler, “but so I understand ’im.”
- “These apologetic assertive phrases annoy me, Candler,” said Lord
- Moggeridge over his shoulder. “You see,” he turned round and spoke very
- clearly, “either the matter is of importance or it is not of importance.
- A thing must either be or not be. I wish you would manage—when you get
- messages on the telephone—.... But I suppose that is asking too much....
- Will you explain to him, Candler, when we start, and—ask him,
- Candler—ask him what sort of matter it is.”
- Candler returned after some parleying.
- “So far as I can make ’is Lordship out, my lord, ’e says ’e wants to set
- you right about something, my lord. He says something about a _little_
- misapprehension.”
- “These diminutives, Candler, kill sense. Does he say what sort—what
- sort—of _little_ misapprehension?”
- “He says something—I’m sorry, my lord, but it’s about Shonts, me lord.”
- “Then I don’t want to hear about it,” said Lord Moggeridge.
- There was a pause. The Lord Chancellor resumed his reading with a
- deliberate obviousness; the butler hovered.
- “I’m sorry, my lord, but I can’t think exactly what I ought to say to
- ’is lordship, my lord.”
- “Tell him—tell him that I do not wish to hear anything more about Shonts
- for ever. Simply.”
- Candler hesitated and went out, shutting the door carefully lest any
- fragment of his halting rendering of this message to Lord Chickney
- should reach his master’s ears.
- Lord Moggeridge’s powers of mental control were, I say, very great—He
- could dismiss subjects from his mind absolutely. In a few instants he
- had completely forgotten Shonts and was making notes with a silver-cased
- pencil on the margins of his draft judgment.
- § 5
- He became aware that Candler had returned.
- “’Is lordship, Lord Chickney, my lord, is very persistent, my lord. ’E’s
- rung up twice. ’E says now that ’e makes a personal matter of it. Come
- what may, ’e says, ’e wishes to speak for two minutes to your lordship.
- Over the telephone, my lord, ’e vouchsafes no further information.”
- Lord Moggeridge meditated over the end of his third after lunch cigar.
- His man watched the end of his left eyebrow as an engineer might watch a
- steam gauge. There were no signs of an explosion. “He must come,
- Candler,” his lordship said at last....
- “Oh, Candler!”
- “My lord?”
- “Put the bags and things in a conspicuous position in the hall, Candler.
- Change yourself, and see that you look thoroughly like trains. And in
- fact have everything ready, _prominently_ ready, Candler.”
- Then once more Lord Moggeridge concentrated his mind.
- § 6
- To him there presently entered Lord Chickney.
- Lord Chickney had been twice round the world and he had seen many
- strange and dusky peoples and many remarkable customs and peculiar
- prejudices, which he had never failed to despise, but he had never
- completely shaken off the county family ideas in which he had been
- brought up. He believed that there was an incurable difference in spirit
- between quite good people like himself and men from down below like
- Moggeridge, who was the son of an Exeter chorister. He believed that
- these men from nowhere always cherished the profoundest respect for the
- real thing like himself, that they were greedy for association and
- gratified by notice, and so for the life of him he could not approach
- Lord Moggeridge without a faint sense of condescension. He saluted him
- as “my _dear_ Lord Moggeridge,” wrung his hand with effusion, and asked
- him kind, almost district-visiting, questions about his younger brother
- and the aspect of his house. “And you are just off, I see, for a
- week-end.”
- These amenities the Lord Chancellor acknowledged by faint gruntings and
- an almost imperceptible movement of his eyebrows. “There was a matter,”
- he said, “some _little_ matter, on which you want to consult me?”
- “Well,” said Lord Chickney, and rubbed his chin. “_Yes._ Yes, there
- _was_ a little matter, a little trouble—”
- “Of an urgent nature.”
- “Yes. Yes. Exactly. Just a little complicated, you know, not quite
- simple.” The dear old soldier’s manner became almost seductive. “One of
- these difficult little affairs, where one has to remember that one is a
- man of the world, you know. A little complication about a lady, known to
- you both. But one must make concessions, one must understand. The boy
- has a witness. Things are not as you supposed them to be.”
- Lord Moggeridge had a clean conscience about ladies; he drew out his
- watch and looked at it—aggressively. He kept it in his hand during his
- subsequent remarks.
- “I must confess,” he declared, “I have not the remotest idea.... If you
- will be so good as to be—elementary. What _is_ it all about?”
- “You see, I knew the lad’s mother,” said Lord Chickney. “In fact—” He
- became insanely confidential—“Under happier circumstances—don’t
- misunderstand me, Moggeridge; I mean no evil—but he might have been my
- son. I feel for him like a son....”
- § 7
- When presently Captain Douglas, a little heated from his engine trouble,
- came into the room—he had left Bealby with Candler in the hall—it was
- instantly manifest to him that the work of preparation had been
- inadequately performed.
- “One minute more, my dear Alan,” cried Lord Chickney.
- Lord Moggeridge with eyebrows waving and watch in hand was of a
- different opinion. He addressed himself to Captain Douglas.
- “There _isn’t_ a minute more,” he said. “What is all this—this
- philoprogenitive rigmarole about? Why have you come to me? My cab is
- outside _now_. All this about ladies and witnesses;—what _is_ it?”
- “Perfectly simple, my lord! You imagine that I played practical jokes
- upon you at Shonts. I didn’t. I have a witness. The attack upon you
- downstairs, the noise in your room—”
- “Have I any guarantee—?”
- “It’s the steward’s boy from Shonts. Your man outside knows him. Saw him
- in the steward’s room. He made the trouble for you—and me, and then he
- ran away. Just caught him. Not exchanged thirty words with him. Half a
- dozen questions. Settle everything. Then you’ll know—nothing for you but
- the utmost respect.”
- Lord Moggeridge pressed his lips together and resisted conviction.
- “In consideration,” interpolated Lord Chickney, “feelings of an old
- fellow. Old soldier. Boy means no harm.”
- With the rudeness of one sorely tried the Lord Chancellor thrust the old
- general aside. “Oh!” he said, “Oh!” and then to Captain Douglas. “One
- minute. Where’s your witness?...”
- The Captain opened a door. Bealby found himself bundled into the
- presence of two celebrated men.
- “Tell him,” said Captain Douglas. “And look sharp about it.”
- “Tell me plainly,” cried the Lord Chancellor, “and be—_quick_.”
- He put such a point on “quick” that it made Bealby jump.
- “Tell him,” said the general more gently. “Don’t be afraid.”
- “Well,” began Bealby after one accumulating pause, “it was ’im told me
- to do it. ’E said you go in there—”
- The Captain would have interrupted but the Lord Chancellor restrained
- him by a magnificent gesture of the hand holding the watch.
- “He told you to do it!” he said. “I knew he did. Now listen! He told you
- practically to go in and do anything you could.”
- “Yessir.” Woe took possession of Bealby. “I didn’t do any ’arm to the
- ole gentleman.”
- “But _who_ told you?” cried the Captain. “_Who_ told you?”
- Lord Moggeridge annihilated him with arm and eyebrows. He held Bealby
- fascinated by a pointing finger.
- “Don’t do more than answer the questions. I have thirty seconds more. He
- told you to go in. He _made_ you go in. At the earliest possible
- opportunity you got away?”
- “I jest nipped out—”
- “Enough! And now, sir, how dare you come here without even a plausible
- lie? How dare you after your intolerable tomfoolery at Shonts confront
- me again with fresh tomfoolery? How dare you drag in your gallant and
- venerable uncle in this last preposterous—I suppose you would call
- it—_lark_! I suppose you had prepared that little wretch with some fine
- story. Little you know of False Witness! At the first question, he
- breaks down! He does not even begin his lie. He at least knows the
- difference between my standards and yours. Candler! Candler!”
- Candler appeared.
- “These—these _gentlemen_ are going. Is everything ready?”
- “The cab is at the door, m’lord. The usual cab.”
- Captain Douglas made one last desperate effort. “Sir!” he said. “My
- lord—”
- The Lord Chancellor turned upon him with a face that he sought to keep
- calm, though the eyebrows waved and streamed like black smoke in a gale.
- “Captain Douglas,” he said, “you are probably not aware of the demands
- upon the time and patience of a public servant in such a position as
- mine. You see the world no doubt as a vastly entertaining fabric upon
- which you can embroider your—your facetious arrangements. Well, it is
- not so. It is real. It is earnest. You may sneer at the simplicity of an
- old man, but what I tell you of life is true. Comic effect is not,
- believe me, its goal. And you, sir, you, sir, you impress me as an
- intolerably foolish, flippant and unnecessary young man. Flippant.
- Unnecessary. Foolish.”
- As he said these words Candler approached him with a dust coat of a
- peculiar fineness and dignity, and he uttered the last words over his
- protruded chest while Candler assisted his arms into his sleeves.
- “My lord,” said Captain Douglas again, but his resolution was deserting
- him.
- “_No_,” said the Lord Chancellor, leaning forward in a minatory manner
- while Candler pulled down the tail of his jacket and adjusted the collar
- of his overcoat.
- “Uncle,” said Captain Douglas.
- “_No_,” said the general, with the curt decision of a soldier, and
- turned exactly ninety degrees away from him. “You little know how you
- have hurt me, Alan! You little know. I couldn’t have imagined it. The
- Douglas strain! False Witness—and insult. I am sorry, my dear
- Moggeridge, beyond measure.”
- “I quite understand—you are as much a victim as myself. Quite. A more
- foolish attempt—I am sorry to be in this hurry—”
- “Oh! You damned little fool,” said the Captain, and advanced a step
- towards the perplexed and shrinking Bealby. “You imbecile little
- trickster! What do you mean by it?”
- “I didn’t mean anything—!”
- Then suddenly the thought of Madeleine, sweet and overpowering, came
- into the head of this distraught young man. He had risked losing her, he
- had slighted and insulted her, and here he was—entangled. Here he was in
- a position of nearly inconceivable foolishness, about to assault a dirty
- and silly little boy in the presence of the Lord Chancellor and Uncle
- Chickney. The world, he felt, was lost, and not well lost. And she was
- lost too. Even now while he pursued these follies she might be consoling
- her wounded pride....
- He perceived that love is the supreme thing in life. He perceived that
- he who divides his purposes scatters his life to the four winds of
- heaven. A vehement resolve to cut the whole of this Bealby business
- pounced upon him. In that moment he ceased to care for reputation, for
- appearances, for the resentment of Lord Moggeridge or the good
- intentions of Uncle Chickney.
- He turned, he rushed out of the room. He escaped by unparalleled
- gymnastics the worst consequences of an encounter with the Lord
- Chancellor’s bag which the under-butler had placed rather tactlessly
- between the doors, crossed the wide and dignified hall, and in another
- moment had his engine going and was struggling to mount his machine in
- the street without. His face expressed an almost apoplectic
- concentration. He narrowly missed the noses of a pair of horses in the
- carriage of Lady Beach Mandarin, made an extraordinary curve to spare a
- fishmonger’s tricycle, shaved the front and completely destroyed the
- gesture of that eminent actor manager, Mr. Pomegranate, who was crossing
- the road in his usual inadvertent fashion, and then he was popping and
- throbbing and banging round the corner and on his way back to the lovely
- and irresistible woman who was exerting so disastrous an influence upon
- his career....
- § 8
- The Captain fled from London in the utmost fury and to the general
- danger of the public. His heart was full of wicked blasphemies,
- shoutings and self-reproaches, but outwardly he seemed only pinkly
- intent. And as he crossed an open breezy common and passed by a
- milestone bearing this inscription, “To London Thirteen Miles,” his hind
- tyre burst conclusively with a massive report....
- § 9
- In every life there are crucial moments, turning points, and not
- infrequently it is just such a thing as this, a report, a sudden waking
- in the night, a flash upon the road to Damascus, that marks and
- precipitates the accumulating new. Vehemence is not concentration. The
- headlong violence of the Captain had been no expression of a
- single-minded purpose, of a soul all gathered together to an end. Far
- less a pursuit had it been than a flight, a flight from his own
- dissensions. And now—now he was held.
- After he had attempted a few plausible repairs and found the tyre
- obdurate, after he had addressed ill-chosen remonstrances to some
- unnamed hearer, after he had walked some way along the road and back in
- an indecision about repair shops in some neighbouring town, the last
- dregs of his resistance were spent. He perceived that he was in the
- presence of a Lesson. He sat down by the roadside, some twenty feet from
- the disabled motor bicycle and, impotent for further effort, frankly
- admitted himself overtaken. He had not reckoned with punctures.
- The pursuing questions came clambering upon him and would no longer be
- denied; who he was and what he was and how he was, and the meaning of
- this Rare Bate he had been in, and all those deep questions that are so
- systematically neglected in the haste and excitement of modern life.
- In short, for the first time in many headlong days he asked himself
- simply and plainly what he thought he was up to?
- Certain things became clear, and so minutely and exactly clear that it
- was incredible that they had ever for a moment been obscure. Of course
- Bealby had been a perfectly honest little boy, under some sort of
- misconception, and of course he ought to have been carefully coached and
- prepared and rehearsed before he was put before the Lord Chancellor.
- This was so manifest now that the Captain stared aghast at his own
- inconceivable negligence. But the mischief was done. Nothing now would
- ever propitiate Moggeridge, nothing now would ever reconcile Uncle
- Chickney. That was—settled. But what was not settled was the amazing
- disorder of his own mind. Why had he been so negligent, what had come
- over his mind in the last few weeks?
- And this sudden strange illumination of the Captain’s mind went so far
- as perceiving that the really important concern for him was not the
- accidents of Shonts but this epilepsy of his own will. Why now was he
- rushing back to Madeleine? Why? He did not love her. He knew he did not
- love her. On the whole, more than anything else he resented her.
- But he was excited about her, he was so excited that these other
- muddles, fluctuations, follies, came as a natural consequence from that.
- Out of this excitement came those wild floods of angry energy that made
- him career about—
- “Like some damned Cracker,” said the Captain.
- “For instance,” he asked himself, “_now!_ what am I going for?
- “If I go back she’ll probably behave like an offended Queen. Doesn’t
- seem to understand anything that does not focus on herself. Wants a sort
- of Limelight Lover....
- “She _relies_ upon exciting me!
- “She relies upon exciting everyone!—she’s just a woman specialized for
- excitement.”
- And after meditating through a profound minute upon this judgment, the
- Captain pronounced these two epoch-making words: “_I won’t!_”
- § 10
- The Captain’s mind was now in a state of almost violent lucidity.
- “This sex stuff,” he said; “first I kept it under too tight and now I’ve
- let it rip too loose.
- “I’ve been just a distracted fool, with my head swimming with meetings
- and embraces and—frills.”
- He produced some long impending generalizations.
- “Not a man’s work, this Lover business. Dancing about in a world of
- petticoats and powder puffs and attentions and jealousies. Rotten game.
- Played off against some other man....
- “I’ll be hanged if I am....
- “Have to put women in their places....
- “Make a hash of everything if we don’t....”
- Then for a time the Captain meditated in silence and chewed his knuckle.
- His face darkened to a scowl. He swore as though some thought twisted
- and tormented him. “Let some other man get her! Think of her with some
- other man.”
- “I don’t care,” he said, when obviously he did.
- “There’s other women in the world.
- “A man—a man mustn’t care for _that_....
- “It’s this or that,” said the Captain, “anyhow....”
- § 11
- Suddenly the Captain’s mind was made up and done.
- He arose to his feet and his face was firm and tranquil and now nearer
- pallor than pink. He left his bicycle and trailer by the wayside even as
- Christian left his burden. He asked a passing nurse-girl the way to the
- nearest railway station, and thither he went. Incidentally, and because
- the opportunity offered, he called in upon a cyclist’s repair shop and
- committed his abandoned machinery to its keeping. He went straight to
- London, changed at his flat, dined at his club, and caught the night
- train for France—for France and whatever was left of the grand
- manœuvres.
- He wrote a letter to Madeleine from the Est train next day, using their
- customary endearments, avoiding any discussion of their relations and
- describing the scenery of the Seine valley and the characteristics of
- Rouen in a few vivid and masterly phrases.
- “If she’s worth having, she’ll understand,” said the Captain, but he
- knew perfectly well she would not understand.
- Mrs. Geedge noted this letter among the others, and afterwards she was
- much exercised by Madeleine’s behaviour. For suddenly that lady became
- extraordinarily gay and joyous in her bearing, singing snatches of song
- and bubbling over with suggestions for larks and picnics and wild
- excursions. She patted Mr. Geedge on the shoulder and ran her arm
- through the arm of Professor Bowles. Both gentlemen received these
- familiarities with a gawky coyness that Mrs. Geedge found contemptible.
- And moreover Madeleine drew several shy strangers into their circle. She
- invited the management to a happy participation.
- Her great idea was a moonlight picnic. “We’ll have a great camp-fire and
- afterwards we’ll dance—this very night.”
- “But wouldn’t it be better to-morrow?”
- “To-night!”
- “To-morrow perhaps Captain Douglas may be back again. And he’s so good
- at all these things.”
- Mrs. Geedge knew better because she had seen the French stamp on the
- letter, but she meant to get to the bottom of this business, and thus it
- was she said this.
- “I’ve sent him back to his soldiering,” said Madeleine serenely. “He has
- better things to do.”
- § 12
- For some moments after the unceremonious departure of Captain Douglas
- from the presence of Lord Moggeridge, it did not occur to anyone, it did
- not occur even to Bealby, that the Captain had left his witness behind
- him. The general and the Lord Chancellor moved into the hall, and
- Bealby, under the sway of a swift compelling gesture from Candler,
- followed modestly. The same current swept them all out into the portico,
- and while the under-butler whistled up a hansom for the General, the
- Lord Chancellor, with a dignity that was at once polite and rapid, and
- Candler gravely protective and little reproving, departed. Bealby,
- slowly apprehending their desertion, regarded the world of London with
- perplexity and dismay. Candler had gone. The last of the gentlemen was
- going. The under-butler, Bealby felt, was no friend. Under-butlers never
- are.
- Lord Chickney in the very act of entering his cab had his coat-tail
- tugged. He looked enquiringly.
- “Please, sir, there’s me,” said Bealby.
- Lord Chickney reflected. “Well?” he said.
- The spirit of Bealby was now greatly abased. His face and voice betrayed
- him on the verge of tears. “I want to go ’ome to Shonts, sir.”
- “Well, my boy, go ’ome—go home, I mean, to Shonts.”
- “’E’s gone, sir,” said Bealby....
- Lord Chickney was a good-hearted man, and he knew that a certain public
- kindliness and disregard of appearances looks far better and is
- infinitely more popular than a punctilious dignity. He took Bealby to
- Waterloo in his hansom, got him a third class ticket to Chelsome, tipped
- a porter to see him safely into his train and dismissed him in the most
- fatherly manner.
- § 13
- It was well after tea-time, Bealby felt, as he came once more within the
- boundaries of the Shonts estate.
- It was a wiser and a graver Bealby who returned from this week of
- miscellaneous adventure. He did not clearly understand all that had
- happened to him; in particular he was puzzled by the extreme annoyance
- and sudden departure of Captain Douglas from the presence of Lord
- Moggeridge; but his general impression was that he had been in great
- peril of dire punishment and that he had been rather hastily and
- ignominiously reprieved. The nice old gentleman with the long grey
- moustaches had dismissed him to the train at last with a quality of
- benediction. But Bealby understood now better than he had done before
- that adventures do not always turn out well for the boy hero, and that
- the social system has a number of dangerous and disagreeable holes at
- the bottom. He had reached the beginnings of wisdom. He was glad he had
- got away from the tramp and still gladder that he had got away from
- Crayminster; he was sorry that he would never see the beautiful lady
- again, and perplexed and perplexed. And also he was interested in the
- probability of his mother having toast for tea....
- It must, he felt, be a long time after tea-time, quite late....
- He had weighed the advisability of returning quietly to his windowless
- bedroom under the stairs, putting on his little green apron and emerging
- with a dutiful sang-froid as if nothing had happened, on the one hand,
- or of going to the gardens on the other. But tea—with eatables—seemed
- more probable at the gardens....
- He was deflected from the direct route across the park by a long deep
- trench, that someone had made and abandoned since the previous Sunday
- morning. He wondered what it was for. It was certainly very ugly. And as
- he came out by the trees and got the full effect of the façade, he
- detected a strangely bandaged quality about Shonts. It was as if Shonts
- had recently been in a fight and got a black eye. Then he saw the reason
- for this; one tower was swathed in scaffolding. He wondered what could
- have happened to the tower. Then his own troubles resumed their sway.
- He was so fortunate as not to meet his father in the gardens, and he
- entered the house so meekly that his mother did not look up from the
- cashmere she was sewing. She was sitting at the table sewing some newly
- dyed black cashmere.
- He was astonished at her extreme pallor and the drooping resignation of
- her pose.
- “Mother!” he said, and she looked up convulsively and stared, stared
- with bright round astonished eyes.
- “I’m sorry, mother, I’aven’t been quite a good steward’s-room boy,
- mother. If I could ’ave another go, mother....”
- He halted for a moment, astonished that she said nothing, but only sat
- with that strange expression and opened and shut her mouth.
- “Reely—I’d _try_, mother....”
- Printed in the United States of America.
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------
- TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
- 1. P. 145, changed “extremely riding breeches” to “extreme riding
- breeches”.
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