"If you please,
mum," said the voice of a domestic from somewhere round the angle of the
door, "number three is moving in.
Two little old ladies,
who were sitting at either side of a table, sprang to their feet with
ejaculations of interest, and rushed to the window of the sitting-room.
"Take care, Monica
dear," said one, shrouding herself in the lace curtain; "don't let
them see us.
"No, no, Bertha.
We must not give them reason to say that their neighbors are inquisitive. But I
think that we are safe if we stand like this."
The open window looked
out upon a sloping lawn, well trimmed and pleasant, with fuzzy rosebushes and a
star-shaped bed of sweet-william. It was bounded by a low wooden fence, which
screened it off from a broad, modern, new metaled road. At the other side of
this road were three large detached deep-bodied villas with peaky eaves and small
wooden balconies, each standing in its own little square of grass and of
flowers. All three were equally new, but numbers one and two were curtained and
sedate, with a human, sociable look to them; while number three, with yawning
door and unkempt garden, had apparently only just received its furniture and
made itself ready for its occupants. A four-wheeler had driven up to the gate,
and it was at this that the old ladies, peeping out bird-like from behind their
curtains, directed an eager and questioning gaze.
The cabman had
descended, and the passengers within were handing out the articles which they
desired him to carry up to the house. He stood red-faced and blinking, with his
crooked arms outstretched, while a male hand, protruding from the window, kept
piling up upon him a series of articles the sight of which filled the curious
old ladies with bewilderment.
"My goodness
me!" cried Monica, the smaller, the drier, and the more wizened of the
pair. "What do you call that, Bertha? It looks to me like four batter
puddings."
"Those are what
young men box each other with, "said Bertha, with a conscious air of
superior worldly knowledge.
"And those?"
Two great bottle-shaped
pieces of yellow shining wood had been heaped upon the cabman.
"Oh, I don't know
what those are," confessed Bertha. Indian clubs had never before obtruded
themselves upon her peaceful and very feminine existence.
These mysterious
articles were followed, however, by others which were more within their, range
of comprehension--by a pair of dumb-bells, a purple cricket-bag, a set of golf
clubs, and a tennis racket. Finally, when the cabman, all top-heavy and bristling,
had staggered off up the garden path, there emerged in a very leisurely way
from the cab a big, powerfully built young man, with a bull pup under one arm
and a pink sporting paper in his hand. The paper he crammed into the pocket of
his light yellow dust-coat, and extended his hand as if to assist some one else
from the vehicle. To the surprise of the two old ladies, however, the only
thing which his open palm received was a violent slap, and a tall lady bounded
unassisted out of the cab. With a regal wave she motioned the young man towards
the door, and then with one hand upon her hip she stood in a careless, lounging
attitude by the gate, kicking her toe against the wall and listlessly awaiting
the return of the driver.
As she turned slowly
round, and the sunshine struck upon her face, the two watchers were amazed to
see that this very active and energetic lady was far from being in her first
youth, so far that she had certainly come of age again since she first passed
that landmark in life's journey. Her finely chiseled, clean-cut face, with
something red Indian about the firm mouth and strongly marked cheek bones,
showed even at that distance traces of the friction of the passing years. And
yet she was very handsome. Her features were as firm in repose as those of a
Greek bust, and her great dark eyes were arched over by two brows so black, so
thick, and so delicately curved, that the eye turned away from the harsher
details of the face to marvel at their grace and strength. Her figure, too, was
straight as a dart, a little portly, perhaps, but curving into magnificent
outlines, which were half accentuated by the strange costume which she wore.
Her hair, black but plentifully shot with grey, was brushed plainly back from
her high forehead, and was gathered under a small round felt hat, like that of
a man, with one sprig of feather in the band as a concession to her sex. A
double-breasted jacket of some dark frieze-like material fitted closely to her
figure, while her straight blue skirt, untrimmed and ungathered, was cut so
short that the lower curve of her finely-turned legs was plainly visible
beneath it, terminating in a pair of broad, flat, low-heeled and square-toed
shoes. Such was the lady who lounged at the gate of number three, under the
curious eyes of her two opposite neighbors.
But if her conduct and
appearance had already somewhat jarred upon their limited and precise sense of
the fitness of things, what were they to think of the next little act in this
tableau vivant? The cabman,red and heavy-jowled, had come back from his labors,
and held out his hand for his fare. The lady passed him a coin, there was a
moment of mumbling and gesticulating, and suddenly she had him with both hands
by the red cravat which girt his neck, and was shaking him as a terrier would a
rat. Right across the pavement she thrust him, and, pushing him up against the
wheel, she banged his head three several times against the side of his own
vehicle.
"Can I be of any
use to you, aunt?" asked the large youth, framing himself in the open
doorway.
"Not the
slightest," panted the enraged lady. "There, you low blackguard, that
will teach you to be impertinent to a lady."
The cabman looked
helplessly about him with a bewildered, questioning gaze, as one to whom alone
of all men this unheard-of and extraordinary thing had happened. Then, rubbing
his head, he mounted slowly onto the box and drove away with an uptossed hand
appealing to the universe. The lady smoothed down her dress, pushed back her
hair under her little felt hat, and strode in through the hall-door, which was
closed behind her. As with a whisk her short skirts vanished into the darkness,
the two spectators--Miss Bertha and Miss Monica Williams--sat looking at each
other in speechless amazement. For fifty years they had peeped through that
little window and across that trim garden, but never yet had such a sight as
this come to confound them.
"I wish,"
said Monica at last, "that we had kept the field."
"I am sure I wish
we had," answered her sister.
The cottage from the
window of which the Misses Williams had looked out stands, and has stood for
many a year, in that pleasant suburban district which lies between Norwood,
Anerley , and Forest Hill. Long before there had been a thought of a township
there, when the Metropolis was still quite a distant thing, old Mr. Williams
had inhabited "The Brambles," as the little house was called, and had
owned all the fields about it. Six or eight such cottages scattered over a
rolling country-side were all the houses to be found there in the days when the
century was young. From afar, when the breeze came from the north, the dull,
low roar of the great city might be heard, like the breaking of the tide of
life, while along the horizon might be seen the dim curtain of smoke, the grim
spray which that tide threw up. Gradually, however, as the years passed, the
City had thrown out a long brick-feeler here and there, curving, extending, and
coalescing, until at last the little cottages had been gripped round by these
red tentacles, and had been absorbed to make room for the modern villa. Field
by field the estate of old Mr. Williams had been sold to the speculative
builder, and had borne rich crops of snug suburban dwellings, arranged in
curving crescents and tree-lined avenues. The father had passed away before his
cottage was entirely bricked round, but his two daughters, to whom the property
had descended, lived to see the last vestige of country taken from them. For
years they had clung to the one field which faced their windows , and it was
only after much argument and many heartburnings, that they had at last
consented that it should share the fate of the others. A broad road was driven
through their quiet domain, the quarter was re-named "The Wilderness,"
and three square, staring, uncompromising villas began to sprout up on the
other side. With sore hearts, the two shy little old maids watched their steady
progress, and speculated as to what fashion of neighbors chance would bring
into the little nook which had always been their own.
And at last they were
all three finished. Wooden balconies and overhanging eaves had been added to
them, so that, in the language of the advertisement, there were vacant three
eligible Swiss-built villas, with sixteen rooms, no basement, electric bells,
hot and cold water, and every modern convenience, including a common tennis
lawn, to be let at £100 a year, or £1,500 purchase. So tempting an offer did
not long remain open. Within a few weeks the card had vanished from number one,
and it was known that Admiral Hay Denver, V. C., C. B., with Mrs. Hay Denver
and their only son, were about to move into it. The news brought peace to the
hearts of the Williams sisters. They had lived with a settled conviction that
some wild impossible colony, some shouting, singing family of madcaps, would
break in upon their peace. This establishment at least was irreproachable. A
reference to "Men of the Time" showed them that Admiral Hay Denver
was a most distinguished officer, who had begun his active career at Bomarsund,
and had ended it at Alexandria, having managed between these two episodes to
see as much service as any man of his years. From the Taku Forts and the
Shannon brigade, to dhow-harrying off Zanzibar, there was no variety of naval work
which did not appear in his record; while the Victoria Cross, and the Albert
Medal for saving life, vouched for it that in peace as in war his courage was
still of the same true temper. Clearly a very eligible neighbor this, the more
so as they had been confidentially assured by the estate agent that Mr. Harold
Denver, the son, was a most quiet young gentleman, and that he was busy from
morning to night on the Stock Exchange.
The Hay Denvers had
hardly moved in before number two also struck its placard, and again the ladies
found that they had no reason to be discontented with their neighbors. Doctor
Balthazar Walker was a very well-known name in the medical world. Did not his
qualifications, his membership, and the record of his writings fill a long half-column
in the "Medical Directory," from his first little paper on the
"Gouty Diathesis" in 1859 to his exhaustive treatise upon
"Affections of the Vaso-Motor System" in 1884? A successful medical
career which promised to end in a presidentship of a college and a baronetcy,
had been cut short by his sudden inheritance of a considerable sum from a
grateful patient, which had rendered him independent for life, and had enabled
him to turn his attention to the more scientific part of his profession, which
had always had a greater charm for him than its more practical and commercial
aspect. To this end he had given up his house in Weymouth Street, and had taken
this opportunity of moving himself, his scientific instruments, and his two
charming daughters (he had been a widower for some years) into the more
peaceful atmosphere of Norwood.
There was thus but one
villa unoccupied, and it was no wonder that the two maiden ladies watched with
a keen interest, which deepened into a dire apprehension, the curious incidents
which heralded the coming of the new tenants. They had already learned from the
agent that the family consisted of two only, Mrs. Westmacott, a widow, and her
nephew, Charles Westmacott. How simple and how select it had sounded! Who could
have foreseen from it these fearful portents which seemed to threaten violence
and discord among the dwellers in The Wilderness? Again the two old maids cried
in heartfelt chorus that they wished they had not sold their field.
"Well, at least,
Monica," remarked Bertha, as they sat over their teacups that afternoon,
"however strange these people may be, it is our duty to be as polite to
them as to the others."
"Most
certainly," acquiesced her sister.
"Since we have
called upon Mrs. Hay Denver and upon the Misses Walker, we must call upon this
Mrs. Westmacott also."
"Certainly, dear.
As long as they are living upon our land I feel as if they were in a sense our
guests, and that it is our duty to welcome them."
"Then we shall
call to-morrow," said Bertha, with decision.
"Yes, dear, we
shall. But, oh, I wish it was over!"
At four o'clock on the
next day, the two maiden ladies set off upon their hospitable errand. In their
stiff, crackling dresses of black silk, with jet-bespangled jackets, and little
rows of cylindrical grey curls drooping down on either side of their black
bonnets, they looked like two old fashion plates which had wandered off into
the wrong decade. Half curious and half fearful, they knocked at the door of
number three, which was instantly opened by a red-headed page-boy.
Yes, Mrs. Westmacott
was at home. He ushered them into the front room, furnished as a drawing-room,
where in spite of the fine spring weather a large fire was burning in the
grate. The boy took their cards, and then, as they sat down together upon a
settee, he set their nerves in a thrill by darting behind a curtain with a
shrill cry, and prodding at something with his foot. The bull pup which they
had seen upon the day before bolted from its hiding-place, and scuttled snarling
from the room.
"It wants to get
at Eliza," said the youth, in a confidential whisper. "Master says
she would give him more'n he brought." He smiled affably at the two little
stiff black figures, and departed in search of his mistress.
"What--what did he
say?" gasped Bertha.
"Something about
a---- Oh, goodness gracious! Oh, help, help, help, help, help!" The two
sisters had bounded on to the settee, and stood there with staring eyes and
skirts gathered in, while they filled the whole house with their yells. Out of
a high wicker-work basket which stood by the fire there had risen a flat
diamond-shaped head with wicked green eyes which came flickering upwards,
waving gently from side to side, until a foot or more of glossy scaly neck was
visible. Slowly the vicious head came floating up, while at every oscillation a
fresh burst of shrieks came from the settee.
"What in the name
of mischief!" cried a voice, and there was the mistress of the house
standing in the doorway. Her gaze at first had merely taken in the fact that
two strangers were standing screaming upon her red plush sofa. A glance at the
fireplace, however, showed her the cause of the terror, and she burst into a
hearty fit of laughter.
"Charley,"
she shouted, "here's Eliza misbehaving again."
"I'll settle
her," answered a masculine voice, and the young man dashed into the room.
He had a brown horse-cloth in his hand, which he threw over the basket, making
it fast with a piece of twine so as to effectually imprison its inmate, while his
aunt ran across to reassure her visitors.
"It is only a rock
snake, " she explained.
"Oh, Bertha!"
"Oh, Monica!" gasped the poor exhausted gentlewomen.
"She's hatching
out some eggs. That is why we have the fire. Eliza always does better when she
is warm. She is a sweet, gentle creature, but no doubt she thought that you had
designs upon her eggs. I suppose that you did not touch any of them?"
"Oh, let us get away,
Bertha!' cried Monica, with her thin, black-gloved hands thrown forwards in
abhorrence.
"Not away, but
into the next room," said Mrs. Westmacott, with the air of one whose word
was law. "This way, if you please! It is less warm here." She led the
way into a very handsomely appointed library, with three great cases of books,
and upon the fourth side a long yellow table littered over with papers and
scientific instruments. "Sit here, and you, there," she continued.
"That is right. Now let me see, which of you is Miss Williams, and which
Miss Bertha Williams?"
"I am Miss
Williams," said Monica, still palpitating, and glancing furtively about in
dread of some new horror.
"And you live, as
I understand, over at the pretty little cottage. It is very nice of you to call
so early. I don't suppose that we shall get on, but still the intention is
equally good." She crossed her legs and leaned her back against the marble
mantelpiece.
"We thought that
perhaps we might be of some assistance," said Bertha, timidly. "If
there is anything which we could do to make you feel more at home----"
"Oh, thank you, I
am too old a traveler to feel anything but at home wherever I go. I've just
come back from a few months in the Marquesas Islands, where I had a very pleasant
visit. That was where I got Eliza. In many respects the Marquesas Islands now
lead the world."
"Dear me!"
ejaculated Miss Williams. "In what respect?"
"In the relation
of the sexes. They have worked out the great problem upon their own lines, and
their isolated geographical position has helped them to come to a conclusion of
their own. The woman there is, as she should be, in every way the absolute
equal of the male. Come in, Charles, and sit down. Is Eliza all right?"
"All right,
aunt."
"These are our
neighbors, the Misses Williams. Perhaps they will have some stout. You might
bring in a couple of bottles, Charles."
"No, no, thank
you! None for us!" cried her two visitors, earnestly.
"No? I am sorry
that I have no tea to offer you. I look upon the subserviency of woman as
largely due to her abandoning nutritious drinks and invigorating exercises to
the male. I do neither." She picked up a pair of fifteen-pound dumb-bells
from beside the fireplace and swung them lightly about her head. "You see
what may be done on stout," said she.
"But don't you
think," the elder Miss Williams suggested timidly, "don't you think,
Mrs. Westmascott, that woman has a mission of her own?"
The lady of the house
dropped her dumb-bells with a crash upon the floor,
"The old
cant!" she cried. "The old shibboleth! What is this mission which is
reserved for woman? All that is humble, that is mean, that is soul-killing,
that is so contemptible and so ill-paid that none other will touch it. All that
is woman's mission. And who imposed these limitations upon her? Who cooped her
up within this narrow sphere? Was it Providence? Was it nature? No, it was the
arch enemy. It was man."
"Oh, I say,
auntie!" drawled her nephew.
"It was man,
Charles. It was you and your fellows I say that woman is a colossal monument to
the selfishness of man. What is all this boasted chivalry--these fine words and
vague phrases? Where is it when we wish to put it to the test? Man in the
abstract will do anything to help a woman. Of course. How does it work when his
pocket is touched? Where is his chivalry then? Will the doctors help her to
qualify? will the lawyers help her to be called to the bar? will the clergy
tolerate her in the Church? Oh, it is close your ranks then and refer poor woman
to her mission! Her mission! To be thankful for coppers and not to interfere
with the men while they grabble for gold, like swine round a trough, that is
man's reading of the mission of women. You may sit there and sneer, Charles,
while you look upon your victim, but you know that it is truth, every word of
it.
Terrified as they were
by this sudden torrent of words, the two gentlewomen could not but smile at the
sight of the fiery, domineering victim and the big apologetic representative of
mankind who sat meekly bearing all the sins of his sex. The lady struck a
match, whipped a cigarette from a case upon the mantelpiece, and began to draw
the smoke into her lungs.
"I find it very
soothing when my nerves are at all ruffled," she explained. "You
don't smoke? Ah, you miss one of the purest of pleasures--one of the few
pleasures which are without a reaction."
Miss Williams smoothed
out her silken lap.
"It is a
pleasure," she said, with some approach to self-assertion, "which
Bertha and I are rather too old-fashioned to enjoy."
"No doubt, It
would probably make you very ill if you attempted it. By the way, I hope that
you will come to some of our Guild meetings. I shall see that tickets are sent
you."
"Your Guild?"
"It is not yet
formed, but I shall lose no time in forming a committee. It is my habit to
establish a branch of the Emancipation Guild wherever I go. There is a Mrs.
Sanderson in Anerley who is already one of the emancipated, so that I have a
nucleus. It is only by organized resistance, Miss Williams, that we can hope to
hold our own against the selfish sex. Must you go, then?"
"Yes, we have one
or two other visits to pay," said the elder sister. "You will, I am
sure, excuse us. I hope that you will find Norwood a pleasant residence."
"All places are to
me simply a battle-field," she answered, gripping first one and then the
other with a grip which crumpled up their little thin fingers. "The days
for work and healthful exercise, the evenings to Browning and high discourse,
eh, Charles? Good-bye!" She came to the door with them, and as they
glanced back they saw her still standing there with the yellow bull pup cuddled
up under one forearm, and the thin blue reek of her cigarette ascending from
her lips.
"Oh, what a
dreadful, dreadful woman!" whispered sister Bertha, as they hurried down
the street. "Thank goodness that it is over."
"But she'll return
the visit," answered the other. "I think that we had better tell Mary
that we are not at home.
How deeply are our
destinies influenced by the most trifling causes! Had the unknown builder who
erected and owned these new villas contented himself by simply building each
within its own grounds, it is probable that these three small groups of people
would have remained hardly conscious of each other's existence, and that there
would have been no opportunity for that action and reaction which is here set
forth. But there was a common link to bind them together. To single himself out
from all other Norwood builders the landlord had devised and laid out a common
lawn tennis ground, which stretched behind the houses with taut-stretched net,
green close-cropped sward, and widespread whitewashed lines. Hither in search
of that hard exercise which is as necessary as air or food to the English
temperament, came young Hay Denver when released from the toil of the City;
hither, too, came Dr. Walker and his two fair daughters, Clara and Ida, and
hither also, champions of the lawn, came the short-skirted, muscular widow and
her athletic nephew. Ere the summer was gone they knew each other in this quiet
nook as they might not have done after years of a stiffer and more formal
acquaintance.
And especially to the
Admiral and the Doctor were this closer intimacy and companionship of value.
Each had a void in his life, as every man must have who with unexhausted
strength steps out of the great race, but each by his society might help to
fill up that of his neighbor. It is true that they had not much in common, but
that is sometimes an aid rather than a bar to friendship. Each had been an
enthusiast in his profession, and had retained all his interest in it. The
Doctor still read from cover to cover his Lancet and his Medical Journal,
attended all professional gatherings, worked himself into an alternate state of
exaltation and depression over the results of the election of officers, and
reserved for himself a den of his own, in which before rows of little round
bottles full of glycerine, Canadian balsam, and staining agents, he still cut
sections with a microtome, and peeped through his long, brass, old-fashioned
microscope at the arcana of nature. With his typical face, clean shaven on lip
and chin, with a firm mouth, a strong jaw, a steady eye, and two little white
fluffs of whiskers, he could never be taken for anything but what he was, a
high-class British medical consultant of the age of fifty, or perhaps just a
year or two older.
The Doctor, in his
hey-day, had been cool over great things, but now, in his retirement, he was
fussy over trifles. The man who had operated without the quiver of a finger,
when not only his patient's life but his own reputation and future were at
stake, was now shaken to the soul by a mislaid book or a careless maid. He remarked
it himself, and knew the reason. "When Mary was alive," he would say,
"she stood between me and the little troubles. I could brace myself for
the big ones. My girls are as good as girls can be, but who can know a man as
his wife knows him?" Then his memory would conjure up a tuft of brown hair
and a single white, thin hand over a coverlet, and he would feel, as we have
all felt, that if we do not live and know each other after death, then indeed
we are tricked and betrayed by all the highest hopes and subtlest intuitions of
our nature.
The Doctor had his
compensations to make up for his loss. The great scales of Fate had been held
on a level for him; for where in all great London could one find two sweeter
girls, more loving, more intelligent, and more sympathetic than Clara and Ida
Walker? So bright were they, so quick, so interested in all which interested
him, that if it were possible for a man to be compensated for the loss of a
good wife then Balthazar Walker might claim to be so.
Clara was tall and thin
and supple, with a graceful, womanly figure. There was something stately and
distinguished in her carriage, "queenly" her friends called her,
while her critics described her as reserved and distant.
Such as it was,
however, it was part and parcel of herself, for she was, and had always from
her childhood been, different from any one around her. There was nothing
gregarious in her nature. She thought with her own mind, saw with her own eyes,
acted from her own impulse. Her face was pale, striking rather than pretty, but
with two great dark eyes, so earnestly questioning, so quick in their
transitions from joy to pathos, so swift in their comment upon every word and
deed around her, that those eyes alone were to many more attractive than all the
beauty of her younger sister. Hers was a strong, quiet soul, and it was her
firm hand which had taken over the duties of her mother, had ordered the house,
restrained the servants, comforted her father, and upheld her weaker sister,
from the day of that great misfortune.
Ida Walker was a hand's
breadth smaller than Clara, but was a little fuller in the face and plumper in
the figure. She had light yellow hair, mischievous blue eyes with the light of
humor ever twinkling in their depths, and a large, perfectly formed mouth, with
that slight upward curve of the corners which goes with a keen appreciation of
fun, suggesting even in repose that a latent smile is ever lurking at the edges
of the lips. She was modern to the soles of her dainty little high-heeled
shoes, frankly fond of dress and of pleasure, devoted to tennis and to comic
opera, delighted with a dance, which came her way only too seldom, longing ever
for some new excitement, and yet behind all this lighter side of her character
a thoroughly good, healthy-minded English girl, the life and soul of the house,
and the idol of her sister and her father. Such was the family at number two. A
peep into the remaining villa and our introductions are complete.
Admiral Hay Denver did
not belong to the florid, white-haired, hearty school of sea-dogs which is more
common in works of fiction than in the Navy List. On the contrary, he was the
representative of a much more common type which is the antithesis of the
conventional sailor. He was a thin, hard-featured man, with an ascetic,
acquiline cast of face, grizzled and hollow-cheeked, clean-shaven with the
exception of the tiniest curved promontory of ash-colored whisker. An observer,
accustomed to classify men, might have put him down as a canon of the church with
a taste for lay costume and a country life, or as the master of a large public
school, who joined his scholars in their outdoor sports. His lips were firm,
his chin prominent, he had a hard, dry eye, and his manner was precise and
formal. Forty years of stern discipline had made him reserved and silent. Yet,
when at his ease with an equal, he could readily assume a less quarter-deck
style, and he had a fund of little, dry stories of the world and its ways which
were of interest from one who had seen so many phases of life. Dry and spare,
as lean as a jockey and as tough as whipcord, he might be seen any day swinging
his silver-headed Malacca cane, and pacing along the suburban roads with the
same measured gait with which he had been wont to tread the poop of his
flagship. He wore a good service stripe upon his cheek, for on one side it was
pitted and scarred where a spurt of gravel knocked up by a round-shot had
struck him thirty years before, when he served in the Lancaster gun-battery.
Yet he was hale and sound, and though he was fifteen years senior to his friend
the Doctor, he might have passed as the younger man.
Mrs. Hay Denver's life
had been a very broken one, and her record upon land represented a greater
amount of endurance and self-sacrifice than his upon the sea. They had been
together for four months after their marriage, and then had come a hiatus of
four years, during which he was flitting about between St. Helena and the Oil
Rivers in a gunboat. Then came a blessed year of peace and domesticity, to be
followed by nine years, with only a three months' break, five upon the Pacific
station, and four on the East Indian. After that was a respite in the shape of
five years in the Channel squadron, with periodical runs home, and then again
he was off to the Mediterranean for three years and to Halifax for four. Now,
at last, however, this old married couple, who were still almost strangers to
one another, had come together in Norwood, where, if their short day had been
chequered and broken, the evening at least promised to be sweet and mellow. In
person Mrs. Hay Denver was tall and stout, with a bright, round, ruddy-cheeked
face still pretty, with a gracious, matronly comeliness. Her whole life was a
round of devotion and of love, which was divided between her husband and her
only son, Harold.
This son it was who
kept them in the neighborhood of London, for the Admiral was as fond of ships
and of salt water as ever, and was as happy in the sheets of a two-ton yacht as
on the bridge of his sixteen-knot monitor. Had he been untied, the Devonshire
or Hampshire coast would certainly have been his choice. There was Harold,
however, and Harold's interests were their chief care. Harold was
four-and-twenty now. Three years before he had been taken in hand by an
acquaintance of his father's, the head of a considerable firm of stock-brokers,
and fairly launched upon 'Change. His three hundred guinea entrance fee paid,
his three sureties of five hundred pounds each found, his name approved by the
Committee, and all other formalities complied with, he found himself whirling
round, an insignificant unit, in the vortex of the money market of the world.
There, under the guidance of his father's friend, he was instructed in the
mysteries of bulling and of bearing, in the strange usages of 'Change in the
intricacies of carrying over and of transferring. He learned to know where to
place his clients' money, which of the jobbers would make a price in New
Zealands, and which would touch nothing but American rails, which might be
trusted and which shunned. All this, and much more, he mastered, and to such
purpose that he soon began to prosper, to retain the clients who had been
recommended to him, and to attract fresh ones. But the work was never
congenial. He had inherited from his father his love of the air of heaven, his
affection for a manly and natural existence. To act as middleman between the
pursuer of wealth, and the wealth which he pursued, or to stand as a human
barometer, registering the rise and fall of the great mammon pressure in the
markets, was not the work for which Providence had placed those broad shoulders
and strong limbs upon his well knit frame. His dark open face, too, with his
straight Grecian nose, well opened brown eyes, and round black-curled head,
were all those of a man who was fashioned for active physical work. Meanwhile
he was popular with his fellow brokers, respected by his clients, and beloved
at home, but his spirit was restless within him and his mind chafed unceasingly
against his surroundings.
"Do you know,
Willy," said Mrs. Hay Denver one evening as she stood behind her husband's
chair, with her hand upon his shoulder, "I think sometimes that Harold is
not quite happy."
"He looks happy,
the young rascal," answered the Admiral, pointing with his cigar. It was
after dinner, and through the open French window of the dining-room a clear
view was to be had of the tennis court and the players. A set had just been
finished, and young Charles Westmacott was hitting up the balls as high as he
could send them in the middle of the ground. Doctor Walker and Mrs. Westmacott
were pacing up and down the lawn, the lady waving her racket as she emphasized
her remarks, and the Doctor listening with slanting head and little nods of
agreement. Against the rails at the near end Harold was leaning in his flannels
talking to the two sisters, who stood listening to him with their long dark
shadows streaming down the lawn behind them. The girls were dressed alike in
dark skirts, with light pink tennis blouses and pink bands on their straw hats,
so that as they stood with the soft red of the setting sun tinging their faces,
Clara, demure and quiet, Ida, mischievous and daring, it was a group which
might have pleased the eye of a more exacting critic than the old sailor.
"Yes, he looks
happy, mother," he repeated, with a chuckle. "It is not so long ago
since it was you and I who were standing like that, and I don't remember that
we were very unhappy either. It was croquet in our time, and the ladies had not
reefed in their skirts quite so taut. What year would it be? Just before the
commission of the Penelope."
Mrs. Hay Denver ran her
fingers through his grizzled hair. "It was when you came back in the
Antelope, just before you got your step.
"Ah, the old Antelope!
What a clipper she was! She could sail two points nearer the wind than anything
of her tonnage in the service. You remember her, mother. You saw her come into
Plymouth Bay. Wasn't she a beauty?"
"She was indeed,
dear. But when I say that I think that Harold is not happy I mean in his daily
life. Has it never struck you how thoughtful, he is at times, and how
absent-minded?"
"In love perhaps,
the young dog. He seems to have found snug moorings now at any rate."
"I think that it
is very likely that you are right, Willy," answered the mother seriously.
"But with which of them?"
"I cannot
tell."
"Well, they are
very charming girls, both of them. But as long as he hangs in the wind between
the two it cannot be serious. After all, the boy is four-and-twenty, and he
made five hundred pounds last year. He is better able to marry than I was when
I was lieutenant."
"I think that we
can see which it is now," remarked the observant mother. Charles
Westmacott had ceased to knock the tennis balls about, and was chatting with
Clara Walker, while Ida and Harold Denver were still talking by the railing
with little outbursts of laughter. Presently a fresh set was formed, and Doctor
Walker, the odd man out, came through the wicket gate and strolled up the garden
walk.
"Good evening,
Mrs. Hay Denver," said he, raising his broad straw hat. "May I come
in?"
"Good evening,
Doctor! Pray do!"
"Try one of
these," said the Admiral, holding out his cigar-case. "They are not
bad. I got them on the Mosquito Coast. I was thinking of signaling to you, but
you seemed so very happy out there."
"Mrs. Westmacott
is a very clever woman," said the Doctor, lighting the cigar. "By the
way, you spoke about the Mosquito Coast just now. Did you see much of the Hyla
when you were out there?"
"No such name on
the list," answered the seaman, with decision. "There's the Hydra, a
harbor defense turret-ship, but she never leaves the home waters."
The Doctor laughed.
"We live in two separate worlds," said he. "The Hyla is the
little green tree frog, and Beale has founded some of his views on protoplasm
upon the appearances, of its nerve cells. It is a subject in which I take an
interest."
"There were vermin
of all sorts in the woods. When I have been on river service I have heard it at
night like the engine-room when you are on the measured mile. You can't sleep
for the piping, and croaking, and chirping. Great Scott! what a woman that is!
She was across the lawn in three jumps. She would have made a captain of the
foretop in the old days."
"She is a very
remarkable woman.
"A very cranky
one."
"A very sensible
one in some things," remarked Mrs. Hay Denver.
"Look at that
now!" cried the Admiral, with a lunge of his forefinger at the Doctor.
"You mark my words, Walker, if we don't look out that woman will raise a
mutiny with her preaching. Here's my wife disaffected already, and your girls
will be no better. We must combine, man, or there's an end of all
discipline."
"No doubt she is a
little excessive in her views." said the Doctor, "but in the main I
think as she does."
"Bravo,
Doctor!" cried the lady.
"What, turned
traitor to your sex! We'll court-martial you as a deserter."
"She is quite
right. The professions are not sufficiently open to women. They are still far
too much circumscribed in their employments. They are a feeble folk, the women
who have to work for their bread--poor, unorganized, timid, taking as a favor
what they might demand as a right. That is why their case is not more
constantly before the public, for if their cry for redress was as great as
their grievance it would fill the world to the exclusion of all others. It is
all very well for us to be courteous to the rich, the refined, those to whom
life is already made easy. It is a mere form, a trick of manner. If we are
truly courteous, we shall stoop to lift up struggling womanhood when she really
needs our help--when it is life and death to her whether she has it or not. And
then to cant about it being unwomanly to work in the higher professions. It is
womanly enough to starve, but unwomanly to use the brains which God has given
them. Is it not a monstrous contention?"
The Admiral chuckled.
"You are like one of these phonographs, Walker," said he; "you
have had all this talked into you, and now you are reeling it off again. It's
rank mutiny, every word of it, for man has his duties and woman has hers, but
they are as separate as their natures are. I suppose that we shall have a woman
hoisting her pennant on the flagship presently, and taking command of the
Channel Squadron."
"Well, you have a
woman on the throne taking command of the whole nation," remarked his
wife; "and everybody is agreed that she does it better than any of the
men."
The Admiral was
somewhat staggered by this home-thrust. "That's quite another thing, said
he.
"You should come
to their next meeting. I am to take the chair. I have just promised Mrs.
Westmacott that I will do so. But it has turned chilly, and it is time that the
girls were indoors. Good night! I shall look out for you after breakfast for
our constitutional, Admiral."
The old sailor looked after
his friend with a twinkle in his eyes.
"How old is he,
mother?"
"About fifty, I
think."
"And Mrs.
Westmacott?"
"I heard that she
was forty-three."
The Admiral rubbed his
hands, and shook with amusement. "We'll find one of these days that three
and two make one," said he. I'll bet you a new bonnet on it, mother.
"Tell me, Miss
Walker! You know how things should be. What would you say was a good profession
for a young man of twenty-six who has had no education worth speaking about,
and who is not very quick by nature?" The speaker was Charles Westmacott,
and the time this same summer evening in the tennis ground, though the shadows
had fallen now and the game been abandoned.
The girl glanced up at
him, amused and surprised.
"Do you mean
yourself?"
"Precisely."
"But how could I
tell?"
"I have no one to
advise me. I believe that you could do it better than any one. I feel
confidence in your opinion."
"It is very
flattering." She glanced up again at his earnest, questioning face, with
its Saxon eyes and drooping flaxen mustache, in some doubt as to whether he
might be joking. On the contrary, all his attention seemed to be concentrated
upon her answer.
"It depends so
much upon what you can do, you know. I do not know you sufficiently to be able
to say what natural gifts you have." They were walking slowly across the
lawn in the direction of the house.
"I have none. That
is to say none worth mentioning. I have no memory and I am very slow."
"But you are very
strong."
"Oh, if that goes
for anything. I can put up a hundred-pound bar till further orders; but what
sort of a calling is that?"
Some little joke about
being called to the bar flickered up in Miss Walker's mind, but her companion
was in such obvious earnest that she stifled down her inclination to laugh.
"I can do a mile
on the cinder-track in 4:50 and across-country in 5:20, but how is that to help
me? I might be a cricket professional, but it is not a very dignified position.
Not that I care a straw about dignity, you know, but I should not like to hurt
the old lady's feelings.
"Your
aunt's?"
"Yes, my aunt's.
My parents were killed in the Mutiny, you know, when I was a baby, and she has
looked after me ever since. She has been very good to me. I'm sorry to leave
her."
"But why should
you leave her?" They had reached the garden gate, and the girl leaned her
racket upon the top of it, looking up with grave interest at her big white-flanneled
companion.
"It's,
Browning," said he.
"What!"
"Don't tell my
aunt that I said it"--he sank his voice to a whisper--"I hate
Browning."
Clara Walker rippled
off into such a merry peal of laughter that he forgot the evil things which he
had suffered from the poet, and burst out laughing too.
"I can't make him
out," said he. "I try, but he is one too many. No doubt it is very
stupid of me; I don't deny it. But as long as I cannot there is no use
pretending that I can. And then of course she feels hurt, for she is very fond
of him, and likes to read him aloud in the evenings. She is reading a piece now
`Pippa Passes,' and I assure you, Miss Walker, that I don't even know what the
title means. You must think me a dreadful fool."
"But surely he is
not so incomprehensible as all that?" she said, as an attempt at
encouragement.
"He is very bad.
There are some things, you know, which are fine. That ride of the three
Dutchmen, and Herve Riel and others, they are all right. But there was a piece
we read last week. The first line stumped my aunt, and it takes a good deal to
do that, for she rides very straight. `Setebos and Setebos and Setebos.' That
was the line."
"It sounds like a
charm."
"No, it is a
gentleman's name. Three gentlemen, I thought, at first, but my aunt says one.
Then he goes on, `Thinketh he dwelleth in the light of the moon.' It was a very
trying piece."
Clara Walker laughed
again.
"You must not
think of leaving your aunt," she said. "Think how lonely she would be
without you."
"Well, yes, I have
thought of that. But you must remember that my aunt is to all intents hardly
middle-aged, and a very eligible person. I don't think that her dislike to
mankind extends to individuals. She might form new ties, and then I should be a
third wheel in the coach. It was all very well as long as I was only a boy,
when her first husband was alive."
"But, good
gracious, you don't mean that Mrs. Westmacott is going to marry again?"
gasped Clara.
The young man glanced
down at her with a question in his eyes "Oh, it is only a remote,
possibility, you know," said he. "Still, of course, it might happen,
and I should like to know what I ought to turn my hand to."
"I wish I could
help you," said Clara. "But I really know very little about such things.
However, I could talk to my father, who knows a very great deal of the
world."
"I wish you would.
I should be so glad if you would."
"Then I certainly
will. And now I must say good-night, Mr. Westmacott, for papa will be wondering
where I am."
"Good night, Miss
Walker." He pulled off his flannel cap, and stalked away through the
gathering darkness.
Clara had imagined that
they had been the last on the lawn, but, looking back from the steps which led
up to the French windows, she saw two dark figures moving across towards the
house. As they came nearer she could distinguish that they were Harold Denver
and her sister Ida. The murmur of their voices rose up to her ears, and then
the musical little child-like laugh which she knew so well. "I am so
delighted," she heard her sister say. "So pleased and proud. I had no
idea of it. Your words were such a surprise and a joy to me. Oh, I am so
glad."
"Is that you,
Ida?"
"Oh, there is
Clara. I must go in, Mr. Denver. Good-night!"
There were a few
whispered words, a laugh from Ida, and a "Good-night, Miss Walker,"
out of the darkness. Clara took her sister's hand, and they passed together
through the long folding window. The Doctor had gone into his study, and the
dining-room was empty. A single small red lamp upon the sideboard was reflected
tenfold by the plate about it and the mahogany beneath it, though its single
wick cast but a feeble light into the large, dimly shadowed room. Ida danced
off to the big central lamp, but Clara put her hand upon her arm. "I
rather like this quiet light," said she. "Why should we not have a
chat?" She sat in the Doctor's large red plush chair, and her sister
cuddled down upon the footstool at her feet, glancing up at her elder with a
smile upon her lips and a mischievous gleam in her eyes. There was a shade of
anxiety in Clara's face, which cleared away as she gazed into her sister's
frank blue eyes.
"Have you anything
to tell me, dear?" she asked.
Ida gave a little pout
and shrug to her shoulder. "The Solicitor-General then opened the case for
the prosecution," said she. "You are going to cross-examine me,
Clara, so don't deny it. I do wish you would have that grey satin foulard of
yours done up. With a little trimming and a new white vest it would look as
good as new, and it is really very dowdy."
"You were quite
late upon the lawn," said the inexorable Clara.
"Yes, I was
rather. So were you. Have you anything to tell me?" She broke away into
her merry musical laugh.
"I was chatting
with Mr. Westmacott."
"And I was
chatting with Mr. Denver. By the way, Clara, now tell me truly, what do you
think of Mr. Denver? Do you like him? Honestly now!"
"I like him very
much indeed. I think that he is one of the most gentlemanly, modest, manly
young men that I have ever known. So now, dear, have you nothing to tell
me?" Clara smoothed down her sister's golden hair with a motherly gesture,
and stooped her face to catch the expected confidence. She could wish nothing
better than that Ida should be the wife of Harold Denver, and from the words
which she had overheard as they left the lawn that evening, she could not doubt
that there was some understanding between them.
But there came no
confession from Ida. Only the same mischievous smile and amused gleam in her
deep blue eyes.
"That grey foulard
dress----" she began.
"Oh, you little
tease! Come now, I will ask you what you have just asked me. Do you like Harold
Denver?"
"Oh, he's a
darling!"
"Ida!"
"Well, you asked
me. That's what I think of him. And now, you dear old inquisitive, you will get
nothing more out of me; so you must wait and not be too curious. I'm going off
to see what papa is doing." She sprang to her feet, threw her arms round
her sister's neck, gave her a final squeeze, and was gone. A chorus from
Olivette, sung in her clear contralto, grew fainter and fainter until it ended
in the slam of a distant door.
But Clara Walker still
sat in the dim-lit room with her chin upon her hands, and her dreamy eyes
looking out into the gathering gloom. It was the duty of her, a maiden, to play
the part of a mother--to guide another in paths which her own steps had not yet
trodden. Since her mother died not a thought had been given to herself, all was
for her father and her sister. In her own eyes she was herself very plain, and
she knew that her manner was often ungracious when she would most wish to be
gracious. She saw her face as the glass reflected it, but she did not see the
changing play of expression which gave it its charm--the infinite pity, the
sympathy, the sweet womanliness which drew towards her all who were in doubt
and in trouble, even as poor slow-moving Charles Westmacott had been drawn to
her that night. She was herself, she thought, outside the pale of love. But it
was very different with Ida, merry, little, quick-witted, bright-faced Ida. She
was born for love. It was her inheritance. But she was young and innocent. She
must not be allowed to venture too far without help in those dangerous waters.
Some understanding there was between her and Harold Denver. In her heart of
hearts Clara, like every good woman, was a match-maker, and already she had chosen
Denver of all men as the one to whom she could most safely confide Ida. He had
talked to her more than once on the serious topics of life, on his aspirations,
on what a man could do to leave the world better for his presence. She knew
that he was a man of a noble nature, high-minded and earnest. And yet she did
not like this secrecy, this disinclination upon the part of one so frank and
honest as Ida to tell her what was passing. She would wait, and if she got the
opportunity next day she would lead Harold Denver himself on to this topic. It
was possible that she might learn from him what her sister had refused to tell
her.
It was the habit of the
Doctor and the Admiral to accompany each other upon a morning ramble between
breakfast and lunch. The dwellers in those quiet tree-lined roads were
accustomed to see the two figures, the long, thin, austere seaman, and the
short, bustling, tweed- clad physician, pass and repass with such regularity
that a stopped clock has been reset by them. The Admiral took two steps to his
companion's three, but the younger man was the quicker, and both were equal to
a good four and a half miles an hour.
It was a lovely summer
day which followed the events which have been described. The sky was of the deepest
blue, with a few white, fleecy clouds drifting lazily across it, and the air
was filled with the low drone of insects or with a sudden sharper note as bee
or bluefly shot past with its quivering, long-drawn hum, like an insect
tuning-fork. As the friends topped each rise which leads up to the Crystal
Palace, they could see the dun clouds of London stretching along the northern
sky-line, with spire or dome breaking through the low-lying haze. The Admiral
was in high spirits, for the morning post had brought good news to his son.
"It is wonderful,
Walker," he was saying, "positively wonderful, the way that boy of
mine has gone ahead during the last three years. We heard from Pearson to-day.
Pearson is the senior partner, you know, and my boy the junior--Pearson and
Denver the firm. Cunning old dog is Pearson, as cute and as greedy as a Rio
shark. Yet he goes off for a fortnight's leave, and puts my boy in full charge,
with all that immense business in his hands, and a freehand to do what he likes
with it. How's that for confidence, and he only three years upon 'Change?"
"Any one would
confide in him. His face is a surety," said the Doctor.
"Go on,
Walker!" The Admiral dug his elbow at him. "You know my weak side.
Still it's truth all the same. I've been blessed with a good wife and a good
son, and maybe I relish them the more for having been cut off from them so
long. I have much to be thankful for!"
"And so have I.
The best two girls that ever stepped. There's Clara, who has learned up as much
medicine as would give her the L.S.A., simply in order that she may sympathize
with me in my work. But hullo, what is this coming along?"
"All drawing and
the wind astern!" cried the Admiral. "Fourteen knots if it's one.
Why, by George, it is that woman!"
A rolling cloud of
yellow dust had streamed round the curve of the road, and from the heart of it
had emerged a high tandem tricycle flying along at a breakneck pace. In front
sat Mrs. Westmacott clad in a heather tweed pea-jacket, a skirt which just passed
her knees and a pair of thick gaiters of the same material. She had a great
bundle of red papers under her arm, while Charles, who sat behind her clad in
Norfolk jacket and knickerbockers, bore a similar roll protruding from either
pocket. Even as they watched, the pair eased up, the lady sprang off, impaled
one of her bills upon the garden railing of an empty house, and then jumping on
to her seat again was about to hurry onwards when her nephew drew her attention
to the two gentlemen upon the footpath.
"Oh, now, really I
didn't notice you," said she, taking a few turns of the treadle and
steering the machine across to them. "Is it not a beautiful morning?"
"Lovely,"
answered the Doctor. "You seem to be very busy."
"I am very
busy." She pointed to the colored paper which still fluttered from the
railing. "We have been pushing our propaganda, you see. Charles and I have
been at it since seven o'clock. It is about our meeting. I wish it to be a
great success. See!" She smoothed out one of the bills, and the Doctor
read his own name in great black letters across the bottom.
"We don't forget
our chairman, you see. Everybody is coming. Those two dear little old maids
opposite, the Williamses, held out for some time; but I have their promise now.
Admiral, I am sure that you wish us well."
"Hum! I wish you
no harm, ma'am."
"You will come on
the platform?"
"I'll be---- No, I
don't think I can do that."
"To our meeting,
then?"
"No, ma'am; I
don't go out after dinner."
"Oh yes, you will
come. I will call in if I may, and chat it over with you when you come home. We
have not breakfasted yet. Goodbye!" There was a whir of wheels, and the
yellow cloud rolled away down the road again. By some legerdemain the Admiral
found that he was clutching in his right hand one of the obnoxious bills. He
crumpled it up, and threw it into the roadway.
"I'll be hanged if
I go, Walker," said he, as be resumed his walk. "I've never been
hustled into doing a thing yet, whether by woman or man."
"I am not a
betting man," answered the Doctor, "but I rather think that the odds
are in favor of your going."
The Admiral had hardly
got home, and had just seated himself in his dining-room, when the attack upon
him was renewed. He was slowly and lovingly unfolding the Times preparatory to
the long read which led up to luncheon, and had even got so far as to fasten
his golden pince-nez on to his thin, high-bridged nose, when he heard a
crunching of gravel, and, looking over the top of his paper, saw Mrs.
Westmacott coming up the garden walk. She was still dressed in the singular
costume which offended the sailor's old-fashioned notions of propriety, but he
could not deny, as he looked at her, that she was a very fine woman. In many
climes he had looked upon women of all shades and ages, but never upon a more
clear-cut, handsome face, nor a more erect, supple, and womanly figure. He
ceased to glower as he gazed upon her, and the frown smoothed away from his
rugged brow.
"May I come
in?" said she, framing herself in the open window, with a background of
green sward and blue sky. "I feel like an invader deep in an enemy's
country."
"It is a very
welcome invasion, ma'am," said he, clearing his throat and pulling at his
high collar. "Try this garden chair. What is there that I can do for you?
Shall I ring and let Mrs. Denver know that you are here?"
"Pray do not
trouble, Admiral. I only looked in with reference to our little chat this
morning. I wish that you would give us your powerful support at our coming
meeting for the improvement of the condition of woman."
"No, ma'am, I
can't do that. "He pursed up his lips and shook his grizzled head.
"And why
not?"
"Against my
principles, ma'am."
"But why?"
"Because woman has
her duties and man has his. I may be old-fashioned, but that is my view. Why,
what is the world coming to? I was saying to Dr. Walker only last night that we
shall have a woman wanting to command the Channel Fleet next."
"That is one of
the few professions which cannot be improved," said Mrs. Westmacott, with
her sweetest smile. "Poor woman must still look to man for
protection."
"I don't like
these new-fangled ideas, ma'am. I tell you honestly that I don't. I like
discipline, and I think every one is the better for it. Women have got a great
deal which they had not in the days of our fathers. They have universities all
for themselves, I am told, and there are women doctors, I hear. Surely they
should rest contented. What more can they want?"
"You are a sailor,
and sailors are always chivalrous. If you could see how things really are, you
would change your opinion? What are the poor things to do? There are so many of
them and so few things to which they can turn their hands. Governesses? But
there are hardly any situations. Music and drawing? There is not one in fifty
who has any special talent in that direction. Medicine? It is still surrounded
with difficulties for women, and it takes many years and a small fortune to
qualify. Nursing? It is hard work ill paid, and none but the strongest can
stand it. What would you have them do then, Admiral? Sit down and starve?"
"Tut, tut! It is
not so bad as that."
"The pressure is
terrible. Advertise for a lady companion at ten shillings a week, which is less
than a cook's wage, and see how many answers you get. There is no hope, no
outlook, for these struggling thousands. Life is a dull, sordid struggle,
leading down to a cheerless old age. Yet when we try to bring some little ray
of hope, some chance, however distant, of something better, we are told by
chivalrous gentlemen that it is against their principles to help."
The Admiral winced, but
shook his head in dissent.
"There is banking,
the law, veterinary surgery, government offices, the civil service, all these
at least should be thrown freely open to women, if they have brains enough to
compete successfully for them. Then if woman were unsuccessful it would be her
own fault, and the majority of the population of this country could no longer
complain that they live under a different law to the minority, and that they
are held down in poverty and serfdom, with every road to independence sealed to
them."
"What would you
propose to do, ma'am?"
"To set the more
obvious injustices right, and so to pave the way for a reform. Now look at that
man digging in the field. I know him. He can neither read nor write, he is
steeped in whisky, and he has as much intelligence as the potatoes that he is
digging. Yet the man has a vote, can possibly turn the scale of an election,
and may help to decide the policy of this empire. Now, to take the nearest
example, here am I, a woman who have had some education, who have traveled, and
who have seen and studied the institutions of many countries. I hold
considerable property, and I pay more in imperial taxes than that man spends in
whisky, which is saying a great deal, and yet I have no more direct influence
upon the disposal of the money which I pay than that fly which creeps along the
wall. Is that right? Is it fair?"
The Admiral moved
uneasily in his chair. "Yours is an exceptional case," said he.
"But no woman has
a voice. Consider that the women are a majority in the nation. Yet if there was
a question of legislation upon which all women were agreed upon one side and
all the men upon the other, it would appear that the matter was settled
unanimously when more than half the population were opposed to it. Is that
right?"
Again the Admiral
wriggled. It was very awkward for the gallant seaman to have a handsome woman
opposite to him, bombarding him with questions to none of which he could find
an answer. "Couldn't even get the tompions out of his guns," as he
explained the matter to the Doctor that evening.
"Now those are
really the points that we shall lay stress upon at the meeting. The free and
complete opening of the professions, the final abolition of the zenana I call
it, and the franchise to all women who pay Queen's taxes above a certain sum.
Surely there is nothing unreasonable in that. Nothing which could offend your
principles. We shall have medicine, law, and the church all rallying that night
for the protection of woman. Is the navy to be the one profession absent?"
The Admiral jumped out
of his chair with an evil word in his throat. "There, there, ma'am,"
he cried. "Drop it for a time. I have heard enough. You've turned me a
point or two. I won't deny it. But let it stand at that. I will think it
over."
"Certainly,
Admiral. We would not hurry you in your decision. But we still hope to see you
on our platform." She rose and moved about in her lounging masculine
fashion from one picture to another, for the walls were thickly covered with
reminiscences of the Admiral's voyages.
"Hullo!" said
she. "Surely this ship would have furled all her lower canvas and reefed
her topsails if she found herself on a lee shore with the wind on her
quarter."
"Of course she
would. The artist was never past Gravesend, I swear. It's the Penelope as she
was on the 14th of June, 1857, in the throat of the Straits of Banca, with the
Island of Banca on the starboard bow, and Sumatra on the port. He painted it
from description, but of course, as you very sensibly say, all was snug below
and she carried storm sails and double-reefed topsails, for it was blowing a
cyclone from the sou'east. I compliment you, ma'am, I do indeed! "
"Oh, I have done a
little sailoring myself--as much as a woman can aspire to, you know. This is
the Bay of Funchal. What a lovely frigate!"
"Lovely, you say!
Ah, she was lovely! That is the Andromeda. I was a mate aboard of
her--sub-lieutenant they call it now, though I like the old name best."
"What a lovely
rake her masts have, and what a curve to her bows! She must have been a
clipper."
The old sailor rubbed
his hands and his eyes glistened. His old ships bordered close upon his wife
and his son in his affections.
"I know
Funchal," said the lady carelessly. "A couple of years ago I had a
seven-ton cutter-rigged yacht, the Banshee, and we ran over to Madeira from
Falmouth."
"You ma'am, in a
seven-tonner?"
"With a couple of
Cornish lads for a crew. Oh, it was glorious! A fortnight right out in the
open, with no worries, no letters, no callers, no petty thoughts, nothing but
the grand works of God, the tossing sea and the great silent sky. They talk of
riding, indeed, I am fond of horses, too, but what is there to compare with the
swoop of a little craft as she pitches down the long steep side of a wave, and
then the quiver and spring as she is tossed upwards again? Oh, if our souls
could transmigrate I'd be a seamew above all birds that fly! But I keep you,
Admiral. Adieu!"
The old sailor was too
transported with sympathy to say a word. He could only shake her broad muscular
hand. She was half-way down the garden path before she heard him calling her,
and saw his grizzled head and weather-stained face looking out from behind the
curtains.
"You may put me
down for the platform," he cried, and vanished abashed behind the I
curtain of his Times, where his wife found him at lunch time.
"I hear that you
have had quite a long chat with Mrs. Westmacott," said she.
"Yes, and I think
that she is one of the most sensible women that I ever knew.
"Except on the
woman's rights question, of course."
"Oh, I don't know.
She had a good deal to say for herself on that also. In fact, mother, I have
taken a platform ticket for her meeting."
But this was not to be
the only eventful conversation which Mrs. Westmacott held that day, nor was the
Admiral the only person in the Wilderness who was destined to find his opinions
considerably changed. Two neighboring families, the Winslows from Anerley, and
the Cumberbatches from Gipsy Hill, had been invited to tennis by Mrs.
Westmacott, and the lawn was gay in the evening with the blazers of the young
men and the bright dresses of the girls. To the older people, sitting round in
their wicker-work garden chairs, the darting, stooping, springing white
figures, the sweep of skirts, and twinkle of canvas shoes, the click of the
rackets and sharp whiz of the balls, with the continual "fifteen
love--fifteen all!" of the marker, made up a merry and exhilarating scene.
To see their sons and daughters so flushed and healthy and happy, gave them
also a reflected glow, and it was hard to say who had most pleasure from the
game, those who played or those who watched.
Mrs. Westmacott had
just finished a set when she caught a glimpse of Clara Walker sitting alone at
the farther end of the ground. She ran down the court, cleared the net to the
amazement of the visitors, and seated herself beside her. Clara's reserved and
refined nature shrank somewhat from the boisterous frankness and strange
manners of the widow, and yet her feminine instinct told her that beneath all
her peculiarities there lay much that was good and noble. She smiled up at her,
therefore, and nodded a greeting.
"Why aren't you
playing, then? Don't, for goodness' sake, begin to be languid and young
ladyish! When you give up active sports you give up youth."
"I have played a
set, Mrs. Westmacott."
"That's right, my
dear." She sat down beside her, and tapped her upon the arm with her
tennis racket. "I like you, my dear, and I am going to call you Clara. You
are not as aggressive as I should wish, Clara, but still I like you very much.
Self-sacrifice is all very well, you know, but we have had rather too much of
it on our side, and should like to see a little on the other. What do you think
of my nephew Charles?"
The question was so
sudden and unexpected that Clara gave quite a jump in her chair. "I--I--I
hardly ever have thought of your nephew Charles."
"No? Oh, you must
think him well over, for I want to speak to you about him."
"To me? But
why?"
"It seemed to me
most delicate. You see, Clara, the matter stands in this way. It is quite
possible that I may soon find myself in a completely new sphere of life, which
will involve fresh duties and make it impossible for me to keep up a household
which Charles can share."
Clara stared. Did this
mean that she was about to marry again? What else could it point to?
"Therefore Charles
must have a household of his own. That is obvious. Now, I don't approve of
bachelor establishments. Do you?"
"Really, Mrs.
Westmacott, I have never thought of the matter."
"Oh, you little
sly puss! Was there ever a girl who never thought of the matter? I think that a
young man of six-and-twenty ought to be married."
Clara felt very
uncomfortable. The awful thought had come upon her that this ambassadress had
come to her as a proxy with a proposal of marriage. But how could that be? She
had not spoken more than three or four times with her nephew, and knew nothing
more of him than he had told her on the evening before. It was impossible,
then. And yet what could his aunt mean by this discussion of his private affairs?
"Do you not think
yourself," she persisted, "that a young man of six-and-twenty is
better married?"
"I should think
that he is old enough to decide for himself."
"Yes, yes. He has
done so. But Charles is just a little shy, just a little slow in expressing
himself. I thought that I would pave the way for him. Two women can arrange
these things so much better. Men sometimes have a difficulty in making
themselves clear."
"I really hardly
follow you, Mrs. Westmacott," cried Clara in despair.
"He has no
profession. But he has nice tastes. He reads Browning every night. And he is
most amazingly strong. When he was younger we used to put on the gloves
together, but I cannot persuade him to now, for he says he cannot play light
enough. I should allow him five hundred, which should be enough at first."
"My dear Mrs.
Westmacott," cried Clara, "I assure you that I have not the least
idea what it is that you are talking of."
"Do you think your
sister Ida would have my nephew Charles?"
Her sister Ida? Quite a
little thrill of relief and of pleasure ran through her at the thought. Ida and
Charles Westmacott. She had never thought of it. And yet they had been a good
deal together. They had played tennis. They had shared the tandem tricycle.
Again came the thrill of joy, and close at its heels the cold questionings of
conscience. Why this joy? What was the real source of it? Was it that deep
down, somewhere pushed back in the black recesses of the soul, there was the
thought lurking that if Charles prospered in his wooing then Harold Denver
would still be free? How mean, how unmaidenly, how unsisterly the thought! She
crushed it down and thrust it aside, but still it would push up its wicked
little head. She crimsoned with shame at her own baseness, as she turned once
more to her companion.
"I really do not
know," she said.
"She is not
engaged?"
"Not that I know
of."
"You speak
hesitatingly."
"Because I am not
sure. But he may ask. She cannot but be flattered."
"Quite so. I tell
him that it is the most practical compliment which a man can pay to a woman. He
is a little shy, but when he sets himself to do it he will do it. He is very
much in love with her, I assure you. These little lively people always do
attract the slow and heavy ones, which is nature's device for the neutralizing
of bores. But they are all going in. I think if you will allow me that I will
just take the opportunity to tell him that, as far as you know, there is no
positive obstacle in the way."
"As far as I know,
"Clara repeated, as the widow moved away to where the players were grouped
round the net, or sauntering slowly towards the house. She rose to follow her,
but her head was in a whirl with new thoughts, and she sat down again. Which
would be best for Ida, Harold or Charles? She thought it over with as much
solicitude as a mother who plans for her only child. Harold had seemed to her
to be in many ways the noblest and the best young man whom she had known. If
ever she was to love a man it would be such a man as that. But she must not
think of herself. She had reason to believe that both these men loved her
sister. Which would be the best for her? But perhaps the matter was already
decided. She could not forget the scrap of conversation which she had heard the
night before, nor the secret which her sister had refused to confide to her. If
Ida would not tell her, there was but one person who could. She raised her eyes
and there was Harold Denver standing before her.
"You were lost in
your thoughts," said he, smiling. "I hope that they were pleasant
ones."
"Oh, I was
planning," said she, rising. "It seems rather a waste of time as a
rule, for things have a way of working themselves out just as you least
expect."
"What were you
planning, then?"
"The future."
"Whose?"
"Oh, my own and
Ida's."
"And was I
included in your joint futures?
"I hope all our
friends were included."
"Don't go
in," said he, as she began to move slowly towards the house. "I
wanted to have a word. Let us stroll up and down the lawn. Perhaps you are
cold. If you are, I could bring you out a shawl."
"Oh, no, I am not
cold."
"I was speaking to
your sister Ida last night. She noticed that there was a slight quiver in his
voice, and, glancing up at his dark, clear-cut face, she saw that he was very
grave. She felt that it was settled, that he had come to ask her for her
sister's hand.
"She is a charming
girl," said he, after a pause.
"Indeed she
is," cried Clara warmly. "And no one who has not lived with her and
known her intimately can tell how charming and good she is. She is like a
sunbeam in the house."
"No one who was
not good could be so absolutely happy as she seems to be. Heaven's last gift, I
think, is a mind so pure and a spirit so high that it is unable even to see
what is impure and evil in the world around us. For as long as we can see it,
how can we be truly happy?"
"She has a deeper
side also. She does not turn it to the world, and it is not natural that she
should, for she is very young. But she thinks, and has aspirations of her
own."
"You cannot admire
her more than I do. Indeed, Miss Walker, I only ask to be brought into nearer
relationship with her, and to feel that there is a permanent bond between
us."
It had come at last.
For a moment her heart was numbed within her, and then a flood of sisterly love
carried all before it. Down with that dark thought which would still try to
raise its unhallowed head! She turned to Harold with sparkling eyes and words
of pleasure upon her lips.
"I should wish to
be near and dear to both of you," said he, as he took her hand. "I
should wish Ida to be my sister, and you my wife."
She said nothing. She
only stood looking at him with parted lips and great, dark, questioning eyes.
The lawn had vanished away, the sloping gardens, the brick villas, the
darkening sky with half a pale moon beginning to show over the chimney-tops.
All was gone, and she was only conscious of a dark, earnest, pleading face, and
of a voice, far away, disconnected from herself, the voice of a man telling a
woman how he loved her. He was unhappy, said the voice, his life was a void;
there was but one thing that could save him; he had come to the parting of the
ways, here lay happiness and honor, and all that was high and noble; there lay
the soul-killing round, the lonely life, the base pursuit of money, the sordid,
selfish aims. He needed but the hand of the woman that he loved to lead him
into the better path. And how he loved her his life would show. He loved her
for her sweetness, for her womanliness, for her strength. He had need of her.
Would she not come to him? And then of a sudden as she listened it came home to
her that the man was Harold Denver, and that she was the woman, and that all
God's work was very beautiful--the green sward beneath her feet, the rustling
leaves, the long orange slashes in the western sky. She spoke; she scarce knew
what the broken words were, but she saw the light of joy shine out on his face,
and her hand was still in his as they wandered amid the twilight. They said no
more now, but only wandered and felt each other's presence. All was fresh
around them, familiar and yet new, tinged with the beauty of their new-found
happiness.
"Did you not know
it before?" he asked. "I did not dare to think it."
"What a mask of
ice I must wear! How could a man feel as I have done without showing it? Your
sister at least knew."
"Ida!"
"It was last
night. She began to praise you, I said what I felt, and then in an instant it
was all out."
"But what could
you--what could you see in me? Oh, I do pray that you may not repent it!"
The gentle heart was ruffled amid its joy by the thought of its own
unworthiness.
"Repent it! I feel
that I am a saved man. You do not know how degrading this city life is, how
debasing, and yet how absorbing. Money for ever clinks in your ear. You can
think of nothing else. From the bottom of my heart I hate it, and yet how can I
draw back without bringing grief to my dear old father? There was but one way
in which I could defy the taint, and that was by having a home influence so
pure and so high that it may brace me up against all that draws me down. I have
felt that influence already. I know that when I am talking to you I am a better
man. It is you who, must go with me through life, or I must walk for ever alone."
"Oh, Harold, I am
so happy!" Still they wandered amid the darkening shadows, while one by
one the stars peeped out in the blue black sky above them. At last a chill
night wind blew up from the east, and brought them back to the realities of life.
"You must go in.
You will be cold."
"My father will
wonder where I am. Shall I say anything to him?"
"If you like, my
darling. Or I will in the morning. I must tell my mother to-night. I know how
delighted she will be."
"I do hope
so."
"Let me take you
up the garden path. It is so dark. Your lamp is not lit yet. There is the
window. Till to-morrow, then, dearest."
"Till to-morrow,
Harold."
"My own
darling!" He stooped, and their lips met for the first time. Then, as she
pushed open the folding windows she heard his quick, firm step as it passed
down the graveled path. A lamp was lit as she entered the room, and there was
Ida, dancing about like a mischievous little fairy in front of her.
"And have you
anything to tell me?" she asked, with a solemn face. Then, suddenly
throwing her arms round her sister's neck, "Oh, you dear, dear old Clara!
I am so pleased. I am so pleased."
It was just three days
after the Doctor and the Admiral had congratulated each other upon the closer
tie which was to unite their two families, and to turn their friendship into
something even dearer and more intimate, that Miss Ida Walker received a letter
which caused her some surprise and considerable amusement. It was dated from
next door, and was handed in by the red-headed page after breakfast.
"Dear Miss
Ida," began this curious document, and then relapsed suddenly into the
third person. "Mr. Charles Westmacott hopes that he may have the extreme
pleasure of a ride with Miss Ida Walker upon his tandem tricycle. Mr. Charles
Westmacott will bring it round in half an hour. You in front. Yours very truly,
Charles Westmacott." The whole was written in a large, loose-jointed, and
school-boyish hand, very thin on the up strokes and thick on the down, as
though care and pains had gone to the fashioning of it.
Strange as was the
form, the meaning was clear enough; so Ida hastened to her room, and had hardly
slipped on her light grey cycling dress when she saw the tandem with its large
occupant at the door. He handed her up to her saddle with a more solemn and
thoughtful face than was usual with him, and a few moments later they were
flying along the beautiful, smooth suburban roads in the direction of Forest
Hill. The great limbs of the athlete made the heavy machine spring and quiver
with every stroke; while the mignon grey figure with the laughing face, and the
golden curls blowing from under the little pink-banded straw hat, simply held
firmly to her perch, and let the treadles whirl round beneath her feet. Mile
after mile they flew, the wind beating in her face, the trees dancing past in
two long ranks on either side, until they had passed round Croydon and were
approaching Norwood once more from the further side.
"Aren't you
tired?" she asked, glancing over her shoulder and turning towards him a
little pink ear, a fluffy golden curl, and one blue eye twinkling from the very
corner of its lid.
"Not a bit. I am
just getting my swing.
"Isn't it
wonderful to be strong? You always remind me of a steamengine."
"Why a
steamengine?"
"Well, because it
is so powerful, and reliable, and unreasoning. Well, I didn't mean that last,
you know, but--but--you know what I mean. What is the matter with you?"
"Why?"
"Because you have
something on your mind. You have not laughed once."
He broke into a
gruesome laugh. "I am quite jolly," said he.
"Oh, no, you are
not. And why did you write me such a dreadfully stiff letter?"
"There now,"
he cried, "I was sure it was stiff. I said it was absurdly stiff."
"Then why write
it?"
"It wasn't my own
composition."
"Whose then? Your
aunt's?"
"Oh, no. It was a
person of the name of Slattery."
"Goodness! Who is
he?"
"I knew it would
come out, I felt that it would. You've heard of Slattery the author?"
"Never."
"He is wonderful
at expressing himself. He wrote a book called `The Secret Solved; or,
Letter-writing Made Easy.' It gives you models of all sorts of letters."
Ida burst out laughing.
"So you actually copied one."
"It was to invite
a young lady to a picnic, but I set to work and soon got it changed so that it
would do very well. Slattery seems never to have asked any one to ride a tandem.
But when I had written it, it seemed so dreadfully stiff that I had to put a
little beginning and end of my own, which seemed to brighten it up a good
deal."
"I thought there
was something funny about the beginning and end."
"Did you? Fancy
your noticing the difference in style. How quick you are! I am very slow at
things like that. I ought to have been a woodman, or game-keeper, or something.
I was made on those lines. But I have found something now."
"What is that,
then?"
"Ranching. I have
a chum in Texas, and he says it is a rare life. I am to buy a share in his
business. It is all in the open air--shooting, and riding, and sport. Would
it--would it inconvenience you much, Ida, to come out there with me?"
Ida nearly fell off her
perch in her amazement. The only words of which she could think were "My
goodness me!" so she said them.
"If it would not
upset your plans, or change your arrangements in any way." He had slowed
down and let go of the steering handle, so that the great machine crawled
aimlessly about from one side of the road to the other. "I know very well
that I am not clever or anything of that sort, but still I would do all I can
to make you very happy. Don't you think that in time you might come to like me
a little bit?"
Ida gave a cry of
fright. "I won't like you if you run me against a brick wall," she
said, as the machine rasped up against the curb "Do attend to the
steering."
"Yes, I will. But
tell me, Ida, whether you will come with me."
"Oh, I don't know.
It's too absurd! How can we talk about such things when I cannot see you? You
speak to the nape of my neck, and then I have to twist my head round to
answer."
"I know. That was
why I put `You in front' upon my letter. I thought that it would make it
easier. But if you would prefer it I will stop the machine, and then you can
sit round and talk about it."
"Good
gracious!" cried Ida. "Fancy our sitting face to face on a motionless
tricycle in the middle of the road, and all the people looking out of their
windows at us!"
"It would look
rather funny, wouldn't it? Well, then, suppose that we both get off and push
the tandem along in front of us?"
"Oh, no, this is
better than that."
"Or I could carry
the thing."
Ida burst out laughing.
"That would be more absurd still."
"Then we will go
quietly, and I will look out for the steering. I won't talk about it at all if
you would rather not. But I really do love you very much, and you would make me
happy if you came to Texas with me, and I think that perhaps after a time I
could make you happy too."
"But your
aunt?"
"Oh, she would
like it very much. I can understand that your father might not like to lose
you. I'm sure I wouldn't either, if I were he. But after all, America is not
very far off nowadays, and is not so very wild. We would take a grand piano,
and--and--a copy of Browning. And Denver and his wife would come over to see
us. We should be quite a family party. It would be jolly."
Ida sat listening to
the stumbling words and awkward phrases which were whispered from the back of
her, but there was something in Charles Westmacott's clumsiness of speech which
was more moving than the words of the most eloquent of pleaders. He paused, he
stammered, he caught his breath between the words, and he blurted out in little
blunt phrases all the hopes of his heart. If love had not come to her yet,
there was at least pity and sympathy, which are nearly akin to it. Wonder there
was also that one so weak and frail as she should shake this strong man so,
should have the whole course of his life waiting for her decision. Her left
hand was on the cushion at her side. He leaned forward and took it gently in
his own. She did not try to draw it back from him.
"May I have
it," said he, "for life?"
"Oh, do attend to
your steering," said she, smiling round at him; "and don't say any
more about this to-day. Please don't!"
"When shall I
know, then?"
"Oh, to-night,
to-morrow, I don't know. I must ask Clara. Talk about something else."
And they did talk about
something else; but her left hand was still enclosed in his, and he knew,
without asking again, that all was well.
Mrs. Westmacott's great
meeting for the enfranchisement of woman had passed over, and it had been a
triumphant success. All the maids and matrons of the southern suburbs had
rallied at her summons, there was an influential platform with Dr. Balthazar
Walker in the chair, and Admiral Hay Denver among his more prominent
supporters. One benighted male had come in from the outside darkness and had
jeered from the further end of the hall, but he had been called to order by the
chair, petrified by indignant glances from the unenfranchised around him, and
finally escorted to the door by Charles Westmacott. Fiery resolutions were
passed, to be forwarded to a large number of leading statesmen, and the meeting
broke up with the conviction that a shrewd blow had been struck for the cause
of woman.
But there was one woman
at least to whom the meeting and all that was connected with it had brought
anything but pleasure. Clara Walker watched with a heavy heart the friendship
and close intimacy which had sprung up between her father and the widow. From
week to week it had increased until no day ever passed without their being
together. The coming meeting had been the excuse for these continual
interviews, but now the meeting was over, and still the Doctor would refer
every point which rose to the judgment of his neighbor. He would talk, too, to
his two daughters of her strength of character, her decisive mind, and of the
necessity of their cultivating her acquaintance and following her example,
until at last it had become his most common topic of conversation.
All this might have
passed as merely the natural pleasure which an elderly man might take in the
society of an intelligent and handsome woman, but there were other points which
seemed to Clara to give it a deeper meaning. She could not forget that when
Charles Westmacott had spoken to her one night he had alluded to the possibility
of his aunt marrying again. He must have known or noticed something before he
would speak upon such a subject. And then again Mrs. Westmacott had herself
said that she hoped to change her style of living shortly and take over
completely new duties. What could that mean except that she expected to marry?
And whom? She seemed to see few friends outside their own little circle. She
must have alluded to her father. It was a hateful thought, and yet it must be
faced.
One evening the Doctor
had been rather late at his neighbor's. He used to go into the Admiral's after
dinner, but now he turned more frequently in the other direction. When he
returned Clara was sitting alone in the drawing-room reading a magazine. She sprang
up as he entered, pushed forward his chair, and ran to fetch his slippers.
"You are looking a
little pale, dear," he remarked.
"Oh, no, papa, I
am very well."
"All well with
Harold?"
"Yes. His partner,
Mr. Pearson, is still away, and he is doing all the work."
"Well done. He is
sure to succeed. Where is Ida?"
"In her room, I
think."
"She was with
Charles Westmacott on the lawn not very long ago. He seems very fond of her. He
is not very bright, but I think he will make her a good husband."
"I am sure of it,
papa. He is very manly and reliable."
"Yes, I should
think that he is not the sort of man who goes wrong. There is nothing hidden
about him. As to his brightness, it really does not matter, for his aunt, Mrs.
Westmacott, is very rich, much richer than you would think from her style of
living, and she has made him a handsome provision."
"I am glad of
that."
"It is between
ourselves. I am her trustee, and so I know something of her arrangements. And
when are you going to marry, Clara?"
"Oh, papa, not for
some time yet. We have not thought of a date.
"Well, really, I
don't know that there is any reason for delay. He has a competence and it
increases yearly. As long as you are quite certain that your mind is made
up----"
"Oh, papa!"
"Well, then, I
really do not know why there should be any delay. And Ida, too, must be married
within the next few months. Now, what I want to know is what I am to do when my
two little companions run away from me." He spoke lightly, but his eyes
were grave as he looked questioningly at his daughter.
"Dear papa, you
shall not be alone. It will be years before Harold and I think of marrying, and
when we do you must come and live with us."
"No, no, dear. I
know that you mean what you say, but I have seen something of the world, and I
know that such arrangements never answer. There cannot be two masters in a
house, and yet at my age my freedom is very necessary to me."
"But you would be
completely free."
"No, dear, you
cannot be that if you are a guest in another man's house. Can you suggest no
other alternative?"
"That we remain
with you."
"No, no. That is
out of the question. Mrs. Westmacott herself says that a woman's first duty is
to marry. Marriage, however, should be an equal partnership, as she points out.
I should wish you both to marry, but still I should like a suggestion from you,
Clara, as to what I should do."
"But there is no
hurry, papa. Let us wait. I do not intend to marry yet."
Doctor Walker looked
disappointed. "Well, Clara, if you can suggest nothing, I suppose that I
must take the initiative myself," said he.
"Then what do you
propose, papa?" She braced herself as one who sees the blow which is about
to fall.
He looked at her and
hesitated. "How like your poor dear mother you are, Clara!" he cried.
"As I looked at you then it was as if she had come back from the
grave." He stooped towards her and kissed her. "There, run away to
your sister, my dear, and do not trouble yourself about me. Nothing is settled
yet, but you will find that all will come right."
Clara went upstairs sad
at heart, for she was sure now that what she had feared was indeed about to
come to pass, and that her father was going to take Mrs. Westmacott to be his
wife. In her pure and earnest mind her mother's memory was enshrined as that of
a saint, and the thought that any one should take her place seemed a terrible
desecration. Even worse, however, did this marriage appear when looked at from
the point of view of her father's future. The widow might fascinate him by her
knowledge of the world, her dash, her strength, her unconventionality--all
these qualities Clara was willing to allow her--but she was convinced that she
would be unendurable as a life companion. She had come to an age when habits are
not lightly to be changed, nor was she a woman who was at all likely to attempt
to change them. How would a sensitive man like her father stand the constant
strain of such a wife, a woman who was all decision, with no softness, and
nothing soothing in her nature? It passed as a mere eccentricity when they
heard of her stout drinking, her cigarette smoking, her occasional whiffs at a
long clay pipe, her horsewhipping of a drunken servant, and her companionship
with the snake Eliza, whom she was in the habit of bearing about in her pocket.
All this would become unendurable to her father when his first infatuation was
past. For his own sake, then, as well as for her mother's memory, this match
must be prevented. And yet how powerless she was to prevent it! What could she
do? Could Harold aid her? Perhaps. Or Ida? At least she would tell her sister
and see what she could suggest.
Ida was in her boudoir,
a tiny little tapestried room, as neat and dainty as herself, with low walls
hung with Imari plaques and with pretty little Swiss brackets bearing blue Kaga
ware, or the pure white Coalport china. In a low chair beneath a red shaded
standing lamp sat Ida, in a diaphanous evening dress of mousseline de soie, the
ruddy light tinging her sweet childlike face, and glowing on her golden curls.
She sprang up as her sister entered, and threw her arms around her.
"Dear old Clara!
Come and sit down here beside me. I have not had a chat for days. But, oh, what
a troubled face! What is it then?" She put up her forefinger and smoothed
her sister's brow with it.
Clara pulled up a
stool, and sitting down beside her sister, passed her arm round her waist.
"I am so sorry to trouble you, dear Ida," she said. "But I do
not know what to do.
"There's nothing
the matter with Harold?"
"Oh, no,
Ida."
"Nor with my
Charles?"
"No, no."
Ida gave a sigh of
relief. "You quite frightened me, dear," said she. "You can't
think how solemn you look. What is it, then?"
"I believe that
papa intends to ask Mrs. Westmacott to marry him."
Ida burst out laughing.
"What can have put such a notion into your head, Clara?"
"It is only too
true, Ida. I suspected it before, and he himself almost told me as much with
his own lips to-night. I don't think that it is a laughing matter."
"Really, I could
not help it. If you had told me that those two dear old ladies opposite, the
Misses Williams, were both engaged, you would not have surprised me more. It is
really too funny."
"Funny, Ida! Think
of any one taking the place of dear mother.
But her sister was of a
more practical and less sentimental nature. "I am sure," said she,
"that dear mother would like papa to do whatever would make him most
happy. We shall both be away, and why should papa not please himself?"
"But think how
unhappy he will be. You know how quiet he is in his ways, and how even a little
thing will upset him. How could he live with a wife who would make his whole
life a series of surprises? Fancy what a whirlwind she must be in a house. A
man at his age cannot change his ways. I am sure he would be miserable."
Ida's face grew graver,
and she pondered over the matter for a few minutes. "I really think that
you are right as usual," said she at last. "I admire Charlie's aunt
very much, you know, and I think that she is a very useful and good person, but
I don't think she would do as a wife for poor quiet papa."
"But he will
certainly ask her, and I really think that she intends to accept him. Then it
would be too late to interfere. We have only a few days at the most. And what
can we do? How can we hope to make him change his mind?"
Again Ida pondered.
"He has never tried what it is to live with a strong-minded woman,"
said she. "If we could only get him to realize it in time. Oh, Clara, I
have it; I have it! Such a lovely plan!" She leaned back in her chair and
burst into a fit of laughter so natural and so hearty that Clara had to forget
her troubles and to join in it.
"Oh, it is
beautiful!" she gasped at last. "Poor papa! What a time he will have!
But it's all for his own good, as he used to say when we had to be punished
when we were little. Oh, Clara, I do hope your heart won't fail you.
"I would do
anything to save him, dear."
"That's it. You
must steel yourself by that thought."
"But what is your
plan?"
"Oh, I am so proud
of it. We will tire him for ever of the widow, and of all emancipated women.
Let me see, what are Mrs. Westmacott's main ideas? You have listened to her
more than I. Women should attend less to household duties. That is one, is it
not?"
"Yes, if they feel
they have capabilities for higher things. Then she thinks that every woman who
has leisure should take up the study of some branch of science, and that, as
far as possible, every woman should qualify herself for some trade or
profession, choosing for preference those which have been hitherto monopolized
by men. To enter the others would only be to intensify the present
competition."
" Quite so. That
is glorious!" Her blue eyes were dancing with mischief, and she clapped
her hands in her delight. "What else? She thinks that whatever a man can
do a woman should be allowed to do also--does she not?"
"She says
so."
"And about dress?
The short skirt, and the divided skirt are what she believes in?"
"Yes."
"We must get in
some cloth."
"Why?"
"We must make
ourselves a dress each. A brand-new, enfranchised, emancipated dress, dear.
Don't you see my plan? We shall act up to all Mrs. Westmacott's views in every
respect, and improve them when we can. Then papa will know what it is to live
with a woman who claims all her rights. Oh, Clara, it will be splendid."
Her milder sister sat
speechless before so daring a scheme. "But it would be wrong, Ida!"
she cried at last.
"Not a bit. It is
to save him."
"I should not
dare."
"Oh, yes, you
would. Harold will help. Besides, what other plan have you?"
"I have
none."
"Then you must
take mine."
"Yes. Perhaps you
are right. Well, we do it for a good motive.
"You will do
it?"
"I do not see any
other way."
"You dear good
Clara! Now I will show you what you are to do. We must not begin too suddenly.
It might excite suspicion."
"What would you
do, then?"
"To-morrow we must
go to Mrs. Westmacott, and sit at her feet and learn all her views."
"What hypocrites
we shall feel!"
"We shall be her
newest and most enthusiastic converts. Oh, it will be such fun, Clara! Then we
shall make our plans and send for what we want, and begin our new life."
"I do hope that we
shall not have to keep it up long. It seems so cruel to dear papa.
"Cruel! To save
him!"
"I wish I was sure
that we were doing right. And yet what else can we do? Well, then, Ida, the die
is cast, and we will call upon Mrs. Westmacott tomorrow.
Little did poor Doctor Walker
imagine as he sat at his breakfast-table next morning that the two sweet girls
who sat on either side of him were deep in a conspiracy, and that he, munching
innocently at his muffins, was the victim against whom their wiles were
planned. Patiently they waited until at last their opening came.
"It is a beautiful
day," he remarked. "It will do for Mrs. Westmacott. She was thinking
of having a spin upon the tricycle."
"Then we must call
early. We both intended to see her after breakfast."
"Oh, indeed!"
The Doctor looked pleased.
"You know,
pa," said Ida, "it seems to us that we really have a very great
advantage in having Mrs. Westmacott living so near."
"Why so,
dear?"
"Well, because she
is so advanced, you know. If we only study her ways we may advance ourselves
also."
"I think I have
heard you say, papa," Clara remarked, "that she is the type of the
woman of the future."
"I am very pleased
to hear you speak so sensibly, my dears. I certainly think that she is a woman
whom you may very well take as your model. The more intimate you are with her
the better pleased I shall be."
"Then that is
settled," said Clara demurely, and the talk drifted to other matters.
All the morning the two
girls sat extracting from Mrs. Westmacott her most extreme view as to the duty
of the one sex and the tyranny of the other. Absolute equality, even in
details, was her ideal. Enough of the parrot cry of unwomanly and unmaidenly. It
had been invented by man to scare woman away when she poached too nearly upon
his precious preserves. Every woman should be independent. Every woman should
learn a trade. It was their duty to push in where they were least welcome. Then
they were martyrs to the cause, and pioneers to their weaker sisters. Why
should the wash-tub, the needle, and the housekeeper's book be eternally
theirs? Might they not reach higher, to the consulting-room, to the bench, and
even to the pulpit? Mrs. Westmacott sacrificed her tricycle ride in her
eagerness over her pet subject, and her two fair disciples drank in every word,
and noted every suggestion for future use. That afternoon they went shopping in
London, and before evening strange packages began to be handed in at the Doctor's
door. The plot was ripe for execution, and one of the conspirators was merry
and jubilant, while the other was very nervous and troubled.
When the Doctor came
down to the dining-room next morning, he was surprised to find that his
daughters had already been up some time. Ida was installed at one end of the
table with a spirit-lamp, a curved glass flask, and several bottles in front of
her. The contents of the flask were boiling furiously, while a villainous smell
filled the room. Clara lounged in an arm-chair with her feet upon a second one,
a blue-covered book in her hand, and a huge map of the British Islands spread
across her lap. "Hullo!" cried the Doctor, blinking and sniffing,
"where's the breakfast?"
"Oh, didn't you
order it?" asked Ida.
"I! No; why should
I?" He rang the bell. "Why have you not laid the breakfast,
Jane?"
"If you please,
sir, Miss Ida was a workin' at the table."
"Oh, of course,
Jane," said the young lady calmly. "I am so sorry. I shall be ready
to move in a few minutes."
"But what on earth
are you doing, Ida?" asked the Doctor. "The smell is most offensive.
And, good gracious, look at the mess which you have made upon the cloth! Why,
you have burned a hole right through."
"Oh, that is the
acid," Ida answered contentedly. "Mrs Westmacott said that it would
burn holes."
"You might have
taken her word for it without trying," said her father dryly.
"But look here,
pa! See what the book says: `The scientific mind takes nothing upon trust.
Prove all things!' I have proved that."
"You certainly
have. Well, until breakfast is ready I'll glance over the Times. Have you seen
it?"
"The Times? Oh,
dear me, this is it which I have under my spirit-lamp. I am afraid there is
some acid upon that too, and it is rather damp and torn. Here it is."
The Doctor took the
bedraggled paper with a rueful face. "Everything seems to be wrong
to-day," he remarked. "What is this sudden enthusiasm about
chemistry, Ida?"
"Oh, I am trying
to live up to Mrs. Westmacott's teaching."
"Quite right!
quite right!" said he, though perhaps with less heartiness than he had
shown the day before. "Ah, here is breakfast at last!"
But nothing was
comfortable that morning. There were eggs without egg-spoons, toast which was
leathery from being kept, dried-up rashers, and grounds in the coffee. Above
all, there was that dreadful smell which pervaded everything and gave a
horrible twang to every mouthful.
"I don't wish to
put a damper upon your studies, Ida," said the Doctor, as he pushed back
his chair. "But I do think it would be better if you did your chemical
experiments a little later in the day."
"But Mrs.
Westmacott says that women should rise early, and do their work before
breakfast."
"Then they should
choose some other room besides the breakfast-room." The Doctor was
becoming just a little ruffled. A turn in the open air would soothe him, he
thought. "Where are my boots?" he asked.
But they were not in
their accustomed corner by his chair. Up and down he searched, while the three
servants took up the quest, stooping and peeping under book-cases and drawers.
Ida had returned to her studies, and Clara to her blue-covered volume, sitting
absorbed and disinterested amid the bustle and the racket. At last a general
buzz of congratulation announced that the cook had discovered the boots hung up
among the hats in the hall. The Doctor, very red and flustered, drew them on,
and stamped off to join the Admiral in his morning walk.
As the door slammed Ida
burst into a shout of laughter. "You see, Clara," she cried,
"the charm works already. He has gone to number one instead of to number
three. Oh, we shall win a great victory. You've been very good, dear; I could
see that you were on thorns to help him when he was looking for his boots."
"Poor papa! It is
so cruel. And yet what are we to do?"
"Oh, he will enjoy
being comfortable all the more if we give him a little discomfort now. What
horrible work this chemistry is! Look at my frock! It is ruined. And this
dreadful smell!" She threw open the window, and thrust her little
golden-curled head out of it. Charles Westmacott was hoeing at the other side
of the garden fence.
"Good morning,
sir," said Ida.
"Good
morning!" The big man leaned upon his hoe and looked up at her.
"Have you any
cigarettes, Charles?"
"Yes,
certainly."
"Throw me up
two."
"Here is my case.
Can you catch!"
A seal-skin case came
with a soft thud on to the floor. Ida opened it. It was full.
"What are
these?" she asked.
"Egyptians."
"What are some
other brands?"
"Oh, Richmond
Gems, and Turkish, and Cambridge. But why?"
"Never mind!"
She nodded to him and closed the window. "We must remember all those,
Clara," said she. "We must learn to talk about such things. Mrs.
Westmacott knows all about the brands of cigarettes. Has your rum come?"
"Yes, dear. It is
here."
"And I have my
stout. Come along up to my room now. This smell is too abominable. But we must
be ready for him when he comes back. If we sit at the window we shall see him
coming down the road."
The fresh morning air,
and the genial company of the Admiral had caused the Doctor to forget his
troubles, and he came back about midday in an excellent humor. As he opened the
hall door the vile smell of chemicals which had spoilt his breakfast met him
with a redoubled virulence. He threw open the hall window, entered the
dining-room, and stood aghast at the sight which met his eyes.
Ida was still sitting
among her bottles, with a lit cigarette in her left hand and a glass of stout
on the table beside her. Clara, with another cigarette, was lounging in the
easy chair with several maps spread out upon the floor around. Her feet were
stuck up on the coal scuttle, and she had a tumblerful of some reddish-brown
composition on the smoking table close at her elbow. The Doctor gazed from one
to the other of them through the thin grey haze of smoke, but his eyes rested
finally in a settled stare of astonishment upon his elder and more serious
daughter.
"Clara!" he
gasped, "I could not have believed it!"
"What is it,
papa?"
"You are
smoking!"
"Trying to, papa.
I find it a little difficult, for I have not been used to it."
"But why, in the
name of goodness--"
"Mrs. Westmacott
recommends it."
"Oh, a lady of
mature years may do many things which a young girl must avoid."
"Oh, no,"
cried Ida, "Mrs. Westmacott says that there should be one law for all.
Have a cigarette, pa?"
"No, thank you. I
never smoke in the morning."
"No? Perhaps you
don't care for the brand. "What are these, Clara?"
"Egyptians."
"Ah, we must have
some Richmond Gems or Turkish. I wish, pa, when you go into town, you would get
me some Turkish."
"I will do nothing
of the kind. I do not at all think that it is a fitting habit for young ladies.
I do not agree with Mrs. Westmacott upon the point."
"Really, pa! It
was you who advised us to imitate her."
"But with
discrimination. What is it that you are drinking, Clara?"
"Rum, papa."
"Rum? In the
morning?" He sat down and rubbed his eyes as one who tries to shake off
some evil dream. "Did you say rum?"
"Yes, pa. They all
drink it in the profession which I am going to take up."
"Profession,
Clara?"
"Mrs. Westmacott
says that every woman should follow a calling, and that we ought to choose
those which women have always avoided."
" Quite so."
"Well, I am going
to act upon her advice. I am going to be a pilot."
"My dear Clara! A
pilot! This is too much."
"This is a
beautiful book, papa. `The Lights, Beacons, Buoys, Channels, and Landmarks of
Great Britain.' Here is another, `The Master Mariner's Handbook.' You can't
imagine how interesting it is."
"You are joking,
Clara. You must be joking!"
"Not at all, pa.
You can't think what a lot I have learned already. I'm to carry a green light
to starboard and a red to port, with a white light at the mast-head, and a
flare-up every fifteen minutes."
"Oh, won't it look
pretty at night!" cried her sister.
"And I know the
fog-signals. One blast means that a ship steers to starboard, two to port,
three astern, four that it is unmanageable. But this man asks such dreadful
questions at the end of each chapter. Listen to this: `You see a red light. The
ship is on the port tack and the wind at north; what course is that ship
steering to a point?'"
The Doctor rose with a
gesture of despair. "I can't imagine what has come over you both,"
said he.
"My dear papa, we
are trying hard to live up to Mrs. Westmacott's standard."
"Well, I must say
that I do not admire the result. Your chemistry, Ida, may perhaps do no harm;
but your scheme, Clara, is out of the question. How a girl of your sense could
ever entertain such a notion is more than I can imagine. But I must absolutely
forbid you to go further with it."
"But, pa,"
asked Ida, with an air of innocent inquiry in her big blue eyes, "what are
we to do when your commands and Mrs. Westmacott's advice are opposed? You told
us to obey her. She says that when women try to throw off their shackles, their
fathers, brothers and husbands are the very first to try to rivet them on
again, and that in such a matter no man has any authority."
"Does Mrs.
Westmacott teach you that I am not the head of my own house?" The Doctor
flushed, and his grizzled hair bristled in his anger.
"Certainly. She
says that all heads of houses are relics of the dark ages."
The Doctor muttered
something and stamped his foot upon the carpet. Then without a word he passed
out into the garden and his daughters could see him striding furiously up and
down, cutting off the heads of the flowers with a switch.
"Oh, you darling!
You played your part so splendidly!" cried Ida.
"But how cruel it
is! When I saw the sorrow and surprise in his eyes I very nearly put my arms
about him and told him all. Don't you think we have done enough?"
"No, no, no. Not
nearly enough. You must not turn weak now, Clara. It is so funny that I should
be leading you. It is quite a new experience. But I know I am right. If we go
an as we are doing, we shall be able to say all our lives that we have saved
him. And if we don't, oh, Clara, we should never forgive ourselves."
From that day the
Doctor's peace was gone. Never was a quiet and orderly household transformed so
suddenly into a bear garden, or a happy man turned into such a completely
miserable one. He had never realized before how entirely his daughters had
shielded him from all the friction of life. Now that they had not only ceased to
protect him, but had themselves become a source of trouble to him, he began to
understand how great the blessing was which he had enjoyed, and to sigh for the
happy days before his girls had come under the influence of his neighbor.
"You don't look
happy," Mrs. Westmacott had remarked to him one morning. "You are
pale and a little off color. You should come with me for a ten mile spin upon
the tandem."
"I am troubled
about my girls." They were walking up and down in the garden. From time to
time there sounded from the house behind them the long, sad wail of a French
horn.
"That is
Ida," said he. "She has taken to practicing on that dreadful
instrument in the intervals of her chemistry. And Clara is quite as bad. I
declare it is getting quite unendurable."
"Ah, Doctor,
Doctor!" she cried, shaking her forefinger, with a gleam of her white
teeth. "You must live up to your principles--you must give your daughters
the same liberty as you advocate for other women."
"Liberty, madam,
certainly! But this approaches to license."
"The same law for
all, my friend." She tapped him reprovingly on the arm with her sunshade.
"When you were twenty your father did not, I presume, object to your
learning chemistry or playing a musical instrument. You would have thought it
tyranny if he had."
"But there is such
a sudden change in them both."
"Yes, I have
noticed that they have been very enthusiastic lately in the cause of liberty.
Of all my disciples I think that they promise to be the most devoted and
consistent, which is the more natural since their father is one of our most
trusted champions."
The Doctor gave a
twitch of impatience. "I seem to have lost all authority," he cried.
"No, no, my dear
friend. They are a little exuberant at having broken the trammels of custom.
That is all."
"You cannot think
what I have had to put up with, madam. It has been a dreadful experience. Last
night, after I had extinguished the candle in my bedroom, I placed my foot upon
something smooth and hard, which scuttled from under me. Imagine my horror! I
lit the gas, and came upon a well-grown tortoise which Clara has thought fit to
introduce into the house. I call it a filthy custom to have such pets."
Mrs. Westmacott dropped
him a little courtesy. "Thank you, sir," said she. "That is a
nice little side hit at my poor Eliza."
"I give you my
word that I had forgotten about her," cried the Doctor, flushing.
"One such pet may no doubt be endured, but two are more than I can bear.
Ida has a monkey which lives on the curtain rod. It is a most dreadful
creature. It will remain absolutely motionless until it sees that you have
forgotten its presence, and then it will suddenly bound from picture to picture
all round the walls, and end by swinging down on the bell-rope and jumping on
to the top of your head. At breakfast it stole a poached egg and daubed it all
over the door handle. Ida calls these outrages amusing tricks."
"Oh, all will come
right," said the widow reassuringly.
"And Clara is as
bad, Clara who used to be so good and sweet, the very image of her poor mother.
She insists upon this preposterous scheme of being a pilot, and will talk of
nothing but revolving lights and hidden rocks, and codes of signals, and
nonsense of the kind."
"But why preposterous?"
asked his companion. "What nobler occupation can there be than that of
stimulating commerce, and aiding the mariner to steer safely into port? I
should think your daughter admirably adapted for such duties."
"Then I must beg
to differ from you, madam."
"Still, you are
inconsistent."
"Excuse me, madam,
I do not see the matter in the same light. And I should be obliged to you if
you would use your influence with my daughter to dissuade her."
"You wish to make
me inconsistent too."
"Then you refuse?"
"I am afraid that
I cannot interfere."
The Doctor was very
angry. "Very well, madam," said he. "In that case I can only say
that I have the honor to wish you a very good morning." He raised his
broad straw hat and strode away up the gravel path, while the widow looked
after him with twinkling eyes. She was surprised herself to find that she liked
the Doctor better the more masculine and aggressive he became. It was
unreasonable and against all principle, and yet so it was and no argument could
mend the matter.
Very hot and angry, the
Doctor retired into his room and sat down to read his paper. Ida had retired,
and the distant wails of the bugle showed that she was upstairs in her boudoir.
Clara sat opposite to him with her exasperating charts and her blue book. The
Doctor glanced at her and his eyes remained fixed in astonishment upon the
front of her skirt.
"My dear
Clara," he cried, "you have torn your skirt!"
His daughter laughed
and smoothed out her frock. To his horror he saw the red plush of the chair
where the dress ought to have been. "It is all torn!" he cried.
"What have you done?"
"My dear
papa!" said she, "what do you know about the mysteries of ladies'
dress? This is a divided skirt."
Then he saw that it was
indeed so arranged, and that his daughter was clad in a sort of loose,
extremely long knickerbockers.
"It will be so
convenient for my sea-boots," she explained.
Her father shook his
head sadly. "Your dear mother would not have liked it, Clara," said
he.
For a moment the
conspiracy was upon the point of collapsing. There was something in the
gentleness of his rebuke, and in his appeal to her mother, which brought the
tears to her eyes, and in another instant she would have been kneeling beside
him with everything confessed, when the door flew open and her sister Ida came
bounding into the room. She wore a short grey skirt, like that of Mrs.
Westmacott, and she held it up in each hand and danced about among the
furniture.
"I feel quite the
Gaiety girl!" she cried. "How delicious it must be to be upon the
stage! You can't think how nice this dress is, papa. One feels so free in it.
And isn't Clara charming?"
"Go to your room
this instant and take it off!" thundered the Doctor. "I call it
highly improper, and no daughter of mine shall wear it."
"Papa! Improper!
Why, it is the exact model of Mrs. Westmacott's."
"I say it is
improper. And yours also, Clara! Your conduct is really outrageous. You drive
me out of the house. I am going to my club in town. I have no comfort or peace
of mind in my own house. I will stand it no longer. I may be late to-night--I shall
go to the British Medical meeting. But when I return I shall hope to find that
you have reconsidered your conduct, and that you have shaken yourself clear of
the pernicious influences which have recently made such an alteration in your
conduct." He seized his hat, slammed the dining-room door, and a few
minutes later they heard the crash of the big front gate.
"Victory, Clara,
victory!" cried Ida, still pirouetting around the furniture. "Did you
hear what he said? Pernicious influences! Don't you understand, Clara? Why do
you sit there so pale and glum? Why don't you get up and dance?"
"Oh, I shall be so
glad when it is over, Ida. I do hate to give him pain. Surely he has learned
now that it is very unpleasant to spend one's life with reformers."
"He has almost
learned it, Clara. Just one more little lesson. We must not risk all at this
last moment."
"What would you
do, Ida? Oh, don't do anything too dreadful. I feel that we have gone too far
already."
"Oh, we can do it
very nicely. You see we are both engaged and that makes it very easy. Harold
will do what you ask him, especially as you have told him the reason why, and
my Charles will do it without even wanting to know the reason. Now you know
what Mrs. Westmacott thinks about the reserve of young ladies. Mere prudery,
affectation, and a relic of the dark ages of the Zenana. Those were her words,
were they not?"
"What then?"
"Well, now we must
put it in practice. We are reducing all her other views to practice, and we
must not shirk this one.
"But what would
you do? Oh, don't look so wicked, Ida! You look like some evil little fairy,
with your golden hair and dancing, mischievous eyes. I know that you are going
to propose something dreadful!"
"We must give a
little supper to-night."
"We? A supper!"
"Why not? Young
gentlemen give suppers. Why not young ladies?"
"But whom shall we
invite?"
"Why, Harold and
Charles of course."
"And the Admiral
and Mrs. Hay Denver?"
"Oh, no. That
would be very old-fashioned.
We must keep up with
the times, Clara."
"But what can we
give them for supper?"
"Oh, something
with a nice, fast, rollicking, late-at-night-kind of flavor to it. Let me see!
Champagne, of course--and oysters. Oysters will do. In the novels, all the
naughty people take champagne and oysters. Besides, they won't need any
cooking. How is your pocket-money, Clara?"
"I have three
pounds."
"And I have one.
Four pounds. I have no idea how much champagne costs. Have you?"
"Not the
slightest."
"How many oysters
does a man eat?"
"I can't
imagine."
"I'll write and
ask Charles. No, I won't. I'll ask Jane. Ring for her, Clara. She has been a
cook, and is sure to know.
Jane, on being
cross-questioned, refused to commit herself beyond the statement that it
depended upon the gentleman, and also upon the oysters. The united experience
of the kitchen, however, testified that three dozen was a fair provision.
"Then we shall
have eight dozen altogether, said Ida, jotting down all her requirements upon a
sheet of paper. "And two pints of champagne. And some brown bread, and
vinegar, and pepper. That's all, I think. It is not so very difficult to give a
supper after all, is it, Clara?"
"I don't like it,
Ida. It seems to me to be so very indelicate."
"But it is needed
to clinch the matter. No, no, there is no drawing back now, Clara, or we shall
ruin everything. Papa is sure to come back by the 9:45. He will reach the door
at 10. We must have everything ready for him. Now, just sit down at once, and
ask Harold to come at nine o'clock, and I shall do the same to Charles."
The two invitations
were dispatched, received and accepted. Harold was already a confidant, and he
understood that this was some further development of the plot. As to Charles,
he was so accustomed to feminine eccentricity, in the person of his aunt, that the
only thing which could surprise him would be a rigid observance of etiquette.
At nine o'clock they entered the dining-room of Number 2, to find the master of
the house absent, a red-shaded lamp, a snowy cloth, a pleasant little feast,
and the two whom they would have chosen, as their companions. A merrier party
never met, and the house rang with their laughter and their chatter.
"It is three
minutes to ten," cried Clara, suddenly, glancing at the clock.
"Good gracious! So
it is! Now for our little tableau! "Ida pushed the champagne bottles
obtrusively forward, in the direction of the door, and scattered oyster shells
over the cloth.
"Have you your
pipe, Charles?"
"My pipe!
Yes."
"Then please smoke
it. Now don't argue about it, but do it, for you will ruin the effect
otherwise."
The large man drew out
a red case, and extracted a great yellow meerschaum, out of which, a moment
later, he was puffing thick wreaths of smoke. Harold had lit a cigar, and both
the girls had cigarettes.
"That looks very
nice and emancipated," said Ida, glancing round. "Now I shall lie on
this sofa. So! Now, Charles, just sit here, and throw your arm carelessly over
the back of the sofa. No, don't stop smoking. I like it. Clara, dear, put your
feet upon the coal-scuttle, and do try to look a little dissipated. I wish we
could crown ourselves with flowers. There are some lettuces on the sideboard.
Oh dear, here he is! I hear his key." She began to sing in her high, fresh
voice a little snatch from a French song, with a swinging tra la-la chorus.
The Doctor had walked
home from the station in a peaceable and relenting frame of mind, feeling that,
perhaps, he had said too much in the morning, that his daughters had for years
been models in every way, and that, if there had been any change of late, it
was, as they said themselves, on account of their anxiety to follow his advice
and to imitate Mrs. Westmacott. He could see clearly enough now that that
advice was unwise, and that a world peopled with Mrs. Westmacotts would not be
a happy or a soothing one. It was he who was, himself, to blame, and he was
grieved by the thought that perhaps his hot words had troubled and saddened his
two girls.
This fear, however, was
soon dissipated. As he entered his hall he heard the voice of Ida uplifted in a
rollicking ditty, and a very strong smell of tobacco was borne to his nostrils.
He threw open the dining-room door, and stood aghast at the scene which met his
eyes.
The room was full of
the blue wreaths of smoke, and the lamp-light shone through the thin haze upon
gold-topped bottles, plates, napkins, and a litter of oyster shells and
cigarettes. Ida, flushed and excited, was reclining upon the settee, a
wine-glass at her elbow, and a cigarette between her fingers, while Charles Westmacott
sat beside her, with his arm thrown over the head of the sofa, with the
suggestion of a caress. On the other side of the room, Clara was lounging in an
arm-chair, with Harold beside her, both smoking, and both with wine-glasses
beside them. The Doctor stood speechless in the doorway, staring at the
Bacchanalian scene.
"Come in, papa!
Do!" cried Ida. "Won't you have a glass of champagne?"
"Pray excuse
me," said her father, coldly, "I feel that I am intruding. I did not
know that you were entertaining. Perhaps you will kindly let me know when you
have finished. You will find me in my study." He ignored the two young men
completely, and, closing the door, retired, deeply hurt and mortified, to his
room. A quarter of an hour afterwards he heard the door slam, and his two
daughters came to announce that the guests were gone.
"Guests! Whose
guests?" he cried angrily. "What is the meaning of this
exhibition?"
"We have been
giving a little supper, papa. They were our guests."
"Oh, indeed!"
The Doctor laughed sarcastically. "You think it right, then, to entertain
young bachelors late at night, to, smoke and drink with them, to---- Oh, that I
should ever have lived to blush for my own daughters! I thank God that your
dear mother never saw the day."
"Dearest
papa," cried Clara, throwing her arms about him. "Do not be angry
with us. If you understood all, you would see that there is no harm in
it."
"No harm, miss!
Who is the best judge of that?"
"Mrs.
Westmacott," suggested Ida, slyly.
The Doctor sprang from
his chair. "Confound Mrs. Westmacott!" he cried, striking frenziedly
into the air with his hands. "Am I to hear of nothing but this woman? Is
she to confront me at every turn? I will endure it no longer."
"But it was your
wish, papa."
"Then I will tell
you now what my second and wiser wish is, and we shall see if you will obey it
as you have the first."
"Of course we
will, papa."
"Then my wish is,
that you should forget these odious notions which you have imbibed, that you
should dress and act as you used to do, before ever you saw this woman, and
that, in future, you confine your intercourse with her to such civilities as
are necessary between neighbors.
"We are to give up
Mrs. Westmacott?"
"Or give up
me."
"Oh, dear dad, how
can you say anything so cruel?" cried Ida, burrowing her towsy golden hair
into her father's shirt front, while Clara pressed her cheek against his
whisker. "Of course we shall give her up, if you prefer it."
"Of course we
shall, papa."
The Doctor patted the
two caressing heads. "These are my own two girls again," he cried.
"It has been my fault as much as yours. I have been astray, and you have
followed me in my error. It was only by seeing your mistake that I have become
conscious of my own. Let us set it aside, and neither say nor think anything
more about it."
So by the cleverness of
two girls a dark cloud was thinned away and turned into sunshine. Over one of
them, alas, another cloud was gathering, which could not be so easily
dispersed. Of these three households which fate had thrown together, two had
already been united by ties of love. It was destined, however, that a bond of
another sort should connect the Westmacotts with the Hay Denvers.
Between the Admiral and
the widow a very cordial feeling had existed since the day when the old seaman
had hauled down his flag and changed his opinions; granting to the yachts-woman
all that he had refused to the reformer. His own frank and downright nature
respected the same qualities in his neighbor, and a friendship sprang up
between them which was more like that which exists between two men, founded
upon esteem and a community of tastes.
"By the way,
Admiral," said Mrs. Westmacott one morning, as they walked together down
to the station, "I understand that this boy of yours in the intervals of
paying his devotions to Miss Walker is doing something upon 'Change."
"Yes, ma'am, and
there is no man of his age who is doing so well. He's drawing ahead, I can tell
you, ma'am. Some of those that started with him are hull down astarn now. He
touched his five hundred last year, and before he's thirty he'll be making the
four figures."
"The reason I
asked is that I have small investments to make myself from time to time, and my
present broker is a rascal. I should be very glad to do it through your
son."
"It is very kind of
you, ma'am. His partner is away on a holiday, and Harold would like to push on
a bit and show what he can do. You know the poop isn't big enough to hold the
lieutenant when the skipper's on shore."
"I suppose he
charges the usual half per cent?"
"Don't know, I'm
sure, ma'am. I'll swear that he does what is right and proper."
"That is what I
usually pay--ten shillings in the hundred pounds. If you see him before I do
just ask him to get me five thousand in New Zealands. It is at four just now,
and I fancy it may rise."
"Five
thousand!" exclaimed the Admiral, reckoning it in his own mind.
"Lemme see! That's twenty-five pounds commission. A nice day's work, upon
my word. It is a very handsome order, ma'am."
"Well, I must pay
some one, and why not him?"
"I'll tell him,
and I'm sure he'll lose no time."
"Oh, there is no
great hurry. By the way, I understand from what you said just now that he has a
partner."
"Yes, my boy is
the junior partner. Pearson is the senior. I was introduced to him years ago,
and he offered Harold the opening. Of course we had a pretty stiff premium to
pay."
Mrs. Westmacott had
stopped, and was standing very stiffly with her Red Indian face even grimmer
than usual.
"Pearson?"
said she. "Jeremiah Pearson?"
"The same."
"Then it's all
off," she cried. "You need not carry out that investment."
"Very well,
ma'am."
They walked on together
side by side, she brooding over some thought of her own, and he a little
crossed and disappointed at her caprice and the lost commission for Harold.
"I tell you what,
Admiral," she exclaimed suddenly, "if I were you I should get your
boy out of this partnership."
"But why,
madam?"
"Because he is
tied to one of the deepest, slyest foxes in the whole city of London."
"Jeremiah Pearson,
ma'am? What can you know of him? He bears a good name."
"No one in this
world knows Jeremiah Pearson as I know him, Admiral. I warn you because I have
a friendly feeling both for you and for your son. The man is a rogue and you
had best avoid him."
"But these are
only words, ma'am. Do you tell me that you know him better than the brokers and
jobbers in the City?"
"Man," cried
Mrs. Westmacott, "will you allow that I know him when I tell you that my
maiden name was Ada Pearson, and that Jeremiah is my only brother?"
The Admiral whistled.
"Whew! " cried he. "Now that I think of it, there is a
likeness."
"He is a man of
iron, Admiral--a man with out a heart. I should shock you if I were to tell you
what I have endured from my brother. My father's wealth was divided equally
between us. His own share he ran through in five years, and he has tried since
then by every trick of a cunning, low-minded man, by base cajolery, by legal
quibbles, by brutal intimidation, to juggle me out of my share as well. There
is no villainy of which the man is not capable. Oh, I know my brother Jeremiah.
I know him and I am prepared for him."
"This is all new
to me, ma'am. 'Pon my word, I hardly know what to say to it. I thank you for
having spoken so plainly. From what you say, this is a poor sort of consort for
a man to sail with. Perhaps Harold would do well to cut himself adrift."
"Without losing a
day."
"Well, we shall
talk it over. You may be sure of that. But here we are at the station, so I
will just see you into your carriage and then home to see what my wife says to
the matter."
As he trudged
homewards, thoughtful and perplexed, he was surprised to hear a shout behind
him, and to see Harold running down the road after him.
"Why, dad,"
he cried, "I have just come from town, and the first thing I saw was your
back as you marched away. But you are such a quick walker that I had to run to
catch you."
The Admiral's smile of
pleasure had broken his stern face into a thousand wrinkles. "You are
early to-day," said he.
"Yes, I wanted to
consult you."
"Nothing
wrong?"
"Oh no, only an
inconvenience."
"What is it,
then?"
"How much have we
in our private account?"
"Pretty fair. Some
eight hundred, I think."
"Oh, half that
will be ample. It was rather thoughtless of Pearson."
"What then?"
"Well, you see,
dad, when he went away upon this little holiday to Havre he left me to pay
accounts and so on. He told me that there was enough at the bank for all
claims. I had occasion on Tuesday to pay away two cheques, one for £80, and the
other for £120, and here they are returned with a bank notice that we have
already overdrawn to the extent of some hundreds."
The Admiral looked very
grave. "What's the meaning of that, then?" he asked.
"Oh, it can easily
be set right. You see Pearson invests all the spare capital and keeps as small
a margin as possible at the bank. Still it was too bad for him to allow me even
to run a risk of having a cheque returned. I have written to him and demanded
his authority to sell out some stock, and I have written an explanation to
these people. In the meantime, however, I have had to issue several cheques; so
I had better transfer part of our private account to meet them."
"Quite so, my boy.
All that's mine is yours. But who do you think this Pearson is? He is Mrs.
Westmacott's brother."
"Really. What a
singular thing! Well, I can see a likeness now that you mention it. They have
both the same hard type of face."
"She has been
warning me against him--says he is the rankest pirate in London. I hope that it
is all right, boy, and that we may not find ourselves in broken water."
Harold had turned a
little pale as he heard Mrs. Westmacott's opinion of his senior partner. It
gave shape and substance to certain vague fears and suspicions of his own which
had been pushed back as often as they obtruded themselves as being too
monstrous and fantastic for belief.
"He is a
well-known man in the City, dad," said he.
"Of course he
is--of course he is. That is what I told her. They would have found him out
there if anything had been amiss with him. Bless you, there's nothing so bitter
as a family quarrel. Still it is just as well that you have written about this
affair, for we may as well have all fair and aboveboard."
But Harold's letter to
his partner was crossed by a letter from his partner to Harold. It lay awaiting
him upon the breakfast table next morning, and it sent the heart into his mouth
as he read it, and caused him to spring up from his chair with a white face and
staring eyes.
"My boy! My
boy!"
"I am ruined,
mother--ruined!" He stood gazing wildly in front of him, while the sheet
of paper fluttered down on the carpet. Then he dropped back into the chair, and
sank his face into his hands. His mother had her arms round him in an instant,
while the Admiral, with shaking fingers, picked up the letter from the floor
and adjusted his glasses to read it.
"My DEAR
DENVER," it ran. "By the time that this reaches you I shall be out of
the reach of yourself or of any one else who may desire an interview. You need
not search for me, for I assure you that this letter is posted by a friend, and
that you will have your trouble in vain if you try to find me. I am sorry to
leave you in such a tight place, but one or other of us must be squeezed, and
on the whole I prefer that it should be you. You'll find nothing in the bank,
and about £13,000 unaccounted for. I'm not sure that the best thing you can do
is not to realize what you can, and imitate your senior's example. If you act
at once you may get clean away. If not, it's not only that you must put up your
shutters, but I am afraid that this missing money could hardly be included as
an ordinary debt, and of course you are legally responsible for it just as much
as I am. Take a friend's advice and get to America. A young man with brains can
always do something out there, and you can live down this little mischance. It
will be a cheap lesson if it teaches you to take nothing upon trust in
business, and to insist upon knowing exactly what your partner is doing,
however senior he may be to you. "Yours faithfully, "JEREMIAH
PEARSON."
"Great
Heavens!" groaned the Admiral, "he has absconded."
"And left me both
a bankrupt and a thief.
"No, no,
Harold," sobbed his mother. "All will be right. What matter about
money!"
"Money, mother! It
is my honor."
"The boy is right.
It is his honor, and my honor, for his is mine. This is a sore trouble, mother,
when we thought our life's troubles were all behind us, but we will bear it as
we have borne others." He held out his stringy hand, and the two old folk
sat with bowed grey heads, their fingers intertwined, strong in each other's
love and sympathy.
"We were too
happy," she sighed.
"But it is God's
will, mother."
"Yes, John, it is
God's will."
"And yet it is
bitter to bear. I could have lost all, the house, money, rank--I could have
borne it. But at my age--my honor--the honor of an admiral of the fleet."
"No honor can be
lost, John, where no dishonor has been done. What have you done? What has
Harold done? There is no question of honor."
The old man shook his
head, but Harold had already called together his clear practical sense, which
for an instant in the presence of this frightful blow had deserted him.
"The mater is
right, dad," said he. "It is bad enough, Heaven knows, but we must
not take too dark a view of it. After all, this insolent letter is in itself
evidence that I had nothing to do with the schemes of the base villain who
wrote it."
"They may think it
prearranged.
"They could not.
My whole life cries out against the thought. They could not look me in the face
and entertain it."
"No, boy, not if
they have eyes in their heads," cried the Admiral, plucking up courage at
the sight of the flashing eyes and brave, defiant face. "We have the
letter, and we have your character. We'll weather it yet between them. It's my
fault from the beginning for choosing such a land-shark for your consort. God
help me, I thought I was finding such an opening for you."
"Dear dad! How
could you possibly know? As he says in his letter, it has given me a lesson.
But he was so much older and so much more experienced, that it was hard for me
to ask to examine his books. But we must waste no time. I must go to the City.
"What will you
do?"
"What an honest
man should do. I will write to all our clients and creditors, assemble them,
lay the whole matter before them, read them the letter and put myself
absolutely in their hands."
"That's it,
boy--yard-arm to yard-arm, and have it over."
"I must go at
once." He put on his top-coat and his hat. "But I have ten minutes
yet before I can catch a train. There is one little thing which I must do
before I start."
He had caught sight
through the long glass folding door of the gleam of a white blouse and a straw
hat in the tennis ground. Clara used often to meet him there of a morning to
say a few words before he hurried away into the City. He walked out now with
the quick, firm step of a man who has taken a momentous resolution, but his
face was haggard and his lips pale.
"Clara," said
he, as she came towards him with words of greeting, "I am sorry to bring
ill news to you, but things have gone wrong in the City, and--and I think that
I ought to release you from your engagement."
Clara stared at him
with her great questioning dark eyes, and her face became as pale as his.
"How can the City
affect you and me, Harold?"
"It is dishonor. I
cannot ask you to share it."
"Dishonor! The
loss of some miserable gold and silver coins!"
"Oh, Clara, if it
were only that! We could be far happier together in a little cottage in the
country than with all the riches of the City. Poverty could not cut me to the
heart, as I have been cut this morning. Why, it is but twenty minutes since I
had the letter, Clara, and it seems to me to be some old, old thing which
happened far away in my past life, some horrid black cloud which shut out all
the freshness and the peace from it."
"But what is it,
then? What do you fear worse than poverty?"
"To have debts
that I cannot meet. To be hammered upon 'Change and declared a bankrupt. To
know that others have a just claim upon me and to feel that I dare not meet
their eyes. Is not that worse than poverty?"
"Yes, Harold, a
thousand fold worse! But all this may be got over. Is there nothing more?"
"My partner has
fled and left me responsible for heavy debts, and in such a position that I may
be required by the law to produce some at least of this missing money. It has
been confided to him to invest, and he has embezzled it. I, as his partner, am
liable for it. I have brought misery on all whom I love--my father, my mother.
But you at least shall not be under the shadow. You are free, Clara. There is
no tie between us."
"It takes two to
make such a tie, Harold," said she, smiling and putting her hand inside
his arm. "It takes two to make it, dear, and also two to break it. Is that
the way they do business in the City, sir, that a man can always at his own
sweet will tear up his engagement?"
"You hold me to
it, Clara?"
"No creditor so
remorseless as I, Harold. Never, never shall you get from that bond."
"But I am ruined.
My whole life is blasted."
"And so you wish
to ruin me, and blast my life also. No indeed, sir, you shall not get away so
lightly. But seriously now, Harold, you would hurt me if it were not so absurd.
Do you think that a woman's love is like this sunshade which I carry in my
hand, a thing only fitted for the sunshine, and of no use when the winds blow
and the clouds gather?"
"I would not drag
you down, Clara."
"Should I not be
dragged down indeed if I left your side at such a time? It is only now that I
can be of use to you, help you, sustain you. You have always been so strong, so
above me. You are strong still, but then two will be stronger. Besides, sir,
you have no idea what a woman of business I am. Papa says so, and he
knows."
Harold tried to speak,
but his heart was too full. He could only press the white hand which curled
round his sleeve. She walked up and down by his side, prattling merrily, and
sending little gleams of cheeriness through the gloom which girt him in. To
listen to her he might have thought that it was Ida, and not her staid and
demure sister, who was chatting to him.
"It will soon be
cleared up," she said, "and then we shall feel quite dull. Of course
all business men have these little ups and downs. Why, I suppose of all the men
you meet upon 'Change, there is not one who has not some such story to tell. If
everything was always smooth, you know, then of course every one would turn
stockbroker, and you would have to hold your meetings in Hyde Park. How much is
it that you need?"
"More than I can
ever get. Not less than thirteen thousand pounds."
Clara's face fell as
she heard the amount. "What do you purpose doing?"
"I shall go to the
City now, and I shall ask all our creditors to meet me to-morrow. I shall read
them Pearson's letter, and put myself into their hands."
"And they, what
will they do?"
"What can they do?
They will serve writs for their money, and the firm will be declared bankrupt.
"And the meeting
will be to-morrow, you say. Will you take my advice?"
"What is it,
Clara?"
"To ask them for a
few days of delay. Who knows what new turn matters may take?"
"What turn can
they take? I have no means of raising the money."
"Let us have a few
days."
"Oh, we should
have that in the ordinary course of business. The legal formalities would take
them some little time. But I must go, Clara, I must not seem to shirk. My place
now must be at my offices."
"Yes, dear, you are
right. God bless you and guard you! I shall be here in The Wilderness , but all
day I shall be by your office table at Throgmorton Street in spirit, and if
ever you should be sad you will hear my little whisper in your ear, and know
that there is one client whom you will never be able to get rid of--never as
long as we both live, dear."
"Now, papa,"
said Clara that morning, wrinkling her brows and putting her finger-tips
together with the air of an experienced person of business, "I want to
have a talk to you about money matters."
"Yes, my
dear." He laid down his paper, and looked a question.
"Kindly tell me
again, papa, how much money I have in my very own right. You have often told me
before, but I always forget figures."
"You have two
hundred and fifty pounds a year of your own, under your aunt's will.
"And Ida?"
"Ida has one
hundred and fifty."
"Now, I think I
can live very well on fifty pounds a year, papa. I am not very extravagant ,
and I could make my own dresses if I had a sewing-machine.
"Very likely,
dear."
"In that case I
have two hundred a year which I could do without."
"If it were
necessary."
"But it is
necessary. Oh, do help me, like a good, dear, kind papa, in this matter, for my
whole heart is set upon it. Harold is in sore need of money, and through no
fault of his own." With a woman's tact and eloquence, she told the whole
story. "Put yourself in my place, papa. What is the money to me? I never
think of it from year's end to year's end. But now I know how precious it is. I
could not have thought that money could be so valuable. See what I can do with
it. It may help to save him. I must have it by to-morrow. Oh, do, do advise me
as to what I should do, and how I should get the money."
The Doctor smiled at
her eagerness. "You are as anxious to get rid of money as others are to
gain it," said he. "In another case I might think it rash, but I
believe in your Harold, and I can see that he has had villainous treatment. You
will let me deal with the matter."
"You, papa?"
"It can be done
best between men. Your capital, Clara, is some five thousand pounds, but it is
out on a mortgage, and you could not call it in."
"Oh, dear! oh,
dear!"
"But we can still
manage. I have as much at my bank. I will advance it to the Denvers as coming
from you, and you can repay it to me, or the interest of it, when your money
becomes due."
"Oh, that is
beautiful! How sweet and kind of you!"
"But there is one
obstacle: I do not think that you would ever induce Harold to take this
money."
Clara's face fell.
"Don't you think so, really?"
"I am sure that he
would not."
"Then what are you
to do? What horrid things money matters are to arrange!"
"I shall see his
father. We can manage it all between us."
"Oh, do, do, papa!
And you will do it soon?"
"There is no time
like the present. I will go in at once." He scribbled a cheque, put it in
an envelope, put on his broad straw hat, and strolled in through the garden to
pay his morning call.
It was a singular sight
which met his eyes as he entered the sitting-room of the Admiral. A great sea
chest stood open in the center, and all round upon the carpet were little piles
of jerseys, oil-skins, books, sextant boxes, instruments, and sea-boots. The
old seaman sat gravely amidst this lumber, turning it over, and examining it
intently; while his wife, with the tears running silently down her ruddy
cheeks, sat upon the sofa, her elbows upon her knees and her chin upon her
hands, rocking herself slowly backwards and forwards.
"Hullo,
Doctor," said the Admiral, holding out his hand, "there's foul
weather set in upon us, as you may have heard, but I have ridden out many a
worse squall, and, please God, we shall all three of us weather this one also,
though two of us are a little more cranky than we were."
"My dear friends,
I came in to tell you how deeply we sympathize with you all. My girl has only
just told me about it."
"It has come so
suddenly upon us, Doctor," sobbed Mrs. Hay Denver. "I thought that I
had John to myself for the rest of our lives--Heaven knows that we have not
seen very much of each other--but now he talks of going to sea again.
"Aye, aye, Walker,
that's the only way out of it. When I first heard of it I was thrown up in the
wind with all aback. I give you my word that I lost my bearings more completely
than ever since I strapped a middy's dirk to my belt. You see, friend, I know
something of shipwreck or battle or whatever may come upon the waters, but the
shoals in the City of London on which my poor boy has struck are clean beyond
me. Pearson had been my pilot there, and now I know him to be a rogue. But I've
taken my bearings now, and I see my course right before me."
"What then,
Admiral?"
"Oh, I have one or
two little plans. I'll have some news for the boy. Why, hang it, Walker man, I
may be a bit stiff in the joints, but you'll be my witness that I can do my
twelve miles under the three hours. What then? My eyes are as good as ever
except just for the newspaper. My head is clear. I'm three-and-sixty, but I'm
as good a man as ever I was--too good a man to lie up for another ten years.
I'd be the better for a smack of the salt water again, and a whiff of the
breeze. Tut, mother, it's not a four years' cruise this time. I'll be back
every month or two. It's no more than if I went for a visit in the
country." He was talking boisterously, and heaping his sea-boots and
sextants back into his chest.
"And you really
think, my dear friend, of hoisting your pennant again?"
"My pennant,
Walker? No, no. Her Majesty, God bless her, has too many young men to need an
old hulk like me. I should be plain Mr. Hay Denver, of the merchant service. I
daresay that I might find some owner who would give me a chance as second or third
officer. It will be strange to me to feel the rails of the bridge under my
fingers once more."
"Tut! tut! this
will never do, this will never do, Admiral!" The Doctor sat down by Mrs.
Hay Denver and patted her hand in token of friendly sympathy. "We must wait
until your son has had it out with all these people, and then we shall know
what damage is done, and how best to set it right. It will be time enough then
to begin to muster our resources to meet it."
"Our
resources!" The Admiral laughed. "There's the pension. I'm afraid,
Walker, that our resources won't need much mustering."
"Oh, come, there
are some which you may not have thought of. For example, Admiral, I had always
intended that my girl should have five thousand from me when she married. Of
course your boy's trouble is her trouble, and the money cannot be spent better
than in helping to set it right. She has a little of her own which she wished
to contribute, but I thought it best to work it this way. Will you take the
cheque, Mrs. Denver, and I think it would be best if you said nothing to Harold
about it, and just used it as the occasion served?"
"God bless you,
Walker, you are a true friend. I won't forget this, Walker. "The Admiral
sat down on his sea chest and mopped his brow with his red handkerchief.
"What is it to me
whether you have it now or then? It may be more useful now. There's only one
stipulation. If things should come to the worst, and if the business should
prove so bad that nothing can set it right, then hold back this cheque, for
there is no use in pouring water into a broken basin, and if the lad should
fall, he will want something to pick himself up again with."
"He shall not
fall, Walker, and you shall not have occasion to be ashamed of the family into
which your daughter is about to marry. I have my own plan. But we shall hold
your money, my friend, and it will strengthen us to feel that it is
there."
"Well, that is all
right," said Doctor Walker, rising. "And if a little more should be
needed, we must not let him go wrong for the want of a thousand or two. And
now, Admiral, I'm off for my morning walk. Won't you come too?"
"No, I am going
into town."
"Well, good-bye. I
hope to have better news, and that all will come right. Good-bye, Mrs. Denver.
I feel as if the boy were my own, and I shall not be easy until all is right
with him."
When Doctor Walker had
departed, the Admiral packed all his possessions back into his sea chest with
the exception of one little brass-bound desk. This he unlocked, and took from
it a dozen or so blue sheets of paper all mottled over with stamps and seals,
with very large V. R.'s printed upon the heads of them. He tied these carefully
into a small bundle, and placing them in the inner pocket of his coat, he
seized his stick and hat.
"Oh, John, don't
do this rash thing," cried Mrs. Denver, laying her hands upon his sleeve.
"I have seen so little of you, John. Only three years since you left the
service. Don't leave me again. I know it is weak of me, but I cannot bear
it."
"There's my own
brave lass," said he, smoothing down the grey-shot hair. "We've lived
in honor together, mother, and please God in honor we'll die. No matter how
debts are made, they have got to be met, and what the boy owes we owe. He has
not the money, and how is he to find it? He can't find it. What then? It
becomes my business, and there's only one way for it."
"But it may not be
so very bad, John. Had we not best wait until after he sees these people
to-morrow?"
"They may give him
little time, lass. But I'll have a care that I don't go so far that I can't put
back again. Now, mother, there's no use holding me. It's got to be done, and
there's no sense in shirking it." He detached her fingers from his sleeve,
pushed her gently back into an arm-chair, and hurried from the house.
In less than half an
hour the Admiral was whirled into Victoria Station and found himself amid a
dense bustling throng, who jostled and pushed in the crowded terminus. His
errand, which had seemed feasible enough in his own room, began now to present
difficulties in the carrying out, and he puzzled over how he should take the
first steps. Amid the stream of business men, each hurrying on his definite
way, the old seaman in his grey tweed suit and black soft hat strode slowly
along, his head sunk and his brow wrinkled in perplexity. Suddenly an idea
occurred to him. He walked back to the railway stall and bought a daily paper.
This he turned and turned until a certain column met his eye, when he smoothed
it out, and carrying it over to a seat, proceeded to read it at his leisure.
And, indeed, as a man
read that column, it seemed strange to him that there should still remain any
one in this world of ours who should be in straits for want of money. Here were
whole lines of gentlemen who were burdened with a surplus in their incomes, and
who were loudly calling to the poor and needy to come and take it off their
hands. Here was the guileless person who was not a professional moneylender,
but who would be glad to correspond, etc. Here too was the accommodating
individual who advanced sums from ten to ten thousand pounds without expense,
security, or delay. "The money actually paid over within a few
hours," ran this fascinating advertisement, conjuring up a vision of swift
messengers rushing with bags of gold to the aid of the poor struggler. A third
gentleman did all business by personal application, advanced money on anything
or nothing; the lightest and airiest promise was enough to content him
according to his circular, and finally he never asked for more than five per
cent. This struck the Admiral as far the most promising, and his wrinkles
relaxed, and his frown softened away as he gazed at it. He folded up the paper
rose from the seat, and found himself face to face with Charles Westmacott.
"Hullo,
Admiral!"
"Hullo,
Westmacott!" Charles had always been a favorite of the seaman's.
"What are you doing here?"
"Oh, I have been
doing a little business for my aunt. But I have never seen you in London
before."
"I hate the place.
It smothers me. There's not a breath of clean air on this side of Greenwich.
But maybe you know your way about pretty well in the City?"
"Well, I know
something about it. You see I've never lived very far from it, and I do a good
deal of my aunt's business."
"Maybe you know
Bread Street?"
"It is out of
Cheapside."
"Well then, how do
you steer for it from here? You make me out a course and I'll keep to it."
"Why, Admiral, I
have nothing to do. I'll take you there with pleasure."
"Will you, though?
Well, I'd take it very kindly if you would. I have business there. Smith and
Hanbury, financial agents, Bread Street."
The pair made their way
to the river-side, and so down the Thames to St. Paul's landing--a mode of
travel which was much more to the Admiral's taste than 'bus or cab. On the way,
he told his companion his mission and the causes which had led to it. Charles
Westmacott knew little enough of City life and the ways of business, but at
least he had more experience in both than the Admiral, and he made up his mind
not to leave him until the matter was settled.
"These are the
people," said the Admiral, twisting round his paper, and pointing to the
advertisement which had seemed to him the most promising. "It sounds
honest and above-board, does it not? The personal interview looks as if there
were no trickery, and then no one could object to five per cent."
"No, it seems fair
enough."
"It is not
pleasant to have to go hat in hand borrowing money, but there are times, as you
may find before you are my age, Westmacott, when a man must stow away his
pride. But here's their number, and their plate is on the corner of the
door."
A narrow entrance was
flanked on either side by a row of brasses, ranging upwards from the shipbrokers
and the solicitors who occupied the ground floors, through a long succession of
West Indian agents, architects, surveyors, and brokers, to the firm of which
they were in quest. A winding stone stair, well carpeted and railed at first
but growing shabbier with every landing, brought them past innumerable doors
until, at last, just under the ground-glass roofing, the names of Smith and
Hanbury were to be seen painted in large white letters across a panel, with a
laconic invitation to push beneath it. Following out the suggestion, the
Admiral and his companion found themselves in a dingy apartment, ill lit from a
couple of glazed windows. An ink-stained table, littered with pens, papers, and
almanacs, an American cloth sofa, three chairs of varying patterns, and a
much-worn carpet, constituted all the furniture, save only a very large and
obtrusive porcelain spittoon, and a gaudily framed and very somber picture
which hung above the fireplace. Sitting in front of this picture, and staring
gloomily at it, as being the only thing which he could stare at, was a small
sallow-faced boy with a large head, who in the intervals of his art studies
munched sedately at an apple.
"Is Mr. Smith or
Mr. Hanbury in?" asked the Admiral.
"There ain't no
such people," said the small boy.
"But you have the
names on the door."
"Ah, that is the
name of the firm, you see. It's only a name. It's Mr. Reuben Metaxa that you
wants."
"Well then, is he
in?"
"No, he's
not."
"When will he be
back?"
"Can't tell, I'm
sure. He's gone to lunch. Sometimes he takes one hour, and sometimes two. It'll
be two to-day, I 'spect, for he said he was hungry afore he went."
"Then I suppose
that we had better call again, " said the Admiral.
"Not a bit,"
cried Charles. "I know how to manage these little imps. See here, you
young varmint, here's a shilling for you. Run off and fetch your master. If you
don't bring him here in five minutes I'll clump you on the side of the head
when you get back. Shoo! Scat!" He charged at the youth, who bolted from
the room and clattered madly down-stairs.
"He'll fetch
him," said Charles. "Let us make ourselves at home. This sofa does
not feel over and above safe. It was not meant for fifteen-stone men. But this
doesn't look quite the sort of place where one would expect to pick up
money."
"Just what I was
thinking," said the Admiral, looking ruefully about him.
"Ah, well! I have
heard that the best furnished offices generally belong to the poorest firms.
Let us hope it's the opposite here. They can't spend much on the management
anyhow. That pumpkin-headed boy was the staff, I suppose. Ha, by Jove, that's
his voice, and he's got our man, I think!"
As he spoke the youth
appeared in the doorway with a small, brown, dried-up little chip of a man at
his heels. He was clean-shaven and blue-chinned, with bristling black hair, and
keen brown eyes which shone out very brightly from between pouched under-lids
and drooping upper ones. He advanced, glancing keenly from one to the other of
his visitors, and slowly rubbing together his thin, blue-veined hands. The
small boy closed the door behind him, and discreetly vanished.
"I am Mr. Reuben
Metaxa," said the moneylender. "Was it about an advance you wished to
see me?"
"Yes."
"For you, I
presume?" turning to Charles Westmacott.
"No, for this
gentleman."
The moneylender looked
surprised. "How much did you desire?"
"I thought of five
thousand pounds," said the Admiral.
"And on what
security?"
"I am a retired
admiral of the British navy. You will find my name in the Navy List. There is
my card. I have here my pension papers. I get £850 a year. I thought that
perhaps if you were to hold these papers it would be security enough that I
should pay you. You could draw my pension, and repay yourselves at the rate,
say, of £500 a year, taking your five per cent interest as well."
"What
interest?"
"Five per cent per
annum.
Mr. Metaxa laughed.
"Per annum!" he said. "Five per cent a month."
"A month! That
would be sixty per cent a year."
"Precisely."
"But that is
monstrous."
"I don't ask
gentlemen to come to me. They come of their own free will. Those are my terms,
and they can take it or leave it."
"Then I shall
leave it." The Admiral rose angrily from his chair.
"But one moment,
sir. Just sit down and we shall chat the matter over. Yours is a rather unusual
case and we may find some other way of doing what you wish. Of course the
security which you offer is no security at all, and no sane man would advance
five thousand pennies on it."
"No security? Why
not, sir?"
"You might die
to-morrow. You are not a young man. What age are you?"
"Sixty-three."
Mr. Metaxa turned over
a long column of figures. "Here is an actuary's table," said he.
"At your time of life the average expectancy of life is only a few years
even in a well-preserved man."
"Do you mean to
insinuate that I am not a well-preserved man?"
"Well, Admiral, it
is a trying life at sea. Sailors in their younger days are gay dogs, and take
it out of themselves. Then when they grow older thy are still hard at it, and
have no chance of rest or peace. I do not think a sailor's life a good
one."
"I'll tell you
what, sir," said the Admiral hotly. "If you have two pairs of gloves
I'll undertake to knock you out under three rounds. Or I'll race you from here
to St. Paul's, and my friend here will see fair. I'll let you see whether I am
an old man or not."
"This is beside
the question," said the moneylender with a deprecatory shrug. "The
point is that if you died to-morrow where would be the security then?"
"I could insure my
life, and make the policy over to you."
"Your premiums for
such a sum, if any office would have you, which I very much doubt, would come
to close on five hundred a year. That would hardly suit your book."
"Well, sir, what
do you intend to propose?" asked the Admiral.
"I might, to
accommodate you, work it in another way. I should send for a medical man, and
have an opinion upon your life. Then I might see what could be done."
"That is quite
fair. I have no objection to that."
"There is a very
clever doctor in the street here. Proudie is his name. John, go and fetch
Doctor Proudie." The youth was dispatched upon his errand, while Mr.
Metaxa sat at his desk, trimming his nails, and shooting out little comments upon
the weather. Presently feet were heard upon the stairs, the moneylender hurried
out, there was a sound of whispering, and he returned with a large, fat,
greasy-looking man, clad in a much worn frock-coat, and a very dilapidated top
hat.
"Doctor Proudie,
gentlemen," said Mr. Metaxa.
The doctor bowed,
smiled, whipped off his hat, and produced his stethoscope from its interior
with the air of a conjurer upon the stage. "Which of these gentlemen am I
to examine?" he asked, blinking from one to the other of them. "Ah,
it is you! Only your waistcoat! You need not undo your collar. Thank you! A
full breath! Thank you! Ninety-nine! Thank you! Now hold your breath for a
moment. Oh, dear, dear, what is this I hear?"
"What is it
then?" asked the Admiral coolly.
"Tut! tut! This is
a great pity. Have you had rheumatic fever?"
"Never."
"You have had some
serious illness?"
"Never."
"Ah, you are an
admiral. You have been abroad, tropics, malaria, ague--I know."
"I have never had
a day's illness."
"Not to your
knowledge; but you have inhaled unhealthy air, and it has left its effect. You
have an organic murmur--slight but distinct."
"Is it
dangerous?"
"It might at
anytime become so. You should not take violent exercise."
"Oh, indeed. It
would hurt me to run a half mile?"
"It would be very
dangerous."
"And a mile?"
"Would be almost
certainly fatal.
"Then there is
nothing else the matter?"
"No. But if the
heart is weak, then everything is weak, and the life is not a sound one."
"You see,
Admiral," remarked Mr. Metaxa, as the doctor secreted his stethoscope once
more in his hat, "my remarks were not entirely uncalled for. I am sorry
that the doctor's opinion is not more favorable, but this is a matter of
business, and certain obvious precautions must be taken."
"Of course. Then
the matter is at an end."
"Well, we might
even now do business. I am most anxious to be of use to you. How long do you
think, doctor, that this gentleman will in all probability live?"
"Well, well, it's
rather a delicate question to answer," said Mr. Proudie, with a show of
embarrassment.
"Not a bit, sir.
Out with it! I have faced death too often to flinch from it now, though I saw
it as near me as you are."
"Well, well, we
must go by averages of course. Shall we say two years? I should think that you
have a full two years before you."
In two years your
pension would bring you in £1,600. Now I will do my very best for you, Admiral!
I will advance you £2,000, and you can make over to me your pension for your
life. It is pure speculation on my part. If you die to-morrow I lose my money.
If the doctor's prophecy is correct I shall still be out of pocket. If you live
a little longer, then I may see my money again. It is the very best I can do
for you."
"Then you wish to
buy my pension?"
"Yes for two
thousand down."
"And if I live for
twenty years?"
"Oh, in that case
of course my speculation would be more successful. But you have heard the
doctor's opinion."
"Would you advance
the money instantly?"
"You should have a
thousand at once. The other thousand I should expect you to take in
furniture."
"In
furniture?"
"Yes, Admiral. We
shall do you a beautiful houseful at that sum. It is the custom of my clients
to take half in furniture."
The Admiral sat in dire
perplexity. He had come out to get money, and to go back without any, to be
powerless to help when his boy needed every shilling to save him from disaster,
that would be very bitter to him. On the other hand, it was so much that he
surrendered, and so little that he received. Little, and yet something. Would
it not be better than going back empty-handed? He saw the yellow backed
cheque-book upon the table. The moneylender opened it and dipped his pen into
the ink.
"Shall I fill it
up?" said he.
"I think,
Admiral," remarked Westmacott, "that we had better have a little walk
and some luncheon before we settle this matter."
"Oh, we may as
well do it at once. It would be absurd to postpone it now," Metaxa spoke
with some heat, and his eyes glinted angrily from between his narrow lids at
the imperturbable Charles. The Admiral was simple in money matters, but he had seen
much of men and had learned to read them. He saw that venomous glance, and saw
too that intense eagerness was peeping out from beneath the careless air which
the agent had assumed.
"You're quite
right, Westmacott," said he. "We'll have a little walk before we settle
it."
"But I may not be
here this afternoon."
"Then we must
choose another day."
"But why not
settle it now?"
"Because I prefer
not," said the Admiral shortly.
"Very well. But
remember that my offer is only for to-day. It is off unless you take it at
once."
"Let it be off,
then.
"There's my
fee," cried the doctor.
"How much?"
"A guinea."
The Admiral threw a
pound and a shilling upon the table. "Come, Westmacott," said he, and
they walked together from the room.
"I don't like
it," said Charles, when they found themselves in the street once more;
"I don't profess to be a very sharp chap, but this is a trifle too thin.
What did he want to go out and speak to the doctor for? And how very convenient
this tale of a weak heart was! I believe they are a couple of rogues, and in
league with each other."
"A shark and a
pilot fish," said the Admiral.
"I'll tell you
what I propose, sir. There's a lawyer named McAdam who does my aunt's business.
He is a very honest fellow, and lives at the other side of Poultry. We'll go
over to him together and have his opinion about the whole matter."
"How far is it to
his place?"
"Oh, a mile at
least. We can have a cab."
"A mile? Then we
shall see if there is any truth in what that swab of a doctor said. Come, my
boy, and clap on all sail, and see who can stay the longest."
Then the sober denizens
of the heart of business London saw a singular sight as they returned from
their luncheons. Down the road way, dodging among cabs and carts, ran a weather-stained
elderly man, with wide flapping black hat, and homely suit of tweeds. With
elbows braced back, hands clenched near his armpits, and chest protruded, he
scudded along, while close at his heels lumbered a large-limbed, heavy, yellow
mustached young man, who seemed to feel the exercise a good deal more than his
senior. On they dashed, helter-skelter, until they pulled up panting at the
office where the lawyer of the Westmacotts was to be found.
"There now!"
cried the Admiral in triumph. "What d'ye think of that? Nothing wrong in
the engine-room, eh?"
"You seem fit
enough, sir.
"Blessed if I
believe the swab was a certificated doctor at all. He was flying false colors,
or I am mistaken."
"They keep the
directories and registers in this eating-house," said Westmacott.
"We'll go and look him out."
They did so, but the
medical rolls contained no such name as that of Dr. Proudie, of Bread Street.
"Pretty villainy
this!" cried the Admiral, thumping his chest. "A dummy doctor and a
vamped up disease. Well, we've tried the rogues, Westmacott! Let us see what we
can do with your honest man."
Mr. McAdam, of the firm
of McAdam and Squire, was a highly polished man who dwelt behind a highly
polished table in the neatest and snuggest of offices. He was white-haired and
amiable, with a deep-lined aquiline face, was addicted to low bows, and indeed,
always seemed to carry himself at half-cock, as though just descending into
one, or just recovering himself. He wore a high-buckled stock, took snuff, and
adorned his conversation with little scraps from the classics.
"My dear
Sir," said he, when he had listened to their story, "any friend of
Mrs. Westmacott's is a friend of mine. Try a pinch. I wonder that you should
have gone to this man Metaxa. His advertisement is enough to condemn him. Habet
foenum in cornu. They are all rogues."
"The doctor was a
rogue too. I didn't like the look of him at the time."
"Arcades ambo. But
now we must see what we can do for you. Of course what Metaxa said was
perfectly right. The pension is in itself no security at all, unless it were
accompanied by a life assurance which would be an income in itself. It is no
good whatever."
His clients' faces
fell.
"But there is the
second alternative. You might sell the pension right out. Speculative investors
occasionally deal in such things. I have one client, a sporting man, who would
be very likely to take it up if we could agree upon terms. Of course, I must
follow Metaxa's example by sending for a doctor.
For the second time was
the Admiral punched and tapped and listened to. This time, however, there could
be no question of the qualifications of the doctor, a well-known Fellow of the
College of Surgeons, and his report was as favorable as the other's had been
adverse.
"He has the heart
and chest of a man of forty," said he. "I can recommend his life as
one of the best of his age that I have ever examined."
"That's
well," said Mr. McAdam, making a note of the doctor's remarks, while the
Admiral disbursed a second guinea. "Your price, I understand, is five
thousand pounds. I can communicate with Mr. Elberry, my client, and let you
know whether he cares to touch the matter. Meanwhile you can leave your pension
papers here, and I will give you a receipt for them."
"Very well. I
should like the money soon."
"That is why I am
retaining the papers. If I can see Mr. Elberry to-day we may let you have a
cheque to-morrow. Try another pinch. No? Well, good-bye. I am very happy to
have been of service." Mr. McAdam bowed them out, for he was a very busy
man, and they found themselves in the street once more with lighter hearts than
when they bad left it.
"Well, Westmacott,
I am sure I am very much obliged to you," said the Admiral. "You have
stood by me when I was the better for a little help, for I'm clean out of my
soundings among these city sharks. But I've something to do now which is more
in my own line, and I need not trouble you any more."
"Oh, it is no
trouble. I have nothing to do. I never have anything to do. I don't suppose I
could do it if I had. I should be delighted to come with you, sir, if I can be
of any use."
"No, no, my lad.
You go home again. It would be kind of you, though, if you would look in at
number one when you get back and tell my wife that all's well with me, and that
I'll be back in an hour or so."
"All right, sir.
I'll tell her." Westmacott raised his hat and strode away to the westward,
while the Admiral, after a hurried lunch, bent his steps towards the east.
It was a long walk, but
the old seaman swung along at a rousing pace, leaving street after street
behind him. The great business places dwindled down into commonplace shops and
dwellings, which decreased and became more stunted, even as the folk who filled
them did, until he was deep in the evil places of the eastern end. It was a
land of huge, dark houses and of garish gin-shops, a land, too, where life
moves irregularly and where adventures are to be gained--as the Admiral was to
learn to his cost.
He was hurrying down
one of the long, narrow, stone-flagged lanes between the double lines of
crouching, disheveled women and of dirty children who sat on the hollowed steps
of the houses, and basked in the autumn sun. At one side was a barrowman with a
load of walnuts, and beside the barrow a bedraggled woman with a black fringe
and a chequered shawl thrown over her head. She was cracking walnuts and
picking them out of the shells, throwing out a remark occasionally to a rough
man in a rabbit-skin cap, with straps under the knees of his corduroy trousers,
who stood puffing a black clay pipe with his back against the wall. What the
cause of the quarrel was, or what sharp sarcasm from the woman's lips pricked
suddenly through that thick skin may never be known, but suddenly the man took
his pipe in his left hand, leaned forward, and deliberately struck her across
the face with his right. It was a slap rather than a blow, but the woman gave a
sharp cry and cowered up against the barrow with her hand to her cheek.
"You infernal
villain!" cried the Admiral, raising his stick. "You brute and
blackguard!"
"Garn!"
growled the rough, with the deep rasping intonation of a savage. "Garn out
o' this or I'll---- He took a step forward with uplifted hand, but in an
instant down came cut number three upon his wrist, and cut number five across
his thigh, and cut number one full in the center of his rabbit-skin cap. It was
not a heavy stick, but it was strong enough to leave a good red weal wherever
it fell. The rough yelled with pain, and rushed in, hitting with both hands,
and kicking with his iron-shod boots, but the Admiral had still a quick foot
and a true eye, so that he bounded backwards and sideways, still raining a
shower, of blows upon his savage antagonist. Suddenly, however, a pair of arms
closed round his neck, and glancing backwards he caught a glimpse of the black
coarse fringe of the woman whom he had befriended, "I've got him!"
she shrieked. "I'll 'old 'im. Now, Bill, knock the tripe out of him!"
Her grip was as strong as a man's, and her wrist pressed like an iron bar upon
the Admiral's throat. He made a desperate effort to disengage himself, but the
most that he could do was to swing her round, so as to place her between his
adversary and himself. As it proved, it was the very best thing that he could
have done. The rough, half-blinded and maddened by the blows which he had
received, struck out with all his ungainly strength, just as his partner's head
swung round in front of him. There was a noise like that of a stone hitting a
wall, a deep groan, her grasp relaxed, and she dropped a dead weight upon the
pavement, while the Admiral sprang back and raised his stick once more, ready
either for attack or defense. Neither were needed, however, for at that moment
there was a scattering of the crowd, and two police constables, burly and
helmeted, pushed their way through the rabble. At the sight of them the rough
took to his heels, and was instantly screened from view by a veil of his
friends and neighbors.
"I have been
assaulted," panted the Admiral. "This woman was attacked and I had to
defend her."
"This is
Bermondsey Sal," said one police officer, bending over the bedraggled heap
of tattered shawl and dirty skirt. "She's got it hot this time."
"He was a shortish
man, thick, with a beard."
"Ah, that's Black
Davie. He's been up four times for beating her. He's about done the job now. If
I were you I would let that sort settle their own little affairs, sir."
"Do you think that
a man who holds the Queen's commission will stand by and see a woman
struck?" cried the Admiral indignantly.
"Well, just as you
like, sir. But you've lost your watch, I see."
"My watch!"
He clapped his hand to his waistcoat. The chain was hanging down in front, and
the watch gone.
He passed his hand over
his forehead. "I would not have lost that watch for anything," said
he. "No money could replace it. It was given me by the ship's company
after our African cruise. It has an inscription."
The policeman shrugged
his shoulders. "It comes from meddling," said he.
"What'll you give
me if I tell yer where it is?" said a sharp-faced boy among the crowd.
"Will you gimme a quid?"
"Certainly."
"Well, where's the
quid?"
The Admiral took a
sovereign from his pocket. "Here it is."
"Then 'ere's the
ticker!" The boy pointed to the clenched hand of the senseless woman. A
glimmer of gold shone out from between the fingers, and on opening them up,
there was the Admiral's chronometer. This interesting victim had throttled her
protector with one hand, while she had robbed him with the other.
The Admiral left his
address with the policeman, satisfied that the woman was only stunned, not
dead, and then set off upon his way once more, the poorer perhaps in his faith
in human nature, but in very good spirits none the less. He walked with dilated
nostrils and clenched hands, all glowing and tingling with the excitement of
the combat, and warmed with the thought that he could still, when there was
need, take his own part in a street brawl in spite of his three-score and odd
years.
His way now led towards
the river-side regions, and a cleansing whiff of tar was to be detected in the
stagnant autumn air. Men with the blue jersey and peaked cap of the boatman, or
the white ducks of the dockers, began to replace the cordurys and fustian of
the laborers. Shops with nautical instruments in the windows, rope and paint
sellers, and slop shops with long rows of oilskins dangling from hooks, all
proclaimed the neighborhood of the docks. The Admiral quickened his pace and
straightened his figure as his surroundings became more nautical, until at
last, peeping between two high, dingy wharfs, he caught a glimpse of the
mud-colored waters of the Thames, and of the bristle of masts and funnels which
rose from its broad bosom. To the right lay a quiet street, with many brass
plates upon either side, and wire blinds in all of the windows. The Admiral
walked slowly down it until "The Saint Lawrence Shipping Company"
caught his eye. He crossed the road, pushed open the door, and found himself in
a low-ceilinged office, with a long counter at one end and a great number of
wooden sections of ships stuck upon boards and plastered all over the walls.
"Is Mr. Henry
in?" asked the Admiral.
"No, sir,"
answered an elderly man from a high seat in the corner. "He has not come
into town to-day. I can manage any business you may wish seen to."
"You don't happen
to have a first or second officer's place vacant, do you?"
The manager looked with
a dubious eye at his singular applicant.
"Do you hold
certificates?" he asked.
"I hold every
nautical certificate there is."
"Then you won't do
for us."
"Why not?"
"Your age, sir.
"I give you my
word that I can see as well as ever, and am as good a man in every way."
"I don't doubt
it."
"Why should my age
be a bar, then?"
"Well, I must put
it plainly. If a man of your age, holding certificates, has not got past a
second officer's berth, there must be a black mark against him somewhere. I
don't know what it is, drink or temper, or want of judgment, but something
there must be."
"I assure you
there is nothing, but I find myself stranded, and so have to turn to the old
business again."
"Oh, that's
it," said the manager, with suspicion in his eye. "How long were you
in your last billet?"
"Fifty-one years."
"What!"
"Yes, sir,
one-and-fifty years."
"In the same
employ?"
"Yes."
"Why, you must
have begun as a child."
"I was twelve when
I joined."
"It must be a
strangely managed business," said the manager, "which allows men to
leave it who have served for fifty years, and who are still as good as ever.
Who did you serve?"
"The Queen. Heaven
bless her!"
"Oh, you were in
the Royal Navy. What rating did you hold?"
"I am Admiral of
the Fleet."
The manager started,
and sprang down from his high stool.
"My name is
Admiral Hay Denver. There is my card. And here are the records of my service. I
don't, you understand, want to push another man from his billet; but if you
should chance to have a berth open, I should be very glad of it. I know the
navigation from the Cod Banks right up to Montreal a great deal better than I
know the streets of London.
The astonished manager
glanced over the blue papers which his visitor had handed him. "Won't you
take a chair, Admiral?" said he.
"Thank you! But I
should be obliged if you would drop my title now. I told you because you asked
me, but I've left the quarter-deck, and I am plain Mr. Hay Denver now."
"May I ask,"
said the manager, "are you the same Denver who commanded at one time on
the North American station?"
"I did."
"Then it was you
who got one of our boats, the Comus, off the rocks in the Bay of Fundy? The
directors voted you three hundred guineas as salvage, and you refused
them."
"It was an offer
which should not have been made," said the Admiral sternly.
"Well, it reflects
credit upon you that you should think so. If Mr. Henry were here I am sure that
he would arrange this matter for you at once. As it is, I shall lay it before
the directors to-day, and I am sure that they will be proud to have you in our
employment, and, I hope, in some more suitable position than that which you
suggest."
"I am very much
obliged to you, sir," said the Admiral, and started off again, well
pleased, upon his homeward journey.
Next day brought the
Admiral a cheque for £5,000 from Mr. McAdam, and a stamped agreement by which
he made over his pension papers to the speculative inventor. It was not until
he had signed and sent it off that the full significance of all that he had
done broke upon him. He had sacrificed everything. His pension was gone. He had
nothing save only what he could earn. But the stout old heart never quailed. He
waited eagerly for a letter from the Saint Lawrence Shipping Company, and in
the meanwhile he gave his landlord a quarter's notice. Hundred pound a year
houses would in future be a luxury which he could not aspire to. A small
lodging in some inexpensive part of London must be the substitute for his
breezy Norwood villa. So be it, then! Better that a thousand fold than that his
name should be associated with failure and disgrace.
On that morning Harold
Denver was to meet the creditors of the firm, and to explain the situation to
them. It was a hateful task, a degrading task, but he set himself to do it with
quiet resolution. At home they waited in intense anxiety to learn the result of
the meeting . It was late before he returned, haggard pale, like a man who has
done and suffered much.
"What's this board
in front of the house? he asked.
"We are going to
try a little change of scene," said the Admiral. "This place is
neither town nor country. But never mind that, boy. Tell us what happened in
the City."
"God help me! My
wretched business driving you out of house and home!" cried Harold, broken
down by this fresh evidence of the effects of his misfortunes. "It is
easier for me to meet my creditors than to see you two suffering so patiently
for my sake."
"Tut, tut!"
cried the Admiral. "There's no suffering in the matter. Mother would
rather be near the theaters. That's at the bottom of it, isn't it, mother? You
come and sit down here between us and tell us all about it."
Harold sat down with a
loving hand in each of his.
"It's not so bad
as we thought," said he, and yet it is bad enough. I have about ten days
to find the money, but I don't know which way to turn for it. Pearson, however,
lied, as usual, when he spoke of £13,000. The amount is not quite £7,000."
The Admiral clapped his
hands. "I knew we should weather it after all! Hurrah my boy! Hip, hip,
hip, hurrah!"
Harold gazed at him in
surprise, while the old seaman waved his arm above his head and bellowed out
three stentorian cheers. "Where am I to get seven thousand pounds from,
dad?" he asked.
"Never mind. You
spin your yarn."
"Well, they were
very good and very kind, but of course they must have either their money or
their money's worth. They passed a vote of sympathy with me, and agreed to wait
ten days before they took any proceedings. Three of them, whose claim came to £3,500,
told me that if I would give them my personal I.O.U., and pay interest at the
rate of five per cent, their amounts might stand over as long as I wished. That
would be a charge of £175 upon my income, but with economy I could meet it, and
it diminishes the debt by one-half."
Again the Admiral burst
out cheering.
"There remains,
therefore, about £3,200 which has to be found within ten days. No man shall
lose by me. I gave them my word in the room that if I worked my soul out of my
body every one of them should be paid. I shall not spend a penny upon myself
until it is done. But some of them can't wait. They are poor men themselves,
and must have their money. They have issued a warrant for Pearson's arrest. But
they think that he has got away the States."
"These men shall
have their money," said the Admiral.
"Dad!"
"Yes, my boy, you
don't know the resources of the family. One never does know until one tries.
What have you yourself now?"
"I have about a
thousand pounds invested."
"All right. And I
have about as much more. There's a good start. Now, mother, it is your turn.
What is that little bit of paper of yours?"
Mrs. Denver unfolded
it, and placed it upon Harold's knee.
"Five thousand
pounds!" he gasped.
"Ah, but mother is
not the only rich one. Look at this!" And the Admiral unfolded his cheque,
and placed it upon the other knee.
Harold gazed from one
to the other in bewilderment. "Ten thousand pounds!" he cried.
"Good heavens! where did these come from?"
"You will not
worry any longer, dear," murmured his mother, slipping her arm round him.
But his quick eye had
caught the signature upon one of the cheques. "Doctor Walker!" he
cried, flushing. "This is Clara's doing. Oh, dad, we cannot take this
money. It would not be right nor honorable."
"No, boy, I am
glad you think so. It is something, however, to have proved one's friend, for a
real good friend he is. It was he who brought it in, though Clara sent him. But
this other money will be enough to cover everything, and it is all my
own."
"Your own? Where
did you get it, dad?"
"Tut, tut! See
what it is to have a City man to deal with. It is my own, and fairly earned,
and that is enough."
"Dear old
dad!" Harold squeezed his gnarled hand. "And you, mother! You have
lifted the trouble from my heart. I feel another man. You have saved my honor,
my good name, everything. I cannot owe you more, for I owe you everything
already."
So while the autumn
sunset shone ruddily through the broad window these three sat together hand in
hand, with hearts which were too full to speak. Suddenly the soft thudding of
tennis balls was heard, and Mrs. Westmacott bounded into view upon the lawn
with brandished racket and short skirts fluttering in the breeze. The sight
came as a relief to their strained nerves, and they burst all three into a
hearty fit of laughter.
"She is playing
with her nephew," said Harold at last. "The Walkers have not come out
yet. I think that it would be well if you were to give me that cheque, mother,
and I were to return it in person."
"Certainly,
Harold. I think it would be very nice.
He went in through the
garden. Clara and the Doctor were sitting together in the dining-room. She
sprang to her feet at the sight of him.
"Oh, Harold, I
have been waiting for you so impatiently," she cried; "I saw you pass
the front windows half an hour ago. I would have come in if I dared. Do tell us
what has happened."
"I have come in to
thank you both. How can I repay you for your kindness? Here is your cheque,
Doctor. I have not needed it. I find that I can lay my hands on enough to pay
my creditors."
"Thank God!"
said Clara fervently.
"The sum is less
than I thought, and our resources considerably more. We have been able to do it
with ease."
"With ease!"
The Doctor's brow clouded and his manner grew cold. "I think, Harold, that
you would do better to take this money of mine, than to use that which seems to
you to be gained with ease."
"Thank you, sir.
If I borrowed from any one it would be from you. But my father has this very
sum, five thousand pounds, and, as I tell him, I owe him so much that I have no
compunction about owing him more."
"No compunction!
Surely there are some sacrifices which a son should not allow his parents to
make."
"Sacrifices! What
do you mean?"
"Is it possible
that you do not know how this money has been obtained?"
"I give you my
word, Doctor Walker, that I have no idea. I asked my father, but he refused to
tell me."
"I thought
not," said the Doctor, the gloom clearing from his brow. "I was sure
that you were not a man who, to clear yourself from a little money difficulty,
would sacrifice the happiness of your mother and the health of your
father."
"Good gracious!
what do you mean?"
"It is only right
that you should know. That money represents the commutation of your father's
pension. He has reduced himself to poverty, and intends to go to sea again to
earn a living."
"To sea again!
Impossible!"
"It is the truth.
Charles Westmacott has told Ida. He was with him in the City when he took his
poor pension about from dealer to dealer trying to sell it. He succeeded at
last, and hence the money."
"He has sold his
pension!" cried Harold, with his hands to his face. "My dear old dad
has sold his pension!" He rushed from the room, and burst wildly into the
presence of his parents once more. "I cannot take it, father," he
cried. "Better bankruptcy than that. Oh, if I had only known your plan! We
must have back the pension. Oh, mother, mother, how could you think me capable
of such selfishness? Give me the cheque, dad, and I will see this man to-night,
for I would sooner die like a dog in the ditch than touch a penny of this
money."
Now all this time,
while the tragi-comedy of life was being played in these three suburban villas,
while on a commonplace stage love and humor and fears and lights and shadows
were so swiftly succeeding each other, and while these three families, drifted
together by fate, were shaping each other's destinies and working out in their
own fashion the strange, intricate ends of human life, there were human eyes
which watched over every stage of the performance, and which were keenly
critical of every actor on it. Across the road beyond the green palings and the
close-cropped lawn, behind the curtains of their creeper-framed windows, sat
the two old ladies, Miss Bertha and Miss Monica Williams, looking out as from a
private box at all that was being enacted be fore them. The growing friendship
of the three families, the engagement of Harold Denver with Clara Walker, the
engagement of Charles Westmacott with her sister, the dangerous fascination
which the widow exercised over the Doctor, the preposterous behavior of the
Walker girls and the unhappiness which they had caused their father, not one of
these incidents escaped the notice of the two maiden ladies. Bertha the younger
had a smile or a sigh for the lovers, Monica the elder a frown or a shrug for
the elders. Every night they talked over what they had seen, and their own
dull, uneventful life took a warmth and a coloring from their neighbors as a
blank wall reflects a beacon fire.
And now it was destined
that they should experience the one keen sensation of their later years, the
one memorable incident from which all future incidents should be dated.
It was on the very
night which succeeded the events which have just been narrated, when suddenly
into Monica William's head, as she tossed upon her sleepless bed, there shot a
thought which made her sit up with a thrill and a gasp.
"Bertha,"
said she, plucking at the shoulder of her sister, "I have left the front
window open."
"No, Monica,
surely not." Bertha sat up also, and thrilled in sympathy.
"I am sure of it.
You remember I had forgotten to water the pots, and then I opened the window,
and Jane called me about the jam, and I have never been in the room
since."
"Good gracious,
Monica, it is a mercy that we have not been murdered in our beds. There was a
house broken into at Forest Hill last week. Shall we go down and shut it?"
"I dare not go
down alone, dear, but if you will come with me. Put on your slippers and
dressing-gown. We do not need a candle. Now, Bertha, we will go down
together."
Two little white
patches moved vaguely through the darkness, the stairs creaked, the door
whined, and they were at the front room window. Monica closed it gently down,
and fastened the snib.
"What a beautiful
moon!" said she, looking out. "We can see as clearly as if it were
day. How peaceful and quiet the three houses are over yonder! It seems quite
sad to see that `To Let' card upon number one. I wonder how number two will
like their going. For my part I could better spare that dreadful woman at
number three with her short skirts and her snake. But, oh, Bertha, look! look!!
look!!!" Her voice had fallen suddenly to a quivering whisper and she was
pointing to the Westmacotts' house. Her sister gave a gasp of horror, and stood
with a clutch at Monica's arm, staring in the same direction.
There was a light in
the front room, a slight, wavering light such as would be given by a small
candle or taper. The blind was down, but the light shone dimly through. Outside
in the garden, with his figure outlined against the luminous square, there
stood a man, his back to the road, his two hands upon the window ledge, and his
body rather bent as though he were trying to peep in past the blind. So
absolutely still and motionless was he that in spite of the moon they might
well have overlooked him were it not for that tell-tale light behind.
"Good
heaven!" gasped Bertha, "it is a burglar."
But her sister set her
mouth grimly and shook her head. "We shall see," she whispered.
"It may be something worse."
Swiftly and furtively
the man stood suddenly erect, and began to push the window slowly up. Then he
put one knee upon the sash, glanced round to see that all was safe, and climbed
over into the room. As he did so he had to push the blind aside. Then the two
spectators saw where the light came from. Mrs. Westmacott was standing, as
rigid as a statue, in the center of the room, with a lighted taper in her right
hand. For an instant they caught a glimpse of her stern face and her white
collar. Then the blind fell back into position, and the two figures disappeared
from their view.
"Oh, that dreadful
woman!" cried Monica. "That dreadful, dreadful woman! She was waiting
for him. You saw it with your own eyes, sister Bertha!"
"Hush, dear, hush
and listen!" said her more charitable companion. They pushed their own
window up once more, and watched from behind the curtains.
For a long time all was
silent within the house. The light still stood motionless as though Mrs.
Westmacott remained rigidly in the one position, while from time to time a
shadow passed in front of it to show that her midnight visitor was pacing up
and down in front of her. Once they saw his outline clearly, with his hands outstretched
as if in appeal or entreaty. Then suddenly there was a dull sound, a cry, the
noise of a fall, the taper was extinguished, and a dark figure fled in the
moonlight, rushed across the garden, and vanished amid the shrubs at the
farther side.
Then only did the two
old ladies understand that they had looked on whilst a tragedy had been
enacted. "Help!" they cried, and "Help!" in their high,
thin voices, timidly at first, but gathering volume as they went on, until the
Wilderness rang with their shrieks. Lights shone in all the windows opposite,
chains rattled , bars were unshot, doors opened, and out rushed friends to the
rescue. Harold, with a stick; the Admiral, with his sword, his grey head and
bare feet protruding from either end of a long brown ulster; finally, Doctor
Walker, with a poker, all ran to the help of the Westmacotts. Their door had
been already opened, and they crowded tumultuously into the front room.
Charles Westmacott,
white to his lips, was kneeling an the floor, supporting his aunt's head upon
his knee. She lay outstretched, dressed in her ordinary clothes, the
extinguished taper still grasped in her hand, no mark or wound upon her--pale,
placid, and senseless.
"Thank God you are
come, Doctor," said Charles, looking up. "Do tell me how she is, and
what I should do."
Doctor Walker kneeled
beside her, and passed his left hand over her head, while he grasped her pulse
with the right.
"She has had a
terrible blow," said he. "It must have been with some blunt weapon.
Here is the place behind the ear. But she is a woman of extraordinary physical
powers. Her pulse is full and slow. There is no stertor. It is my belief that
she is merely stunned, and that she is in no danger at all."
"Thank God for
that!"
"We must get her
to bed. We shall carry her upstairs, and then I shall send my girls in to her.
But who has done this?"
"Some robber"
said Charles. "You see that the window is open. She must have heard him
and come down, for she was always perfectly fearless. I wish to goodness she
had called me.
"But she was
dressed."
"Sometimes she
sits up very late."
"I did sit up very
late," said a voice. She had opened her eyes, and was blinking at them in
the lamplight. "A villain came in through the window and struck me with a
life-preserver. You can tell the police so when they come. Also that it was a
little fat man. Now, Charles, give me your arm and I shall go upstairs."
But her spirit was
greater than her strength, for, as she staggered to her feet, her head swam
round, and she would have fallen again had her nephew not thrown his arms round
her. They carried her upstairs among them and laid her upon the bed, where the
Doctor watched beside her, while Charles went off to the police-station, and
the Denvers mounted guard over the frightened maids.
Day had broken before
the several denizens of the Wilderness had all returned to their homes, the
police finished their inquiries, and all come back to its normal quiet. Mrs.
Westmacott had been left sleeping peacefully with a small chloral draught to
steady her nerves and a handkerchief soaked in arnica bound round her head. It
was with some surprise, therefore, that the Admiral received a note from her
about ten o'clock, asking him to be good enough to step in to her. He hurried
in, fearing that she might have taken some turn for the worse, but he was
reassured to find her sitting up in her bed, with Clara and Ida Walker in
attendance upon her. She had removed the handkerchief, and had put on a little
cap with pink ribbons, and a maroon dressing-jacket, daintily fulled at the
neck and sleeves.
"My dear
friend," said she as he entered, "I wish to make a last few remarks
to you. No, no," she continued, laughing, as she saw a look of dismay upon
his face. "I shall not dream of dying for at least another thirty years. A
woman should be ashamed to die before she is seventy. I wish, Clara, that you
would ask your father to step up. And you, Ida, just pass me my cigarettes, and
open me a bottle of stout."
"Now then,"
she continued, as the doctor joined their party. "I don't quite know what
I ought to say to you, Admiral. You want some very plain speaking to."
"'Pon my word,
ma'am, I don't know what you are talking about."
"The idea of you
at your age talking of going to sea, and leaving that dear, patient little wife
of yours at home, who has seen nothing of you all her life! It's all very well
for you. You have the life, and the change, and the excitement, but you don't
think of her eating her heart out in a dreary London lodging. You men are all
the same."
"Well, ma'am,
since you know so much, you probably know also that I have sold my pension. How
am I to live if I do not turn my hand to work?"
Mrs. Westmacott
produced a large registered envelope from beneath the sheets and tossed it over
to the old seaman.
"That excuse won't
do. There are your pension papers. Just see if they are right."
He broke the seal, and
out tumbled the very papers which he had made over to McAdam two days before.
"But what am I to
do with these now?" he cried in bewilderment.
"You will put them
in a safe place, or get a friend to do so, and, if you do your duty, you will
go to your wife and beg her pardon for having even for an instant thought of
leaving her."
The Admiral passed his
hand over his rugged forehead. "This is very good of you, ma'am" said
he, "very good and kind, and I know that you are a staunch friend, but for
all that these papers mean money, and though we may have been in broken water
lately, we are not quite in such straits as to have to signal to our friends.
When we do, ma'am, there's no one we would look to sooner than to you."
"Don't be
ridiculous!" said the widow. "You know nothing whatever about it, and
yet you stand there laying down the law. I'll have my way in the matter, and
you shall take the papers, for it is no favor that I am doing you, but simply a
restoration of stolen property."
"How that,
ma'am?"
"I am just going
to explain, though you might take a lady's word for it without asking any
questions. Now, what I am going to say is just between you four, and must go no
farther. I have my own reasons for wishing to keep it from the police. Who do
you think it was who struck me last night, Admiral?"
"Some villain,
ma'am. I don't know his name.
"But I do. It was
the same man who ruined or tried to ruin your son. It was my only brother,
Jeremiah.
"Ah!"
"I will tell you
about him--or a little about him, for he has done much which I would not care
to talk of, nor you to listen to. He was always a villain, smooth-spoken and
plausible, but a dangerous, subtle villain all the same. If I have some hard thoughts
about mankind I can trace them back to the childhood which I spent with my
brother. He is my only living relative, for my other brother, Charles's father,
was killed in the Indian mutiny.
"Our father was
rich, and when he died he made a good provision both for Jeremiah and for me.
He knew Jeremiah and he mistrusted him, however; so instead of giving him all
that he meant him to have he handed me over a part of it, telling me, with what
was almost his dying breath, to hold it in trust for my brother, and to use it
in his behalf when he should have squandered or lost all that he had. This
arrangement was meant to be a secret between my father and myself, but
unfortunately his words were overheard by the nurse, and she repeated them
afterwards to my brother, so that he came to know that I held some money in
trust for him. I suppose tobacco will not harm my head, Doctor? Thank you, then
I shall trouble you for the matches, Ida." She lit a cigarette, and leaned
back upon the pillow, with the blue wreaths curling from her lips.
"I cannot tell you
how often he has attempted to get that money from me. He has bullied, cajoled,
threatened, coaxed, done all that a man could do. I still held it with the
presentiment that a need for it would come. When I heard of this villainous
business, his flight, and his leaving his partner to face the storm, above all
that my old friend had been driven to surrender his income in order to make up
for my brother's defalcations, I felt that now indeed I had a need for it. I
sent in Charles yesterday to Mr. McAdam, and his client, upon hearing the facts
of the case, very graciously consented to give back the papers, and to take the
money which he had advanced. Not a word of thanks to me, Admiral. I tell you
that it was very cheap benevolence, for it was all done with his own money, and
how could I use it better?
"I thought that I
should probably hear from him soon, and I did. Last evening there was handed in
a note of the usual whining, cringing tone. He had come back from abroad at the
risk of his life and liberty, just in order that he might say good-bye to the
only sister he ever had, and to entreat my forgiveness for any pain which he
had caused me. He would never trouble me again, and he begged only that I would
hand over to him the sum which I held in trust for him. That, with what he had
already, would be enough to start him as an honest man in the new world, when
he would ever remember and pray for the dear sister who had been his savior.
That was the style of the letter, and it ended by imploring me to leave the
window-latch open, and to be in the front room at three in the morning, when he
would come to receive my last kiss and to bid me farewell.
"Bad as he was, I
could not, when he trusted me, betray him. I said nothing, but I was there at
the hour. He entered through the window, and implored me to give him the money.
He was terribly changed; gaunt, wolfish, and spoke like a madman. I told him
that I had spent the money. He gnashed his teeth at me, and swore it was his money.
I told him that I had spent it on him. He asked me how. I said in trying to
make him an honest man, and in repairing the results of his villainy. He
shrieked out a curse, and pulling something out of the breast of his coat--a
loaded stick, I think--he struck me with it, and I remembered nothing
more."
"The
blackguard!" cried the Doctor, "but the police must be hot upon his
track."
"I fancy
not," Mrs. Westmacott answered calmly. "As my brother is a
particularly tall, thin man, and as the police are looking for a short, fat
one, I do not think that it is very probable that they will catch him. It is
best, I think, that these little family matters should be adjusted in
private."
"My dear
ma'am," said the Admiral, "if it is indeed this man's money that has
bought back my pension, then I can have no scruples about taking it. You have
brought sunshine upon us, ma'am, when the clouds were at their darkest, for
here is my boy who insists upon returning the money which I got. He can keep it
now to pay his debts. For what you have done I can only ask God to bless you,
ma'am, and as to thanking you I can't even---- "
"Then pray don't
try," said the widow. "Now run away, Admiral, and make your peace
with Mrs. Denver. I am sure if I were she it would be a long time before I
should forgive you. As for me, I am going to America when Charles goes. You'll
take me so far, won't you, Ida? There is a college being built in Denver which
is to equip the woman of the future for the struggle of life, and especially
for her battle against man. Some months ago the committee offered me a
responsible situation upon the staff, and I have decided now to accept it, for
Charles's marriage removes the last tie which binds me to England. You will
write to me sometimes, my friends, and you will address your letters to
Professor Westmacott, Emancipation College, Denver. >From there I shall
watch how the glorious struggle goes in conservative old England, and if I am
needed you will find me here again fighting in the forefront of the fray.
Good-bye--but not you, girls; I have still a word I wish to say to you.
"Give me your
hand, Ida, and yours, Clara," said she when they were alone. "Oh, you
naughty little pusses, aren't you ashamed to look me in the face? Did you
think--did you really think that I was so very blind, and could not see your
little plot? You did it very well, I must say that, and really I think that I
like you better as you are. But you had all your pains for nothing, you little
conspirators, for I give you my word that I had quite made up my mind not to
have him."
And so within a few
weeks our little ladies from their observatory saw a mighty bustle in the
Wilderness, when two-horse carriages came, and coachmen with favors, to bear
away the twos who were destined to come back one. And they themselves in their
crackling silk dresses went across, as invited, to the big double wedding
breakfast which was held in the house of Doctor Walker. Then there was
health-drinking, and laughter, and changing of dresses, and rice-throwing when
the carriages drove up again, and two more couples started on that journey
which ends only with life itself.
Charles Westmacott is
now a flourishing ranchman in the western part of Texas, where he and his sweet
little wife are the two most popular persons in all that county. Of their aunt
they see little, but from time to time they see notices in the papers that
there is a focus of light in Denver, where mighty thunderbolts are being forged
which will one day bring the dominant sex upon their knees. The Admiral and his
wife still live at number one, while Harold and Clara have taken number two,
where Doctor Walker continues to reside. As to the business, it had been
reconstructed, and the energy and ability of the junior partner had soon made
up for all the ill that had been done by his senior. Yet with his sweet and
refined home atmosphere he is able to realize his wish, and to keep himself
free from the sordid aims and base ambitions which drag down the man whose
business lies too exclusively in the money market of the vast Babylon. As he
goes back every evening from the crowds of Throgmorton Street to the tree-lined
peaceful avenues of Norwood, so he has found it possible in spirit also to do
one's duties amidst the babel of the City, and yet to live beyond it.