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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1264 ***
+THE WHEELS OF CHANCE;
+A BICYCLING IDYLL
+
+By H.G. Wells
+
+1896
+
+
+
+
+To
+MY DEAR MOTHER
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ CHAPTER I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+ CHAPTER II
+ CHAPTER III
+ CHAPTER IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ CHAPTER V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+ CHAPTER VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ CHAPTER IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+ CHAPTER X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER’S HEART
+ CHAPTER XI. OMISSIONS
+ CHAPTER XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ CHAPTER XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+ CHAPTER XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+ CHAPTER XV. AN INTERLUDE
+ CHAPTER XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+ CHAPTER XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+ CHAPTER XVIII.
+ CHAPTER XIX.
+ CHAPTER XX. THE PURSUIT
+ CHAPTER XXI. AT BOGNOR
+ CHAPTER XXII.
+ CHAPTER XXIII.
+ CHAPTER XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+ CHAPTER XXV.
+ CHAPTER XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+ CHAPTER XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ CHAPTER XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+ CHAPTER XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+ CHAPTER XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+ CHAPTER XXXI.
+ CHAPTER XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+ CHAPTER XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ CHAPTER XXXIV.
+ CHAPTER XXXV.
+ CHAPTER XXXVI.
+ CHAPTER XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST
+ CHAPTER XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE
+ CHAPTER XXXIX.
+ CHAPTER XL.
+ CHAPTER XLI. THE ENVOY
+
+
+
+
+I.
+THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+
+
+If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)—if you had
+gone into the Drapery Emporium—which is really only magnificent for
+shop—of Messrs. Antrobus & Co.—a perfectly fictitious “Co.,” by the
+bye—of Putney, on the 14th of August, 1895, had turned to the
+right-hand side, where the blocks of white linen and piles of blankets
+rise up to the rail from which the pink and blue prints depend, you
+might have been served by the central figure of this story that is now
+beginning. He would have come forward, bowing and swaying, he would
+have extended two hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over
+the counter, and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and
+without the slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner, what he
+might have the pleasure of showing you. Under certain circumstances—as,
+for instance, hats, baby linen, gloves, silks, lace, or curtains—he
+would simply have bowed politely, and with a drooping expression, and
+making a kind of circular sweep, invited you to “step this way,” and so
+led you beyond his ken; but under other and happier
+conditions,—huckaback, blankets, dimity, cretonne, linen, calico, are
+cases in point,—he would have requested you to take a seat, emphasising
+the hospitality by leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back
+in a spasmodic manner, and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit
+his goods for your consideration. Under which happier circumstances you
+might—if of an observing turn of mind and not too much of a housewife
+to be inhuman—have given the central figure of this story less cursory
+attention.
+
+Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been chiefly
+to notice how little he was noticeable. He wore the black morning coat,
+the black tie, and the speckled grey nether parts (descending into
+shadow and mystery below the counter) of his craft. He was of a pallid
+complexion, hair of a kind of dirty fairness, greyish eyes, and a
+skimpy, immature moustache under his peaked indeterminate nose. His
+features were all small, but none ill-shaped. A rosette of pins
+decorated the lappel of his coat. His remarks, you would observe, were
+entirely what people used to call _cliché_, formulae not organic to the
+occasion, but stereotyped ages ago and learnt years since by heart.
+“This, madam,” he would say, “is selling very well.” “We are doing a
+very good article at four three a yard.” “We could show you something
+better, of course.” “No trouble, madam, I assure you.” Such were the
+simple counters of his intercourse. So, I say, he would have presented
+himself to your superficial observation. He would have danced about
+behind the counter, have neatly refolded the goods he had shown you,
+have put on one side those you selected, extracted a little book with a
+carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet from a fixture, made you out a little
+bill in that weak flourishing hand peculiar to drapers, and have bawled
+“Sayn!” Then a puffy little shop-walker would have come into view,
+looked at the bill for a second, very hard (showing you a parting down
+the middle of his head meanwhile), have scribbled a still more
+flourishing J. M. all over the document, have asked you if there was
+nothing more, have stood by you—supposing that you were paying
+cash—until the central figure of this story reappeared with the change.
+One glance more at him, and the puffy little shop-walker would have
+been bowing you out, with fountains of civilities at work all about
+you. And so the interview would have terminated.
+
+But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not concern
+itself with superficial appearances alone. Literature is revelation.
+Modern literature is indecorous revelation. It is the duty of the
+earnest author to tell you what you would not have seen—even at the
+cost of some blushes. And the thing that you would not have seen about
+this young man, and the thing of the greatest moment to this story, the
+thing that must be told if the book is to be written, was—let us face
+it bravely—the Remarkable Condition of this Young Man’s Legs.
+
+Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let us
+assume something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost
+professorial tone of the conscientious realist. Let us treat this young
+man’s legs as a mere diagram, and indicate the points of interest with
+the unemotional precision of a lecturer’s pointer. And so to our
+revelation. On the internal aspect of the right ankle of this young man
+you would have observed, ladies and gentlemen, a contusion and an
+abrasion; on the internal aspect of the left ankle a contusion also; on
+its external aspect a large yellowish bruise. On his left shin there
+were two bruises, one a leaden yellow graduating here and there into
+purple, and another, obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy
+red—tumid and threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral
+manner, an unnatural hardness and redness would have been discovered on
+the upper aspect of the calf, and above the knee and on the inner side,
+an extraordinary expanse of bruised surface, a kind of closely stippled
+shading of contused points. The right leg would be found to be bruised
+in a marvellous manner all about and under the knee, and particularly
+on the interior aspect of the knee. So far we may proceed with our
+details. Fired by these discoveries, an investigator might perhaps have
+pursued his inquiries further—to bruises on the shoulders, elbows, and
+even the finger joints, of the central figure of our story. He had
+indeed been bumped and battered at an extraordinary number of points.
+But enough of realistic description is as good as a feast, and we have
+exhibited enough for our purpose. Even in literature one must know
+where to draw the line.
+
+Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young
+shopman should have got his legs, and indeed himself generally, into
+such a dreadful condition. One might fancy that he had been sitting
+with his nether extremities in some complicated machinery, a
+threshing-machine, say, or one of those hay-making furies. But Sherlock
+Holmes (now happily dead) would have fancied nothing of the kind. He
+would have recognised at once that the bruises on the internal aspect
+of the left leg, considered in the light of the distribution of the
+other abrasions and contusions, pointed unmistakably to the violent
+impact of the Mounting Beginner upon the bicycling saddle, and that the
+ruinous state of the right knee was equally eloquent of the concussions
+attendant on that person’s hasty, frequently causeless, and invariably
+ill-conceived descents. One large bruise on the shin is even more
+characteristic of the ’prentice cyclist, for upon every one of them
+waits the jest of the unexpected treadle. You try at least to walk your
+machine in an easy manner, and whack!—you are rubbing your shin. So out
+of innocence we ripen. _Two_ bruises on that place mark a certain want
+of aptitude in learning, such as one might expect in a person unused to
+muscular exercise. Blisters on the hands are eloquent of the nervous
+clutch of the wavering rider. And so forth, until Sherlock is presently
+explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that the machine ridden
+is an old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the diamond frame, a
+cushioned tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and a gross weight all on
+of perhaps three-and-forty pounds.
+
+The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the attentive
+shopman that I had the honour of showing you at first, rises a vision
+of a nightly struggle, of two dark figures and a machine in a dark
+road,—the road, to be explicit, from Roehampton to Putney Hill,—and
+with this vision is the sound of a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping
+and grunting, a shouting of “Steer, man, steer!” a wavering unsteady
+flight, a spasmodic turning of the missile edifice of man and machine,
+and a collapse. Then you descry dimly through the dusk the central
+figure of this story sitting by the roadside and rubbing his leg at
+some new place, and his friend, sympathetic (but by no means
+depressed), repairing the displacement of the handle-bar.
+
+Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert itself,
+and drive him against all the conditions of his calling, against the
+counsels of prudence and the restrictions of his means, to seek the
+wholesome delights of exertion and danger and pain. And our first
+examination of the draper reveals beneath his draperies—the man! To
+which initial fact (among others) we shall come again in the end.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story is now
+going along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your purchases in
+his arms, to the warehouse, where the various articles you have
+selected will presently be packed by the senior porter and sent to you.
+Returning thence to his particular place, he lays hands on a folded
+piece of gingham, and gripping the corners of the folds in his hands,
+begins to straighten them punctiliously. Near him is an apprentice,
+apprenticed to the same high calling of draper’s assistant, a ruddy,
+red-haired lad in a very short tailless black coat and a very high
+collar, who is deliberately unfolding and refolding some patterns of
+cretonne. By twenty-one he too may hope to be a full-blown assistant,
+even as Mr. Hoopdriver. Prints depend from the brass rails above them,
+behind are fixtures full of white packages containing, as inscriptions
+testify, _Lino, Hd Bk_, and _Mull_. You might imagine to see them that
+the two were both intent upon nothing but smoothness of textile and
+rectitude of fold. But to tell the truth, neither is thinking of the
+mechanical duties in hand. The assistant is dreaming of the delicious
+time—only four hours off now—when he will resume the tale of his
+bruises and abrasions. The apprentice is nearer the long long thoughts
+of boyhood, and his imagination rides _cap-à-pie_ through the chambers
+of his brain, seeking some knightly quest in honour of that Fair Lady,
+the last but one of the girl apprentices to the dress-making upstairs.
+He inclines rather to street fighting against revolutionaries—because
+then she could see him from the window.
+
+Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little shop-walker,
+with a paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes extremely active. The
+shopwalker eyes the goods in hand. “Hoopdriver,” he says, “how’s that
+line of g-sez-x ginghams?”
+
+Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the uncertainties of
+dismounting. “They’re going fairly well, sir. But the larger checks
+seem hanging.”
+
+The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. “Any particular time
+when you want your holidays?” he asks.
+
+Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. “No—Don’t want them too late,
+sir, of course.”
+
+“How about this day week?”
+
+Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of the
+gingham folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of conflicting
+considerations. Can he learn it in a week? That’s the question.
+Otherwise Briggs will get next week, and he will have to wait until
+September—when the weather is often uncertain. He is naturally of a
+sanguine disposition. All drapers have to be, or else they could never
+have the faith they show in the beauty, washability, and unfading
+excellence of the goods they sell you. The decision comes at last.
+“That’ll do me very well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+
+The die is cast.
+
+The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the
+“dresses,” the next in the strict scale of precedence of the Drapery
+Emporium. Mr. Hoopdriver in alternating spasms anon straightens his
+gingham and anon becomes meditative, with his tongue in the hollow of
+his decaying wisdom tooth.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr. Pritchard
+spoke of “Scotland,” Miss Isaacs clamoured of Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson
+displayed a proprietary interest in the Norfolk Broads. “_I?_” said
+Hoopdriver when the question came to him. “Why, cycling, of course.”
+
+“You’re never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day after
+day?” said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+
+“I am,” said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the
+insufficient moustache. “I’m going for a Cycling Tour. Along the South
+Coast.”
+
+“Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you’ll get fine weather,”
+said Miss Howe. “And not come any nasty croppers.”
+
+“And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag,” said the junior
+apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one of the
+lessons at the top of Putney Hill.)
+
+“You stow it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and threateningly at
+the junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a tone of bitter
+contempt,—“Jampot.”
+
+“I’m getting fairly safe upon it now,” he told Miss Howe.
+
+At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the satirical
+efforts of the apprentice, but his mind was too full of the projected
+Tour to admit any petty delicacies of dignity. He left the supper table
+early, so that he might put in a good hour at the desperate gymnastics
+up the Roehampton Road before it would be time to come back for locking
+up. When the gas was turned off for the night he was sitting on the
+edge of his bed, rubbing arnica into his knee—a new and very big
+place—and studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of the
+“dresses,” who shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed and
+trying to smoke in the dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle in his
+life, but he felt Hoopdriver’s inexperience and offered such advice as
+occurred to him.
+
+“Have the machine thoroughly well oiled,” said Briggs, “carry one or
+two lemons with you, don’t tear yourself to death the first day, and
+sit upright. Never lose control of the machine, and always sound the
+bell on every possible opportunity. You mind those things, and nothing
+very much can’t happen to you, Hoopdriver—you take my word.”
+
+He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a curse or
+so at his pipe, and then break out with an entirely different set of
+tips.
+
+“Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It’s one of the
+worst things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the machine
+buckle—there was a man killed only the other day through his wheel
+buckling—don’t scorch, don’t ride on the foot-path, keep your own side
+of the road, and if you see a tramline, go round the corner at once,
+and hurry off into the next county—and always light up before dark. You
+mind just a few little things like that, Hoopdriver, and nothing much
+can’t happen to you—you take my word.”
+
+“Right you are!” said Hoopdriver. “Good-night, old man.”
+
+“Good-night,” said Briggs, and there was silence for a space, save for
+the succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode off into
+Dreamland on his machine, and was scarcely there before he was pitched
+back into the world of sense again.—Something—what was it?
+
+“Never oil the steering. It’s fatal,” a voice that came from round a
+fitful glow of light, was saying. “And clean the chain daily with
+black-lead. You mind just a few little things like that—”
+
+“Lord _love_ us!” said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over his
+ears.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+
+Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the year
+round, save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in the summer
+time, know the exquisite sensations of the First Holiday Morning. All
+the dreary, uninteresting routine drops from you suddenly, your chains
+fall about your feet. All at once you are Lord of yourself, Lord of
+every hour in the long, vacant day; you may go where you please, call
+none Sir or Madame, have a lappel free of pins, doff your black morning
+coat, and wear the colour of your heart, and be a Man. You grudge
+sleep, you grudge eating, and drinking even, their intrusion on those
+exquisite moments. There will be no more rising before breakfast in
+casual old clothing, to go dusting and getting ready in a cheerless,
+shutter-darkened, wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of,
+“Forward, Hoopdriver,” no more hasty meals, and weary attendance on
+fitful old women, for ten blessed days. The first morning is by far the
+most glorious, for you hold your whole fortune in your hands.
+Thereafter, every night, comes a pang, a spectre, that will not be
+exorcised—the premonition of the return. The shadow of going back, of
+being put in the cage again for another twelve months, lies blacker and
+blacker across the sunlight. But on the first morning of the ten the
+holiday has no past, and ten days seems as good as infinity.
+
+And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue sky
+with dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though celestial
+haymakers had been piling the swathes of last night’s clouds into cocks
+for a coming cartage. There were thrushes in the Richmond Road, and a
+lark on Putney Heath. The freshness of dew was in the air; dew or the
+relics of an overnight shower glittered on the leaves and grass.
+Hoopdriver had breakfasted early by Mrs. Gunn’s complaisance. He
+wheeled his machine up Putney Hill, and his heart sang within him.
+Halfway up, a dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across the road
+and vanished under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the
+variegated shrubs and trees had their blinds down still, and he would
+not have changed places with a soul in any one of them for a hundred
+pounds.
+
+He had on his new brown cycling suit—a handsome Norfolk jacket thing
+for 30/(sp.)—and his legs—those martyr legs—were more than consoled by
+thick chequered stockings, “thin in the foot, thick in the leg,” for
+all they had endured. A neat packet of American cloth behind the saddle
+contained his change of raiment, and the bell and the handle-bar and
+the hubs and lamp, albeit a trifle freckled by wear, glittered
+blindingly in the rising sunlight. And at the top of the hill, after
+only one unsuccessful attempt, which, somehow, terminated on the green,
+Hoopdriver mounted, and with a stately and cautious restraint in his
+pace, and a dignified curvature of path, began his great Cycling Tour
+along the Southern Coast.
+
+There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage, and that
+is—voluptuous curves. He did not ride fast, he did not ride straight,
+an exacting critic might say he did not ride well—but he rode
+generously, opulently, using the whole road and even nibbling at the
+footpath. The excitement never flagged. So far he had never passed or
+been passed by anything, but as yet the day was young and the road was
+clear. He doubted his steering so much that, for the present, he had
+resolved to dismount at the approach of anything else upon wheels. The
+shadows of the trees lay very long and blue across the road, the
+morning sunlight was like amber fire.
+
+At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle trough
+stands, he turned towards Kingston and set himself to scale the little
+bit of ascent. An early heath-keeper, in his velveteen jacket,
+marvelled at his efforts. And while he yet struggled, the head of a
+carter rose over the brow.
+
+At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous
+determination, resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and the
+machine stopped dead. He was trying to think what he did with his right
+leg whilst getting off. He gripped the handles and released the brake,
+standing on the left pedal and waving his right foot in the air.
+Then—these things take so long in the telling—he found the machine was
+falling over to the right. While he was deciding upon a plan of action,
+gravitation appears to have been busy. He was still irresolute when he
+found the machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon it, and a vague
+feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly with his
+shin. This happened when he was just level with the heath-keeper. The
+man in the approaching cart stood up to see the ruins better.
+
+“_That_ ain’t the way to get off,” said the heath-keeper.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted askew
+again. He said something under his breath. He would have to unscrew the
+beastly thing.
+
+“_That_ ain’t the way to get off,” repeated the heath-keeper, after a
+silence.
+
+“_I_ know that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to overlook
+the new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled the wallet
+behind the saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+
+“If you know it ain’t the way to get off—whaddyer do it for?” said the
+heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle. He was
+annoyed. “That’s my business, I suppose,” he said, fumbling with the
+screw. The unusual exertion had made his hands shake frightfully.
+
+The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his hands
+behind his back. “You’ve broken yer ’andle, ain’t yer?” he said
+presently. Just then the screw hammer slipped off the nut. Mr.
+Hoopdriver used a nasty, low word.
+
+“They’re trying things, them bicycles,” said the heath-keeper,
+charitably. “Very trying.” Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious turn
+and suddenly stood up—he was holding the front wheel between his knees.
+“I wish,” said he, with a catch in his voice, “I wish you’d leave off
+staring at me.”
+
+Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began
+replacing the screw hammer in the wallet.
+
+The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows, and
+certainly he stared harder than he did before. “You’re pretty
+unsociable,” he said slowly, as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles and
+stood ready to mount as soon as the cart had passed.
+
+The indignation gathered slowly but surely. “Why don’t you ride on a
+private road of your own if no one ain’t to speak to you?” asked the
+heath-keeper, perceiving more and more clearly the bearing of the
+matter. “Can’t no one make a passin’ remark to you, Touchy? Ain’t I
+good enough to speak to you? Been struck wooden all of a sudden?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was rigid
+with emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar Square. But
+the heath-keeper felt his honour was at stake.
+
+“Don’t you make no remarks to ’_im_,” said the keeper as the carter
+came up broadside to them. “’E’s a bloomin’ dook, ’e is. ’E don’t
+converse with no one under a earl. ’E’s off to Windsor, ’e is; that’s
+why ’e’s stickin’ his be’ind out so haughty. Pride! Why, ’e’s got so
+much of it, ’e has to carry some of it in that there bundle there, for
+fear ’e’d bust if ’e didn’t ease hisself a bit—’_E_—”
+
+But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along the
+road, in a spasmodic attempt to remount. He missed the treadle once and
+swore viciously, to the keeper’s immense delight. “Nar! Nar!” said the
+heath-keeper.
+
+In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific lurch
+of the machine, the heath-keeper dropped out of earshot. Mr. Hoopdriver
+would have liked to look back at his enemy, but he usually twisted
+round and upset if he tried that. He had to imagine the indignant
+heath-keeper telling the carter all about it. He tried to infuse as
+much disdain as possible into his retreating aspect.
+
+He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up the
+little rise to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston Vale; and
+so remarkable is the psychology of cycling, that he rode all the
+straighter and easier because the emotions the heath-keeper had aroused
+relieved his mind of the constant expectation of collapse that had
+previously unnerved him. To ride a bicycle properly is very like a love
+affair—chiefly it is a matter of faith. Believe you do it, and the
+thing is done; doubt, and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+
+Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings towards
+the heath-keeper were either vindictive or remorseful,—vindictive for
+the aggravation or remorseful for his own injudicious display of ill
+temper. As a matter of fact, they were nothing of the sort. A sudden, a
+wonderful gratitude, possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had
+resumed its sway with a sudden accession of splendour. At the crest of
+the hill he put his feet upon the footrests, and now riding moderately
+straight, went, with a palpitating brake, down that excellent descent.
+A new delight was in his eyes, quite over and above the pleasure of
+rushing through the keen, sweet, morning air. He reached out his thumb
+and twanged his bell out of sheer happiness.
+
+“‘He’s a bloomin’ Dook—he is!’” said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself, in a
+soft undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again, “‘He’s a
+bloomin’ Dook!”’ He opened his mouth in a silent laugh. It was having a
+decent cut did it. His social superiority had been so evident that even
+a man like that noticed it. No more Manchester Department for ten days!
+Out of Manchester, a Man. The draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished
+from existence. Instead was a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a
+five-pound note, two sovereigns, and some silver at various convenient
+points of his person. At any rate as good as a Dook, if not precisely
+in the peerage. Involuntarily at the thought of his funds Hoopdriver’s
+right hand left the handle and sought his breast pocket, to be
+immediately recalled by a violent swoop of the machine towards the
+cemetery. Whirroo! Just missed that half-brick! Mischievous brutes
+there were in the world to put such a thing in the road. Some blooming
+’Arry or other! Ought to prosecute a few of these roughs, and the rest
+would know better. That must be the buckle of the wallet was rattling
+on the mud-guard. How cheerfully the wheels buzzed!
+
+The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was waking, and
+windows rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came out of one of the
+houses and yelped at him. He got off, rather breathless, at the foot of
+Kingston Hill, and pushed up. Halfway up, an early milk chariot rattled
+by him; two dirty men with bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt
+sure they were burglars, carrying home the swag.
+
+It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling, a
+slight tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top that he
+rode straighter than he did before. The pleasure of riding straight
+blotted out these first intimations of fatigue. A man on horseback
+appeared; Hoopdriver, in a tumult of soul at his own temerity, passed
+him. Then down the hill into Kingston, with the screw hammer, behind in
+the wallet, rattling against the oil can. He passed, without
+misadventure, a fruiterer’s van and a sluggish cartload of bricks. And
+in Kingston Hoopdriver, with the most exquisite sensations, saw the
+shutters half removed from a draper’s shop, and two yawning youths, in
+dusty old black jackets and with dirty white comforters about their
+necks, clearing up the planks and boxes and wrappers in the window,
+preparatory to dressing it out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the
+previous day. But now, was he not a bloomin’ Dook, palpably in the
+sight of common men? Then round the corner to the right—bell banged
+furiously—and so along the road to Surbiton.
+
+Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with an
+expression of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed, and to
+the right of him for a mile or so the weltering Thames flashed and
+glittered. Talk of your _joie de vivre!_ Albeit with a certain cramping
+sensation about the knees and calves slowly forcing itself upon his
+attention.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+
+
+Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your fast
+young men. If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have profited more
+by his mother’s instructions. He regarded the feminine sex as something
+to bow to and smirk at from a safe distance. Years of the intimate
+remoteness of a counter leave their mark upon a man. It was an
+adventure for him to take one of the Young Ladies of the establishment
+to church on a Sunday. Few modern young men could have merited less the
+epithet “Dorg.” But I have thought at times that his machine may have
+had something of the blade in its metal. Decidedly it was a machine
+with a past. Mr. Hoopdriver had bought it second-hand from Hare’s in
+Putney, and Hare said it had had several owners. Second-hand was
+scarcely the word for it, and Hare was mildly puzzled that he should be
+selling such an antiquity. He said it was perfectly sound, if a little
+old-fashioned, but he was absolutely silent about its moral character.
+It may even have begun its career with a poet, say, in his glorious
+youth. It may have been the bicycle of a Really Bad Man. No one who has
+ever ridden a cycle of any kind but will witness that the things are
+unaccountably prone to pick up bad habits—and keep them.
+
+It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent
+emotions directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an
+absolutely unprecedented Wabble—unprecedented so far as Hoopdriver’s
+experience went. It “showed off”—the most decadent sinuosity. It left a
+track like one of Beardsley’s feathers. He suddenly realised, too, that
+his cap was loose on his head and his breath a mere remnant.
+
+The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed in a
+beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her outline in gold
+and left the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly aware that she was
+young, rather slender, dark, and with a bright colour and bright eyes.
+Strange doubts possessed him as to the nature of her nether costume. He
+had heard of such things of course. French, perhaps. Her handles
+glittered; a jet of sunlight splashed off her bell blindingly. She was
+approaching the high road along an affluent from the villas of
+Surbiton. The roads converged slantingly. She was travelling at about
+the same pace as Mr. Hoopdriver. The appearances pointed to a meeting
+at the fork of the roads.
+
+Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By contrast
+with her he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get off at once and
+pretend something was wrong with his treadle? Yet even the end of
+getting off was an uncertainty. That last occasion on Putney Heath! On
+the other hand, what would happen if he kept on? To go very slow seemed
+the abnegation of his manhood. To crawl after a mere schoolgirl!
+Besides, she was not riding very fast. On the other hand, to thrust
+himself in front of her, consuming the road in his tendril-like
+advance, seemed an incivility—greed. He would leave her such a very
+little. His business training made him prone to bow and step aside. If
+only one could take one’s hands off the handles, one might pass with a
+silent elevation of the hat, of course. But even that was a little
+suggestive of a funeral.
+
+Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was flushed,
+a little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips fell apart. She
+may have been riding hard, but it looked uncommonly like a faint smile.
+And the things were—yes!—_rationals!_ Suddenly an impulse to bolt from
+the situation became clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively,
+intending to pass her. He jerked against some tin thing on the road,
+and it flew up between front wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round
+towards her. Had the machine a devil?
+
+At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done wiser
+to dismount. He gave a frantic ‘whoop’ and tried to get round, then, as
+he seemed falling over, he pulled the handles straight again and to the
+left by an instinctive motion, and shot behind her hind wheel, missing
+her by a hair’s breadth. The pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to
+recover, and found himself jumped up on the pavement and riding
+squarely at a neat wooden paling. He struck this with a terrific impact
+and shot forward off his saddle into a clumsy entanglement. Then he
+began to tumble over sideways, and completed the entire figure in a
+sitting position on the gravel, with his feet between the fork and the
+stay of the machine. The concussion on the gravel shook his entire
+being. He remained in that position, wishing that he had broken his
+neck, wishing even more heartily that he had never been born. The glory
+of life had departed. Bloomin’ Dook, indeed! These unwomanly women!
+
+There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and the
+Young Lady in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned round and
+come back to him. The warm sunlight now was in her face. “Are you
+hurt?” she said. She had a pretty, clear, girlish voice. She was really
+very young—quite a girl, in fact. And rode so well! It was a bitter
+draught.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. “Not a bit,” he said, a little
+ruefully. He became painfully aware that large patches of gravel
+scarcely improve the appearance of a Norfolk suit. “I’m very sorry
+indeed—”
+
+“It’s my fault,” she said, interrupting and so saving him on the very
+verge of calling her ‘Miss.’ (He knew ‘Miss’ was wrong, but it was
+deep-seated habit with him.) “I tried to pass you on the wrong side.”
+Her face and eyes seemed all alive. “It’s my place to be sorry.”
+
+“But it was my steering—”
+
+“I ought to have seen you were a Novice”—with a touch of superiority.
+“But you rode so straight coming along there!”
+
+She really was—dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver’s feelings passed the
+nadir. When he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of the
+aristocratic in his voice.
+
+“It’s my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that’s no excuse for my
+ah! blundering—”
+
+“Your finger’s bleeding,” she said, abruptly.
+
+He saw his knuckle was barked. “I didn’t feel it,” he said, feeling
+manly.
+
+“You don’t at first. Have you any sticking-plaster? If not—” She
+balanced her machine against herself. She had a little side pocket, and
+she whipped out a small packet of sticking-plaster with a pair of
+scissors in a sheath at the side, and cut off a generous portion. He
+had a wild impulse to ask her to stick it on for him. Controlled.
+“Thank you,” he said.
+
+“Machine all right?” she asked, looking past him at the prostrate
+vehicle, her hands on her handle-bar. For the first time Hoopdriver did
+not feel proud of his machine.
+
+He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over his
+shoulder, and she was gone, turned his head over the other shoulder
+down the road, and she was riding off. “_Orf!_” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+“Well, I’m blowed!—Talk about Slap Up!” (His aristocratic refinement
+rarely adorned his speech in his private soliloquies.) His mind was
+whirling. One fact was clear. A most delightful and novel human being
+had flashed across his horizon and was going out of his life again. The
+Holiday madness was in his blood. She looked round!
+
+At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty ascent.
+Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he _never_ be able to get up
+on the thing again? She will be round the corner in a minute. Once
+more. Ah! Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time! He gripped the handles
+and put his head down. He would overtake her.
+
+The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a moment
+over the civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed at the pedals
+with archaic violence. So Palaeolithic man may have ridden his simple
+bicycle of chipped flint in pursuit of his exogamous affinity. She
+vanished round the corner. His effort was Titanic. What should he say
+when he overtook her? That scarcely disturbed him at first. How fine
+she had looked, flushed with the exertion of riding, breathing a little
+fast, but elastic and active! Talk about your ladylike, homekeeping
+girls with complexions like cold veal! But what should he say to her?
+That was a bother. And he could not lift his cap without risking a
+repetition of his previous ignominy. She was a real Young Lady. No
+mistake about that! None of your blooming shop girls. (There is no
+greater contempt in the world than that of shop men for shop girls,
+unless it be that of shop girls for shop men.) Phew! This was work. A
+certain numbness came and went at his knees.
+
+“May I ask to whom I am indebted?” he panted to himself, trying it
+over. That might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a
+shilling—while you wait. He was getting winded. The road was certainly
+a bit uphill. He turned the corner and saw a long stretch of road, and
+a grey dress vanishing. He set his teeth. Had he gained on her at all?
+“Monkey on a gridiron!” yelped a small boy. Hoopdriver redoubled his
+efforts. His breath became audible, his steering unsteady, his
+pedalling positively ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his
+eye, irritant as acid. The road really was uphill beyond dispute. All
+his physiology began to cry out at him. A last tremendous effort
+brought him to the corner and showed yet another extent of shady
+roadway, empty save for a baker’s van. His front wheel suddenly
+shrieked aloud. “Oh Lord!” said Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+
+Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a moment
+his legs felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his machine against the
+grassy edge of the path and sat down panting. His hands were gnarled
+with swollen veins and shaking palpably, his breath came viscid.
+
+“I’m hardly in training yet,” he remarked. His legs had gone leaden. “I
+don’t feel as though I’d had a mouthful of breakfast.” Presently he
+slapped his side pocket and produced therefrom a brand-new cigarette
+case and a packet of Vansittart’s Red Herring cigarettes. He filled the
+case. Then his eye fell with a sudden approval on the ornamental
+chequering of his new stockings. The expression in his eyes faded
+slowly to abstract meditation.
+
+“She _was_ a stunning girl,” he said. “I wonder if I shall ever set
+eyes on her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she
+thought of me.”
+
+The phrase ‘bloomin’ Dook’ floated into his mind with a certain flavour
+of comfort.
+
+He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not even
+look up when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes before he
+roused himself. “What rot it is! What’s the good of thinking such
+things,” he said. “I’m only a blessed draper’s assistant.” (To be
+exact, he did not say blessed. The service of a shop may polish a man’s
+exterior ways, but the ’prentices’ dormitory is an indifferent school
+for either manners or morals.) He stood up and began wheeling his
+machine towards Esher. It was going to be a beautiful day, and the
+hedges and trees and the open country were all glorious to his
+town-tired eyes. But it was a little different from the elation of his
+start.
+
+“Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle,” said a nursemaid on the path to
+a personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little. “‘Gentleman
+wizzer bicitle,’—‘bloomin’ Dook’—I can’t look so very seedy,” he said
+to himself.
+
+“I _wonder_—I should just like to know—”
+
+There was something very comforting in the track of _her_ pneumatic
+running straight and steady along the road before him. It must be hers.
+No other pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It was just
+possible, of course, that he might see her once more—coming back.
+Should he try and say something smart? He speculated what manner of
+girl she might be. Probably she was one of these here New Women. He had
+a persuasion the cult had been maligned. Anyhow she was a Lady. And
+rich people, too! Her machine couldn’t have cost much under twenty
+pounds. His mind came round and dwelt some time on her visible self.
+Rational dress didn’t look a bit unwomanly. However, he disdained to be
+one of your fortune-hunters. Then his thoughts drove off at a tangent.
+He would certainly have to get something to eat at the next public
+house.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+
+
+In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of Granby
+at Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw the inn in
+front of him, he mounted his machine again and rode bravely up to the
+doorway. Burton and biscuit and cheese he had, which, indeed, is Burton
+in its proper company; and as he was eating there came a middleaged man
+in a drab cycling suit, very red and moist and angry in the face, and
+asked bitterly for a lemon squash. And he sat down upon the seat in the
+bar and mopped his face. But scarcely had he sat down before he got up
+again and stared out of the doorway.
+
+“Damn!” said he. Then, “Damned Fool!”
+
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece of
+cheese in his cheek.
+
+The man in drab faced him. “I called myself a Damned Fool, sir. Have
+you any objections?”
+
+“Oh!—None. None,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I thought you spoke to me. I
+didn’t hear what you said.”
+
+“To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic temperament, sir,
+is hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative disposition and a phlegmatic
+temperament, all very well. But energy and philosophy—!”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said nothing.
+
+“There’s no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise, gentle
+exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And no sooner do I
+get on the accursed machine, than off I go hammer and tongs; I never
+look to right or left, never notice a flower, never see a view, get
+hot, juicy, red,—like a grilled chop. Here I am, sir. Come from
+Guildford in something under the hour. _why_, sir?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+
+“Because I’m a damned fool, sir. Because I’ve reservoirs and reservoirs
+of muscular energy, and one or other of them is always leaking. It’s a
+most interesting road, birds and trees, I’ve no doubt, and wayside
+flowers, and there’s nothing I should enjoy more than watching them.
+But I can’t. Get me on that machine, and I have to go. Get me on
+anything, and I have to go. And I don’t want to go a bit. _Why_ should
+a man rush about like a rocket, all pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me
+furious. I can assure you, sir, I go scorching along the road, and
+cursing aloud at myself for doing it. A quiet, dignified, philosophical
+man, that’s what I am—at bottom; and here I am dancing with rage and
+swearing like a drunken tinker at a perfect stranger—
+
+“But my day’s wasted. I’ve lost all that country road, and now I’m on
+the fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the morning! Ugh!
+Thank Heaven, sir, you have not the irritable temperament, that you are
+not goaded to madness by your endogenous sneers, by the eternal
+wrangling of an uncomfortable soul and body. I tell you, I lead a cat
+and dog life—But what _is_ the use of talking?—It’s all of a piece!”
+
+He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the lemon
+squash into his mouth, paid for it, and without any further remark
+strode to the door. Mr. Hoopdriver was still wondering what to say when
+his interlocutor vanished. There was a noise of a foot spurning the
+gravel, and when Mr. Hoopdriver reached the doorway, the man in drab
+was a score of yards Londonward. He had already gathered pace. He
+pedalled with ill-suppressed anger, and his head was going down. In
+another moment he flew swiftly out of sight under the railway arch, and
+Mr. Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+
+After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and—being now a
+little rested about the muscles of the knees—resumed his saddle and
+rode on in the direction of Ripley, along an excellent but undulating
+road. He was pleased to find his command over his machine already
+sensibly increased. He set himself little exercises as he went along
+and performed them with variable success. There was, for instance,
+steering in between a couple of stones, say a foot apart, a deed of
+little difficulty as far as the front wheel is concerned. But the back
+wheel, not being under the sway of the human eye, is apt to take a
+vicious jump over the obstacle, which sends a violent concussion all
+along the spine to the skull, and will even jerk a loosely fastened hat
+over the eyes, and so lead to much confusion. And again, there was
+taking the hand or hands off the handlebar, a thing simple in itself,
+but complex in its consequences. This particularly was a feat Mr.
+Hoopdriver desired to do, for several divergent reasons; but at present
+it simply led to convulsive balancings and novel and inelegant modes of
+dismounting.
+
+The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are those
+who consider it ornamental, and would regard a face deprived of its
+assistance with pity or derision; but it is doubtful whether our esteem
+is dictated so much by a sense of its absolute beauty as by the
+vitiating effect of a universally prevalent fashion. In the case of
+bicycle students, as in the young of both sexes, its inutility is
+aggravated by its persistent annoyance—it requires constant attention.
+Until one can ride with one hand, and search for, secure, and use a
+pocket handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant
+series of descents. Nothing can be further from the author’s ambition
+than a wanton realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver’s nose is a plain and salient
+fact, and face it we must. And, in addition to this inconvenience,
+there are flies. Until the cyclist can steer with one hand, his face is
+given over to Beelzebub. Contemplative flies stroll over it, and trifle
+absently with its most sensitive surfaces. The only way to dislodge
+them is to shake the head forcibly and to writhe one’s features
+violently. This is not only a lengthy and frequently ineffectual
+method, but one exceedingly terrifying to foot passengers. And again,
+sometimes the beginner rides for a space with one eye closed by
+perspiration, giving him a waggish air foreign to his mood and ill
+calculated to overawe the impertinent. However, you will appreciate now
+the motive of Mr. Hoopdriver’s experiments. He presently attained
+sufficient dexterity to slap himself smartly and violently in the face
+with his right hand, without certainly overturning the machine; but his
+pocket handkerchief might have been in California for any good it was
+to him while he was in the saddle.
+
+Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little
+uncomfortable, he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the
+background of his consciousness was the sense that about this time
+Briggs would be half-way through his window dressing, and Gosling, the
+apprentice, busy, with a chair turned down over the counter and his
+ears very red, trying to roll a piece of huckaback—only those who have
+rolled pieces of huckaback know quite how detestable huckaback is to
+roll—and the shop would be dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and
+snappy. And here was quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the
+desire took one, without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of
+“Sayn,” no folding of remnants, no voice to shout, “Hoopdriver,
+forward!” And once he almost ran over something wonderful, a little,
+low, red beast with a yellowish tail, that went rushing across the road
+before him. It was the first weasel he had ever seen in his cockney
+life. There were miles of this, scores of miles of this before him,
+pinewood and oak forest, purple, heathery moorland and grassy down,
+lush meadows, where shining rivers wound their lazy way, villages with
+square-towered, flint churches, and rambling, cheap, and hearty inns,
+clean, white, country towns, long downhill stretches, where one might
+ride at one’s ease (overlooking a jolt or so), and far away, at the end
+of it all,—the sea.
+
+What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps he had
+been dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young Lady in Grey,
+and perhaps the memory of it was making itself a little lair in a
+corner of his brain from which it could distress him in the retrospect
+by suggesting that he looked like a fool; but for the present that
+trouble was altogether in abeyance. The man in drab—evidently a
+swell—had spoken to him as his equal, and the knees of his brown suit
+and the chequered stockings were ever before his eyes. (Or, rather, you
+could see the stockings by carrying the head a little to one side.) And
+to feel, little by little, his mastery over this delightful,
+treacherous machine, growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his
+knees reasserted themselves, and he dismounted and sat awhile by the
+roadside.
+
+It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where a
+bridge crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the other
+cyclist in brown. It is well to notice the fact here, although the
+interview was of the slightest, because it happened that subsequently
+Hoopdriver saw a great deal more of this other man in brown. The other
+cyclist in brown had a machine of dazzling newness, and a punctured
+pneumatic lay across his knees. He was a man of thirty or more, with a
+whitish face, an aquiline nose, a lank, flaxen moustache, and very fair
+hair, and he scowled at the job before him. At the sight of him Mr.
+Hoopdriver pulled himself together, and rode by with the air of one
+born to the wheel. “A splendid morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “and a
+fine surface.”
+
+“The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!” said the
+other man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver heard the mumble
+and did not distinguish the words, and he felt a pleasing sense of
+having duly asserted the wide sympathy that binds all cyclists
+together, of having behaved himself as becomes one of the brotherhood
+of the wheel. The other man in brown watched his receding aspect.
+“Greasy proletarian,” said the other man in brown, feeling a prophetic
+dislike. “Got a suit of brown, the very picture of this. One would
+think his sole aim in life had been to caricature me. It’s Fortune’s
+way with me. Look at his insteps on the treadles! Why does Heaven make
+such men?”
+
+And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to the
+business in hand.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that he
+felt sure was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then he
+dismounted and pushed his machine; until the proximity of the village
+and a proper pride drove him into the saddle again.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+
+Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in its
+beginning if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was perhaps
+half-way between Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver dropped down a
+little hill, where, unfenced from the road, fine mossy trees and
+bracken lay on either side; and looking up he saw an open country
+before him, covered with heather and set with pines, and a yellow road
+running across it, and half a mile away perhaps, a little grey figure
+by the wayside waving something white. “Never!” said Mr. Hoopdriver
+with his hands tightening on the handles.
+
+He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a stone,
+wabbled, recovered, and began riding faster at once, with his eyes
+ahead. “It can’t be,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a limp
+numbness had resumed possession of his legs. “It _can’t_ be,” he
+repeated, feeling every moment more assured that it _was_. “Lord! I
+don’t know even now,” said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs awhirling), and then,
+“Blow my legs!”
+
+But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and gathering
+flies like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden. Then the road began
+to rise, and the resistance of the pedals grew. As he crested the hill
+he saw her, not a hundred yards away from him. “It’s her!” he said.
+“It’s her—right enough. It’s the suit’s done it,”—which was truer even
+than Mr. Hoopdriver thought. But now she was not waving her
+handkerchief, she was not even looking at him. She was wheeling her
+machine slowly along the road towards him, and admiring the pretty
+wooded hills towards Weybridge. She might have been unaware of his
+existence for all the recognition he got.
+
+For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that
+handkerchief been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and
+scarlet, and felt so. It must be her coquetry—the handkerchief was
+indisputable. Should he ride up to her and get off, or get off and ride
+up to her? It was as well she didn’t look, because he would certainly
+capsize if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was her consideration. Even
+as he hesitated he was upon her. She must have heard his breathing. He
+gripped the brake. Steady! His right leg waved in the air, and he came
+down heavily and staggering, but erect. She turned her eyes upon him
+with admirable surprise.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine, raise
+his cap, and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as much. He
+was a man singularly devoid of the minutiæ of self-consciousness, and
+he was quite unaware of a tail of damp hair lying across his forehead,
+and just clearing his eyes, and of the general disorder of his
+coiffure. There was an interrogative pause.
+
+“What can I have the pleasure—” began Mr. Hoopdriver, insinuatingly. “I
+mean” (remembering his emancipation and abruptly assuming his most
+aristocratic intonation), “can I be of any assistance to you?”
+
+The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily, “None,
+thank you.” She glanced away from him and made as if she would proceed.
+
+“Oh!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen again.
+It was so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was she
+coquetting? Or had he—?
+
+“Excuse me, one minute,” he said, as she began to wheel her machine
+again.
+
+“Yes?” she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour in her
+cheeks deepening.
+
+“I should not have alighted if I had not—imagined that you—er, waved
+something white—” He paused.
+
+She looked at him doubtfully. He _had_ seen it! She decided that he was
+not an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but an innocent
+soul meaning well while seeking happiness. “I _did_ wave my
+handkerchief,” she said. “I’m very sorry. I am expecting—a friend, a
+gentleman,”—she seemed to flush pink for a minute. “He is riding a
+bicycle and dressed in—in brown; and at a distance, you know—”
+
+“Oh, quite!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion against
+his bitter disappointment. “Certainly.”
+
+“I’m awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all that.”
+
+“No trouble. ’Ssure you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and bowing
+over his saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could not find it in
+his heart to tell her that the man was beyond there with a punctured
+pneumatic. He looked back along the road and tried to think of
+something else to say. But the gulf in the conversation widened rapidly
+and hopelessly. “There’s nothing further,” began Mr. Hoopdriver
+desperately, recurring to his stock of _clichés_.
+
+“Nothing, thank you,” she said decisively. And immediately, “This _is_
+the Ripley road?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Ripley is about two miles from here.
+According to the mile-stones.”
+
+“Thank you,” she said warmly. “Thank you so much. I felt sure there was
+no mistake. And I really am awfully sorry—”
+
+“Don’t mention it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t mention it.” He
+hesitated and gripped his handles to mount. “It’s me,” he said, “ought
+to be sorry.” Should he say it? Was it an impertinence? Anyhow!—“Not
+being the other gentleman, you know.”
+
+He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even as he
+smiled it; felt she disapproved—that she despised him, was overcome
+with shame at her expression, turned his back upon her, and began (very
+clumsily) to mount. He did so with a horrible swerve, and went
+pedalling off, riding very badly, as he was only too painfully aware.
+Nevertheless, thank Heaven for the mounting! He could not see her
+because it was so dangerous for him to look round, but he could imagine
+her indignant and pitiless. He felt an unspeakable idiot. One had to be
+so careful what one said to Young Ladies, and he’d gone and treated her
+just as though she was only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He
+always _was_ a fool. You could tell from her manner she didn’t think
+him a gentleman. One glance, and she seemed to look clear through him
+and all his presence. What rot it was venturing to speak to a girl like
+that! With her education she was bound to see through him at once.
+
+How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel what
+slush his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What was it? ‘Not
+being the other gentleman, you know!’ No point in it. And
+‘_gentleman!_’ What _could_ she be thinking of him?
+
+But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from her
+thoughts almost before he had vanished round the corner. She had
+thought no ill of him. His manifest awe and admiration of her had given
+her not an atom of offence. But for her just now there were weightier
+things to think about, things that would affect all the rest of her
+life. She continued slowly walking her machine Londonward. Presently
+she stopped. “Oh! Why _doesn’t_ he come?” she said, and stamped her
+foot petulantly. Then, as if in answer, coming down the hill among the
+trees, appeared the other man in brown, dismounted and wheeling his
+machine.
+
+
+
+
+IX.
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came to
+him, with an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen the last
+of the Young Lady in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery of the
+machine, the present machinery of Fate, the _deus ex machina_, so to
+speak, was against him. The bicycle, torn from this attractive young
+woman, grew heavier and heavier, and continually more unsteady. It
+seemed a choice between stopping at Ripley or dying in the flower of
+his days. He went into the Unicorn, after propping his machine outside
+the door, and, as he cooled down and smoked his Red Herring cigarette
+while the cold meat was getting ready, he saw from the window the Young
+Lady in Grey and the other man in brown, entering Ripley.
+
+They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which
+sheltered him, but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk and
+incapable attitude against the doorway, humping its rackety mud-guard
+and leering at them with its darkened lantern eye, drove them away—so
+it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver—to the spacious swallow of the Golden
+Dragon. The young lady was riding very slowly, but the other man in
+brown had a bad puncture and was wheeling his machine. Mr. Hoopdriver
+noted his flaxen moustache, his aquiline nose, his rather bent
+shoulders, with a sudden, vivid dislike.
+
+The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is jaded
+by the incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver’s mind, even as
+he conversed with her in that cultivated voice of his—of the weather,
+of the distance from London, and of the excellence of the Ripley
+road—wandered to the incomparable freshness and brilliance of the Young
+Lady in Grey. As he sat at meat he kept turning his head to the window
+to see what signs there were of that person, but the face of the Golden
+Dragon displayed no appreciation of the delightful morsel it had
+swallowed. As an incidental consequence of this distraction, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly inconvenienced by a mouthful of
+mustard. After he had called for his reckoning he went, his courage
+being high with meat and mustard, to the door, intending to stand, with
+his legs wide apart and his hands deep in his pockets, and stare boldly
+across the road. But just then the other man in brown appeared in the
+gateway of the Golden Dragon yard—it is one of those delightful inns
+that date from the coaching days—wheeling his punctured machine. He was
+taking it to Flambeau’s, the repairer’s. He looked up and saw
+Hoopdriver, stared for a minute, and then scowled darkly.
+
+But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other man in
+brown had disappeared into Flambeau’s. Then he glanced momentarily at
+the Golden Dragon, puckered his mouth into a whistle of unconcern, and
+proceeded to wheel his machine into the road until a sufficient margin
+for mounting was secured.
+
+Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not of
+seeing no more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in brown he
+guessed was her brother, albeit that person was of a pallid fairness,
+differing essentially from her rich colouring; and, besides, he felt he
+had made a hopeless fool of himself. But the afternoon was against him,
+intolerably hot, especially on the top of his head, and the virtue had
+gone out of his legs to digest his cold meat, and altogether his ride
+to Guildford was exceedingly intermittent. At times he would walk, at
+times lounge by the wayside, and every public house, in spite of Briggs
+and a sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of bitter. (For
+that is the experience of all those who go on wheels, that drinking
+begets thirst, even more than thirst begets drinking, until at last the
+man who yields becomes a hell unto himself, a hell in which the fire
+dieth not, and the thirst is not quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid
+green apples turned the current that threatened to carry him away. Ever
+and again a cycle, or a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering
+wheels and softly running chains, and on each occasion, to save his
+self-respect, Mr. Hoopdriver descended and feigned some trouble with
+his saddle. Each time he descended with less trepidation.
+
+He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o’clock, and then he was
+so much exhausted that he decided to put up there for the night, at the
+Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern. And after he had cooled a space and
+refreshed himself with tea and bread and butter and jam,—the tea he
+drank noisily out of the saucer,—he went out to loiter away the rest of
+the afternoon. Guildford is an altogether charming old town, famous, so
+he learnt from a Guide Book, as the scene of Master Tupper’s great
+historical novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a delightful castle,
+all set about with geraniums and brass plates commemorating the
+gentlemen who put them up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very
+pleasant to see, and in the afternoon the shops are busy and the people
+going to and fro make the pavements look bright and prosperous. It was
+nice to peep in the windows and see the heads of the men and girls in
+the drapers’ shops, busy as busy, serving away. The High Street runs
+down at an angle of seventy degrees to the horizon (so it seemed to Mr.
+Hoopdriver, whose feeling for gradients was unnaturally exalted), and
+it brought his heart into his mouth to see a cyclist ride down it, like
+a fly crawling down a window pane. The man hadn’t even a brake. He
+visited the castle early in the evening and paid his twopence to ascend
+the Keep.
+
+At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red roofs
+of the town and the tower of the church, and then going to the southern
+side sat down and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and stared away south
+over the old bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin, at the waves of blue
+upland that rose, one behind another, across the Weald, to the lazy
+altitudes of Hindhead and Butser. His pale grey eyes were full of
+complacency and pleasurable anticipation. Tomorrow he would go riding
+across that wide valley.
+
+He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him until he
+heard a soft voice behind him saying: “Well, _Miss Beaumont_, here’s
+the view.” Something in the accent pointed to a jest in the name.
+
+“It’s a dear old town, brother George,” answered another voice that
+sounded familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr. Hoopdriver saw the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, with their backs towards
+him. She turned her smiling profile towards Hoopdriver. “Only, you
+know, brothers don’t call their sisters—”
+
+She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. “Damn!” said the
+other man in brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed her glance.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the Weald.
+“Beautiful old town, isn’t it?” said the other man in brown, after a
+quite perceptible pause.
+
+“Isn’t it?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Another pause began.
+
+“Can’t get alone anywhere,” said the other man in brown, looking round.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and
+decided to retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should
+stumble at the head of the steps and vanish with indignity. This was
+the third time that he’d seen _him_, and the fourth time _her_. And of
+course he was too big a fat-head to raise his cap to her! He thought of
+that at the foot of the Keep. Apparently they aimed at the South Coast
+just as he did. He’d get up betimes the next day and hurry off to avoid
+her—them, that is. It never occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver that Miss
+Beaumont and her brother might do exactly the same thing, and that
+evening, at least, the peculiarity of a brother calling his sister
+“Miss Beaumont” did not recur to him. He was much too preoccupied with
+an analysis of his own share of these encounters. He found it hard to
+be altogether satisfied about the figure he had cut, revise his
+memories as he would.
+
+Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two people. It
+was about seven o’clock. He stopped outside a linen draper’s and peered
+over the goods in the window at the assistants in torment. He could
+have spent a whole day happily at that. He told himself that he was
+trying to see how they dressed out the brass lines over their counters,
+in a purely professional spirit, but down at the very bottom of his
+heart he knew better. The customers were a secondary consideration, and
+it was only after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he perceived that
+among them was—the Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the window
+at once, and saw the other man in brown standing at the edge of the
+pavement and regarding him with a very curious expression of face.
+
+There came into Mr. Hoopdriver’s head the curious problem whether he
+was to be regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or whether they
+were to be regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He abandoned the
+solution at last in despair, quite unable to decide upon the course he
+should take at the next encounter, whether he should scowl savagely at
+the couple or assume an attitude eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+
+
+
+
+X.
+THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER’S HEART
+
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he had
+never written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will describe him
+better. Like I know not how many of those who do the fetching and
+carrying of life,—a great number of them certainly,—his real life was
+absolutely uninteresting, and if he had faced it as realistically as
+such people do in Mr. Gissing’s novels, he would probably have come by
+way of drink to suicide in the course of a year. But that was just what
+he had the natural wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he was always
+decorating his existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses,
+deliberate and yet quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences
+were mere material for a romantic superstructure. If some power had
+given Hoopdriver the ‘giftie’ Burns invoked, ‘to see oursels as ithers
+see us,’ he would probably have given it away to some one else at the
+very earliest opportunity. His entire life, you must understand, was
+not a continuous romance, but a series of short stories linked only by
+the general resemblance of their hero, a brown-haired young fellow
+commonly, with blue eyes and a fair moustache, graceful rather than
+strong, sharp and resolute rather than clever (cp., as the scientific
+books say, p. 2). Invariably this person possessed an iron will. The
+stories fluctuated indefinitely. The smoking of a cigarette converted
+Hoopdriver’s hero into something entirely worldly, subtly rakish, with
+a humorous twinkle in the eye and some gallant sinning in the
+background. You should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver promenading the
+brilliant gardens at Earl’s Court on an early-closing night. His
+meaning glances! (I dare not give the meaning.) Such an influence as
+the eloquence of a revivalist preacher would suffice to divert the
+story into absolutely different channels, make him a white-soured hero,
+a man still pure, walking untainted and brave and helpful through miry
+ways. The appearance of some daintily gloved frockcoated gentleman with
+buttonhole and eyeglass complete, gallantly attendant in the rear of
+customers, served again to start visions of a simplicity essentially
+Cromwell-like, of sturdy plainness, of a strong, silent man going
+righteously through the world. This day there had predominated a fine
+leisurely person immaculately clothed, and riding on an unexceptional
+machine, a mysterious person—quite unostentatious, but with accidental
+self-revelation of something over the common, even a “bloomin’ Dook,”
+it might be incognito, on the tour of the South Coast.
+
+You must not think that there was any _telling_ of these stories of
+this life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that they were
+known to a soul. If it were not for the trouble, I would, I think, go
+back and rewrite this section from the beginning, expunging the
+statements that Hoopdriver was a poet and a romancer, and saying
+instead that he was a playwright and acted his own plays. He was not
+only the sole performer, but the entire audience, and the entertainment
+kept him almost continuously happy. Yet even that playwright comparison
+scarcely expresses all the facts of the case. After all, very many of
+his dreams never got acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the
+dreams of a solitary walk for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the
+dreams dreamt behind the counter while trade was slack and mechanical
+foldings and rollings occupied his muscles. Most of them were little
+dramatic situations, crucial dialogues, the return of Mr. Hoopdriver to
+his native village, for instance, in a well-cut holiday suit and natty
+gloves, the unheard asides of the rival neighbours, the delight of the
+old ‘mater,’ the intelligence—“A ten-pound rise all at once from
+Antrobus, mater. Whad d’yer think of that?” or again, the first
+whispering of love, dainty and witty and tender, to the girl he served
+a few days ago with sateen, or a gallant rescue of generalised beauty
+in distress from truculent insult or ravening dog.
+
+So many people do this—and you never suspect it. You see a tattered lad
+selling matches in the street, and you think there is nothing between
+him and the bleakness of immensity, between him and utter abasement,
+but a few tattered rags and a feeble musculature. And all unseen by you
+a host of heaven-sent fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they
+swathe you about. Many men have never seen their own profiles or the
+backs of their heads, and for the back of your own mind no mirror has
+been invented. They swathe him about so thickly that the pricks of fate
+scarce penetrate to him, or become but a pleasant titillation. And so,
+indeed, it is with all of us who go on living. Self-deception is the
+anaesthetic of life, while God is carving out our beings.
+
+But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+imaginings. You see now how external our view has been; we have had but
+the slightest transitory glimpses of the drama within, of how the
+things looked in the magic mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. On the road
+to Guildford and during his encounters with his haunting
+fellow-cyclists the drama had presented chiefly the quiet gentleman to
+whom we have alluded, but at Guildford, under more varied stimuli, he
+burgeoned out more variously. There was the house agent’s window, for
+instance, set him upon a charming little comedy. He would go in, make
+inquires about that thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go
+over it—the thing would stimulate the clerk’s curiosity immensely. He
+searched his mind for a reason for this proceeding and discovered that
+he was a dynamiter needing privacy. Upon that theory he procured the
+key, explored the house carefully, said darkly that it might suit his
+special needs, but that there were _others_ to consult. The clerk,
+however, did not understand the allusion, and merely pitied him as one
+who had married young and paired himself to a stronger mind than his
+own.
+
+This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a note-book
+and pencil, and that started the conception of an artist taking notes.
+That was a little game Mr. Hoopdriver had, in congenial company, played
+in his still younger days—to the infinite annoyance of quite a number
+of respectable excursionists at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver
+had been, as his mother proudly boasted, a ‘bit of a drawer,’ but a
+conscientious and normally stupid schoolmaster perceived the incipient
+talent and had nipped it in the bud by a series of lessons in art.
+However, our principal character figured about quite happily in old
+corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking out of
+the bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a corner by a
+gateway, note-book in hand, busily sketching the Earl’s imposing
+features. At which sight the other man in brown started back from the
+centre of the window, so as to be hidden from him, and crouching
+slightly, watched him intently through the interstices of the lace
+curtains.
+
+
+
+
+XI.
+OMISSIONS
+
+
+Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the great
+opening day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here. How he
+wandered about the old town in the dusk, and up to the Hogsback to see
+the little lamps below and the little stars above come out one after
+another; how he returned through the yellow-lit streets to the Yellow
+Hammer Coffee Tavern and supped bravely in the commercial room—a Man
+among Men; how he joined in the talk about flying-machines and the
+possibilities of electricity, witnessing that flying-machines were
+“dead certain to come,” and that electricity was “wonderful,
+wonderful”; how he went and watched the billiard playing and said,
+“Left ’em” several times with an oracular air; how he fell a-yawning;
+and how he got out his cycling map and studied it intently,—are things
+that find no mention here. Nor will I enlarge upon his going into the
+writing-room, and marking the road from London to Guildford with a
+fine, bright line of the reddest of red ink. In his little cyclist
+hand-book there is a diary, and in the diary there is an entry of these
+things—it is there to this day, and I cannot do better than reproduce
+it here to witness that this book is indeed a true one, and no lying
+fable written to while away an hour.
+
+At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he set
+about finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all days must
+end at last! ) He got his candle in the hall from a friendly
+waiting-maid, and passed upward—whither a modest novelist, who writes
+for the family circle, dare not follow. Yet I may tell you that he
+knelt down at his bedside, happy and drowsy, and said, “Our Father
+‘chartin’ heaven,” even as he had learnt it by rote from his mother
+nearly twenty years ago. And anon when his breathing had become deep
+and regular, we may creep into his bedroom and catch him at his dreams.
+He is lying upon his left side, with his arm under the pillow. It is
+dark, and he is hidden; but if you could have seen his face, sleeping
+there in the darkness, I think you would have perceived, in spite of
+that treasured, thin, and straggling moustache, in spite of your memory
+of the coarse words he had used that day, that the man before you was,
+after all, only a little child asleep.
+
+
+
+
+XII.
+THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+
+In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little, plain
+bedroom at the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern at
+Guildford. That was before midnight. As the night progressed he was
+disturbed by dreams.
+
+After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory of
+motion lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and round they
+seem to go. You ride through Dreamland on wonderful dream bicycles that
+change and grow; you ride down steeples and staircases and over
+precipices; you hover in horrible suspense over inhabited towns, vainly
+seeking for a brake your hand cannot find, to save you from a headlong
+fall; you plunge into weltering rivers, and rush helplessly at
+monstrous obstacles. Anon Mr. Hoopdriver found himself riding out of
+the darkness of non-existence, pedalling Ezekiel’s Wheels across the
+Weald of Surrey, jolting over the hills and smashing villages in his
+course, while the other man in brown cursed and swore at him and
+shouted to stop his career. There was the Putney heath-keeper, too, and
+the man in drab raging at him. He felt an awful fool, a—what was it?—a
+juggins, ah!—a Juggernaut. The villages went off one after another with
+a soft, squashing noise. He did not see the Young Lady in Grey, but he
+knew she was looking at his back. He dared not look round. Where the
+devil was the brake? It must have fallen off. And the bell? Right in
+front of him was Guildford. He tried to shout and warn the town to get
+out of the way, but his voice was gone as well. Nearer, nearer! it was
+fearful! and in another moment the houses were cracking like nuts and
+the blood of the inhabitants squirting this way and that. The streets
+were black with people running. Right under his wheels he saw the Young
+Lady in Grey. A feeling of horror came upon Mr. Hoopdriver; he flung
+himself sideways to descend, forgetting how high he was, and forthwith
+he began falling; falling, falling.
+
+He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered a
+little, and went to sleep again.
+
+This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other man
+in brown came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew uglier and
+uglier as he approached, and his expression was intolerably evil. He
+came and looked close into Mr. Hoopdriver’s eyes and then receded to an
+incredible distance. His face seemed to be luminous. “_Miss Beaumont_,”
+he said, and splashed up a spray of suspicion. Some one began letting
+off fireworks, chiefly Catherine wheels, down the shop, though Mr.
+Hoopdriver knew it was against the rules. For it seemed that the place
+they were in was a vast shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived that
+the other man in brown was the shop-walker, differing from most
+shop-walkers in the fact that he was lit from within as a Chinese
+lantern might be. And the customer Mr. Hoopdriver was going to serve
+was the Young Lady in Grey. Curious he hadn’t noticed it before. She
+was in grey as usual,—rationals,—and she had her bicycle leaning
+against the counter. She smiled quite frankly at him, just as she had
+done when she had apologised for stopping him. And her form, as she
+leant towards him, was full of a sinuous grace he had never noticed
+before. “What can I have the pleasure?” said Mr. Hoopdriver at once,
+and she said, “The Ripley road.” So he got out the Ripley road and
+unrolled it and showed it to her, and she said that would do very
+nicely, and kept on looking at him and smiling, and he began measuring
+off eight miles by means of the yard measure on the counter, eight
+miles being a dress length, a rational dress length, that is; and then
+the other man in brown came up and wanted to interfere, and said Mr.
+Hoopdriver was a cad, besides measuring it off too slowly. And as Mr.
+Hoopdriver began to measure faster, the other man in brown said the
+Young Lady in Grey had been there long enough, and that he WAS her
+brother, or else she would not be travelling with him, and he suddenly
+whipped his arm about her waist and made off with her. It occurred to
+Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment that this was scarcely brotherly
+behaviour. Of course it wasn’t! The sight of the other man gripping her
+so familiarly enraged him frightfully; he leapt over the counter
+forthwith and gave chase. They ran round the shop and up an iron
+staircase into the Keep, and so out upon the Ripley road. For some time
+they kept dodging in and out of a wayside hotel with two front doors
+and an inn yard. The other man could not run very fast because he had
+hold of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was hampered by the
+absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch out; they would
+keep going round and round as if they were on the treadles of a wheel,
+so that he made the smallest steps conceivable. This dream came to no
+crisis. The chase seemed to last an interminable time, and all kinds of
+people, heath-keepers, shopmen, policemen, the old man in the Keep, the
+angry man in drab, the barmaid at the Unicorn, men with
+flying-machines, people playing billiards in the doorways, silly,
+headless figures, stupid cocks and hens encumbered with parcels and
+umbrellas and waterproofs, people carrying bedroom candles, and
+such-like riffraff, kept getting in his way and annoying him, although
+he sounded his electric bell, and said, “Wonderful, wonderful!” at
+every corner....
+
+
+
+
+XIII.
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+
+
+There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver’s breakfast, so
+that after all he was not free to start out of Guildford until just
+upon the stroke of nine. He wheeled his machine from the High Street in
+some perplexity. He did not know whether this young lady, who had
+seized hold of his imagination so strongly, and her unfriendly and
+possibly menacing brother, were ahead of him or even now breakfasting
+somewhere in Guildford. In the former case he might loiter as he chose;
+in the latter he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in branch roads.
+
+It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that he
+would leave Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but by the
+road running through Shalford. Along this pleasant shady way he felt
+sufficiently secure to resume his exercises in riding with one hand off
+the handles, and in staring over his shoulder. He came over once or
+twice, but fell on his foot each time, and perceived that he was
+improving. Before he got to Bramley a specious byway snapped him up,
+ran with him for half a mile or more, and dropped him as a terrier
+drops a walkingstick, upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from
+Godalming. He entered Godalming on his feet, for the road through that
+delightful town is beyond dispute the vilest in the world, a mere
+tumult of road metal, a way of peaks and precipices, and, after a
+successful experiment with cider at the Woolpack, he pushed on to
+Milford.
+
+All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young Lady
+in Grey and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark is of
+Bogies. Sometimes he could hear their pneumatics stealing upon him from
+behind, and looking round saw a long stretch of vacant road. Once he
+saw far ahead of him a glittering wheel, but it proved to be a
+workingman riding to destruction on a very tall ordinary. And he felt a
+curious, vague uneasiness about that Young Lady in Grey, for which he
+was altogether unable to account. Now that he was awake he had
+forgotten that accentuated Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in
+his dream. But the curious dream conviction, that the girl was not
+really the man’s sister, would not let itself be forgotten. Why, for
+instance, should a man want to be alone with his sister on the top of a
+tower? At Milford his bicycle made, so to speak, an ass of itself. A
+finger-post suddenly jumped out at him, vainly indicating an abrupt
+turn to the right, and Mr. Hoopdriver would have slowed up and read the
+inscription, but no!—the bicycle would not let him. The road dropped a
+little into Milford, and the thing shied, put down its head and bolted,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver only thought of the brake when the fingerpost was
+passed. Then to have recovered the point of intersection would have
+meant dismounting. For as yet there was no road wide enough for Mr.
+Hoopdriver to turn in. So he went on his way—or to be precise, he did
+exactly the opposite thing. The road to the right was the Portsmouth
+road, and this he was on went to Haslemere and Midhurst. By that error
+it came about that he once more came upon his fellow travellers of
+yesterday, coming on them suddenly, without the slightest preliminary
+announcement and when they least expected it, under the Southwestern
+Railway arch. “It’s horrible,” said a girlish voice; “it’s
+brutal—cowardly—” And stopped.
+
+His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have been
+something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of annoyance at
+himself for the unintentional intrusion. But disconcerted as he was, he
+was yet able to appreciate something of the peculiarity of their mutual
+attitudes. The bicycles were lying by the roadside, and the two riders
+stood face to face. The other man in brown’s attitude, as it flashed
+upon Hoopdriver, was a deliberate pose; he twirled his moustache and
+smiled faintly, and he was conscientiously looking amused. And the girl
+stood rigid, her arms straight by her side, her handkerchief clenched
+in her hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest touch of red
+upon her eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s sense to be indignant.
+But that was the impression of a second. A mask of surprised
+recognition fell across this revelation of emotion as she turned her
+head towards him, and the pose of the other man in brown vanished too
+in a momentary astonishment. And then he had passed them, and was
+riding on towards Haslemere to make what he could of the swift picture
+that had photographed itself on his brain.
+
+“Rum,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s _dashed_ rum!”
+
+“They were having a row.”
+
+“Smirking—” What he called the other man in brown need not trouble us.
+
+“Annoying her!” That any human being should do that!
+
+“_Why?_”
+
+The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. He
+grasped his brake, descended, and stood looking hesitatingly back. They
+still stood by the railway bridge, and it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+fancy that she was stamping her foot. He hesitated, then turned his
+bicycle round, mounted, and rode back towards them, gripping his
+courage firmly lest it should slip away and leave him ridiculous. “I’ll
+offer ’im a screw ’ammer,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. Then, with a wave of
+fierce emotion, he saw that the girl was crying. In another moment they
+heard him and turned in surprise. Certainly she had been crying; her
+eyes were swimming in tears, and the other man in brown looked
+exceedingly disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver descended and stood over his
+machine.
+
+“Nothing wrong, I hope?” he said, looking the other man in brown
+squarely in the face. “No accident?”
+
+“Nothing,” said the other man in brown shortly. “Nothing at all,
+thanks.”
+
+“But,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, “the young lady is
+crying. I thought perhaps—”
+
+The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance, and
+covered one eye with her handkerchief. “It’s this speck,” she said.
+“This speck of dust in my eye.”
+
+“This lady,” said the other man in brown, explaining, “has a gnat in
+her eye.”
+
+There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. “I
+believe it’s out,” she said. The other man in brown made movements
+indicating commiserating curiosity concerning the alleged fly. Mr.
+Hoopdriver—the word is his own—stood flabber-gastered. He had all the
+intuition of the simple-minded. He knew there was no fly. But the
+ground was suddenly cut from his feet. There is a limit to
+knighterrantry—dragons and false knights are all very well, but flies!
+Fictitious flies! Whatever the trouble was, it was evidently not his
+affair. He felt he had made a fool of himself again. He would have
+mumbled some sort of apology; but the other man in brown gave him no
+time, turned on him abruptly, even fiercely. “I hope,” he said, “that
+your curiosity is satisfied?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Then we won’t detain you.”
+
+And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about, struggled
+upon it, and resumed the road southward. And when he learnt that he was
+not on the Portsmouth road, it was impossible to turn and go back, for
+that would be to face his shame again, and so he had to ride on by
+Brook Street up the hill to Haslemere. And away to the right the
+Portsmouth road mocked at him and made off to its fastnesses amid the
+sunlit green and purple masses of Hindhead, where Mr. Grant Allen
+writes his Hill Top Novels day by day.
+
+The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys one
+saw on either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the sides of the
+road itself set about with grey heather scrub and prickly masses of
+gorse, and pine trees with their year’s growth still bright green,
+against the darkened needles of the previous years, were fresh and
+delightful to Mr. Hoopdriver’s eyes But the brightness of the day and
+the day-old sense of freedom fought an uphill fight against his
+intolerable vexation at that abominable encounter, and had still to win
+it when he reached Haslemere. A great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred
+of the other man in brown, possessed him. He had conceived the
+brilliant idea of abandoning Portsmouth, or at least giving up the
+straight way to his fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the
+left, eastward. He did not dare to stop at any of the inviting
+public-houses in the main street of Haslemere, but turned up a side way
+and found a little beer-shop, the Good Hope, wherein to refresh
+himself. And there he ate and gossipped condescendingly with an aged
+labourer, assuming the while for his own private enjoyment the
+attributes of a Lost Heir, and afterwards mounted and rode on towards
+Northchapel, a place which a number of finger-posts conspired to boom,
+but which some insidious turning prevented him from attaining.
+
+
+
+
+XIV.
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+
+
+It was one of my uncle’s profoundest remarks that human beings are the
+only unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far justified by
+Mr. Hoopdriver that, after spending the morning tortuously avoiding the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, he spent a considerable
+part of the afternoon in thinking about the Young Lady in Grey, and
+contemplating in an optimistic spirit the possibilities of seeing her
+again. Memory and imagination played round her, so that his course was
+largely determined by the windings of the road he traversed. Of one
+general proposition he was absolutely convinced. “There’s something
+Juicy wrong with ’em,” said he—once even aloud. But what it was he
+could not imagine. He recapitulated the facts. “Miss Beaumont—brother
+and sister—and the stoppage to quarrel and weep—” it was perplexing
+material for a young man of small experience. There was no exertion he
+hated so much as inference, and after a time he gave up any attempt to
+get at the realities of the case, and let his imagination go free.
+Should he ever see her again? Suppose he did—with that other chap not
+about. The vision he found pleasantest was an encounter with her, an
+unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing Class ‘Do’ at the Putney
+Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift together, and he would dance
+with her again and again. It was a pleasant vision, for you must
+understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly well. Or again, in the
+shop, a sudden radiance in the doorway, and she is bowed towards the
+Manchester counter. And then to lean over that counter and murmur,
+seemingly _àpropos_ of the goods under discussion, “I have not
+forgotten that morning on the Portsmouth road,” and lower, “I never
+shall forget.”
+
+At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel and
+weighed his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible resting-place,
+or Pullborough; Midhurst seemed too near, and any place over the Downs
+beyond, too far, and so he meandered towards Petworth, posing himself
+perpetually and loitering, gathering wild flowers and wondering why
+they had no names—for he had never heard of any—dropping them furtively
+at the sight of a stranger, and generally ‘mucking about.’ There were
+purple vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet, honeysuckle, belated
+brambles—but the dog-roses had already gone; there were green and red
+blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another place white
+dead nettles, traveller’s-joy, clinging bedstraw, grasses flowering,
+white campions, and ragged robins. One cornfield was glorious with
+poppies, bright scarlet and purple white, and the blue corn-flowers
+were beginning. In the lanes the trees met overhead, and the wisps of
+hay still hung to the straggling hedges. In one of the main roads he
+steered a perilous passage through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and
+there were little cottages, and picturesque beer-houses with the vivid
+brewers’ boards of blue and scarlet, and once a broad green and a
+church, and an expanse of some hundred houses or so. Then he came to a
+pebbly rivulet that emerged between clumps of sedge loosestrife and
+forget-me-nots under an arch of trees, and rippled across the road, and
+there he dismounted, longing to take off shoes and stockings—those
+stylish chequered stockings were now all dimmed with dust—and paddle
+his lean legs in the chuckling cheerful water. But instead he sat in a
+manly attitude, smoking a cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in
+Grey should come glittering round the corner. For the flavour of the
+Young Lady in Grey was present through it all, mixing with the flowers
+and all the delight of it, a touch that made this second day quite
+different from the first, an undertone of expectation, anxiety, and
+something like regret that would not be ignored.
+
+It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he began to
+repent, vividly and decidedly, having fled these two people. He was
+getting hungry, and that has a curious effect upon the emotional
+colouring of our minds. The man was a sinister brute, Hoopdriver saw in
+a flash of inspiration, and the girl—she was in some serious trouble.
+And he who might have helped her had taken his first impulse as
+decisive—and bolted. This new view of it depressed him dreadfully. What
+might not be happening to her now? He thought again of her tears.
+Surely it was merely his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his
+eye upon it.
+
+He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found
+himself in a tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming on,
+emerged, not at Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from Midhurst. “I’m
+getting hungry,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of a gamekeeper in
+Easebourne village. “Midhurst a mile, and Petworth five!—Thenks, I’ll
+take Midhurst.”
+
+He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the North
+Street, and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the cheerful sign of
+a teapot, and exhibiting a brilliant array of tobaccos, sweets, and
+children’s toys in the window, struck his fancy. A neat, bright-eyed
+little old lady made him welcome, and he was presently supping
+sumptuously on sausages and tea, with a visitors’ book full of the most
+humorous and flattering remarks about the little old lady, in verse and
+prose, propped up against his teapot as he ate. Regular good some of
+the jokes were, and rhymes that read well—even with your mouth full of
+sausage. Mr. Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing “something”—for
+his judgment on the little old lady was already formed. He pictured the
+little old lady discovering it afterwards—“My gracious! One of them
+_Punch_ men,” she would say. The room had a curtained recess and a
+chest of drawers, for presently it was to be his bedroom, and the day
+part of it was decorated with framed Oddfellows’ certificates and
+giltbacked books and portraits, and kettle-holders, and all kinds of
+beautiful things made out of wool; very comfortable it was indeed. The
+window was lead framed and diamond paned, and through it one saw the
+corner of the vicarage and a pleasant hill crest, in dusky silhouette
+against the twilight sky. And after the sausages had ceased to be, he
+lit a Red Herring cigarette and went swaggering out into the twilight
+street. All shadowy blue between its dark brick houses, was the street,
+with a bright yellow window here and there and splashes of green and
+red where the chemist’s illumination fell across the road.
+
+
+
+
+XV.
+AN INTERLUDE
+
+
+And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky Midhurst
+North Street, and return to the two folks beside the railway bridge
+between Milford and Haslemere. She was a girl of eighteen, dark, fine
+featured, with bright eyes, and a rich, swift colour under her
+warm-tinted skin. Her eyes were all the brighter for the tears that
+swam in them. The man was thirty three or four, fair, with a longish
+nose overhanging his sandy flaxen moustache, pale blue eyes, and a head
+that struck out above and behind. He stood with his feet wide apart,
+his hand on his hip, in an attitude that was equally suggestive of
+defiance and aggression. They had watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The
+unexpected interruption had stopped the flood of her tears. He tugged
+his abundant moustache and regarded her calmly. She stood with face
+averted, obstinately resolved not to speak first. “Your behaviour,” he
+said at last, “makes you conspicuous.”
+
+She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands clenched.
+“You unspeakable _cad_,” she said, and choked, stamped her little foot,
+and stood panting.
+
+“Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I _am_ an unspeakable cad. Who
+wouldn’t be—for you?”
+
+“‘Dear girl!’ How _dare_ you speak to me like that? _You_—”
+
+“I would do anything—”
+
+“_Oh!_”
+
+There was a moment’s pause. She looked squarely into his face, her eyes
+alight with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a little. He
+stroked his moustache, and by an effort maintained his cynical calm.
+“Let us be reasonable,” he said.
+
+“Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual in
+the world.”
+
+“You have always had it so—in your generalising way. But let us look at
+the facts of the case—if that pleases you better.”
+
+With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+
+“Well,” he said,—“you’ve eloped.”
+
+“I’ve left my home,” she corrected, with dignity. “I left my home
+because it was unendurable. Because that woman—”
+
+“Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me.”
+
+“You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to help me
+to earn a living by writing. It was you who said, why shouldn’t a man
+and woman be friends? And now you dare—you dare—”
+
+“Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence—”
+
+“I will go back. I forbid you—I forbid you to stand in the way—”
+
+“One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at least
+clear-headed. You don’t know everything yet, you know. Listen to me for
+a moment.”
+
+“Haven’t I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who dared
+only to talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at anything
+beyond.”
+
+“But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You _knew_. And you
+did not mind. _Mind!_ You liked it. It was the fun of the whole thing
+for you. That I loved you, and could not speak to you. You played with
+it—”
+
+“You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?”
+
+“That isn’t all. I made up my mind—Well, to make the game more even.
+And so I suggested to you and joined with you in this expedition of
+yours, invented a sister at Midhurst—I tell you, I _haven’t_ a sister!
+For one object—”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“To compromise you.”
+
+She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute
+neither spoke. Then she began half defiantly: “Much I am compromised.
+Of course—I have made a fool of myself—”
+
+“My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and you
+know very little of this world. Less than you think. But you will
+learn. Before you write all those novels we have talked about, you will
+have to learn. And that’s one point—” He hesitated. “You started and
+blushed when the man at breakfast called you Ma’am. You thought it a
+funny mistake, but you did not say anything because he was young and
+nervous—and besides, the thought of being my wife offended your
+modesty. You didn’t care to notice it. But—you see; I gave your name as
+_Mrs_. Beaumont.” He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical
+pose. “_Mrs_. Beaumont,” he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and
+watching the effect.
+
+She looked into his eyes speechless. “I am learning fast,” she said
+slowly, at last.
+
+He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. “Jessie,” he
+said, with a sudden change of voice, “I know all this is mean, is
+villanous. But do you think that I have done all this scheming, all
+this subterfuge, for any other object—”
+
+She did not seem to listen to his words. “I shall ride home,” she said
+abruptly.
+
+“To her?”
+
+She winced.
+
+“Just think,” said he, “what she could say to you after this.”
+
+“Anyhow, I shall leave you now.”
+
+“Yes? And go—”
+
+“Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live without
+conventionality—”
+
+“My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven’t money and you haven’t
+credit. No one would take you in. It’s one of two things: go back to
+your stepmother, or—trust to me.”
+
+“How _can_ I?”
+
+“Then you must go back to her.” He paused momentarily, to let this
+consideration have its proper weight. “Jessie, I did not mean to say
+the things I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when I spoke so. If
+you will, forgive me. I am a man. I could not help myself. Forgive me,
+and I promise you—”
+
+“How can I trust you?”
+
+“Try me. I can assure you—”
+
+She regarded him distrustfully.
+
+“At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the shadow of
+this horrible bridge long enough.”
+
+“Oh! let me think,” she said, half turning from him and pressing her
+hand to her brow.
+
+“_Think!_ Look here, Jessie. It is ten o’clock. Shall we call a truce
+until one?”
+
+She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last agreed.
+
+They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and the
+heather. Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed. She was
+pale, divided between fear and anger. She perceived she was in a
+scrape, and tried in vain to think of a way of escape. Only one
+tangible thing would keep in her mind, try as she would to ignore it.
+That was the quite irrelevant fact that his head was singularly like an
+albino cocoanut. He, too, felt thwarted. He felt that this romantic
+business of seduction was, after all, unexpectedly tame. But this was
+only the beginning. At any rate, every day she spent with him was a day
+gained. Perhaps things looked worse than they were; that was some
+consolation.
+
+
+
+
+XVI.
+OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+
+
+You have seen these two young people—Bechamel, by-the-bye, is the man’s
+name, and the girl’s is Jessie Milton—from the outside; you have heard
+them talking; they ride now side by side (but not too close together,
+and in an uneasy silence) towards Haslemere; and this chapter will
+concern itself with those curious little council chambers inside their
+skulls, where their motives are in session and their acts are
+considered and passed.
+
+But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester,
+enlarging upon the increase of bald heads and purblind people, has
+deduced a wonderful future for the children of men. Man, he said, was
+nowadays a hairless creature by forty or fifty, and for hair we gave
+him a wig; shrivelled, and we padded him; toothless, and lo! false
+teeth set in gold. Did he lose a limb, and a fine, new, artificial one
+was at his disposal; get indigestion, and to hand was artificial
+digestive fluid or bile or pancreatine, as the case might be.
+Complexions, too, were replaceable, spectacles superseded an
+inefficient eye-lens, and imperceptible false diaphragms were thrust
+into the failing ear. So he went over our anatomies, until, at last, he
+had conjured up a weird thing of shreds and patches, a simulacrum, an
+artificial body of a man, with but a doubtful germ of living flesh
+lurking somewhere in his recesses. To that, he held, we were coming.
+
+How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not concern
+us now. But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr. Rudyard Kipling,
+hath it that in the case of one Tomlinson, the thing, so far as the
+soul is concerned, has already been accomplished. Time was when men had
+simple souls, desires as natural as their eyes, a little reasonable
+philanthropy, a little reasonable philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a
+taste for good living, a decent, personal vanity, a healthy, satisfying
+pugnacity, and so forth. But now we are taught and disciplined for
+years and years, and thereafter we read and read for all the time some
+strenuous, nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic hypnotists,
+pulpit and platform hypnotists, book-writing hypnotists,
+newspaper-writing hypnotists, are at us all. This sugar you are eating,
+they tell us, is ink, and forthwith we reject it with infinite disgust.
+This black draught of unrequited toil is True Happiness, and down it
+goes with every symptom of pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull past
+believing, and we yawn and stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they
+interrupt, but this Ibsen is deep and delightful, and we vie with one
+another in an excess of entertainment. And when we open the heads of
+these two young people, we find, not a straightforward motive on the
+surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a soul so much as an oversoul, a
+zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas, a highway’s feast of fine,
+confused thinking. The girl is resolute to Live Her Own Life, a phrase
+you may have heard before, and the man has a pretty perverted ambition
+to be a cynical artistic person of the very calmest description. He is
+hoping for the awakening of Passion in her, among other things. He
+knows Passion ought to awaken, from the text-books he has studied. He
+knows she admires his genius, but he is unaware that she does not
+admire his head. He is quite a distinguished art critic in London, and
+he met her at that celebrated lady novelist’s, her stepmother, and here
+you have them well embarked upon the Adventure. Both are in the first
+stage of repentance, which consists, as you have probably found for
+yourself, in setting your teeth hard and saying’ “I _will_ go on.”
+
+Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way
+together with a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for the
+orthodox development of the Adventure. He perceives he was too
+precipitate. But he feels his honour is involved, and meditates the
+development of a new attack. And the girl? She is unawakened. Her
+motives are bookish, written by a haphazard syndicate of authors,
+novelists, and biographers, on her white inexperience. An artificial
+oversoul she is, that may presently break down and reveal a human being
+beneath it. She is still in that schoolgirl phase when a talkative old
+man is more interesting than a tongue-tied young one, and when to be an
+eminent mathematician, say, or to edit a daily paper, seems as fine an
+ambition as any girl need aspire to. Bechamel was to have helped her to
+attain that in the most expeditious manner, and here he is beside her,
+talking enigmatical phrases about passion, looking at her with the
+oddest expression, and once, and that was his gravest offence, offering
+to kiss her. At any rate he has apologised. She still scarcely
+realises, you see, the scrape she has got into.
+
+
+
+
+XVII.
+THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+
+
+We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and tobacco
+shop. You must not think that a strain is put on coincidence when I
+tell you that next door to Mrs. Wardor’s—that was the name of the
+bright-eyed, little old lady with whom Mr. Hoopdriver had stopped—is
+the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel Hotel, on the night that Mr.
+Hoopdriver reached Midhurst, were ‘Mr.’ and ‘Miss’ Beaumont, our
+Bechamel and Jessie Milton. Indeed, it was a highly probable thing; for
+if one goes through Guildford, the choice of southward roads is
+limited; you may go by Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to
+Chichester, in addition to which highways there is nothing for it but
+minor roadways to Petworth or Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward.
+And coming to Midhurst from the north, the Angel’s entrance lies
+yawning to engulf your highly respectable cyclists, while Mrs. Wardor’s
+genial teapot is equally attractive to those who weigh their means in
+little scales. But to people unfamiliar with the Sussex roads—and such
+were the three persons of this story—the convergence did not appear to
+be so inevitable.
+
+Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner, was the
+first to be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver walk slowly
+across the gateway, his head enhaloed in cigarette smoke, and pass out
+of sight up the street. Incontinently a mass of cloudy uneasiness, that
+had been partly dispelled during the day, reappeared and concentrated
+rapidly into definite suspicion. He put his screw hammer into his
+pocket and walked through the archway into the street, to settle the
+business forthwith, for he prided himself on his decision. Hoopdriver
+was merely promenading, and they met face to face.
+
+At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and laughter
+seized Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his animosity. “’Ere
+we are again!” he said, laughing insincerely in a sudden outbreak at
+the perversity of chance.
+
+The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver’s way, staring.
+Then his face assumed an expression of dangerous civility. “Is it any
+information to you,” he said, with immense politeness, “when I remark
+that you are following us?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his characteristic
+impulse to apologise. He wanted to annoy the other man in brown, and a
+sentence that had come into his head in a previous rehearsal cropped up
+appropriately. “Since when,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath,
+yet bringing the question out valiantly, nevertheless,—“since when ’ave
+you purchased the county of Sussex?”
+
+“May I point out,” said the other man in brown, “that I object—we
+object not only to your proximity to us. To be frank—you appear to be
+following us—with an object.”
+
+“You can always,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “turn round if you don’t like
+it, and go back the way you came.”
+
+“Oh-o!” said the other man in brown. “_That’s_ it! I thought as much.”
+
+“Did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily to
+the unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+
+“I see,” said the other man. “I see. I half suspected—” His manner
+changed abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. “Yes—a word with
+you. You will, I hope, give me ten minutes.”
+
+Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the other man
+take him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated. Then he thought
+of an admirable phrase. “You ’ave some communication—”
+
+“We’ll call it a communication,” said the other man.
+
+“I can spare you the ten minutes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+
+“This way, then,” said the other man in brown, and they walked slowly
+down the North Street towards the Grammar School. There was, perhaps,
+thirty seconds’ silence. The other man stroked his moustache nervously.
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s dramatic instincts were now fully awake. He did not
+quite understand in what _rôle_ he was cast, but it was evidently
+something dark and mysterious. Doctor Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and
+Alexander Dumas were well within Mr. Hoopdriver’s range of reading, and
+he had not read them for nothing.
+
+“I will be perfectly frank with you,” said the other man in brown.
+
+“Frankness is always the best course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Well, then—who the devil set you on this business?”
+
+“Set me _on_ this business?”
+
+“Don’t pretend to be stupid. Who’s your employer? Who engaged you for
+this job?”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. “No—I can’t say.”
+
+“Quite sure?” The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at his
+hand, and Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a yellow
+milled edge glittering in the twilight. Now your shop assistant is just
+above the tip-receiving class, and only just above it—so that he is
+acutely sensitive on the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met those
+of the other man in brown. “Stow it!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, stopping and
+facing the tempter.
+
+“What!” said the other man in brown, surprised. “Eigh?” And so saying
+he stowed it in his breeches pocket.
+
+“D’yer think I’m to be bribed?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose imagination
+was rapidly expanding the situation. “By Gosh! I’d follow you now—”
+
+“My dear sir,” said the other man in brown, “I beg your pardon. I
+misunderstood you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In your
+profession—”
+
+“What have you got to say against my profession?”
+
+“Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior
+description—watchers. The whole class. Private Inquiry—I did not
+realise—I really trust you will overlook what was, after all—you must
+admit—a natural indiscretion. Men of honour are not so common in the
+world—in any profession.”
+
+It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not light the
+lamps in the summer time, or the one they were passing had betrayed
+him. As it was, he had to snatch suddenly at his moustache and tug
+fiercely at it, to conceal the furious tumult of exultation, the
+passion of laughter, that came boiling up. Detective! Even in the
+shadow Bechamel saw that a laugh was stifled, but he put it down to the
+fact that the phrase “men of honour” amused his interlocutor. “He’ll
+come round yet,” said Bechamel to himself. “He’s simply holding out for
+a fiver.” He coughed.
+
+“I don’t see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is.”
+
+“Don’t you? I do.”
+
+“Prompt,” said Bechamel, appreciatively. “Now here’s the thing I want
+to put to you—the kernel of the whole business. You need not answer if
+you don’t want to. There’s no harm done in my telling you what I want
+to know. Are you employed to watch me—or Miss Milton?”
+
+“I’m not the leaky sort,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret he
+did not know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her name.
+Perhaps he’d tell some more. “It’s no good pumping. Is that all you’re
+after?” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to catch
+a remark by throwing out a confidence. “I take it there are two people
+concerned in watching this affair.”
+
+“Who’s the other?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling with
+enormous internal tension his self-appreciation. “Who’s the other?” was
+really brilliant, he thought.
+
+“There’s my wife and _her_ stepmother.”
+
+“And you want to know which it is?”
+
+“Yes,” said Bechamel.
+
+“Well—arst ’em!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the better
+of him, and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. “Arst ’em both.”
+
+Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. “I’d give a
+five-pound note to know just the precise state of affairs,” he said.
+
+“I told you to stow that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening tone.
+And added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery, “You don’t
+quite understand who you’re dealing with. But you will!” He spoke with
+such conviction that he half believed that that defective office of his
+in London—Baker Street, in fact—really existed.
+
+With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the Angel,
+perturbed. “Hang detectives!” It wasn’t the kind of thing he had
+anticipated at all. Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a wondering smile,
+walked down to where the mill waters glittered in the moonlight, and
+after meditating over the parapet of the bridge for a space, with
+occasional murmurs of, “Private Inquiry” and the like, returned, with
+mystery even in his paces, towards the town.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+
+That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low
+whistling noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot the
+tears of the Young Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!—and a real one.
+Mr. Hoopdriver as a Private Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock Holmes in fact,
+keeping these two people ‘under observation.’ He walked slowly back
+from the bridge until he was opposite the Angel, and stood for ten
+minutes, perhaps, contemplating that establishment and enjoying all the
+strange sensations of being this wonderful, this mysterious and
+terrible thing. Everything fell into place in his scheme. He had, of
+course, by a kind of instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist,
+picked up the first old crock he came across as a means of pursuit. ‘No
+expense was to be spared.’
+
+Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was
+observing. “My wife”—“_Her_ stepmother!” Then he remembered her
+swimming eyes. Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him, washed
+away the detective superstructure, and left him plain Mr. Hoopdriver.
+This man in brown, with his confident manner, and his proffered half
+sovereign (damn him!) was up to no good, else why should he object to
+being watched? He was married! She was not his sister. He began to
+understand. A horrible suspicion of the state of affairs came into Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s head. Surely it had not come to _that_. He was a
+detective!—he would find out. How was it to be done? He began to submit
+sketches on approval to himself. It required an effort before he could
+walk into the Angel bar. “A lemonade and bitter, please,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+He cleared his throat. “Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?”
+
+“What, a gentleman and a young lady—on bicycles?”
+
+“Fairly young—a married couple.”
+
+“No,” said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions.
+“There’s no married couples stopping here. But there’s a Mr. and Miss
+_Beaumont_.” She spelt it for precision. “Sure you’ve got the name
+right, young man?”
+
+“Quite,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of—What was the name you
+gave?”
+
+“Bowlong,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“No, there ain’t no Bowlong,” said the barmaid, taking up a glasscloth
+and a drying tumbler and beginning to polish the latter. “First off, I
+thought you might be asking for Beaumont—the names being similar. Were
+you expecting them on bicycles?”
+
+“Yes—they said they _might_ be in Midhurst tonight.”
+
+“P’raps they’ll come presently. Beaumont’s here, but no Bowlong. Sure
+that Beaumont ain’t the name?”
+
+“Certain,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“It’s curious the names being so alike. I thought p’raps—”
+
+And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to find
+his horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having listened awhile
+at the staircase volunteered some particulars of the young couple
+upstairs. Her modesty was much impressed by the young lady’s costume,
+so she intimated, and Mr. Hoopdriver whispered the badinage natural to
+the occasion, at which she was coquettishly shocked. “There’ll be no
+knowing which is which, in a year or two,” said the barmaid. “And her
+manner too! She got off her machine and give it ’im to stick up against
+the kerb, and in she marched. ‘I and my brother,’ says she, ‘want to
+stop here to-night. My brother doesn’t mind what kind of room ’e ’as,
+but I want a room with a good view, if there’s one to be got,’ says
+she. He comes hurrying in after and looks at her. ‘I’ve settled the
+rooms,’ she says, and ’e says ‘damn!’ just like that. I can fancy my
+brother letting me boss the show like that.”
+
+“I dessay you do,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if the truth was known.”
+
+The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the
+tumbler, polished, and took up another that had been draining, and
+shook the drops of water into her little zinc sink.
+
+“She’ll be a nice little lot to marry,” said the barmaid. “She’ll be
+wearing the—well, b-dashes, as the sayin’ is. I can’t think what girls
+is comin’ to.”
+
+This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to Hoopdriver’s
+taste.
+
+“Fashion,” said he, taking up his change. “Fashion is all the go with
+you ladies—and always was. You’ll be wearing ’em yourself before a
+couple of years is out.”
+
+“Nice they’d look on my figger,” said the barmaid, with a titter. “No—I
+ain’t one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I shouldn’t feel as if
+I’d anything on me, not more than if I’d forgot—Well, there! I’m
+talking.” She put down the glass abruptly. “I dessay I’m old
+fashioned,” she said, and walked humming down the bar.
+
+“Not you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her eye, then
+with his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and wished her good
+evening.
+
+
+
+
+XIX.
+
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the lead-framed
+windows where he had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made,
+sat down on the box under the window, stared at the moon rising on the
+shining vicarage roof, and tried to collect his thoughts. How they
+whirled at first! It was past ten, and most of Midhurst was tucked away
+in bed, some one up the street was learning the violin, at rare
+intervals a belated inhabitant hurried home and woke the echoes, and a
+corncrake kept up a busy churning in the vicarage garden. The sky was
+deep blue, with a still luminous afterglow along the black edge of the
+hill, and the white moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars,
+had the sky to herself.
+
+At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not relationships.
+There was this malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr.
+Hoopdriver to take a hand in the game. _He_ was married. Did she know
+he was married? Never for a moment did a thought of evil concerning her
+cross Hoopdriver’s mind. Simple-minded people see questions of morals
+so much better than superior persons—who have read and thought
+themselves complex to impotence. He had heard her voice, seen the frank
+light in her eyes, and she had been weeping—that sufficed. The rights
+of the case he hadn’t properly grasped. But he would. And that
+smirking—well, swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the
+exceedingly unpleasant incident of the railway bridge. “Thin we won’t
+detain yer, thenks,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange,
+unnatural, contemptible voice, supposed to represent that of Bechamel.
+“Oh, the _beggar!_ I’ll be level with him yet. He’s afraid of us
+detectives—that I’ll _swear_.” (If Mrs. Wardor should chance to be on
+the other side of the door within earshot, well and good.)
+
+For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical
+impossibilities for the most part,—Bechamel staggering headlong from
+the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver’s large, but, to tell the truth, ill
+supported fist, Bechamel’s five feet nine of height lifted from the
+ground and quivering under a vigorously applied horsewhip. So pleasant
+was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver’s peaked face under the
+moonlight was transfigured. One might have paired him with that
+well-known and universally admired triumph, ‘The Soul’s Awakening,’ so
+sweet was his ecstasy. And presently with his thirst for revenge
+glutted by six or seven violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous
+murders, his mind came round to the Young Lady in Grey again.
+
+She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid at the
+Angel had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a torrent,
+smoothed down to a mirror in which she was reflected with infinite
+clearness and detail. He’d never met anything like her before. Fancy
+that bolster of a barmaid being dressed in that way! He whuffed a
+contemptuous laugh. He compared her colour, her vigour, her voice, with
+the Young Ladies in Business with whom his lot had been cast. Even in
+tears she was beautiful, more beautiful indeed to him, for it made her
+seem softer and weaker, more accessible. And such weeping as he had
+seen before had been so much a matter of damp white faces, red noses,
+and hair coming out of curl. Your draper’s assistant becomes something
+of a judge of weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young
+Ladies in Business, when for any reason their services are dispensed
+with. She could weep—and (by Gosh!) she could smile. _He_ knew that,
+and reverting to acting abruptly, he smiled confidentially at the
+puckered pallor of the moon.
+
+It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver’s pensiveness lasted. It
+seemed a long time before his thoughts of action returned. Then he
+remembered he was a ‘watcher’; that to-morrow he must be busy. It would
+be in character to make notes, and he pulled out his little note-book.
+With that in hand he fell a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her
+the ’tecks were after them? If so, would she be as anxious to get away
+as _he_ was? He must be on the alert. If possible he must speak to her.
+Just a significant word, “Your friend—trust me!”—It occurred to him
+that to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to escape. At that he
+thought of the time and found it was half-past eleven. “Lord!” said he,
+“I must see that I wake.” He yawned and rose. The blind was up, and he
+pulled back the little chintz curtains to let the sunlight strike
+across to the bed, hung his watch within good view of his pillow, on a
+nail that supported a kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to
+undress. He lay awake for a little while thinking of the wonderful
+possibilities of the morrow, and thence he passed gloriously into the
+wonderland of dreams.
+
+
+
+
+XX.
+THE PURSUIT
+
+
+And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant,
+active, wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window stuck
+open, ears alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the corner panes, in
+oblique glances at the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor wanted him to have his
+breakfast downstairs in her kitchen, but that would have meant
+abandoning the watch, and he held out strongly. The bicycle,
+_cap-à-pie_, occupied, under protest, a strategic position in the shop.
+He was expectant by six in the morning. By nine horrible fears
+oppressed him that his quest had escaped him, and he had to reconnoitre
+the Angel yard in order to satisfy himself. There he found the ostler
+(How are the mighty fallen in these decadent days!) brushing down the
+bicycles of the chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs. Wardor’s
+premises. And about ten they emerged, and rode quietly up the North
+Street. He watched them until they turned the corner of the post
+office, and then out into the road and up after them in fine style!
+They went by the engine-house where the old stocks and the whipping
+posts are, and on to the Chichester road, and he followed gallantly. So
+this great chase began.
+
+They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight, getting
+down if he chanced to draw closely upon them round a corner. By riding
+vigorously he kept quite conveniently near them, for they made but
+little hurry. He grew hot indeed, and his knees were a little stiff to
+begin with, but that was all. There was little danger of losing them,
+for a thin chalky dust lay upon the road, and the track of her tire was
+milled like a shilling, and his was a chequered ribbon along the way.
+So they rode by Cobden’s monument and through the prettiest of
+villages, until at last the downs rose steeply ahead. There they
+stopped awhile at the only inn in the place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up
+a position which commanded the inn door, and mopped his face and
+thirsted and smoked a Red Herring cigarette. They remained in the inn
+for some time. A number of chubby innocents returning home from school,
+stopped and formed a line in front of him, and watched him quietly but
+firmly for the space of ten minutes or so. “Go away,” said he, and they
+only seemed quietly interested. He asked them all their names then, and
+they answered indistinct murmurs. He gave it up at last and became
+passive on his gate, and so at length they tired of him.
+
+The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr.
+Hoopdriver at the thought of their possible employment hungered as well
+as thirsted. Clearly, they were lunching. It was a cloudless day, and
+the sun at the meridian beat down upon the top of Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+head, a shower bath of sunshine, a huge jet of hot light. It made his
+head swim. At last they emerged, and the other man in brown looked back
+and saw him. They rode on to the foot of the down, and dismounting
+began to push tediously up that long nearly vertical ascent of blinding
+white road. Mr. Hoopdriver hesitated. It might take them twenty minutes
+to mount that. Beyond was empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided
+to return to the inn and snatch a hasty meal.
+
+At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading pewter
+measure of sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in the throat,
+but leaden in the legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a man of substance
+as he emerged in the blinding sunshine, but even by the foot of the
+down the sun was insisting again that his skull was too small for his
+brains. The hill had gone steeper, the chalky road blazed like a
+magnesium light, and his front wheel began an apparently incurable
+squeaking. He felt as a man from Mars would feel if he were suddenly
+transferred to this planet, about three times as heavy as he was wont
+to feel. The two little black figures had vanished over the forehead of
+the hill. “The tracks’ll be all right,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow progress
+up the hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf beside the road, to
+contemplate the Weald from the south. In a matter of two days he had
+crossed that spacious valley, with its frozen surge of green hills, its
+little villages and townships here and there, its copses and
+cornfields, its ponds and streams like jewelery of diamonds and silver
+glittering in the sun. The North Downs were hidden, far away beyond the
+Wealden Heights. Down below was the little village of Cocking, and
+half-way up the hill, a mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of
+sheep grazing together. Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the
+blue, and every now and then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat
+was tempered by a pleasant breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed by
+unreasonable contentment; he lit himself a cigarette and lounged more
+comfortably. Surely the Sussex ale is made of the waters of Lethe, of
+poppies and pleasant dreams. Drowsiness coiled insidiously about him.
+
+He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on the
+turf with his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes, and
+realised that he had slept. His head was still a trifle heavy. And the
+chase? He jumped to his feet and stooped to pick up his overturned
+machine. He whipped out his watch and saw that it was past two o’clock.
+“Lord love us, fancy that!—But the tracks’ll be all right,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, wheeling his machine back to the chalky road. “I must
+scorch till I overtake them.”
+
+He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering lassitude
+permitted. Now and then he had to dismount to examine the surface where
+the road forked. He enjoyed that rather. “Trackin’,” he said aloud, and
+decided in the privacy of his own mind that he had a wonderful instinct
+for ‘spoor.’ So he came past Goodwood station and Lavant, and
+approached Chichester towards four o’clock. And then came a terrible
+thing. In places the road became hard, in places were the crowded
+indentations of a recent flock of sheep, and at last in the throat of
+the town cobbles and the stony streets branching east, west, north, and
+south, at a stone cross under the shadow of the cathedral the tracks
+vanished. “O Cricky!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in dismay and
+standing agape. “Dropped anything?” said an inhabitant at the kerb.
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “I’ve lost the spoor,” and walked upon his
+way, leaving the inhabitant marvelling what part of a bicycle a spoor
+might be. Mr. Hoopdriver, abandoning tracking, began asking people if
+they had seen a Young Lady in Grey on a bicycle. Six casual people
+hadn’t, and he began to feel the inquiry was conspicuous, and desisted.
+But what was to be done?
+
+Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first gnawings
+of a monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some tea and meat,
+and in the Royal George he meditated over the business in a melancholy
+frame enough. They had passed out of his world—vanished, and all his
+wonderful dreams of some vague, crucial interference collapsed like a
+castle of cards. What a fool he had been not to stick to them like a
+leech! He might have thought! But there!—what WAS the good of that sort
+of thing now? He thought of her tears, of her helplessness, of the
+bearing of the other man in brown, and his wrath and disappointment
+surged higher. “What CAN I do?” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, bringing his
+fist down beside the teapot.
+
+What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there might
+be such things as clues in the world, albeit the age of miracles was
+past. But to look for a clue in this intricate network of cobbled
+streets, to examine every muddy interstice! There was a chance by
+looking about and inquiry at the various inns. Upon that he began. But
+of course they might have ridden straight through and scarcely a soul
+have marked them. And then came a positively brilliant idea. “’Ow many
+ways are there out of Chichester?” said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was really
+equal to Sherlock Holmes—that. “If they’ve made tracks, I shall find
+those tracks. If not—they’re in the town.” He was then in East Street,
+and he started at once to make the circuit of the place, discovering
+incidentally that Chichester is a walled city. In passing, he made
+inquiries at the Black Swan, the Crown, and the Red Lion Hotel. At six
+o’clock in the evening, he was walking downcast, intent, as one who had
+dropped money, along the road towards Bognor, kicking up the dust with
+his shoes and fretting with disappointed pugnacity. A thwarted,
+crestfallen Hoopdriver it was, as you may well imagine. And then
+suddenly there jumped upon his attention—a broad line ribbed like a
+shilling, and close beside it one chequered, that ever and again split
+into two. “Found!” said Mr. Hoopdriver and swung round on his heel at
+once, and back to the Royal George, helter skelter, for the bicycle
+they were minding for him. The ostler thought he was confoundedly
+imperious, considering his machine.
+
+
+
+
+XXI.
+AT BOGNOR
+
+
+That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a crisis. He
+had started upon this elopement in a vein of fine romance, immensely
+proud of his wickedness, and really as much in love as an artificial
+oversoul can be, with Jessie. But either she was the profoundest of
+coquettes or she had not the slightest element of Passion (with a large
+P) in her composition. It warred with all his ideas of himself and the
+feminine mind to think that under their flattering circumstances she
+really could be so vitally deficient. He found her persistent coolness,
+her more or less evident contempt for himself, exasperating in the
+highest degree. He put it to himself that she was enough to provoke a
+saint, and tried to think that was piquant and enjoyable, but the
+blisters on his vanity asserted themselves. The fact is, he was, under
+this standing irritation, getting down to the natural man in himself
+for once, and the natural man in himself, in spite of Oxford and the
+junior Reviewers’ Club, was a Palaeolithic creature of simple tastes
+and violent methods. “I’ll be level with you yet,” ran like a plough
+through the soil of his thoughts.
+
+Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his wife he
+was going to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied she was
+reconciled, but how she would take this exploit was entirely
+problematical. She was a woman of peculiar moral views, and she
+measured marital infidelity largely by its proximity to herself. Out of
+her sight, and more particularly out of the sight of the other women of
+her set, vice of the recognised description was, perhaps, permissible
+to those contemptible weaklings, men, but this was Evil on the High
+Roads. She was bound to make a fuss, and these fusses invariably took
+the final form of a tightness of money for Bechamel. Albeit, and he
+felt it was heroic of him to resolve so, it was worth doing if it was
+to be done. His imagination worked on a kind of matronly Valkyrie, and
+the noise of pursuit and vengeance was in the air. The idyll still had
+the front of the stage. That accursed detective, it seemed, had been
+thrown off the scent, and that, at any rate, gave a night’s respite.
+But things must be brought to an issue forthwith.
+
+By eight o’clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the Vicuna
+Hotel, Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed and angry in
+the face and with her heart sinking, faced him again for her last
+struggle with him. He had tricked her this time, effectually, and luck
+had been on his side. She was booked as Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her
+refusal to enter their room, and her eccentricity of eating with
+unwashed hands, she had so far kept up the appearances of things before
+the waiter. But the dinner was grim enough. Now in turn she appealed to
+his better nature and made extravagant statements of her plans to fool
+him.
+
+He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered through
+his pose of brilliant wickedness.
+
+“I will go to the station,” she said. “I will go back—”
+
+“The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42.”
+
+“I will appeal to the police—”
+
+“You don’t know them.”
+
+“I will tell these hotel people.”
+
+“They will turn you out of doors. You’re in such a thoroughly false
+position now. They don’t understand unconventionality, down here.”
+
+She stamped her foot. “If I wander about the streets all night—” she
+said.
+
+“You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what the
+streets of a charming little holiday resort are like—”
+
+“I don’t care,” she said. “I can go to the clergyman here.”
+
+“He’s a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike than you
+think. And anyhow—”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“How _can_ you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The mischief
+is done, Jessie.”
+
+“You _cur_,” she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He
+thought she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone from
+her face.
+
+“No,” he said. “I love you.”
+
+“Love!” said she.
+
+“Yes—love.”
+
+“There are ways yet,” she said, after a pause.
+
+“Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is
+it?—not the dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don’t you think of
+it. You’ll only shirk it when the moment comes, and turn it all into
+comedy.”
+
+She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across the
+parade at the shining sea over which the afterglow of day fled before
+the rising moon. He maintained his attitude. The blinds were still up,
+for she had told the waiter not to draw them. There was silence for
+some moments.
+
+At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon. “Take it
+sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in common, quarrel
+into melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all that is bright and
+desirable to me. I am stronger than you, older; man to your woman. To
+find _you_ too—conventional!”
+
+She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge of
+delight how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her cheek.
+
+“_Man!_” she said. “Man to _my_ woman! Do _men_ lie? Would a _man_ use
+his five and thirty years’ experience to outwit a girl of seventeen?
+Man to my woman indeed! That surely is the last insult!”
+
+“Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do, though—all
+that and more also when their hearts were set on such a girl as
+yourself. For God’s sake drop this shrewishness! Why should you be
+so—difficult to me? Here am I with _my_ reputation, _my_ career, at
+your feet. Look here, Jessie—on my honour, I will marry you—”
+
+“God forbid,” she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had a
+wife, even then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in the
+flash of her retort, that she did not know he was married.
+
+“’Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement,” he said, following that hint.
+
+He paused.
+
+“You must be sensible. The thing’s your own doing. Come out on the
+beach now—the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon be high.”
+
+“_I won’t_” she said, stamping her foot.
+
+“Well, well—”
+
+“Oh! leave me alone. Let me think—”
+
+“Think,” he said, “if you want to. It’s your cry always. But you can’t
+save yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can’t save yourself in any
+way now. If saving it is—this parsimony—”
+
+“Oh, go—go.”
+
+“Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of you,
+dear.... But do you think I should do all this if I did not care?”
+
+“Go,” she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to stare out
+of the window. He stood looking at her for a moment, with a strange
+light in his eyes. He made a step towards her. “I _have_ you,” he said.
+“You are mine. Netted—caught. But mine.” He would have gone up to her
+and laid his hand upon her, but he did not dare to do that yet. “I have
+you in my hand,” he said, “in my power. Do you hear—_Power!_”
+
+She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and then,
+with a superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the door. Surely
+the instinctive abasement of her sex before Strength was upon his side.
+He told himself that his battle was won. She heard the handle move and
+the catch click as the door closed behind him.
+
+
+
+
+XXII.
+
+
+And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks hot,
+his eye bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous, obsequious
+Hoopdriver, to whom I introduced you some days since, has undergone a
+wonderful change. Ever since he lost that ‘spoor’ in Chichester, he has
+been tormented by the most horrible visions of the shameful insults
+that may be happening. The strangeness of new surroundings has been
+working to strip off the habitual servile from him. Here was moonlight
+rising over the memory of a red sunset, dark shadows and glowing orange
+lamps, beauty somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong
+in a brown suit and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver
+for the time, was in the world of Romance and Knight-errantry, divinely
+forgetful of his social position or hers; forgetting, too, for the time
+any of the wretched timidities that had tied him long since behind the
+counter in his proper place. He was angry and adventurous. It was all
+about him, this vivid drama he had fallen into, and it was eluding him.
+He was far too grimly in earnest to pick up that lost thread and make a
+play of it now. The man was living. He did not pose when he alighted at
+the coffee tavern even, nor when he made his hasty meal.
+
+As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade, Hoopdriver,
+disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the corner from the
+Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his heart jumped, and the
+tension of his angry suspense exploded into, rather than gave place to,
+an excited activity of mind. They were at the Vicuna, and she was there
+now alone. It was the occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no
+chance against him. He went back round the corner, sat down on the
+seat, and watched Bechamel recede into the dimness up the esplanade,
+before he got up and walked into the hotel entrance. “A lady cyclist in
+grey,” he asked for, and followed boldly on the waiter’s heels. The
+door of the dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm. And then
+suddenly he was nearly minded to turn and run for it, and his features
+seemed to him to be convulsed.
+
+She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between
+terror and hope in her eyes.
+
+“Can I—have a few words—with you, alone?” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+controlling his breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then
+motioned the waiter to withdraw.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out into
+the middle of the room, fold his arms and say, “You are in trouble. I
+am a Friend. Trust me.” Instead of which he stood panting and then
+spoke with sudden familiarity, hastily, guiltily: “Look here. I don’t
+know what the juice is up, but I think there’s something wrong. Excuse
+my intruding—if it isn’t so. I’ll do anything you like to help you out
+of the scrape—if you’re in one. That’s my meaning, I believe. What can
+I do? I would do anything to help you.”
+
+Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite emotion, this
+remarkable speech. “_You!_” she said. She was tumultuously weighing
+possibilities in her mind, and he had scarcely ceased when she had made
+her resolve.
+
+She stepped a pace forward. “You are a gentleman,” she said.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Can I trust you?”
+
+She did not wait for his assurance. “I must leave this hotel at once.
+Come here.”
+
+She took his arm and led him to the window.
+
+“You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are our
+bicycles. Go down, get them out, and I will come down to you. Dare you?
+
+“Get your bicycle out in the road?”
+
+“Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?”
+
+“Which way?”
+
+“Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one minute.”
+
+“Right!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+
+He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill
+Bechamel he would have done it. His head was a maelstrom now. He walked
+out of the hotel, along the front, and into the big, black-shadowed
+coach yard. He looked round. There were no bicycles visible. Then a man
+emerged from the dark, a short man in a short, black, shiny jacket.
+Hoopdriver was caught. He made no attempt to turn and run for it. “I’ve
+been giving your machines a wipe over, sir,” said the man, recognising
+the suit, and touching his cap. Hoopdriver’s intelligence now was a
+soaring eagle; he swooped on the situation at once. “That’s right,” he
+said, and added, before the pause became marked, “Where is mine? I want
+to look at the chain.”
+
+The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a lantern.
+Hoopdriver moved the lady’s machine out of his way to the door, and
+then laid hands on the man’s machine and wheeled it out of the shed
+into the yard. The gate stood open and beyond was the pale road and a
+clump of trees black in the twilight. He stooped and examined the chain
+with trembling fingers. How was it to be done? Something behind the
+gate seemed to flutter. The man must be got rid of anyhow.
+
+“I say,” said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, “can you get me a
+screwdriver?”
+
+The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and came
+up to the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his hand.
+Hoopdriver felt himself a lost man. He took the screwdriver with a
+tepid “Thanks,” and incontinently had another inspiration.
+
+“I say,” he said again.
+
+“Well?”
+
+“This is miles too big.”
+
+The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it down on
+the ground. “Want a smaller screwdriver?” he said.
+
+Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt _atichew_. It
+is the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. “As small as
+you have,” he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+
+“I ain’t got none smaller than that,” said the ostler.
+
+“Won’t do, really,” said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his
+handkerchief.
+
+“I’ll see wot they got in the ’ouse, if you like, sir,” said the man.
+“If you would,” said Hoopdriver. And as the man’s heavily nailed boots
+went clattering down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up, took a noiseless
+step to the lady’s machine, laid trembling hands on its handle and
+saddle, and prepared for a rush.
+
+The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm, yellow
+light up the road, shut again behind the man, and forthwith Hoopdriver
+rushed the machines towards the gate. A dark grey form came fluttering
+to meet him. “Give me this,” she said, “and bring yours.”
+
+He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran back,
+seized Bechamel’s machine, and followed.
+
+The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the cobbles
+again. It was too late now to do anything but escape. He heard the
+ostler shout behind him, and came into the road. She was up and dim
+already. He got into the saddle without a blunder. In a moment the
+ostler was in the gateway with a full-throated “_Hi!_! sir! That ain’t
+allowed;” and Hoopdriver was overtaking the Young Lady in Grey. For
+some moments the earth seemed alive with shouts of, “Stop ’em!” and the
+shadows with ambuscades of police. The road swept round, and they were
+riding out of sight of the hotel, and behind dark hedges, side by side.
+
+She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. “Brave,” she said,
+“brave!” and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He looked over his
+shoulder and about him, and saw that they were already out of
+Bognor—for the Vicuna stands at the very westernmost extremity of the
+sea front—and riding on a fair wide road.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+
+The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road vociferating
+after them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna Hotel, and finding a
+group of men outside the entrance, who wanted to know what was _up_,
+stopped to give them the cream of the adventure. That gave the
+fugitives five minutes. Then pushing breathlessly into the bar, he had
+to make it clear to the barmaid what the matter was, and the ‘gov’nor’
+being out, they spent some more precious time wondering ‘what—_ever_’
+was to be done! in which the two customers returning from outside
+joined with animation. There were also moral remarks and other
+irrelevant contributions. There were conflicting ideas of telling the
+police and pursuing the flying couple on a horse. That made ten
+minutes. Then Stephen, the waiter, who had shown Hoopdriver up, came
+down and lit wonderful lights and started quite a fresh discussion by
+the simple question “_Which?_?” That turned ten minutes into a quarter
+of an hour. And in the midst of this discussion, making a sudden and
+awestricken silence, appeared Bechamel in the hall beyond the bar,
+walked with a resolute air to the foot of the staircase, and passed out
+of sight. You conceive the backward pitch of that exceptionally shaped
+cranium? Incredulous eyes stared into one another’s in the bar, as his
+paces, muffled by the stair carpet, went up to the landing, turned,
+reached the passage and walked into the dining-room overhead.
+
+“It wasn’t that one at all, miss,” said the ostler, “I’d _swear_.”
+
+“Well, that’s Mr. Beaumont,” said the barmaid, “—anyhow.”
+
+Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by Bechamel.
+They listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went out of the
+diningroom. Down the passage to the bedroom. Stopped again.
+
+“Poor chap!” said the barmaid. “She’s a wicked woman!”
+
+“Sssh!” said Stephen.
+
+After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a chair
+creak under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+
+“I’m going up,” said Stephen, “to break the melancholy news to him.”
+
+Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without knocking,
+Stephen entered. Bechamel’s face suggested a different expectation.
+“Beg pardon, sir,” said Stephen, with a diplomatic cough.
+
+“Well?” said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some of
+her threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had it ready.
+She was a monomaniac. “Leave me alone with her,” he would say; “I know
+how to calm her.”
+
+“Mrs. Beaumont,” said Stephen.
+
+“_Well?_”
+
+“Has gone.”
+
+He rose with a fine surprise. “Gone!” he said with a half laugh.
+
+“Gone, sir. On her bicycle.”
+
+“On her bicycle! Why?”
+
+“She went, sir, with Another Gentleman.”
+
+This time Bechamel was really startled. “An—other Gentlemen! _Who?_”
+
+“Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got out the
+two bicycles, sir, and went off, sir—about twenty minutes ago.”
+
+Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips.
+Stephen, watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether this
+abandoned husband would weep or curse, or rush off at once in furious
+pursuit. But as yet he seemed merely stunned.
+
+“Brown clothes?” he said. “And fairish?”
+
+“A little like yourself, sir—in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim Duke—”
+
+Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said—But let us
+put in blank cartridge—he said, “———!”
+
+“I might have thought!”
+
+He flung himself into the armchair.
+
+“Damn her,” said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man. “I’ll
+chuck this infernal business! They’ve gone, eigh?”
+
+“Yessir.”
+
+“Well, let ’em GO,” said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. “Let ’em
+GO. Who cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon as fast
+as you can, there’s a good chap. I’ll take that, and then I’ll have
+another look round Bognor before I turn in.”
+
+Stephen was too surprised to say anything but “Bourbon, sir?”
+
+“Go on,” said Bechamel. “Damn you!”
+
+Stephen’s sympathies changed at once. “Yessir,” he murmured, fumbling
+for the door handle, and left the room, marvelling. Bechamel, having in
+this way satisfied his sense of appearances, and comported himself as a
+Pagan should, so soon as the waiter’s footsteps had passed, vented the
+cream of his feelings in a stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his
+wife or _her_ stepmother had sent the detective, _she_ had evidently
+gone off with him, and that little business was over. And he was here,
+stranded and sold, an ass, and as it were, the son of many generations
+of asses. And his only ray of hope was that it seemed more probable,
+after all, that the girl had escaped through her stepmother. In which
+case the business might be hushed up yet, and the evil hour of
+explanation with his wife indefinitely postponed. Then abruptly the
+image of that lithe figure in grey knickerbockers went frisking across
+his mind again, and he reverted to his blasphemies. He started up in a
+gusty frenzy with a vague idea of pursuit, and incontinently sat down
+again with a concussion that stirred the bar below to its depths. He
+banged the arms of the chair with his fist, and swore again. “Of all
+the accursed fools that were ever spawned,” he was chanting, “I,
+Bechamel—” when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening of the door,
+Stephen entered with the Bourbon.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV.
+THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+
+
+And so the twenty minutes’ law passed into an infinity. We leave the
+wicked Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a garment,—the
+wretched creature has already sufficiently sullied our modest but
+truthful pages,—we leave the eager little group in the bar of the
+Vicuna Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we have left all Chichester and
+Midhurst and Haslemere and Guildford and Ripley and Putney, and follow
+this dear fool of a Hoopdriver of ours and his Young Lady in Grey out
+upon the moonlight road. How they rode! How their hearts beat together
+and their breath came fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and
+every noise pursuit! For all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the
+world of Romance. Had a policeman intervened because their lamps were
+not lit, Hoopdriver had cut him down and ridden on, after the fashion
+of a hero born. Had Bechamel arisen in the way with rapiers for a duel,
+Hoopdriver had fought as one to whom Agincourt was a reality and
+drapery a dream. It was Rescue, Elopement, Glory! And she by the side
+of him! He had seen her face in shadow, with the morning sunlight
+tangled in her hair, he had seen her sympathetic with that warm light
+in her face, he had seen her troubled and her eyes bright with tears.
+But what light is there lighting a face like hers, to compare with the
+soft glamour of the midsummer moon?
+
+The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of Bognor,
+in one place dark and heavy under a thick growth of trees, then amidst
+villas again, some warm and lamplit, some white and sleeping in the
+moonlight; then between hedges, over which they saw broad wan meadows
+shrouded in a low-lying mist. They scarcely heeded whither they rode at
+first, being only anxious to get away, turning once westward when the
+spire of Chichester cathedral rose suddenly near them out of the dewy
+night, pale and intricate and high. They rode, speaking little, just a
+rare word now and then, at a turning, at a footfall, at a roughness in
+the road.
+
+She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to him,
+but after the first tumult of the adventure, as flight passed into mere
+steady riding his mind became an enormous appreciation of the position.
+The night was a warm white silence save for the subtile running of
+their chains. He looked sideways at her as she sat beside him with her
+ankles gracefully ruling the treadles. Now the road turned westward,
+and she was a dark grey outline against the shimmer of the moon; and
+now they faced northwards, and the soft cold light passed caressingly
+over her hair and touched her brow and cheek.
+
+There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is sweet and
+beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has created the
+fairies, whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises again in our
+hearts at the sight of it, the voices of the filmy route, and their
+faint, soul-piercing melodies. By the moonlight every man, dull clod
+though he be by day, tastes something of Endymion, takes something of
+the youth and strength of Endymion, and sees the dear white goddess
+shining at him from his Lady’s eyes. The firm substantial daylight
+things become ghostly and elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of
+unsubstantial texture, the world a visible spirit, the spiritual within
+us rises out of its darkness, loses something of its weight and body,
+and swims up towards heaven. This road that was a mere rutted white
+dust, hot underfoot, blinding to the eye, is now a soft grey silence,
+with the glitter of a crystal grain set starlike in its silver here and
+there. Overhead, riding serenely through the spacious blue, is the
+mother of the silence, she who has spiritualised the world, alone save
+for two attendant steady shining stars. And in silence under her benign
+influence, under the benediction of her light, rode our two wanderers
+side by side through the transfigured and transfiguring night.
+
+Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+skull. At the turnings of the road he made his decisions with an air of
+profound promptitude (and quite haphazard). “The Right,” he would say.
+Or again “The Left,” as one who knew. So it was that in the space of an
+hour they came abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea.
+Grey beach to the right of them and to the left, and a little white
+cottage fast asleep inland of a sleeping fishing-boat. “Hullo!” said
+Mr. Hoopdriver, _sotto voce_. They dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks
+and thorns rose out of the haze of moonlight that was tangled in the
+hedge on either side.
+
+“You are safe,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an air
+and bowing courtly.
+
+“Where are we?”
+
+“_Safe_.”
+
+“But _where?_”
+
+“Chichester Harbour.” He waved his arm seaward as though it was a goal.
+
+“Do you think they will follow us?”
+
+“We have turned and turned again.”
+
+It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly there,
+holding her machine, and he, holding his, could go no nearer to her to
+see if she sobbed for weeping or for want of breath. “What are we to do
+now?” her voice asked.
+
+“Are you tired?” he asked.
+
+“I will do what has to be done.”
+
+The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a space. “Do
+you know,” she said, “I am not afraid of you. I am sure you are honest
+to me. And I do not even know your name!”
+
+He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. “It’s an
+ugly name,” he said. “But you are right in trusting me. I would—I would
+do anything for you.... This is nothing.”
+
+She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But compared
+with Bechamel!—“We take each other on trust,” she said. “Do you want to
+know—how things are with me?”
+
+“That man,” she went on, after the assent of his listening silence,
+“promised to help and protect me. I was unhappy at home—never mind why.
+A stepmother—Idle, unoccupied, hindered, cramped, that is enough,
+perhaps. Then he came into my life, and talked to me of art and
+literature, and set my brain on fire. I wanted to come out into the
+world, to be a human being—not a thing in a hutch. And he—”
+
+“I know,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“And now here I am—”
+
+“I will do anything,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+She thought. “You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not
+describe her—”
+
+“I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my power.”
+
+“I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant.” She spoke of
+Bechamel as the Illusion.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+
+“I’m thinking,” he said, full of a rapture of protective
+responsibility, “what we had best be doing. You are tired, you know.
+And we can’t wander all night—after the day we’ve had.”
+
+“That was Chichester we were near?” she asked.
+
+“If,” he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, “you would make _me_
+your brother, _Miss Beaumont_.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“We could stop there together—”
+
+She took a minute to answer. “I am going to light these lamps,” said
+Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on his shoe.
+She looked at his face in its light, grave and intent. How could she
+ever have thought him common or absurd?
+
+“But you must tell me your name—brother,” she said,
+
+“Er—Carrington,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause. Who
+would be Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+
+“But the Christian name?”
+
+“Christian name? _My_ Christian name. Well—Chris.” He snapped his lamp
+and stood up. “If you will hold my machine, I will light yours,” he
+said.
+
+She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment they
+stood face to face. “My name, brother Chris,” she said, “is Jessie.”
+
+He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested.
+“_Jessie_,” he repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face affected
+her strangely. She had to speak. “It’s not such a very wonderful name,
+is it?” she said, with a laugh to break the intensity.
+
+He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing of
+his features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the lantern in
+front of her machine. She looked down at him, almost kneeling in front
+of her, with an unreasonable approbation in her eyes. It was, as I have
+indicated, the hour and season of the full moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXV.
+
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night’s journey with the same
+confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good luck and the
+fact that most roads about a town converge thereupon, that Chichester
+was at last attained. It seemed at first as though everyone had gone to
+bed, but the Red Hotel still glowed yellow and warm. It was the first
+time Hoopdriver had dared the mysteries of a ‘first-class’ hotel. But
+that night he was in the mood to dare anything.
+
+“So you found your Young Lady at last,” said the ostler of the Red
+Hotel; for it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver had made
+inquiries in the afternoon.
+
+“Quite a misunderstanding,” said Hoopdriver, with splendid readiness.
+“My sister had gone to Bognor. But I brought her back here. I’ve took a
+fancy to this place. And the moonlight’s simply dee-vine.”
+
+“We’ve had supper, thenks, and we’re tired,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I
+suppose you won’t take anything,—Jessie?”
+
+The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie like
+that! But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself bound to
+admit. “Good-night, Sis,” he said, “and pleasant dreams. I’ll just ’ave
+a look at this paper before I turn in.” But this was living indeed! he
+told himself.
+
+So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very edge of
+the Most Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you will remember,
+with a vigil in a little sweetstuff shop next door to the Angel at
+Midhurst. But to think of all the things that had happened since then!
+He caught himself in the middle of a yawn, pulled out his watch, saw
+the time was halfpast eleven, and marched off, with a fine sense of
+heroism, bedward.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI.
+THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+
+
+And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a break in
+the narrative again. These absurd young people are safely tucked away
+now, their heads full of glowing nonsense, indeed, but the course of
+events at any rate is safe from any fresh developments through their
+activities for the next eight hours or more. They are both sleeping
+healthily you will perhaps be astonished to hear. Here is the girl—what
+girls are coming to nowadays only Mrs. Lynn Linton can tell!—in company
+with an absolute stranger, of low extraction and uncertain accent,
+unchaperoned and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is safe, she
+is, if anything, a little proud of her own share in these transactions.
+Then this Mr. Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot that he is! is in
+illegal possession of a stolen bicycle, a stolen young lady, and two
+stolen names, established with them in an hotel that is quite beyond
+his means, and immensely proud of himself in a somnolent way for these
+incomparable follies. There are occasions when a moralising novelist
+can merely wring his hands and leave matters to take their course. For
+all Hoopdriver knows or cares he may be locked up the very first thing
+to-morrow morning for the rape of the cycle. Then in Bognor, let alone
+that melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with whom our dealings are, thank
+Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern with a steak Mr. Hoopdriver
+ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his American-cloth parcel in a
+bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of guarantee, carefully
+locked up in the hayloft. To-morrow he will be a Mystery, and they will
+be looking for his body along the sea front. And so far we have never
+given a glance at the desolate home in Surbiton, familiar to you no
+doubt through the medium of illustrated interviews, where the unhappy
+stepmother—
+
+That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to you. That
+is a little surprise I have prepared for you. She is ‘Thomas
+Plantagenet,’ the gifted authoress of that witty and daring book, “A
+Soul Untrammelled,” and quite an excellent woman in her way,—only it is
+such a crooked way. Her real name is Milton. She is a widow and a
+charming one, only ten years older than Jessie, and she is always
+careful to dedicate her more daring works to the ‘sacred memory of my
+husband’ to show that there’s nothing personal, you know, in the
+matter. Considering her literary reputation (she was always speaking of
+herself as one ‘martyred for truth,’ because the critics advertised her
+written indecorums in column long ‘slates’),—considering her literary
+reputation, I say, she was one of the most respectable women it is
+possible to imagine. She furnished correctly, dressed correctly, had
+severe notions of whom she might meet, went to church, and even at
+times took the sacrament in some esoteric spirit. And Jessie she
+brought up so carefully that she never even let her read “A Soul
+Untrammelled.” Which, therefore, naturally enough, Jessie did, and went
+on from that to a feast of advanced literature. Mrs. Milton not only
+brought up Jessie carefully, but very slowly, so that at seventeen she
+was still a clever schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and quite in the
+background of the little literary circle of unimportant celebrities
+which ‘Thomas Plantagenet’ adorned. Mrs. Milton knew Bechamel’s
+reputation of being a dangerous man; but then bad men are not bad
+women, and she let him come to her house to show she was not afraid—she
+took no account of Jessie. When the elopement came, therefore, it was a
+double disappointment to her, for she perceived his hand by a kind of
+instinct. She did the correct thing. The correct thing, as you know, is
+to take hansom cabs, regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not
+know _what_ to do, round the circle of your confidential friends. She
+could not have ridden nor wept more had Jessie been her own
+daughter—she showed the properest spirit. And she not only showed it,
+but felt it.
+
+Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more successful
+widow of thirty-two,—“Thomas Plantagenet is a charming woman,” her
+reviewers used to write invariably, even if they spoke ill of
+her,—found the steady growth of Jessie into womanhood an unmitigated
+nuisance and had been willing enough to keep her in the background. And
+Jessie—who had started this intercourse at fourteen with abstract
+objections to stepmothers—had been active enough in resenting this.
+Increasing rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them, until
+they could engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or the
+cutting of a book with a sharpened knife. There is very little
+deliberate wickedness in the world. The stupidity of our selfishness
+gives much the same results indeed, but in the ethical laboratory it
+shows a different nature. And when the disaster came, Mrs. Milton’s
+remorse for their gradual loss of sympathy and her share in the losing
+of it, was genuine enough.
+
+You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how West
+Kensington and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary suburbs, those
+decent penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling, hummed with the
+business, Her ‘Men’—as a charming literary lady she had, of course, an
+organised corps—were immensely excited, and were sympathetic; helpfully
+energetic, suggestive, alert, as their ideals of their various
+dispositions required them to be. “Any news of Jessie?” was the
+pathetic opening of a dozen melancholy but interesting conversations.
+To her Men she was not perhaps so damp as she was to her women friends,
+but in a quiet way she was even more touching. For three days,
+Wednesday that is, Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the
+fugitives. It was known that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with
+buttonup skirts, and mounted on a diamond frame safety with Dunlops,
+and a loofah covered saddle, had ridden forth early in the morning,
+taking with her about two pounds seven shillings in money, and a grey
+touring case packed, and there, save for a brief note to her
+stepmother,—a declaration of independence, it was said, an assertion of
+her Ego containing extensive and very annoying quotations from “A Soul
+Untrammelled,” and giving no definite intimation of her plans—knowledge
+ceased. That note was shown to few, and then only in the strictest
+confidence.
+
+But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery, a
+correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the first. He
+had been touring in Sussex,—his knapsack was still on his back,—and he
+testified hurriedly that at a place called Midhurst, in the bar of an
+hotel called the Angel, he had heard from a barmaid a vivid account of
+a Young Lady in Grey. Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in
+brown? “The poor, misguided girl! I must go to her at once,” she said,
+choking, and rising with her hand to her heart.
+
+“It’s impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on my
+way.”
+
+“A mother’s love,” she said. “I bear her _that_.”
+
+“I know you do.” He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his
+photographs of scenery more than Mrs. Milton. “It’s more than she
+deserves.”
+
+“Oh, don’t speak unkindly of her! She has been misled.”
+
+It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry his
+news ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back? He had
+come to her because he knew of her anxiety. “It is _good_ of you,” she
+said, and quite instinctively took and pressed his hand. “And to think
+of that poor girl—tonight! It’s dreadful.” She looked into the fire
+that she had lit when he came in, the warm light fell upon her dark
+purple dress, and left her features in a warm shadow. She looked such a
+slight, frail thing to be troubled so. “We must follow her.” Her
+resolution seemed magnificent. “I have no one to go with me.”
+
+“He must marry her,” said the man.
+
+“She has no friends. We have no one. After all—Two women.—So helpless.”
+
+And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who knew
+her only from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply because she
+was great-hearted—intellectual. He was overcome by the unspeakable
+pathos of her position.
+
+“Mrs. Milton,” he said. “Hetty!”
+
+She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. “Not now,” she said,
+“not now. I must find her first.”
+
+“Yes,” he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big, fat men
+who feel deeply.) “But let me help you. At least let me help you.”
+
+“But can you spare time?” she said. “For _me_.”
+
+“For you—”
+
+“But what can I do? what can _we_ do?”
+
+“Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on Thursday
+night, last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!” he said. “We
+will save her yet!”
+
+She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+
+“Courage!” he repeated, finding it so well received.
+
+There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to the
+fire, and he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which suited his
+dimensions admirably. Then the door opened, and the girl showed in
+Dangle, who looked curiously from one to the other. There was emotion
+here, he had heard the armchair creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face
+was flushed, displayed a suspicious alacrity to explain. “You, too,”
+she said, “are one of my good friends. And we have news of her at
+last.”
+
+It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined to show
+himself a man of resource. In the end he, too, was accepted for the
+Midhurst Expedition, to the intense disgust of Widgery; and young
+Phipps, a callow youth of few words, faultless collars, and fervent
+devotion, was also enrolled before the evening was out. They would
+scour the country, all three of them. She appeared to brighten up a
+little, but it was evident she was profoundly touched. She did not know
+what she had done to merit such friends. Her voice broke a little, she
+moved towards the door, and young Phipps, who was a youth of action
+rather than of words, sprang and opened it—proud to be first.
+
+“She is sorely troubled,” said Dangle to Widgery. “We must do what we
+can for her.”
+
+“She is a wonderful woman,” said Dangle. “So subtle, so intricate, so
+many faceted. She feels this deeply.”
+
+Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+
+And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+
+But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers time to
+refresh themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the present,
+therefore, we will not concern ourselves with the starting of the
+Rescue Party, nor with Mrs. Milton’s simple but becoming grey dress,
+with the healthy Widgery’s Norfolk jacket and thick boots, with the
+slender Dangle’s energetic bearing, nor with the wonderful chequerings
+that set off the legs of the golf-suited Phipps. They are after us. In
+a little while they will be upon us. You must imagine as you best can
+the competitive raidings at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps.
+How Widgery was great at questions, and Dangle good at inference, and
+Phipps so conspicuously inferior in everything that he felt it, and
+sulked with Mrs. Milton most of the day, after the manner of your
+callow youth the whole world over. Mrs. Milton stopped at the Angel and
+was very sad and charming and intelligent, and Widgery paid the bill in
+the afternoon of Saturday, Chichester was attained. But by that time
+our fugitives—As you shall immediately hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII.
+THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and, staring
+unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and pleasant. He turned
+the peaked nose that overrides the insufficient moustache, up to the
+ceiling, a pinkish projection over the billow of white. You might see
+it wrinkle as he yawned again, and then became quiet. So matters
+remained for a space. Very slowly recollection returned to him. Then a
+shock of indeterminate brown hair appeared, and first one watery grey
+eye a-wondering, and then two; the bed upheaved, and you had him, his
+thin neck projecting abruptly from the clothes he held about him, his
+face staring about the room. He held the clothes about him, I hope I
+may explain, because his night-shirt was at Bognor in an American-cloth
+packet, derelict. He yawned a third time, rubbed his eyes, smacked his
+lips. He was recalling almost everything now. The pursuit, the hotel,
+the tremulous daring of his entry, the swift adventure of the inn yard,
+the moonlight—Abruptly he threw the clothes back and rose into a
+sitting position on the edge of the bed. Without was the noise of
+shutters being unfastened and doors unlocked, and the passing of hoofs
+and wheels in the street. He looked at his watch. Half-past six. He
+surveyed the sumptuous room again.
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t a dream, after all.”
+
+“I wonder what they charge for these Juicèd rooms!” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, nursing one rosy foot.
+
+He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache. Suddenly
+he gave vent to a noiseless laugh. “What a rush it was! Rushed in and
+off with his girl right under his nose. Planned it well too. Talk of
+highway robbery! Talk of brigands! Up and off! How juicèd _sold_ he
+must be feeling! It was a shave too—in the coach yard!”
+
+Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw fell.
+“I sa-a-ay!” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand the
+whirl he had been in overnight. But one sees things clearer in the
+daylight. “I’m hanged if I haven’t been and stolen a blessed bicycle.”
+
+“Who cares?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face supplied the
+answer.
+
+Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put a
+more heroic complexion on the business. But of an early morning, on an
+empty stomach (as with characteristic coarseness, medical men put it)
+heroics are of a more difficult growth than by moonlight. Everything
+had seemed exceptionally fine and brilliant, but quite natural, the
+evening before.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket, laid it
+over his knees, and took out the money from the little ticket pocket.
+“Fourteen and six-half,” he said, holding the coins in his left hand
+and stroking his chin with his right. He verified, by patting, the
+presence of a pocketbook in the breast pocket. “Five, fourteen,
+six-half,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Left.”
+
+With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into another
+silent meditation. “That wouldn’t matter,” he said. “It’s the bike’s
+the bother.
+
+“No good going back to Bognor.
+
+“Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the loan.
+Having no further use—” Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed into the
+silent concoction of a delightfully impudent letter. “Mr. J. Hoopdriver
+presents his compliments.” But the grave note reasserted itself.
+
+“Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange them.
+_My_ old crock’s so blessed shabby. He’s sure to be spiteful too. Have
+me run in, perhaps. Then she’d be in just the same old fix, only worse.
+You see, I’m her Knight-errant. It complicates things so.”
+
+His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. “What the juice
+do they want with cream pans in a bedroom?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, _en
+passant_.
+
+“Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible,
+anyhow. I suppose she’ll go home to her friends. That bicycle is a
+juicy nuisance, anyhow. Juicy nuisance!”
+
+He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to proceed
+with his toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered that the
+simple necessaries of that process were at Bognor! “Lord!” he remarked,
+and whistled silently for a space. “Rummy go! profit and loss; profit,
+one sister with bicycle complete, wot offers?—cheap for tooth and ’air
+brush, vests, night-shirt, stockings, and sundries.
+
+“Make the best of it,” and presently, when it came to hair-brushing, he
+had to smooth his troubled locks with his hands. It was a poor result.
+“Sneak out and get a shave, I suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink
+again! Beard don’t show much.”
+
+He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for some
+time, and curled his insufficient moustache up with some care. Then he
+fell a-meditating on his beauty. He considered himself, three-quarter
+face, left and right. An expression of distaste crept over his
+features. “Looking won’t alter it, Hoopdriver,” he remarked. “You’re a
+weedy customer, my man. Shoulders narrow. Skimpy, anyhow.”
+
+He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with his
+chin lifted in the air. “Good Lord!” he said. “_What_ a neck! Wonder
+why I got such a thundering lump there.”
+
+He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. “If I’d been
+exercised properly, if I’d been fed reasonable, if I hadn’t been shoved
+out of a silly school into a silly shop—But there! the old folks didn’t
+know no better. The schoolmaster ought to have. But he didn’t, poor old
+fool!—Still, when it comes to meeting a girl like this—It’s ’_ard_.
+
+“I wonder what Adam’d think of me—as a specimen. Civilisation, eigh?
+Heir of the ages! I’m nothing. I know nothing. I can’t do
+anything—sketch a bit. Why wasn’t I made an artist?
+
+“Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine.”
+
+“No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don’t tell yourself any lies about
+it. Lovers ain’t your game,—anyway. But there’s other things yet. You
+can help the young lady, and you will—I suppose she’ll be going
+home—And that business of the bicycle’s to see to, too, my man.
+_Forward_, Hoopdriver! If you ain’t a beauty, that’s no reason why you
+should stop and be copped, is it?”
+
+And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of self-satisfaction,
+he had another attempt at his hair preparatory to leaving his room and
+hurrying on breakfast, for an early departure. While breakfast was
+preparing he wandered out into South Street and refurnished himself
+with the elements of luggage again. “No expense to be spared,” he
+murmured, disgorging the half-sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII.
+THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+
+
+He caused his ‘sister’ to be called repeatedly, and when she came down,
+explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to the bicycle
+in the yard. “Might be disagreeable, y’ know.” His anxiety was obvious
+enough. “Very well,” she said (quite friendly); “hurry breakfast, and
+we’ll ride out. I want to talk things over with you.” The girl seemed
+more beautiful than ever after the night’s sleep; her hair in comely
+dark waves from her forehead, her ungauntleted finger-tips pink and
+cool. And how decided she was! Breakfast was a nervous ceremony,
+conversation fraternal but thin; the waiter overawed him, and he was
+cowed by a multiplicity of forks. But she called him “Chris.” They
+discussed their route over his sixpenny county map for the sake of
+talking, but avoided a decision in the presence of the attendant. The
+five-pound note was changed for the bill, and through Hoopdriver’s
+determination to be quite the gentleman, the waiter and chambermaid got
+half a crown each and the ostler a florin. “’Olidays,” said the ostler
+to himself, without gratitude. The public mounting of the bicycles in
+the street was a moment of trepidation. A policeman actually stopped
+and watched them from the opposite kerb. Suppose him to come across and
+ask: “Is that your bicycle, sir?” Fight? Or drop it and run? It was a
+time of bewildering apprehension, too, going through the streets of the
+town, so that a milk cart barely escaped destruction under Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s chancy wheel. That recalled him to a sense of erratic
+steering, and he pulled himself together. In the lanes he breathed
+freer, and a less formal conversation presently began.
+
+“You’ve ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry,” said Jessie.
+
+“Well, the fact of it is, I’m worried, just a little bit. About this
+machine.”
+
+“Of course,” she said. “I had forgotten that. But where are we going?”
+
+“Jest a turning or two more, if you don’t mind,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should feel
+more easy. If we was locked up, you know—Not that I should mind on my
+own account—”
+
+They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left hand.
+Every mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr. Hoopdriver
+felt a little less conscience-stricken, and a little more of the
+gallant desperado. Here he was riding on a splendid machine with a
+Slap-up girl beside him. What would they think of it in the Emporium if
+any of them were to see him? He imagined in detail the astonishment of
+Miss Isaacs and of Miss Howe. “Why! It’s Mr. Hoopdriver,” Miss Isaacs
+would say. “_Never!_” emphatically from Miss Howe. Then he played with
+Briggs, and then tried the ‘G.V.’ in a shay. “Fancy introducing ’em to
+her—My sister _pro tem_.” He was her brother Chris—Chris what?—Confound
+it! Harringon, Hartington—something like that. Have to keep off that
+topic until he could remember. Wish he’d told her the truth now—almost.
+He glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes straight ahead of her.
+Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she seemed. He noticed how well
+she rode and that she rode with her lips closed—a thing he could never
+manage.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind came round to the future. What was she going to
+do? What were they both going to do? His thoughts took a graver colour.
+He had rescued her. This was fine, manly rescue work he was engaged
+upon. She ought to go home, in spite of that stepmother. He must insist
+gravely but firmly upon that. She was the spirited sort, of course, but
+still—Wonder if she had any money? Wonder what the second-class fare
+from Havant to London is? Of course he would have to pay that—it was
+the regular thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he take her home?
+He began to rough in a moving sketch of the return. The stepmother,
+repentant of her indescribable cruelties, would be present,—even these
+rich people have their troubles,—probably an uncle or two. The footman
+would announce, Mr.—(bother that name!) and Miss Milton. Then two women
+weeping together, and a knightly figure in the background dressed in a
+handsome Norfolk jacket, still conspicuously new. He would conceal his
+feeling until the very end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the
+doorway in such an attitude as Mr. George Alexander might assume, and
+say, slowly and dwindlingly: “Be kind to her—_be_ kind to her,” and so
+depart, heartbroken to the meanest intelligence. But that was a matter
+for the future. He would have to begin discussing the return soon.
+There was no traffic along the road, and he came up beside her (he had
+fallen behind in his musing). She began to talk. “Mr. Denison,” she
+began, and then, doubtfully, “That _is_ your name? I’m very stupid—”
+
+“It is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison,
+Denison. What was she saying?)
+
+“I wonder how far you are willing to help me?” Confoundedly hard to
+answer a question like that on the spur of the moment, without steering
+wildly. “You may rely—” said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering from a violent
+wabble. “I can assure you—I want to help you very much. Don’t consider
+me at all. Leastways, consider me entirely at your service.” (Nuisance
+not to be able to say this kind of thing right.)
+
+“You see, I am so awkwardly situated.”
+
+“If I can only help you—you will make me very happy—” There was a
+pause. Round a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space between
+hedge and road, set with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a felled tree
+lay among the green. There she dismounted, and propping her machine
+against a stone, sat down. “Here, we can talk,” she said.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+
+She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with her
+chin in her hand, and looking straight in front of her. “I don’t know—I
+am resolved to Live my Own Life.”
+
+“Of course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Naturally.”
+
+“I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to learn.
+Everyone is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want time to
+think.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how clear
+and ready her words were. But then one might speak well with a throat
+and lips like that. He knew he was inadequate, but he tried to meet the
+occasion. “If you let them rush you into anything you might repent of,
+of course you’d be very silly.”
+
+“Don’t _you_ want to learn?” she asked.
+
+“I was wondering only this morning,” he began, and stopped.
+
+She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this insufficiency.
+“I find myself in life, and it terrifies me. I seem to be like a little
+speck, whirling on a wheel, suddenly caught up. ‘What am I here for?’ I
+ask. Simply to be here at a time—I asked it a week ago, I asked it
+yesterday, and I ask it to-day. And little things happen and the days
+pass. My stepmother takes me shopping, people come to tea, there is a
+new play to pass the time, or a concert, or a novel. The wheels of the
+world go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a miracle
+like Joshua and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At home—It’s
+impossible.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. “It _is_ so,” he said in a
+meditative tone. “Things _will_ go on,” he said. The faint breath of
+summer stirred the trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted among
+the meadowsweet and struck and broke into a dozen separate threads
+against his knee. They flew on apart, and sank, as the breeze fell,
+among the grass: some to germinate, some to perish. His eye followed
+them until they had vanished.
+
+“I can’t go back to Surbiton,” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+“_Eigh?_” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was an
+unexpected development.
+
+“I want to write, you see,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “to write
+Books and alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free Life and Own
+myself. I can’t go back. I want to obtain a position as a journalist. I
+have been told—But I know no one to help me at once. No one that I
+could go to. There is one person—She was a mistress at my school. If I
+could write to her—But then, how could I get her answer?”
+
+“H’mp,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+
+“I can’t trouble you much more. You have come—you have risked things—”
+
+“That don’t count,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s double pay to let me do
+it, so to speak.”
+
+“It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am
+resolved to be Unconventional—at any cost. But we are so hampered. If I
+could only burgeon out of all that hinders me! I want to struggle, to
+take my place in the world. I want to be my own mistress, to shape my
+own career. But my stepmother objects so. She does as she likes
+herself, and is strict with me to ease her conscience. And if I go back
+now, go back owning myself beaten—” She left the rest to his
+imagination.
+
+“I see that,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He _must_ help her. Within his
+skull he was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six and
+twopence. In some vague way he inferred from all this that Jessie was
+trying to escape from an undesirable marriage, but was saying these
+things out of modesty. His circle of ideas was so limited.
+
+“You know, Mr.—I’ve forgotten your name again.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. “You can’t go back of
+course, quite like that,” he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed suddenly
+red and his cheeks flushed.
+
+“But what _is_ your name?”
+
+“Name!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Why!—Benson, of course.”
+
+“Mr. Benson—yes it’s really very stupid of me. But I can never remember
+names. I must make a note on my cuff.” She clicked a little silver
+pencil and wrote the name down. “If I could write to my friend. I
+believe she would be able to help me to an independent life. I could
+write to her—or telegraph. Write, I think. I could scarcely explain in
+a telegram. I know she would help me.”
+
+Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the
+circumstances. “In that case,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if you don’t mind
+trusting yourself to a stranger, we might continue as we are perhaps.
+For a day or so. Until you heard.” (Suppose thirty shillings a day,
+that gives four days, say four thirties is hun’ and twenty, six
+quid,—well, three days, say; four ten.)
+
+“You are very good to me.”
+
+His expression was eloquent.
+
+“Very well, then, and thank you. It’s wonderful—it’s more than I
+deserve that you—” She dropped the theme abruptly. “What was our bill
+at Chichester?”
+
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There was a
+brief discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her insistence in
+paying. She carried her point. Their talk came round to their immediate
+plans for the day. They decided to ride easily, through Havant, and
+stop, perhaps, at Fareham or Southampton. For the previous day had
+tried them both. Holding the map extended on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+eye fell by chance on the bicycle at his feet. “That bicycle,” he
+remarked, quite irrelevantly, “wouldn’t look the same machine if I got
+a big, double Elarum instead of that little bell.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Jest a thought.” A pause.
+
+“Very well, then,—Havant and lunch,” said Jessie, rising.
+
+“I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that
+machine,” said Hoopdriver. “Because it IS stealing it, you know, come
+to think of it.”
+
+“Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you—I will tell the whole world—if
+need be.”
+
+“I believe you would,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. “You’re
+plucky enough—goodness knows.”
+
+Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and picked up
+her machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road. Then he took his
+own. He paused, regarding it. “I say!” said he. “How’d this bike look,
+now, if it was enamelled grey?” She looked over her shoulder at his
+grave face. “Why try and hide it in that way?”
+
+“It was jest a passing thought,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily. “Didn’t
+_mean_ anything, you know.”
+
+As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in a
+transitory manner that the interview had been quite other than his
+expectation. But that was the way with everything in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+experience. And though his Wisdom looked grave within him, and Caution
+was chinking coins, and an ancient prejudice in favour of Property
+shook her head, something else was there too, shouting in his mind to
+drown all these saner considerations, the intoxicating thought of
+riding beside Her all to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days
+after that. Of talking to her familiarly, being brother of all her
+slender strength and freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful
+time beyond all his imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave place
+to anticipations as impalpable and fluctuating and beautiful as the
+sunset of a summer day.
+
+At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at a small hairdresser’s
+in the main street, a toothbrush, a pair of nail scissors, and a little
+bottle of stuff to darken the moustache, an article the shopman
+introduced to his attention, recommended highly, and sold in the
+excitement of the occasion.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX.
+THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+
+
+They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there.
+Jessie went out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then the
+green height of Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving their machines
+in the village they clambered up the slope to the silent red-brick fort
+that crowned it. Thence they had a view of Portsmouth and its cluster
+of sister towns, the crowded narrows of the harbour, the Solent and the
+Isle of Wight like a blue cloud through the hot haze. Jessie by some
+miracle had become a skirted woman in the Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver
+lounged gracefully on the turf, smoked a Red Herring cigarette, and
+lazily regarded the fortified towns that spread like a map away there,
+the inner line of defence like toy fortifications, a mile off perhaps;
+and beyond that a few little fields and then the beginnings of Landport
+suburb and the smoky cluster of the multitudinous houses. To the right
+at the head of the harbour shallows the town of Porchester rose among
+the trees. Mr. Hoopdriver’s anxiety receded to some remote corner of
+his brain and that florid half-voluntary imagination of his shared the
+stage with the image of Jessie. He began to speculate on the impression
+he was creating. He took stock of his suit in a more optimistic spirit,
+and reviewed, with some complacency, his actions for the last four and
+twenty hours. Then he was dashed at the thought of her infinite
+perfections.
+
+She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during the last
+hour or so. She did not look at him directly because he seemed always
+looking at her. Her own troubles had quieted down a little, and her
+curiosity about the chivalrous, worshipping, but singular gentleman in
+brown, was awakening. She had recalled, too, the curious incident of
+their first encounter. She found him hard to explain to herself. You
+must understand that her knowledge of the world was rather less than
+nothing, having been obtained entirely from books. You must not take a
+certain ignorance for foolishness.
+
+She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French except
+‘_sivverplay_,’ a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good light table
+joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not such as books
+informed her distinguished the lower classes. His manners seemed to her
+good on the whole, but a trifle over-respectful and out of fashion. He
+called her ‘Madam’ once. He seemed a person of means and leisure, but
+he knew nothing of recent concerts, theatres, or books. How did he
+spend his time? He was certainly chivalrous, and a trifle simpleminded.
+She fancied (so much is there in a change of costume) that she had
+never met with such a man before. What _could_ he be?
+
+“Mr. Benson,” she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+
+He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+
+“At your service.”
+
+“Do you paint? Are you an artist?”
+
+“Well.” Judicious pause. “I should hardly call myself a Nartist, you
+know. I _do_ paint a little. And sketch, you know—skitty kind of
+things.”
+
+He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really not so
+much lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to add, “In
+Papers, you know, and all that.”
+
+“I see,” said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a very
+heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of being a
+little odd. He avoided her eye and bit his grass. “I don’t do _much_,
+you know.”
+
+“It’s not your profession?
+
+“Oh, no,” said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. “I don’t make a
+regular thing of it, you know. Jest now and then something comes into
+my head and down it goes. No—I’m not a _regular_ artist.”
+
+“Then you don’t practise any regular profession?” Mr. Hoopdriver looked
+into her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He had vague
+ideas of resuming the detective _rôle_. “It’s like this,” he said, to
+gain time. “I have a sort of profession. Only there’s a kind of
+reason—nothing much, you know.”
+
+“I beg your pardon for cross-examining you.”
+
+“No trouble,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Only I can’t very well—I leave it
+to you, you know. I don’t want to make any mystery of it, so far as
+that goes.” Should he plunge boldly and be a barrister? That anyhow was
+something pretty good. But she might know about barristry.
+
+“I think I could guess what you are.”
+
+“Well—guess,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You come from one of the colonies?”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind. “How did
+you find out _that?_” (the man was born in a London suburb, dear
+Reader.)
+
+“I guessed,” she said.
+
+He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new piece of
+grass.
+
+“You were educated up country.”
+
+“Good again,” said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow.
+“You’re a _clairvoy_ ant.” He bit at the grass, smiling. “Which colony
+was it?”
+
+“That I don’t know.”
+
+“You must guess,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“South Africa,” she said. “I strongly incline to South Africa.”
+
+“South Africa’s quite a large place,” he said.
+
+“But South Africa is right?”
+
+“You’re warm,” said Hoopdriver, “anyhow,” and the while his imagination
+was eagerly exploring this new province.
+
+“South Africa _is_ right?” she insisted.
+
+He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her eyes.
+
+“What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive
+Schreiner’s, you know—‘The Story of an African Farm.’ Gregory Rose is
+so like you.”
+
+“I never read ‘The Story of an African Farm,’” said Hoopdriver. “I
+must. What’s he like?”
+
+“You must read the book. But it’s a wonderful place, with its mixture
+of races, and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old savagery.
+Were you near Khama?”
+
+“He was a long way off from our place,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “We had a
+little ostrich farm, you know—Just a few hundred of ’em, out
+Johannesburg way.”
+
+“On the Karroo—was it called?”
+
+“That’s the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got along
+very well in the old days.—But there’s no ostriches on that farm now.”
+He had a diamond mine in his head, just at the moment, but he stopped
+and left a little to the girl’s imagination. Besides which it had
+occurred to him with a kind of shock that he was lying.
+
+“What became of the ostriches?”
+
+“We sold ’em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I have
+another cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap, you know,
+that we had this ostrich farm.”
+
+“Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?”
+
+“Lots,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and
+beginning to feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought upon
+himself.
+
+“How interesting! Do you know, I’ve never been out of England except to
+Paris and Mentone and Switzerland.”
+
+“One gets tired of travelling (_puff_) after a bit, of course.”
+
+“You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always stimulates
+my imagination to think of these places. I can fancy all the tall
+ostriches being driven out by a black herd—to graze, I suppose. How do
+ostriches feed?”
+
+“Well,” said Hoopdriver. “That’s rather various. They have their
+fancies, you know. There’s fruit, of course, and that kind of thing.
+And chicken food, and so forth. You have to use judgment.”
+
+“Did you ever see a lion?” “They weren’t very common in our district,”
+said Hoopdriver, quite modestly. “But I’ve seen them, of course. Once
+or twice.”
+
+“Fancy seeing a lion! Weren’t you frightened?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that offer of
+South Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the Solent languidly
+as he settled the fate on that lion in his mind. “I scarcely had time,”
+he said. “It all happened in a minute.”
+
+“Go on,” she said.
+
+“I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches were.”
+
+“Did you _eat_ ostriches, then? I did not know—”
+
+“Eat them!—often. Very nice they _are_ too, properly stuffed. Well,
+we—I, rather—was going across this paddock, and I saw something
+standing up in the moonlight and looking at me.” Mr. Hoopdriver was in
+a hot perspiration now. His invention seemed to have gone limp.
+“Luckily I had my father’s gun with me. I _was_ scared, though, I can
+tell you. (_Puff._) I just aimed at the end that I thought was the
+head. And let fly. (_Puff._) And over it went, you know.”
+
+“Dead?”
+
+“_As_ dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I wasn’t
+much over nine at the time, neither.”
+
+“_I_ should have screamed and run away.”
+
+“There’s some things you can’t run away from,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “To
+run would have been Death.”
+
+“I don’t think I ever met a lion-killer before,” she remarked,
+evidently with a heightened opinion of him.
+
+There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr.
+Hoopdriver drew his watch hastily. “I say,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+showing it to her, “don’t you think we ought to be getting on?”
+
+His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his confusion
+to modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens of his
+conscience, and held out his hand to assist her. They walked down into
+Cosham again, resumed their machines, and went on at a leisurely pace
+along the northern shore of the big harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no
+longer happy. This horrible, this fulsome lie, stuck in his memory. Why
+_had_ he done it? She did not ask for any more South African stories,
+happily—at least until Porchester was reached—but talked instead of
+Living One’s Own Life, and how custom hung on people like chains. She
+talked wonderfully, and set Hoopdriver’s mind fermenting. By the
+Castle, Mr. Hoopdriver caught several crabs in little shore pools. At
+Fareham they stopped for a second tea, and left the place towards the
+hour of sunset, under such invigorating circumstances as you shall in
+due course hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXX.
+THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+
+
+And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle, and
+Phipps, and of that distressed beauty, ‘Thomas Plantagenet,’ well known
+in society, so the paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We left them at
+Midhurst station, if I remember rightly, waiting, in a state of fine
+emotion, for the Chichester train. It was clearly understood by the
+entire Rescue Party that Mrs. Milton was bearing up bravely against
+almost overwhelming grief. The three gentlemen outdid one another in
+sympathetic expedients; they watched her gravely—almost tenderly. The
+substantial Widgery tugged at his moustache, and looked his unspeakable
+feelings at her with those dog-like, brown eyes of his; the slender
+Dangle tugged at _his_ moustache, and did what he could with
+unsympathetic grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no moustache to run any
+risks with, so he folded his arms and talked in a brave, indifferent,
+bearing-up tone about the London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway,
+just to cheer the poor woman up a little. And even Mrs. Milton really
+felt that exalted melancholy to the very bottom of her heart, and tried
+to show it in a dozen little, delicate, feminine ways.
+
+“There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester,” said Dangle.
+“Nothing.”
+
+“Nothing,” said Widgery, and aside in her ear: “You really ate scarcely
+anything, you know.”
+
+“Their trains are always late,” said Phipps, with his fingers along the
+edge of his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a sub-editor and
+reviewer, and his pride was to be Thomas Plantagenet’s intellectual
+companion. Widgery, the big man, was manager of a bank and a mighty
+golfer, and his conception of his relations to her never came into his
+mind without those charming old lines, “Douglas, Douglas, tender and
+true,” falling hard upon its heels. His name was Douglas-Douglas
+Widgery. And Phipps, Phipps was a medical student still, and he felt
+that he laid his heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world.
+She was kind to them all in her way, and insisted on their being
+friends together, in spite of a disposition to reciprocal criticism
+they displayed. Dangle thought Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but
+coarsely the merits of “A Soul Untrammelled,” and Widgery thought
+Dangle lacked humanity—would talk insincerely to say a clever thing.
+Both Dangle and Widgery thought Phipps a bit of a cub, and Phipps
+thought both Dangle and Widgery a couple of Thundering Bounders.
+
+“They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch,” said Dangle, in
+the train. “After, perhaps. And there’s no sufficient place in the
+road. So soon as we get there, Phipps must inquire at the chief hotels
+to see if any one answering to her description has lunched there.”
+
+“Oh, _I’ll_ inquire,” said Phipps. “Willingly. I suppose you and
+Widgery will just hang about—”
+
+He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton’s gentle face, and stopped
+abruptly.
+
+“No,” said Dangle, “we shan’t _hang about_, as you put it. There are
+two places in Chichester where tourists might go—the cathedral and a
+remarkably fine museum. I shall go to the cathedral and make an inquiry
+or so, while Widgery—”
+
+“The museum. Very well. And after that there’s a little thing or two
+I’ve thought of myself,” said Widgery.
+
+To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to the Red
+Hotel and established her there with some tea. “You are so kind to me,”
+she said. “All of you.” They signified that it was nothing, and
+dispersed to their inquiries. By six they returned, their zeal a little
+damped, without news. Widgery came back with Dangle. Phipps was the
+last to return. “You’re quite sure,” said Widgery, “that there isn’t
+any flaw in that inference of yours?”
+
+“Quite,” said Dangle, rather shortly.
+
+“Of course,” said Widgery, “their starting from Midhurst on the
+Chichester road doesn’t absolutely bind them not to change their
+minds.”
+
+“My dear fellow!—It does. Really it does. You must allow me to have
+enough intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you must. There
+aren’t any cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn aside here? No.
+Would they turn there? Many more things are inevitable than you fancy.”
+
+“We shall see at once,” said Widgery, at the window. “Here comes
+Phipps. For my own part—”
+
+“Phipps!” said Mrs. Milton. “Is he hurrying? Does he look—” She rose in
+her eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards the window.
+
+“No news,” said Phipps, entering.
+
+“Ah!” said Widgery.
+
+“None?” said Dangle.
+
+“Well,” said Phipps. “One fellow had got hold of a queer story of a man
+in bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question about this time
+yesterday.”
+
+“What question?” said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window. She
+spoke in a low voice, almost a whisper.
+
+“Why—Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?”
+
+Dangle caught at his lower lip. “What’s that?” he said. “Yesterday! A
+man asking after her then! What can _that_ mean?”
+
+“Heaven knows,” said Phipps, sitting down wearily. “You’d better
+infer.”
+
+“What kind of man?” said Dangle.
+
+“How should I know?—in bicycling costume, the fellow said.”
+
+“But what height?—What complexion?”
+
+“Didn’t ask,” said Phipps.
+
+“_Didn’t ask!_ Nonsense,” said Dangle.
+
+“Ask him yourself,” said Phipps. “He’s an ostler chap in the White
+Hart,—short, thick-set fellow, with a red face and a crusty manner.
+Leaning up against the stable door. Smells of whiskey. Go and ask him.”
+
+“Of course,” said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade over the
+stuffed bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the door. “I might
+have known.”
+
+Phipps’ mouth opened and shut.
+
+“You’re tired, I’m sure, Mr. Phipps,” said the lady, soothingly. “Let
+me ring for some tea for you.” It suddenly occurred to Phipps that he
+had lapsed a little from his chivalry. “I was a little annoyed at the
+way he rushed me to do all this business,” he said. “But I’d do a
+hundred times as much if it would bring you any nearer to her.” Pause.
+“I _would_ like a little tea.”
+
+“I don’t want to raise any false hopes,” said Widgery. “But I do _not_
+believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle’s a very clever fellow, of
+course, but sometimes these Inferences of his—”
+
+“Tchak!” said Phipps, suddenly.
+
+“What is it?” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“Something I’ve forgotten. I went right out from here, went to every
+other hotel in the place, and never thought—But never mind. I’ll ask
+when the waiter comes.”
+
+“You don’t mean—” A tap, and the door opened. “Tea, m’m? yes, m’m,”
+said the waiter.
+
+“One minute,” said Phipps. “Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady—”
+
+“Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her brother,
+sir—a young gent.”
+
+“Brother!” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Thank God!”
+
+The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. “A young gent,
+sir,” he said, “very free with his money. Give the name of Beaumont.”
+He proceeded to some rambling particulars, and was cross-examined by
+Widgery on the plans of the young couple.
+
+“Havant! Where’s Havant?” said Phipps. “I seem to remember it
+somewhere.”
+
+“Was the man tall?” said Mrs. Milton, intently, “distinguished looking?
+with a long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?”
+
+“Well,” said the waiter, and thought. “His moustache, m’m, was scarcely
+long—scrubby more, and young looking.”
+
+“About thirty-five, he was?”
+
+“No, m’m. More like five and twenty. Not that.”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice,
+fumbling for her salts, and showing the finest self-control. “It must
+have been her _younger_ brother—must have been.”
+
+“That will do, thank you,” said Widgery, officiously, feeling that she
+would be easier under this new surprise if the man were dismissed. The
+waiter turned to go, and almost collided with Dangle, who was entering
+the room, panting excitedly and with a pocket handkerchief held to his
+right eye. “Hullo!” said dangle. “What’s up?”
+
+“What’s up with _you?_” said Phipps.
+
+“Nothing—an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of yours. He
+thought it was a plot to annoy him—that the Young Lady in Grey was
+mythical. Judged from your manner. I’ve got a piece of raw meat to keep
+over it. You have some news, I see?”
+
+“Did the man hit you?” asked Widgery.
+
+Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. “Cannot I do anything?”
+
+Dangle was heroic. “Only tell me your news,” he said, round the corner
+of the handkerchief.
+
+“It was in this way,” said Phipps, and explained rather sheepishly.
+While he was doing so, with a running fire of commentary from Widgery,
+the waiter brought in a tray of tea. “A time table,” said Dangle,
+promptly, “for Havant.” Mrs. Milton poured two cups, and Phipps and
+Dangle partook in passover form. They caught the train by a hair’s
+breadth. So to Havant and inquiries.
+
+Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right. In
+view of the fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a steep
+hill continuously on the right-hand side, and the sea on the left, he
+hit upon a magnificent scheme for heading the young folks off. He and
+Mrs. Milton would go to Fareham, Widgery and Phipps should alight one
+each at the intermediate stations of Cosham and Porchester, and come on
+by the next train if they had no news. If they did not come on, a wire
+to the Fareham post office was to explain why. It was Napoleonic, and
+more than consoled Dangle for the open derision of the Havant street
+boys at the handkerchief which still protected his damaged eye.
+
+Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives escaped by a
+hair’s breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor at Fareham, and
+preparing to mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle came round the corner
+from the station. “It’s her!” said Mrs. Milton, and would have
+screamed. “Hist!” said Dangle, gripping the lady’s arm, removing his
+handkerchief in his excitement, and leaving the piece of meat over his
+eye, an extraordinary appearance which seemed unexpectedly to calm her.
+“Be cool!” said Dangle, glaring under the meat. “They must not see us.
+They will get away else. Were there flys at the station?” The young
+couple mounted and vanished round the corner of the Winchester road.
+Had it not been for the publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would
+have fainted. “_Save her!_” she said.
+
+“Ah! A conveyance,” said Dangle. “One minute.”
+
+He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to her
+heart, and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten minutes.
+Emerged. The meat had gone now, and one saw the cooling puffiness over
+his eye. “I will conduct you back to the station,” said Dangle; “hurry
+back here, and pursue them. You will meet Widgery and Phipps and tell
+them I am in pursuit.”
+
+She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a hard,
+blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and dreadfully
+ruffled and agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt, most energetic
+and devoted; but for a kindly, helpful manner commend her to Douglas
+Widgery.
+
+Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving (as
+well as he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing called a
+gig, northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring his swollen eye,
+was a refined-looking little man, and he wore a deerstalker cap and was
+dressed in dark grey. His neck was long and slender. Perhaps you know
+what gigs are,—huge, big, wooden things and very high and the horse,
+too, was huge and big and high, with knobby legs, a long face, a hard
+mouth, and a whacking trick of pacing. Smack, smack, smack, smack it
+went along the road, and hard by the church it shied vigorously at a
+hooded perambulator.
+
+The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It appears
+that Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton left about
+upon the Fareham platform. The day had irritated him somehow, though he
+had started with the noblest intentions, and he seemed glad to find an
+outlet for justifiable indignation. “He’s such a spasmodic creature,”
+said Widgery. “Rushing off! And I suppose we’re to wait here until he
+comes back! It’s likely. He’s so egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants
+to mismanage everything himself.”
+
+“He means to help me,” said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully,
+touching his arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified all at
+once. “He need not prevent ME,” he said, and stopped. “It’s no good
+talking, you know, and you are tired.”
+
+“I can go on,” she said brightly, “if only we find her.” “While I was
+cooling my heels in Cosham I bought a county map.” He produced and
+opened it. “Here, you see, is the road out of Fareham.” He proceeded
+with the calm deliberation of a business man to develop a proposal of
+taking train forthwith to Winchester. “They _must_ be going to
+Winchester,” he explained. It was inevitable. To-morrow Sunday,
+Winchester a cathedral town, road going nowhere else of the slightest
+importance.
+
+“But Mr. Dangle?”
+
+“He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he will
+break his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It’s scarcely likely a
+dog-cart, especially a hired dog-cart, will overtake bicycles in the
+cool of the evening. Rely upon me, Mrs. Milton—”
+
+“I am in your hands,” she said, with pathetic littleness, looking up at
+him, and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the day.
+
+Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat depressed
+attitude, leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and looking from
+one speaker to the other. The idea of leaving Dangle behind seemed to
+him an excellent one. “We might leave a message at the place where he
+got the dog-cart,” he suggested, when he saw their eyes meeting. There
+was a cheerful alacrity about all three at the proposal.
+
+But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran into the
+station, a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a shouting overhead,
+the guard stood astonished on the platform, and Phipps, thrusting his
+head out of the window, cried, “There he goes!” and sprang out of the
+carriage. Mrs. Milton, following in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it
+was hidden. Botley station lies in a cutting, overhead was the roadway,
+and across the lemon yellows and flushed pinks of the sunset, there
+whirled a great black mass, a horse like a long-nosed chess knight, the
+upper works of a gig, and Dangle in transit from front to back. A
+monstrous shadow aped him across the cutting. It was the event of a
+second. Dangle seemed to jump, hang in the air momentarily, and vanish,
+and after a moment’s pause came a heart-rending smash. Then two black
+heads running swiftly.
+
+“Better get out,” said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood fascinated in
+the doorway.
+
+In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They found
+Dangle, hatless, standing up with cut hands extended, having his hands
+brushed by an officious small boy. A broad, ugly road ran downhill in a
+long vista, and in the distance was a little group of Botley
+inhabitants holding the big, black horse. Even at that distance they
+could see the expression of conscious pride on the monster’s visage. It
+was as wooden-faced a horse as you can imagine. The beasts in the Tower
+of London, on which the men in armour are perched, are the only horses
+I have ever seen at all like it. However, we are not concerned now with
+the horse, but with Dangle. “Hurt?” asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+
+“Mr. Dangle!” cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+
+“Hullo!” said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. “Glad you’ve
+come. I may want you. Bit of a mess I’m in—eigh? But I’ve caught ’em.
+At the very place I expected, too.”
+
+“Caught them!” said Widgery. “Where are they?”
+
+“Up there,” he said, with a backward motion of his head. “About a mile
+up the hill. I left ’em. I _had_ to.”
+
+“I don’t understand,” said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful look
+again. “Have you found Jessie?”
+
+“I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands somewhere. It
+was like this, you know. Came on them suddenly round a corner. Horse
+shied at the bicycles. They were sitting by the roadside botanising
+flowers. I just had time to shout, ‘Jessie Milton, we’ve been looking
+for you,’ and then that confounded brute bolted. I didn’t dare turn
+round. I had all my work to do to save myself being turned over, as it
+was—so long as I did, I mean. I just shouted, ‘Return to your friends.
+All will be forgiven.’ And off I came, clatter, clatter. Whether they
+heard—”
+
+“_Take me to her_,” said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning towards
+Widgery.
+
+“Certainly,” said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. “How far is it,
+Dangle?”
+
+“Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you know.
+I say though—Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs. Milton.” He
+turned to Phipps. “Phipps, I say, where shall I wash the gravel out?
+And have a look at my knee?”
+
+“There’s the station,” said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made a
+step, and a damaged knee became evident. “Take my arm,” said Phipps.
+
+“Where can we get a conveyance?” asked Widgery of two small boys.
+
+The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one another.
+
+“There’s not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight,” said Widgery. “It’s a
+case of a horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse.”
+
+“There’s a harse all right,” said one of the small boys with a movement
+of the head.
+
+“Don’t you know where we can hire traps?” asked Widgery. “Or a cart
+or—anything?” asked Mrs. Milton.
+
+“John Ooker’s gart a cart, but no one can’t ’ire’n,” said the larger of
+the small boys, partially averting his face and staring down the road
+and making a song of it. “And so’s my feyther, for’s leg us broke.”
+
+“Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?”
+
+It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for courtly
+devotion, Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. “I suppose—” she
+said, timidly. “Perhaps if you were to ask Mr. Dangle—”
+
+And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely.
+“Confound Dangle! Hasn’t he messed us up enough? He must needs drive
+after them in a trap to tell them we’re coming, and now you want me to
+ask him—”
+
+Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped abruptly.
+“I’ll go and ask Dangle,” he said, shortly. “If you wish it.” And went
+striding into the station and down the steps, leaving her in the road
+under the quiet inspection of the two little boys, and with a kind of
+ballad refrain running through her head, “Where are the Knights of the
+Olden Time?” and feeling tired to death and hungry and dusty and out of
+curl, and, in short, a martyr woman.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+
+It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the fugitives
+vanished into Immensity; how there were no more trains; how Botley
+stared unsympathetically with a palpable disposition to derision,
+denying conveyances; how the landlord of the Heron was suspicious, how
+the next day was Sunday, and the hot summer’s day had crumpled the
+collar of Phipps and stained the skirts of Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the
+radiant emotions of the whole party. Dangle, with sticking-plaster and
+a black eye, felt the absurdity of the pose of the Wounded Knight, and
+abandoned it after the faintest efforts. Recriminations never, perhaps,
+held the foreground of the talk, but they played like summer lightning
+on the edge of the conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a
+galling sense of the ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most to
+blame. Apparently, too, the worst, which would have made the whole
+business tragic, was not happening. Here was a young woman—young woman
+do I say? a mere girl!—had chosen to leave a comfortable home in
+Surbiton, and all the delights of a refined and intellectual circle,
+and had rushed off, trailing us after her, posing hard, mutually
+jealous, and now tired and weather-worn, to flick us off at last, mere
+mud from her wheel, into this detestable village beer-house on a
+Saturday night! And she had done it, not for Love and Passion, which
+are serious excuses one may recognise even if one must reprobate, but
+just for a Freak, just for a fantastic Idea; for nothing, in fact, but
+the outraging of Common Sense. Yet withal, such was our restraint, that
+we talked of her still as one much misguided, as one who burthened us
+with anxiety, as a lamb astray, and Mrs. Milton having eaten, continued
+to show the finest feelings on the matter.
+
+She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only
+comfortable chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard, horsehair
+things having antimacassars tied to their backs by means of
+lemon-coloured bows. It was different from those dear old talks at
+Surbiton, somehow. She sat facing the window, which was open (the night
+was so tranquil and warm), and the dim light—for we did not use the
+lamp—suited her admirably. She talked in a voice that told you she was
+tired, and she seemed inclined to state a case against herself in the
+matter of “A Soul Untrammelled.” It was such an evening as might live
+in a sympathetic memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+
+“I feel,” she said, “that I am to blame. I have Developed. That first
+book of mine—I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but it has been
+misunderstood, misapplied.”
+
+“It has,” said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as to be
+visible in the dark. “Deliberately misunderstood.”
+
+“Don’t say that,” said the lady. “Not deliberately. I try and think
+that critics are honest. After their lights. I was not thinking of
+critics. But she—I mean—” She paused, an interrogation.
+
+“It is possible,” said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+
+“I write a book and state a case. I want people to _think_ as I
+recommend, not to _do_ as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I make
+it into a story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to promulgate
+Ideas. Then when the Ideas have been spread abroad—Things will come
+about. Only now it is madness to fly in the face of the established
+order. Bernard Shaw, you know, has explained that with regard to
+Socialism. We all know that to earn all you consume is right, and that
+living on invested capital is wrong. Only we cannot begin while we are
+so few. It is Those Others.”
+
+“Precisely,” said Widgery. “It is Those Others. They must begin first.”
+
+“And meanwhile you go on banking—”
+
+“If I didn’t, some one else would.”
+
+“And I live on Mr. Milton’s Lotion while I try to gain a footing in
+Literature.”
+
+“_Try!_” said Phipps. “You _have_ done so.” And, “That’s different,”
+said Dangle, at the same time.
+
+“You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina
+Griffiths in my book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to life
+classes and had men visitors, but then she was over twenty-one.”
+
+“Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that,” said Dangle.
+
+“It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman. And
+Georgina Griffiths never flaunted her freedom—on a bicycle, in country
+places. In this country. Where every one is so particular. Fancy,
+_sleeping_ away from home. It’s dreadful—If it gets about it spells
+ruin for her.”
+
+“Ruin,” said Widgery.
+
+“No man would marry a girl like that,” said Phipps.
+
+“It must be hushed up,” said Dangle.
+
+“It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of
+individual cases. We must weigh each person against his or her
+circumstances. General rules don’t apply—”
+
+“I often feel the force of that,” said Widgery. “Those are my rules. Of
+course my books—”
+
+“It’s different, altogether different,” said Dangle. “A novel deals
+with typical cases.”
+
+“And life is not typical,” said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+
+Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and
+shocked of any in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was infectious,
+and the gathering having, as you can easily understand, talked itself
+weary, dispersed on trivial pretences. But not to sleep immediately.
+Directly Dangle was alone he began, with infinite disgust, to
+scrutinise his darkling eye, for he was a neat-minded little man in
+spite of his energy. The whole business—so near a capture—was horribly
+vexatious. Phipps sat on his bed for some time examining, with equal
+disgust, a collar he would have thought incredible for Sunday
+twenty-four hours before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of
+even big, fat men with dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because
+he had been so cross to her at the station, and because so far he did
+not feel that he had scored over Dangle. Also he was angry with Dangle.
+And all four of them, being souls living very much upon the appearances
+of things, had a painful, mental middle distance of Botley derisive and
+suspicious, and a remoter background of London humorous, and Surbiton
+speculative. Were they really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+
+
+
+
+XXXII.
+MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+
+
+As Mr. Dangle had witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him by the
+side of the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr. Dangle’s
+appearance, Mr. Hoopdriver had been learning with great interest that
+mere roadside flowers had names,—star-flowers, wind-stars, St. John’s
+wort, willow herb, lords and ladies, bachelor’s buttons,—most curious
+names, some of them. “The flowers are all different in South Africa,
+y’know,” he was explaining with a happy fluke of his imagination to
+account for his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by clattering sounds
+and a gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across the
+tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and gesticulating
+behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie by her name, had
+backed towards the hedge for no ostensible reason, and vanished to the
+accomplishment of the Fate that had been written down for him from the
+very beginning of things. Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to
+stand up and seize their machines, before this tumultuous, this swift
+and wonderful passing of Dangle was achieved. He went from side to side
+of the road,—worse even than the riding forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it
+was,—and vanished round the corner.
+
+“He knew my name,” said Jessie. “Yes—it was Mr. Dangle.”
+
+“That was our bicycles did that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver simultaneously,
+and speaking with a certain complacent concern. “I hope he won’t get
+hurt.”
+
+“That was Mr. Dangle,” repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard this
+time, with a violent start. His eyebrows went up spasmodically.
+
+“What! someone you know?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Lord!”
+
+“He was looking for me,” said Jessie. “I could see. He began to call to
+me before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for his
+ideas were still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs. Milton. Honesty
+_is_ the best policy—often, he thought. He turned his head this way and
+that. He became active. “After us, eigh? Then he’ll come back. He’s
+gone down that hill, and he won’t be able to pull up for a bit, I’m
+certain.”
+
+Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was mounting.
+Still staring at the corner that had swallowed up Dangle, Hoopdriver
+followed suit. And so, just as the sun was setting, they began another
+flight together,—riding now towards Bishops Waltham, with Mr.
+Hoopdriver in the post of danger—the rear—ever and again looking over
+his shoulder and swerving dangerously as he did so. Occasionally Jessie
+had to slacken her pace. He breathed heavily, and hated himself because
+his mouth fell open. After nearly an hour’s hard riding, they found
+themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of Dangle nor any other
+danger was visible as they rode into the dusky, yellow-lit street.
+Though the bats had been fluttering behind the hedges and the evening
+star was bright while they were still two miles from Winchester, Mr.
+Hoopdriver pointed out the dangers of stopping in such an obvious
+abiding-place, and gently but firmly insisted upon replenishing the
+lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From Winchester, roads branch in
+every direction, and to turn abruptly westward was clearly the way to
+throw off the chase. As Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad and yellow
+through the twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that
+ride out of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the
+atmospheric effects were the same, the emotions were different. They
+rode in absolute silence, and slowly after they had cleared the
+outskirts of Winchester. Both of them were now nearly tired out,—the
+level was tedious, and even a little hill a burden; and so it came
+about that in the hamlet of Wallenstock they were beguiled to stop and
+ask for accommodation in an exceptionally prosperous-looking village
+inn. A plausible landlady rose to the occasion.
+
+Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were prepared,
+Mr. Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and floating in a
+reek of smoke, of three and a half faces—for the edge of the door cut
+one down—and an American cloth-covered table with several glasses and a
+tankard. And he also heard a remark. In the second before he heard that
+remark, Mr. Hoopdriver had been a proud and happy man, to
+particularize, a baronet’s heir _incognito_. He had surrendered their
+bicycles to the odd man of the place with infinite easy dignity, and
+had bowingly opened the door for Jessie. “Who’s that, then?” he
+imagined people saying; and then, “Some’n pretty well orf—judge by the
+bicycles.” Then the imaginary spectators would fall a-talking of the
+fashionableness of bicycling,—how judges and stockbrokers and actresses
+and, in fact, all the best people rode, and how that it was often the
+fancy of such great folk to shun the big hotels, the adulation of urban
+crowds, and seek, _incognito_, the cosy quaintnesses of village life.
+Then, maybe, they would think of a certain nameless air of distinction
+about the lady who had stepped across the doorway, and about the
+handsome, flaxen-moustached, blue-eyed Cavalier who had followed her
+in, and they would look one to another. “Tell you what it is,” one of
+the village elders would say—just as they do in novels—voicing the
+thought of all, in a low, impressive tone: “There’s such a thin’ as
+entertaining barranets unawares—not to mention no higher things—”
+
+Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+head the moment before he heard that remark. But the remark toppled him
+headlong. What the precise remark was need not concern us. It was a
+casual piece of such satire as Strephon delights in. Should you be
+curious, dear lady, as to its nature, you have merely to dress yourself
+in a really modern cycling costume, get one of the feeblest-looking of
+your men to escort you, and ride out, next Saturday evening, to any
+public house where healthy, homely people gather together. Then you
+will hear quite a lot of the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver heard. More,
+possibly, than you will desire.
+
+The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated an
+entire disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it shattered all
+the gorgeous imaginative fabric his mind had been rejoicing in. All
+that foolish happiness vanished like a dream. And there was nothing to
+show for it, as there is nothing to show for any spiteful remark that
+has ever been made. Perhaps the man who said the thing had a gleam of
+satisfaction at the idea of taking a complacent-looking fool down a
+peg, but it is just as possible he did not know at the time that his
+stray shot had hit. He had thrown it as a boy throws a stone at a bird.
+And it not only demolished a foolish, happy conceit, but it wounded. It
+touched Jessie grossly.
+
+She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing; but
+during the supper they had in the little private dining-room, though
+she talked cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of indistinct
+conversation, and now and then laughter, came in from the inn parlor
+through the pelargoniums in the open window. Hoopdriver felt it must
+all be in the same strain,—at her expense and his. He answered her
+abstractedly. She was tired, she said, and presently went to her room.
+Mr. Hoopdriver, in his courtly way, opened the door for her and bowed
+her out. He stood listening and fearing some new offence as she went
+upstairs, and round the bend where the barometer hung beneath the
+stuffed birds. Then he went back to the room, and stood on the
+hearthrug before the paper fireplace ornament. “Cads!” he said in a
+scathing undertone, as a fresh burst of laughter came floating in. All
+through supper he had been composing stinging repartee, a blistering
+speech of denunciation to be presently delivered. He would rate them as
+a nobleman should: “Call themselves Englishmen, indeed, and insult a
+woman!” he would say; take the names and addresses perhaps, threaten to
+speak to the Lord of the Manor, promise to let them hear from him
+again, and so out with consternation in his wake. It really ought to be
+done.
+
+“Teach ’em better,” he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache
+painfully. What was it? He revived the objectionable remark for his own
+exasperation, and then went over the heads of his speech again.
+
+He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and went
+back to the hearthrug. He wouldn’t—after all. Yet was he not a Knight
+Errant? Should such men go unreproved, unchecked, by wandering baronets
+_incognito?_ Magnanimity? Look at it in that way? Churls beneath one’s
+notice? No; merely a cowardly subterfuge. He _would_ after all.
+
+Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even as he
+went towards the door again. But he only went on the more resolutely.
+He crossed the hall, by the bar, and entered the room from which the
+remark had proceeded. He opened the door abruptly and stood scowling on
+them in the doorway. “You’ll only make a mess of it,” remarked the
+internal sceptic. There were five men in the room altogether: a fat
+person, with a long pipe and a great number of chins, in an armchair by
+the fireplace, who wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good evening very affably; a
+young fellow smoking a cutty and displaying crossed legs with gaiters;
+a little, bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged,
+comfortable man with bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket; and a
+fair young man, very genteel in a yellowish-brown ready-made suit and a
+white tie.
+
+“H’m,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And then in a
+forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties, “Good evening.”
+
+“Very pleasant day we’ve been ’aving,” said the fair young man with the
+white tie.
+
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair, he
+planted it with great deliberation where he faced the fireplace, and
+sat down. Let’s see—how did that speech begin?
+
+“Very pleasant roads about here,” said the fair young man with the
+white tie.
+
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin somehow.
+“The roads about here are all right, and the weather about here is all
+right, but what I’ve come in here to say is—there’s some damned
+unpleasant people—damned unpleasant people!”
+
+“Oh!” said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a mental
+inventory of his pearl buttons as he spoke. “How’s that?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his elbows with
+extreme angularity. In his heart he was raving at his idiotic folly at
+thus bearding these lions,—indisputably they _were_ lions,—but he had
+to go through with it now. Heaven send, his breath, which was already
+getting a trifle spasmodic, did not suddenly give out. He fixed his eye
+on the face of the fat man with the chins, and spoke in a low,
+impressive voice. “I came here, sir,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and paused
+to inflate his cheeks, “with a lady.”
+
+“Very nice lady,” said the man with the gaiters, putting his head on
+one side to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind the
+curvature of his calf. “Very nice lady indeed.”
+
+“I came here,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “with a lady.”
+
+“We saw you did, bless you,” said the fat man with the chins, in a
+curious wheezy voice. “I don’t see there’s anything so very
+extraordinary in that. One ’ud think we hadn’t eyes.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. “I came, here, sir—”
+
+“We’ve ’eard that,” said the little man with the beard, sharply and
+went off into an amiable chuckle. “We know it by ’art,” said the little
+man, elaborating the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly at
+the little man with the beard, and tried to recover his discourse. A
+pause.
+
+“You were saying,” said the fair young man with the white tie, speaking
+very politely, “that you came here with a lady.”
+
+“A lady,” meditated the gaiter gazer.
+
+The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another with
+keen, bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been scored, and
+stimulated Mr. Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him with an expectant
+regard.
+
+“Some dirty cad,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his discourse,
+and suddenly growing extremely fierce, “made a remark as we went by
+this door.”
+
+“Steady on!” said the old gentleman with many chins. “Steady on! Don’t
+you go a-calling us names, please.”
+
+“One minute!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t I began calling names.”
+(“Who did?” said the man with the chins.) “I’m not calling any of you
+dirty cads. Don’t run away with that impression. Only some person in
+this room made a remark that showed he wasn’t fit to wipe boots on,
+and, with all due deference to such gentlemen as _are_ gentlemen” (Mr.
+Hoopdriver looked round for moral support), “I want to know which it
+was.”
+
+“Meanin’?” said the fair young man in the white tie.
+
+“That I’m going to wipe my boots on ’im straight away,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his
+throat—than which threat of personal violence nothing had been further
+from his thoughts on entering the room. He said this because he could
+think of nothing else to say, and stuck out his elbows truculently to
+hide the sinking of his heart. It is curious how situations run away
+with us.
+
+“’Ullo, Charlie!” said the little man, and “My eye!” said the owner of
+the chins. “You’re going to wipe your boots on ’im?” said the fair
+young man, in a tone of mild surprise.
+
+“I am,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared in
+the young man’s face.
+
+“That’s fair and reasonable,” said the man in the velveteen jacket; “if
+you can.”
+
+The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man in the
+white tie. “Of course, if you can’t find out which it is, I suppose
+you’re prepared to wipe your boots in a liberal way on everybody in the
+room,” said this young man, in the same tone of impersonal question.
+“This gentleman, the champion lightweight—”
+
+“Own up, Charlie,” said the young man with the gaiters, looking up for
+a moment. “And don’t go a-dragging in your betters. It’s fair and
+square. You can’t get out of it.”
+
+“Was it this—gent?” began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Of course,” said the young man in the white tie, “when it comes to
+talking of wiping boots—”
+
+“I’m not talking; I’m going to do it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists; they
+were spectators. He would have to go through with it now. But this tone
+of personal aggression on the maker of the remark had somehow got rid
+of the oppressive feeling of Hoopdriver _contra mundum_. Apparently, he
+would have to fight someone. Would he get a black eye? Would he get
+very much hurt? Pray goodness it wasn’t that sturdy chap in the
+gaiters! Should he rise and begin? What would she think if he brought a
+black eye to breakfast to-morrow? “Is this the man?” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, with a business-like calm, and arms more angular than ever.
+
+“Eat ’im!” said the little man with the beard; “eat ’im straight orf.”
+
+“Steady on!” said the young man in the white tie. “Steady on a minute.
+If I did happen to say—”
+
+“You did, did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Backing out of it, Charlie?” said the young man with the gaiters.
+
+“Not a bit,” said Charlie. “Surely we can pass a bit of a joke—”
+
+“I’m going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+“Bray-vo!” said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+
+“Charlie _is_ a bit too free with his jokes,” said the little man with
+the beard.
+
+“It’s downright disgusting,” said Hoopdriver, falling back upon his
+speech. “A lady can’t ride a bicycle in a country road, or wear a dress
+a little out of the ordinary, but every dirty little greaser must needs
+go shouting insults—”
+
+“_I_ didn’t know the young lady would hear what I said,” said Charlie.
+“Surely one can speak friendly to one’s friends. How was I to know the
+door was open—”
+
+Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible, more
+seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself, and his
+spirits rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough lesson. “Of
+_course_ you knew the door was open,” he retorted indignantly. “Of
+_course_ you thought we should hear what you said. Don’t go telling
+lies about it. It’s no good your saying things like that. You’ve had
+your fun, and you meant to have your fun. And I mean to make an example
+of you, Sir.”
+
+“Ginger beer,” said the little man with the beard, in a confidential
+tone to the velveteen jacket, “is regular up this ’ot weather. Bustin’
+its bottles it is everywhere.”
+
+“What’s the good of scrapping about in a public-house?” said Charlie,
+appealing to the company. “A fair fight without interruptions, now, I
+_wouldn’t_ mind, if the gentleman’s so disposed.”
+
+Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew truculent.
+
+“Where you like,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “jest wherever you like.”
+
+“You insulted the gent,” said the man in velveteen.
+
+“Don’t be a bloomin’ funk, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “Why, you
+got a stone of him, if you got an ounce.”
+
+“What I say, is this,” said the gentleman with the excessive chins,
+trying to get a hearing by banging his chair arms. “If Charlie goes
+saying things, he ought to back ’em up. That’s what I say. I don’t mind
+his sayin’ such things ’t all, but he ought to be prepared to back ’em
+up.”
+
+“I’ll _back_ ’em up all right,” said Charlie, with extremely bitter
+emphasis on ‘back.’ “If the gentleman likes to come Toosday week—”
+
+“Rot!” chopped in Hoopdriver. “Now.”
+
+“’Ear, ’ear,” said the owner of the chins.
+
+“Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day,” said
+the man in the velveteen coat.
+
+“You got to do it, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “It’s no good.”
+
+“It’s like this,” said Charlie, appealing to everyone except
+Hoopdriver. “Here’s me, got to take in her ladyship’s dinner to-morrow
+night. How should I look with a black eye? And going round with the
+carriage with a split lip?”
+
+“If you don’t want your face sp’iled, Charlie, why don’t you keep your
+mouth shut?” said the person in gaiters.
+
+“Exactly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great fierceness.
+“Why don’t you shut your ugly mouth?”
+
+“It’s as much as my situation’s worth,” protested Charlie.
+
+“You should have thought of that before,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“There’s no occasion to be so thunderin’ ’ot about it. I only meant the
+thing joking,” said Charlie. “_As_ one gentleman to another, I’m very
+sorry if the gentleman’s annoyed—”
+
+Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his moustache.
+He felt that Charlie’s recognition of his gentlemanliness was at any
+rate a redeeming feature. But it became his pose to ride hard and heavy
+over the routed foe. He shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+
+“You’re regular abject,” the man in gaiters was saying to Charlie.
+
+More confusion.
+
+“Only don’t think I’m afraid,—not of a spindle-legged cuss like him,”
+shouted Charlie. “Because I ain’t.”
+
+“Change of front,” thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. “Where are we
+going?”
+
+“Don’t sit there and be abusive,” said the man in velveteen. “He’s
+offered to hit you, and if I was him, I’d hit you now.”
+
+“All right, then,” said Charlie, with a sudden change of front and
+springing to his feet. “If I must, I must. Now, then!” At that,
+Hoopdriver, the child of Fate, rose too, with a horrible sense that his
+internal monitor was right. Things had taken a turn. He had made a mess
+of it, and now there was nothing for it, so far as he could see, but to
+hit the man at once. He and Charlie stood six feet apart, with a table
+between, both very breathless and fierce. A vulgar fight in a
+public-house, and with what was only too palpably a footman! Good
+Heavens! And this was the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the
+juice had it all happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But
+before the brawl could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened.
+“Not here,” he said, stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was
+standing up.
+
+“Charlie’s artful,” said the little man with the beard.
+
+“Buller’s yard,” said the man with the gaiters, taking the control of
+the entire affair with the easy readiness of an accomplished
+practitioner. “If the gentleman _don’t_ mind.” Buller’s yard, it
+seemed, was the very place. “We’ll do the thing regular and decent,
+_if_ you please.” And before he completely realized what was happening,
+Hoopdriver was being marched out through the back premises of the inn,
+to the first and only fight with fists that was ever to glorify his
+life.
+
+Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr. Hoopdriver
+was quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But inwardly he was a chaos
+of conflicting purposes. It was extraordinary how things happened. One
+remark had trod so closely on the heels of another, that he had had the
+greatest difficulty in following the development of the business. He
+distinctly remembered himself walking across from one room to the
+other,—a dignified, even an aristocratic figure, primed with considered
+eloquence, intent upon a scathing remonstrance to these wretched
+yokels, regarding their manners. Then incident had flickered into
+incident until here he was out in a moonlit lane,—a slight, dark figure
+in a group of larger, indistinct figures,—marching in a quiet,
+business-like way towards some unknown horror at Buller’s yard. Fists!
+It was astonishing. It was terrible! In front of him was the pallid
+figure of Charles, and he saw that the man in gaiters held Charles
+kindly but firmly by the arm.
+
+“It’s blasted rot,” Charles was saying, “getting up a fight just for a
+thing like that; all very well for ’im. ’E’s got ’is ’olidays; ’e
+’asn’t no blessed dinner to take up to-morrow night like I ’ave.—No
+need to numb my arm, _is_ there?”
+
+They went into Buller’s yard through gates. There were sheds in
+Buller’s yard—sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not solve—a
+smell of cows, and a pump stood out clear and black, throwing a clear
+black shadow on the whitewashed wall. And here it was his face was to
+be battered to a pulp. He knew this was the uttermost folly, to stand
+up here and be pounded, but the way out of it was beyond his imagining.
+Yet afterwards—? Could he ever face her again? He patted his Norfolk
+jacket and took his ground with his back to the gate. How did one
+square? So? Suppose one were to turn and run even now, run straight
+back to the inn and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn’t make
+him come out—anyhow. He could prosecute them for assault if they did.
+How did one set about prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with his
+face ghastly white under the moon, squaring in front of him.
+
+He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him. Then
+he hit with his right and with the violence of despair. It was a hit of
+his own devising,—an impromptu,—but it chanced to coincide with the
+regulation hook hit at the head. He perceived with a leap of exultation
+that the thing his fist had met was the jawbone of Charles. It was the
+sole gleam of pleasure he experienced during the fight, and it was
+quite momentary. He had hardly got home upon Charles before he was
+struck in the chest and whirled backward. He had the greatest
+difficulty in keeping his feet. He felt that his heart was smashed
+flat. “Gord darm!” said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind
+him. As Mr. Hoopdriver staggered, Charles gave a loud and
+fear-compelling cry. He seemed to tower over Hoopdriver in the
+moonlight. Both his fists were whirling. It was annihilation coming—no
+less. Mr. Hoopdriver ducked perhaps and certainly gave ground to the
+right, hit, and missed. Charles swept round to the left, missing
+generously. A blow glanced over Mr. Hoopdriver’s left ear, and the
+flanking movement was completed. Another blow behind the ear. Heaven
+and earth spun furiously round Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he became aware
+of a figure in a light suit shooting violently through an open gate
+into the night. The man in gaiters sprang forward past Mr. Hoopdriver,
+but too late to intercept the fugitive. There were shouts, laughter,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver, still solemnly squaring, realized the great and
+wonderful truth—Charles had fled. He, Hoopdriver, had fought and, by
+all the rules of war, had won.
+
+“That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him,” the toothless
+little man with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly friendly
+manner.
+
+“The fact of it is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road to
+Salisbury, and with the sound of distant church bells in his ears, “I
+had to give the fellow a lesson; simply had to.”
+
+“It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people about,” said
+Jessie.
+
+“These louts get unbearable,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “If now and then we
+didn’t give them a lesson,—well, a lady cyclist in the roads would be
+an impossibility.”
+
+“I suppose every woman shrinks from violence,” said Jessie. “I suppose
+men _are_ braver—in a way—than women. It seems to me—I can’t
+imagine—how one could bring oneself to face a roomful of rough
+characters, pick out the bravest, and give him an exemplary thrashing.
+I quail at the idea. I thought only Ouida’s guardsmen did things like
+that.”
+
+“It was nothing more than my juty—as a gentleman,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“But to walk straight into the face of danger!”
+
+“It’s habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a
+particle of cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII.
+THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+
+On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting at
+the Golden Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of an
+elaborate doubling movement through Dorsetshire towards Ringwood, where
+Jessie anticipated an answer from her schoolmistress friend. By this
+time they had been nearly sixty hours together, and you will understand
+that Mr. Hoopdriver’s feelings had undergone a considerable
+intensification and development. At first Jessie had been only an
+impressionist sketch upon his mind, something feminine, active, and
+dazzling, something emphatically “above” him, cast into his company by
+a kindly fate. His chief idea, at the outset, as you know, had been to
+live up to her level, by pretending to be more exceptional, more
+wealthy, better educated, and, above all, better born than he was. His
+knowledge of the feminine mind was almost entirely derived from the
+young ladies he had met in business, and in that class (as in military
+society and among gentlemen’s servants) the good old tradition of a
+brutal social exclusiveness is still religiously preserved. He had an
+almost intolerable dread of her thinking him a ‘bounder.’ Later he
+began to perceive the distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a
+magnificent want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract
+views of the most advanced description, and her strength of conviction
+completely carried Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own Life,
+with emphasis, and Mr. Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to similar
+resolves. So soon as he grasped the tenor of her views, he perceived
+that he himself had thought as much from his earliest years. “Of
+course,” he remarked, in a flash of sexual pride, “a man is freer than
+a woman. End in the Colonies, y’know, there isn’t half the
+Conventionality you find in society in this country.”
+
+He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality, and was
+quite unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded person. He
+suppressed the habits of years and made no proposal to go to church. He
+discussed church-going in a liberal spirit. “It’s jest a habit,” he
+said, “jest a custom. I don’t see what good it does you at all,
+really.” And he made a lot of excellent jokes at the chimney-pot hat,
+jokes he had read in the _Globe_ ‘turnovers’ on that subject. But he
+showed his gentle breeding by keeping his gloves on all through the
+Sunday’s ride, and ostentatiously throwing away more than half a
+cigarette when they passed a church whose congregation was gathering
+for afternoon service. He cautiously avoided literary topics, except by
+way of compliment, seeing that she was presently to be writing books.
+
+It was on Jessie’s initiative that they attended service in the
+old-fashioned gallery of Blandford church. Jessie’s conscience, I may
+perhaps tell you, was now suffering the severest twinges. She perceived
+clearly that things were not working out quite along the lines she had
+designed. She had read her Olive Schreiner and George Egerton, and so
+forth, with all the want of perfect comprehension of one who is still
+emotionally a girl. She knew the thing to do was to have a flat and to
+go to the British Museum and write leading articles for the daily
+papers until something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable
+person) had kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable
+horridness, all would have been well. Now her only hope was that
+liberal-minded woman, Miss Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her out,
+highly educated, into the world. Miss Mergle had told her at parting to
+live fearlessly and truly, and had further given her a volume of
+Emerson’s Essays and Motley’s “Dutch Republic,” to help her through the
+rapids of adolescence.
+
+Jessie’s feelings for her stepmother’s household at Surbiton amounted
+to an active detestation. There are no graver or more solemn women in
+the world than these clever girls whose scholastic advancement has
+retarded their feminine coquetry. In spite of the advanced tone of
+‘Thomas Plantagenet’s’ antimarital novel, Jessie had speedily seen
+through that amiable woman’s amiable defences. The variety of pose
+necessitated by the _corps_ of ‘Men’ annoyed her to an altogether
+unreasonable degree. To return to this life of ridiculous
+unreality—unconditional capitulation to ‘Conventionality’ was an
+exasperating prospect. Yet what else was there to do? You will
+understand, therefore, that at times she was moody (and Mr. Hoopdriver
+respectfully silent and attentive) and at times inclined to eloquent
+denunciation of the existing order of things. She was a Socialist,
+Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation that he went further,
+intending, thereby, no less than the horrors of anarchism. He would
+have owned up to the destruction of the Winter Palace indeed, had he
+had the faintest idea where the Winter Palace was, and had his
+assurance amounted to certainty that the Winter Palace was destroyed.
+He agreed with her cordially that the position of women was
+intolerable, but checked himself on the verge of the proposition that a
+girl ought not to expect a fellow to hand down boxes for her when he
+was getting the ‘swap’ from a customer. It was Jessie’s preoccupation
+with her own perplexities, no doubt, that delayed the unveiling of Mr.
+Hoopdriver all through Saturday and Sunday. Once or twice, however,
+there were incidents that put him about terribly—even questions that
+savoured of suspicion.
+
+On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted wakefulness
+came upon him. Unaccountably he realised he was a contemptible liar.
+All through the small hours of Monday he reviewed the tale of his
+falsehoods, and when he tried to turn his mind from that, the financial
+problem suddenly rose upon him. He heard two o’clock strike, and three.
+It is odd how unhappy some of us are at times, when we are at our
+happiest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+
+“Good morning, Madam,” said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the
+breakfast room of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he smiled,
+bowed, rubbed his hands together, and pulled out a chair for her, and
+rubbed his hands again.
+
+She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face. “Where
+_have_ I seen that before?” she said.
+
+“The chair?” said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+
+“No—the attitude.”
+
+She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously
+into his face. “And—Madam?”
+
+“It’s a habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. “A bad habit. Calling
+ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there
+up country—y’know—the ladies—so rare—we call ’em all Madam.”
+
+“You _have_ some funny habits, brother Chris,” said Jessie. “Before you
+sell your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and stand for
+Parliament—What a fine thing it is to be a man!—you must cure yourself.
+That habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing your hands, and looking
+expectant.”
+
+“It’s a habit.”
+
+“I know. But I don’t think it a good one. You don’t mind my telling
+you?”
+
+“Not a bit. I’m grateful.”
+
+“I’m blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation,” said Jessie,
+looking at the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his hand to his
+moustache and then, thinking this might be another habit, checked his
+arm and stuck his hand into his pocket. He felt juiced awkward, to use
+his private formula. Jessie’s eye wandered to the armchair, where a
+piece of binding was loose, and, possibly to carry out her theory of an
+observant disposition, she turned and asked him for a pin.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and there,
+planted by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had impounded.
+
+“What an odd place to put pins!” exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+
+“It’s ’andy,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I saw a chap in a shop do it once.”
+
+“You must have a careful disposition,” she said, over her shoulder,
+kneeling down to the chair.
+
+“In the centre of Africa—up country, that is—one learns to value pins,”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause. “There weren’t over
+many pins in Africa. They don’t lie about on the ground there.” His
+face was now in a fine, red glow. Where would the draper break out
+next? He thrust his hands into his coat pockets, then took one out
+again, furtively removed the second pin and dropped it behind him
+gently. It fell with a loud ‘ping’ on the fender. Happily she made no
+remark, being preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and stood
+against it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were keeping
+breakfast a tremendous time. He took up his rolled serviette, looked
+closely and scrutinisingly at the ring, then put his hand under the
+fold of the napkin and examined the texture, and put the thing down
+again. Then he had a vague impulse to finger his hollow wisdom
+tooth—happily checked. He suddenly discovered he was standing as if the
+table was a counter, and sat down forthwith. He drummed with his hand
+on the table. He felt dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+
+“Breakfast is late,” said Jessie, standing up.
+
+“Isn’t it?”
+
+Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to Ringwood.
+Then silence fell again.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing, looked
+again at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the corner of the
+tablecloth on the ends of his fingers, and regarded it. “Fifteen
+three,” he thought, privately.
+
+“Why do you do that?” said Jessie.
+
+“_What?_” said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+
+“Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s face became quite a bright red. He began pulling his
+moustache nervously. “I know,” he said. “I know. It’s a queer habit, I
+know. But out there, you know, there’s native servants, you know,
+and—it’s a queer thing to talk about—but one has to look at things to
+see, don’t y’know, whether they’re quite clean or not. It’s got to be a
+habit.”
+
+“How odd!” said Jessie.
+
+“Isn’t it?” mumbled Hoopdriver.
+
+“If I were a Sherlock Holmes,” said Jessie, “I suppose I could have
+told you were a colonial from little things like that. But anyhow, I
+guessed it, didn’t I?”
+
+“Yes,” said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, “you guessed it.”
+
+Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add,
+“unhappily in this case you guessed wrong.” Did she suspect? Then, at
+the psychological moment, the girl bumped the door open with her tray
+and brought in the coffee and scrambled eggs.
+
+“I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes,” said Jessie.
+
+Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days surged to
+the top of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+
+And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself away.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning, sat with
+his cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the coffee. His ears
+were a bright red, and his eyes bright. He took his coffee cup
+clumsily, cleared his throat, suddenly leant back in his chair, and
+thrust his hands deep into his pockets. “I’ll do it,” he said aloud.
+
+“Do what?” said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee pot. She
+was just beginning her scrambled egg.
+
+“Own up.”
+
+“Own what?”
+
+“Miss Milton—I’m a liar.” He put his head on one side and regarded her
+with a frown of tremendous resolution. Then in measured accents, and
+moving his head slowly from side to side, he announced, “Ay’m a
+deraper.”
+
+“You’re a draper? I thought—”
+
+“You thought wrong. But it’s bound to come up. Pins, attitude,
+habits—It’s plain enough.
+
+“I’m a draper’s assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a
+draper’s assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper.”
+
+“A draper’s assistant isn’t a position to be ashamed of,” she said,
+recovering, and not quite understanding yet what this all meant.
+
+“Yes, it is,” he said, “for a man, in this country now. To be just
+another man’s hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes you are told,
+and go to church to please customers, and work—There’s no other kind of
+men stand such hours. A drunken bricklayer’s a king to it.”
+
+“But why are you telling me this now?”
+
+“It’s important you should know at once.”
+
+“But, Mr. Benson—”
+
+“That isn’t all. If you don’t mind my speaking about myself a bit,
+there’s a few things I’d like to tell you. I can’t go on deceiving you.
+My name’s not Benson. _Why_ I told you Benson, I _don’t_ know. Except
+that I’m a kind of fool. Well—I wanted somehow to seem more than I was.
+My name’s Hoopdriver.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“And that about South Africa—and that lion.”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Lies.”
+
+“Lies!”
+
+“And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And all
+the reminiscences of the giraffes—lies too. I never rode on no
+giraffes. I’d be afraid.”
+
+He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased his
+conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity. This was a
+new side altogether to the man. “But _why_,” she began.
+
+“Why did I tell you such things? _I_ don’t know. Silly sort of chap, I
+expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow, now, I want you
+to know the truth.”
+
+Silence. Breakfast untouched. “I thought I’d tell you,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. “I suppose it’s snobbishness and all that kind of thing, as
+much as anything. I lay awake pretty near all last night thinking about
+myself; thinking what a got-up imitation of a man I was, and all that.”
+
+“And you haven’t any diamond shares, and you are not going into
+Parliament, and you’re not—”
+
+“All Lies,” said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. “Lies from
+beginning to end. ’Ow I came to tell ’em I _don’t_ know.”
+
+She stared at him blankly.
+
+“I never set eyes on Africa in my life,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+completing the confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his
+pocket, and with the nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of death
+is passed, began to drink his coffee.
+
+“It’s a little surprising,” began Jessie, vaguely.
+
+“Think it over,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m sorry from the bottom of my
+heart.”
+
+And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little, and
+seemed lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by contrition
+and anxiety that he consumed an extraordinarily large breakfast out of
+pure nervousness, and ate his scrambled eggs for the most part with the
+spoon that belonged properly to the marmalade. His eyes were gloomily
+downcast. She glanced at him through her eyelashes. Once or twice she
+struggled with laughter, once or twice she seemed to be indignant.
+
+“I don’t know what to think,” she said at last. “I don’t know what to
+make of you—brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that you were
+perfectly honest. And somehow—”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“I think so still.”
+
+“Honest—with all those lies!”
+
+“I wonder.”
+
+“I don’t,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m fair ashamed of myself. But
+anyhow—I’ve stopped deceiving you.”
+
+“I _thought_,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “that story of the lion—”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t remind me of _that_.”
+
+“I thought, somehow, I _felt_, that the things you said didn’t ring
+quite true.” She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the expression of
+his face. “Of _course_ you are honest,” she said. “How could I ever
+doubt it? As if _I_ had never pretended! I see it all now.”
+
+Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast things.
+He looked at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing friendliness in her
+eyes. He scarcely understood at first. He rose, holding the marmalade
+spoon, and took her proffered hand with abject humility. “Lord,” he
+broke out, “if you aren’t enough—but there!”
+
+“I see it all now.” A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured her
+humour. She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. “You did it,” she
+said, “because you wanted to help me. And you thought I was too
+Conventional to take help from one I might think my social inferior.”
+
+“That was partly it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“How you misunderstood me!” she said.
+
+“You don’t mind?”
+
+“It was noble of you. But I am sorry,” she said, “you should think me
+likely to be ashamed of you because you follow a decent trade.”
+
+“I didn’t know at first, you see,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He was as
+useful a citizen as could be,—it was proposed and carried,—and his
+lying was of the noblest. And so the breakfast concluded much more
+happily than his brightest expectation, and they rode out of ruddy
+little Blandford as though no shadow of any sort had come between them.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+
+As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees half-way up a
+stretch of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood, however, Mr. Hoopdriver
+reopened the question of his worldly position.
+
+“Ju think,” he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette from his
+mouth, “that a draper’s shopman _is_ a decent citizen?”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“When he puts people off with what they don’t quite want, for
+instance?”
+
+“Need he do that?”
+
+“Salesmanship,” said Hoopdriver. “Wouldn’t get a crib if he
+didn’t.—It’s no good your arguing. It’s not a particularly honest nor a
+particularly useful trade; it’s not very high up; there’s no freedom
+and no leisure—seven to eight-thirty every day in the week; don’t leave
+much edge to live on, does it?—real workmen laugh at us and educated
+chaps like bank clerks and solicitors’ clerks look down on us. You look
+respectable outside, and inside you are packed in dormitories like
+convicts, fed on bread and butter and bullied like slaves. You’re just
+superior enough to feel that you’re not superior. Without capital
+there’s no prospects; one draper in a hundred don’t even earn enough to
+marry on; and if he _does_ marry, his G.V. can just use him to black
+boots if he likes, and he daren’t put his back up. That’s drapery! And
+you tell me to be contented. Would _you_ be contented if you was a shop
+girl?”
+
+She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown eyes,
+and he remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+
+Presently he spoke. “I’ve been thinking,” he said, and stopped.
+
+She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand. There
+was a light in her eyes that made the expression of them tender. Mr.
+Hoopdriver had not looked in her face while he had talked. He had
+regarded the grass, and pointed his remarks with redknuckled hands held
+open and palms upwards. Now they hung limply over his knees.
+
+“Well?” she said.
+
+“I was thinking it this morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“Of course it’s silly.” “Well?”
+
+“It’s like this. I’m twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all right
+to fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years behind.—Is it too
+late? I wasn’t so backward. I did algebra, and Latin up to auxiliary
+verbs, and French genders. I got a kind of grounding.”
+
+“And now you mean, should you go on working?”
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “That’s it. You can’t do much at drapery
+without capital, you know. But if I could get really educated. I’ve
+thought sometimes...”
+
+“Why not?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. “You think?” he
+said. “Of course. You are a Man. You are free—” She warmed. “I wish I
+were you to have the chance of that struggle.”
+
+“Am I Man _enough?_” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing himself.
+“There’s that eight years,” he said to her.
+
+“You can make it up. What you call educated men—They’re not going on.
+You can catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing golf, and
+thinking of clever things to say to women like my stepmother, and
+dining out. You’re in front of them already in one thing. They think
+they know everything. You don’t. And they know such little things.”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “How you encourage a fellow!”
+
+“If I could only help you,” she said, and left an eloquent hiatus. He
+became pensive again.
+
+“It’s pretty evident you don’t think much of a draper,” he said
+abruptly.
+
+Another interval. “Hundreds of men,” she said, “have come from the very
+lowest ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and Hugh Miller, a
+stonemason; and plenty of others. Dodsley was a footman—”
+
+“But drapers! We’re too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats and
+cuffs might get crumpled—”
+
+“Wasn’t there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper.”
+
+“There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard tell
+of.”
+
+“Have you ever read ’Hearts Insurgent’?”
+
+“Never,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context, but
+suddenly broke out with an account of his literary requirements. “The
+fact is—I’ve read precious little. One don’t get much of a chance,
+situated as I am. We have a library at business, and I’ve gone through
+that. Most Besant I’ve read, and a lot of Mrs. Braddon’s and Rider
+Haggard and Marie Corelli—and, well—a Ouida or so. They’re good
+stories, of course, and first-class writers, but they didn’t seem to
+have much to do with me. But there’s heaps of books one hears talked
+about, I _haven’t_ read.”
+
+“Don’t you read any other books but novels?”
+
+“Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can’t get the
+books. I have been to some extension lectures, of course, ‘Lizabethan
+Dramatists,’ it was, but it seemed a little high-flown, you know. And I
+went and did wood-carving at the same place. But it didn’t seem leading
+nowhere, and I cut my thumb and chucked it.”
+
+He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his hands
+limp. “It makes me _sick_,” he said, “to think how I’ve been fooled
+with. My old schoolmaster ought to have a juiced _hiding_. He’s a
+thief. He pretended to undertake to make a man of me, and he’s stole
+twenty-three years of my life, filled me up with scraps and sweepings.
+Here I am! I don’t _know_ anything, and I can’t _do_ anything, and all
+the learning time is over.”
+
+“Is it?” she said; but he did not seem to hear her. “My o’ people
+didn’t know any better, and went and paid thirty pounds premium—thirty
+pounds down to have me made _this_. The G.V. promised to teach me the
+trade, and he never taught me anything but to be a Hand. It’s the way
+they do with draper’s apprentices. If every swindler was locked
+up—well, you’d have nowhere to buy tape and cotton. It’s all very well
+to bring up Burns and those chaps, but I’m not that make. Yet I’m not
+such muck that I might not have been better—with teaching. I wonder
+what the chaps who sneer and laugh at such as me would be if they’d
+been fooled about as I’ve been. At twenty-three—it’s a long start.”
+
+He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver indeed
+than him of the glorious imaginings. “It’s _you_ done this,” he said.
+“You’re real. And it sets me thinking what I really am, and what I
+might have been. Suppose it was all different—”
+
+“_Make_ it different.”
+
+“How?”
+
+“_Work_. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man.”
+
+“Ah!” said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his eyes.
+“And even then—”
+
+“No! It’s not much good. I’m beginning too late.”
+
+And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation ended.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII.
+IN THE NEW FOREST
+
+
+At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment. There
+was no letter for her at the post office. Opposite the hotel, The
+Chequered Career, was a machine shop with a conspicuously second-hand
+Marlborough Club tandem tricycle displayed in the window, together with
+the announcement that bicycles and tricycles were on hire within. The
+establishment was impressed on Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind by the
+proprietor’s action in coming across the road and narrowly inspecting
+their machines. His action revived a number of disagreeable
+impressions, but, happily, came to nothing. While they were still
+lunching, a tall clergyman, with a heated face, entered the room and
+sat down at the table next to theirs. He was in a kind of holiday
+costume; that is to say, he had a more than usually high collar,
+fastened behind and rather the worse for the weather, and his long-tail
+coat had been replaced by a black jacket of quite remarkable brevity.
+He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his trouser legs were grey with
+dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw in the place of the customary
+soft felt. He was evidently socially inclined.
+
+“A most charming day, sir,” he said, in a ringing tenor.
+
+“Charming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+
+“You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country,” said
+the clergyman.
+
+“Touring,” explained Mr. Hoopdriver. “I can imagine that, with a
+properly oiled machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way of
+seeing the country.”
+
+“No,” said Mr. Hoopdriver; “it isn’t half a bad way of getting about.”
+
+“For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be, I
+should imagine, a delightful bond.”
+
+“Quite so,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+
+“Do you ride a tandem?”
+
+“No—we’re separate,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“The motion through the air is indisputably of a very exhilarating
+description.” With that decision, the clergyman turned to give his
+orders to the attendant, in a firm, authoritative voice, for a cup of
+tea, two gelatine lozenges, bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow.
+“The gelatine lozenges I must have. I require them to precipitate the
+tannin in my tea,” he remarked to the room at large, and folding his
+hands, remained for some time with his chin thereon, staring fixedly at
+a little picture over Mr. Hoopdriver’s head.
+
+“I myself am a cyclist,” said the clergyman, descending suddenly upon
+Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Indeed!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. “What machine,
+may I ask?”
+
+“I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I regret
+to say, considered too—how shall I put it?—_flippant_ by my
+parishioners. So I have a tricycle. I have just been hauling it
+hither.”
+
+“Hauling!” said Jessie, surprised.
+
+“With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back.”
+
+The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb. Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face passed through several phases of surprise. Then he
+saw the explanation. “Had an accident?”
+
+“I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to go
+round. I found myself about five miles from here with an absolutely
+immobile machine.”
+
+“Ow!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie
+glanced at this insane person.
+
+“It appears,” said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he had
+created, “that my man carefully washed out the bearings with paraffin,
+and let the machine dry without oiling it again. The consequence was
+that they became heated to a considerable temperature and jammed. Even
+at the outset the machine ran stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being
+inclined to ascribe this stiffness to my own lassitude, merely
+redoubled my exertions.”
+
+“’Ot work all round,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of life to
+do whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe, indeed, that the
+bearings became red hot. Finally one of the wheels jammed together. A
+side wheel it was, so that its stoppage necessitated an inversion of
+the entire apparatus,—an inversion in which I participated.”
+
+“Meaning, that you went over?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much
+amused.
+
+“Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly. You may
+understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I expostulated—playfully, of
+course. Happily the road was not overlooked. Finally, the entire
+apparatus became rigid, and I abandoned the unequal contest. For all
+practical purposes the tricycle was no better than a heavy chair
+without castors. It was a case of hauling or carrying.”
+
+The clergyman’s nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+
+“Five miles,” said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread and
+butter vigorously. “Happily,” he said, “I am an eupeptic, energetic
+sort of person on principle. I would all men were likewise.”
+
+“It’s the best way,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation gave
+precedence to bread and butter.
+
+“Gelatine,” said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea
+thoughtfully, “precipitates the tannin in one’s tea and renders it easy
+of digestion.”
+
+“That’s a useful sort of thing to know,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You are altogether welcome,” said the clergyman, biting generously at
+two pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+
+In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace towards
+Stoney Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South Africa being
+in abeyance. Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by disagreeable thoughts. He
+had changed the last sovereign at Ringwood. The fact had come upon him
+suddenly. Now too late he was reflecting upon his resources. There was
+twenty pounds or more in the post office savings bank in Putney, but
+his book was locked up in his box at the Antrobus establishment. Else
+this infatuated man would certainly have surreptitiously withdrawn the
+entire sum in order to prolong these journeyings even for a few days.
+As it was, the shadow of the end fell across his happiness. Strangely
+enough, in spite of his anxiety and the morning’s collapse, he was
+still in a curious emotional state that was certainly not misery. He
+was forgetting his imaginings and posings, forgetting himself
+altogether in his growing appreciation of his companion. The most
+tangible trouble in his mind was the necessity of breaking the matter
+to her.
+
+A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was reached,
+and they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little oak tree. Near
+the crest the road looped on itself, so that, looking back, it sloped
+below them up to the right and then came towards them. About them grew
+a rich heather with stunted oaks on the edge of a deep ditch along the
+roadside, and this road was sandy; below the steepness of the hill,
+however, it was grey and barred with shadows, for there the trees
+clustered thick and tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled clumsily with his
+cigarettes.
+
+“There’s a thing I got to tell you,” he said, trying to be perfectly
+calm.
+
+“Yes?” she said.
+
+“I’d like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y’know.”
+
+“I’m very unsettled,” said Jessie. “You are thinking of writing Books?”
+
+“Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that.”
+
+“And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“How long’d it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?”
+
+“I don’t know at all. I believe there are a great many women
+journalists and sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists. But I
+suppose it takes time. Women, you know, edit most papers nowadays,
+George Egerton says. I ought, I suppose, to communicate with a literary
+agent.”
+
+“Of course,” said Hoopdriver, “it’s very suitable work. Not being heavy
+like the drapery.”
+
+“There’s heavy brain labour, you must remember.”
+
+“That wouldn’t hurt _you_,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a compliment.
+
+“It’s like this,” he said, ending a pause. “It’s a juiced nuisance
+alluding to these matters, but—we got very little more money.”
+
+He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her. “I was
+counting, of course, on your friend’s writing and your being able to
+take some action to-day.” ‘Take some action’ was a phrase he had learnt
+at his last ‘swop.’
+
+“Money,” said Jessie. “I didn’t think of money.”
+
+“Hullo! Here’s a tandem bicycle,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly, and
+pointing with his cigarette.
+
+She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the trees at
+the foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly over their work
+and made a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to take the rise. The
+machine was evidently too highly geared for hill climbing, and
+presently the rearmost rider rose on his saddle and hopped off, leaving
+his companion to any fate he found proper. The foremost rider was a man
+unused to such machines and apparently undecided how to dismount. He
+wabbled a few yards up the hill with a long tail of machine wabbling
+behind him. Finally, he made an attempt to jump off as one does off a
+single bicycle, hit his boot against the backbone, and collapsed
+heavily, falling on his shoulder.
+
+She stood up. “Dear me!” she said. “I hope he isn’t hurt.”
+
+The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+
+Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up and
+wheeled out of the way, and then the fallen rider, being assisted, got
+up slowly and stood rubbing his arm. No serious injury seemed to be
+done to the man, and the couple presently turned their attention to the
+machine by the roadside. They were not in cycling clothes Hoopdriver
+observed. One wore the grotesque raiment for which the Cockney
+discovery of the game of golf seems indirectly blamable. Even at this
+distance the flopping flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at
+the top of his calves, and the chequering of his stockings were
+perceptible. The other, the rear rider, was a slender little man in
+grey.
+
+“Amatoors,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her eyes. She
+no longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering at the machine
+down below there.
+
+“How much have you?” she said.
+
+He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins,
+counted them with his left index finger, and held them out to her.
+“Thirteen four half,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Every penny.”
+
+“I have half a sovereign,” she said. “Our bill wherever we stop—” The
+hiatus was more eloquent than many words.
+
+“I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this,” said Jessie.
+
+“It’s a juiced nuisance.”
+
+“Money,” said Jessie. “Is it possible—Surely! Conventionality! May only
+people of means—Live their own Lives? I never thought ...”
+
+Pause.
+
+“Here’s some more cyclists coming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from among
+the trees emerged the massive bulk of a ‘Marlborough Club’ tandem,
+ridden by a slender woman in grey and a burly man in a Norfolk jacket.
+Following close upon this came a lank black figure in a piebald straw
+hat, riding a tricycle of antiquated pattern with two large wheels in
+front. The man in grey remained bowed over the bicycle, with his
+stomach resting on the saddle, but his companion stood up and addressed
+some remark to the tricycle riders. Then it seemed as if he pointed up
+hill to where Mr. Hoopdriver and his companion stood side by side. A
+still odder thing followed; the lady in grey took out her handkerchief,
+appeared to wave it for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from her
+companion the white signal vanished.
+
+“Surely,” said Jessie, peering under her hand. “It’s never—”
+
+The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering elaborately
+from side to side to ease the ascent. It was evident, from his heaving
+shoulders and depressed head, that the burly gentleman was exerting
+himself. The clerical person on the tricycle assumed the shape of a
+note of interrogation. Then on the heels of this procession came a
+dogcart driven by a man in a billycock hat and containing a lady in
+dark green.
+
+“Looks like some sort of excursion,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand. “Surely,”
+she said.
+
+The clergyman’s efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious
+jerking motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself, and he
+partly dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his machine up hill
+again immediately and began to wheel it. Then the burly gentleman
+dismounted, and with a courtly attentiveness assisted the lady in grey
+to alight. There was some little difference of opinion as to
+assistance, she so clearly wished to help push. Finally she gave in,
+and the burly gentleman began impelling the machine up hill by his own
+unaided strength. His face made a dot of brilliant colour among the
+greys and greens at the foot of the hill. The tandem bicycle was now,
+it seems, repaired, and this joined the tail of the procession, its
+riders walking behind the dogcart, from which the lady in green and the
+driver had now descended.
+
+“Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie. “Those people—I’m almost sure—”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he
+turned to pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and assisted
+her to mount.
+
+At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people coming
+up the hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie’s doubts at once.
+Two handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted. The riders of the tandem
+bicycle began to run it up hill, past the other vehicles. But our young
+people did not wait for further developments of the pursuit. In another
+moment they were out of sight, riding hard down a steady incline
+towards Stoney Cross.
+
+Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill brow,
+Jessie looked back and saw the tandem rising over the crest, with its
+rear rider just tumbling into the saddle. “They’re coming,” she said,
+and bent her head over her handles in true professional style.
+
+They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw ahead
+of them a number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the roadway.
+Involuntarily they slackened. “Shoo!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and the
+ponies kicked up their heels derisively. At that Mr. Hoopdriver lost
+his temper and charged at them, narrowly missed one, and sent them
+jumping the ditch into the bracken under the trees, leaving the way
+clear for Jessie.
+
+Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew heavy,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver’s breath sounded like a saw. The tandem appeared,
+making frightful exertions, at the foot, while the chase was still
+climbing. Then, thank Heaven! a crest and a stretch of up and down
+road, whose only disadvantage was its pitiless exposure to the
+afternoon sun. The tandem apparently dismounted at the hill, and did
+not appear against the hot blue sky until they were already near some
+trees and a good mile away.
+
+“We’re gaining,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of
+perspiration dropping from brow to cheek. “That hill—”
+
+But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly spent.
+Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of shame
+prolonged the liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From that point the
+tandem grained upon them steadily. At the Rufus Stone, it was scarcely
+a hundred yards behind. Then one desperate spurt, and they found
+themselves upon a steady downhill stretch among thick pine woods.
+Downhill nothing can beat a highly geared tandem bicycle. Automatically
+Mr. Hoopdriver put up his feet, and Jessie slackened her pace. In
+another moment they heard the swish of the fat pneumatics behind them,
+and the tandem passed Hoopdriver and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver
+felt a mad impulse to collide with this abominable machine as it passed
+him. His only consolation was to notice that its riders, riding
+violently, were quite as dishevelled as himself and smothered in sandy
+white dust.
+
+Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders shot
+panting past them downhill. “Brake,” said Dangle, who was riding
+behind, and stood up on the pedals. For a moment the velocity of the
+thing increased, and then they saw the dust fly from the brake, as it
+came down on the front tire. Dangle’s right leg floundered in the air
+as he came off in the road. The tandem wobbled. “Hold it!” cried Phipps
+over his shoulder, going on downhill. “I can’t get off if you don’t
+hold it.” He put on the brake until the machine stopped almost dead,
+and then feeling unstable began to pedal again. Dangle shouted after
+him. “Put out your foot, man,” said Dangle.
+
+In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards or more
+beyond their quarry. Then Phipps realized his possibilities, slacked up
+with the brake, and let the thing go over sideways, dropping on to his
+right foot. With his left leg still over the saddle, and still holding
+the handles, he looked over his shoulder and began addressing
+uncomplimentary remarks to Dangle. “You only think of yourself,” said
+Phipps, with a florid face.
+
+“They have forgotten us,” said Jessie, turning her machine.
+
+“There was a road at the top of the hill—to Lyndhurst,” said
+Hoopdriver, following her example.
+
+“It’s no good. There’s the money. We must give it up. But let us go
+back to that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don’t see why we should be led
+captive.”
+
+So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her companion
+mounted and rode quietly back up the hill again. As they dismounted at
+the hotel entrance, the tandem overtook them, and immediately
+afterwards the dogcart came into view in pursuit. Dangle jumped off.
+
+“Miss Milton, I believe,” said Dangle, panting and raising a damp cap
+from his wet and matted hair.
+
+“I _say_,” said Phipps, receding involuntarily. “Don’t go doing it
+again, Dangle. _Help_ a chap.”
+
+“One minute,” said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+
+Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the hotel
+entrance. Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp but defiant.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII.
+AT THE RUFUS STONE
+
+
+He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps
+was abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now
+wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. “Miss Milton?” he
+said briefly.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+
+“Miss Milton within?” said Dangle.
+
+“_And_ not to be disturved,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You are a scoundrel, sir,” said Mr. Dangle.
+
+“Et your service,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “She awaits ’er stepmother,
+sir.”
+
+Mr. Dangle hesitated. “She will be here immediately,” he said. “Here is
+her friend, Miss Mergle.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense
+calm, thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of
+those fatal hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude
+was merely vulgarly defiant; he withdrew both, returned one and pulled
+at the insufficient moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in
+confusion. “Is this the man?” she said to Dangle, and forthwith, “How
+_dare_ you, sir? How dare you face me? That poor girl!”
+
+“You will permit me to observe,” began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid
+drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a
+romantic villain.
+
+“Ugh,” said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff
+with her extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the
+hall of the hotel.
+
+“Let me pass,” said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. “How dare you
+resist my passage?” and so swept by him and into the dining-room,
+wherein Jessie had sought refuge.
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand,
+Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle’s activity,
+came in upon her heels, Phipps leading. “How dare you prevent that lady
+passing?” said Phipps.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle’s sense, dangerous, but
+he made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the
+passage, guardant. “It is men of your stamp, sir,” said Phipps, “who
+discredit manhood.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. “Who the juice are
+you?” shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+
+“Who are _you_, sir?” retorted Phipps. “Who are you? That’s the
+question. What are _you_, and what are you doing, wandering at large
+with a young lady under age?”
+
+“Don’t speak to him,” said Dangle.
+
+“I’m not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me,”
+said Hoopdriver. “Not Likely.” And added fiercely, “And that I tell
+you, sir.”
+
+He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at
+one another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if
+the long clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but
+deliberate. “Petticoated anachronism,” said the long clergyman in the
+doorway, apparently still suffering from the antiquated prejudice that
+demanded a third wheel and a black coat from a clerical rider. He
+looked at Phipps and Hoopdriver for a moment, then extending his hand
+towards the latter, he waved it up and down three times, saying,
+“Tchak, tchak, tchak,” very deliberately as he did so. Then with a
+concluding “Ugh!” and a gesture of repugnance he passed on into the
+dining-room from which the voice of Miss Mergle was distinctly audible
+remarking that the weather was extremely hot even for the time of year.
+
+This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing
+effect upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed
+by the advent of the massive Widgery.
+
+“Is this the man?” said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special
+voice for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+
+“Don’t hurt him!” said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. “However much
+wrong he has done her—No violence!”
+
+“’Ow many more of you?” said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella
+stand. “Where is she? What has he done with her?” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“I’m not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers,”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver. “So you needn’t think it.”
+
+“Please don’t worry, Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie, suddenly appearing
+in the door of the dining-room. “I’m here, mother.” Her face was white.
+
+Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional
+charge at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery
+moved as if to follow, and hesitated. “You’d better make yourself
+scarce,” he said to Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“I shan’t do anything of the kind,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+catching of the breath. “I’m here defending that young lady.”
+
+“You’ve done her enough mischief, I should think,” said Widgery,
+suddenly walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind
+him, leaving Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+
+“Clear!” said Phipps, threateningly.
+
+“I shall go and sit out in the garden,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with
+dignity. “There I shall remain.”
+
+“Don’t make a row with him,” said Dangle.
+
+And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX.
+
+
+So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion is
+over. In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable
+collection of wheeled instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in
+grave and stately attitudes, and by the driver of a stylish dogcart
+from Ringwood. In the garden behind, in an attitude of nervous
+prostration, Mr. Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat. Through the
+open window of a private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of
+men and women in conference. Occasionally something that might have
+been a girlish sob.
+
+“I fail to see what status Widgery has,” says Dangle, “thrusting
+himself in there.”
+
+“He takes too much upon himself,” said Phipps.
+
+“I’ve been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day,” said Dangle,
+and stopped.
+
+“They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon.”
+
+“Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course,” said Dangle,
+with a gloomy magnanimity.
+
+He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the
+man’s chequered legs. “Financially it wouldn’t be half bad.”
+
+“He’s so dull and heavy,” said Phipps.
+
+Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity,
+taken the chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate
+Jessie. I regret to have to say that my heroine had been appalled by
+the visible array of public opinion against her excursion, to the pitch
+of tears. She was sitting with flushed cheeks and swimming eyes at the
+end of the table opposite to the clergyman. She held her handkerchief
+crumpled up in her extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as
+possible, and occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie’s
+hand, to indicate forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated,
+which touched Widgery very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B.
+A.), sat on the opposite side near the clergyman. She was the
+strong-minded schoolmistress to whom Jessie had written, and who had
+immediately precipitated the pursuit upon her. She had picked up the
+clergyman in Ringwood, and had told him everything forthwith, having
+met him once at a British Association meeting. He had immediately
+constituted himself administrator of the entire business. Widgery,
+having been foiled in an attempt to conduct the proceedings, stood with
+his legs wide apart in front of the fireplace ornament, and looked
+profound and sympathetic. Jessie’s account of her adventures was a
+chary one and given amidst frequent interruptions. She surprised
+herself by skilfully omitting any allusion to the Bechamel episode. She
+completely exonerated Hoopdriver from the charge of being more than an
+accessory to her escapade. But public feeling was heavy against
+Hoopdriver. Her narrative was inaccurate and sketchy, but happily the
+others were too anxious to pass opinions to pin her down to
+particulars. At last they had all the facts they would permit.
+
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “I can only ascribe this
+extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest
+misconceptions of your place in the world and of your duties and
+responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your present emotion is due
+not so much to a real and sincere penitence for your disobedience and
+folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate interference—”
+
+“Not that,” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Not that.”
+
+“But _why_ did she go off like this?” said Widgery. “That’s what _I_
+want to know.”
+
+Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said “Hush!” and the
+ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. “I
+cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more
+intelligent portion of the feminine community. You had a pleasant home,
+a most refined and intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to
+cherish and protect you—”
+
+“If I _had_ a mother,” gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare
+of self-pity, and sobbing.
+
+“To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it
+all alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-”
+
+“I wanted to learn,” said Jessie.
+
+“You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn.”
+
+“_Ah!_” from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+
+“It isn’t fair for all of you to argue at me at once,” submitted
+Jessie, irrelevantly.
+
+“A world full of unknown dangers,” resumed the clergyman. “Your proper
+place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You
+have been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of
+literature which, with all due respect to distinguished authoress that
+shall be nameless, I must call the New Woman Literature. In that
+deleterious ingredient of our book boxes—”
+
+“I don’t altogether agree with you there,” said Miss Mergle, throwing
+her head back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr.
+Widgery coughed.
+
+“What _has_ all this to do with me?” asked Jessie, availing herself of
+the interruption.
+
+“The point is,” said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, “that in my books—”
+
+“All I want to do,” said Jessie, “is to go about freely by myself.
+Girls do so in America. Why not here?”
+
+“Social conditions are entirely different in America,” said Miss
+Mergle. “Here we respect Class Distinctions.”
+
+“It’s very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away
+for a holiday if I want to.”
+
+“With a strange young man, socially your inferior,” said Widgery, and
+made her flush by his tone.
+
+“Why not?” she said. “With anybody.”
+
+“They don’t do that, even in America,” said Miss Mergle.
+
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “the most elementary
+principles of decorum—A day will come when you will better understand
+how entirely subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of our
+present civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing
+anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of
+yours. We can only put things down at present, in charity, to your
+ignorance—”
+
+“You have to consider the general body of opinion, too,” said Widgery.
+
+“Precisely,” said Miss Mergle. “There is no such thing as conduct in
+the absolute.” “If once this most unfortunate business gets about,”
+said the clergyman, “it will do you infinite harm.”
+
+“But _I’ve_ done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
+people’s—”
+
+“The world has no charity,” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“For a girl,” said Jessie. “No.”
+
+“Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen to
+reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you
+infinite harm, if once it is generally known. And not only that, it
+will cause infinite pain to those who care for you. But if you will
+return at once to your home, causing it to be understood that you have
+been with friends for these last few days—”
+
+“Tell lies,” said Jessie. “Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I
+understand that is how your absence is understood at present, and there
+is no reason—”
+
+Jessie’s grip tightened on her handkerchief. “I won’t go back,” she
+said, “to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books
+I need to read, to be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching—”
+
+“Anything,” said Mrs. Milton, “anything in reason.”
+
+“But will you keep your promise?” said Jessie.
+
+“Surely you won’t dictate to your mother!” said Widgery.
+
+“My stepmother! I don’t want to dictate. I want definite promises now.”
+
+“This is most unreasonable,” said the clergyman. “Very well,” said
+Jessie, swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. “Then I won’t go
+back. My life is being frittered away—”
+
+“_Let_ her have her way,” said Widgery.
+
+“A room then. All your Men. I’m not to come down and talk away half my
+days—”
+
+“My dear child, if only to save you,” said Mrs. Milton. “If you don’t
+keep your promise—”
+
+“Then I take it the matter is practically concluded,” said the
+clergyman. “And that you very properly submit to return to your proper
+home. And now, if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we take tea.
+Freed of its tannin, nothing, I think, is more refreshing and
+stimulating.”
+
+“There’s a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six,” said
+Widgery, unfolding a time table. “That gives us about half an hour or
+three-quarters here—if a conveyance is obtainable, that is.”
+
+“A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in
+the form of tannate of gelatine,” said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in
+a confidential bray.
+
+Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and
+shoulders over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards
+the door. “While you have tea, mother,” she said, “I must tell Mr.
+Hoopdriver of our arrangements.”
+
+“Don’t you think I—” began the clergyman.
+
+“No,” said Jessie, very rudely; “I don’t.”
+
+“But, Jessie, haven’t you already—”
+
+“You are already breaking the capitulation,” said Jessie.
+
+“Will you want the whole half hour?” said Widgery, at the bell.
+
+“Every minute,” said Jessie, in the doorway. “He’s behaved very nobly
+to me.”
+
+“There’s tea,” said Widgery.
+
+“I’ve had tea.”
+
+“He may not have behaved badly,” said the clergyman. “But he’s
+certainly an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young
+girl—”
+
+Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It
+was over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned,
+and with the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those
+days had done for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their
+position. Of course, they would take her away to those social altitudes
+of hers. She would become an inaccessible young lady again. Would they
+let him say good-bye to her?
+
+How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had
+first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the
+riverside road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering
+it as if everything had been done of his own initiative. “Brave,
+brave!” she had called him. And afterwards, when she came down to him
+in the morning, kindly, quiet. But ought he to have persuaded her then
+to return to her home? He remembered some intention of the sort. Now
+these people snatched her away from him as though he was scarcely fit
+to live in the same world with her. No more he was! He felt he had
+presumed upon her worldly ignorance in travelling with her day after
+day. She was so dainty, so delightful, so serene. He began to
+recapitulate her expressions, the light of her eyes, the turn of her
+face.. .
+
+He wasn’t good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was.
+Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But
+they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be
+there as—what was it? _Chaperone_. He’d never once had a chance of
+saying what he felt; indeed, it was only now he was beginning to
+realise what he felt. Love! he wouldn’t presume. It was worship. If
+only he could have one more chance. He must have one more chance,
+somewhere, somehow. Then he would pour out his soul to her eloquently.
+He felt eloquently, and words would come. He was dust under her feet...
+
+His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and
+Jessie appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. “Come away from
+here,” she said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. “I’m going home
+with them. We have to say good-bye.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a
+word.
+
+
+
+
+XL.
+
+
+At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
+silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw
+her lips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and
+bright. She was looking straight before her. He could think of nothing
+to say, and thrust his hands in his pockets and looked away from her
+intentionally. After a while she began to talk. They dealt disjointedly
+with scenery first, and then with the means of self-education. She took
+his address at Antrobus’s and promised to send him some books. But even
+with that it was spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for the
+fighting mood was over. She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the
+memories of her late battle, and that appearance hurt him.
+
+“It’s the end,” he whispered to himself. “It’s the end.”
+
+They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last
+to a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There,
+by a common impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch—a little
+ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of forest rolling away
+beneath them, crest beyond crest, of leafy trees, fading at last into
+blue.
+
+“The end” ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
+thoughts.
+
+“And so,” she said, presently, breaking the silence, “it comes to
+good-bye.”
+
+For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution.
+“There is one thing I _must_ say.”
+
+“Well?” she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent
+argument. “I ask no return. But—”
+
+Then he stopped. “I won’t say it. It’s no good. It would be rot from
+me—now. I wasn’t going to say anything. Good-bye.”
+
+She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. “No,” she
+said. “But don’t forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris,
+you are my friend. You will work. You are not a very strong man, you
+know, now—you will forgive me—nor do you know all you should. But what
+will you be in six years’ time?”
+
+He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak
+mouth seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not
+say.
+
+“I’ll work,” he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment.
+Then he said, with a motion of his head, “I won’t come back to _them_.
+Do you mind? Going back alone?”
+
+She took ten seconds to think. “No.” she said, and held out her hand,
+biting her nether lip. “_Good-bye_,” she whispered.
+
+He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand
+limply, and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She
+would have snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her movement.
+She felt the touch of his lips, and then he had dropped her fingers and
+turned from her and was striding down the slope. A dozen paces away his
+foot turned in the lip of a rabbit hole, and he stumbled forward and
+almost fell. He recovered his balance and went on, not looking back. He
+never once looked back. She stared at his receding figure until it was
+small and far below her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids
+now, turned slowly, and walked with her hands gripped hard together
+behind her, towards Stoney Cross again.
+
+“I did not know,” she whispered to herself. “I did not understand. Even
+now—No, I do not understand.”
+
+
+
+
+XLI.
+THE ENVOY
+
+
+So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there
+among the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or
+listening to what chances to his breathing. And of what came of it all,
+of the six years and afterwards, this is no place to tell. In truth,
+there is no telling it, for the years have still to run. But if you see
+how a mere counter-jumper, a cad on castors, and a fool to boot, may
+come to feel the little insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any
+extent won your sympathies, my end is attained. (If it is not attained,
+may Heaven forgive us both!) Nor will we follow this adventurous young
+lady of ours back to her home at Surbiton, to her new struggle against
+Widgery and Mrs. Milton combined. For, as she will presently hear, that
+devoted man has got his reward. For her, also, your sympathies are
+invited.
+
+The rest of this great holiday, too—five days there are left of it—is
+beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in a
+dusty brown suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not
+intended to be cycled in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and
+Berkshire and Surrey, going economically—for excellent reasons. Day by
+day he goes on, riding fitfully and for the most part through
+bye-roads, but getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He
+is a narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge
+with unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing
+expression sits upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he
+whistles noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, “a juiced
+good try, anyhow!” you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my
+liking, he looks irritable and hopeless. “I know,” he says, “I know.
+It’s over and done. It isn’t _in_ me. You ain’t man enough, Hoopdriver.
+Look at yer silly hands!... Oh, my God!” and a gust of passion comes
+upon him and he rides furiously for a space.
+
+Sometimes again his face softens. “Anyhow, if I’m not to see her—she’s
+going to lend me books,” he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can.
+Then again; “Books! What’s books?” Once or twice triumphant memories of
+the earlier incidents nerve his face for a while. “I put the ky-bosh on
+_his_ little game,” he remarks. “I _did_ that,” and one might even call
+him happy in these phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice,
+has been enamel-painted grey and carries a sonorous gong.
+
+This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton,
+and Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth
+of an August sunset and with all the ’prentice boys busy shutting up
+shop, and the work girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad,
+and the white ’buses full of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to
+their dinners, we part from him. He is back. To-morrow, the early
+rising, the dusting, and drudgery, begin again—but with a difference,
+with wonderful memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions
+replacing those discrepant dreams.
+
+He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh,
+and pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard,
+as the apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words
+of greeting. “South Coast,” you hear; and “splendid weather—splendid.”
+He sighs. “Yes—swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It’s a juiced good
+machine.”
+
+The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1264 ***
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+<title>The Wheels of Chance; a Bicycling Idyll | Project Gutenberg</title>
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+<body>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1264 ***</div>
+
+<h1>THE WHEELS OF CHANCE;<br/>A BICYCLING IDYLL</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">By H.G. Wells</h2>
+
+<h3>1896</h3>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h3>To<br/>
+MY DEAR MOTHER</h3>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter01"> CHAPTER I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter02"> CHAPTER II</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter03"> CHAPTER III</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter04"> CHAPTER IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter05"> CHAPTER V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter06"> CHAPTER VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter07"> CHAPTER VII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter08"> CHAPTER VIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter09"> CHAPTER IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter10"> CHAPTER X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER’S HEART</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter11"> CHAPTER XI. OMISSIONS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter12"> CHAPTER XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter13"> CHAPTER XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter14"> CHAPTER XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter15"> CHAPTER XV. AN INTERLUDE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter16"> CHAPTER XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter17"> CHAPTER XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter18"> CHAPTER XVIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter19"> CHAPTER XIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter20"> CHAPTER XX. THE PURSUIT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter21"> CHAPTER XXI. AT BOGNOR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter22"> CHAPTER XXII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter23"> CHAPTER XXIII.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter24"> CHAPTER XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter25"> CHAPTER XXV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter26"> CHAPTER XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter27"> CHAPTER XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter28"> CHAPTER XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter29"> CHAPTER XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter30"> CHAPTER XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter31"> CHAPTER XXXI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter32"> CHAPTER XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter33"> CHAPTER XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter34"> CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter35"> CHAPTER XXXV.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter36"> CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter37"> CHAPTER XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter38"> CHAPTER XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter39"> CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter40"> CHAPTER XL.</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chapter41"> CHAPTER XLI. THE ENVOY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<hr />
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter01"></a>I.<br/>
+THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY</h2>
+
+<p>
+If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)—if you had gone
+into the Drapery Emporium—which is really only magnificent for shop—of Messrs.
+Antrobus &amp; Co.—a perfectly fictitious “Co.,” by the bye—of Putney, on the
+14th of August, 1895, had turned to the right-hand side, where the blocks of
+white linen and piles of blankets rise up to the rail from which the pink and
+blue prints depend, you might have been served by the central figure of this
+story that is now beginning. He would have come forward, bowing and swaying, he
+would have extended two hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over the
+counter, and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and without the
+slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner, what he might have the
+pleasure of showing you. Under certain circumstances—as, for instance, hats,
+baby linen, gloves, silks, lace, or curtains—he would simply have bowed
+politely, and with a drooping expression, and making a kind of circular sweep,
+invited you to “step this way,” and so led you beyond his ken; but under other
+and happier conditions,—huckaback, blankets, dimity, cretonne, linen, calico,
+are cases in point,—he would have requested you to take a seat, emphasising the
+hospitality by leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back in a
+spasmodic manner, and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit his goods for
+your consideration. Under which happier circumstances you might—if of an
+observing turn of mind and not too much of a housewife to be inhuman—have given
+the central figure of this story less cursory attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been chiefly to notice
+how little he was noticeable. He wore the black morning coat, the black tie,
+and the speckled grey nether parts (descending into shadow and mystery below
+the counter) of his craft. He was of a pallid complexion, hair of a kind of
+dirty fairness, greyish eyes, and a skimpy, immature moustache under his peaked
+indeterminate nose. His features were all small, but none ill-shaped. A rosette
+of pins decorated the lappel of his coat. His remarks, you would observe, were
+entirely what people used to call <i>cliché</i>, formulae not organic to the
+occasion, but stereotyped ages ago and learnt years since by heart. “This,
+madam,” he would say, “is selling very well.” “We are doing a very good article
+at four three a yard.” “We could show you something better, of course.” “No
+trouble, madam, I assure you.” Such were the simple counters of his
+intercourse. So, I say, he would have presented himself to your superficial
+observation. He would have danced about behind the counter, have neatly
+refolded the goods he had shown you, have put on one side those you selected,
+extracted a little book with a carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet from a fixture,
+made you out a little bill in that weak flourishing hand peculiar to drapers,
+and have bawled “Sayn!” Then a puffy little shop-walker would have come into
+view, looked at the bill for a second, very hard (showing you a parting down
+the middle of his head meanwhile), have scribbled a still more flourishing J.
+M. all over the document, have asked you if there was nothing more, have stood
+by you—supposing that you were paying cash—until the central figure of this
+story reappeared with the change. One glance more at him, and the puffy little
+shop-walker would have been bowing you out, with fountains of civilities at
+work all about you. And so the interview would have terminated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not concern itself
+with superficial appearances alone. Literature is revelation. Modern literature
+is indecorous revelation. It is the duty of the earnest author to tell you what
+you would not have seen—even at the cost of some blushes. And the thing that
+you would not have seen about this young man, and the thing of the greatest
+moment to this story, the thing that must be told if the book is to be written,
+was—let us face it bravely—the Remarkable Condition of this Young Man’s Legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let us assume
+something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost professorial tone of the
+conscientious realist. Let us treat this young man’s legs as a mere diagram,
+and indicate the points of interest with the unemotional precision of a
+lecturer’s pointer. And so to our revelation. On the internal aspect of the
+right ankle of this young man you would have observed, ladies and gentlemen, a
+contusion and an abrasion; on the internal aspect of the left ankle a contusion
+also; on its external aspect a large yellowish bruise. On his left shin there
+were two bruises, one a leaden yellow graduating here and there into purple,
+and another, obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy red—tumid and
+threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral manner, an unnatural
+hardness and redness would have been discovered on the upper aspect of the
+calf, and above the knee and on the inner side, an extraordinary expanse of
+bruised surface, a kind of closely stippled shading of contused points. The
+right leg would be found to be bruised in a marvellous manner all about and
+under the knee, and particularly on the interior aspect of the knee. So far we
+may proceed with our details. Fired by these discoveries, an investigator might
+perhaps have pursued his inquiries further—to bruises on the shoulders, elbows,
+and even the finger joints, of the central figure of our story. He had indeed
+been bumped and battered at an extraordinary number of points. But enough of
+realistic description is as good as a feast, and we have exhibited enough for
+our purpose. Even in literature one must know where to draw the line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young shopman should
+have got his legs, and indeed himself generally, into such a dreadful
+condition. One might fancy that he had been sitting with his nether extremities
+in some complicated machinery, a threshing-machine, say, or one of those
+hay-making furies. But Sherlock Holmes (now happily dead) would have fancied
+nothing of the kind. He would have recognised at once that the bruises on the
+internal aspect of the left leg, considered in the light of the distribution of
+the other abrasions and contusions, pointed unmistakably to the violent impact
+of the Mounting Beginner upon the bicycling saddle, and that the ruinous state
+of the right knee was equally eloquent of the concussions attendant on that
+person’s hasty, frequently causeless, and invariably ill-conceived descents.
+One large bruise on the shin is even more characteristic of the ’prentice
+cyclist, for upon every one of them waits the jest of the unexpected treadle.
+You try at least to walk your machine in an easy manner, and whack!—you are
+rubbing your shin. So out of innocence we ripen. <i>Two</i> bruises on that
+place mark a certain want of aptitude in learning, such as one might expect in
+a person unused to muscular exercise. Blisters on the hands are eloquent of the
+nervous clutch of the wavering rider. And so forth, until Sherlock is presently
+explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that the machine ridden is an
+old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the diamond frame, a cushioned
+tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and a gross weight all on of perhaps
+three-and-forty pounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the attentive shopman
+that I had the honour of showing you at first, rises a vision of a nightly
+struggle, of two dark figures and a machine in a dark road,—the road, to be
+explicit, from Roehampton to Putney Hill,—and with this vision is the sound of
+a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping and grunting, a shouting of “Steer, man,
+steer!” a wavering unsteady flight, a spasmodic turning of the missile edifice
+of man and machine, and a collapse. Then you descry dimly through the dusk the
+central figure of this story sitting by the roadside and rubbing his leg at
+some new place, and his friend, sympathetic (but by no means depressed),
+repairing the displacement of the handle-bar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert itself, and
+drive him against all the conditions of his calling, against the counsels of
+prudence and the restrictions of his means, to seek the wholesome delights of
+exertion and danger and pain. And our first examination of the draper reveals
+beneath his draperies—the man! To which initial fact (among others) we shall
+come again in the end.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter02"></a>II</h2>
+
+<p>
+But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story is now going
+along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your purchases in his arms, to
+the warehouse, where the various articles you have selected will presently be
+packed by the senior porter and sent to you. Returning thence to his particular
+place, he lays hands on a folded piece of gingham, and gripping the corners of
+the folds in his hands, begins to straighten them punctiliously. Near him is an
+apprentice, apprenticed to the same high calling of draper’s assistant, a
+ruddy, red-haired lad in a very short tailless black coat and a very high
+collar, who is deliberately unfolding and refolding some patterns of cretonne.
+By twenty-one he too may hope to be a full-blown assistant, even as Mr.
+Hoopdriver. Prints depend from the brass rails above them, behind are fixtures
+full of white packages containing, as inscriptions testify, <i>Lino, Hd Bk</i>,
+and <i>Mull</i>. You might imagine to see them that the two were both intent
+upon nothing but smoothness of textile and rectitude of fold. But to tell the
+truth, neither is thinking of the mechanical duties in hand. The assistant is
+dreaming of the delicious time—only four hours off now—when he will resume the
+tale of his bruises and abrasions. The apprentice is nearer the long long
+thoughts of boyhood, and his imagination rides <i>cap-à-pie</i> through the
+chambers of his brain, seeking some knightly quest in honour of that Fair Lady,
+the last but one of the girl apprentices to the dress-making upstairs. He
+inclines rather to street fighting against revolutionaries—because then she
+could see him from the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little shop-walker, with a
+paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes extremely active. The shopwalker eyes
+the goods in hand. “Hoopdriver,” he says, “how’s that line of g-sez-x
+ginghams?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the uncertainties of
+dismounting. “They’re going fairly well, sir. But the larger checks seem
+hanging.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. “Any particular time when
+you want your holidays?” he asks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. “No—Don’t want them too late, sir, of
+course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How about this day week?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of the gingham
+folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of conflicting considerations. Can he
+learn it in a week? That’s the question. Otherwise Briggs will get next week,
+and he will have to wait until September—when the weather is often uncertain.
+He is naturally of a sanguine disposition. All drapers have to be, or else they
+could never have the faith they show in the beauty, washability, and unfading
+excellence of the goods they sell you. The decision comes at last. “That’ll do
+me very well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The die is cast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the “dresses,” the
+next in the strict scale of precedence of the Drapery Emporium. Mr. Hoopdriver
+in alternating spasms anon straightens his gingham and anon becomes meditative,
+with his tongue in the hollow of his decaying wisdom tooth.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter03"></a>III</h2>
+
+<p>
+At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr. Pritchard spoke of
+“Scotland,” Miss Isaacs clamoured of Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson displayed a
+proprietary interest in the Norfolk Broads. “<i>I?</i>” said Hoopdriver when
+the question came to him. “Why, cycling, of course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day after day?”
+said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am,” said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the insufficient
+moustache. “I’m going for a Cycling Tour. Along the South Coast.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you’ll get fine weather,” said Miss
+Howe. “And not come any nasty croppers.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag,” said the junior
+apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one of the lessons at the
+top of Putney Hill.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You stow it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and threateningly at the
+junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a tone of bitter contempt,—“Jampot.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m getting fairly safe upon it now,” he told Miss Howe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the satirical efforts of
+the apprentice, but his mind was too full of the projected Tour to admit any
+petty delicacies of dignity. He left the supper table early, so that he might
+put in a good hour at the desperate gymnastics up the Roehampton Road before it
+would be time to come back for locking up. When the gas was turned off for the
+night he was sitting on the edge of his bed, rubbing arnica into his knee—a new
+and very big place—and studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of
+the “dresses,” who shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed and trying
+to smoke in the dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle in his life, but he felt
+Hoopdriver’s inexperience and offered such advice as occurred to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have the machine thoroughly well oiled,” said Briggs, “carry one or two lemons
+with you, don’t tear yourself to death the first day, and sit upright. Never
+lose control of the machine, and always sound the bell on every possible
+opportunity. You mind those things, and nothing very much can’t happen to you,
+Hoopdriver—you take my word.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a curse or so at his
+pipe, and then break out with an entirely different set of tips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It’s one of the worst
+things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the machine buckle—there was a
+man killed only the other day through his wheel buckling—don’t scorch, don’t
+ride on the foot-path, keep your own side of the road, and if you see a
+tramline, go round the corner at once, and hurry off into the next county—and
+always light up before dark. You mind just a few little things like that,
+Hoopdriver, and nothing much can’t happen to you—you take my word.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Right you are!” said Hoopdriver. “Good-night, old man.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good-night,” said Briggs, and there was silence for a space, save for the
+succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode off into Dreamland on his
+machine, and was scarcely there before he was pitched back into the world of
+sense again.—Something—what was it?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never oil the steering. It’s fatal,” a voice that came from round a fitful
+glow of light, was saying. “And clean the chain daily with black-lead. You mind
+just a few little things like that—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord <i>love</i> us!” said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over his
+ears.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter04"></a>IV.<br/>
+THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the year round,
+save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in the summer time, know the
+exquisite sensations of the First Holiday Morning. All the dreary,
+uninteresting routine drops from you suddenly, your chains fall about your
+feet. All at once you are Lord of yourself, Lord of every hour in the long,
+vacant day; you may go where you please, call none Sir or Madame, have a lappel
+free of pins, doff your black morning coat, and wear the colour of your heart,
+and be a Man. You grudge sleep, you grudge eating, and drinking even, their
+intrusion on those exquisite moments. There will be no more rising before
+breakfast in casual old clothing, to go dusting and getting ready in a
+cheerless, shutter-darkened, wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of,
+“Forward, Hoopdriver,” no more hasty meals, and weary attendance on fitful old
+women, for ten blessed days. The first morning is by far the most glorious, for
+you hold your whole fortune in your hands. Thereafter, every night, comes a
+pang, a spectre, that will not be exorcised—the premonition of the return. The
+shadow of going back, of being put in the cage again for another twelve months,
+lies blacker and blacker across the sunlight. But on the first morning of the
+ten the holiday has no past, and ten days seems as good as infinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue sky with
+dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though celestial haymakers had
+been piling the swathes of last night’s clouds into cocks for a coming cartage.
+There were thrushes in the Richmond Road, and a lark on Putney Heath. The
+freshness of dew was in the air; dew or the relics of an overnight shower
+glittered on the leaves and grass. Hoopdriver had breakfasted early by Mrs.
+Gunn’s complaisance. He wheeled his machine up Putney Hill, and his heart sang
+within him. Halfway up, a dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across the
+road and vanished under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the
+variegated shrubs and trees had their blinds down still, and he would not have
+changed places with a soul in any one of them for a hundred pounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had on his new brown cycling suit—a handsome Norfolk jacket thing for
+30/(sp.)—and his legs—those martyr legs—were more than consoled by thick
+chequered stockings, “thin in the foot, thick in the leg,” for all they had
+endured. A neat packet of American cloth behind the saddle contained his change
+of raiment, and the bell and the handle-bar and the hubs and lamp, albeit a
+trifle freckled by wear, glittered blindingly in the rising sunlight. And at
+the top of the hill, after only one unsuccessful attempt, which, somehow,
+terminated on the green, Hoopdriver mounted, and with a stately and cautious
+restraint in his pace, and a dignified curvature of path, began his great
+Cycling Tour along the Southern Coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage, and that
+is—voluptuous curves. He did not ride fast, he did not ride straight, an
+exacting critic might say he did not ride well—but he rode generously,
+opulently, using the whole road and even nibbling at the footpath. The
+excitement never flagged. So far he had never passed or been passed by
+anything, but as yet the day was young and the road was clear. He doubted his
+steering so much that, for the present, he had resolved to dismount at the
+approach of anything else upon wheels. The shadows of the trees lay very long
+and blue across the road, the morning sunlight was like amber fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle trough stands, he
+turned towards Kingston and set himself to scale the little bit of ascent. An
+early heath-keeper, in his velveteen jacket, marvelled at his efforts. And
+while he yet struggled, the head of a carter rose over the brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous determination,
+resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and the machine stopped dead. He
+was trying to think what he did with his right leg whilst getting off. He
+gripped the handles and released the brake, standing on the left pedal and
+waving his right foot in the air. Then—these things take so long in the
+telling—he found the machine was falling over to the right. While he was
+deciding upon a plan of action, gravitation appears to have been busy. He was
+still irresolute when he found the machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon
+it, and a vague feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly
+with his shin. This happened when he was just level with the heath-keeper. The
+man in the approaching cart stood up to see the ruins better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>That</i> ain’t the way to get off,” said the heath-keeper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted askew again. He
+said something under his breath. He would have to unscrew the beastly thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>That</i> ain’t the way to get off,” repeated the heath-keeper, after a
+silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>I</i> know that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to overlook the
+new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled the wallet behind the
+saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you know it ain’t the way to get off—whaddyer do it for?” said the
+heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle. He was annoyed.
+“That’s my business, I suppose,” he said, fumbling with the screw. The unusual
+exertion had made his hands shake frightfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his hands behind
+his back. “You’ve broken yer ’andle, ain’t yer?” he said presently. Just then
+the screw hammer slipped off the nut. Mr. Hoopdriver used a nasty, low word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They’re trying things, them bicycles,” said the heath-keeper, charitably.
+“Very trying.” Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious turn and suddenly stood
+up—he was holding the front wheel between his knees. “I wish,” said he, with a
+catch in his voice, “I wish you’d leave off staring at me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began replacing the
+screw hammer in the wallet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows, and certainly he
+stared harder than he did before. “You’re pretty unsociable,” he said slowly,
+as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles and stood ready to mount as soon as the
+cart had passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The indignation gathered slowly but surely. “Why don’t you ride on a private
+road of your own if no one ain’t to speak to you?” asked the heath-keeper,
+perceiving more and more clearly the bearing of the matter. “Can’t no one make
+a passin’ remark to you, Touchy? Ain’t I good enough to speak to you? Been
+struck wooden all of a sudden?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was rigid with
+emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar Square. But the
+heath-keeper felt his honour was at stake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you make no remarks to ’<i>im</i>,” said the keeper as the carter came
+up broadside to them. “’E’s a bloomin’ dook, ’e is. ’E don’t converse with no
+one under a earl. ’E’s off to Windsor, ’e is; that’s why ’e’s stickin’ his
+be’ind out so haughty. Pride! Why, ’e’s got so much of it, ’e has to carry some
+of it in that there bundle there, for fear ’e’d bust if ’e didn’t ease hisself
+a bit—’<i>E</i>—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along the road, in
+a spasmodic attempt to remount. He missed the treadle once and swore viciously,
+to the keeper’s immense delight. “Nar! Nar!” said the heath-keeper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific lurch of the
+machine, the heath-keeper dropped out of earshot. Mr. Hoopdriver would have
+liked to look back at his enemy, but he usually twisted round and upset if he
+tried that. He had to imagine the indignant heath-keeper telling the carter all
+about it. He tried to infuse as much disdain as possible into his retreating
+aspect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up the little rise
+to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston Vale; and so remarkable is
+the psychology of cycling, that he rode all the straighter and easier because
+the emotions the heath-keeper had aroused relieved his mind of the constant
+expectation of collapse that had previously unnerved him. To ride a bicycle
+properly is very like a love affair—chiefly it is a matter of faith. Believe
+you do it, and the thing is done; doubt, and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings towards the
+heath-keeper were either vindictive or remorseful,—vindictive for the
+aggravation or remorseful for his own injudicious display of ill temper. As a
+matter of fact, they were nothing of the sort. A sudden, a wonderful gratitude,
+possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had resumed its sway with a sudden
+accession of splendour. At the crest of the hill he put his feet upon the
+footrests, and now riding moderately straight, went, with a palpitating brake,
+down that excellent descent. A new delight was in his eyes, quite over and
+above the pleasure of rushing through the keen, sweet, morning air. He reached
+out his thumb and twanged his bell out of sheer happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘He’s a bloomin’ Dook—he is!’” said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself, in a soft
+undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again, “‘He’s a bloomin’
+Dook!”’ He opened his mouth in a silent laugh. It was having a decent cut did
+it. His social superiority had been so evident that even a man like that
+noticed it. No more Manchester Department for ten days! Out of Manchester, a
+Man. The draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished from existence. Instead was
+a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a five-pound note, two sovereigns, and
+some silver at various convenient points of his person. At any rate as good as
+a Dook, if not precisely in the peerage. Involuntarily at the thought of his
+funds Hoopdriver’s right hand left the handle and sought his breast pocket, to
+be immediately recalled by a violent swoop of the machine towards the cemetery.
+Whirroo! Just missed that half-brick! Mischievous brutes there were in the
+world to put such a thing in the road. Some blooming ’Arry or other! Ought to
+prosecute a few of these roughs, and the rest would know better. That must be
+the buckle of the wallet was rattling on the mud-guard. How cheerfully the
+wheels buzzed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was waking, and windows
+rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came out of one of the houses and
+yelped at him. He got off, rather breathless, at the foot of Kingston Hill, and
+pushed up. Halfway up, an early milk chariot rattled by him; two dirty men with
+bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt sure they were burglars, carrying
+home the swag.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling, a slight
+tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top that he rode straighter
+than he did before. The pleasure of riding straight blotted out these first
+intimations of fatigue. A man on horseback appeared; Hoopdriver, in a tumult of
+soul at his own temerity, passed him. Then down the hill into Kingston, with
+the screw hammer, behind in the wallet, rattling against the oil can. He
+passed, without misadventure, a fruiterer’s van and a sluggish cartload of
+bricks. And in Kingston Hoopdriver, with the most exquisite sensations, saw the
+shutters half removed from a draper’s shop, and two yawning youths, in dusty
+old black jackets and with dirty white comforters about their necks, clearing
+up the planks and boxes and wrappers in the window, preparatory to dressing it
+out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the previous day. But now, was he not a
+bloomin’ Dook, palpably in the sight of common men? Then round the corner to
+the right—bell banged furiously—and so along the road to Surbiton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with an expression
+of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed, and to the right of him for
+a mile or so the weltering Thames flashed and glittered. Talk of your <i>joie
+de vivre!</i> Albeit with a certain cramping sensation about the knees and
+calves slowly forcing itself upon his attention.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter05"></a>V.<br/>
+THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your fast young men.
+If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have profited more by his mother’s
+instructions. He regarded the feminine sex as something to bow to and smirk at
+from a safe distance. Years of the intimate remoteness of a counter leave their
+mark upon a man. It was an adventure for him to take one of the Young Ladies of
+the establishment to church on a Sunday. Few modern young men could have
+merited less the epithet “Dorg.” But I have thought at times that his machine
+may have had something of the blade in its metal. Decidedly it was a machine
+with a past. Mr. Hoopdriver had bought it second-hand from Hare’s in Putney,
+and Hare said it had had several owners. Second-hand was scarcely the word for
+it, and Hare was mildly puzzled that he should be selling such an antiquity. He
+said it was perfectly sound, if a little old-fashioned, but he was absolutely
+silent about its moral character. It may even have begun its career with a
+poet, say, in his glorious youth. It may have been the bicycle of a Really Bad
+Man. No one who has ever ridden a cycle of any kind but will witness that the
+things are unaccountably prone to pick up bad habits—and keep them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent emotions
+directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an absolutely unprecedented
+Wabble—unprecedented so far as Hoopdriver’s experience went. It “showed
+off”—the most decadent sinuosity. It left a track like one of Beardsley’s
+feathers. He suddenly realised, too, that his cap was loose on his head and his
+breath a mere remnant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed in a
+beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her outline in gold and left
+the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly aware that she was young, rather
+slender, dark, and with a bright colour and bright eyes. Strange doubts
+possessed him as to the nature of her nether costume. He had heard of such
+things of course. French, perhaps. Her handles glittered; a jet of sunlight
+splashed off her bell blindingly. She was approaching the high road along an
+affluent from the villas of Surbiton. The roads converged slantingly. She was
+travelling at about the same pace as Mr. Hoopdriver. The appearances pointed to
+a meeting at the fork of the roads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By contrast with her
+he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get off at once and pretend something
+was wrong with his treadle? Yet even the end of getting off was an uncertainty.
+That last occasion on Putney Heath! On the other hand, what would happen if he
+kept on? To go very slow seemed the abnegation of his manhood. To crawl after a
+mere schoolgirl! Besides, she was not riding very fast. On the other hand, to
+thrust himself in front of her, consuming the road in his tendril-like advance,
+seemed an incivility—greed. He would leave her such a very little. His business
+training made him prone to bow and step aside. If only one could take one’s
+hands off the handles, one might pass with a silent elevation of the hat, of
+course. But even that was a little suggestive of a funeral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was flushed, a
+little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips fell apart. She may have
+been riding hard, but it looked uncommonly like a faint smile. And the things
+were—yes!—<i>rationals!</i> Suddenly an impulse to bolt from the situation
+became clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively, intending to pass her.
+He jerked against some tin thing on the road, and it flew up between front
+wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round towards her. Had the machine a devil?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done wiser to
+dismount. He gave a frantic ‘whoop’ and tried to get round, then, as he seemed
+falling over, he pulled the handles straight again and to the left by an
+instinctive motion, and shot behind her hind wheel, missing her by a hair’s
+breadth. The pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to recover, and found himself
+jumped up on the pavement and riding squarely at a neat wooden paling. He
+struck this with a terrific impact and shot forward off his saddle into a
+clumsy entanglement. Then he began to tumble over sideways, and completed the
+entire figure in a sitting position on the gravel, with his feet between the
+fork and the stay of the machine. The concussion on the gravel shook his entire
+being. He remained in that position, wishing that he had broken his neck,
+wishing even more heartily that he had never been born. The glory of life had
+departed. Bloomin’ Dook, indeed! These unwomanly women!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and the Young Lady
+in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned round and come back to him.
+The warm sunlight now was in her face. “Are you hurt?” she said. She had a
+pretty, clear, girlish voice. She was really very young—quite a girl, in fact.
+And rode so well! It was a bitter draught.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. “Not a bit,” he said, a little ruefully. He
+became painfully aware that large patches of gravel scarcely improve the
+appearance of a Norfolk suit. “I’m very sorry indeed—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s my fault,” she said, interrupting and so saving him on the very verge of
+calling her ‘Miss.’ (He knew ‘Miss’ was wrong, but it was deep-seated habit
+with him.) “I tried to pass you on the wrong side.” Her face and eyes seemed
+all alive. “It’s my place to be sorry.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But it was my steering—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ought to have seen you were a Novice”—with a touch of superiority. “But you
+rode so straight coming along there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She really was—dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver’s feelings passed the nadir. When
+he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of the aristocratic in his voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that’s no excuse for my ah!
+blundering—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your finger’s bleeding,” she said, abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw his knuckle was barked. “I didn’t feel it,” he said, feeling manly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t at first. Have you any sticking-plaster? If not—” She balanced her
+machine against herself. She had a little side pocket, and she whipped out a
+small packet of sticking-plaster with a pair of scissors in a sheath at the
+side, and cut off a generous portion. He had a wild impulse to ask her to stick
+it on for him. Controlled. “Thank you,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Machine all right?” she asked, looking past him at the prostrate vehicle, her
+hands on her handle-bar. For the first time Hoopdriver did not feel proud of
+his machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over his shoulder,
+and she was gone, turned his head over the other shoulder down the road, and
+she was riding off. “<i>Orf!</i>” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Well, I’m blowed!—Talk
+about Slap Up!” (His aristocratic refinement rarely adorned his speech in his
+private soliloquies.) His mind was whirling. One fact was clear. A most
+delightful and novel human being had flashed across his horizon and was going
+out of his life again. The Holiday madness was in his blood. She looked round!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty ascent.
+Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he <i>never</i> be able to get up on
+the thing again? She will be round the corner in a minute. Once more. Ah!
+Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time! He gripped the handles and put his head
+down. He would overtake her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a moment over the
+civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed at the pedals with archaic
+violence. So Palaeolithic man may have ridden his simple bicycle of chipped
+flint in pursuit of his exogamous affinity. She vanished round the corner. His
+effort was Titanic. What should he say when he overtook her? That scarcely
+disturbed him at first. How fine she had looked, flushed with the exertion of
+riding, breathing a little fast, but elastic and active! Talk about your
+ladylike, homekeeping girls with complexions like cold veal! But what should he
+say to her? That was a bother. And he could not lift his cap without risking a
+repetition of his previous ignominy. She was a real Young Lady. No mistake
+about that! None of your blooming shop girls. (There is no greater contempt in
+the world than that of shop men for shop girls, unless it be that of shop girls
+for shop men.) Phew! This was work. A certain numbness came and went at his
+knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“May I ask to whom I am indebted?” he panted to himself, trying it over. That
+might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a shilling—while you wait. He was
+getting winded. The road was certainly a bit uphill. He turned the corner and
+saw a long stretch of road, and a grey dress vanishing. He set his teeth. Had
+he gained on her at all? “Monkey on a gridiron!” yelped a small boy. Hoopdriver
+redoubled his efforts. His breath became audible, his steering unsteady, his
+pedalling positively ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his eye,
+irritant as acid. The road really was uphill beyond dispute. All his physiology
+began to cry out at him. A last tremendous effort brought him to the corner and
+showed yet another extent of shady roadway, empty save for a baker’s van. His
+front wheel suddenly shrieked aloud. “Oh Lord!” said Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a moment his legs
+felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his machine against the grassy edge of
+the path and sat down panting. His hands were gnarled with swollen veins and
+shaking palpably, his breath came viscid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m hardly in training yet,” he remarked. His legs had gone leaden. “I don’t
+feel as though I’d had a mouthful of breakfast.” Presently he slapped his side
+pocket and produced therefrom a brand-new cigarette case and a packet of
+Vansittart’s Red Herring cigarettes. He filled the case. Then his eye fell with
+a sudden approval on the ornamental chequering of his new stockings. The
+expression in his eyes faded slowly to abstract meditation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She <i>was</i> a stunning girl,” he said. “I wonder if I shall ever set eyes
+on her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she thought of me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The phrase ‘bloomin’ Dook’ floated into his mind with a certain flavour of
+comfort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not even look up
+when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes before he roused himself.
+“What rot it is! What’s the good of thinking such things,” he said. “I’m only a
+blessed draper’s assistant.” (To be exact, he did not say blessed. The service
+of a shop may polish a man’s exterior ways, but the ’prentices’ dormitory is an
+indifferent school for either manners or morals.) He stood up and began
+wheeling his machine towards Esher. It was going to be a beautiful day, and the
+hedges and trees and the open country were all glorious to his town-tired eyes.
+But it was a little different from the elation of his start.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle,” said a nursemaid on the path to a
+personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little. “‘Gentleman wizzer
+bicitle,’—‘bloomin’ Dook’—I can’t look so very seedy,” he said to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I <i>wonder</i>—I should just like to know—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was something very comforting in the track of <i>her</i> pneumatic
+running straight and steady along the road before him. It must be hers. No
+other pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It was just possible, of
+course, that he might see her once more—coming back. Should he try and say
+something smart? He speculated what manner of girl she might be. Probably she
+was one of these here New Women. He had a persuasion the cult had been
+maligned. Anyhow she was a Lady. And rich people, too! Her machine couldn’t
+have cost much under twenty pounds. His mind came round and dwelt some time on
+her visible self. Rational dress didn’t look a bit unwomanly. However, he
+disdained to be one of your fortune-hunters. Then his thoughts drove off at a
+tangent. He would certainly have to get something to eat at the next public
+house.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter06"></a>VI.<br/>
+ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of Granby at
+Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw the inn in front of him,
+he mounted his machine again and rode bravely up to the doorway. Burton and
+biscuit and cheese he had, which, indeed, is Burton in its proper company; and
+as he was eating there came a middleaged man in a drab cycling suit, very red
+and moist and angry in the face, and asked bitterly for a lemon squash. And he
+sat down upon the seat in the bar and mopped his face. But scarcely had he sat
+down before he got up again and stared out of the doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Damn!” said he. Then, “Damned Fool!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece of cheese in
+his cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man in drab faced him. “I called myself a Damned Fool, sir. Have you any
+objections?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!—None. None,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I thought you spoke to me. I didn’t
+hear what you said.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic temperament, sir, is
+hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative disposition and a phlegmatic
+temperament, all very well. But energy and philosophy—!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise, gentle
+exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And no sooner do I get on
+the accursed machine, than off I go hammer and tongs; I never look to right or
+left, never notice a flower, never see a view, get hot, juicy, red,—like a
+grilled chop. Here I am, sir. Come from Guildford in something under the hour.
+<i>why</i>, sir?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Because I’m a damned fool, sir. Because I’ve reservoirs and reservoirs of
+muscular energy, and one or other of them is always leaking. It’s a most
+interesting road, birds and trees, I’ve no doubt, and wayside flowers, and
+there’s nothing I should enjoy more than watching them. But I can’t. Get me on
+that machine, and I have to go. Get me on anything, and I have to go. And I
+don’t want to go a bit. <i>Why</i> should a man rush about like a rocket, all
+pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me furious. I can assure you, sir, I go
+scorching along the road, and cursing aloud at myself for doing it. A quiet,
+dignified, philosophical man, that’s what I am—at bottom; and here I am dancing
+with rage and swearing like a drunken tinker at a perfect stranger—
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But my day’s wasted. I’ve lost all that country road, and now I’m on the
+fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the morning! Ugh! Thank Heaven,
+sir, you have not the irritable temperament, that you are not goaded to madness
+by your endogenous sneers, by the eternal wrangling of an uncomfortable soul
+and body. I tell you, I lead a cat and dog life—But what <i>is</i> the use of
+talking?—It’s all of a piece!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the lemon squash into
+his mouth, paid for it, and without any further remark strode to the door. Mr.
+Hoopdriver was still wondering what to say when his interlocutor vanished.
+There was a noise of a foot spurning the gravel, and when Mr. Hoopdriver
+reached the doorway, the man in drab was a score of yards Londonward. He had
+already gathered pace. He pedalled with ill-suppressed anger, and his head was
+going down. In another moment he flew swiftly out of sight under the railway
+arch, and Mr. Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter07"></a>VII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and—being now a little
+rested about the muscles of the knees—resumed his saddle and rode on in the
+direction of Ripley, along an excellent but undulating road. He was pleased to
+find his command over his machine already sensibly increased. He set himself
+little exercises as he went along and performed them with variable success.
+There was, for instance, steering in between a couple of stones, say a foot
+apart, a deed of little difficulty as far as the front wheel is concerned. But
+the back wheel, not being under the sway of the human eye, is apt to take a
+vicious jump over the obstacle, which sends a violent concussion all along the
+spine to the skull, and will even jerk a loosely fastened hat over the eyes,
+and so lead to much confusion. And again, there was taking the hand or hands
+off the handlebar, a thing simple in itself, but complex in its consequences.
+This particularly was a feat Mr. Hoopdriver desired to do, for several
+divergent reasons; but at present it simply led to convulsive balancings and
+novel and inelegant modes of dismounting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are those who
+consider it ornamental, and would regard a face deprived of its assistance with
+pity or derision; but it is doubtful whether our esteem is dictated so much by
+a sense of its absolute beauty as by the vitiating effect of a universally
+prevalent fashion. In the case of bicycle students, as in the young of both
+sexes, its inutility is aggravated by its persistent annoyance—it requires
+constant attention. Until one can ride with one hand, and search for, secure,
+and use a pocket handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant
+series of descents. Nothing can be further from the author’s ambition than a
+wanton realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver’s nose is a plain and salient fact, and face
+it we must. And, in addition to this inconvenience, there are flies. Until the
+cyclist can steer with one hand, his face is given over to Beelzebub.
+Contemplative flies stroll over it, and trifle absently with its most sensitive
+surfaces. The only way to dislodge them is to shake the head forcibly and to
+writhe one’s features violently. This is not only a lengthy and frequently
+ineffectual method, but one exceedingly terrifying to foot passengers. And
+again, sometimes the beginner rides for a space with one eye closed by
+perspiration, giving him a waggish air foreign to his mood and ill calculated
+to overawe the impertinent. However, you will appreciate now the motive of Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s experiments. He presently attained sufficient dexterity to slap
+himself smartly and violently in the face with his right hand, without
+certainly overturning the machine; but his pocket handkerchief might have been
+in California for any good it was to him while he was in the saddle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little uncomfortable,
+he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the background of his consciousness
+was the sense that about this time Briggs would be half-way through his window
+dressing, and Gosling, the apprentice, busy, with a chair turned down over the
+counter and his ears very red, trying to roll a piece of huckaback—only those
+who have rolled pieces of huckaback know quite how detestable huckaback is to
+roll—and the shop would be dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and snappy.
+And here was quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the desire took one,
+without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of “Sayn,” no folding of
+remnants, no voice to shout, “Hoopdriver, forward!” And once he almost ran over
+something wonderful, a little, low, red beast with a yellowish tail, that went
+rushing across the road before him. It was the first weasel he had ever seen in
+his cockney life. There were miles of this, scores of miles of this before him,
+pinewood and oak forest, purple, heathery moorland and grassy down, lush
+meadows, where shining rivers wound their lazy way, villages with
+square-towered, flint churches, and rambling, cheap, and hearty inns, clean,
+white, country towns, long downhill stretches, where one might ride at one’s
+ease (overlooking a jolt or so), and far away, at the end of it all,—the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps he had been
+dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young Lady in Grey, and perhaps
+the memory of it was making itself a little lair in a corner of his brain from
+which it could distress him in the retrospect by suggesting that he looked like
+a fool; but for the present that trouble was altogether in abeyance. The man in
+drab—evidently a swell—had spoken to him as his equal, and the knees of his
+brown suit and the chequered stockings were ever before his eyes. (Or, rather,
+you could see the stockings by carrying the head a little to one side.) And to
+feel, little by little, his mastery over this delightful, treacherous machine,
+growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his knees reasserted themselves, and
+he dismounted and sat awhile by the roadside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where a bridge
+crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the other cyclist in brown.
+It is well to notice the fact here, although the interview was of the
+slightest, because it happened that subsequently Hoopdriver saw a great deal
+more of this other man in brown. The other cyclist in brown had a machine of
+dazzling newness, and a punctured pneumatic lay across his knees. He was a man
+of thirty or more, with a whitish face, an aquiline nose, a lank, flaxen
+moustache, and very fair hair, and he scowled at the job before him. At the
+sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver pulled himself together, and rode by with the air
+of one born to the wheel. “A splendid morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “and a
+fine surface.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!” said the other
+man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver heard the mumble and did not
+distinguish the words, and he felt a pleasing sense of having duly asserted the
+wide sympathy that binds all cyclists together, of having behaved himself as
+becomes one of the brotherhood of the wheel. The other man in brown watched his
+receding aspect. “Greasy proletarian,” said the other man in brown, feeling a
+prophetic dislike. “Got a suit of brown, the very picture of this. One would
+think his sole aim in life had been to caricature me. It’s Fortune’s way with
+me. Look at his insteps on the treadles! Why does Heaven make such men?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to the business in
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that he felt sure
+was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then he dismounted and pushed
+his machine; until the proximity of the village and a proper pride drove him
+into the saddle again.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter08"></a>VIII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in its beginning
+if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was perhaps half-way between
+Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver dropped down a little hill, where, unfenced
+from the road, fine mossy trees and bracken lay on either side; and looking up
+he saw an open country before him, covered with heather and set with pines, and
+a yellow road running across it, and half a mile away perhaps, a little grey
+figure by the wayside waving something white. “Never!” said Mr. Hoopdriver with
+his hands tightening on the handles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a stone, wabbled,
+recovered, and began riding faster at once, with his eyes ahead. “It can’t be,”
+said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a limp numbness
+had resumed possession of his legs. “It <i>can’t</i> be,” he repeated, feeling
+every moment more assured that it <i>was</i>. “Lord! I don’t know even now,”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs awhirling), and then, “Blow my legs!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and gathering flies
+like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden. Then the road began to rise, and
+the resistance of the pedals grew. As he crested the hill he saw her, not a
+hundred yards away from him. “It’s her!” he said. “It’s her—right enough. It’s
+the suit’s done it,”—which was truer even than Mr. Hoopdriver thought. But now
+she was not waving her handkerchief, she was not even looking at him. She was
+wheeling her machine slowly along the road towards him, and admiring the pretty
+wooded hills towards Weybridge. She might have been unaware of his existence
+for all the recognition he got.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that handkerchief
+been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and scarlet, and felt so. It
+must be her coquetry—the handkerchief was indisputable. Should he ride up to
+her and get off, or get off and ride up to her? It was as well she didn’t look,
+because he would certainly capsize if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was her
+consideration. Even as he hesitated he was upon her. She must have heard his
+breathing. He gripped the brake. Steady! His right leg waved in the air, and he
+came down heavily and staggering, but erect. She turned her eyes upon him with
+admirable surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine, raise his cap,
+and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as much. He was a man
+singularly devoid of the minutiæ of self-consciousness, and he was quite
+unaware of a tail of damp hair lying across his forehead, and just clearing his
+eyes, and of the general disorder of his coiffure. There was an interrogative
+pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What can I have the pleasure—” began Mr. Hoopdriver, insinuatingly. “I mean”
+(remembering his emancipation and abruptly assuming his most aristocratic
+intonation), “can I be of any assistance to you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily, “None, thank
+you.” She glanced away from him and made as if she would proceed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen again. It was
+so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was she coquetting? Or had he—?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Excuse me, one minute,” he said, as she began to wheel her machine again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?” she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour in her cheeks
+deepening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I should not have alighted if I had not—imagined that you—er, waved something
+white—” He paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him doubtfully. He <i>had</i> seen it! She decided that he was
+not an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but an innocent soul
+meaning well while seeking happiness. “I <i>did</i> wave my handkerchief,” she
+said. “I’m very sorry. I am expecting—a friend, a gentleman,”—she seemed to
+flush pink for a minute. “He is riding a bicycle and dressed in—in brown; and
+at a distance, you know—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, quite!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion against his
+bitter disappointment. “Certainly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No trouble. ’Ssure you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and bowing over his
+saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could not find it in his heart to
+tell her that the man was beyond there with a punctured pneumatic. He looked
+back along the road and tried to think of something else to say. But the gulf
+in the conversation widened rapidly and hopelessly. “There’s nothing further,”
+began Mr. Hoopdriver desperately, recurring to his stock of <i>clichés</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing, thank you,” she said decisively. And immediately, “This <i>is</i> the
+Ripley road?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Ripley is about two miles from here.
+According to the mile-stones.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Thank you,” she said warmly. “Thank you so much. I felt sure there was no
+mistake. And I really am awfully sorry—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t mention it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t mention it.” He hesitated and
+gripped his handles to mount. “It’s me,” he said, “ought to be sorry.” Should
+he say it? Was it an impertinence? Anyhow!—“Not being the other gentleman, you
+know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even as he smiled
+it; felt she disapproved—that she despised him, was overcome with shame at her
+expression, turned his back upon her, and began (very clumsily) to mount. He
+did so with a horrible swerve, and went pedalling off, riding very badly, as he
+was only too painfully aware. Nevertheless, thank Heaven for the mounting! He
+could not see her because it was so dangerous for him to look round, but he
+could imagine her indignant and pitiless. He felt an unspeakable idiot. One had
+to be so careful what one said to Young Ladies, and he’d gone and treated her
+just as though she was only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He always
+<i>was</i> a fool. You could tell from her manner she didn’t think him a
+gentleman. One glance, and she seemed to look clear through him and all his
+presence. What rot it was venturing to speak to a girl like that! With her
+education she was bound to see through him at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel what slush
+his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What was it? ‘Not being the
+other gentleman, you know!’ No point in it. And ‘<i>gentleman!</i>’ What
+<i>could</i> she be thinking of him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from her thoughts
+almost before he had vanished round the corner. She had thought no ill of him.
+His manifest awe and admiration of her had given her not an atom of offence.
+But for her just now there were weightier things to think about, things that
+would affect all the rest of her life. She continued slowly walking her machine
+Londonward. Presently she stopped. “Oh! Why <i>doesn’t</i> he come?” she said,
+and stamped her foot petulantly. Then, as if in answer, coming down the hill
+among the trees, appeared the other man in brown, dismounted and wheeling his
+machine.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter09"></a>IX.<br/>
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED</h2>
+
+<p>
+As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came to him, with
+an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen the last of the Young Lady
+in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery of the machine, the present machinery of
+Fate, the <i>deus ex machina</i>, so to speak, was against him. The bicycle,
+torn from this attractive young woman, grew heavier and heavier, and
+continually more unsteady. It seemed a choice between stopping at Ripley or
+dying in the flower of his days. He went into the Unicorn, after propping his
+machine outside the door, and, as he cooled down and smoked his Red Herring
+cigarette while the cold meat was getting ready, he saw from the window the
+Young Lady in Grey and the other man in brown, entering Ripley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which sheltered him,
+but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk and incapable attitude against
+the doorway, humping its rackety mud-guard and leering at them with its
+darkened lantern eye, drove them away—so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver—to the
+spacious swallow of the Golden Dragon. The young lady was riding very slowly,
+but the other man in brown had a bad puncture and was wheeling his machine. Mr.
+Hoopdriver noted his flaxen moustache, his aquiline nose, his rather bent
+shoulders, with a sudden, vivid dislike.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is jaded by the
+incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver’s mind, even as he conversed
+with her in that cultivated voice of his—of the weather, of the distance from
+London, and of the excellence of the Ripley road—wandered to the incomparable
+freshness and brilliance of the Young Lady in Grey. As he sat at meat he kept
+turning his head to the window to see what signs there were of that person, but
+the face of the Golden Dragon displayed no appreciation of the delightful
+morsel it had swallowed. As an incidental consequence of this distraction, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly inconvenienced by a mouthful of mustard.
+After he had called for his reckoning he went, his courage being high with meat
+and mustard, to the door, intending to stand, with his legs wide apart and his
+hands deep in his pockets, and stare boldly across the road. But just then the
+other man in brown appeared in the gateway of the Golden Dragon yard—it is one
+of those delightful inns that date from the coaching days—wheeling his
+punctured machine. He was taking it to Flambeau’s, the repairer’s. He looked up
+and saw Hoopdriver, stared for a minute, and then scowled darkly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other man in brown had
+disappeared into Flambeau’s. Then he glanced momentarily at the Golden Dragon,
+puckered his mouth into a whistle of unconcern, and proceeded to wheel his
+machine into the road until a sufficient margin for mounting was secured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not of seeing no
+more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in brown he guessed was her
+brother, albeit that person was of a pallid fairness, differing essentially
+from her rich colouring; and, besides, he felt he had made a hopeless fool of
+himself. But the afternoon was against him, intolerably hot, especially on the
+top of his head, and the virtue had gone out of his legs to digest his cold
+meat, and altogether his ride to Guildford was exceedingly intermittent. At
+times he would walk, at times lounge by the wayside, and every public house, in
+spite of Briggs and a sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of
+bitter. (For that is the experience of all those who go on wheels, that
+drinking begets thirst, even more than thirst begets drinking, until at last
+the man who yields becomes a hell unto himself, a hell in which the fire dieth
+not, and the thirst is not quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid green apples
+turned the current that threatened to carry him away. Ever and again a cycle,
+or a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering wheels and softly running
+chains, and on each occasion, to save his self-respect, Mr. Hoopdriver
+descended and feigned some trouble with his saddle. Each time he descended with
+less trepidation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o’clock, and then he was so much
+exhausted that he decided to put up there for the night, at the Yellow Hammer
+Coffee Tavern. And after he had cooled a space and refreshed himself with tea
+and bread and butter and jam,—the tea he drank noisily out of the saucer,—he
+went out to loiter away the rest of the afternoon. Guildford is an altogether
+charming old town, famous, so he learnt from a Guide Book, as the scene of
+Master Tupper’s great historical novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a
+delightful castle, all set about with geraniums and brass plates commemorating
+the gentlemen who put them up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very
+pleasant to see, and in the afternoon the shops are busy and the people going
+to and fro make the pavements look bright and prosperous. It was nice to peep
+in the windows and see the heads of the men and girls in the drapers’ shops,
+busy as busy, serving away. The High Street runs down at an angle of seventy
+degrees to the horizon (so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver, whose feeling for
+gradients was unnaturally exalted), and it brought his heart into his mouth to
+see a cyclist ride down it, like a fly crawling down a window pane. The man
+hadn’t even a brake. He visited the castle early in the evening and paid his
+twopence to ascend the Keep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red roofs of the
+town and the tower of the church, and then going to the southern side sat down
+and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and stared away south over the old
+bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin, at the waves of blue upland that rose, one
+behind another, across the Weald, to the lazy altitudes of Hindhead and Butser.
+His pale grey eyes were full of complacency and pleasurable anticipation.
+Tomorrow he would go riding across that wide valley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him until he heard a
+soft voice behind him saying: “Well, <i>Miss Beaumont</i>, here’s the view.”
+Something in the accent pointed to a jest in the name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a dear old town, brother George,” answered another voice that sounded
+familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr. Hoopdriver saw the other man in
+brown and the Young Lady in Grey, with their backs towards him. She turned her
+smiling profile towards Hoopdriver. “Only, you know, brothers don’t call their
+sisters—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. “Damn!” said the other man in
+brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed her glance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the Weald. “Beautiful
+old town, isn’t it?” said the other man in brown, after a quite perceptible
+pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t it?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another pause began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can’t get alone anywhere,” said the other man in brown, looking round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and decided to
+retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should stumble at the head of
+the steps and vanish with indignity. This was the third time that he’d seen
+<i>him</i>, and the fourth time <i>her</i>. And of course he was too big a
+fat-head to raise his cap to her! He thought of that at the foot of the Keep.
+Apparently they aimed at the South Coast just as he did. He’d get up betimes
+the next day and hurry off to avoid her—them, that is. It never occurred to Mr.
+Hoopdriver that Miss Beaumont and her brother might do exactly the same thing,
+and that evening, at least, the peculiarity of a brother calling his sister
+“Miss Beaumont” did not recur to him. He was much too preoccupied with an
+analysis of his own share of these encounters. He found it hard to be
+altogether satisfied about the figure he had cut, revise his memories as he
+would.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two people. It was about
+seven o’clock. He stopped outside a linen draper’s and peered over the goods in
+the window at the assistants in torment. He could have spent a whole day
+happily at that. He told himself that he was trying to see how they dressed out
+the brass lines over their counters, in a purely professional spirit, but down
+at the very bottom of his heart he knew better. The customers were a secondary
+consideration, and it was only after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he
+perceived that among them was—the Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the
+window at once, and saw the other man in brown standing at the edge of the
+pavement and regarding him with a very curious expression of face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There came into Mr. Hoopdriver’s head the curious problem whether he was to be
+regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or whether they were to be
+regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He abandoned the solution at last in
+despair, quite unable to decide upon the course he should take at the next
+encounter, whether he should scowl savagely at the couple or assume an attitude
+eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter10"></a>X.<br/>
+THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER’S HEART</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he had never
+written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will describe him better. Like I
+know not how many of those who do the fetching and carrying of life,—a great
+number of them certainly,—his real life was absolutely uninteresting, and if he
+had faced it as realistically as such people do in Mr. Gissing’s novels, he
+would probably have come by way of drink to suicide in the course of a year.
+But that was just what he had the natural wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he
+was always decorating his existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses,
+deliberate and yet quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences were mere
+material for a romantic superstructure. If some power had given Hoopdriver the
+‘giftie’ Burns invoked, ‘to see oursels as ithers see us,’ he would probably
+have given it away to some one else at the very earliest opportunity. His
+entire life, you must understand, was not a continuous romance, but a series of
+short stories linked only by the general resemblance of their hero, a
+brown-haired young fellow commonly, with blue eyes and a fair moustache,
+graceful rather than strong, sharp and resolute rather than clever (cp., as the
+scientific books say, p. 2). Invariably this person possessed an iron will. The
+stories fluctuated indefinitely. The smoking of a cigarette converted
+Hoopdriver’s hero into something entirely worldly, subtly rakish, with a
+humorous twinkle in the eye and some gallant sinning in the background. You
+should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver promenading the brilliant gardens at Earl’s
+Court on an early-closing night. His meaning glances! (I dare not give the
+meaning.) Such an influence as the eloquence of a revivalist preacher would
+suffice to divert the story into absolutely different channels, make him a
+white-soured hero, a man still pure, walking untainted and brave and helpful
+through miry ways. The appearance of some daintily gloved frockcoated gentleman
+with buttonhole and eyeglass complete, gallantly attendant in the rear of
+customers, served again to start visions of a simplicity essentially
+Cromwell-like, of sturdy plainness, of a strong, silent man going righteously
+through the world. This day there had predominated a fine leisurely person
+immaculately clothed, and riding on an unexceptional machine, a mysterious
+person—quite unostentatious, but with accidental self-revelation of something
+over the common, even a “bloomin’ Dook,” it might be incognito, on the tour of
+the South Coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You must not think that there was any <i>telling</i> of these stories of this
+life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that they were known to a
+soul. If it were not for the trouble, I would, I think, go back and rewrite
+this section from the beginning, expunging the statements that Hoopdriver was a
+poet and a romancer, and saying instead that he was a playwright and acted his
+own plays. He was not only the sole performer, but the entire audience, and the
+entertainment kept him almost continuously happy. Yet even that playwright
+comparison scarcely expresses all the facts of the case. After all, very many
+of his dreams never got acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the dreams
+of a solitary walk for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the dreams dreamt behind
+the counter while trade was slack and mechanical foldings and rollings occupied
+his muscles. Most of them were little dramatic situations, crucial dialogues,
+the return of Mr. Hoopdriver to his native village, for instance, in a well-cut
+holiday suit and natty gloves, the unheard asides of the rival neighbours, the
+delight of the old ‘mater,’ the intelligence—“A ten-pound rise all at once from
+Antrobus, mater. Whad d’yer think of that?” or again, the first whispering of
+love, dainty and witty and tender, to the girl he served a few days ago with
+sateen, or a gallant rescue of generalised beauty in distress from truculent
+insult or ravening dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So many people do this—and you never suspect it. You see a tattered lad selling
+matches in the street, and you think there is nothing between him and the
+bleakness of immensity, between him and utter abasement, but a few tattered
+rags and a feeble musculature. And all unseen by you a host of heaven-sent
+fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they swathe you about. Many men
+have never seen their own profiles or the backs of their heads, and for the
+back of your own mind no mirror has been invented. They swathe him about so
+thickly that the pricks of fate scarce penetrate to him, or become but a
+pleasant titillation. And so, indeed, it is with all of us who go on living.
+Self-deception is the anaesthetic of life, while God is carving out our beings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver’s imaginings. You
+see now how external our view has been; we have had but the slightest
+transitory glimpses of the drama within, of how the things looked in the magic
+mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. On the road to Guildford and during his
+encounters with his haunting fellow-cyclists the drama had presented chiefly
+the quiet gentleman to whom we have alluded, but at Guildford, under more
+varied stimuli, he burgeoned out more variously. There was the house agent’s
+window, for instance, set him upon a charming little comedy. He would go in,
+make inquires about that thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go over
+it—the thing would stimulate the clerk’s curiosity immensely. He searched his
+mind for a reason for this proceeding and discovered that he was a dynamiter
+needing privacy. Upon that theory he procured the key, explored the house
+carefully, said darkly that it might suit his special needs, but that there
+were <i>others</i> to consult. The clerk, however, did not understand the
+allusion, and merely pitied him as one who had married young and paired himself
+to a stronger mind than his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a note-book and
+pencil, and that started the conception of an artist taking notes. That was a
+little game Mr. Hoopdriver had, in congenial company, played in his still
+younger days—to the infinite annoyance of quite a number of respectable
+excursionists at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver had been, as his mother
+proudly boasted, a ‘bit of a drawer,’ but a conscientious and normally stupid
+schoolmaster perceived the incipient talent and had nipped it in the bud by a
+series of lessons in art. However, our principal character figured about quite
+happily in old corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking
+out of the bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a corner by a
+gateway, note-book in hand, busily sketching the Earl’s imposing features. At
+which sight the other man in brown started back from the centre of the window,
+so as to be hidden from him, and crouching slightly, watched him intently
+through the interstices of the lace curtains.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter11"></a>XI.<br/>
+OMISSIONS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the great opening
+day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here. How he wandered about the old
+town in the dusk, and up to the Hogsback to see the little lamps below and the
+little stars above come out one after another; how he returned through the
+yellow-lit streets to the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern and supped bravely in the
+commercial room—a Man among Men; how he joined in the talk about
+flying-machines and the possibilities of electricity, witnessing that
+flying-machines were “dead certain to come,” and that electricity was
+“wonderful, wonderful”; how he went and watched the billiard playing and said,
+“Left ’em” several times with an oracular air; how he fell a-yawning; and how
+he got out his cycling map and studied it intently,—are things that find no
+mention here. Nor will I enlarge upon his going into the writing-room, and
+marking the road from London to Guildford with a fine, bright line of the
+reddest of red ink. In his little cyclist hand-book there is a diary, and in
+the diary there is an entry of these things—it is there to this day, and I
+cannot do better than reproduce it here to witness that this book is indeed a
+true one, and no lying fable written to while away an hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he set about
+finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all days must end at last! )
+He got his candle in the hall from a friendly waiting-maid, and passed
+upward—whither a modest novelist, who writes for the family circle, dare not
+follow. Yet I may tell you that he knelt down at his bedside, happy and drowsy,
+and said, “Our Father ‘chartin’ heaven,” even as he had learnt it by rote from
+his mother nearly twenty years ago. And anon when his breathing had become deep
+and regular, we may creep into his bedroom and catch him at his dreams. He is
+lying upon his left side, with his arm under the pillow. It is dark, and he is
+hidden; but if you could have seen his face, sleeping there in the darkness, I
+think you would have perceived, in spite of that treasured, thin, and
+straggling moustache, in spite of your memory of the coarse words he had used
+that day, that the man before you was, after all, only a little child asleep.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter12"></a>XII.<br/>
+THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</h2>
+
+<p>
+In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little, plain bedroom at
+the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern at Guildford. That was before
+midnight. As the night progressed he was disturbed by dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory of motion
+lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and round they seem to go. You
+ride through Dreamland on wonderful dream bicycles that change and grow; you
+ride down steeples and staircases and over precipices; you hover in horrible
+suspense over inhabited towns, vainly seeking for a brake your hand cannot
+find, to save you from a headlong fall; you plunge into weltering rivers, and
+rush helplessly at monstrous obstacles. Anon Mr. Hoopdriver found himself
+riding out of the darkness of non-existence, pedalling Ezekiel’s Wheels across
+the Weald of Surrey, jolting over the hills and smashing villages in his
+course, while the other man in brown cursed and swore at him and shouted to
+stop his career. There was the Putney heath-keeper, too, and the man in drab
+raging at him. He felt an awful fool, a—what was it?—a juggins, ah!—a
+Juggernaut. The villages went off one after another with a soft, squashing
+noise. He did not see the Young Lady in Grey, but he knew she was looking at
+his back. He dared not look round. Where the devil was the brake? It must have
+fallen off. And the bell? Right in front of him was Guildford. He tried to
+shout and warn the town to get out of the way, but his voice was gone as well.
+Nearer, nearer! it was fearful! and in another moment the houses were cracking
+like nuts and the blood of the inhabitants squirting this way and that. The
+streets were black with people running. Right under his wheels he saw the Young
+Lady in Grey. A feeling of horror came upon Mr. Hoopdriver; he flung himself
+sideways to descend, forgetting how high he was, and forthwith he began
+falling; falling, falling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered a little, and
+went to sleep again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other man in brown
+came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew uglier and uglier as he
+approached, and his expression was intolerably evil. He came and looked close
+into Mr. Hoopdriver’s eyes and then receded to an incredible distance. His face
+seemed to be luminous. “<i>Miss Beaumont</i>,” he said, and splashed up a spray
+of suspicion. Some one began letting off fireworks, chiefly Catherine wheels,
+down the shop, though Mr. Hoopdriver knew it was against the rules. For it
+seemed that the place they were in was a vast shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver
+perceived that the other man in brown was the shop-walker, differing from most
+shop-walkers in the fact that he was lit from within as a Chinese lantern might
+be. And the customer Mr. Hoopdriver was going to serve was the Young Lady in
+Grey. Curious he hadn’t noticed it before. She was in grey as
+usual,—rationals,—and she had her bicycle leaning against the counter. She
+smiled quite frankly at him, just as she had done when she had apologised for
+stopping him. And her form, as she leant towards him, was full of a sinuous
+grace he had never noticed before. “What can I have the pleasure?” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver at once, and she said, “The Ripley road.” So he got out the Ripley
+road and unrolled it and showed it to her, and she said that would do very
+nicely, and kept on looking at him and smiling, and he began measuring off
+eight miles by means of the yard measure on the counter, eight miles being a
+dress length, a rational dress length, that is; and then the other man in brown
+came up and wanted to interfere, and said Mr. Hoopdriver was a cad, besides
+measuring it off too slowly. And as Mr. Hoopdriver began to measure faster, the
+other man in brown said the Young Lady in Grey had been there long enough, and
+that he WAS her brother, or else she would not be travelling with him, and he
+suddenly whipped his arm about her waist and made off with her. It occurred to
+Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment that this was scarcely brotherly behaviour.
+Of course it wasn’t! The sight of the other man gripping her so familiarly
+enraged him frightfully; he leapt over the counter forthwith and gave chase.
+They ran round the shop and up an iron staircase into the Keep, and so out upon
+the Ripley road. For some time they kept dodging in and out of a wayside hotel
+with two front doors and an inn yard. The other man could not run very fast
+because he had hold of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was hampered
+by the absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch out; they would
+keep going round and round as if they were on the treadles of a wheel, so that
+he made the smallest steps conceivable. This dream came to no crisis. The chase
+seemed to last an interminable time, and all kinds of people, heath-keepers,
+shopmen, policemen, the old man in the Keep, the angry man in drab, the barmaid
+at the Unicorn, men with flying-machines, people playing billiards in the
+doorways, silly, headless figures, stupid cocks and hens encumbered with
+parcels and umbrellas and waterproofs, people carrying bedroom candles, and
+such-like riffraff, kept getting in his way and annoying him, although he
+sounded his electric bell, and said, “Wonderful, wonderful!” at every
+corner....
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter13"></a>XIII.<br/>
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE</h2>
+
+<p>
+There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver’s breakfast, so that
+after all he was not free to start out of Guildford until just upon the stroke
+of nine. He wheeled his machine from the High Street in some perplexity. He did
+not know whether this young lady, who had seized hold of his imagination so
+strongly, and her unfriendly and possibly menacing brother, were ahead of him
+or even now breakfasting somewhere in Guildford. In the former case he might
+loiter as he chose; in the latter he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in
+branch roads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that he would leave
+Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but by the road running through
+Shalford. Along this pleasant shady way he felt sufficiently secure to resume
+his exercises in riding with one hand off the handles, and in staring over his
+shoulder. He came over once or twice, but fell on his foot each time, and
+perceived that he was improving. Before he got to Bramley a specious byway
+snapped him up, ran with him for half a mile or more, and dropped him as a
+terrier drops a walkingstick, upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from
+Godalming. He entered Godalming on his feet, for the road through that
+delightful town is beyond dispute the vilest in the world, a mere tumult of
+road metal, a way of peaks and precipices, and, after a successful experiment
+with cider at the Woolpack, he pushed on to Milford.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young Lady in Grey
+and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark is of Bogies. Sometimes he
+could hear their pneumatics stealing upon him from behind, and looking round
+saw a long stretch of vacant road. Once he saw far ahead of him a glittering
+wheel, but it proved to be a workingman riding to destruction on a very tall
+ordinary. And he felt a curious, vague uneasiness about that Young Lady in
+Grey, for which he was altogether unable to account. Now that he was awake he
+had forgotten that accentuated Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in his
+dream. But the curious dream conviction, that the girl was not really the man’s
+sister, would not let itself be forgotten. Why, for instance, should a man want
+to be alone with his sister on the top of a tower? At Milford his bicycle made,
+so to speak, an ass of itself. A finger-post suddenly jumped out at him, vainly
+indicating an abrupt turn to the right, and Mr. Hoopdriver would have slowed up
+and read the inscription, but no!—the bicycle would not let him. The road
+dropped a little into Milford, and the thing shied, put down its head and
+bolted, and Mr. Hoopdriver only thought of the brake when the fingerpost was
+passed. Then to have recovered the point of intersection would have meant
+dismounting. For as yet there was no road wide enough for Mr. Hoopdriver to
+turn in. So he went on his way—or to be precise, he did exactly the opposite
+thing. The road to the right was the Portsmouth road, and this he was on went
+to Haslemere and Midhurst. By that error it came about that he once more came
+upon his fellow travellers of yesterday, coming on them suddenly, without the
+slightest preliminary announcement and when they least expected it, under the
+Southwestern Railway arch. “It’s horrible,” said a girlish voice; “it’s
+brutal—cowardly—” And stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have been
+something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of annoyance at himself for
+the unintentional intrusion. But disconcerted as he was, he was yet able to
+appreciate something of the peculiarity of their mutual attitudes. The bicycles
+were lying by the roadside, and the two riders stood face to face. The other
+man in brown’s attitude, as it flashed upon Hoopdriver, was a deliberate pose;
+he twirled his moustache and smiled faintly, and he was conscientiously looking
+amused. And the girl stood rigid, her arms straight by her side, her
+handkerchief clenched in her hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest
+touch of red upon her eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s sense to be
+indignant. But that was the impression of a second. A mask of surprised
+recognition fell across this revelation of emotion as she turned her head
+towards him, and the pose of the other man in brown vanished too in a momentary
+astonishment. And then he had passed them, and was riding on towards Haslemere
+to make what he could of the swift picture that had photographed itself on his
+brain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Rum,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s <i>dashed</i> rum!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They were having a row.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Smirking—” What he called the other man in brown need not trouble us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Annoying her!” That any human being should do that!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Why?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. He grasped
+his brake, descended, and stood looking hesitatingly back. They still stood by
+the railway bridge, and it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s fancy that she was
+stamping her foot. He hesitated, then turned his bicycle round, mounted, and
+rode back towards them, gripping his courage firmly lest it should slip away
+and leave him ridiculous. “I’ll offer ’im a screw ’ammer,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+Then, with a wave of fierce emotion, he saw that the girl was crying. In
+another moment they heard him and turned in surprise. Certainly she had been
+crying; her eyes were swimming in tears, and the other man in brown looked
+exceedingly disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver descended and stood over his machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing wrong, I hope?” he said, looking the other man in brown squarely in
+the face. “No accident?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing,” said the other man in brown shortly. “Nothing at all, thanks.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, “the young lady is crying. I
+thought perhaps—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance, and covered
+one eye with her handkerchief. “It’s this speck,” she said. “This speck of dust
+in my eye.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This lady,” said the other man in brown, explaining, “has a gnat in her eye.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. “I believe it’s
+out,” she said. The other man in brown made movements indicating commiserating
+curiosity concerning the alleged fly. Mr. Hoopdriver—the word is his own—stood
+flabber-gastered. He had all the intuition of the simple-minded. He knew there
+was no fly. But the ground was suddenly cut from his feet. There is a limit to
+knighterrantry—dragons and false knights are all very well, but flies!
+Fictitious flies! Whatever the trouble was, it was evidently not his affair. He
+felt he had made a fool of himself again. He would have mumbled some sort of
+apology; but the other man in brown gave him no time, turned on him abruptly,
+even fiercely. “I hope,” he said, “that your curiosity is satisfied?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then we won’t detain you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about, struggled upon it,
+and resumed the road southward. And when he learnt that he was not on the
+Portsmouth road, it was impossible to turn and go back, for that would be to
+face his shame again, and so he had to ride on by Brook Street up the hill to
+Haslemere. And away to the right the Portsmouth road mocked at him and made off
+to its fastnesses amid the sunlit green and purple masses of Hindhead, where
+Mr. Grant Allen writes his Hill Top Novels day by day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys one saw on
+either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the sides of the road itself set
+about with grey heather scrub and prickly masses of gorse, and pine trees with
+their year’s growth still bright green, against the darkened needles of the
+previous years, were fresh and delightful to Mr. Hoopdriver’s eyes But the
+brightness of the day and the day-old sense of freedom fought an uphill fight
+against his intolerable vexation at that abominable encounter, and had still to
+win it when he reached Haslemere. A great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred of
+the other man in brown, possessed him. He had conceived the brilliant idea of
+abandoning Portsmouth, or at least giving up the straight way to his
+fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the left, eastward. He did not
+dare to stop at any of the inviting public-houses in the main street of
+Haslemere, but turned up a side way and found a little beer-shop, the Good
+Hope, wherein to refresh himself. And there he ate and gossipped
+condescendingly with an aged labourer, assuming the while for his own private
+enjoyment the attributes of a Lost Heir, and afterwards mounted and rode on
+towards Northchapel, a place which a number of finger-posts conspired to boom,
+but which some insidious turning prevented him from attaining.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter14"></a>XIV.<br/>
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was one of my uncle’s profoundest remarks that human beings are the only
+unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far justified by Mr. Hoopdriver
+that, after spending the morning tortuously avoiding the other man in brown and
+the Young Lady in Grey, he spent a considerable part of the afternoon in
+thinking about the Young Lady in Grey, and contemplating in an optimistic
+spirit the possibilities of seeing her again. Memory and imagination played
+round her, so that his course was largely determined by the windings of the
+road he traversed. Of one general proposition he was absolutely convinced.
+“There’s something Juicy wrong with ’em,” said he—once even aloud. But what it
+was he could not imagine. He recapitulated the facts. “Miss Beaumont—brother
+and sister—and the stoppage to quarrel and weep—” it was perplexing material
+for a young man of small experience. There was no exertion he hated so much as
+inference, and after a time he gave up any attempt to get at the realities of
+the case, and let his imagination go free. Should he ever see her again?
+Suppose he did—with that other chap not about. The vision he found pleasantest
+was an encounter with her, an unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing Class
+‘Do’ at the Putney Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift together, and he
+would dance with her again and again. It was a pleasant vision, for you must
+understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly well. Or again, in the shop, a
+sudden radiance in the doorway, and she is bowed towards the Manchester
+counter. And then to lean over that counter and murmur, seemingly
+<i>àpropos</i> of the goods under discussion, “I have not forgotten that
+morning on the Portsmouth road,” and lower, “I never shall forget.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel and weighed
+his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible resting-place, or Pullborough;
+Midhurst seemed too near, and any place over the Downs beyond, too far, and so
+he meandered towards Petworth, posing himself perpetually and loitering,
+gathering wild flowers and wondering why they had no names—for he had never
+heard of any—dropping them furtively at the sight of a stranger, and generally
+‘mucking about.’ There were purple vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet,
+honeysuckle, belated brambles—but the dog-roses had already gone; there were
+green and red blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another place
+white dead nettles, traveller’s-joy, clinging bedstraw, grasses flowering,
+white campions, and ragged robins. One cornfield was glorious with poppies,
+bright scarlet and purple white, and the blue corn-flowers were beginning. In
+the lanes the trees met overhead, and the wisps of hay still hung to the
+straggling hedges. In one of the main roads he steered a perilous passage
+through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and there were little cottages, and
+picturesque beer-houses with the vivid brewers’ boards of blue and scarlet, and
+once a broad green and a church, and an expanse of some hundred houses or so.
+Then he came to a pebbly rivulet that emerged between clumps of sedge
+loosestrife and forget-me-nots under an arch of trees, and rippled across the
+road, and there he dismounted, longing to take off shoes and stockings—those
+stylish chequered stockings were now all dimmed with dust—and paddle his lean
+legs in the chuckling cheerful water. But instead he sat in a manly attitude,
+smoking a cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in Grey should come
+glittering round the corner. For the flavour of the Young Lady in Grey was
+present through it all, mixing with the flowers and all the delight of it, a
+touch that made this second day quite different from the first, an undertone of
+expectation, anxiety, and something like regret that would not be ignored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he began to repent,
+vividly and decidedly, having fled these two people. He was getting hungry, and
+that has a curious effect upon the emotional colouring of our minds. The man
+was a sinister brute, Hoopdriver saw in a flash of inspiration, and the
+girl—she was in some serious trouble. And he who might have helped her had
+taken his first impulse as decisive—and bolted. This new view of it depressed
+him dreadfully. What might not be happening to her now? He thought again of her
+tears. Surely it was merely his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his eye
+upon it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found himself in a
+tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming on, emerged, not at
+Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from Midhurst. “I’m getting hungry,” said
+Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of a gamekeeper in Easebourne village. “Midhurst a
+mile, and Petworth five!—Thenks, I’ll take Midhurst.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the North Street,
+and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the cheerful sign of a teapot, and
+exhibiting a brilliant array of tobaccos, sweets, and children’s toys in the
+window, struck his fancy. A neat, bright-eyed little old lady made him welcome,
+and he was presently supping sumptuously on sausages and tea, with a visitors’
+book full of the most humorous and flattering remarks about the little old
+lady, in verse and prose, propped up against his teapot as he ate. Regular good
+some of the jokes were, and rhymes that read well—even with your mouth full of
+sausage. Mr. Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing “something”—for his
+judgment on the little old lady was already formed. He pictured the little old
+lady discovering it afterwards—“My gracious! One of them <i>Punch</i> men,” she
+would say. The room had a curtained recess and a chest of drawers, for
+presently it was to be his bedroom, and the day part of it was decorated with
+framed Oddfellows’ certificates and giltbacked books and portraits, and
+kettle-holders, and all kinds of beautiful things made out of wool; very
+comfortable it was indeed. The window was lead framed and diamond paned, and
+through it one saw the corner of the vicarage and a pleasant hill crest, in
+dusky silhouette against the twilight sky. And after the sausages had ceased to
+be, he lit a Red Herring cigarette and went swaggering out into the twilight
+street. All shadowy blue between its dark brick houses, was the street, with a
+bright yellow window here and there and splashes of green and red where the
+chemist’s illumination fell across the road.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter15"></a>XV.<br/>
+AN INTERLUDE</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky Midhurst North
+Street, and return to the two folks beside the railway bridge between Milford
+and Haslemere. She was a girl of eighteen, dark, fine featured, with bright
+eyes, and a rich, swift colour under her warm-tinted skin. Her eyes were all
+the brighter for the tears that swam in them. The man was thirty three or four,
+fair, with a longish nose overhanging his sandy flaxen moustache, pale blue
+eyes, and a head that struck out above and behind. He stood with his feet wide
+apart, his hand on his hip, in an attitude that was equally suggestive of
+defiance and aggression. They had watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The
+unexpected interruption had stopped the flood of her tears. He tugged his
+abundant moustache and regarded her calmly. She stood with face averted,
+obstinately resolved not to speak first. “Your behaviour,” he said at last,
+“makes you conspicuous.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands clenched. “You
+unspeakable <i>cad</i>,” she said, and choked, stamped her little foot, and
+stood panting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I <i>am</i> an unspeakable cad. Who
+wouldn’t be—for you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“‘Dear girl!’ How <i>dare</i> you speak to me like that? <i>You</i>—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I would do anything—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Oh!</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a moment’s pause. She looked squarely into his face, her eyes alight
+with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a little. He stroked his
+moustache, and by an effort maintained his cynical calm. “Let us be
+reasonable,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual in the
+world.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have always had it so—in your generalising way. But let us look at the
+facts of the case—if that pleases you better.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” he said,—“you’ve eloped.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve left my home,” she corrected, with dignity. “I left my home because it
+was unendurable. Because that woman—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to help me to earn a
+living by writing. It was you who said, why shouldn’t a man and woman be
+friends? And now you dare—you dare—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will go back. I forbid you—I forbid you to stand in the way—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at least
+clear-headed. You don’t know everything yet, you know. Listen to me for a
+moment.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Haven’t I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who dared only to
+talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at anything beyond.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You <i>knew</i>. And you did
+not mind. <i>Mind!</i> You liked it. It was the fun of the whole thing for you.
+That I loved you, and could not speak to you. You played with it—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That isn’t all. I made up my mind—Well, to make the game more even. And so I
+suggested to you and joined with you in this expedition of yours, invented a
+sister at Midhurst—I tell you, I <i>haven’t</i> a sister! For one object—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To compromise you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute neither spoke.
+Then she began half defiantly: “Much I am compromised. Of course—I have made a
+fool of myself—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and you know very
+little of this world. Less than you think. But you will learn. Before you write
+all those novels we have talked about, you will have to learn. And that’s one
+point—” He hesitated. “You started and blushed when the man at breakfast called
+you Ma’am. You thought it a funny mistake, but you did not say anything because
+he was young and nervous—and besides, the thought of being my wife offended
+your modesty. You didn’t care to notice it. But—you see; I gave your name as
+<i>Mrs</i>. Beaumont.” He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical
+pose. “<i>Mrs</i>. Beaumont,” he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and
+watching the effect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked into his eyes speechless. “I am learning fast,” she said slowly, at
+last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. “Jessie,” he said, with a
+sudden change of voice, “I know all this is mean, is villanous. But do you
+think that I have done all this scheming, all this subterfuge, for any other
+object—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not seem to listen to his words. “I shall ride home,” she said
+abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To her?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She winced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Just think,” said he, “what she could say to you after this.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Anyhow, I shall leave you now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes? And go—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live without
+conventionality—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven’t money and you haven’t credit.
+No one would take you in. It’s one of two things: go back to your stepmother,
+or—trust to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How <i>can</i> I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you must go back to her.” He paused momentarily, to let this
+consideration have its proper weight. “Jessie, I did not mean to say the things
+I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when I spoke so. If you will, forgive me.
+I am a man. I could not help myself. Forgive me, and I promise you—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How can I trust you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Try me. I can assure you—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She regarded him distrustfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the shadow of this
+horrible bridge long enough.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh! let me think,” she said, half turning from him and pressing her hand to
+her brow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Think!</i> Look here, Jessie. It is ten o’clock. Shall we call a truce
+until one?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and the heather.
+Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed. She was pale, divided
+between fear and anger. She perceived she was in a scrape, and tried in vain to
+think of a way of escape. Only one tangible thing would keep in her mind, try
+as she would to ignore it. That was the quite irrelevant fact that his head was
+singularly like an albino cocoanut. He, too, felt thwarted. He felt that this
+romantic business of seduction was, after all, unexpectedly tame. But this was
+only the beginning. At any rate, every day she spent with him was a day gained.
+Perhaps things looked worse than they were; that was some consolation.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter16"></a>XVI.<br/>
+OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST</h2>
+
+<p>
+You have seen these two young people—Bechamel, by-the-bye, is the man’s name,
+and the girl’s is Jessie Milton—from the outside; you have heard them talking;
+they ride now side by side (but not too close together, and in an uneasy
+silence) towards Haslemere; and this chapter will concern itself with those
+curious little council chambers inside their skulls, where their motives are in
+session and their acts are considered and passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester, enlarging upon
+the increase of bald heads and purblind people, has deduced a wonderful future
+for the children of men. Man, he said, was nowadays a hairless creature by
+forty or fifty, and for hair we gave him a wig; shrivelled, and we padded him;
+toothless, and lo! false teeth set in gold. Did he lose a limb, and a fine,
+new, artificial one was at his disposal; get indigestion, and to hand was
+artificial digestive fluid or bile or pancreatine, as the case might be.
+Complexions, too, were replaceable, spectacles superseded an inefficient
+eye-lens, and imperceptible false diaphragms were thrust into the failing ear.
+So he went over our anatomies, until, at last, he had conjured up a weird thing
+of shreds and patches, a simulacrum, an artificial body of a man, with but a
+doubtful germ of living flesh lurking somewhere in his recesses. To that, he
+held, we were coming.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not concern us now.
+But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr. Rudyard Kipling, hath it that in the
+case of one Tomlinson, the thing, so far as the soul is concerned, has already
+been accomplished. Time was when men had simple souls, desires as natural as
+their eyes, a little reasonable philanthropy, a little reasonable
+philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a taste for good living, a decent, personal
+vanity, a healthy, satisfying pugnacity, and so forth. But now we are taught
+and disciplined for years and years, and thereafter we read and read for all
+the time some strenuous, nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic
+hypnotists, pulpit and platform hypnotists, book-writing hypnotists,
+newspaper-writing hypnotists, are at us all. This sugar you are eating, they
+tell us, is ink, and forthwith we reject it with infinite disgust. This black
+draught of unrequited toil is True Happiness, and down it goes with every
+symptom of pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull past believing, and we yawn
+and stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they interrupt, but this Ibsen is deep
+and delightful, and we vie with one another in an excess of entertainment. And
+when we open the heads of these two young people, we find, not a
+straightforward motive on the surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a soul so
+much as an oversoul, a zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas, a highway’s
+feast of fine, confused thinking. The girl is resolute to Live Her Own Life, a
+phrase you may have heard before, and the man has a pretty perverted ambition
+to be a cynical artistic person of the very calmest description. He is hoping
+for the awakening of Passion in her, among other things. He knows Passion ought
+to awaken, from the text-books he has studied. He knows she admires his genius,
+but he is unaware that she does not admire his head. He is quite a
+distinguished art critic in London, and he met her at that celebrated lady
+novelist’s, her stepmother, and here you have them well embarked upon the
+Adventure. Both are in the first stage of repentance, which consists, as you
+have probably found for yourself, in setting your teeth hard and saying’ “I
+<i>will</i> go on.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way together with
+a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for the orthodox development of
+the Adventure. He perceives he was too precipitate. But he feels his honour is
+involved, and meditates the development of a new attack. And the girl? She is
+unawakened. Her motives are bookish, written by a haphazard syndicate of
+authors, novelists, and biographers, on her white inexperience. An artificial
+oversoul she is, that may presently break down and reveal a human being beneath
+it. She is still in that schoolgirl phase when a talkative old man is more
+interesting than a tongue-tied young one, and when to be an eminent
+mathematician, say, or to edit a daily paper, seems as fine an ambition as any
+girl need aspire to. Bechamel was to have helped her to attain that in the most
+expeditious manner, and here he is beside her, talking enigmatical phrases
+about passion, looking at her with the oddest expression, and once, and that
+was his gravest offence, offering to kiss her. At any rate he has apologised.
+She still scarcely realises, you see, the scrape she has got into.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter17"></a>XVII.<br/>
+THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST</h2>
+
+<p>
+We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and tobacco shop.
+You must not think that a strain is put on coincidence when I tell you that
+next door to Mrs. Wardor’s—that was the name of the bright-eyed, little old
+lady with whom Mr. Hoopdriver had stopped—is the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel
+Hotel, on the night that Mr. Hoopdriver reached Midhurst, were ‘Mr.’ and ‘Miss’
+Beaumont, our Bechamel and Jessie Milton. Indeed, it was a highly probable
+thing; for if one goes through Guildford, the choice of southward roads is
+limited; you may go by Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to Chichester,
+in addition to which highways there is nothing for it but minor roadways to
+Petworth or Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward. And coming to Midhurst
+from the north, the Angel’s entrance lies yawning to engulf your highly
+respectable cyclists, while Mrs. Wardor’s genial teapot is equally attractive
+to those who weigh their means in little scales. But to people unfamiliar with
+the Sussex roads—and such were the three persons of this story—the convergence
+did not appear to be so inevitable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner, was the first to
+be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver walk slowly across the gateway,
+his head enhaloed in cigarette smoke, and pass out of sight up the street.
+Incontinently a mass of cloudy uneasiness, that had been partly dispelled
+during the day, reappeared and concentrated rapidly into definite suspicion. He
+put his screw hammer into his pocket and walked through the archway into the
+street, to settle the business forthwith, for he prided himself on his
+decision. Hoopdriver was merely promenading, and they met face to face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and laughter seized
+Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his animosity. “’Ere we are again!”
+he said, laughing insincerely in a sudden outbreak at the perversity of chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver’s way, staring. Then his
+face assumed an expression of dangerous civility. “Is it any information to
+you,” he said, with immense politeness, “when I remark that you are following
+us?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his characteristic impulse to
+apologise. He wanted to annoy the other man in brown, and a sentence that had
+come into his head in a previous rehearsal cropped up appropriately. “Since
+when,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath, yet bringing the question out
+valiantly, nevertheless,—“since when ’ave you purchased the county of Sussex?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“May I point out,” said the other man in brown, “that I object—we object not
+only to your proximity to us. To be frank—you appear to be following us—with an
+object.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can always,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “turn round if you don’t like it, and go
+back the way you came.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh-o!” said the other man in brown. “<i>That’s</i> it! I thought as much.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily to the
+unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see,” said the other man. “I see. I half suspected—” His manner changed
+abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. “Yes—a word with you. You will, I
+hope, give me ten minutes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the other man take
+him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated. Then he thought of an
+admirable phrase. “You ’ave some communication—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ll call it a communication,” said the other man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can spare you the ten minutes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This way, then,” said the other man in brown, and they walked slowly down the
+North Street towards the Grammar School. There was, perhaps, thirty seconds’
+silence. The other man stroked his moustache nervously. Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+dramatic instincts were now fully awake. He did not quite understand in what
+<i>rôle</i> he was cast, but it was evidently something dark and mysterious.
+Doctor Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and Alexander Dumas were well within Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s range of reading, and he had not read them for nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will be perfectly frank with you,” said the other man in brown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Frankness is always the best course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, then—who the devil set you on this business?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Set me <i>on</i> this business?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t pretend to be stupid. Who’s your employer? Who engaged you for this
+job?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. “No—I can’t say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite sure?” The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at his hand, and
+Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a yellow milled edge glittering
+in the twilight. Now your shop assistant is just above the tip-receiving class,
+and only just above it—so that he is acutely sensitive on the point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met those of the
+other man in brown. “Stow it!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, stopping and facing the
+tempter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What!” said the other man in brown, surprised. “Eigh?” And so saying he stowed
+it in his breeches pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“D’yer think I’m to be bribed?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose imagination was
+rapidly expanding the situation. “By Gosh! I’d follow you now—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear sir,” said the other man in brown, “I beg your pardon. I misunderstood
+you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In your profession—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What have you got to say against my profession?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior
+description—watchers. The whole class. Private Inquiry—I did not realise—I
+really trust you will overlook what was, after all—you must admit—a natural
+indiscretion. Men of honour are not so common in the world—in any profession.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not light the lamps in
+the summer time, or the one they were passing had betrayed him. As it was, he
+had to snatch suddenly at his moustache and tug fiercely at it, to conceal the
+furious tumult of exultation, the passion of laughter, that came boiling up.
+Detective! Even in the shadow Bechamel saw that a laugh was stifled, but he put
+it down to the fact that the phrase “men of honour” amused his interlocutor.
+“He’ll come round yet,” said Bechamel to himself. “He’s simply holding out for
+a fiver.” He coughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you? I do.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Prompt,” said Bechamel, appreciatively. “Now here’s the thing I want to put to
+you—the kernel of the whole business. You need not answer if you don’t want to.
+There’s no harm done in my telling you what I want to know. Are you employed to
+watch me—or Miss Milton?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not the leaky sort,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret he did not
+know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her name. Perhaps he’d tell
+some more. “It’s no good pumping. Is that all you’re after?” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to catch a remark
+by throwing out a confidence. “I take it there are two people concerned in
+watching this affair.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who’s the other?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling with enormous
+internal tension his self-appreciation. “Who’s the other?” was really
+brilliant, he thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s my wife and <i>her</i> stepmother.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you want to know which it is?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Bechamel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well—arst ’em!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the better of him,
+and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. “Arst ’em both.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. “I’d give a five-pound
+note to know just the precise state of affairs,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I told you to stow that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening tone. And
+added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery, “You don’t quite understand
+who you’re dealing with. But you will!” He spoke with such conviction that he
+half believed that that defective office of his in London—Baker Street, in
+fact—really existed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the Angel, perturbed.
+“Hang detectives!” It wasn’t the kind of thing he had anticipated at all.
+Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a wondering smile, walked down to where the
+mill waters glittered in the moonlight, and after meditating over the parapet
+of the bridge for a space, with occasional murmurs of, “Private Inquiry” and
+the like, returned, with mystery even in his paces, towards the town.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter18"></a>XVIII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low whistling
+noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot the tears of the Young
+Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!—and a real one. Mr. Hoopdriver as a Private
+Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock Holmes in fact, keeping these two people ‘under
+observation.’ He walked slowly back from the bridge until he was opposite the
+Angel, and stood for ten minutes, perhaps, contemplating that establishment and
+enjoying all the strange sensations of being this wonderful, this mysterious
+and terrible thing. Everything fell into place in his scheme. He had, of
+course, by a kind of instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist, picked up the
+first old crock he came across as a means of pursuit. ‘No expense was to be
+spared.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was observing.
+“My wife”—“<i>Her</i> stepmother!” Then he remembered her swimming eyes.
+Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him, washed away the detective
+superstructure, and left him plain Mr. Hoopdriver. This man in brown, with his
+confident manner, and his proffered half sovereign (damn him!) was up to no
+good, else why should he object to being watched? He was married! She was not
+his sister. He began to understand. A horrible suspicion of the state of
+affairs came into Mr. Hoopdriver’s head. Surely it had not come to <i>that</i>.
+He was a detective!—he would find out. How was it to be done? He began to
+submit sketches on approval to himself. It required an effort before he could
+walk into the Angel bar. “A lemonade and bitter, please,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He cleared his throat. “Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What, a gentleman and a young lady—on bicycles?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Fairly young—a married couple.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions. “There’s no
+married couples stopping here. But there’s a Mr. and Miss <i>Beaumont</i>.” She
+spelt it for precision. “Sure you’ve got the name right, young man?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of—What was the name you gave?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bowlong,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, there ain’t no Bowlong,” said the barmaid, taking up a glasscloth and a
+drying tumbler and beginning to polish the latter. “First off, I thought you
+might be asking for Beaumont—the names being similar. Were you expecting them
+on bicycles?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes—they said they <i>might</i> be in Midhurst tonight.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“P’raps they’ll come presently. Beaumont’s here, but no Bowlong. Sure that
+Beaumont ain’t the name?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certain,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s curious the names being so alike. I thought p’raps—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to find his
+horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having listened awhile at the
+staircase volunteered some particulars of the young couple upstairs. Her
+modesty was much impressed by the young lady’s costume, so she intimated, and
+Mr. Hoopdriver whispered the badinage natural to the occasion, at which she was
+coquettishly shocked. “There’ll be no knowing which is which, in a year or
+two,” said the barmaid. “And her manner too! She got off her machine and give
+it ’im to stick up against the kerb, and in she marched. ‘I and my brother,’
+says she, ‘want to stop here to-night. My brother doesn’t mind what kind of
+room ’e ’as, but I want a room with a good view, if there’s one to be got,’
+says she. He comes hurrying in after and looks at her. ‘I’ve settled the
+rooms,’ she says, and ’e says ‘damn!’ just like that. I can fancy my brother
+letting me boss the show like that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I dessay you do,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if the truth was known.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the tumbler,
+polished, and took up another that had been draining, and shook the drops of
+water into her little zinc sink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She’ll be a nice little lot to marry,” said the barmaid. “She’ll be wearing
+the—well, b-dashes, as the sayin’ is. I can’t think what girls is comin’ to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to Hoopdriver’s taste.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Fashion,” said he, taking up his change. “Fashion is all the go with you
+ladies—and always was. You’ll be wearing ’em yourself before a couple of years
+is out.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nice they’d look on my figger,” said the barmaid, with a titter. “No—I ain’t
+one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I shouldn’t feel as if I’d anything
+on me, not more than if I’d forgot—Well, there! I’m talking.” She put down the
+glass abruptly. “I dessay I’m old fashioned,” she said, and walked humming down
+the bar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her eye, then with
+his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and wished her good evening.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter19"></a>XIX.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the lead-framed windows
+where he had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made, sat down on the
+box under the window, stared at the moon rising on the shining vicarage roof,
+and tried to collect his thoughts. How they whirled at first! It was past ten,
+and most of Midhurst was tucked away in bed, some one up the street was
+learning the violin, at rare intervals a belated inhabitant hurried home and
+woke the echoes, and a corncrake kept up a busy churning in the vicarage
+garden. The sky was deep blue, with a still luminous afterglow along the black
+edge of the hill, and the white moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow
+stars, had the sky to herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not relationships. There was
+this malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr. Hoopdriver to take a
+hand in the game. <i>He</i> was married. Did she know he was married? Never for
+a moment did a thought of evil concerning her cross Hoopdriver’s mind.
+Simple-minded people see questions of morals so much better than superior
+persons—who have read and thought themselves complex to impotence. He had heard
+her voice, seen the frank light in her eyes, and she had been weeping—that
+sufficed. The rights of the case he hadn’t properly grasped. But he would. And
+that smirking—well, swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the exceedingly
+unpleasant incident of the railway bridge. “Thin we won’t detain yer, thenks,”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange, unnatural, contemptible voice,
+supposed to represent that of Bechamel. “Oh, the <i>beggar!</i> I’ll be level
+with him yet. He’s afraid of us detectives—that I’ll <i>swear</i>.” (If Mrs.
+Wardor should chance to be on the other side of the door within earshot, well
+and good.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical impossibilities
+for the most part,—Bechamel staggering headlong from the impact of Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s large, but, to tell the truth, ill supported fist, Bechamel’s five
+feet nine of height lifted from the ground and quivering under a vigorously
+applied horsewhip. So pleasant was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver’s peaked
+face under the moonlight was transfigured. One might have paired him with that
+well-known and universally admired triumph, ‘The Soul’s Awakening,’ so sweet
+was his ecstasy. And presently with his thirst for revenge glutted by six or
+seven violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous murders, his mind came round to
+the Young Lady in Grey again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid at the Angel
+had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a torrent, smoothed down to a
+mirror in which she was reflected with infinite clearness and detail. He’d
+never met anything like her before. Fancy that bolster of a barmaid being
+dressed in that way! He whuffed a contemptuous laugh. He compared her colour,
+her vigour, her voice, with the Young Ladies in Business with whom his lot had
+been cast. Even in tears she was beautiful, more beautiful indeed to him, for
+it made her seem softer and weaker, more accessible. And such weeping as he had
+seen before had been so much a matter of damp white faces, red noses, and hair
+coming out of curl. Your draper’s assistant becomes something of a judge of
+weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young Ladies in Business, when
+for any reason their services are dispensed with. She could weep—and (by Gosh!)
+she could smile. <i>He</i> knew that, and reverting to acting abruptly, he
+smiled confidentially at the puckered pallor of the moon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver’s pensiveness lasted. It seemed
+a long time before his thoughts of action returned. Then he remembered he was a
+‘watcher’; that to-morrow he must be busy. It would be in character to make
+notes, and he pulled out his little note-book. With that in hand he fell
+a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her the ’tecks were after them? If so,
+would she be as anxious to get away as <i>he</i> was? He must be on the alert.
+If possible he must speak to her. Just a significant word, “Your friend—trust
+me!”—It occurred to him that to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to
+escape. At that he thought of the time and found it was half-past eleven.
+“Lord!” said he, “I must see that I wake.” He yawned and rose. The blind was
+up, and he pulled back the little chintz curtains to let the sunlight strike
+across to the bed, hung his watch within good view of his pillow, on a nail
+that supported a kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to undress. He lay
+awake for a little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities of the morrow,
+and thence he passed gloriously into the wonderland of dreams.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter20"></a>XX.<br/>
+THE PURSUIT</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant, active,
+wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window stuck open, ears
+alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the corner panes, in oblique glances at
+the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor wanted him to have his breakfast downstairs in her
+kitchen, but that would have meant abandoning the watch, and he held out
+strongly. The bicycle, <i>cap-à-pie</i>, occupied, under protest, a strategic
+position in the shop. He was expectant by six in the morning. By nine horrible
+fears oppressed him that his quest had escaped him, and he had to reconnoitre
+the Angel yard in order to satisfy himself. There he found the ostler (How are
+the mighty fallen in these decadent days!) brushing down the bicycles of the
+chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs. Wardor’s premises. And about ten they
+emerged, and rode quietly up the North Street. He watched them until they
+turned the corner of the post office, and then out into the road and up after
+them in fine style! They went by the engine-house where the old stocks and the
+whipping posts are, and on to the Chichester road, and he followed gallantly.
+So this great chase began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight, getting down if he
+chanced to draw closely upon them round a corner. By riding vigorously he kept
+quite conveniently near them, for they made but little hurry. He grew hot
+indeed, and his knees were a little stiff to begin with, but that was all.
+There was little danger of losing them, for a thin chalky dust lay upon the
+road, and the track of her tire was milled like a shilling, and his was a
+chequered ribbon along the way. So they rode by Cobden’s monument and through
+the prettiest of villages, until at last the downs rose steeply ahead. There
+they stopped awhile at the only inn in the place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up a
+position which commanded the inn door, and mopped his face and thirsted and
+smoked a Red Herring cigarette. They remained in the inn for some time. A
+number of chubby innocents returning home from school, stopped and formed a
+line in front of him, and watched him quietly but firmly for the space of ten
+minutes or so. “Go away,” said he, and they only seemed quietly interested. He
+asked them all their names then, and they answered indistinct murmurs. He gave
+it up at last and became passive on his gate, and so at length they tired of
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr. Hoopdriver at
+the thought of their possible employment hungered as well as thirsted. Clearly,
+they were lunching. It was a cloudless day, and the sun at the meridian beat
+down upon the top of Mr. Hoopdriver’s head, a shower bath of sunshine, a huge
+jet of hot light. It made his head swim. At last they emerged, and the other
+man in brown looked back and saw him. They rode on to the foot of the down, and
+dismounting began to push tediously up that long nearly vertical ascent of
+blinding white road. Mr. Hoopdriver hesitated. It might take them twenty
+minutes to mount that. Beyond was empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided
+to return to the inn and snatch a hasty meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading pewter measure of
+sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in the throat, but leaden in the
+legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a man of substance as he emerged in the
+blinding sunshine, but even by the foot of the down the sun was insisting again
+that his skull was too small for his brains. The hill had gone steeper, the
+chalky road blazed like a magnesium light, and his front wheel began an
+apparently incurable squeaking. He felt as a man from Mars would feel if he
+were suddenly transferred to this planet, about three times as heavy as he was
+wont to feel. The two little black figures had vanished over the forehead of
+the hill. “The tracks’ll be all right,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow progress up the
+hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf beside the road, to contemplate the
+Weald from the south. In a matter of two days he had crossed that spacious
+valley, with its frozen surge of green hills, its little villages and townships
+here and there, its copses and cornfields, its ponds and streams like jewelery
+of diamonds and silver glittering in the sun. The North Downs were hidden, far
+away beyond the Wealden Heights. Down below was the little village of Cocking,
+and half-way up the hill, a mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of sheep
+grazing together. Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue, and
+every now and then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat was tempered by a
+pleasant breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed by unreasonable contentment; he
+lit himself a cigarette and lounged more comfortably. Surely the Sussex ale is
+made of the waters of Lethe, of poppies and pleasant dreams. Drowsiness coiled
+insidiously about him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on the turf with
+his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes, and realised that he had
+slept. His head was still a trifle heavy. And the chase? He jumped to his feet
+and stooped to pick up his overturned machine. He whipped out his watch and saw
+that it was past two o’clock. “Lord love us, fancy that!—But the tracks’ll be
+all right,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, wheeling his machine back to the chalky road.
+“I must scorch till I overtake them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering lassitude permitted.
+Now and then he had to dismount to examine the surface where the road forked.
+He enjoyed that rather. “Trackin’,” he said aloud, and decided in the privacy
+of his own mind that he had a wonderful instinct for ‘spoor.’ So he came past
+Goodwood station and Lavant, and approached Chichester towards four o’clock.
+And then came a terrible thing. In places the road became hard, in places were
+the crowded indentations of a recent flock of sheep, and at last in the throat
+of the town cobbles and the stony streets branching east, west, north, and
+south, at a stone cross under the shadow of the cathedral the tracks vanished.
+“O Cricky!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in dismay and standing agape.
+“Dropped anything?” said an inhabitant at the kerb. “Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+“I’ve lost the spoor,” and walked upon his way, leaving the inhabitant
+marvelling what part of a bicycle a spoor might be. Mr. Hoopdriver, abandoning
+tracking, began asking people if they had seen a Young Lady in Grey on a
+bicycle. Six casual people hadn’t, and he began to feel the inquiry was
+conspicuous, and desisted. But what was to be done?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first gnawings of a
+monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some tea and meat, and in the
+Royal George he meditated over the business in a melancholy frame enough. They
+had passed out of his world—vanished, and all his wonderful dreams of some
+vague, crucial interference collapsed like a castle of cards. What a fool he
+had been not to stick to them like a leech! He might have thought! But
+there!—what WAS the good of that sort of thing now? He thought of her tears, of
+her helplessness, of the bearing of the other man in brown, and his wrath and
+disappointment surged higher. “What CAN I do?” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud,
+bringing his fist down beside the teapot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there might be such
+things as clues in the world, albeit the age of miracles was past. But to look
+for a clue in this intricate network of cobbled streets, to examine every muddy
+interstice! There was a chance by looking about and inquiry at the various
+inns. Upon that he began. But of course they might have ridden straight through
+and scarcely a soul have marked them. And then came a positively brilliant
+idea. “’Ow many ways are there out of Chichester?” said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was
+really equal to Sherlock Holmes—that. “If they’ve made tracks, I shall find
+those tracks. If not—they’re in the town.” He was then in East Street, and he
+started at once to make the circuit of the place, discovering incidentally that
+Chichester is a walled city. In passing, he made inquiries at the Black Swan,
+the Crown, and the Red Lion Hotel. At six o’clock in the evening, he was
+walking downcast, intent, as one who had dropped money, along the road towards
+Bognor, kicking up the dust with his shoes and fretting with disappointed
+pugnacity. A thwarted, crestfallen Hoopdriver it was, as you may well imagine.
+And then suddenly there jumped upon his attention—a broad line ribbed like a
+shilling, and close beside it one chequered, that ever and again split into
+two. “Found!” said Mr. Hoopdriver and swung round on his heel at once, and back
+to the Royal George, helter skelter, for the bicycle they were minding for him.
+The ostler thought he was confoundedly imperious, considering his machine.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter21"></a>XXI.<br/>
+AT BOGNOR</h2>
+
+<p>
+That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a crisis. He had
+started upon this elopement in a vein of fine romance, immensely proud of his
+wickedness, and really as much in love as an artificial oversoul can be, with
+Jessie. But either she was the profoundest of coquettes or she had not the
+slightest element of Passion (with a large P) in her composition. It warred
+with all his ideas of himself and the feminine mind to think that under their
+flattering circumstances she really could be so vitally deficient. He found her
+persistent coolness, her more or less evident contempt for himself,
+exasperating in the highest degree. He put it to himself that she was enough to
+provoke a saint, and tried to think that was piquant and enjoyable, but the
+blisters on his vanity asserted themselves. The fact is, he was, under this
+standing irritation, getting down to the natural man in himself for once, and
+the natural man in himself, in spite of Oxford and the junior Reviewers’ Club,
+was a Palaeolithic creature of simple tastes and violent methods. “I’ll be
+level with you yet,” ran like a plough through the soil of his thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his wife he was going
+to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied she was reconciled, but how she
+would take this exploit was entirely problematical. She was a woman of peculiar
+moral views, and she measured marital infidelity largely by its proximity to
+herself. Out of her sight, and more particularly out of the sight of the other
+women of her set, vice of the recognised description was, perhaps, permissible
+to those contemptible weaklings, men, but this was Evil on the High Roads. She
+was bound to make a fuss, and these fusses invariably took the final form of a
+tightness of money for Bechamel. Albeit, and he felt it was heroic of him to
+resolve so, it was worth doing if it was to be done. His imagination worked on
+a kind of matronly Valkyrie, and the noise of pursuit and vengeance was in the
+air. The idyll still had the front of the stage. That accursed detective, it
+seemed, had been thrown off the scent, and that, at any rate, gave a night’s
+respite. But things must be brought to an issue forthwith.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By eight o’clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the Vicuna Hotel,
+Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed and angry in the face and with
+her heart sinking, faced him again for her last struggle with him. He had
+tricked her this time, effectually, and luck had been on his side. She was
+booked as Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her refusal to enter their room, and her
+eccentricity of eating with unwashed hands, she had so far kept up the
+appearances of things before the waiter. But the dinner was grim enough. Now in
+turn she appealed to his better nature and made extravagant statements of her
+plans to fool him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered through his pose
+of brilliant wickedness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will go to the station,” she said. “I will go back—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will appeal to the police—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t know them.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will tell these hotel people.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They will turn you out of doors. You’re in such a thoroughly false position
+now. They don’t understand unconventionality, down here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stamped her foot. “If I wander about the streets all night—” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what the streets of
+a charming little holiday resort are like—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t care,” she said. “I can go to the clergyman here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike than you think.
+And anyhow—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How <i>can</i> you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The mischief is
+done, Jessie.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You <i>cur</i>,” she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He thought
+she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone from her face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” he said. “I love you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Love!” said she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes—love.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There are ways yet,” she said, after a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is it?—not the
+dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don’t you think of it. You’ll only shirk
+it when the moment comes, and turn it all into comedy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across the parade at
+the shining sea over which the afterglow of day fled before the rising moon. He
+maintained his attitude. The blinds were still up, for she had told the waiter
+not to draw them. There was silence for some moments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon. “Take it
+sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in common, quarrel into
+melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all that is bright and desirable to me.
+I am stronger than you, older; man to your woman. To find <i>you</i>
+too—conventional!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge of delight
+how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Man!</i>” she said. “Man to <i>my</i> woman! Do <i>men</i> lie? Would a
+<i>man</i> use his five and thirty years’ experience to outwit a girl of
+seventeen? Man to my woman indeed! That surely is the last insult!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do, though—all that and
+more also when their hearts were set on such a girl as yourself. For God’s sake
+drop this shrewishness! Why should you be so—difficult to me? Here am I with
+<i>my</i> reputation, <i>my</i> career, at your feet. Look here, Jessie—on my
+honour, I will marry you—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“God forbid,” she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had a wife, even
+then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in the flash of her retort,
+that she did not know he was married.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement,” he said, following that hint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must be sensible. The thing’s your own doing. Come out on the beach
+now—the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon be high.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>I won’t</i>” she said, stamping her foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, well—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh! leave me alone. Let me think—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think,” he said, “if you want to. It’s your cry always. But you can’t save
+yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can’t save yourself in any way now. If
+saving it is—this parsimony—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, go—go.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of you, dear....
+But do you think I should do all this if I did not care?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go,” she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to stare out of the
+window. He stood looking at her for a moment, with a strange light in his eyes.
+He made a step towards her. “I <i>have</i> you,” he said. “You are mine.
+Netted—caught. But mine.” He would have gone up to her and laid his hand upon
+her, but he did not dare to do that yet. “I have you in my hand,” he said, “in
+my power. Do you hear—<i>Power!</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and then, with a
+superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the door. Surely the instinctive
+abasement of her sex before Strength was upon his side. He told himself that
+his battle was won. She heard the handle move and the catch click as the door
+closed behind him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter22"></a>XXII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks hot, his eye
+bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous, obsequious Hoopdriver, to whom I
+introduced you some days since, has undergone a wonderful change. Ever since he
+lost that ‘spoor’ in Chichester, he has been tormented by the most horrible
+visions of the shameful insults that may be happening. The strangeness of new
+surroundings has been working to strip off the habitual servile from him. Here
+was moonlight rising over the memory of a red sunset, dark shadows and glowing
+orange lamps, beauty somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong
+in a brown suit and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver for the
+time, was in the world of Romance and Knight-errantry, divinely forgetful of
+his social position or hers; forgetting, too, for the time any of the wretched
+timidities that had tied him long since behind the counter in his proper place.
+He was angry and adventurous. It was all about him, this vivid drama he had
+fallen into, and it was eluding him. He was far too grimly in earnest to pick
+up that lost thread and make a play of it now. The man was living. He did not
+pose when he alighted at the coffee tavern even, nor when he made his hasty
+meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade, Hoopdriver,
+disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the corner from the
+Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his heart jumped, and the tension
+of his angry suspense exploded into, rather than gave place to, an excited
+activity of mind. They were at the Vicuna, and she was there now alone. It was
+the occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no chance against him. He went
+back round the corner, sat down on the seat, and watched Bechamel recede into
+the dimness up the esplanade, before he got up and walked into the hotel
+entrance. “A lady cyclist in grey,” he asked for, and followed boldly on the
+waiter’s heels. The door of the dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm.
+And then suddenly he was nearly minded to turn and run for it, and his features
+seemed to him to be convulsed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between terror and
+hope in her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can I—have a few words—with you, alone?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, controlling his
+breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then motioned the waiter to
+withdraw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out into the
+middle of the room, fold his arms and say, “You are in trouble. I am a Friend.
+Trust me.” Instead of which he stood panting and then spoke with sudden
+familiarity, hastily, guiltily: “Look here. I don’t know what the juice is up,
+but I think there’s something wrong. Excuse my intruding—if it isn’t so. I’ll
+do anything you like to help you out of the scrape—if you’re in one. That’s my
+meaning, I believe. What can I do? I would do anything to help you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite emotion, this
+remarkable speech. “<i>You!</i>” she said. She was tumultuously weighing
+possibilities in her mind, and he had scarcely ceased when she had made her
+resolve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stepped a pace forward. “You are a gentleman,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Can I trust you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not wait for his assurance. “I must leave this hotel at once. Come
+here.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took his arm and led him to the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are our bicycles. Go
+down, get them out, and I will come down to you. Dare you?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Get your bicycle out in the road?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Which way?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Right!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill Bechamel he
+would have done it. His head was a maelstrom now. He walked out of the hotel,
+along the front, and into the big, black-shadowed coach yard. He looked round.
+There were no bicycles visible. Then a man emerged from the dark, a short man
+in a short, black, shiny jacket. Hoopdriver was caught. He made no attempt to
+turn and run for it. “I’ve been giving your machines a wipe over, sir,” said
+the man, recognising the suit, and touching his cap. Hoopdriver’s intelligence
+now was a soaring eagle; he swooped on the situation at once. “That’s right,”
+he said, and added, before the pause became marked, “Where is mine? I want to
+look at the chain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a lantern. Hoopdriver
+moved the lady’s machine out of his way to the door, and then laid hands on the
+man’s machine and wheeled it out of the shed into the yard. The gate stood open
+and beyond was the pale road and a clump of trees black in the twilight. He
+stooped and examined the chain with trembling fingers. How was it to be done?
+Something behind the gate seemed to flutter. The man must be got rid of anyhow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I say,” said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, “can you get me a screwdriver?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and came up to
+the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his hand. Hoopdriver felt himself
+a lost man. He took the screwdriver with a tepid “Thanks,” and incontinently
+had another inspiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I say,” he said again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is miles too big.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it down on the
+ground. “Want a smaller screwdriver?” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt <i>atichew</i>. It is
+the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. “As small as you have,”
+he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I ain’t got none smaller than that,” said the ostler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Won’t do, really,” said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his handkerchief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll see wot they got in the ’ouse, if you like, sir,” said the man. “If you
+would,” said Hoopdriver. And as the man’s heavily nailed boots went clattering
+down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up, took a noiseless step to the lady’s
+machine, laid trembling hands on its handle and saddle, and prepared for a
+rush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm, yellow light up
+the road, shut again behind the man, and forthwith Hoopdriver rushed the
+machines towards the gate. A dark grey form came fluttering to meet him. “Give
+me this,” she said, “and bring yours.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran back, seized
+Bechamel’s machine, and followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the cobbles again.
+It was too late now to do anything but escape. He heard the ostler shout behind
+him, and came into the road. She was up and dim already. He got into the saddle
+without a blunder. In a moment the ostler was in the gateway with a
+full-throated “<i>Hi!</i>! sir! That ain’t allowed;” and Hoopdriver was
+overtaking the Young Lady in Grey. For some moments the earth seemed alive with
+shouts of, “Stop ’em!” and the shadows with ambuscades of police. The road
+swept round, and they were riding out of sight of the hotel, and behind dark
+hedges, side by side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. “Brave,” she said, “brave!”
+and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He looked over his shoulder and
+about him, and saw that they were already out of Bognor—for the Vicuna stands
+at the very westernmost extremity of the sea front—and riding on a fair wide
+road.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter23"></a>XXIII.</h2>
+
+<p>
+The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road vociferating after
+them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna Hotel, and finding a group of men
+outside the entrance, who wanted to know what was <i>up</i>, stopped to give
+them the cream of the adventure. That gave the fugitives five minutes. Then
+pushing breathlessly into the bar, he had to make it clear to the barmaid what
+the matter was, and the ‘gov’nor’ being out, they spent some more precious time
+wondering ‘what—<i>ever</i>’ was to be done! in which the two customers
+returning from outside joined with animation. There were also moral remarks and
+other irrelevant contributions. There were conflicting ideas of telling the
+police and pursuing the flying couple on a horse. That made ten minutes. Then
+Stephen, the waiter, who had shown Hoopdriver up, came down and lit wonderful
+lights and started quite a fresh discussion by the simple question
+“<i>Which?</i>?” That turned ten minutes into a quarter of an hour. And in the
+midst of this discussion, making a sudden and awestricken silence, appeared
+Bechamel in the hall beyond the bar, walked with a resolute air to the foot of
+the staircase, and passed out of sight. You conceive the backward pitch of that
+exceptionally shaped cranium? Incredulous eyes stared into one another’s in the
+bar, as his paces, muffled by the stair carpet, went up to the landing, turned,
+reached the passage and walked into the dining-room overhead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It wasn’t that one at all, miss,” said the ostler, “I’d <i>swear</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, that’s Mr. Beaumont,” said the barmaid, “—anyhow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by Bechamel. They
+listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went out of the diningroom. Down
+the passage to the bedroom. Stopped again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Poor chap!” said the barmaid. “She’s a wicked woman!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Sssh!” said Stephen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a chair creak
+under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m going up,” said Stephen, “to break the melancholy news to him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without knocking, Stephen
+entered. Bechamel’s face suggested a different expectation. “Beg pardon, sir,”
+said Stephen, with a diplomatic cough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?” said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some of her
+threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had it ready. She was a
+monomaniac. “Leave me alone with her,” he would say; “I know how to calm her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mrs. Beaumont,” said Stephen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Well?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Has gone.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rose with a fine surprise. “Gone!” he said with a half laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Gone, sir. On her bicycle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“On her bicycle! Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She went, sir, with Another Gentleman.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This time Bechamel was really startled. “An—other Gentlemen! <i>Who?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got out the two
+bicycles, sir, and went off, sir—about twenty minutes ago.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips. Stephen,
+watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether this abandoned husband
+would weep or curse, or rush off at once in furious pursuit. But as yet he
+seemed merely stunned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Brown clothes?” he said. “And fairish?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A little like yourself, sir—in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim Duke—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said—But let us put in
+blank cartridge—he said, “———!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I might have thought!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He flung himself into the armchair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Damn her,” said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man. “I’ll chuck
+this infernal business! They’ve gone, eigh?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yessir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, let ’em GO,” said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. “Let ’em GO. Who
+cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon as fast as you can,
+there’s a good chap. I’ll take that, and then I’ll have another look round
+Bognor before I turn in.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stephen was too surprised to say anything but “Bourbon, sir?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go on,” said Bechamel. “Damn you!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stephen’s sympathies changed at once. “Yessir,” he murmured, fumbling for the
+door handle, and left the room, marvelling. Bechamel, having in this way
+satisfied his sense of appearances, and comported himself as a Pagan should, so
+soon as the waiter’s footsteps had passed, vented the cream of his feelings in
+a stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his wife or <i>her</i> stepmother
+had sent the detective, <i>she</i> had evidently gone off with him, and that
+little business was over. And he was here, stranded and sold, an ass, and as it
+were, the son of many generations of asses. And his only ray of hope was that
+it seemed more probable, after all, that the girl had escaped through her
+stepmother. In which case the business might be hushed up yet, and the evil
+hour of explanation with his wife indefinitely postponed. Then abruptly the
+image of that lithe figure in grey knickerbockers went frisking across his mind
+again, and he reverted to his blasphemies. He started up in a gusty frenzy with
+a vague idea of pursuit, and incontinently sat down again with a concussion
+that stirred the bar below to its depths. He banged the arms of the chair with
+his fist, and swore again. “Of all the accursed fools that were ever spawned,”
+he was chanting, “I, Bechamel—” when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening of
+the door, Stephen entered with the Bourbon.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter24"></a>XXIV.<br/>
+THE MOONLIGHT RIDE</h2>
+
+<p>
+And so the twenty minutes’ law passed into an infinity. We leave the wicked
+Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a garment,—the wretched creature
+has already sufficiently sullied our modest but truthful pages,—we leave the
+eager little group in the bar of the Vicuna Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we
+have left all Chichester and Midhurst and Haslemere and Guildford and Ripley
+and Putney, and follow this dear fool of a Hoopdriver of ours and his Young
+Lady in Grey out upon the moonlight road. How they rode! How their hearts beat
+together and their breath came fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and
+every noise pursuit! For all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the world of
+Romance. Had a policeman intervened because their lamps were not lit,
+Hoopdriver had cut him down and ridden on, after the fashion of a hero born.
+Had Bechamel arisen in the way with rapiers for a duel, Hoopdriver had fought
+as one to whom Agincourt was a reality and drapery a dream. It was Rescue,
+Elopement, Glory! And she by the side of him! He had seen her face in shadow,
+with the morning sunlight tangled in her hair, he had seen her sympathetic with
+that warm light in her face, he had seen her troubled and her eyes bright with
+tears. But what light is there lighting a face like hers, to compare with the
+soft glamour of the midsummer moon?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of Bognor, in one
+place dark and heavy under a thick growth of trees, then amidst villas again,
+some warm and lamplit, some white and sleeping in the moonlight; then between
+hedges, over which they saw broad wan meadows shrouded in a low-lying mist.
+They scarcely heeded whither they rode at first, being only anxious to get
+away, turning once westward when the spire of Chichester cathedral rose
+suddenly near them out of the dewy night, pale and intricate and high. They
+rode, speaking little, just a rare word now and then, at a turning, at a
+footfall, at a roughness in the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to him, but after
+the first tumult of the adventure, as flight passed into mere steady riding his
+mind became an enormous appreciation of the position. The night was a warm
+white silence save for the subtile running of their chains. He looked sideways
+at her as she sat beside him with her ankles gracefully ruling the treadles.
+Now the road turned westward, and she was a dark grey outline against the
+shimmer of the moon; and now they faced northwards, and the soft cold light
+passed caressingly over her hair and touched her brow and cheek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is sweet and
+beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has created the fairies,
+whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises again in our hearts at the sight
+of it, the voices of the filmy route, and their faint, soul-piercing melodies.
+By the moonlight every man, dull clod though he be by day, tastes something of
+Endymion, takes something of the youth and strength of Endymion, and sees the
+dear white goddess shining at him from his Lady’s eyes. The firm substantial
+daylight things become ghostly and elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of
+unsubstantial texture, the world a visible spirit, the spiritual within us
+rises out of its darkness, loses something of its weight and body, and swims up
+towards heaven. This road that was a mere rutted white dust, hot underfoot,
+blinding to the eye, is now a soft grey silence, with the glitter of a crystal
+grain set starlike in its silver here and there. Overhead, riding serenely
+through the spacious blue, is the mother of the silence, she who has
+spiritualised the world, alone save for two attendant steady shining stars. And
+in silence under her benign influence, under the benediction of her light, rode
+our two wanderers side by side through the transfigured and transfiguring
+night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr. Hoopdriver’s skull. At
+the turnings of the road he made his decisions with an air of profound
+promptitude (and quite haphazard). “The Right,” he would say. Or again “The
+Left,” as one who knew. So it was that in the space of an hour they came
+abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea. Grey beach to the right of
+them and to the left, and a little white cottage fast asleep inland of a
+sleeping fishing-boat. “Hullo!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, <i>sotto voce</i>. They
+dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks and thorns rose out of the haze of moonlight
+that was tangled in the hedge on either side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are safe,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an air and
+bowing courtly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where are we?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Safe</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But <i>where?</i>”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Chichester Harbour.” He waved his arm seaward as though it was a goal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you think they will follow us?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We have turned and turned again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly there, holding
+her machine, and he, holding his, could go no nearer to her to see if she
+sobbed for weeping or for want of breath. “What are we to do now?” her voice
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Are you tired?” he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will do what has to be done.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a space. “Do you
+know,” she said, “I am not afraid of you. I am sure you are honest to me. And I
+do not even know your name!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. “It’s an ugly name,”
+he said. “But you are right in trusting me. I would—I would do anything for
+you.... This is nothing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But compared with
+Bechamel!—“We take each other on trust,” she said. “Do you want to know—how
+things are with me?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That man,” she went on, after the assent of his listening silence, “promised
+to help and protect me. I was unhappy at home—never mind why. A
+stepmother—Idle, unoccupied, hindered, cramped, that is enough, perhaps. Then
+he came into my life, and talked to me of art and literature, and set my brain
+on fire. I wanted to come out into the world, to be a human being—not a thing
+in a hutch. And he—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And now here I am—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I will do anything,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She thought. “You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not describe her—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my power.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant.” She spoke of Bechamel as
+the Illusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m thinking,” he said, full of a rapture of protective responsibility, “what
+we had best be doing. You are tired, you know. And we can’t wander all
+night—after the day we’ve had.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was Chichester we were near?” she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If,” he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, “you would make <i>me</i> your
+brother, <i>Miss Beaumont</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We could stop there together—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took a minute to answer. “I am going to light these lamps,” said
+Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on his shoe. She looked
+at his face in its light, grave and intent. How could she ever have thought him
+common or absurd?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But you must tell me your name—brother,” she said,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Er—Carrington,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause. Who would be
+Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But the Christian name?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Christian name? <i>My</i> Christian name. Well—Chris.” He snapped his lamp and
+stood up. “If you will hold my machine, I will light yours,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment they stood
+face to face. “My name, brother Chris,” she said, “is Jessie.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested. “<i>Jessie</i>,”
+he repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face affected her strangely. She
+had to speak. “It’s not such a very wonderful name, is it?” she said, with a
+laugh to break the intensity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing of his
+features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the lantern in front of her
+machine. She looked down at him, almost kneeling in front of her, with an
+unreasonable approbation in her eyes. It was, as I have indicated, the hour and
+season of the full moon.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter25"></a>XXV.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night’s journey with the same
+confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good luck and the fact that
+most roads about a town converge thereupon, that Chichester was at last
+attained. It seemed at first as though everyone had gone to bed, but the Red
+Hotel still glowed yellow and warm. It was the first time Hoopdriver had dared
+the mysteries of a ‘first-class’ hotel. But that night he was in the mood to
+dare anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“So you found your Young Lady at last,” said the ostler of the Red Hotel; for
+it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver had made inquiries in the
+afternoon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite a misunderstanding,” said Hoopdriver, with splendid readiness. “My
+sister had gone to Bognor. But I brought her back here. I’ve took a fancy to
+this place. And the moonlight’s simply dee-vine.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ve had supper, thenks, and we’re tired,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I suppose
+you won’t take anything,—Jessie?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie like that!
+But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself bound to admit.
+“Good-night, Sis,” he said, “and pleasant dreams. I’ll just ’ave a look at this
+paper before I turn in.” But this was living indeed! he told himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very edge of the Most
+Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you will remember, with a vigil in a
+little sweetstuff shop next door to the Angel at Midhurst. But to think of all
+the things that had happened since then! He caught himself in the middle of a
+yawn, pulled out his watch, saw the time was halfpast eleven, and marched off,
+with a fine sense of heroism, bedward.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter26"></a>XXVI.<br/>
+THE SURBITON INTERLUDE</h2>
+
+<p>
+And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a break in the
+narrative again. These absurd young people are safely tucked away now, their
+heads full of glowing nonsense, indeed, but the course of events at any rate is
+safe from any fresh developments through their activities for the next eight
+hours or more. They are both sleeping healthily you will perhaps be astonished
+to hear. Here is the girl—what girls are coming to nowadays only Mrs. Lynn
+Linton can tell!—in company with an absolute stranger, of low extraction and
+uncertain accent, unchaperoned and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is
+safe, she is, if anything, a little proud of her own share in these
+transactions. Then this Mr. Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot that he is! is
+in illegal possession of a stolen bicycle, a stolen young lady, and two stolen
+names, established with them in an hotel that is quite beyond his means, and
+immensely proud of himself in a somnolent way for these incomparable follies.
+There are occasions when a moralising novelist can merely wring his hands and
+leave matters to take their course. For all Hoopdriver knows or cares he may be
+locked up the very first thing to-morrow morning for the rape of the cycle.
+Then in Bognor, let alone that melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with whom our
+dealings are, thank Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern with a steak Mr.
+Hoopdriver ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his American-cloth parcel in a
+bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of guarantee, carefully locked up
+in the hayloft. To-morrow he will be a Mystery, and they will be looking for
+his body along the sea front. And so far we have never given a glance at the
+desolate home in Surbiton, familiar to you no doubt through the medium of
+illustrated interviews, where the unhappy stepmother—
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to you. That is a
+little surprise I have prepared for you. She is ‘Thomas Plantagenet,’ the
+gifted authoress of that witty and daring book, “A Soul Untrammelled,” and
+quite an excellent woman in her way,—only it is such a crooked way. Her real
+name is Milton. She is a widow and a charming one, only ten years older than
+Jessie, and she is always careful to dedicate her more daring works to the
+‘sacred memory of my husband’ to show that there’s nothing personal, you know,
+in the matter. Considering her literary reputation (she was always speaking of
+herself as one ‘martyred for truth,’ because the critics advertised her written
+indecorums in column long ‘slates’),—considering her literary reputation, I
+say, she was one of the most respectable women it is possible to imagine. She
+furnished correctly, dressed correctly, had severe notions of whom she might
+meet, went to church, and even at times took the sacrament in some esoteric
+spirit. And Jessie she brought up so carefully that she never even let her read
+“A Soul Untrammelled.” Which, therefore, naturally enough, Jessie did, and went
+on from that to a feast of advanced literature. Mrs. Milton not only brought up
+Jessie carefully, but very slowly, so that at seventeen she was still a clever
+schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and quite in the background of the little
+literary circle of unimportant celebrities which ‘Thomas Plantagenet’ adorned.
+Mrs. Milton knew Bechamel’s reputation of being a dangerous man; but then bad
+men are not bad women, and she let him come to her house to show she was not
+afraid—she took no account of Jessie. When the elopement came, therefore, it
+was a double disappointment to her, for she perceived his hand by a kind of
+instinct. She did the correct thing. The correct thing, as you know, is to take
+hansom cabs, regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not know
+<i>what</i> to do, round the circle of your confidential friends. She could not
+have ridden nor wept more had Jessie been her own daughter—she showed the
+properest spirit. And she not only showed it, but felt it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more successful widow
+of thirty-two,—“Thomas Plantagenet is a charming woman,” her reviewers used to
+write invariably, even if they spoke ill of her,—found the steady growth of
+Jessie into womanhood an unmitigated nuisance and had been willing enough to
+keep her in the background. And Jessie—who had started this intercourse at
+fourteen with abstract objections to stepmothers—had been active enough in
+resenting this. Increasing rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them,
+until they could engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or the
+cutting of a book with a sharpened knife. There is very little deliberate
+wickedness in the world. The stupidity of our selfishness gives much the same
+results indeed, but in the ethical laboratory it shows a different nature. And
+when the disaster came, Mrs. Milton’s remorse for their gradual loss of
+sympathy and her share in the losing of it, was genuine enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how West Kensington
+and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary suburbs, those decent
+penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling, hummed with the business, Her
+‘Men’—as a charming literary lady she had, of course, an organised corps—were
+immensely excited, and were sympathetic; helpfully energetic, suggestive,
+alert, as their ideals of their various dispositions required them to be. “Any
+news of Jessie?” was the pathetic opening of a dozen melancholy but interesting
+conversations. To her Men she was not perhaps so damp as she was to her women
+friends, but in a quiet way she was even more touching. For three days,
+Wednesday that is, Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the fugitives. It
+was known that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with buttonup skirts, and
+mounted on a diamond frame safety with Dunlops, and a loofah covered saddle,
+had ridden forth early in the morning, taking with her about two pounds seven
+shillings in money, and a grey touring case packed, and there, save for a brief
+note to her stepmother,—a declaration of independence, it was said, an
+assertion of her Ego containing extensive and very annoying quotations from “A
+Soul Untrammelled,” and giving no definite intimation of her plans—knowledge
+ceased. That note was shown to few, and then only in the strictest confidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery, a
+correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the first. He had
+been touring in Sussex,—his knapsack was still on his back,—and he testified
+hurriedly that at a place called Midhurst, in the bar of an hotel called the
+Angel, he had heard from a barmaid a vivid account of a Young Lady in Grey.
+Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in brown? “The poor, misguided girl!
+I must go to her at once,” she said, choking, and rising with her hand to her
+heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on my way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A mother’s love,” she said. “I bear her <i>that</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know you do.” He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his photographs of
+scenery more than Mrs. Milton. “It’s more than she deserves.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, don’t speak unkindly of her! She has been misled.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry his news
+ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back? He had come to her
+because he knew of her anxiety. “It is <i>good</i> of you,” she said, and quite
+instinctively took and pressed his hand. “And to think of that poor
+girl—tonight! It’s dreadful.” She looked into the fire that she had lit when he
+came in, the warm light fell upon her dark purple dress, and left her features
+in a warm shadow. She looked such a slight, frail thing to be troubled so. “We
+must follow her.” Her resolution seemed magnificent. “I have no one to go with
+me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He must marry her,” said the man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She has no friends. We have no one. After all—Two women.—So helpless.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who knew her only
+from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply because she was
+great-hearted—intellectual. He was overcome by the unspeakable pathos of her
+position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mrs. Milton,” he said. “Hetty!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. “Not now,” she said, “not now. I
+must find her first.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big, fat men who feel
+deeply.) “But let me help you. At least let me help you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But can you spare time?” she said. “For <i>me</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For you—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But what can I do? what can <i>we</i> do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on Thursday night,
+last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!” he said. “We will save her
+yet!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Courage!” he repeated, finding it so well received.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to the fire, and
+he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which suited his dimensions
+admirably. Then the door opened, and the girl showed in Dangle, who looked
+curiously from one to the other. There was emotion here, he had heard the
+armchair creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face was flushed, displayed a
+suspicious alacrity to explain. “You, too,” she said, “are one of my good
+friends. And we have news of her at last.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined to show himself
+a man of resource. In the end he, too, was accepted for the Midhurst
+Expedition, to the intense disgust of Widgery; and young Phipps, a callow youth
+of few words, faultless collars, and fervent devotion, was also enrolled before
+the evening was out. They would scour the country, all three of them. She
+appeared to brighten up a little, but it was evident she was profoundly
+touched. She did not know what she had done to merit such friends. Her voice
+broke a little, she moved towards the door, and young Phipps, who was a youth
+of action rather than of words, sprang and opened it—proud to be first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She is sorely troubled,” said Dangle to Widgery. “We must do what we can for
+her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“She is a wonderful woman,” said Dangle. “So subtle, so intricate, so many
+faceted. She feels this deeply.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers time to refresh
+themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the present, therefore, we will not
+concern ourselves with the starting of the Rescue Party, nor with Mrs. Milton’s
+simple but becoming grey dress, with the healthy Widgery’s Norfolk jacket and
+thick boots, with the slender Dangle’s energetic bearing, nor with the
+wonderful chequerings that set off the legs of the golf-suited Phipps. They are
+after us. In a little while they will be upon us. You must imagine as you best
+can the competitive raidings at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps. How
+Widgery was great at questions, and Dangle good at inference, and Phipps so
+conspicuously inferior in everything that he felt it, and sulked with Mrs.
+Milton most of the day, after the manner of your callow youth the whole world
+over. Mrs. Milton stopped at the Angel and was very sad and charming and
+intelligent, and Widgery paid the bill in the afternoon of Saturday, Chichester
+was attained. But by that time our fugitives—As you shall immediately hear.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter27"></a>XXVII.<br/>
+THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and, staring
+unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and pleasant. He turned the
+peaked nose that overrides the insufficient moustache, up to the ceiling, a
+pinkish projection over the billow of white. You might see it wrinkle as he
+yawned again, and then became quiet. So matters remained for a space. Very
+slowly recollection returned to him. Then a shock of indeterminate brown hair
+appeared, and first one watery grey eye a-wondering, and then two; the bed
+upheaved, and you had him, his thin neck projecting abruptly from the clothes
+he held about him, his face staring about the room. He held the clothes about
+him, I hope I may explain, because his night-shirt was at Bognor in an
+American-cloth packet, derelict. He yawned a third time, rubbed his eyes,
+smacked his lips. He was recalling almost everything now. The pursuit, the
+hotel, the tremulous daring of his entry, the swift adventure of the inn yard,
+the moonlight—Abruptly he threw the clothes back and rose into a sitting
+position on the edge of the bed. Without was the noise of shutters being
+unfastened and doors unlocked, and the passing of hoofs and wheels in the
+street. He looked at his watch. Half-past six. He surveyed the sumptuous room
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t a dream, after all.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wonder what they charge for these Juicèd rooms!” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+nursing one rosy foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache. Suddenly he gave
+vent to a noiseless laugh. “What a rush it was! Rushed in and off with his girl
+right under his nose. Planned it well too. Talk of highway robbery! Talk of
+brigands! Up and off! How juicèd <i>sold</i> he must be feeling! It was a shave
+too—in the coach yard!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw fell. “I
+sa-a-ay!” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand the whirl he had
+been in overnight. But one sees things clearer in the daylight. “I’m hanged if
+I haven’t been and stolen a blessed bicycle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who cares?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face supplied the answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put a more heroic
+complexion on the business. But of an early morning, on an empty stomach (as
+with characteristic coarseness, medical men put it) heroics are of a more
+difficult growth than by moonlight. Everything had seemed exceptionally fine
+and brilliant, but quite natural, the evening before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket, laid it over his
+knees, and took out the money from the little ticket pocket. “Fourteen and
+six-half,” he said, holding the coins in his left hand and stroking his chin
+with his right. He verified, by patting, the presence of a pocketbook in the
+breast pocket. “Five, fourteen, six-half,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Left.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into another silent
+meditation. “That wouldn’t matter,” he said. “It’s the bike’s the bother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No good going back to Bognor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the loan. Having no
+further use—” Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed into the silent concoction of
+a delightfully impudent letter. “Mr. J. Hoopdriver presents his compliments.”
+But the grave note reasserted itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange them. <i>My</i>
+old crock’s so blessed shabby. He’s sure to be spiteful too. Have me run in,
+perhaps. Then she’d be in just the same old fix, only worse. You see, I’m her
+Knight-errant. It complicates things so.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. “What the juice do they
+want with cream pans in a bedroom?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, <i>en passant</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible, anyhow. I
+suppose she’ll go home to her friends. That bicycle is a juicy nuisance,
+anyhow. Juicy nuisance!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to proceed with his
+toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered that the simple necessaries of
+that process were at Bognor! “Lord!” he remarked, and whistled silently for a
+space. “Rummy go! profit and loss; profit, one sister with bicycle complete,
+wot offers?—cheap for tooth and ’air brush, vests, night-shirt, stockings, and
+sundries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Make the best of it,” and presently, when it came to hair-brushing, he had to
+smooth his troubled locks with his hands. It was a poor result. “Sneak out and
+get a shave, I suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink again! Beard don’t
+show much.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for some time, and
+curled his insufficient moustache up with some care. Then he fell a-meditating
+on his beauty. He considered himself, three-quarter face, left and right. An
+expression of distaste crept over his features. “Looking won’t alter it,
+Hoopdriver,” he remarked. “You’re a weedy customer, my man. Shoulders narrow.
+Skimpy, anyhow.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with his chin
+lifted in the air. “Good Lord!” he said. “<i>What</i> a neck! Wonder why I got
+such a thundering lump there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. “If I’d been exercised
+properly, if I’d been fed reasonable, if I hadn’t been shoved out of a silly
+school into a silly shop—But there! the old folks didn’t know no better. The
+schoolmaster ought to have. But he didn’t, poor old fool!—Still, when it comes
+to meeting a girl like this—It’s ’<i>ard</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wonder what Adam’d think of me—as a specimen. Civilisation, eigh? Heir of
+the ages! I’m nothing. I know nothing. I can’t do anything—sketch a bit. Why
+wasn’t I made an artist?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don’t tell yourself any lies about it. Lovers
+ain’t your game,—anyway. But there’s other things yet. You can help the young
+lady, and you will—I suppose she’ll be going home—And that business of the
+bicycle’s to see to, too, my man. <i>Forward</i>, Hoopdriver! If you ain’t a
+beauty, that’s no reason why you should stop and be copped, is it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of self-satisfaction, he had
+another attempt at his hair preparatory to leaving his room and hurrying on
+breakfast, for an early departure. While breakfast was preparing he wandered
+out into South Street and refurnished himself with the elements of luggage
+again. “No expense to be spared,” he murmured, disgorging the half-sovereign.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter28"></a>XXVIII.<br/>
+THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER</h2>
+
+<p>
+He caused his ‘sister’ to be called repeatedly, and when she came down,
+explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to the bicycle in the
+yard. “Might be disagreeable, y’ know.” His anxiety was obvious enough. “Very
+well,” she said (quite friendly); “hurry breakfast, and we’ll ride out. I want
+to talk things over with you.” The girl seemed more beautiful than ever after
+the night’s sleep; her hair in comely dark waves from her forehead, her
+ungauntleted finger-tips pink and cool. And how decided she was! Breakfast was
+a nervous ceremony, conversation fraternal but thin; the waiter overawed him,
+and he was cowed by a multiplicity of forks. But she called him “Chris.” They
+discussed their route over his sixpenny county map for the sake of talking, but
+avoided a decision in the presence of the attendant. The five-pound note was
+changed for the bill, and through Hoopdriver’s determination to be quite the
+gentleman, the waiter and chambermaid got half a crown each and the ostler a
+florin. “’Olidays,” said the ostler to himself, without gratitude. The public
+mounting of the bicycles in the street was a moment of trepidation. A policeman
+actually stopped and watched them from the opposite kerb. Suppose him to come
+across and ask: “Is that your bicycle, sir?” Fight? Or drop it and run? It was
+a time of bewildering apprehension, too, going through the streets of the town,
+so that a milk cart barely escaped destruction under Mr. Hoopdriver’s chancy
+wheel. That recalled him to a sense of erratic steering, and he pulled himself
+together. In the lanes he breathed freer, and a less formal conversation
+presently began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ve ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well, the fact of it is, I’m worried, just a little bit. About this machine.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” she said. “I had forgotten that. But where are we going?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jest a turning or two more, if you don’t mind,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should feel more easy.
+If we was locked up, you know—Not that I should mind on my own account—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left hand. Every
+mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr. Hoopdriver felt a little
+less conscience-stricken, and a little more of the gallant desperado. Here he
+was riding on a splendid machine with a Slap-up girl beside him. What would
+they think of it in the Emporium if any of them were to see him? He imagined in
+detail the astonishment of Miss Isaacs and of Miss Howe. “Why! It’s Mr.
+Hoopdriver,” Miss Isaacs would say. “<i>Never!</i>” emphatically from Miss
+Howe. Then he played with Briggs, and then tried the ‘G.V.’ in a shay. “Fancy
+introducing ’em to her—My sister <i>pro tem</i>.” He was her brother
+Chris—Chris what?—Confound it! Harringon, Hartington—something like that. Have
+to keep off that topic until he could remember. Wish he’d told her the truth
+now—almost. He glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes straight ahead of
+her. Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she seemed. He noticed how well she
+rode and that she rode with her lips closed—a thing he could never manage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind came round to the future. What was she going to do? What
+were they both going to do? His thoughts took a graver colour. He had rescued
+her. This was fine, manly rescue work he was engaged upon. She ought to go
+home, in spite of that stepmother. He must insist gravely but firmly upon that.
+She was the spirited sort, of course, but still—Wonder if she had any money?
+Wonder what the second-class fare from Havant to London is? Of course he would
+have to pay that—it was the regular thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he
+take her home? He began to rough in a moving sketch of the return. The
+stepmother, repentant of her indescribable cruelties, would be present,—even
+these rich people have their troubles,—probably an uncle or two. The footman
+would announce, Mr.—(bother that name!) and Miss Milton. Then two women weeping
+together, and a knightly figure in the background dressed in a handsome Norfolk
+jacket, still conspicuously new. He would conceal his feeling until the very
+end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the doorway in such an attitude as Mr.
+George Alexander might assume, and say, slowly and dwindlingly: “Be kind to
+her—<i>be</i> kind to her,” and so depart, heartbroken to the meanest
+intelligence. But that was a matter for the future. He would have to begin
+discussing the return soon. There was no traffic along the road, and he came up
+beside her (he had fallen behind in his musing). She began to talk. “Mr.
+Denison,” she began, and then, doubtfully, “That <i>is</i> your name? I’m very
+stupid—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison, Denison. What
+was she saying?)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wonder how far you are willing to help me?” Confoundedly hard to answer a
+question like that on the spur of the moment, without steering wildly. “You may
+rely—” said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering from a violent wabble. “I can assure
+you—I want to help you very much. Don’t consider me at all. Leastways, consider
+me entirely at your service.” (Nuisance not to be able to say this kind of
+thing right.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You see, I am so awkwardly situated.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I can only help you—you will make me very happy—” There was a pause. Round
+a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space between hedge and road, set
+with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a felled tree lay among the green. There she
+dismounted, and propping her machine against a stone, sat down. “Here, we can
+talk,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with her chin in her
+hand, and looking straight in front of her. “I don’t know—I am resolved to Live
+my Own Life.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Naturally.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to learn. Everyone
+is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want time to think.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how clear and ready
+her words were. But then one might speak well with a throat and lips like that.
+He knew he was inadequate, but he tried to meet the occasion. “If you let them
+rush you into anything you might repent of, of course you’d be very silly.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t <i>you</i> want to learn?” she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was wondering only this morning,” he began, and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this insufficiency. “I find
+myself in life, and it terrifies me. I seem to be like a little speck, whirling
+on a wheel, suddenly caught up. ‘What am I here for?’ I ask. Simply to be here
+at a time—I asked it a week ago, I asked it yesterday, and I ask it to-day. And
+little things happen and the days pass. My stepmother takes me shopping, people
+come to tea, there is a new play to pass the time, or a concert, or a novel.
+The wheels of the world go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a
+miracle like Joshua and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At home—It’s
+impossible.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. “It <i>is</i> so,” he said in a
+meditative tone. “Things <i>will</i> go on,” he said. The faint breath of
+summer stirred the trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted among the
+meadowsweet and struck and broke into a dozen separate threads against his
+knee. They flew on apart, and sank, as the breeze fell, among the grass: some
+to germinate, some to perish. His eye followed them until they had vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t go back to Surbiton,” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Eigh?</i>” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was an
+unexpected development.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I want to write, you see,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “to write Books and
+alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free Life and Own myself. I can’t go
+back. I want to obtain a position as a journalist. I have been told—But I know
+no one to help me at once. No one that I could go to. There is one person—She
+was a mistress at my school. If I could write to her—But then, how could I get
+her answer?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“H’mp,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can’t trouble you much more. You have come—you have risked things—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That don’t count,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s double pay to let me do it, so
+to speak.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am resolved to
+be Unconventional—at any cost. But we are so hampered. If I could only burgeon
+out of all that hinders me! I want to struggle, to take my place in the world.
+I want to be my own mistress, to shape my own career. But my stepmother objects
+so. She does as she likes herself, and is strict with me to ease her
+conscience. And if I go back now, go back owning myself beaten—” She left the
+rest to his imagination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see that,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He <i>must</i> help her. Within his skull
+he was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six and twopence. In
+some vague way he inferred from all this that Jessie was trying to escape from
+an undesirable marriage, but was saying these things out of modesty. His circle
+of ideas was so limited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You know, Mr.—I’ve forgotten your name again.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. “You can’t go back of course, quite
+like that,” he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed suddenly red and his cheeks
+flushed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But what <i>is</i> your name?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Name!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Why!—Benson, of course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Benson—yes it’s really very stupid of me. But I can never remember names.
+I must make a note on my cuff.” She clicked a little silver pencil and wrote
+the name down. “If I could write to my friend. I believe she would be able to
+help me to an independent life. I could write to her—or telegraph. Write, I
+think. I could scarcely explain in a telegram. I know she would help me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the circumstances.
+“In that case,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if you don’t mind trusting yourself to a
+stranger, we might continue as we are perhaps. For a day or so. Until you
+heard.” (Suppose thirty shillings a day, that gives four days, say four
+thirties is hun’ and twenty, six quid,—well, three days, say; four ten.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are very good to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His expression was eloquent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well, then, and thank you. It’s wonderful—it’s more than I deserve that
+you—” She dropped the theme abruptly. “What was our bill at Chichester?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There was a brief
+discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her insistence in paying. She carried
+her point. Their talk came round to their immediate plans for the day. They
+decided to ride easily, through Havant, and stop, perhaps, at Fareham or
+Southampton. For the previous day had tried them both. Holding the map extended
+on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver’s eye fell by chance on the bicycle at his feet.
+“That bicycle,” he remarked, quite irrelevantly, “wouldn’t look the same
+machine if I got a big, double Elarum instead of that little bell.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jest a thought.” A pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very well, then,—Havant and lunch,” said Jessie, rising.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that machine,” said
+Hoopdriver. “Because it IS stealing it, you know, come to think of it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you—I will tell the whole world—if need
+be.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I believe you would,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. “You’re plucky
+enough—goodness knows.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and picked up her
+machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road. Then he took his own. He
+paused, regarding it. “I say!” said he. “How’d this bike look, now, if it was
+enamelled grey?” She looked over her shoulder at his grave face. “Why try and
+hide it in that way?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was jest a passing thought,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily. “Didn’t
+<i>mean</i> anything, you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in a transitory
+manner that the interview had been quite other than his expectation. But that
+was the way with everything in Mr. Hoopdriver’s experience. And though his
+Wisdom looked grave within him, and Caution was chinking coins, and an ancient
+prejudice in favour of Property shook her head, something else was there too,
+shouting in his mind to drown all these saner considerations, the intoxicating
+thought of riding beside Her all to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days
+after that. Of talking to her familiarly, being brother of all her slender
+strength and freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful time beyond all
+his imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave place to anticipations as
+impalpable and fluctuating and beautiful as the sunset of a summer day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at a small hairdresser’s in the
+main street, a toothbrush, a pair of nail scissors, and a little bottle of
+stuff to darken the moustache, an article the shopman introduced to his
+attention, recommended highly, and sold in the excitement of the occasion.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter29"></a>XXIX.<br/>
+THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION</h2>
+
+<p>
+They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there. Jessie went
+out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then the green height of
+Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving their machines in the village they
+clambered up the slope to the silent red-brick fort that crowned it. Thence
+they had a view of Portsmouth and its cluster of sister towns, the crowded
+narrows of the harbour, the Solent and the Isle of Wight like a blue cloud
+through the hot haze. Jessie by some miracle had become a skirted woman in the
+Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver lounged gracefully on the turf, smoked a Red Herring
+cigarette, and lazily regarded the fortified towns that spread like a map away
+there, the inner line of defence like toy fortifications, a mile off perhaps;
+and beyond that a few little fields and then the beginnings of Landport suburb
+and the smoky cluster of the multitudinous houses. To the right at the head of
+the harbour shallows the town of Porchester rose among the trees. Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s anxiety receded to some remote corner of his brain and that florid
+half-voluntary imagination of his shared the stage with the image of Jessie. He
+began to speculate on the impression he was creating. He took stock of his suit
+in a more optimistic spirit, and reviewed, with some complacency, his actions
+for the last four and twenty hours. Then he was dashed at the thought of her
+infinite perfections.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during the last hour or
+so. She did not look at him directly because he seemed always looking at her.
+Her own troubles had quieted down a little, and her curiosity about the
+chivalrous, worshipping, but singular gentleman in brown, was awakening. She
+had recalled, too, the curious incident of their first encounter. She found him
+hard to explain to herself. You must understand that her knowledge of the world
+was rather less than nothing, having been obtained entirely from books. You
+must not take a certain ignorance for foolishness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French except
+‘<i>sivverplay</i>,’ a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good light table
+joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not such as books informed her
+distinguished the lower classes. His manners seemed to her good on the whole,
+but a trifle over-respectful and out of fashion. He called her ‘Madam’ once. He
+seemed a person of means and leisure, but he knew nothing of recent concerts,
+theatres, or books. How did he spend his time? He was certainly chivalrous, and
+a trifle simpleminded. She fancied (so much is there in a change of costume)
+that she had never met with such a man before. What <i>could</i> he be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Benson,” she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“At your service.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you paint? Are you an artist?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well.” Judicious pause. “I should hardly call myself a Nartist, you know. I
+<i>do</i> paint a little. And sketch, you know—skitty kind of things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really not so much
+lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to add, “In Papers, you know,
+and all that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see,” said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a very
+heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of being a little odd.
+He avoided her eye and bit his grass. “I don’t do <i>much</i>, you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s not your profession?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, no,” said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. “I don’t make a regular thing
+of it, you know. Jest now and then something comes into my head and down it
+goes. No—I’m not a <i>regular</i> artist.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then you don’t practise any regular profession?” Mr. Hoopdriver looked into
+her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He had vague ideas of
+resuming the detective <i>rôle</i>. “It’s like this,” he said, to gain time. “I
+have a sort of profession. Only there’s a kind of reason—nothing much, you
+know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I beg your pardon for cross-examining you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No trouble,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Only I can’t very well—I leave it to you,
+you know. I don’t want to make any mystery of it, so far as that goes.” Should
+he plunge boldly and be a barrister? That anyhow was something pretty good. But
+she might know about barristry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think I could guess what you are.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well—guess,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You come from one of the colonies?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind. “How did you
+find out <i>that?</i>” (the man was born in a London suburb, dear Reader.)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I guessed,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new piece of grass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You were educated up country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Good again,” said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow. “You’re a
+<i>clairvoy</i> ant.” He bit at the grass, smiling. “Which colony was it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That I don’t know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must guess,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“South Africa,” she said. “I strongly incline to South Africa.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“South Africa’s quite a large place,” he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But South Africa is right?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re warm,” said Hoopdriver, “anyhow,” and the while his imagination was
+eagerly exploring this new province.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“South Africa <i>is</i> right?” she insisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive Schreiner’s, you
+know—‘The Story of an African Farm.’ Gregory Rose is so like you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I never read ‘The Story of an African Farm,’” said Hoopdriver. “I must. What’s
+he like?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must read the book. But it’s a wonderful place, with its mixture of races,
+and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old savagery. Were you near Khama?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was a long way off from our place,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “We had a little
+ostrich farm, you know—Just a few hundred of ’em, out Johannesburg way.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“On the Karroo—was it called?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got along very
+well in the old days.—But there’s no ostriches on that farm now.” He had a
+diamond mine in his head, just at the moment, but he stopped and left a little
+to the girl’s imagination. Besides which it had occurred to him with a kind of
+shock that he was lying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What became of the ostriches?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We sold ’em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I have another
+cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap, you know, that we had this
+ostrich farm.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lots,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and beginning to
+feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought upon himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How interesting! Do you know, I’ve never been out of England except to Paris
+and Mentone and Switzerland.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One gets tired of travelling (<i>puff</i>) after a bit, of course.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always stimulates my
+imagination to think of these places. I can fancy all the tall ostriches being
+driven out by a black herd—to graze, I suppose. How do ostriches feed?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said Hoopdriver. “That’s rather various. They have their fancies, you
+know. There’s fruit, of course, and that kind of thing. And chicken food, and
+so forth. You have to use judgment.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you ever see a lion?” “They weren’t very common in our district,” said
+Hoopdriver, quite modestly. “But I’ve seen them, of course. Once or twice.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Fancy seeing a lion! Weren’t you frightened?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that offer of South
+Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the Solent languidly as he settled
+the fate on that lion in his mind. “I scarcely had time,” he said. “It all
+happened in a minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Go on,” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches were.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did you <i>eat</i> ostriches, then? I did not know—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eat them!—often. Very nice they <i>are</i> too, properly stuffed. Well, we—I,
+rather—was going across this paddock, and I saw something standing up in the
+moonlight and looking at me.” Mr. Hoopdriver was in a hot perspiration now. His
+invention seemed to have gone limp. “Luckily I had my father’s gun with me. I
+<i>was</i> scared, though, I can tell you. (<i>Puff.</i>) I just aimed at the
+end that I thought was the head. And let fly. (<i>Puff.</i>) And over it went,
+you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dead?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>As</i> dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I wasn’t
+much over nine at the time, neither.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>I</i> should have screamed and run away.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s some things you can’t run away from,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “To run
+would have been Death.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t think I ever met a lion-killer before,” she remarked, evidently with a
+heightened opinion of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr. Hoopdriver drew
+his watch hastily. “I say,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, showing it to her, “don’t you
+think we ought to be getting on?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his confusion to
+modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens of his conscience, and held
+out his hand to assist her. They walked down into Cosham again, resumed their
+machines, and went on at a leisurely pace along the northern shore of the big
+harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no longer happy. This horrible, this fulsome
+lie, stuck in his memory. Why <i>had</i> he done it? She did not ask for any
+more South African stories, happily—at least until Porchester was reached—but
+talked instead of Living One’s Own Life, and how custom hung on people like
+chains. She talked wonderfully, and set Hoopdriver’s mind fermenting. By the
+Castle, Mr. Hoopdriver caught several crabs in little shore pools. At Fareham
+they stopped for a second tea, and left the place towards the hour of sunset,
+under such invigorating circumstances as you shall in due course hear.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter30"></a>XXX.<br/>
+THE RESCUE EXPEDITION</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps, and
+of that distressed beauty, ‘Thomas Plantagenet,’ well known in society, so the
+paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We left them at Midhurst station, if I
+remember rightly, waiting, in a state of fine emotion, for the Chichester
+train. It was clearly understood by the entire Rescue Party that Mrs. Milton
+was bearing up bravely against almost overwhelming grief. The three gentlemen
+outdid one another in sympathetic expedients; they watched her gravely—almost
+tenderly. The substantial Widgery tugged at his moustache, and looked his
+unspeakable feelings at her with those dog-like, brown eyes of his; the slender
+Dangle tugged at <i>his</i> moustache, and did what he could with unsympathetic
+grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no moustache to run any risks with, so he
+folded his arms and talked in a brave, indifferent, bearing-up tone about the
+London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway, just to cheer the poor woman up a
+little. And even Mrs. Milton really felt that exalted melancholy to the very
+bottom of her heart, and tried to show it in a dozen little, delicate, feminine
+ways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester,” said Dangle. “Nothing.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing,” said Widgery, and aside in her ear: “You really ate scarcely
+anything, you know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Their trains are always late,” said Phipps, with his fingers along the edge of
+his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a sub-editor and reviewer, and his
+pride was to be Thomas Plantagenet’s intellectual companion. Widgery, the big
+man, was manager of a bank and a mighty golfer, and his conception of his
+relations to her never came into his mind without those charming old lines,
+“Douglas, Douglas, tender and true,” falling hard upon its heels. His name was
+Douglas-Douglas Widgery. And Phipps, Phipps was a medical student still, and he
+felt that he laid his heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world. She
+was kind to them all in her way, and insisted on their being friends together,
+in spite of a disposition to reciprocal criticism they displayed. Dangle
+thought Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but coarsely the merits of “A Soul
+Untrammelled,” and Widgery thought Dangle lacked humanity—would talk
+insincerely to say a clever thing. Both Dangle and Widgery thought Phipps a bit
+of a cub, and Phipps thought both Dangle and Widgery a couple of Thundering
+Bounders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch,” said Dangle, in the
+train. “After, perhaps. And there’s no sufficient place in the road. So soon as
+we get there, Phipps must inquire at the chief hotels to see if any one
+answering to her description has lunched there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh, <i>I’ll</i> inquire,” said Phipps. “Willingly. I suppose you and Widgery
+will just hang about—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton’s gentle face, and stopped
+abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” said Dangle, “we shan’t <i>hang about</i>, as you put it. There are two
+places in Chichester where tourists might go—the cathedral and a remarkably
+fine museum. I shall go to the cathedral and make an inquiry or so, while
+Widgery—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The museum. Very well. And after that there’s a little thing or two I’ve
+thought of myself,” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to the Red Hotel
+and established her there with some tea. “You are so kind to me,” she said.
+“All of you.” They signified that it was nothing, and dispersed to their
+inquiries. By six they returned, their zeal a little damped, without news.
+Widgery came back with Dangle. Phipps was the last to return. “You’re quite
+sure,” said Widgery, “that there isn’t any flaw in that inference of yours?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite,” said Dangle, rather shortly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” said Widgery, “their starting from Midhurst on the Chichester road
+doesn’t absolutely bind them not to change their minds.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear fellow!—It does. Really it does. You must allow me to have enough
+intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you must. There aren’t any
+cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn aside here? No. Would they turn
+there? Many more things are inevitable than you fancy.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We shall see at once,” said Widgery, at the window. “Here comes Phipps. For my
+own part—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Phipps!” said Mrs. Milton. “Is he hurrying? Does he look—” She rose in her
+eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No news,” said Phipps, entering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah!” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“None?” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said Phipps. “One fellow had got hold of a queer story of a man in
+bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question about this time yesterday.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What question?” said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window. She spoke in a
+low voice, almost a whisper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why—Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dangle caught at his lower lip. “What’s that?” he said. “Yesterday! A man
+asking after her then! What can <i>that</i> mean?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Heaven knows,” said Phipps, sitting down wearily. “You’d better infer.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What kind of man?” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How should I know?—in bicycling costume, the fellow said.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But what height?—What complexion?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Didn’t ask,” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Didn’t ask!</i> Nonsense,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ask him yourself,” said Phipps. “He’s an ostler chap in the White Hart,—short,
+thick-set fellow, with a red face and a crusty manner. Leaning up against the
+stable door. Smells of whiskey. Go and ask him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade over the stuffed
+bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the door. “I might have known.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phipps’ mouth opened and shut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re tired, I’m sure, Mr. Phipps,” said the lady, soothingly. “Let me ring
+for some tea for you.” It suddenly occurred to Phipps that he had lapsed a
+little from his chivalry. “I was a little annoyed at the way he rushed me to do
+all this business,” he said. “But I’d do a hundred times as much if it would
+bring you any nearer to her.” Pause. “I <i>would</i> like a little tea.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t want to raise any false hopes,” said Widgery. “But I do <i>not</i>
+believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle’s a very clever fellow, of course,
+but sometimes these Inferences of his—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tchak!” said Phipps, suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What is it?” said Mrs. Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Something I’ve forgotten. I went right out from here, went to every other
+hotel in the place, and never thought—But never mind. I’ll ask when the waiter
+comes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t mean—” A tap, and the door opened. “Tea, m’m? yes, m’m,” said the
+waiter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One minute,” said Phipps. “Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her brother, sir—a
+young gent.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Brother!” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Thank God!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. “A young gent, sir,” he
+said, “very free with his money. Give the name of Beaumont.” He proceeded to
+some rambling particulars, and was cross-examined by Widgery on the plans of
+the young couple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Havant! Where’s Havant?” said Phipps. “I seem to remember it somewhere.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was the man tall?” said Mrs. Milton, intently, “distinguished looking? with a
+long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well,” said the waiter, and thought. “His moustache, m’m, was scarcely
+long—scrubby more, and young looking.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“About thirty-five, he was?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No, m’m. More like five and twenty. Not that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Dear me!” said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice, fumbling for
+her salts, and showing the finest self-control. “It must have been her
+<i>younger</i> brother—must have been.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That will do, thank you,” said Widgery, officiously, feeling that she would be
+easier under this new surprise if the man were dismissed. The waiter turned to
+go, and almost collided with Dangle, who was entering the room, panting
+excitedly and with a pocket handkerchief held to his right eye. “Hullo!” said
+dangle. “What’s up?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s up with <i>you?</i>” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Nothing—an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of yours. He thought it
+was a plot to annoy him—that the Young Lady in Grey was mythical. Judged from
+your manner. I’ve got a piece of raw meat to keep over it. You have some news,
+I see?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Did the man hit you?” asked Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. “Cannot I do anything?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dangle was heroic. “Only tell me your news,” he said, round the corner of the
+handkerchief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was in this way,” said Phipps, and explained rather sheepishly. While he
+was doing so, with a running fire of commentary from Widgery, the waiter
+brought in a tray of tea. “A time table,” said Dangle, promptly, “for Havant.”
+Mrs. Milton poured two cups, and Phipps and Dangle partook in passover form.
+They caught the train by a hair’s breadth. So to Havant and inquiries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right. In view of the
+fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a steep hill continuously on
+the right-hand side, and the sea on the left, he hit upon a magnificent scheme
+for heading the young folks off. He and Mrs. Milton would go to Fareham,
+Widgery and Phipps should alight one each at the intermediate stations of
+Cosham and Porchester, and come on by the next train if they had no news. If
+they did not come on, a wire to the Fareham post office was to explain why. It
+was Napoleonic, and more than consoled Dangle for the open derision of the
+Havant street boys at the handkerchief which still protected his damaged eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives escaped by a hair’s
+breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor at Fareham, and preparing to
+mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle came round the corner from the station. “It’s
+her!” said Mrs. Milton, and would have screamed. “Hist!” said Dangle, gripping
+the lady’s arm, removing his handkerchief in his excitement, and leaving the
+piece of meat over his eye, an extraordinary appearance which seemed
+unexpectedly to calm her. “Be cool!” said Dangle, glaring under the meat. “They
+must not see us. They will get away else. Were there flys at the station?” The
+young couple mounted and vanished round the corner of the Winchester road. Had
+it not been for the publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would have fainted.
+“<i>Save her!</i>” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah! A conveyance,” said Dangle. “One minute.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to her heart,
+and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten minutes. Emerged. The meat
+had gone now, and one saw the cooling puffiness over his eye. “I will conduct
+you back to the station,” said Dangle; “hurry back here, and pursue them. You
+will meet Widgery and Phipps and tell them I am in pursuit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a hard,
+blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and dreadfully ruffled and
+agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt, most energetic and devoted; but for a
+kindly, helpful manner commend her to Douglas Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving (as well as
+he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing called a gig,
+northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring his swollen eye, was a
+refined-looking little man, and he wore a deerstalker cap and was dressed in
+dark grey. His neck was long and slender. Perhaps you know what gigs are,—huge,
+big, wooden things and very high and the horse, too, was huge and big and high,
+with knobby legs, a long face, a hard mouth, and a whacking trick of pacing.
+Smack, smack, smack, smack it went along the road, and hard by the church it
+shied vigorously at a hooded perambulator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It appears that
+Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton left about upon the Fareham
+platform. The day had irritated him somehow, though he had started with the
+noblest intentions, and he seemed glad to find an outlet for justifiable
+indignation. “He’s such a spasmodic creature,” said Widgery. “Rushing off! And
+I suppose we’re to wait here until he comes back! It’s likely. He’s so
+egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants to mismanage everything himself.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He means to help me,” said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully, touching his
+arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified all at once. “He need not
+prevent ME,” he said, and stopped. “It’s no good talking, you know, and you are
+tired.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can go on,” she said brightly, “if only we find her.” “While I was cooling
+my heels in Cosham I bought a county map.” He produced and opened it. “Here,
+you see, is the road out of Fareham.” He proceeded with the calm deliberation
+of a business man to develop a proposal of taking train forthwith to
+Winchester. “They <i>must</i> be going to Winchester,” he explained. It was
+inevitable. To-morrow Sunday, Winchester a cathedral town, road going nowhere
+else of the slightest importance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But Mr. Dangle?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he will break
+his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It’s scarcely likely a dog-cart,
+especially a hired dog-cart, will overtake bicycles in the cool of the evening.
+Rely upon me, Mrs. Milton—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am in your hands,” she said, with pathetic littleness, looking up at him,
+and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat depressed attitude,
+leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and looking from one speaker to the
+other. The idea of leaving Dangle behind seemed to him an excellent one. “We
+might leave a message at the place where he got the dog-cart,” he suggested,
+when he saw their eyes meeting. There was a cheerful alacrity about all three
+at the proposal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran into the station,
+a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a shouting overhead, the guard stood
+astonished on the platform, and Phipps, thrusting his head out of the window,
+cried, “There he goes!” and sprang out of the carriage. Mrs. Milton, following
+in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it was hidden. Botley station lies in a
+cutting, overhead was the roadway, and across the lemon yellows and flushed
+pinks of the sunset, there whirled a great black mass, a horse like a
+long-nosed chess knight, the upper works of a gig, and Dangle in transit from
+front to back. A monstrous shadow aped him across the cutting. It was the event
+of a second. Dangle seemed to jump, hang in the air momentarily, and vanish,
+and after a moment’s pause came a heart-rending smash. Then two black heads
+running swiftly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Better get out,” said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood fascinated in the
+doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They found Dangle,
+hatless, standing up with cut hands extended, having his hands brushed by an
+officious small boy. A broad, ugly road ran downhill in a long vista, and in
+the distance was a little group of Botley inhabitants holding the big, black
+horse. Even at that distance they could see the expression of conscious pride
+on the monster’s visage. It was as wooden-faced a horse as you can imagine. The
+beasts in the Tower of London, on which the men in armour are perched, are the
+only horses I have ever seen at all like it. However, we are not concerned now
+with the horse, but with Dangle. “Hurt?” asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Dangle!” cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo!” said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. “Glad you’ve come. I may
+want you. Bit of a mess I’m in—eigh? But I’ve caught ’em. At the very place I
+expected, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Caught them!” said Widgery. “Where are they?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Up there,” he said, with a backward motion of his head. “About a mile up the
+hill. I left ’em. I <i>had</i> to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t understand,” said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful look again.
+“Have you found Jessie?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands somewhere. It was like
+this, you know. Came on them suddenly round a corner. Horse shied at the
+bicycles. They were sitting by the roadside botanising flowers. I just had time
+to shout, ‘Jessie Milton, we’ve been looking for you,’ and then that confounded
+brute bolted. I didn’t dare turn round. I had all my work to do to save myself
+being turned over, as it was—so long as I did, I mean. I just shouted, ‘Return
+to your friends. All will be forgiven.’ And off I came, clatter, clatter.
+Whether they heard—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Take me to her</i>,” said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning towards
+Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Certainly,” said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. “How far is it, Dangle?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you know. I say
+though—Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs. Milton.” He turned to
+Phipps. “Phipps, I say, where shall I wash the gravel out? And have a look at
+my knee?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s the station,” said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made a step, and a
+damaged knee became evident. “Take my arm,” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where can we get a conveyance?” asked Widgery of two small boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight,” said Widgery. “It’s a case of a
+horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a harse all right,” said one of the small boys with a movement of the
+head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you know where we can hire traps?” asked Widgery. “Or a cart
+or—anything?” asked Mrs. Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“John Ooker’s gart a cart, but no one can’t ’ire’n,” said the larger of the
+small boys, partially averting his face and staring down the road and making a
+song of it. “And so’s my feyther, for’s leg us broke.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for courtly devotion,
+Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. “I suppose—” she said, timidly.
+“Perhaps if you were to ask Mr. Dangle—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely. “Confound
+Dangle! Hasn’t he messed us up enough? He must needs drive after them in a trap
+to tell them we’re coming, and now you want me to ask him—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped abruptly. “I’ll go
+and ask Dangle,” he said, shortly. “If you wish it.” And went striding into the
+station and down the steps, leaving her in the road under the quiet inspection
+of the two little boys, and with a kind of ballad refrain running through her
+head, “Where are the Knights of the Olden Time?” and feeling tired to death and
+hungry and dusty and out of curl, and, in short, a martyr woman.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter31"></a>XXXI.</h2>
+
+<p>
+It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the fugitives vanished
+into Immensity; how there were no more trains; how Botley stared
+unsympathetically with a palpable disposition to derision, denying conveyances;
+how the landlord of the Heron was suspicious, how the next day was Sunday, and
+the hot summer’s day had crumpled the collar of Phipps and stained the skirts
+of Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the radiant emotions of the whole party. Dangle,
+with sticking-plaster and a black eye, felt the absurdity of the pose of the
+Wounded Knight, and abandoned it after the faintest efforts. Recriminations
+never, perhaps, held the foreground of the talk, but they played like summer
+lightning on the edge of the conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a
+galling sense of the ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most to blame.
+Apparently, too, the worst, which would have made the whole business tragic,
+was not happening. Here was a young woman—young woman do I say? a mere
+girl!—had chosen to leave a comfortable home in Surbiton, and all the delights
+of a refined and intellectual circle, and had rushed off, trailing us after
+her, posing hard, mutually jealous, and now tired and weather-worn, to flick us
+off at last, mere mud from her wheel, into this detestable village beer-house
+on a Saturday night! And she had done it, not for Love and Passion, which are
+serious excuses one may recognise even if one must reprobate, but just for a
+Freak, just for a fantastic Idea; for nothing, in fact, but the outraging of
+Common Sense. Yet withal, such was our restraint, that we talked of her still
+as one much misguided, as one who burthened us with anxiety, as a lamb astray,
+and Mrs. Milton having eaten, continued to show the finest feelings on the
+matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only comfortable
+chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard, horsehair things having
+antimacassars tied to their backs by means of lemon-coloured bows. It was
+different from those dear old talks at Surbiton, somehow. She sat facing the
+window, which was open (the night was so tranquil and warm), and the dim
+light—for we did not use the lamp—suited her admirably. She talked in a voice
+that told you she was tired, and she seemed inclined to state a case against
+herself in the matter of “A Soul Untrammelled.” It was such an evening as might
+live in a sympathetic memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I feel,” she said, “that I am to blame. I have Developed. That first book of
+mine—I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but it has been misunderstood,
+misapplied.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It has,” said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as to be visible
+in the dark. “Deliberately misunderstood.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t say that,” said the lady. “Not deliberately. I try and think that
+critics are honest. After their lights. I was not thinking of critics. But
+she—I mean—” She paused, an interrogation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It is possible,” said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I write a book and state a case. I want people to <i>think</i> as I recommend,
+not to <i>do</i> as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I make it into a
+story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to promulgate Ideas. Then when
+the Ideas have been spread abroad—Things will come about. Only now it is
+madness to fly in the face of the established order. Bernard Shaw, you know,
+has explained that with regard to Socialism. We all know that to earn all you
+consume is right, and that living on invested capital is wrong. Only we cannot
+begin while we are so few. It is Those Others.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Precisely,” said Widgery. “It is Those Others. They must begin first.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And meanwhile you go on banking—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I didn’t, some one else would.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And I live on Mr. Milton’s Lotion while I try to gain a footing in
+Literature.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Try!</i>” said Phipps. “You <i>have</i> done so.” And, “That’s different,”
+said Dangle, at the same time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina Griffiths in my
+book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to life classes and had men
+visitors, but then she was over twenty-one.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman. And Georgina
+Griffiths never flaunted her freedom—on a bicycle, in country places. In this
+country. Where every one is so particular. Fancy, <i>sleeping</i> away from
+home. It’s dreadful—If it gets about it spells ruin for her.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ruin,” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No man would marry a girl like that,” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It must be hushed up,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of individual
+cases. We must weigh each person against his or her circumstances. General
+rules don’t apply—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I often feel the force of that,” said Widgery. “Those are my rules. Of course
+my books—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s different, altogether different,” said Dangle. “A novel deals with
+typical cases.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And life is not typical,” said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and shocked of any
+in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was infectious, and the gathering
+having, as you can easily understand, talked itself weary, dispersed on trivial
+pretences. But not to sleep immediately. Directly Dangle was alone he began,
+with infinite disgust, to scrutinise his darkling eye, for he was a neat-minded
+little man in spite of his energy. The whole business—so near a capture—was
+horribly vexatious. Phipps sat on his bed for some time examining, with equal
+disgust, a collar he would have thought incredible for Sunday twenty-four hours
+before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of even big, fat men with
+dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because he had been so cross to her at
+the station, and because so far he did not feel that he had scored over Dangle.
+Also he was angry with Dangle. And all four of them, being souls living very
+much upon the appearances of things, had a painful, mental middle distance of
+Botley derisive and suspicious, and a remoter background of London humorous,
+and Surbiton speculative. Were they really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter32"></a>XXXII.<br/>
+MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT</h2>
+
+<p>
+As Mr. Dangle had witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him by the side of
+the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr. Dangle’s appearance, Mr.
+Hoopdriver had been learning with great interest that mere roadside flowers had
+names,—star-flowers, wind-stars, St. John’s wort, willow herb, lords and
+ladies, bachelor’s buttons,—most curious names, some of them. “The flowers are
+all different in South Africa, y’know,” he was explaining with a happy fluke of
+his imagination to account for his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by
+clattering sounds and a gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across
+the tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and gesticulating
+behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie by her name, had backed
+towards the hedge for no ostensible reason, and vanished to the accomplishment
+of the Fate that had been written down for him from the very beginning of
+things. Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to stand up and seize their
+machines, before this tumultuous, this swift and wonderful passing of Dangle
+was achieved. He went from side to side of the road,—worse even than the riding
+forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it was,—and vanished round the corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He knew my name,” said Jessie. “Yes—it was Mr. Dangle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was our bicycles did that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver simultaneously, and
+speaking with a certain complacent concern. “I hope he won’t get hurt.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was Mr. Dangle,” repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard this time,
+with a violent start. His eyebrows went up spasmodically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What! someone you know?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He was looking for me,” said Jessie. “I could see. He began to call to me
+before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for his ideas were
+still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs. Milton. Honesty <i>is</i> the best
+policy—often, he thought. He turned his head this way and that. He became
+active. “After us, eigh? Then he’ll come back. He’s gone down that hill, and he
+won’t be able to pull up for a bit, I’m certain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was mounting. Still
+staring at the corner that had swallowed up Dangle, Hoopdriver followed suit.
+And so, just as the sun was setting, they began another flight together,—riding
+now towards Bishops Waltham, with Mr. Hoopdriver in the post of danger—the
+rear—ever and again looking over his shoulder and swerving dangerously as he
+did so. Occasionally Jessie had to slacken her pace. He breathed heavily, and
+hated himself because his mouth fell open. After nearly an hour’s hard riding,
+they found themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of Dangle nor any
+other danger was visible as they rode into the dusky, yellow-lit street. Though
+the bats had been fluttering behind the hedges and the evening star was bright
+while they were still two miles from Winchester, Mr. Hoopdriver pointed out the
+dangers of stopping in such an obvious abiding-place, and gently but firmly
+insisted upon replenishing the lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From
+Winchester, roads branch in every direction, and to turn abruptly westward was
+clearly the way to throw off the chase. As Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad
+and yellow through the twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that
+ride out of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the atmospheric
+effects were the same, the emotions were different. They rode in absolute
+silence, and slowly after they had cleared the outskirts of Winchester. Both of
+them were now nearly tired out,—the level was tedious, and even a little hill a
+burden; and so it came about that in the hamlet of Wallenstock they were
+beguiled to stop and ask for accommodation in an exceptionally
+prosperous-looking village inn. A plausible landlady rose to the occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were prepared, Mr.
+Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and floating in a reek of
+smoke, of three and a half faces—for the edge of the door cut one down—and an
+American cloth-covered table with several glasses and a tankard. And he also
+heard a remark. In the second before he heard that remark, Mr. Hoopdriver had
+been a proud and happy man, to particularize, a baronet’s heir
+<i>incognito</i>. He had surrendered their bicycles to the odd man of the place
+with infinite easy dignity, and had bowingly opened the door for Jessie. “Who’s
+that, then?” he imagined people saying; and then, “Some’n pretty well orf—judge
+by the bicycles.” Then the imaginary spectators would fall a-talking of the
+fashionableness of bicycling,—how judges and stockbrokers and actresses and, in
+fact, all the best people rode, and how that it was often the fancy of such
+great folk to shun the big hotels, the adulation of urban crowds, and seek,
+<i>incognito</i>, the cosy quaintnesses of village life. Then, maybe, they
+would think of a certain nameless air of distinction about the lady who had
+stepped across the doorway, and about the handsome, flaxen-moustached,
+blue-eyed Cavalier who had followed her in, and they would look one to another.
+“Tell you what it is,” one of the village elders would say—just as they do in
+novels—voicing the thought of all, in a low, impressive tone: “There’s such a
+thin’ as entertaining barranets unawares—not to mention no higher things—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr. Hoopdriver’s head the
+moment before he heard that remark. But the remark toppled him headlong. What
+the precise remark was need not concern us. It was a casual piece of such
+satire as Strephon delights in. Should you be curious, dear lady, as to its
+nature, you have merely to dress yourself in a really modern cycling costume,
+get one of the feeblest-looking of your men to escort you, and ride out, next
+Saturday evening, to any public house where healthy, homely people gather
+together. Then you will hear quite a lot of the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver
+heard. More, possibly, than you will desire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated an entire
+disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it shattered all the gorgeous
+imaginative fabric his mind had been rejoicing in. All that foolish happiness
+vanished like a dream. And there was nothing to show for it, as there is
+nothing to show for any spiteful remark that has ever been made. Perhaps the
+man who said the thing had a gleam of satisfaction at the idea of taking a
+complacent-looking fool down a peg, but it is just as possible he did not know
+at the time that his stray shot had hit. He had thrown it as a boy throws a
+stone at a bird. And it not only demolished a foolish, happy conceit, but it
+wounded. It touched Jessie grossly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing; but during the
+supper they had in the little private dining-room, though she talked
+cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of indistinct conversation, and now and
+then laughter, came in from the inn parlor through the pelargoniums in the open
+window. Hoopdriver felt it must all be in the same strain,—at her expense and
+his. He answered her abstractedly. She was tired, she said, and presently went
+to her room. Mr. Hoopdriver, in his courtly way, opened the door for her and
+bowed her out. He stood listening and fearing some new offence as she went
+upstairs, and round the bend where the barometer hung beneath the stuffed
+birds. Then he went back to the room, and stood on the hearthrug before the
+paper fireplace ornament. “Cads!” he said in a scathing undertone, as a fresh
+burst of laughter came floating in. All through supper he had been composing
+stinging repartee, a blistering speech of denunciation to be presently
+delivered. He would rate them as a nobleman should: “Call themselves
+Englishmen, indeed, and insult a woman!” he would say; take the names and
+addresses perhaps, threaten to speak to the Lord of the Manor, promise to let
+them hear from him again, and so out with consternation in his wake. It really
+ought to be done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Teach ’em better,” he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache painfully. What
+was it? He revived the objectionable remark for his own exasperation, and then
+went over the heads of his speech again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and went back to
+the hearthrug. He wouldn’t—after all. Yet was he not a Knight Errant? Should
+such men go unreproved, unchecked, by wandering baronets <i>incognito?</i>
+Magnanimity? Look at it in that way? Churls beneath one’s notice? No; merely a
+cowardly subterfuge. He <i>would</i> after all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even as he went
+towards the door again. But he only went on the more resolutely. He crossed the
+hall, by the bar, and entered the room from which the remark had proceeded. He
+opened the door abruptly and stood scowling on them in the doorway. “You’ll
+only make a mess of it,” remarked the internal sceptic. There were five men in
+the room altogether: a fat person, with a long pipe and a great number of
+chins, in an armchair by the fireplace, who wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good
+evening very affably; a young fellow smoking a cutty and displaying crossed
+legs with gaiters; a little, bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged,
+comfortable man with bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket; and a fair young
+man, very genteel in a yellowish-brown ready-made suit and a white tie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“H’m,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And then in a
+forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties, “Good evening.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very pleasant day we’ve been ’aving,” said the fair young man with the white
+tie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair, he planted it
+with great deliberation where he faced the fireplace, and sat down. Let’s
+see—how did that speech begin?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very pleasant roads about here,” said the fair young man with the white tie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin somehow. “The
+roads about here are all right, and the weather about here is all right, but
+what I’ve come in here to say is—there’s some damned unpleasant people—damned
+unpleasant people!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Oh!” said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a mental inventory
+of his pearl buttons as he spoke. “How’s that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his elbows with extreme
+angularity. In his heart he was raving at his idiotic folly at thus bearding
+these lions,—indisputably they <i>were</i> lions,—but he had to go through with
+it now. Heaven send, his breath, which was already getting a trifle spasmodic,
+did not suddenly give out. He fixed his eye on the face of the fat man with the
+chins, and spoke in a low, impressive voice. “I came here, sir,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, and paused to inflate his cheeks, “with a lady.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Very nice lady,” said the man with the gaiters, putting his head on one side
+to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind the curvature of his calf.
+“Very nice lady indeed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I came here,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “with a lady.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We saw you did, bless you,” said the fat man with the chins, in a curious
+wheezy voice. “I don’t see there’s anything so very extraordinary in that. One
+’ud think we hadn’t eyes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. “I came, here, sir—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’ve ’eard that,” said the little man with the beard, sharply and went off
+into an amiable chuckle. “We know it by ’art,” said the little man, elaborating
+the point.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly at the little
+man with the beard, and tried to recover his discourse. A pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You were saying,” said the fair young man with the white tie, speaking very
+politely, “that you came here with a lady.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A lady,” meditated the gaiter gazer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another with keen,
+bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been scored, and stimulated Mr.
+Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him with an expectant regard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Some dirty cad,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his discourse, and
+suddenly growing extremely fierce, “made a remark as we went by this door.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Steady on!” said the old gentleman with many chins. “Steady on! Don’t you go
+a-calling us names, please.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One minute!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t I began calling names.” (“Who
+did?” said the man with the chins.) “I’m not calling any of you dirty cads.
+Don’t run away with that impression. Only some person in this room made a
+remark that showed he wasn’t fit to wipe boots on, and, with all due deference
+to such gentlemen as <i>are</i> gentlemen” (Mr. Hoopdriver looked round for
+moral support), “I want to know which it was.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Meanin’?” said the fair young man in the white tie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That I’m going to wipe my boots on ’im straight away,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his throat—than which threat of
+personal violence nothing had been further from his thoughts on entering the
+room. He said this because he could think of nothing else to say, and stuck out
+his elbows truculently to hide the sinking of his heart. It is curious how
+situations run away with us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Ullo, Charlie!” said the little man, and “My eye!” said the owner of the
+chins. “You’re going to wipe your boots on ’im?” said the fair young man, in a
+tone of mild surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared in the young
+man’s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s fair and reasonable,” said the man in the velveteen jacket; “if you
+can.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man in the white
+tie. “Of course, if you can’t find out which it is, I suppose you’re prepared
+to wipe your boots in a liberal way on everybody in the room,” said this young
+man, in the same tone of impersonal question. “This gentleman, the champion
+lightweight—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Own up, Charlie,” said the young man with the gaiters, looking up for a
+moment. “And don’t go a-dragging in your betters. It’s fair and square. You
+can’t get out of it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Was it this—gent?” began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” said the young man in the white tie, “when it comes to talking of
+wiping boots—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not talking; I’m going to do it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists; they were
+spectators. He would have to go through with it now. But this tone of personal
+aggression on the maker of the remark had somehow got rid of the oppressive
+feeling of Hoopdriver <i>contra mundum</i>. Apparently, he would have to fight
+someone. Would he get a black eye? Would he get very much hurt? Pray goodness
+it wasn’t that sturdy chap in the gaiters! Should he rise and begin? What would
+she think if he brought a black eye to breakfast to-morrow? “Is this the man?”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a business-like calm, and arms more angular than
+ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Eat ’im!” said the little man with the beard; “eat ’im straight orf.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Steady on!” said the young man in the white tie. “Steady on a minute. If I did
+happen to say—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You did, did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Backing out of it, Charlie?” said the young man with the gaiters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a bit,” said Charlie. “Surely we can pass a bit of a joke—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Bray-vo!” said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Charlie <i>is</i> a bit too free with his jokes,” said the little man with the
+beard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s downright disgusting,” said Hoopdriver, falling back upon his speech. “A
+lady can’t ride a bicycle in a country road, or wear a dress a little out of
+the ordinary, but every dirty little greaser must needs go shouting insults—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>I</i> didn’t know the young lady would hear what I said,” said Charlie.
+“Surely one can speak friendly to one’s friends. How was I to know the door was
+open—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible, more
+seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself, and his spirits
+rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough lesson. “Of <i>course</i> you
+knew the door was open,” he retorted indignantly. “Of <i>course</i> you thought
+we should hear what you said. Don’t go telling lies about it. It’s no good your
+saying things like that. You’ve had your fun, and you meant to have your fun.
+And I mean to make an example of you, Sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ginger beer,” said the little man with the beard, in a confidential tone to
+the velveteen jacket, “is regular up this ’ot weather. Bustin’ its bottles it
+is everywhere.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What’s the good of scrapping about in a public-house?” said Charlie, appealing
+to the company. “A fair fight without interruptions, now, I <i>wouldn’t</i>
+mind, if the gentleman’s so disposed.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew truculent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Where you like,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “jest wherever you like.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You insulted the gent,” said the man in velveteen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t be a bloomin’ funk, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “Why, you got a
+stone of him, if you got an ounce.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What I say, is this,” said the gentleman with the excessive chins, trying to
+get a hearing by banging his chair arms. “If Charlie goes saying things, he
+ought to back ’em up. That’s what I say. I don’t mind his sayin’ such things ’t
+all, but he ought to be prepared to back ’em up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll <i>back</i> ’em up all right,” said Charlie, with extremely bitter
+emphasis on ‘back.’ “If the gentleman likes to come Toosday week—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Rot!” chopped in Hoopdriver. “Now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Ear, ’ear,” said the owner of the chins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day,” said the man
+in the velveteen coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You got to do it, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “It’s no good.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s like this,” said Charlie, appealing to everyone except Hoopdriver.
+“Here’s me, got to take in her ladyship’s dinner to-morrow night. How should I
+look with a black eye? And going round with the carriage with a split lip?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If you don’t want your face sp’iled, Charlie, why don’t you keep your mouth
+shut?” said the person in gaiters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Exactly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great fierceness. “Why
+don’t you shut your ugly mouth?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s as much as my situation’s worth,” protested Charlie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You should have thought of that before,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s no occasion to be so thunderin’ ’ot about it. I only meant the thing
+joking,” said Charlie. “<i>As</i> one gentleman to another, I’m very sorry if
+the gentleman’s annoyed—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his moustache. He felt
+that Charlie’s recognition of his gentlemanliness was at any rate a redeeming
+feature. But it became his pose to ride hard and heavy over the routed foe. He
+shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re regular abject,” the man in gaiters was saying to Charlie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More confusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Only don’t think I’m afraid,—not of a spindle-legged cuss like him,” shouted
+Charlie. “Because I ain’t.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Change of front,” thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. “Where are we going?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t sit there and be abusive,” said the man in velveteen. “He’s offered to
+hit you, and if I was him, I’d hit you now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All right, then,” said Charlie, with a sudden change of front and springing to
+his feet. “If I must, I must. Now, then!” At that, Hoopdriver, the child of
+Fate, rose too, with a horrible sense that his internal monitor was right.
+Things had taken a turn. He had made a mess of it, and now there was nothing
+for it, so far as he could see, but to hit the man at once. He and Charlie
+stood six feet apart, with a table between, both very breathless and fierce. A
+vulgar fight in a public-house, and with what was only too palpably a footman!
+Good Heavens! And this was the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the juice
+had it all happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But before the brawl
+could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened. “Not here,” he said,
+stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was standing up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Charlie’s artful,” said the little man with the beard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Buller’s yard,” said the man with the gaiters, taking the control of the
+entire affair with the easy readiness of an accomplished practitioner. “If the
+gentleman <i>don’t</i> mind.” Buller’s yard, it seemed, was the very place.
+“We’ll do the thing regular and decent, <i>if</i> you please.” And before he
+completely realized what was happening, Hoopdriver was being marched out
+through the back premises of the inn, to the first and only fight with fists
+that was ever to glorify his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr. Hoopdriver was
+quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But inwardly he was a chaos of
+conflicting purposes. It was extraordinary how things happened. One remark had
+trod so closely on the heels of another, that he had had the greatest
+difficulty in following the development of the business. He distinctly
+remembered himself walking across from one room to the other,—a dignified, even
+an aristocratic figure, primed with considered eloquence, intent upon a
+scathing remonstrance to these wretched yokels, regarding their manners. Then
+incident had flickered into incident until here he was out in a moonlit lane,—a
+slight, dark figure in a group of larger, indistinct figures,—marching in a
+quiet, business-like way towards some unknown horror at Buller’s yard. Fists!
+It was astonishing. It was terrible! In front of him was the pallid figure of
+Charles, and he saw that the man in gaiters held Charles kindly but firmly by
+the arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s blasted rot,” Charles was saying, “getting up a fight just for a thing
+like that; all very well for ’im. ’E’s got ’is ’olidays; ’e ’asn’t no blessed
+dinner to take up to-morrow night like I ’ave.—No need to numb my arm,
+<i>is</i> there?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went into Buller’s yard through gates. There were sheds in Buller’s
+yard—sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not solve—a smell of cows, and a
+pump stood out clear and black, throwing a clear black shadow on the
+whitewashed wall. And here it was his face was to be battered to a pulp. He
+knew this was the uttermost folly, to stand up here and be pounded, but the way
+out of it was beyond his imagining. Yet afterwards—? Could he ever face her
+again? He patted his Norfolk jacket and took his ground with his back to the
+gate. How did one square? So? Suppose one were to turn and run even now, run
+straight back to the inn and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn’t make
+him come out—anyhow. He could prosecute them for assault if they did. How did
+one set about prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with his face ghastly
+white under the moon, squaring in front of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him. Then he hit
+with his right and with the violence of despair. It was a hit of his own
+devising,—an impromptu,—but it chanced to coincide with the regulation hook hit
+at the head. He perceived with a leap of exultation that the thing his fist had
+met was the jawbone of Charles. It was the sole gleam of pleasure he
+experienced during the fight, and it was quite momentary. He had hardly got
+home upon Charles before he was struck in the chest and whirled backward. He
+had the greatest difficulty in keeping his feet. He felt that his heart was
+smashed flat. “Gord darm!” said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind
+him. As Mr. Hoopdriver staggered, Charles gave a loud and fear-compelling cry.
+He seemed to tower over Hoopdriver in the moonlight. Both his fists were
+whirling. It was annihilation coming—no less. Mr. Hoopdriver ducked perhaps and
+certainly gave ground to the right, hit, and missed. Charles swept round to the
+left, missing generously. A blow glanced over Mr. Hoopdriver’s left ear, and
+the flanking movement was completed. Another blow behind the ear. Heaven and
+earth spun furiously round Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he became aware of a figure
+in a light suit shooting violently through an open gate into the night. The man
+in gaiters sprang forward past Mr. Hoopdriver, but too late to intercept the
+fugitive. There were shouts, laughter, and Mr. Hoopdriver, still solemnly
+squaring, realized the great and wonderful truth—Charles had fled. He,
+Hoopdriver, had fought and, by all the rules of war, had won.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him,” the toothless little man
+with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly friendly manner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The fact of it is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road to Salisbury,
+and with the sound of distant church bells in his ears, “I had to give the
+fellow a lesson; simply had to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people about,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“These louts get unbearable,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “If now and then we didn’t
+give them a lesson,—well, a lady cyclist in the roads would be an
+impossibility.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I suppose every woman shrinks from violence,” said Jessie. “I suppose men
+<i>are</i> braver—in a way—than women. It seems to me—I can’t imagine—how one
+could bring oneself to face a roomful of rough characters, pick out the
+bravest, and give him an exemplary thrashing. I quail at the idea. I thought
+only Ouida’s guardsmen did things like that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was nothing more than my juty—as a gentleman,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But to walk straight into the face of danger!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a particle of
+cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter33"></a>XXXIII.<br/>
+THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER</h2>
+
+<p>
+On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting at the Golden
+Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of an elaborate doubling
+movement through Dorsetshire towards Ringwood, where Jessie anticipated an
+answer from her schoolmistress friend. By this time they had been nearly sixty
+hours together, and you will understand that Mr. Hoopdriver’s feelings had
+undergone a considerable intensification and development. At first Jessie had
+been only an impressionist sketch upon his mind, something feminine, active,
+and dazzling, something emphatically “above” him, cast into his company by a
+kindly fate. His chief idea, at the outset, as you know, had been to live up to
+her level, by pretending to be more exceptional, more wealthy, better educated,
+and, above all, better born than he was. His knowledge of the feminine mind was
+almost entirely derived from the young ladies he had met in business, and in
+that class (as in military society and among gentlemen’s servants) the good old
+tradition of a brutal social exclusiveness is still religiously preserved. He
+had an almost intolerable dread of her thinking him a ‘bounder.’ Later he began
+to perceive the distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a magnificent
+want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract views of the most
+advanced description, and her strength of conviction completely carried
+Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own Life, with emphasis, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to similar resolves. So soon as he grasped
+the tenor of her views, he perceived that he himself had thought as much from
+his earliest years. “Of course,” he remarked, in a flash of sexual pride, “a
+man is freer than a woman. End in the Colonies, y’know, there isn’t half the
+Conventionality you find in society in this country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality, and was quite
+unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded person. He suppressed the
+habits of years and made no proposal to go to church. He discussed church-going
+in a liberal spirit. “It’s jest a habit,” he said, “jest a custom. I don’t see
+what good it does you at all, really.” And he made a lot of excellent jokes at
+the chimney-pot hat, jokes he had read in the <i>Globe</i> ‘turnovers’ on that
+subject. But he showed his gentle breeding by keeping his gloves on all through
+the Sunday’s ride, and ostentatiously throwing away more than half a cigarette
+when they passed a church whose congregation was gathering for afternoon
+service. He cautiously avoided literary topics, except by way of compliment,
+seeing that she was presently to be writing books.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was on Jessie’s initiative that they attended service in the old-fashioned
+gallery of Blandford church. Jessie’s conscience, I may perhaps tell you, was
+now suffering the severest twinges. She perceived clearly that things were not
+working out quite along the lines she had designed. She had read her Olive
+Schreiner and George Egerton, and so forth, with all the want of perfect
+comprehension of one who is still emotionally a girl. She knew the thing to do
+was to have a flat and to go to the British Museum and write leading articles
+for the daily papers until something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable
+person) had kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable horridness,
+all would have been well. Now her only hope was that liberal-minded woman, Miss
+Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her out, highly educated, into the world.
+Miss Mergle had told her at parting to live fearlessly and truly, and had
+further given her a volume of Emerson’s Essays and Motley’s “Dutch Republic,”
+to help her through the rapids of adolescence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie’s feelings for her stepmother’s household at Surbiton amounted to an
+active detestation. There are no graver or more solemn women in the world than
+these clever girls whose scholastic advancement has retarded their feminine
+coquetry. In spite of the advanced tone of ‘Thomas Plantagenet’s’ antimarital
+novel, Jessie had speedily seen through that amiable woman’s amiable defences.
+The variety of pose necessitated by the <i>corps</i> of ‘Men’ annoyed her to an
+altogether unreasonable degree. To return to this life of ridiculous
+unreality—unconditional capitulation to ‘Conventionality’ was an exasperating
+prospect. Yet what else was there to do? You will understand, therefore, that
+at times she was moody (and Mr. Hoopdriver respectfully silent and attentive)
+and at times inclined to eloquent denunciation of the existing order of things.
+She was a Socialist, Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation that he
+went further, intending, thereby, no less than the horrors of anarchism. He
+would have owned up to the destruction of the Winter Palace indeed, had he had
+the faintest idea where the Winter Palace was, and had his assurance amounted
+to certainty that the Winter Palace was destroyed. He agreed with her cordially
+that the position of women was intolerable, but checked himself on the verge of
+the proposition that a girl ought not to expect a fellow to hand down boxes for
+her when he was getting the ‘swap’ from a customer. It was Jessie’s
+preoccupation with her own perplexities, no doubt, that delayed the unveiling
+of Mr. Hoopdriver all through Saturday and Sunday. Once or twice, however,
+there were incidents that put him about terribly—even questions that savoured
+of suspicion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted wakefulness came upon
+him. Unaccountably he realised he was a contemptible liar. All through the
+small hours of Monday he reviewed the tale of his falsehoods, and when he tried
+to turn his mind from that, the financial problem suddenly rose upon him. He
+heard two o’clock strike, and three. It is odd how unhappy some of us are at
+times, when we are at our happiest.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter34"></a>XXXIV.</h2>
+
+<p>
+“Good morning, Madam,” said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the breakfast room
+of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he smiled, bowed, rubbed his
+hands together, and pulled out a chair for her, and rubbed his hands again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face. “Where <i>have</i>
+I seen that before?” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The chair?” said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No—the attitude.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously into his
+face. “And—Madam?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. “A bad habit. Calling ladies
+Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there up
+country—y’know—the ladies—so rare—we call ’em all Madam.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You <i>have</i> some funny habits, brother Chris,” said Jessie. “Before you
+sell your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and stand for
+Parliament—What a fine thing it is to be a man!—you must cure yourself. That
+habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing your hands, and looking expectant.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a habit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I know. But I don’t think it a good one. You don’t mind my telling you?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not a bit. I’m grateful.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation,” said Jessie, looking at
+the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his hand to his moustache and then,
+thinking this might be another habit, checked his arm and stuck his hand into
+his pocket. He felt juiced awkward, to use his private formula. Jessie’s eye
+wandered to the armchair, where a piece of binding was loose, and, possibly to
+carry out her theory of an observant disposition, she turned and asked him for
+a pin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and there, planted
+by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had impounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What an odd place to put pins!” exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s ’andy,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I saw a chap in a shop do it once.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You must have a careful disposition,” she said, over her shoulder, kneeling
+down to the chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“In the centre of Africa—up country, that is—one learns to value pins,” said
+Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause. “There weren’t over many pins in
+Africa. They don’t lie about on the ground there.” His face was now in a fine,
+red glow. Where would the draper break out next? He thrust his hands into his
+coat pockets, then took one out again, furtively removed the second pin and
+dropped it behind him gently. It fell with a loud ‘ping’ on the fender. Happily
+she made no remark, being preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and stood against
+it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were keeping breakfast a
+tremendous time. He took up his rolled serviette, looked closely and
+scrutinisingly at the ring, then put his hand under the fold of the napkin and
+examined the texture, and put the thing down again. Then he had a vague impulse
+to finger his hollow wisdom tooth—happily checked. He suddenly discovered he
+was standing as if the table was a counter, and sat down forthwith. He drummed
+with his hand on the table. He felt dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Breakfast is late,” said Jessie, standing up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t it?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to Ringwood. Then
+silence fell again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing, looked again
+at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the corner of the tablecloth on
+the ends of his fingers, and regarded it. “Fifteen three,” he thought,
+privately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why do you do that?” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>What?</i>” said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s face became quite a bright red. He began pulling his moustache
+nervously. “I know,” he said. “I know. It’s a queer habit, I know. But out
+there, you know, there’s native servants, you know, and—it’s a queer thing to
+talk about—but one has to look at things to see, don’t y’know, whether they’re
+quite clean or not. It’s got to be a habit.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How odd!” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Isn’t it?” mumbled Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I were a Sherlock Holmes,” said Jessie, “I suppose I could have told you
+were a colonial from little things like that. But anyhow, I guessed it, didn’t
+I?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, “you guessed it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add, “unhappily in
+this case you guessed wrong.” Did she suspect? Then, at the psychological
+moment, the girl bumped the door open with her tray and brought in the coffee
+and scrambled eggs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days surged to the top
+of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself away.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter35"></a>XXXV.</h2>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning, sat with his
+cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the coffee. His ears were a bright
+red, and his eyes bright. He took his coffee cup clumsily, cleared his throat,
+suddenly leant back in his chair, and thrust his hands deep into his pockets.
+“I’ll do it,” he said aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do what?” said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee pot. She was
+just beginning her scrambled egg.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Own up.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Own what?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Milton—I’m a liar.” He put his head on one side and regarded her with a
+frown of tremendous resolution. Then in measured accents, and moving his head
+slowly from side to side, he announced, “Ay’m a deraper.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’re a draper? I thought—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You thought wrong. But it’s bound to come up. Pins, attitude, habits—It’s
+plain enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m a draper’s assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a draper’s
+assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A draper’s assistant isn’t a position to be ashamed of,” she said, recovering,
+and not quite understanding yet what this all meant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes, it is,” he said, “for a man, in this country now. To be just another
+man’s hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes you are told, and go to
+church to please customers, and work—There’s no other kind of men stand such
+hours. A drunken bricklayer’s a king to it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But why are you telling me this now?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s important you should know at once.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But, Mr. Benson—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That isn’t all. If you don’t mind my speaking about myself a bit, there’s a
+few things I’d like to tell you. I can’t go on deceiving you. My name’s not
+Benson. <i>Why</i> I told you Benson, I <i>don’t</i> know. Except that I’m a
+kind of fool. Well—I wanted somehow to seem more than I was. My name’s
+Hoopdriver.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And that about South Africa—and that lion.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lies.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lies!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And all the
+reminiscences of the giraffes—lies too. I never rode on no giraffes. I’d be
+afraid.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased his
+conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity. This was a new
+side altogether to the man. “But <i>why</i>,” she began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why did I tell you such things? <i>I</i> don’t know. Silly sort of chap, I
+expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow, now, I want you to know
+the truth.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence. Breakfast untouched. “I thought I’d tell you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I
+suppose it’s snobbishness and all that kind of thing, as much as anything. I
+lay awake pretty near all last night thinking about myself; thinking what a
+got-up imitation of a man I was, and all that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And you haven’t any diamond shares, and you are not going into Parliament, and
+you’re not—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All Lies,” said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. “Lies from beginning to
+end. ’Ow I came to tell ’em I <i>don’t</i> know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stared at him blankly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I never set eyes on Africa in my life,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, completing the
+confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his pocket, and with the
+nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of death is passed, began to drink
+his coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a little surprising,” began Jessie, vaguely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Think it over,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m sorry from the bottom of my heart.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little, and seemed
+lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by contrition and anxiety that
+he consumed an extraordinarily large breakfast out of pure nervousness, and ate
+his scrambled eggs for the most part with the spoon that belonged properly to
+the marmalade. His eyes were gloomily downcast. She glanced at him through her
+eyelashes. Once or twice she struggled with laughter, once or twice she seemed
+to be indignant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know what to think,” she said at last. “I don’t know what to make of
+you—brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that you were perfectly honest. And
+somehow—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I think so still.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Honest—with all those lies!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wonder.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m fair ashamed of myself. But anyhow—I’ve
+stopped deceiving you.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I <i>thought</i>,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “that story of the lion—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t remind me of <i>that</i>.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I thought, somehow, I <i>felt</i>, that the things you said didn’t ring quite
+true.” She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the expression of his face. “Of
+<i>course</i> you are honest,” she said. “How could I ever doubt it? As if
+<i>I</i> had never pretended! I see it all now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast things. He looked
+at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing friendliness in her eyes. He scarcely
+understood at first. He rose, holding the marmalade spoon, and took her
+proffered hand with abject humility. “Lord,” he broke out, “if you aren’t
+enough—but there!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I see it all now.” A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured her humour.
+She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. “You did it,” she said, “because
+you wanted to help me. And you thought I was too Conventional to take help from
+one I might think my social inferior.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That was partly it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How you misunderstood me!” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You don’t mind?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It was noble of you. But I am sorry,” she said, “you should think me likely to
+be ashamed of you because you follow a decent trade.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I didn’t know at first, you see,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He was as useful
+a citizen as could be,—it was proposed and carried,—and his lying was of the
+noblest. And so the breakfast concluded much more happily than his brightest
+expectation, and they rode out of ruddy little Blandford as though no shadow of
+any sort had come between them.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter36"></a>XXXVI.</h2>
+
+<p>
+As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees half-way up a stretch
+of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood, however, Mr. Hoopdriver reopened the
+question of his worldly position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ju think,” he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette from his mouth,
+“that a draper’s shopman <i>is</i> a decent citizen?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why not?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“When he puts people off with what they don’t quite want, for instance?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Need he do that?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Salesmanship,” said Hoopdriver. “Wouldn’t get a crib if he didn’t.—It’s no
+good your arguing. It’s not a particularly honest nor a particularly useful
+trade; it’s not very high up; there’s no freedom and no leisure—seven to
+eight-thirty every day in the week; don’t leave much edge to live on, does
+it?—real workmen laugh at us and educated chaps like bank clerks and
+solicitors’ clerks look down on us. You look respectable outside, and inside
+you are packed in dormitories like convicts, fed on bread and butter and
+bullied like slaves. You’re just superior enough to feel that you’re not
+superior. Without capital there’s no prospects; one draper in a hundred don’t
+even earn enough to marry on; and if he <i>does</i> marry, his G.V. can just
+use him to black boots if he likes, and he daren’t put his back up. That’s
+drapery! And you tell me to be contented. Would <i>you</i> be contented if you
+was a shop girl?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown eyes, and he
+remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he spoke. “I’ve been thinking,” he said, and stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand. There was a
+light in her eyes that made the expression of them tender. Mr. Hoopdriver had
+not looked in her face while he had talked. He had regarded the grass, and
+pointed his remarks with redknuckled hands held open and palms upwards. Now
+they hung limply over his knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I was thinking it this morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course it’s silly.” “Well?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s like this. I’m twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all right to
+fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years behind.—Is it too late? I wasn’t
+so backward. I did algebra, and Latin up to auxiliary verbs, and French
+genders. I got a kind of grounding.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And now you mean, should you go on working?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “That’s it. You can’t do much at drapery without
+capital, you know. But if I could get really educated. I’ve thought
+sometimes...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why not?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. “You think?” he said. “Of
+course. You are a Man. You are free—” She warmed. “I wish I were you to have
+the chance of that struggle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Am I Man <i>enough?</i>” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing himself.
+“There’s that eight years,” he said to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You can make it up. What you call educated men—They’re not going on. You can
+catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing golf, and thinking of clever
+things to say to women like my stepmother, and dining out. You’re in front of
+them already in one thing. They think they know everything. You don’t. And they
+know such little things.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “How you encourage a fellow!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I could only help you,” she said, and left an eloquent hiatus. He became
+pensive again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s pretty evident you don’t think much of a draper,” he said abruptly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another interval. “Hundreds of men,” she said, “have come from the very lowest
+ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and Hugh Miller, a stonemason; and
+plenty of others. Dodsley was a footman—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But drapers! We’re too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats and cuffs
+might get crumpled—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Wasn’t there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard tell of.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Have you ever read ’Hearts Insurgent’?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Never,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context, but suddenly
+broke out with an account of his literary requirements. “The fact is—I’ve read
+precious little. One don’t get much of a chance, situated as I am. We have a
+library at business, and I’ve gone through that. Most Besant I’ve read, and a
+lot of Mrs. Braddon’s and Rider Haggard and Marie Corelli—and, well—a Ouida or
+so. They’re good stories, of course, and first-class writers, but they didn’t
+seem to have much to do with me. But there’s heaps of books one hears talked
+about, I <i>haven’t</i> read.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you read any other books but novels?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can’t get the books. I
+have been to some extension lectures, of course, ‘Lizabethan Dramatists,’ it
+was, but it seemed a little high-flown, you know. And I went and did
+wood-carving at the same place. But it didn’t seem leading nowhere, and I cut
+my thumb and chucked it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his hands limp. “It
+makes me <i>sick</i>,” he said, “to think how I’ve been fooled with. My old
+schoolmaster ought to have a juiced <i>hiding</i>. He’s a thief. He pretended
+to undertake to make a man of me, and he’s stole twenty-three years of my life,
+filled me up with scraps and sweepings. Here I am! I don’t <i>know</i>
+anything, and I can’t <i>do</i> anything, and all the learning time is over.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is it?” she said; but he did not seem to hear her. “My o’ people didn’t know
+any better, and went and paid thirty pounds premium—thirty pounds down to have
+me made <i>this</i>. The G.V. promised to teach me the trade, and he never
+taught me anything but to be a Hand. It’s the way they do with draper’s
+apprentices. If every swindler was locked up—well, you’d have nowhere to buy
+tape and cotton. It’s all very well to bring up Burns and those chaps, but I’m
+not that make. Yet I’m not such muck that I might not have been better—with
+teaching. I wonder what the chaps who sneer and laugh at such as me would be if
+they’d been fooled about as I’ve been. At twenty-three—it’s a long start.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver indeed than him
+of the glorious imaginings. “It’s <i>you</i> done this,” he said. “You’re real.
+And it sets me thinking what I really am, and what I might have been. Suppose
+it was all different—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Make</i> it different.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Work</i>. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ah!” said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his eyes. “And
+even then—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No! It’s not much good. I’m beginning too late.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation ended.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter37"></a>XXXVII.<br/>
+IN THE NEW FOREST</h2>
+
+<p>
+At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment. There was no
+letter for her at the post office. Opposite the hotel, The Chequered Career,
+was a machine shop with a conspicuously second-hand Marlborough Club tandem
+tricycle displayed in the window, together with the announcement that bicycles
+and tricycles were on hire within. The establishment was impressed on Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s mind by the proprietor’s action in coming across the road and
+narrowly inspecting their machines. His action revived a number of disagreeable
+impressions, but, happily, came to nothing. While they were still lunching, a
+tall clergyman, with a heated face, entered the room and sat down at the table
+next to theirs. He was in a kind of holiday costume; that is to say, he had a
+more than usually high collar, fastened behind and rather the worse for the
+weather, and his long-tail coat had been replaced by a black jacket of quite
+remarkable brevity. He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his trouser legs were
+grey with dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw in the place of the
+customary soft felt. He was evidently socially inclined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A most charming day, sir,” he said, in a ringing tenor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Charming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country,” said the
+clergyman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Touring,” explained Mr. Hoopdriver. “I can imagine that, with a properly oiled
+machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way of seeing the country.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” said Mr. Hoopdriver; “it isn’t half a bad way of getting about.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be, I should
+imagine, a delightful bond.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Quite so,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Do you ride a tandem?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No—we’re separate,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The motion through the air is indisputably of a very exhilarating
+description.” With that decision, the clergyman turned to give his orders to
+the attendant, in a firm, authoritative voice, for a cup of tea, two gelatine
+lozenges, bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow. “The gelatine lozenges I
+must have. I require them to precipitate the tannin in my tea,” he remarked to
+the room at large, and folding his hands, remained for some time with his chin
+thereon, staring fixedly at a little picture over Mr. Hoopdriver’s head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I myself am a cyclist,” said the clergyman, descending suddenly upon Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Indeed!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. “What machine, may I
+ask?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I regret to say,
+considered too—how shall I put it?—<i>flippant</i> by my parishioners. So I
+have a tricycle. I have just been hauling it hither.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hauling!” said Jessie, surprised.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb. Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face passed through several phases of surprise. Then he saw the
+explanation. “Had an accident?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to go round. I
+found myself about five miles from here with an absolutely immobile machine.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ow!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie glanced at
+this insane person.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It appears,” said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he had created,
+“that my man carefully washed out the bearings with paraffin, and let the
+machine dry without oiling it again. The consequence was that they became
+heated to a considerable temperature and jammed. Even at the outset the machine
+ran stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being inclined to ascribe this stiffness
+to my own lassitude, merely redoubled my exertions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Ot work all round,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of life to do
+whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe, indeed, that the bearings
+became red hot. Finally one of the wheels jammed together. A side wheel it was,
+so that its stoppage necessitated an inversion of the entire apparatus,—an
+inversion in which I participated.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Meaning, that you went over?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much amused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly. You may
+understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I expostulated—playfully, of course.
+Happily the road was not overlooked. Finally, the entire apparatus became
+rigid, and I abandoned the unequal contest. For all practical purposes the
+tricycle was no better than a heavy chair without castors. It was a case of
+hauling or carrying.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clergyman’s nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Five miles,” said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread and butter
+vigorously. “Happily,” he said, “I am an eupeptic, energetic sort of person on
+principle. I would all men were likewise.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the best way,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation gave
+precedence to bread and butter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Gelatine,” said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea thoughtfully,
+“precipitates the tannin in one’s tea and renders it easy of digestion.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That’s a useful sort of thing to know,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are altogether welcome,” said the clergyman, biting generously at two
+pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace towards Stoney
+Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South Africa being in abeyance.
+Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by disagreeable thoughts. He had changed the last
+sovereign at Ringwood. The fact had come upon him suddenly. Now too late he was
+reflecting upon his resources. There was twenty pounds or more in the post
+office savings bank in Putney, but his book was locked up in his box at the
+Antrobus establishment. Else this infatuated man would certainly have
+surreptitiously withdrawn the entire sum in order to prolong these journeyings
+even for a few days. As it was, the shadow of the end fell across his
+happiness. Strangely enough, in spite of his anxiety and the morning’s
+collapse, he was still in a curious emotional state that was certainly not
+misery. He was forgetting his imaginings and posings, forgetting himself
+altogether in his growing appreciation of his companion. The most tangible
+trouble in his mind was the necessity of breaking the matter to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was reached, and
+they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little oak tree. Near the crest
+the road looped on itself, so that, looking back, it sloped below them up to
+the right and then came towards them. About them grew a rich heather with
+stunted oaks on the edge of a deep ditch along the roadside, and this road was
+sandy; below the steepness of the hill, however, it was grey and barred with
+shadows, for there the trees clustered thick and tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled
+clumsily with his cigarettes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a thing I got to tell you,” he said, trying to be perfectly calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes?” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’d like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y’know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m very unsettled,” said Jessie. “You are thinking of writing Books?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Yes.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How long’d it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t know at all. I believe there are a great many women journalists and
+sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists. But I suppose it takes time.
+Women, you know, edit most papers nowadays, George Egerton says. I ought, I
+suppose, to communicate with a literary agent.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Of course,” said Hoopdriver, “it’s very suitable work. Not being heavy like
+the drapery.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s heavy brain labour, you must remember.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“That wouldn’t hurt <i>you</i>,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a compliment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s like this,” he said, ending a pause. “It’s a juiced nuisance alluding to
+these matters, but—we got very little more money.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her. “I was
+counting, of course, on your friend’s writing and your being able to take some
+action to-day.” ‘Take some action’ was a phrase he had learnt at his last
+‘swop.’
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Money,” said Jessie. “I didn’t think of money.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Hullo! Here’s a tandem bicycle,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly, and pointing
+with his cigarette.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the trees at the
+foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly over their work and made a
+gallant but unsuccessful attempt to take the rise. The machine was evidently
+too highly geared for hill climbing, and presently the rearmost rider rose on
+his saddle and hopped off, leaving his companion to any fate he found proper.
+The foremost rider was a man unused to such machines and apparently undecided
+how to dismount. He wabbled a few yards up the hill with a long tail of machine
+wabbling behind him. Finally, he made an attempt to jump off as one does off a
+single bicycle, hit his boot against the backbone, and collapsed heavily,
+falling on his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood up. “Dear me!” she said. “I hope he isn’t hurt.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up and wheeled out
+of the way, and then the fallen rider, being assisted, got up slowly and stood
+rubbing his arm. No serious injury seemed to be done to the man, and the couple
+presently turned their attention to the machine by the roadside. They were not
+in cycling clothes Hoopdriver observed. One wore the grotesque raiment for
+which the Cockney discovery of the game of golf seems indirectly blamable. Even
+at this distance the flopping flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at
+the top of his calves, and the chequering of his stockings were perceptible.
+The other, the rear rider, was a slender little man in grey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Amatoors,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her eyes. She no
+longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering at the machine down below
+there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“How much have you?” she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins, counted them
+with his left index finger, and held them out to her. “Thirteen four half,”
+said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Every penny.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I have half a sovereign,” she said. “Our bill wherever we stop—” The hiatus
+was more eloquent than many words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s a juiced nuisance.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Money,” said Jessie. “Is it possible—Surely! Conventionality! May only people
+of means—Live their own Lives? I never thought ...”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Here’s some more cyclists coming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from among the
+trees emerged the massive bulk of a ‘Marlborough Club’ tandem, ridden by a
+slender woman in grey and a burly man in a Norfolk jacket. Following close upon
+this came a lank black figure in a piebald straw hat, riding a tricycle of
+antiquated pattern with two large wheels in front. The man in grey remained
+bowed over the bicycle, with his stomach resting on the saddle, but his
+companion stood up and addressed some remark to the tricycle riders. Then it
+seemed as if he pointed up hill to where Mr. Hoopdriver and his companion stood
+side by side. A still odder thing followed; the lady in grey took out her
+handkerchief, appeared to wave it for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from
+her companion the white signal vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely,” said Jessie, peering under her hand. “It’s never—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering elaborately from side
+to side to ease the ascent. It was evident, from his heaving shoulders and
+depressed head, that the burly gentleman was exerting himself. The clerical
+person on the tricycle assumed the shape of a note of interrogation. Then on
+the heels of this procession came a dogcart driven by a man in a billycock hat
+and containing a lady in dark green.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Looks like some sort of excursion,” said Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand. “Surely,” she
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clergyman’s efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious jerking
+motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself, and he partly
+dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his machine up hill again immediately
+and began to wheel it. Then the burly gentleman dismounted, and with a courtly
+attentiveness assisted the lady in grey to alight. There was some little
+difference of opinion as to assistance, she so clearly wished to help push.
+Finally she gave in, and the burly gentleman began impelling the machine up
+hill by his own unaided strength. His face made a dot of brilliant colour among
+the greys and greens at the foot of the hill. The tandem bicycle was now, it
+seems, repaired, and this joined the tail of the procession, its riders walking
+behind the dogcart, from which the lady in green and the driver had now
+descended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie. “Those people—I’m almost sure—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he turned to
+pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and assisted her to mount.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people coming up the
+hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie’s doubts at once. Two
+handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted. The riders of the tandem bicycle
+began to run it up hill, past the other vehicles. But our young people did not
+wait for further developments of the pursuit. In another moment they were out
+of sight, riding hard down a steady incline towards Stoney Cross.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill brow, Jessie
+looked back and saw the tandem rising over the crest, with its rear rider just
+tumbling into the saddle. “They’re coming,” she said, and bent her head over
+her handles in true professional style.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw ahead of them a
+number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the roadway. Involuntarily they
+slackened. “Shoo!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and the ponies kicked up their heels
+derisively. At that Mr. Hoopdriver lost his temper and charged at them,
+narrowly missed one, and sent them jumping the ditch into the bracken under the
+trees, leaving the way clear for Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew heavy, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s breath sounded like a saw. The tandem appeared, making frightful
+exertions, at the foot, while the chase was still climbing. Then, thank Heaven!
+a crest and a stretch of up and down road, whose only disadvantage was its
+pitiless exposure to the afternoon sun. The tandem apparently dismounted at the
+hill, and did not appear against the hot blue sky until they were already near
+some trees and a good mile away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“We’re gaining,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of perspiration
+dropping from brow to cheek. “That hill—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly spent.
+Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of shame prolonged the
+liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From that point the tandem grained upon
+them steadily. At the Rufus Stone, it was scarcely a hundred yards behind. Then
+one desperate spurt, and they found themselves upon a steady downhill stretch
+among thick pine woods. Downhill nothing can beat a highly geared tandem
+bicycle. Automatically Mr. Hoopdriver put up his feet, and Jessie slackened her
+pace. In another moment they heard the swish of the fat pneumatics behind them,
+and the tandem passed Hoopdriver and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver felt a
+mad impulse to collide with this abominable machine as it passed him. His only
+consolation was to notice that its riders, riding violently, were quite as
+dishevelled as himself and smothered in sandy white dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders shot panting past
+them downhill. “Brake,” said Dangle, who was riding behind, and stood up on the
+pedals. For a moment the velocity of the thing increased, and then they saw the
+dust fly from the brake, as it came down on the front tire. Dangle’s right leg
+floundered in the air as he came off in the road. The tandem wobbled. “Hold
+it!” cried Phipps over his shoulder, going on downhill. “I can’t get off if you
+don’t hold it.” He put on the brake until the machine stopped almost dead, and
+then feeling unstable began to pedal again. Dangle shouted after him. “Put out
+your foot, man,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards or more beyond
+their quarry. Then Phipps realized his possibilities, slacked up with the
+brake, and let the thing go over sideways, dropping on to his right foot. With
+his left leg still over the saddle, and still holding the handles, he looked
+over his shoulder and began addressing uncomplimentary remarks to Dangle. “You
+only think of yourself,” said Phipps, with a florid face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They have forgotten us,” said Jessie, turning her machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There was a road at the top of the hill—to Lyndhurst,” said Hoopdriver,
+following her example.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s no good. There’s the money. We must give it up. But let us go back to
+that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don’t see why we should be led captive.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her companion mounted
+and rode quietly back up the hill again. As they dismounted at the hotel
+entrance, the tandem overtook them, and immediately afterwards the dogcart came
+into view in pursuit. Dangle jumped off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Milton, I believe,” said Dangle, panting and raising a damp cap from his
+wet and matted hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I <i>say</i>,” said Phipps, receding involuntarily. “Don’t go doing it again,
+Dangle. <i>Help</i> a chap.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“One minute,” said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the hotel entrance.
+Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp but defiant.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter38"></a>XXXVIII.<br/>
+AT THE RUFUS STONE</h2>
+
+<p>
+He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps was
+abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now wheeling,
+but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. “Miss Milton?” he said briefly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Miss Milton within?” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>And</i> not to be disturved,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are a scoundrel, sir,” said Mr. Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Et your service,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “She awaits ’er stepmother, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Dangle hesitated. “She will be here immediately,” he said. “Here is her
+friend, Miss Mergle.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense calm,
+thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of those fatal
+hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude was merely vulgarly
+defiant; he withdrew both, returned one and pulled at the insufficient
+moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in confusion. “Is this the
+man?” she said to Dangle, and forthwith, “How <i>dare</i> you, sir? How dare
+you face me? That poor girl!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You will permit me to observe,” began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid drawl,
+seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a romantic villain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Ugh,” said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff with her
+extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the hall of the hotel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Let me pass,” said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. “How dare you resist
+my passage?” and so swept by him and into the dining-room, wherein Jessie had
+sought refuge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand, Dangle and
+Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle’s activity, came in upon her
+heels, Phipps leading. “How dare you prevent that lady passing?” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle’s sense, dangerous, but he made
+no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the passage, guardant.
+“It is men of your stamp, sir,” said Phipps, “who discredit manhood.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. “Who the juice are you?”
+shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Who are <i>you</i>, sir?” retorted Phipps. “Who are you? That’s the question.
+What are <i>you</i>, and what are you doing, wandering at large with a young
+lady under age?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t speak to him,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me,” said
+Hoopdriver. “Not Likely.” And added fiercely, “And that I tell you, sir.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at one
+another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if the long
+clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but deliberate. “Petticoated
+anachronism,” said the long clergyman in the doorway, apparently still
+suffering from the antiquated prejudice that demanded a third wheel and a black
+coat from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps and Hoopdriver for a moment,
+then extending his hand towards the latter, he waved it up and down three
+times, saying, “Tchak, tchak, tchak,” very deliberately as he did so. Then with
+a concluding “Ugh!” and a gesture of repugnance he passed on into the
+dining-room from which the voice of Miss Mergle was distinctly audible
+remarking that the weather was extremely hot even for the time of year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing effect upon
+Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed by the advent of
+the massive Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Is this the man?” said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special voice for
+the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t hurt him!” said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. “However much wrong he
+has done her—No violence!”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“’Ow many more of you?” said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella stand.
+“Where is she? What has he done with her?” said Mrs. Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’m not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. “So you needn’t think it.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Please don’t worry, Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie, suddenly appearing in the
+door of the dining-room. “I’m here, mother.” Her face was white.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional charge at
+Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery moved as if to
+follow, and hesitated. “You’d better make yourself scarce,” he said to Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shan’t do anything of the kind,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a catching of the
+breath. “I’m here defending that young lady.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You’ve done her enough mischief, I should think,” said Widgery, suddenly
+walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind him, leaving
+Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Clear!” said Phipps, threateningly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I shall go and sit out in the garden,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+“There I shall remain.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t make a row with him,” said Dangle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter39"></a>XXXIX.</h2>
+
+<p>
+So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion is over. In
+the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable collection of wheeled
+instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in grave and stately attitudes,
+and by the driver of a stylish dogcart from Ringwood. In the garden behind, in
+an attitude of nervous prostration, Mr. Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat.
+Through the open window of a private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as
+of men and women in conference. Occasionally something that might have been a
+girlish sob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I fail to see what status Widgery has,” says Dangle, “thrusting himself in
+there.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He takes too much upon himself,” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day,” said Dangle, and
+stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course,” said Dangle, with a
+gloomy magnanimity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the man’s
+chequered legs. “Financially it wouldn’t be half bad.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He’s so dull and heavy,” said Phipps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity, taken the
+chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate Jessie. I regret to have
+to say that my heroine had been appalled by the visible array of public opinion
+against her excursion, to the pitch of tears. She was sitting with flushed
+cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the table opposite to the clergyman. She
+held her handkerchief crumpled up in her extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near
+to her as possible, and occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie’s
+hand, to indicate forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which
+touched Widgery very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B. A.), sat on the
+opposite side near the clergyman. She was the strong-minded schoolmistress to
+whom Jessie had written, and who had immediately precipitated the pursuit upon
+her. She had picked up the clergyman in Ringwood, and had told him everything
+forthwith, having met him once at a British Association meeting. He had
+immediately constituted himself administrator of the entire business. Widgery,
+having been foiled in an attempt to conduct the proceedings, stood with his
+legs wide apart in front of the fireplace ornament, and looked profound and
+sympathetic. Jessie’s account of her adventures was a chary one and given
+amidst frequent interruptions. She surprised herself by skilfully omitting any
+allusion to the Bechamel episode. She completely exonerated Hoopdriver from the
+charge of being more than an accessory to her escapade. But public feeling was
+heavy against Hoopdriver. Her narrative was inaccurate and sketchy, but happily
+the others were too anxious to pass opinions to pin her down to particulars. At
+last they had all the facts they would permit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “I can only ascribe this extravagant
+and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest misconceptions of your place
+in the world and of your duties and responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me,
+your present emotion is due not so much to a real and sincere penitence for
+your disobedience and folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate
+interference—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Not that,” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Not that.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But <i>why</i> did she go off like this?” said Widgery. “That’s what <i>I</i>
+want to know.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said “Hush!” and the ringing
+tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. “I cannot understand
+this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more intelligent portion of the
+feminine community. You had a pleasant home, a most refined and intelligent
+lady in the position of your mother, to cherish and protect you—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“If I <i>had</i> a mother,” gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare of
+self-pity, and sobbing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it all alone
+into a strange world of unknown dangers-”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I wanted to learn,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Ah!</i>” from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It isn’t fair for all of you to argue at me at once,” submitted Jessie,
+irrelevantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A world full of unknown dangers,” resumed the clergyman. “Your proper place
+was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You have been unduly
+influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of literature which, with all
+due respect to distinguished authoress that shall be nameless, I must call the
+New Woman Literature. In that deleterious ingredient of our book boxes—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I don’t altogether agree with you there,” said Miss Mergle, throwing her head
+back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr. Widgery coughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“What <i>has</i> all this to do with me?” asked Jessie, availing herself of the
+interruption.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The point is,” said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, “that in my books—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“All I want to do,” said Jessie, “is to go about freely by myself. Girls do so
+in America. Why not here?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Social conditions are entirely different in America,” said Miss Mergle. “Here
+we respect Class Distinctions.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away for a
+holiday if I want to.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“With a strange young man, socially your inferior,” said Widgery, and made her
+flush by his tone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Why not?” she said. “With anybody.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“They don’t do that, even in America,” said Miss Mergle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “the most elementary principles of
+decorum—A day will come when you will better understand how entirely
+subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of our present
+civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing anxiety you have
+given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of yours. We can only put things
+down at present, in charity, to your ignorance—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You have to consider the general body of opinion, too,” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Precisely,” said Miss Mergle. “There is no such thing as conduct in the
+absolute.” “If once this most unfortunate business gets about,” said the
+clergyman, “it will do you infinite harm.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But <i>I’ve</i> done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
+people’s—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The world has no charity,” said Mrs. Milton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“For a girl,” said Jessie. “No.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen to reason.
+Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you infinite harm, if once
+it is generally known. And not only that, it will cause infinite pain to those
+who care for you. But if you will return at once to your home, causing it to be
+understood that you have been with friends for these last few days—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Tell lies,” said Jessie. “Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I understand
+that is how your absence is understood at present, and there is no reason—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie’s grip tightened on her handkerchief. “I won’t go back,” she said, “to
+have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books I need to read, to
+be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Anything,” said Mrs. Milton, “anything in reason.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But will you keep your promise?” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Surely you won’t dictate to your mother!” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My stepmother! I don’t want to dictate. I want definite promises now.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“This is most unreasonable,” said the clergyman. “Very well,” said Jessie,
+swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. “Then I won’t go back. My life is
+being frittered away—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“<i>Let</i> her have her way,” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A room then. All your Men. I’m not to come down and talk away half my days—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“My dear child, if only to save you,” said Mrs. Milton. “If you don’t keep your
+promise—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Then I take it the matter is practically concluded,” said the clergyman. “And
+that you very properly submit to return to your proper home. And now, if I may
+offer a suggestion, it is that we take tea. Freed of its tannin, nothing, I
+think, is more refreshing and stimulating.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six,” said Widgery,
+unfolding a time table. “That gives us about half an hour or three-quarters
+here—if a conveyance is obtainable, that is.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in the
+form of tannate of gelatine,” said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in a
+confidential bray.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and shoulders over
+the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards the door. “While you
+have tea, mother,” she said, “I must tell Mr. Hoopdriver of our arrangements.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Don’t you think I—” began the clergyman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“No,” said Jessie, very rudely; “I don’t.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“But, Jessie, haven’t you already—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“You are already breaking the capitulation,” said Jessie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Will you want the whole half hour?” said Widgery, at the bell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Every minute,” said Jessie, in the doorway. “He’s behaved very nobly to me.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“There’s tea,” said Widgery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ve had tea.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“He may not have behaved badly,” said the clergyman. “But he’s certainly an
+astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young girl—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It was
+over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned, and with
+the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those days had done
+for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their position. Of course, they
+would take her away to those social altitudes of hers. She would become an
+inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him say good-bye to her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had first
+seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the riverside road; he
+recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering it as if everything had
+been done of his own initiative. “Brave, brave!” she had called him. And
+afterwards, when she came down to him in the morning, kindly, quiet. But ought
+he to have persuaded her then to return to her home? He remembered some
+intention of the sort. Now these people snatched her away from him as though he
+was scarcely fit to live in the same world with her. No more he was! He felt he
+had presumed upon her worldly ignorance in travelling with her day after day.
+She was so dainty, so delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate her
+expressions, the light of her eyes, the turn of her face.. .
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He wasn’t good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was. Suppose
+they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But they were sure
+not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be there as—what was it?
+<i>Chaperone</i>. He’d never once had a chance of saying what he felt; indeed,
+it was only now he was beginning to realise what he felt. Love! he wouldn’t
+presume. It was worship. If only he could have one more chance. He must have
+one more chance, somewhere, somehow. Then he would pour out his soul to her
+eloquently. He felt eloquently, and words would come. He was dust under her
+feet...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and Jessie
+appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. “Come away from here,” she said to
+Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. “I’m going home with them. We have to say
+good-bye.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a word.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter40"></a>XL.</h2>
+
+<p>
+At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
+silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw her lips
+pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and bright. She was
+looking straight before her. He could think of nothing to say, and thrust his
+hands in his pockets and looked away from her intentionally. After a while she
+began to talk. They dealt disjointedly with scenery first, and then with the
+means of self-education. She took his address at Antrobus’s and promised to
+send him some books. But even with that it was spiritless, aching talk,
+Hoopdriver felt, for the fighting mood was over. She seemed, to him,
+preoccupied with the memories of her late battle, and that appearance hurt him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“It’s the end,” he whispered to himself. “It’s the end.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last to a
+high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There, by a common
+impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch—a little ostentatiously. They
+stared at the billows of forest rolling away beneath them, crest beyond crest,
+of leafy trees, fading at last into blue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“The end” ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“And so,” she said, presently, breaking the silence, “it comes to good-bye.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution. “There is
+one thing I <i>must</i> say.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“Well?” she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent argument. “I ask
+no return. But—”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he stopped. “I won’t say it. It’s no good. It would be rot from me—now. I
+wasn’t going to say anything. Good-bye.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. “No,” she said. “But
+don’t forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris, you are my friend.
+You will work. You are not a very strong man, you know, now—you will forgive
+me—nor do you know all you should. But what will you be in six years’ time?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak mouth seemed
+to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I’ll work,” he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment. Then he
+said, with a motion of his head, “I won’t come back to <i>them</i>. Do you
+mind? Going back alone?”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She took ten seconds to think. “No.” she said, and held out her hand, biting
+her nether lip. “<i>Good-bye</i>,” she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand limply, and
+then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She would have snatched it
+away, but his grip tightened to her movement. She felt the touch of his lips,
+and then he had dropped her fingers and turned from her and was striding down
+the slope. A dozen paces away his foot turned in the lip of a rabbit hole, and
+he stumbled forward and almost fell. He recovered his balance and went on, not
+looking back. He never once looked back. She stared at his receding figure
+until it was small and far below her, and then, the tears running over her
+eyelids now, turned slowly, and walked with her hands gripped hard together
+behind her, towards Stoney Cross again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+“I did not know,” she whispered to herself. “I did not understand. Even now—No,
+I do not understand.”
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chapter41"></a>XLI.<br/>
+THE ENVOY</h2>
+
+<p>
+So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there among the
+bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or listening to what chances
+to his breathing. And of what came of it all, of the six years and afterwards,
+this is no place to tell. In truth, there is no telling it, for the years have
+still to run. But if you see how a mere counter-jumper, a cad on castors, and a
+fool to boot, may come to feel the little insufficiencies of life, and if he
+has to any extent won your sympathies, my end is attained. (If it is not
+attained, may Heaven forgive us both!) Nor will we follow this adventurous
+young lady of ours back to her home at Surbiton, to her new struggle against
+Widgery and Mrs. Milton combined. For, as she will presently hear, that devoted
+man has got his reward. For her, also, your sympathies are invited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rest of this great holiday, too—five days there are left of it—is beyond
+the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in a dusty brown
+suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not intended to be cycled
+in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and Berkshire and Surrey, going
+economically—for excellent reasons. Day by day he goes on, riding fitfully and
+for the most part through bye-roads, but getting a few miles to the
+north-eastward every day. He is a narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and
+tanned at the bridge with unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A
+musing expression sits upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he
+whistles noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, “a juiced good try,
+anyhow!” you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my liking, he looks
+irritable and hopeless. “I know,” he says, “I know. It’s over and done. It
+isn’t <i>in</i> me. You ain’t man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer silly
+hands!... Oh, my God!” and a gust of passion comes upon him and he rides
+furiously for a space.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes again his face softens. “Anyhow, if I’m not to see her—she’s going to
+lend me books,” he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can. Then again; “Books!
+What’s books?” Once or twice triumphant memories of the earlier incidents nerve
+his face for a while. “I put the ky-bosh on <i>his</i> little game,” he
+remarks. “I <i>did</i> that,” and one might even call him happy in these
+phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has been enamel-painted grey
+and carries a sonorous gong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton, and
+Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth of an August
+sunset and with all the ’prentice boys busy shutting up shop, and the work
+girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad, and the white ’buses full
+of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to their dinners, we part from him.
+He is back. To-morrow, the early rising, the dusting, and drudgery, begin
+again—but with a difference, with wonderful memories and still more wonderful
+desires and ambitions replacing those discrepant dreams.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh, and
+pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard, as the
+apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words of greeting.
+“South Coast,” you hear; and “splendid weather—splendid.” He sighs.
+“Yes—swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It’s a juiced good machine.”
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 1264 ***</div>
+</body>
+
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wheels of Chance, by H. G. Wells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Wheels of Chance
+ A Bicycling Idyll
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: April, 1998 [Etext #1264]
+Posting Date: November 10, 2009 [EBook #1264]
+Last Updated: September 17, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WHEELS OF CHANCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEELS OF CHANCE; A BICYCLING IDYLL
+
+By H.G. Wells
+
+
+1896
+
+
+
+
+I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+
+If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)--if you had
+gone into the Drapery Emporium--which is really only magnificent for
+shop--of Messrs. Antrobus & Co.--a perfectly fictitious “Co.,” by
+the bye--of Putney, on the 14th of August, 1895, had turned to the
+right-hand side, where the blocks of white linen and piles of blankets
+rise up to the rail from which the pink and blue prints depend, you
+might have been served by the central figure of this story that is now
+beginning. He would have come forward, bowing and swaying, he would have
+extended two hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over the
+counter, and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and
+without the slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner, what he
+might have the pleasure of showing you. Under certain circumstances--as,
+for instance, hats, baby linen, gloves, silks, lace, or curtains--he
+would simply have bowed politely, and with a drooping expression, and
+making a kind of circular sweep, invited you to “step this way,”
+ and so led you beyond his ken; but under other and happier
+conditions,--huckaback, blankets, dimity, cretonne, linen, calico, are
+cases in point,--he would have requested you to take a seat, emphasising
+the hospitality by leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back in
+a spasmodic manner, and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit
+his goods for your consideration. Under which happier circumstances you
+might--if of an observing turn of mind and not too much of a housewife
+to be inhuman--have given the central figure of this story less cursory
+attention.
+
+Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been chiefly to
+notice how little he was noticeable. He wore the black morning coat, the
+black tie, and the speckled grey nether parts (descending into shadow
+and mystery below the counter) of his craft. He was of a pallid
+complexion, hair of a kind of dirty fairness, greyish eyes, and a
+skimpy, immature moustache under his peaked indeterminate nose.
+His features were all small, but none ill-shaped. A rosette of pins
+decorated the lappel of his coat. His remarks, you would observe, were
+entirely what people used to call cliche, formulae not organic to the
+occasion, but stereotyped ages ago and learnt years since by heart.
+“This, madam,” he would say, “is selling very well.” “We are doing a
+very good article at four three a yard.” “We could show you something
+better, of course.” “No trouble, madam, I assure you.” Such were the
+simple counters of his intercourse. So, I say, he would have presented
+himself to your superficial observation. He would have danced about
+behind the counter, have neatly refolded the goods he had shown you,
+have put on one side those you selected, extracted a little book with
+a carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet from a fixture, made you out a little
+bill in that weak flourishing hand peculiar to drapers, and have bawled
+“Sayn!” Then a puffy little shop-walker would have come into view,
+looked at the bill for a second, very hard (showing you a parting
+down the middle of his head meanwhile), have scribbled a still more
+flourishing J. M. all over the document, have asked you if there
+was nothing more, have stood by you--supposing that you were paying
+cash--until the central figure of this story reappeared with the change.
+One glance more at him, and the puffy little shop-walker would have been
+bowing you out, with fountains of civilities at work all about you. And
+so the interview would have terminated.
+
+But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not concern
+itself with superficial appearances alone. Literature is revelation.
+Modern literature is indecorous revelation. It is the duty of the
+earnest author to tell you what you would not have seen--even at the
+cost of some blushes. And the thing that you would not have seen about
+this young man, and the thing of the greatest moment to this story, the
+thing that must be told if the book is to be written, was--let us face
+it bravely--the Remarkable Condition of this Young Man’s Legs.
+
+Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let us
+assume something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost professorial
+tone of the conscientious realist. Let us treat this young man’s legs as
+a mere diagram, and indicate the points of interest with the unemotional
+precision of a lecturer’s pointer. And so to our revelation. On the
+internal aspect of the right ankle of this young man you would have
+observed, ladies and gentlemen, a contusion and an abrasion; on the
+internal aspect of the left ankle a contusion also; on its external
+aspect a large yellowish bruise. On his left shin there were two
+bruises, one a leaden yellow graduating here and there into purple,
+and another, obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy red--tumid and
+threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral manner, an unnatural
+hardness and redness would have been discovered on the upper aspect of
+the calf, and above the knee and on the inner side, an extraordinary
+expanse of bruised surface, a kind of closely stippled shading of
+contused points. The right leg would be found to be bruised in a
+marvellous manner all about and under the knee, and particularly on the
+interior aspect of the knee. So far we may proceed with our details.
+Fired by these discoveries, an investigator might perhaps have pursued
+his inquiries further--to bruises on the shoulders, elbows, and even the
+finger joints, of the central figure of our story. He had indeed been
+bumped and battered at an extraordinary number of points. But enough
+of realistic description is as good as a feast, and we have exhibited
+enough for our purpose. Even in literature one must know where to draw
+the line.
+
+Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young shopman
+should have got his legs, and indeed himself generally, into such a
+dreadful condition. One might fancy that he had been sitting with his
+nether extremities in some complicated machinery, a threshing-machine,
+say, or one of those hay-making furies. But Sherlock Holmes (now happily
+dead) would have fancied nothing of the kind. He would have recognised
+at once that the bruises on the internal aspect of the left leg,
+considered in the light of the distribution of the other abrasions and
+contusions, pointed unmistakably to the violent impact of the Mounting
+Beginner upon the bicycling saddle, and that the ruinous state of the
+right knee was equally eloquent of the concussions attendant on that
+person’s hasty, frequently causeless, and invariably ill-conceived
+descents. One large bruise on the shin is even more characteristic of
+the ‘prentice cyclist, for upon every one of them waits the jest of the
+unexpected treadle. You try at least to walk your machine in an easy
+manner, and whack!--you are rubbing your shin. So out of innocence we
+ripen. Two bruises on that place mark a certain want of aptitude in
+learning, such as one might expect in a person unused to muscular
+exercise. Blisters on the hands are eloquent of the nervous clutch
+of the wavering rider. And so forth, until Sherlock is presently
+explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that the machine ridden
+is an old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the diamond frame, a
+cushioned tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and a gross weight all on
+of perhaps three-and-forty pounds.
+
+The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the attentive
+shopman that I had the honour of showing you at first, rises a vision
+of a nightly struggle, of two dark figures and a machine in a dark
+road,--the road, to be explicit, from Roehampton to Putney Hill,--and
+with this vision is the sound of a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping
+and grunting, a shouting of “Steer, man, steer!” a wavering unsteady
+flight, a spasmodic turning of the missile edifice of man and machine,
+and a collapse. Then you descry dimly through the dusk the central
+figure of this story sitting by the roadside and rubbing his leg at
+some new place, and his friend, sympathetic (but by no means depressed),
+repairing the displacement of the handle-bar.
+
+Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert itself,
+and drive him against all the conditions of his calling, against the
+counsels of prudence and the restrictions of his means, to seek the
+wholesome delights of exertion and danger and pain. And our first
+examination of the draper reveals beneath his draperies--the man! To
+which initial fact (among others) we shall come again in the end.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story is now
+going along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your purchases in
+his arms, to the warehouse, where the various articles you have selected
+will presently be packed by the senior porter and sent to you. Returning
+thence to his particular place, he lays hands on a folded piece of
+gingham, and gripping the corners of the folds in his hands, begins to
+straighten them punctiliously. Near him is an apprentice, apprenticed to
+the same high calling of draper’s assistant, a ruddy, red-haired lad
+in a very short tailless black coat and a very high collar, who is
+deliberately unfolding and refolding some patterns of cretonne. By
+twenty-one he too may hope to be a full-blown assistant, even as Mr.
+Hoopdriver. Prints depend from the brass rails above them, behind are
+fixtures full of white packages containing, as inscriptions testify,
+Lino, Hd Bk, and Mull. You might imagine to see them that the two were
+both intent upon nothing but smoothness of textile and rectitude of
+fold. But to tell the truth, neither is thinking of the mechanical
+duties in hand. The assistant is dreaming of the delicious time--only
+four hours off now--when he will resume the tale of his bruises and
+abrasions. The apprentice is nearer the long long thoughts of boyhood,
+and his imagination rides cap-a-pie through the chambers of his brain,
+seeking some knightly quest in honour of that Fair Lady, the last but
+one of the girl apprentices to the dress-making upstairs. He inclines
+rather to street fighting against revolutionaries--because then she
+could see him from the window.
+
+Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little shop-walker,
+with a paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes extremely active. The
+shopwalker eyes the goods in hand. “Hoopdriver,” he says, “how’s that
+line of g-sez-x ginghams?”
+
+Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the uncertainties of
+dismounting. “They’re going fairly well, sir. But the larger checks seem
+hanging.”
+
+The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. “Any particular time
+when you want your holidays?” he asks.
+
+Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. “No--Don’t want them too late,
+sir, of course.”
+
+“How about this day week?”
+
+Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of the
+gingham folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of conflicting
+considerations. Can he learn it in a week? That’s the question.
+Otherwise Briggs will get next week, and he will have to wait until
+September--when the weather is often uncertain. He is naturally of a
+sanguine disposition. All drapers have to be, or else they could never
+have the faith they show in the beauty, washability, and unfading
+excellence of the goods they sell you. The decision comes at last.
+“That’ll do me very well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+
+The die is cast.
+
+The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the
+“dresses,” the next in the strict scale of precedence of the Drapery
+Emporium. Mr. Hoopdriver in alternating spasms anon straightens his
+gingham and anon becomes meditative, with his tongue in the hollow of
+his decaying wisdom tooth.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr. Pritchard
+spoke of “Scotland,” Miss Isaacs clamoured of Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson
+displayed a proprietary interest in the Norfolk Broads. “I?” said
+Hoopdriver when the question came to him. “Why, cycling, of course.”
+
+“You’re never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day after
+day?” said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+
+“I am,” said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the
+insufficient moustache. “I’m going for a Cycling Tour. Along the South
+Coast.”
+
+“Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you’ll get fine weather,”
+ said Miss Howe. “And not come any nasty croppers.”
+
+“And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag,” said the junior
+apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one of the lessons
+at the top of Putney Hill.)
+
+“You stow it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and threateningly
+at the junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a tone of bitter
+contempt,--“Jampot.”
+
+“I’m getting fairly safe upon it now,” he told Miss Howe.
+
+At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the satirical
+efforts of the apprentice, but his mind was too full of the projected
+Tour to admit any petty delicacies of dignity. He left the supper table
+early, so that he might put in a good hour at the desperate gymnastics
+up the Roehampton Road before it would be time to come back for locking
+up. When the gas was turned off for the night he was sitting on the edge
+of his bed, rubbing arnica into his knee--a new and very big place--and
+studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of the “dresses,”
+ who shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed and trying to smoke
+in the dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle in his life, but he felt
+Hoopdriver’s inexperience and offered such advice as occurred to him.
+
+“Have the machine thoroughly well oiled,” said Briggs, “carry one or
+two lemons with you, don’t tear yourself to death the first day, and sit
+upright. Never lose control of the machine, and always sound the bell on
+every possible opportunity. You mind those things, and nothing very much
+can’t happen to you, Hoopdriver--you take my word.”
+
+He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a curse or so
+at his pipe, and then break out with an entirely different set of tips.
+
+“Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It’s one of
+the worst things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the machine
+buckle--there was a man killed only the other day through his wheel
+buckling--don’t scorch, don’t ride on the foot-path, keep your own side
+of the road, and if you see a tramline, go round the corner at once,
+and hurry off into the next county--and always light up before dark. You
+mind just a few little things like that, Hoopdriver, and nothing much
+can’t happen to you--you take my word.”
+
+“Right you are!” said Hoopdriver. “Good-night, old man.”
+
+“Good-night,” said Briggs, and there was silence for a space, save
+for the succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode off into
+Dreamland on his machine, and was scarcely there before he was pitched
+back into the world of sense again.--Something--what was it?
+
+“Never oil the steering. It’s fatal,” a voice that came from round
+a fitful glow of light, was saying. “And clean the chain daily with
+black-lead. You mind just a few little things like that--”
+
+“Lord LOVE us!” said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over his
+ears.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the year
+round, save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in the summer
+time, know the exquisite sensations of the First Holiday Morning. All
+the dreary, uninteresting routine drops from you suddenly, your chains
+fall about your feet. All at once you are Lord of yourself, Lord of
+every hour in the long, vacant day; you may go where you please, call
+none Sir or Madame, have a lappel free of pins, doff your black morning
+coat, and wear the colour of your heart, and be a Man. You grudge sleep,
+you grudge eating, and drinking even, their intrusion on those exquisite
+moments. There will be no more rising before breakfast in casual
+old clothing, to go dusting and getting ready in a cheerless,
+shutter-darkened, wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of,
+“Forward, Hoopdriver,” no more hasty meals, and weary attendance on
+fitful old women, for ten blessed days. The first morning is by far
+the most glorious, for you hold your whole fortune in your hands.
+Thereafter, every night, comes a pang, a spectre, that will not be
+exorcised--the premonition of the return. The shadow of going back, of
+being put in the cage again for another twelve months, lies blacker and
+blacker across the sunlight. But on the first morning of the ten the
+holiday has no past, and ten days seems as good as infinity.
+
+And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue sky
+with dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though celestial
+haymakers had been piling the swathes of last night’s clouds into cocks
+for a coming cartage. There were thrushes in the Richmond Road, and a
+lark on Putney Heath. The freshness of dew was in the air; dew or
+the relics of an overnight shower glittered on the leaves and grass.
+Hoopdriver had breakfasted early by Mrs. Gunn’s complaisance. He wheeled
+his machine up Putney Hill, and his heart sang within him. Halfway up, a
+dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across the road and vanished
+under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the variegated shrubs
+and trees had their blinds down still, and he would not have changed
+places with a soul in any one of them for a hundred pounds.
+
+He had on his new brown cycling suit--a handsome Norfolk jacket thing
+for 30/(sp.)--and his legs--those martyr legs--were more than consoled
+by thick chequered stockings, “thin in the foot, thick in the leg,” for
+all they had endured. A neat packet of American cloth behind the saddle
+contained his change of raiment, and the bell and the handle-bar and the
+hubs and lamp, albeit a trifle freckled by wear, glittered blindingly
+in the rising sunlight. And at the top of the hill, after only
+one unsuccessful attempt, which, somehow, terminated on the green,
+Hoopdriver mounted, and with a stately and cautious restraint in his
+pace, and a dignified curvature of path, began his great Cycling Tour
+along the Southern Coast.
+
+There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage, and that
+is--voluptuous curves. He did not ride fast, he did not ride straight,
+an exacting critic might say he did not ride well--but he rode
+generously, opulently, using the whole road and even nibbling at the
+footpath. The excitement never flagged. So far he had never passed or
+been passed by anything, but as yet the day was young and the road was
+clear. He doubted his steering so much that, for the present, he had
+resolved to dismount at the approach of anything else upon wheels. The
+shadows of the trees lay very long and blue across the road, the morning
+sunlight was like amber fire.
+
+At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle trough
+stands, he turned towards Kingston and set himself to scale the little
+bit of ascent. An early heath-keeper, in his velveteen jacket, marvelled
+at his efforts. And while he yet struggled, the head of a carter rose
+over the brow.
+
+At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous
+determination, resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and the
+machine stopped dead. He was trying to think what he did with his right
+leg whilst getting off. He gripped the handles and released the brake,
+standing on the left pedal and waving his right foot in the air.
+Then--these things take so long in the telling--he found the machine was
+falling over to the right. While he was deciding upon a plan of action,
+gravitation appears to have been busy. He was still irresolute when he
+found the machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon it, and a vague
+feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly with his
+shin. This happened when he was just level with the heathkeeper. The man
+in the approaching cart stood up to see the ruins better.
+
+“THAT ain’t the way to get off,” said the heathkeeper.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted askew again
+He said something under his breath. He would have to unscrew the beastly
+thing.
+
+“THAT ain’t the way to get off,” repeated the heathkeeper, after a
+silence.
+
+“_I_ know that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to overlook
+the new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled the wallet behind
+the saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+
+“If you know it ain’t the way to get off--whaddyer do it for?” said the
+heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle. He was
+annoyed. “That’s my business, I suppose,” he said, fumbling with the
+screw. The unusual exertion had made his hands shake frightfully.
+
+The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his
+hands behind his back. “You’ve broken yer ‘andle, ain’t yer?” he
+said presently. Just then the screw hammer slipped off the nut. Mr.
+Hoopdriver used a nasty, low word.
+
+“They’re trying things, them bicycles,” said the heath-keeper,
+charitably. “Very trying.” Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious turn
+and suddenly stood up--he was holding the front wheel between his knees.
+“I wish,” said he, with a catch in his voice, “I wish you’d leave off
+staring at me.”
+
+Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began
+replacing the screw hammer in the wallet.
+
+The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows,
+and certainly he stared harder than he did before. “You’re pretty
+unsociable,” he said slowly, as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles and
+stood ready to mount as soon as the cart had passed.
+
+The indignation gathered slowly but surely. “Why don’t you ride on a
+private road of your own if no one ain’t to speak to you?” asked the
+heath-keeper, perceiving more and more clearly the bearing of the
+matter. “Can’t no one make a passin’ remark to you, Touchy? Ain’t I good
+enough to speak to you? Been struck wooden all of a sudden?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was rigid
+with emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar Square. But the
+heathkeeper felt his honour was at stake.
+
+“Don’t you make no remarks to ‘IM,” said the keeper as the carter came
+up broadside to them. “‘E’s a bloomin’ dook, ‘e is. ‘E don’t converse
+with no one under a earl. ‘E’s off to Windsor, ‘e is; that’s why ‘e’s
+stickin’ his be’ind out so haughty. Pride! Why, ‘e’s got so much of it,
+‘e has to carry some of it in that there bundle there, for fear ‘e’d
+bust if ‘e didn’t ease hisself a bit--‘E--”
+
+But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along the
+road, in a spasmodic attempt to remount. He missed the treadle once and
+swore viciously, to the keeper’s immense delight. “Nar! Nar!” said the
+heath-keeper.
+
+In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific lurch
+of the machine, the heathkeeper dropped out of earshot. Mr. Hoopdriver
+would have liked to look back at his enemy, but he usually twisted round
+and upset if he tried that. He had to imagine the indignant heath-keeper
+telling the carter all about it. He tried to infuse as much disdain
+aspossible into his retreating aspect.
+
+He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up the
+little rise to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston Vale;
+and so remarkable is the psychology of cycling, that he rode all the
+straighter and easier because the emotions the heathkeeper had aroused
+relieved his mind of the constant expectation of collapse that had
+previously unnerved him. To ride a bicycle properly is very like a love
+affair--chiefly it is a matter of faith. Believe you do it, and the
+thing is done; doubt, and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+
+Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings towards the
+heath-keeper were either vindictive or remorseful,--vindictive for the
+aggravation or remorseful for his own injudicious display of ill
+temper. As a matter of fact, they were nothing of the sort. A sudden,
+a wonderful gratitude, possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had
+resumed its sway with a sudden accession of splendour. At the crest of
+the hill he put his feet upon the footrests, and now riding moderately
+straight, went, with a palpitating brake, down that excellent descent.
+A new delight was in his eyes, quite over and above the pleasure of
+rushing through the keen, sweet, morning air. He reached out his thumb
+and twanged his bell out of sheer happiness.
+
+“‘He’s a bloomin’ Dook--he is!’” said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself, in a
+soft undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again, “‘He’s a
+bloomin’ Dook!”’ He opened his mouth in a silent laugh. It was having a
+decent cut did it. His social superiority had been so evident that even
+a man like that noticed it. No more Manchester Department for ten days!
+Out of Manchester, a Man. The draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished
+from existence. Instead was a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a
+five-pound note, two sovereigns, and some silver at various convenient
+points of his person. At any rate as good as a Dook, if not precisely
+in the peerage. Involuntarily at the thought of his funds Hoopdriver’s
+right hand left the handle and sought his breast pocket, to be
+immediately recalled by a violent swoop of the machine towards the
+cemetery. Whirroo! Just missed that half-brick! Mischievous brutes there
+were in the world to put such a thing in the road. Some blooming ‘Arry
+or other! Ought to prosecute a few of these roughs, and the rest would
+know better. That must be the buckle of the wallet was rattling on the
+mud-guard. How cheerfully the wheels buzzed!
+
+The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was waking, and
+windows rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came out of one of the
+houses and yelped at him. He got off, rather breathless, at the foot of
+Kingston Hill, and pushed up. Halfway up, an early milk chariot rattled
+by him; two dirty men with bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt
+sure they were burglars, carrying home the swag.
+
+It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling, a
+slight tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top that
+he rode straighter than he did before. The pleasure of riding straight
+blotted out these first intimations of fatigue. A man on horseback
+appeared; Hoopdriver, in a tumult of soul at his own temerity, passed
+him. Then down the hill into Kingston, with the screw hammer, behind
+in the wallet, rattling against the oil can. He passed, without
+misadventure, a fruiterer’s van and a sluggish cartload of bricks. And
+in Kingston Hoopdriver, with the most exquisite sensations, saw the
+shutters half removed from a draper’s shop, and two yawning youths,
+in dusty old black jackets and with dirty white comforters about their
+necks, clearing up the planks and boxes and wrappers in the window,
+preparatory to dressing it out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the
+previous day. But now, was he not a bloomin’ Dook, palpably in the
+sight of common men? Then round the corner to the right--bell banged
+furiously--and so along the road to Surbiton.
+
+Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with an
+expression of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed, and
+to the right of him for a mile or so the weltering Thames flashed and
+glittered. Talk of your joie de vivre. Albeit with a certain cramping
+sensation about the knees and calves slowly forcing itself upon his
+attention.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+
+Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your fast
+young men. If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have profited more
+by his mother’s instructions. He regarded the feminine sex as something
+to bow to and smirk at from a safe distance. Years of the intimate
+remoteness of a counter leave their mark upon a man. It was an adventure
+for him to take one of the Young Ladies of the establishment to church
+on a Sunday. Few modern young men could have merited less the epithet
+“Dorg.” But I have thought at times that his machine may have had
+something of the blade in its metal. Decidedly it was a machine with a
+past. Mr. Hoopdriver had bought it second-hand from Hare’s in Putney,
+and Hare said it had had several owners. Second-hand was scarcely the
+word for it, and Hare was mildly puzzled that he should be selling such
+an antiquity. He said it was perfectly sound, if a little old-fashioned,
+but he was absolutely silent about its moral character. It may even have
+begun its career with a poet, say, in his glorious youth. It may have
+been the bicycle of a Really Bad Man. No one who has ever ridden a cycle
+of any kind but will witness that the things are unaccountably prone to
+pick up bad habits--and keep them.
+
+It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent emotions
+directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an absolutely
+unprecedented Wabble--unprecedented so far as Hoopdriver’s experience
+went. It “showed off”--the most decadent sinuosity. It left a track like
+one of Beardsley’s feathers. He suddenly realised, too, that his cap was
+loose on his head and his breath a mere remnant.
+
+The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed in a
+beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her outline in gold
+and left the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly aware that she was
+young, rather slender, dark, and with a bright colour and bright eyes.
+Strange doubts possessed him as to the nature of her nether costume.
+He had heard of such things of course. French, perhaps. Her handles
+glittered; a jet of sunlight splashed off her bell blindingly. She was
+approaching the high road along an affluent from the villas of Surbiton.
+fee roads converged slantingly. She was travelling at about the same
+pace as Mr. Hoopdriver. The appearances pointed to a meeting at the fork
+of the roads.
+
+Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By contrast
+with her he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get off at once
+and pretend something was wrong with his treadle? Yet even the end of
+getting off was an uncertainty. That last occasion on Putney Heath! On
+the other hand, what would happen if he kept on? To go very slow
+seemed the abnegation of his manhood. To crawl after a mere schoolgirl!
+Besides, she was not riding very fast. On the other hand, to thrust
+himself in front of her, consuming the road in his tendril-like advance,
+seemed an incivility--greed. He would leave her such a very little.
+His business training made him prone to bow and step aside. If only one
+could take one’s hands off the handles, one might pass with a silent
+elevation of the hat, of course. But even that was a little suggestive
+of a funeral.
+
+Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was flushed,
+a little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips fell apart. She
+may have been riding hard, but it looked uncommonly like a faint smile.
+And the things were--yes!--RATIONALS! Suddenly an impulse to bolt from
+the situation became clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively,
+intending to pass her. He jerked against some tin thing on the road, and
+it flew up between front wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round towards
+her. Had the machine a devil?
+
+At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done wiser
+to dismount. He gave a frantic ‘whoop’ and tried to get round, then, as
+he seemed falling over, he pulled the handles straight again and to the
+left by an instinctive motion, and shot behind her hind wheel, missing
+her by a hair’s breadth. The pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to
+recover, and found himself jumped up on the pavement and riding squarely
+at a neat wooden paling. He struck this with a terrific impact and shot
+forward off his saddle into a clumsy entanglement. Then he began to
+tumble over sideways, and completed the entire figure in a sitting
+position on the gravel, with his feet between the fork and the stay of
+the machine. The concussion on the gravel shook his entire being. He
+remained in that position, wishing that he had broken his neck, wishing
+even more heartily that he had never been born. The glory of life had
+departed. Bloomin’ Dook, indeed! These unwomanly women!
+
+There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and the
+Young Lady in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned round and
+come back to him. The warm sunlight now was in her face. “Are you hurt?”
+ she said. She had a pretty, clear, girlish voice. She was really very
+young--quite a girl, in fact. And rode so well! It was a bitter draught.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. “Not a bit,” he said, a little
+ruefully. He became painfully aware that large patches of gravel
+scarcely improve the appearance of a Norfolk suit. “I’m very sorry
+indeed--”
+
+“It’s my fault,” she said, interrupting and so saving him on the very
+verge of calling her ‘Miss.’ (He knew ‘Miss’ was wrong, but it was
+deep-seated habit with him.) “I tried to pass you on the wrong side.”
+ Her face and eyes seemed all alive. “It’s my place to be sorry.”
+
+“But it was my steering--”
+
+“I ought to have seen you were a Novice”--with a touch of superiority.
+“But you rode so straight coming along there!”
+
+She really was--dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver’s feelings passed the
+nadir. When he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of the
+aristocratic in his voice.
+
+“It’s my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that’s no excuse for my
+ah! blundering--”
+
+“Your finger’s bleeding,” she said, abruptly.
+
+He saw his knuckle was barked. “I didn’t feel it,” he said, feeling
+manly.
+
+“You don’t at first. Have you any sticking-plaster? If not--” She
+balanced her machine against herself. She had a little side pocket,
+and she whipped out a small packet of sticking-plaster with a pair of
+scissors in a sheath at the side, and cut off a generous portion. He
+had a wild impulse to ask her to stick it on for him. Controlled. “Thank
+you,” he said.
+
+“Machine all right?” she asked, looking past him at the prostrate
+vehicle, her hands on her handle-bar. For the first time Hoopdriver did
+not feel proud of his machine.
+
+He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over his
+shoulder, and she was gone, turned his head over the other shoulder down
+the road, and she was riding off. “ORF!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Well,
+I’m blowed!--Talk about Slap Up!” (His aristocratic refinement rarely
+adorned his speech in his private soliloquies.) His mind was whirling.
+One fact was clear. A most delightful and novel human being had flashed
+across his horizon and was going out of his life again. The Holiday
+madness was in his blood. She looked round!
+
+At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty ascent.
+Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he NEVER be able to get up
+on the thing again? She will be round the corner in a minute. Once more.
+Ah! Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time! He gripped the handles and put
+his head down. He would overtake her.
+
+The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a moment
+over the civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed at the pedals
+with archaic violence. So Palaeolithic man may have ridden his simple
+bicycle of chipped flint in pursuit of his exogamous affinity. She
+vanished round the corner. His effort was Titanic. What should he say
+when he overtook her? That scarcely disturbed him at first. How fine
+she had looked, flushed with the exertion of riding, breathing a little
+fast, but elastic and active! Talk about your ladylike, homekeeping
+girls with complexions like cold veal! But what should he say to her?
+That was a bother. And he could not lift his cap without risking a
+repetition of his previous ignominy. She was a real Young Lady. No
+mistake about that! None of your blooming shop girls. (There is no
+greater contempt in the world than that of shop men for shop girls,
+unless it be that of shop girls for shop men.) Phew! This was work. A
+certain numbness came and went at his knees.
+
+“May I ask to whom I am indebted?” he panted to himself, trying it over.
+That might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a shilling--while
+you wait. He was getting winded. The road was certainly a bit uphill.
+He turned the corner and saw a long stretch of road, and a grey dress
+vanishing. He set his teeth. Had he gained on her at all? “Monkey on
+a gridiron!” yelped a small boy. Hoopdriver redoubled his efforts. His
+breath became audible, his steering unsteady, his pedalling positively
+ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his eye, irritant as acid.
+The road really was uphill beyond dispute. All his physiology began to
+cry out at him. A last tremendous effort brought him to the corner and
+showed yet another extent of shady roadway, empty save for a baker’s
+van. His front wheel suddenly shrieked aloud. “Oh Lord!” said
+Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+
+Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a moment
+his legs felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his machine against the
+grassy edge of the path and sat down panting. His hands were gnarled
+with swollen veins and shaking palpably, his breath came viscid.
+
+“I’m hardly in training yet,” he remarked. His legs had gone leaden.
+“I don’t feel as though I’d had a mouthful of breakfast.” Presently he
+slapped his side pocket and produced therefrom a brand-new cigarette
+case and a packet of Vansittart’s Red Herring cigarettes. He filled
+the case. Then his eye fell with a sudden approval on the ornamental
+chequering of his new stockings. The expression in his eyes faded slowly
+to abstract meditation.
+
+“She WAS a stunning girl,” he said. “I wonder if I shall ever set eyes
+on her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she thought of
+me.”
+
+The phrase ‘bloomin’ Dook’ floated into his mind with a certain flavour
+of comfort.
+
+He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not even look
+up when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes before he roused
+himself. “What rot it is! What’s the good of thinking such things,” he
+said. “I’m only a blessed draper’s assistant.” (To be exact, he did not
+say blessed. The service of a shop may polish a man’s exterior ways, but
+the ‘prentices’ dormitory is an indifferent school for either manners
+or morals.) He stood up and began wheeling his machine towards Esher. It
+was going to be a beautiful day, and the hedges and trees and the open
+country were all glorious to his town-tired eyes. But it was a little
+different from the elation of his start.
+
+“Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle,” said a nursemaid on the path
+to a personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little. “‘Gentleman
+wizzer bicitle,’--‘bloomin’ Dook’--I can’t look so very seedy,” he said
+to himself.
+
+“I WONDER--I should just like to know--”
+
+There was something very comforting in the track of HER pneumatic
+running straight and steady along the road before him. It must be hers.
+No other pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It was just
+possible, of course, that he might see her once more--coming back.
+Should he try and say something smart? He speculated what manner of girl
+she might be. Probably she was one of these here New Women. He had a
+persuasion the cult had been maligned. Anyhow she was a Lady. And rich
+people, too! Her machine couldn’t have cost much under twenty pounds.
+His mind came round and dwelt some time on her visible self. Rational
+dress didn’t look a bit unwomanly. However, he disdained to be one of
+your fortune-hunters. Then his thoughts drove off at a tangent. He would
+certainly have to get something to eat at the next public house.
+
+
+
+
+VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+
+In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of Granby
+at Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw the inn in front
+of him, he mounted his machine again and rode bravely up to the doorway.
+Burton and biscuit and cheese he had, which, indeed, is Burton in its
+proper company; and as he was eating there came a middleaged man in a
+drab cycling suit, very red and moist and angry in the face, and asked
+bitterly for a lemon squash. And he sat down upon the seat in the bar
+and mopped his face. But scarcely had he sat down before he got up again
+and stared out of the doorway.
+
+“Damn!” said he. Then, “Damned Fool!”
+
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece of
+cheese in his cheek.
+
+The man in drab faced him. “I called myself a Damned Fool, sir. Have you
+any objections?”
+
+“Oh!--None. None,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I thought you spoke to me. I
+didn’t hear what you said.”
+
+“To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic temperament, sir,
+is hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative disposition and a phlegmatic
+temperament, all very well. But energy and philosophy--!”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said nothing.
+
+“There’s no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise, gentle
+exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And no sooner do
+I get on the accursed machine, than off I go hammer and tongs; I never
+look to right or left, never notice a flower, never see a view, get hot,
+juicy, red,--like a grilled chop. Here I am, sir. Come from Guildford in
+something under the hour. WHY, sir?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+
+“Because I’m a damned fool, sir. Because I’ve reservoirs and reservoirs
+of muscular energy, and one or other of them is always leaking. It’s
+a most interesting road, birds and trees, I’ve no doubt, and wayside
+flowers, and there’s nothing I should enjoy more than watching them. But
+I can’t. Get me on that machine, and I have to go. Get me on anything,
+and I have to go. And I don’t want to go a bit. WHY should a man rush
+about like a rocket, all pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me furious. I
+can assure you, sir, I go scorching along the road, and cursing aloud at
+myself for doing it. A quiet, dignified, philosophical man, that’s what
+I am--at bottom; and here I am dancing with rage and swearing like a
+drunken tinker at a perfect stranger--
+
+“But my day’s wasted. I’ve lost all that country road, and now I’m on
+the fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the morning! Ugh!
+Thank Heaven, sir, you have not the irritable temperament, that you
+are not goaded to madness by your endogenous sneers, by the eternal
+wrangling of an uncomfortable soul and body. I tell you, I lead a cat
+and dog life--But what IS the use of talking?--It’s all of a piece!”
+
+He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the lemon
+squash into his mouth, paid for it, and without any further remark
+strode to the door. Mr. Hoopdriver was still wondering what to say when
+his interlocutor vanished. There was a noise of a foot spurning the
+gravel, and when Mr. Hoopdriver reached the doorway, the man in drab was
+a score of yards Londonward. He had already gathered pace. He pedalled
+with ill-suppressed anger, and his head was going down. In another
+moment he flew swiftly out of sight under the railway arch, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and--being now
+a little rested about the muscles of the knees--resumed his saddle and
+rode on in the direction of Ripley, along an excellent but undulating
+road. He was pleased to find his command over his machine already
+sensibly increased. He set himself little exercises as he went along and
+performed them with variable success. There was, for instance, steering
+in between a couple of stones, say a foot apart, a deed of little
+difficulty as far as the front wheel is concerned. But the back wheel,
+not being under the sway of the human eye, is apt to take a vicious jump
+over the obstacle, which sends a violent concussion all along the spine
+to the skull, and will even jerk a loosely fastened hat over the eyes,
+and so lead to much confusion. And again, there was taking the hand or
+hands off the handlebar, a thing simple in itself, but complex in its
+consequences. This particularly was a feat Mr. Hoopdriver desired to
+do, for several divergent reasons; but at present it simply led to
+convulsive balancings and novel and inelegant modes of dismounting.
+
+The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are those
+who consider it ornamental, and would regard a face deprived of its
+assistance with pity or derision; but it is doubtful whether our
+esteem is dictated so much by a sense of its absolute beauty as by the
+vitiating effect of a universally prevalent fashion. In the case of
+bicycle students, as in the young of both sexes, its inutility is
+aggravated by its persistent annoyance--it requires constant attention.
+Until one can ride with one hand, and search for, secure, and use a
+pocket handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant
+series of descents. Nothing can be further from the author’s ambition
+than a wanton realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver’s nose is a plain and salient
+fact, and face it we must. And, in addition to this inconvenience, there
+are flies. Until the cyclist can steer with one hand, his face is
+given over to Beelzebub. Contemplative flies stroll over it, and trifle
+absently with its most sensitive surfaces. The only way to dislodge them
+is to shake the head forcibly and to writhe one’s features violently.
+This is not only a lengthy and frequently ineffectual method, but one
+exceedingly terrifying to foot passengers. And again, sometimes the
+beginner rides for a space with one eye closed by perspiration, giving
+him a waggish air foreign to his mood and ill calculated to overawe
+the impertinent. However, you will appreciate now the motive of Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s experiments. He presently attained sufficient dexterity
+to slap himself smartly and violently in the face with his right hand,
+without certainly overturning the machine; but his pocket handkerchief
+might have been in California for any good it was to him while he was in
+the saddle.
+
+Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little
+uncomfortable, he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the background
+of his consciousness was the sense that about this time Briggs would be
+half-way through his window dressing, and Gosling, the apprentice, busy,
+with a chair turned down over the counter and his ears very red, trying
+to roll a piece of huckaback--only those who have rolled pieces of
+huckaback know quite how detestable huckaback is to roll--and the shop
+would be dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and snappy. And here was
+quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the desire took one,
+without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of “Sayn,” no folding of
+remnants, no voice to shout, “Hoopdriver, forward!” And once he almost
+ran over something wonderful, a little, low, red beast with a yellowish
+tail, that went rushing across the road before him. It was the first
+weasel he had ever seen in his cockney life. There were miles of this,
+scores of miles of this before him, pinewood and oak forest, purple,
+heathery moorland and grassy down, lush meadows, where shining rivers
+wound their lazy way, villages with square-towered, flint churches,
+and rambling, cheap, and hearty inns, clean, white, country towns, long
+downhill stretches, where one might ride at one’s ease (overlooking a
+jolt or so), and far away, at the end of it all,--the sea.
+
+What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps he had
+been dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young Lady in Grey,
+and perhaps the memory of it was making itself a little lair in a corner
+of his brain from which it could distress him in the retrospect by
+suggesting that he looked like a fool; but for the present that trouble
+was altogether in abeyance. The man in drab--evidently a swell--had
+spoken to him as his equal, and the knees of his brown suit and the
+chequered stockings were ever before his eyes. (Or, rather, you could
+see the stockings by carrying the head a little to one side.) And to
+feel, little by little, his mastery over this delightful, treacherous
+machine, growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his knees reasserted
+themselves, and he dismounted and sat awhile by the roadside.
+
+It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where a
+bridge crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the other
+cyclist in brown. It is well to notice the fact here, although the
+interview was of the slightest, because it happened that subsequently
+Hoopdriver saw a great deal more of this other man in brown. The other
+cyclist in brown had a machine of dazzling newness, and a punctured
+pneumatic lay across his knees. He was a man of thirty or more, with a
+whitish face, an aquiline nose, a lank, flaxen moustache, and very fair
+hair, and he scowled at the job before him. At the sight of him Mr.
+Hoopdriver pulled himself together, and rode by with the air of one born
+to the wheel. “A splendid morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “and a fine
+surface.”
+
+“The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!” said the
+other man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver heard the mumble
+and did not distinguish the words, and he felt a pleasing sense of
+having duly asserted the wide sympathy that binds all cyclists together,
+of having behaved himself as becomes one of the brotherhood of the
+wheel. The other man in brown watched his receding aspect. “Greasy
+proletarian,” said the other man in brown, feeling a prophetic dislike.
+“Got a suit of brown, the very picture of this. One would think his sole
+aim in life had been to caricature me. It’s Fortune’s way with me. Look
+at his insteps on the treadles! Why does Heaven make such men?”
+
+And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to the
+business in hand.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that he felt
+sure was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then he dismounted
+and pushed his machine; until the proximity of the village and a proper
+pride drove him into the saddle again.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in its
+beginning if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was perhaps
+half-way between Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver dropped down a little
+hill, where, unfenced from the road, fine mossy trees and bracken lay on
+either side; and looking up he saw an open country before him, covered
+with heather and set with pines, and a yellow road running across it,
+and half a mile away perhaps, a little grey figure by the wayside waving
+something white. “Never!” said Mr. Hoopdriver with his hands tightening
+on the handles.
+
+He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a stone,
+wabbled, recovered, and began riding faster at once, with his eyes
+ahead. “It can’t be,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a limp
+numbness had resumed possession of his legs. “It CAN’T be,” he repeated,
+feeling every moment more assured that it WAS. “Lord! I don’t know even
+now,” said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs awhirling), and then, “Blow my legs!”
+
+But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and gathering
+flies like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden. Then the road began
+to rise, and the resistance of the pedals grew. As he crested the hill
+he saw her, not a hundred yards away from him. “It’s her!” he said.
+“It’s her--right enough. It’s the suit’s done it,”--which was truer
+even than Mr. Hoopdriver thought. But now she was not waving her
+handkerchief, she was not even looking at him. She was wheeling her
+machine slowly along the road towards him, and admiring the pretty
+wooded hills towards Weybridge. She might have been unaware of his
+existence for all the recognition he got.
+
+For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that
+handkerchief been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and
+scarlet, and felt so. It must be her coquetry--the handkerchief was
+indisputable. Should he ride up to her and get off, or get off and ride
+up to her? It was as well she didn’t look, because he would certainly
+capsize if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was her consideration. Even
+as he hesitated he was upon her. She must have heard his breathing. He
+gripped the brake. Steady! His right leg waved in the air, and he came
+down heavily and staggering, but erect. She turned her eyes upon him
+with admirable surprise.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine, raise his
+cap, and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as much. He was a
+man singularly devoid of the minutiae of self-consciousness, and he was
+quite unaware of a tail of damp hair lying across his forehead, and just
+clearing his eyes, and of the general disorder of his coiffure. There
+was an interrogative pause.
+
+“What can I have the pleasure--” began Mr. Haopdriver, insinuatingly.
+“I mean” (remembering his emancipation and abruptly assuming his most
+aristocratic intonation), “can I be of any assistance to you?”
+
+The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily, “None,
+thank you.” She glanced away from him and made as if she would proceed.
+
+“Oh!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen
+again. It was so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was she
+coquetting? Or had he--?
+
+“Excuse me, one minute,” he said, as she began to wheel her machine
+again.
+
+“Yes?” she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour in her
+cheeks deepening.
+
+“I should not have alighted if I had not--imagined that you--er, waved
+something white--” He paused.
+
+She looked at him doubtfully. He HAD seen it! She decided that he was
+not an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but an innocent
+soul meaning well while seeking happiness. “I DID wave my handkerchief,”
+ she said. “I’m very sorry. I am expecting--a friend, a gentleman,”--she
+seemed to flush pink for a minute. “He is riding a bicycle and dressed
+in--in brown; and at a distance, you know--”
+
+“Oh, quite!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion against
+his bitter disappointment. “Certainly.”
+
+“I’m awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all that.”
+
+“No trouble. ‘Ssure you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and bowing
+over his saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could not find it
+in his heart to tell her that the man was beyond there with a punctured
+pneumatic. He looked back along the road and tried to think of something
+else to say. But the gulf in the conversation widened rapidly and
+hopelessly. “There’s nothing further,” began Mr. Hoopdriver desperately,
+recurring to his stock of cliches.
+
+“Nothing, thank you,” she said decisively. And immediately, “This IS the
+Ripley road?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Ripley is about two miles from here.
+According to the mile-stones.”
+
+“Thank you,” she said warmly. “Thank you so much. I felt sure there was
+no mistake. And I really am awfully sorry--”
+
+“Don’t mention it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t mention it.” He
+hesitated and gripped his handles to mount. “It’s me,” he said, “ought
+to be sorry.” Should he say it? Was it an impertinence? Anyhow!--“Not
+being the other gentleman, you know.”
+
+He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even as
+he smiled it; felt she disapproved--that she despised him, was overcome
+with shame at her expression, turned his back upon her, and began (very
+clumsily) to mount. He did so with a horrible swerve, and went
+pedalling off, riding very badly, as he was only too painfully aware.
+Nevertheless, thank Heaven for the mounting! He could not see her
+because it was so dangerous for him to look round, but he could imagine
+her indignant and pitiless. He felt an unspeakable idiot. One had to be
+so careful what one said to Young Ladies, and he’d gone and treated her
+just as though she was only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He
+always WAS a fool. You could tell from her manner she didn’t think him a
+gentleman. One glance, and she seemed to look clear through him and all
+his presence. What rot it was venturing to speak to a girl like that!
+With her education she was bound to see through him at once.
+
+How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel what
+slush his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What was it? ‘Not
+being the other gentleman, you know!’ No point in it. And ‘GENTLEMAN!’
+What COULD she be thinking of him?
+
+But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from her
+thoughts almost before he had vanished round the corner. She had thought
+no ill of him. His manifest awe and admiration of her had given her not
+an atom of offence. But for her just now there were weightier things
+to think about, things that would affect all the rest of her life. She
+continued slowly walking her machine Londonward. Presently she stopped.
+“Oh! Why DOESN’T he come?” she said, and stamped her foot petulantly.
+Then, as if in answer, coming down the hill among the trees, appeared
+the other man in brown, dismounted and wheeling his machine.
+
+
+
+
+IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came to him,
+with an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen the last of the
+Young Lady in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery of the machine, the
+present machinery of Fate, the deus ex machina, so to speak, was against
+him. The bicycle, torn from this attractive young woman, grew heavier
+and heavier, and continually more unsteady. It seemed a choice between
+stopping at Ripley or dying in the flower of his days. He went into the
+Unicorn, after propping his machine outside the door, and, as he cooled
+down and smoked his Red Herring cigarette while the cold meat was
+getting ready, he saw from the window the Young Lady in Grey and the
+other man in brown, entering Ripley.
+
+They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which
+sheltered him, but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk and
+incapable attitude against the doorway, humping its rackety mud-guard
+and leering at them with its darkened lantern eye, drove them away--so
+it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver--to the spacious swallow of the Golden
+Dragon. The young lady was riding very slowly, but the other man in
+brown had a bad puncture and was wheeling his machine. Mr. Hoopdriver
+noted his flaxen moustache, his aquiline nose, his rather bent
+shoulders, with a sudden, vivid dislike.
+
+The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is jaded
+by the incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver’s mind, even as
+he conversed with her in that cultivated voice of his--of the weather,
+of the distance from London, and of the excellence of the Ripley
+road--wandered to the incomparable freshness and brilliance of the Young
+Lady in Grey. As he sat at meat he kept turning his head to the window
+to see what signs there were of that person, but the face of the
+Golden Dragon displayed no appreciation of the delightful morsel it
+had swallowed. As an incidental consequence of this distraction, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly inconvenienced by a mouthful of
+mustard. After he had called for his reckoning he went, his courage
+being high with meat and mustard, to the door, intending to stand, with
+his legs wide apart and his hands deep in his pockets, and stare boldly
+across the road. But just then the other man in brown appeared in the
+gateway of the Golden Dragon yard--it is one of those delightful inns
+that date from the coaching days--wheeling his punctured machine. He
+was taking it to Flambeau’s, the repairer’s. He looked up and saw
+Hoopdriver, stared for a minute, and then scowled darkly.
+
+But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other man in
+brown had disappeared into Flambeau’s. Then he glanced momentarily at
+the Golden Dragon, puckered his mouth into a whistle of unconcern, and
+proceeded to wheel his machine into the road until a sufficient margin
+for mounting was secured.
+
+Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not of
+seeing no more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in brown he
+guessed was her brother, albeit that person was of a pallid fairness,
+differing essentially from her rich colouring; and, besides, he felt he
+had made a hopeless fool of himself. But the afternoon was against him,
+intolerably hot, especially on the top of his head, and the virtue had
+gone out of his legs to digest his cold meat, and altogether his ride to
+Guildford was exceedingly intermittent. At times he would walk, at times
+lounge by the wayside, and every public house, in spite of Briggs and a
+sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of bitter. (For that
+is the experience of all those who go on wheels, that drinking begets
+thirst, even more than thirst begets drinking, until at last the man who
+yields becomes a hell unto himself, a hell in which the fire dieth
+not, and the thirst is not quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid green
+apples turned the current that threatened to carry him away. Ever and
+again a cycle, or a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering
+wheels and softly running chains, and on each occasion, to save his
+self-respect, Mr. Hoopdriver descended and feigned some trouble with his
+saddle. Each time he descended with less trepidation.
+
+He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o’clock, and then he was
+so much exhausted that he decided to put up there for the night, at
+the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern. And after he had cooled a space and
+refreshed himself with tea and bread and butter and jam,--the tea he
+drank noisily out of the saucer,--he went out to loiter away the rest of
+the afternoon. Guildford is an altogether charming old town, famous,
+so he learnt from a Guide Book, as the scene of Master Tupper’s great
+historical novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a delightful castle, all
+set about with geraniums and brass plates commemorating the gentlemen
+who put them up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very pleasant to
+see, and in the afternoon the shops are busy and the people going to and
+fro make the pavements look bright and prosperous. It was nice to peep
+in the windows and see the heads of the men and girls in the drapers’
+shops, busy as busy, serving away. The High Street runs down at an angle
+of seventy degrees to the horizon (so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver, whose
+feeling for gradients was unnaturally exalted), and it brought his heart
+into his mouth to see a cyclist ride down it, like a fly crawling down a
+window pane. The man hadn’t even a brake. He visited the castle early in
+the evening and paid his twopence to ascend the Keep.
+
+At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red roofs
+of the town and the tower of the church, and then going to the southern
+side sat down and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and stared away south
+over the old bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin, at the waves of blue
+upland that rose, one behind another, across the Weald, to the lazy
+altitudes of Hindhead and Butser. His pale grey eyes were full of
+complacency and pleasurable anticipation. Tomorrow he would go riding
+across that wide valley.
+
+He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him until he
+heard a soft voice behind him saying: “Well, MISS BEAUMONT, here’s the
+view.” Something in the accent pointed to a jest in the name.
+
+“It’s a dear old town, brother George,” answered another voice that
+sounded familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr. Hoopdriver saw the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, with their backs towards
+him. She turned her smiling profile towards Hoopdriver. “Only, you know,
+brothers don’t call their sisters--”
+
+She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. “Damn!” said the other
+man in brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed her glance.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the Weald.
+“Beautiful old town, isn’t it?” said the other man in brown, after a
+quite perceptible pause.
+
+“Isn’t it?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Another pause began.
+
+“Can’t get alone anywhere,” said the other man in brown, looking round.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and
+decided to retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should
+stumble at the head of the steps and vanish with indignity. This was the
+third time that he’d seen HIM, and the fourth time her. And of course
+he was too big a fat-head to raise his cap to HER! He thought of that at
+the foot of the Keep. Apparently they aimed at the South Coast just
+as he did, He’d get up betimes the next day and hurry off to avoid
+her--them, that is. It never occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver that Miss
+Beaumont and her brother might do exactly the same thing, and that
+evening, at least, the peculiarity of a brother calling his sister “Miss
+Beaumont” did not recur to him. He was much too preoccupied with an
+analysis of his own share of these encounters. He found it hard to be
+altogether satisfied about the figure he had cut, revise his memories as
+he would.
+
+Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two people. It
+was about seven o’clock. He stopped outside a linen draper’s and peered
+over the goods in the window at the assistants in torment. He could have
+spent a whole day happily at that. He told himself that he was trying
+to see how they dressed out the brass lines over their counters, in a
+purely professional spirit, but down at the very bottom of his heart he
+knew better. The customers were a secondary consideration, and it was
+only after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he perceived that among
+them was--the Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the window
+at once, and saw the other man in brown standing at the edge of the
+pavement and regarding him with a very curious expression of face.
+
+There came into Mr. Hoopdriver’s head the curious problem whether he was
+to be regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or whether they were
+to be regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He abandoned the solution at
+last in despair, quite unable to decide upon the course he should take
+at the next encounter, whether he should scowl savagely at the couple or
+assume an attitude eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+
+
+
+
+X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER’S HEART
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he had
+never written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will describe him
+better. Like I know not how many of those who do the fetching and
+carrying of life,--a great number of them certainly,--his real life was
+absolutely uninteresting, and if he had faced it as realistically as
+such people do in Mr. Gissing’s novels, he would probably have come by
+way of drink to suicide in the course of a year. But that was just what
+he had the natural wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he was always
+decorating his existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses,
+deliberate and yet quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences were
+mere material for a romantic superstructure. If some power had given
+Hoopdriver the ‘giftie’ Burns invoked, ‘to see oursels as ithers see
+us,’ he would probably have given it away to some one else at the very
+earliest opportunity. His entire life, you must understand, was not a
+continuous romance, but a series of short stories linked only by the
+general resemblance of their hero, a brown-haired young fellow commonly,
+with blue eyes and a fair moustache, graceful rather than strong, sharp
+and resolute rather than clever (cp., as the scientific books say,
+p. 2). Invariably this person possessed an iron will. The stories
+fluctuated indefinitely. The smoking of a cigarette converted
+Hoopdriver’s hero into something entirely worldly, subtly rakish, with a
+humorous twinkle in the eye and some gallant sinning in the background.
+You should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver promenading the brilliant gardens at
+Earl’s Court on an early-closing night. His meaning glances! (I dare not
+give the meaning.) Such an influence as the eloquence of a revivalist
+preacher would suffice to divert the story into absolutely different
+channels, make him a white-soured hero, a man still pure, walking
+untainted and brave and helpful through miry ways. The appearance of
+some daintily gloved frockcoated gentleman with buttonhole and eyeglass
+complete, gallantly attendant in the rear of customers, served again
+to start visions of a simplicity essentially Cromwell-like, of sturdy
+plainness, of a strong, silent man going righteously through the world.
+This day there had predominated a fine leisurely person immaculately
+clothed, and riding on an unexceptional machine, a mysterious
+person--quite unostentatious, but with accidental self-revelation
+of something over the common, even a “bloomin’ Dook,” it might be
+incognito, on the tour of the South Coast.
+
+You must not think that there was any TELLING of these stories of this
+life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that they were known
+to a soul. If it were not for the trouble, I would, I think, go back and
+rewrite this section from the beginning, expunging the statements that
+Hoopdriver was a poet and a romancer, and saying instead that he was a
+playwright and acted his own plays. He was not only the sole performer,
+but the entire audience, and the entertainment kept him almost
+continuously happy. Yet even that playwright comparison scarcely
+expresses all the facts of the case. After all, very many of his dreams
+never got acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the dreams of
+a solitary walk for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the dreams dreamt
+behind the counter while trade was slack and mechanical foldings
+and rollings occupied his muscles. Most of them were little dramatic
+situations, crucial dialogues, the return of Mr. Hoopdriver to his
+native village, for instance, in a well-cut holiday suit and natty
+gloves, the unheard asides of the rival neighbours, the delight of
+the old ‘mater,’ the intelligence--“A ten-pound rise all at once
+from Antrobus, mater. Whad d’yer think of that?” or again, the first
+whispering of love, dainty and witty and tender, to the girl he served
+a few days ago with sateen, or a gallant rescue of generalised beauty in
+distress from truculent insult or ravening dog.
+
+So many people do this--and you never suspect it. You see a tattered lad
+selling matches in the street, and you think there is nothing between
+him and the bleakness of immensity, between him and utter abasement, but
+a few tattered rags and a feeble musculature. And all unseen by you a
+host of heaven-sent fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they
+swathe you about. Many men have never seen their own profiles or the
+backs of their heads, and for the back of your own mind no mirror has
+been invented. They swathe him about so thickly that the pricks of fate
+scarce penetrate to him, or become but a pleasant titillation. And so,
+indeed, it is with all of us who go on living. Self-deception is the
+anaesthetic of life, while God is carving out our beings.
+
+But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+imaginings. You see now how external our view has been; we have had but
+the slightest transitory glimpses of the drama within, of how the things
+looked in the magic mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. On the road to
+Guildford and during his encounters with his haunting fellow-cyclists
+the drama had presented chiefly the quiet gentleman to whom we have
+alluded, but at Guildford, under more varied stimuli, he burgeoned out
+more variously. There was the house agent’s window, for instance, set
+him upon a charming little comedy. He would go in, make inquires about
+that thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go over it--the thing
+would stimulate the clerk’s curiosity immensely. He searched his mind
+for a reason for this proceeding and discovered that he was a dynamiter
+needing privacy. Upon that theory he procured the key, explored the
+house carefully, said darkly that it might suit his special needs,
+but that there were OTHERS to consult. The clerk, however, did not
+understand the allusion, and merely pitied him as one who had married
+young and paired himself to a stronger mind than his own.
+
+This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a note-book
+and pencil, and that started the conception of an artist taking notes.
+That was a little game Mr. Hoopdriver had, in congenial company, played
+in his still younger days--to the infinite annoyance of quite a number
+of respectable excursionists at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver
+had been, as his mother proudly boasted, a ‘bit of a drawer,’ but a
+conscientious and normally stupid schoolmaster perceived the incipient
+talent and had nipped it in the bud by a series of lessons in art.
+However, our principal character figured about quite happily in old
+corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking out of
+the bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a corner by
+a gateway, note-book in hand, busily sketching the Earl’s imposing
+features. At which sight the other man in brown started back from
+the centre of the window, so as to be hidden from him, and crouching
+slightly, watched him intently through the interstices of the lace
+curtains.
+
+
+
+
+XI. OMISSIONS
+
+Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the great
+opening day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here. How he
+wandered about the old town in the dusk, and up to the Hogsback to see
+the little lamps below and the little stars above come out one after
+another; how he returned through the yellow-lit streets to the Yellow
+Hammer Coffee Tavern and supped bravely in the commercial room--a Man
+among Men; how he joined in the talk about flying-machines and the
+possibilities of electricity, witnessing that flying-machines were “dead
+certain to come,” and that electricity was “wonderful, wonderful”; how
+he went and watched the billiard playing and said, “Left ‘em” several
+times with an oracular air; how he fell a-yawning; and how he got
+out his cycling map and studied it intently,--are things that find no
+mention here. Nor will I enlarge upon his going into the writing-room,
+and marking the road from London to Guildford with a fine, bright line
+of the reddest of red ink. In his little cyclist hand-book there is a
+diary, and in the diary there is an entry of these things--it is there
+to this day, and I cannot do better than reproduce it here to witness
+that this book is indeed a true one, and no lying fable written to while
+away an hour.
+
+At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he set
+about finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all days
+must end at last! ) He got his candle in the hall from a friendly
+waiting-maid, and passed upward--whither a modest novelist, who writes
+for the family circle, dare not follow. Yet I may tell you that he knelt
+down at his bedside, happy and drowsy, and said, “Our Father ‘chartin’
+heaven,” even as he had learnt it by rote from his mother nearly twenty
+years ago. And anon when his breathing had become deep and regular, we
+may creep into his bedroom and catch him at his dreams. He is lying
+upon his left side, with his arm under the pillow. It is dark, and he
+is hidden; but if you could have seen his face, sleeping there in the
+darkness, I think you would have perceived, in spite of that treasured,
+thin, and straggling moustache, in spite of your memory of the coarse
+words he had used that day, that the man before you was, after all, only
+a little child asleep.
+
+
+
+
+XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little, plain
+bedroom at the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern at Guildford.
+That was before midnight. As the night progressed he was disturbed by
+dreams.
+
+After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory of
+motion lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and round they
+seem to go. You ride through Dreamland on wonderful dream bicycles
+that change and grow; you ride down steeples and staircases and over
+precipices; you hover in horrible suspense over inhabited towns, vainly
+seeking for a brake your hand cannot find, to save you from a headlong
+fall; you plunge into weltering rivers, and rush helplessly at monstrous
+obstacles. Anon Mr. Hoopdriver found himself riding out of the darkness
+of non-existence, pedalling Ezekiel’s Wheels across the Weald of Surrey,
+jolting over the hills and smashing villages in his course, while the
+other man in brown cursed and swore at him and shouted to stop his
+career. There was the Putney heath-keeper, too, and the man in drab
+raging at him. He felt an awful fool, a--what was it?--a juggins,
+ah!--a Juggernaut. The villages went off one after another with a soft,
+squashing noise. He did not see the Young Lady in Grey, but he knew she
+was looking at his back. He dared not look round. Where the devil was
+the brake? It must have fallen off. And the bell? Right in front of him
+was Guildford. He tried to shout and warn the town to get out of the
+way, but his voice was gone as well. Nearer, nearer! it was fearful! and
+in another moment the houses were cracking like nuts and the blood of
+the inhabitants squirting this way and that. The streets were black with
+people running. Right under his wheels he saw the Young Lady in Grey. A
+feeling of horror came upon Mr. Hoopdriver; he flung himself sideways
+to descend, forgetting how high he was, and forthwith he began falling;
+falling, falling.
+
+He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered a
+little, and went to sleep again.
+
+This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other man
+in brown came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew uglier and
+uglier as he approached, and his expression was intolerably evil. He
+came and looked close into Mr. Hoopdriver’s eyes and then receded to an
+incredible distance. His face seemed to be luminous. “MISS BEAUMONT,” he
+said, and splashed up a spray of suspicion. Some one began letting
+off fireworks, chiefly Catherine wheels, down the shop, though Mr.
+Hoopdriver knew it was against the rules. For it seemed that the place
+they were in was a vast shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived that the
+other man in brown was the shop-walker, differing from most shop-walkers
+in the fact that he was lit from within as a Chinese lantern might be.
+And the customer Mr. Hoopdriver was going to serve was the Young Lady
+in Grey. Curious he hadn’t noticed it before. She was in grey as
+usual,--rationals,--and she had her bicycle leaning against the counter.
+She smiled quite frankly at him, just as she had done when she had
+apologised for stopping him. And her form, as she leant towards him, was
+full of a sinuous grace he had never noticed before. “What can I have
+the pleasure?” said Mr. Hoopdriver at once, and she said, “The Ripley
+road.” So he got out the Ripley road and unrolled it and showed it to
+her, and she said that would do very nicely, and kept on looking at him
+and smiling, and he began measuring off eight miles by means of the yard
+measure on the counter, eight miles being a dress length, a rational
+dress length, that is; and then the other man in brown came up and
+wanted to interfere, and said Mr. Hoopdriver was a cad, besides
+measuring it off too slowly. And as Mr. Hoopdriver began to measure
+faster, the other man in brown said the Young Lady in Grey had been
+there long enough, and that he WAS her brother, or else she would not be
+travelling with him, and he suddenly whipped his arm about her waist and
+made off with her. It occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment that
+this was scarcely brotherly behaviour. Of course it wasn’t! The sight
+of the other man gripping her so familiarly enraged him frightfully; he
+leapt over the counter forthwith and gave chase. They ran round the shop
+and up an iron staircase into the Keep, and so out upon the Ripley road.
+For some time they kept dodging in and out of a wayside hotel with
+two front doors and an inn yard. The other man could not run very fast
+because he had hold of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was
+hampered by the absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch
+out; they would keep going round and round as if they were on the
+treadles of a wheel, so that he made the smallest steps conceivable.
+This dream came to no crisis. The chase seemed to last an interminable
+time, and all kinds of people, heathkeepers, shopmen, policemen, the old
+man in the Keep, the angry man in drab, the barmaid at the Unicorn, men
+with flying-machines, people playing billiards in the doorways, silly,
+headless figures, stupid cocks and hens encumbered with parcels
+and umbrellas and waterproofs, people carrying bedroom candles, and
+such-like riffraff, kept getting in his way and annoying him, although
+he sounded his electric bell, and said, “Wonderful, wonderful!” at every
+corner....
+
+
+
+
+XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+
+There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver’s breakfast, so
+that after all he was not free to start out of Guildford until just upon
+the stroke of nine. He wheeled his machine from the High Street in some
+perplexity. He did not know whether this young lady, who had seized hold
+of his imagination so strongly, and her unfriendly and possibly menacing
+brother, were ahead of him or even now breakfasting somewhere in
+Guildford. In the former case he might loiter as he chose; in the latter
+he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in branch roads.
+
+It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that he would
+leave Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but by the road
+running through Shalford. Along this pleasant shady way he felt
+sufficiently secure to resume his exercises in riding with one hand
+off the handles, and in staring over his shoulder. He came over once
+or twice, but fell on his foot each time, and perceived that he was
+improving. Before he got to Bramley a specious byway snapped him up, ran
+with him for half a mile or more, and dropped him as a terrier drops
+a walkingstick, upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from
+Godalming. He entered Godalming on his feet, for the road through that
+delightful town is beyond dispute the vilest in the world, a mere tumult
+of road metal, a way of peaks and precipices, and, after a successful
+experiment with cider at the Woolpack, he pushed on to Milford.
+
+All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young Lady
+in Grey and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark is of Bogies.
+Sometimes he could hear their pneumatics stealing upon him from behind,
+and looking round saw a long stretch of vacant road. Once he saw far
+ahead of him a glittering wheel, but it proved to be a workingman riding
+to destruction on a very tall ordinary. And he felt a curious, vague
+uneasiness about that Young Lady in Grey, for which he was altogether
+unable to account. Now that he was awake he had forgotten that
+accentuated Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in his dream. But
+the curious dream conviction, that the girl was not really the man’s
+sister, would not let itself be forgotten. Why, for instance, should a
+man want to be alone with his sister on the top of a tower? At Milford
+his bicycle made, so to speak, an ass of itself. A finger-post suddenly
+jumped out at him, vainly indicating an abrupt turn to the right,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver would have slowed up and read the inscription, but
+no!--the bicycle would not let him. The road dropped a little into
+Milford, and the thing shied, put down its head and bolted, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver only thought of the brake when the fingerpost was passed.
+Then to have recovered the point of intersection would have meant
+dismounting. For as yet there was no road wide enough for Mr. Hoopdriver
+to turn in. So he went on his way--or to be precise, he did exactly the
+opposite thing. The road to the right was the Portsmouth road, and this
+he was on went to Haslemere and Midhurst. By that error it came about
+that he once more came upon his fellow travellers of yesterday, coming
+on them suddenly, without the slightest preliminary announcement and
+when they least expected it, under the Southwestern Railway arch. “It’s
+horrible,” said a girlish voice; “it’s brutal--cowardly--” And stopped.
+
+His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have been
+something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of annoyance at
+himself for the unintentional intrusion. But disconcerted as he was, he
+was yet able to appreciate something of the peculiarity of their mutual
+attitudes. The bicycles were lying by the roadside, and the two riders
+stood face to face. The other man in brown’s attitude, as it flashed
+upon Hoopdriver, was a deliberate pose; he twirled his moustache and
+smiled faintly, and he was conscientiously looking amused. And the girl
+stood rigid, her arms straight by her side, her handkerchief clenched in
+her hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest touch of red upon
+her eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s sense to be indignant. But
+that was the impression of a second. A mask of surprised recognition
+fell across this revelation of emotion as she turned her head towards
+him, and the pose of the other man in brown vanished too in a momentary
+astonishment. And then he had passed them, and was riding on towards
+Haslemere to make what he could of the swift picture that had
+photographed itself on his brain.
+
+“Rum,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s DASHED rum!”
+
+“They were having a row.”
+
+“Smirking--” What he called the other man in brown need not trouble us.
+
+“Annoying her!” That any human being should do that!
+
+“WHY?”
+
+The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind. He
+grasped his brake, descended, and stood looking hesitatingly back. They
+still stood by the railway bridge, and it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+fancy that she was stamping her foot. He hesitated, then turned his
+bicycle round, mounted, and rode back towards them, gripping his courage
+firmly lest it should slip away and leave him ridiculous. “I’ll offer
+‘im a screw ‘ammer,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. Then, with a wave of fierce
+emotion, he saw that the girl was crying. In another moment they heard
+him and turned in surprise. Certainly she had been crying; her eyes
+were swimming in tears, and the other man in brown looked exceedingly
+disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver descended and stood over his machine.
+
+“Nothing wrong, I hope?” he said, looking the other man in brown
+squarely in the face. “No accident?”
+
+“Nothing,” said the other man in brown shortly. “Nothing at all,
+thanks.”
+
+“But,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, “the young lady is
+crying. I thought perhaps--”
+
+The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance, and
+covered one eye with her handkerchief. “It’s this speck,” she said.
+“This speck of dust in my eye.”
+
+“This lady,” said the other man in brown, explaining, “has a gnat in her
+eye.”
+
+There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. “I
+believe it’s out,” she said. The other man in brown made movements
+indicating commiserating curiosity concerning the alleged fly. Mr.
+Hoopdriver--the word is his own--stood flabber-gastered. He had all the
+intuition of the simple-minded. He knew there was no fly. But the
+ground was suddenly cut from his feet. There is a limit to
+knighterrantry--dragons and false knights are all very well, but flies!
+Fictitious flies! Whatever the trouble was, it was evidently not his
+affair. He felt he had made a fool of himself again. He would have
+mumbled some sort of apology; but the other man in brown gave him no
+time, turned on him abruptly, even fiercely. “I hope,” he said, “that
+your curiosity is satisfied?”
+
+“Certainly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Then we won’t detain you.”
+
+And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about, struggled
+upon it, and resumed the road southward. And when he learnt that he was
+not on the Portsmouth road, it was impossible to turn and go back, for
+that would be to face his shame again, and so he had to ride on by Brook
+Street up the hill to Haslemere. And away to the right the Portsmouth
+road mocked at him and made off to its fastnesses amid the sunlit green
+and purple masses of Hindhead, where Mr. Grant Allen writes his Hill Top
+Novels day by day.
+
+The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys one saw
+on either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the sides of the road
+itself set about with grey heather scrub and prickly masses of gorse,
+and pine trees with their year’s growth still bright green, against the
+darkened needles of the previous years, were fresh and delightful to Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s eyes But the brightness of the day and the day-old sense of
+freedom fought an uphill fight against his intolerable vexation at that
+abominable encounter, and had still to win it when he reached Haslemere.
+A great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred of the other man in brown,
+possessed him. He had conceived the brilliant idea of abandoning
+Portsmouth, or at least giving up the straight way to his
+fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the left, eastward. He
+did not dare to stop at any of the inviting public-houses in the
+main street of Haslemere, but turned up a side way and found a little
+beer-shop, the Good Hope, wherein to refresh himself. And there he ate
+and gossipped condescendingly with an aged labourer, assuming the
+while for his own private enjoyment the attributes of a Lost Heir, and
+afterwards mounted and rode on towards Northchapel, a place which a
+number of finger-posts conspired to boom, but which some insidious
+turning prevented him from attaining.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+
+It was one of my uncle’s profoundest remarks that human beings are the
+only unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far justified by
+Mr. Hoopdriver that, after spending the morning tortuously avoiding the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, he spent a considerable
+part of the afternoon in thinking about the Young Lady in Grey, and
+contemplating in an optimistic spirit the possibilities of seeing her
+again. Memory and imagination played round her, so that his course was
+largely determined by the windings of the road he traversed. Of one
+general proposition he was absolutely convinced. “There’s something
+Juicy wrong with ‘em,” said he--once even aloud. But what it was he
+could not imagine. He recapitulated the facts. “Miss Beaumont--brother
+and sister--and the stoppage to quarrel and weep--” it was perplexing
+material for a young man of small experience. There was no exertion he
+hated so much as inference, and after a time he gave up any attempt
+to get at the realities of the case, and let his imagination go free.
+Should he ever see her again? Suppose he did--with that other chap not
+about. The vision he found pleasantest was an encounter with her, an
+unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing Class ‘Do’ at the Putney
+Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift together, and he would dance
+with her again and again. It was a pleasant vision, for you must
+understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly well. Or again, in the
+shop, a sudden radiance in the doorway, and she is bowed towards the
+Manchester counter. And then to lean over that counter and murmur,
+seemingly apropos of the goods under discussion, “I have not forgotten
+that morning on the Portsmouth road,” and lower, “I never shall forget.”
+
+At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel and
+weighed his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible resting-place,
+or Pullborough; Midhurst seemed too near, and any place over the Downs
+beyond, too far, and so he meandered towards Petworth, posing himself
+perpetually and loitering, gathering wild flowers and wondering why they
+had no names--for he had never heard of any--dropping them furtively
+at the sight of a stranger, and generally ‘mucking about.’ There
+were purple vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet, honeysuckle, belated
+brambles--but the dog-roses had already gone; there were green and red
+blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another place white
+dead nettles, traveller’s-joy, clinging bedstraw, grasses flowering,
+white campions, and ragged robins. One cornfield was glorious with
+poppies, bright scarlet and purple white, and the blue corn-flowers were
+beginning. In the lanes the trees met overhead, and the wisps of hay
+still hung to the straggling hedges. Iri one of the main roads he
+steered a perilous passage through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and
+there were little cottages, and picturesque beer-houses with the vivid
+brewers’ boards of blue and scarlet, and once a broad green and a
+church, and an expanse of some hundred houses or so. Then he came to
+a pebbly rivulet that emerged between clumps of sedge loosestrife and
+forget-me-nots under an arch of trees, and rippled across the road,
+and there he dismounted, longing to take off shoes and stockings--those
+stylish chequered stockings were now all dimmed with dust--and paddle
+his lean legs in the chuckling cheerful water. But instead he sat in
+a manly attitude, smoking a cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in
+Grey should come glittering round the corner. For the flavour of the
+Young Lady in Grey was present through it all, mixing with the flowers
+and all the delight of it, a touch that made this second day quite
+different from the first, an undertone of expectation, anxiety, and
+something like regret that would not be ignored.
+
+It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he began
+to repent, vividly and decidedly, having fled these two people. He
+was getting hungry, and that has a curious effect upon the emotional
+colouring of our minds. The man was a sinister brute, Hoopdriver saw in
+a flash of inspiration, and the girl--she was in some serious trouble.
+And he who might have helped her had taken his first impulse as
+decisive--and bolted. This new view of it depressed him dreadfully. What
+might not be happening to her now? He thought again of her tears. Surely
+it was merely his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his eye upon
+it.
+
+He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found
+himself in a tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming on,
+emerged, not at Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from Midhurst. “I’m
+getting hungry,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of a gamekeeper in
+Easebourne village. “Midhurst a mile, and Petworth five!--Thenks, I’ll
+take Midhurst.”
+
+He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the North
+Street, and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the cheerful sign of
+a teapot, and exhibiting a brilliant array of tobaccos, sweets, and
+children’s toys in the window, struck his fancy. A neat, bright-eyed
+little old lady made him welcome, and he was presently supping
+sumptuously on sausages and tea, with a visitors’ book full of the most
+humorous and flattering remarks about the little old lady, in verse and
+prose, propped up against his teapot as he ate. Regular good some of
+the jokes were, and rhymes that read well--even with your mouth full
+of sausage. Mr. Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing
+“something”--for his judgment on the little old lady was already formed.
+He pictured the little old lady discovering it afterwards--“My gracious!
+One of them Punch men,” she would say. The room had a curtained recess
+and a chest of drawers, for presently it was to be his bedroom, and the
+day part of it was decorated with framed Oddfellows’ certificates and
+giltbacked books and portraits, and kettle-holders, and all kinds of
+beautiful things made out of wool; very comfortable it was indeed. The
+window was lead framed and diamond paned, and through it one saw the
+corner of the vicarage and a pleasant hill crest, in dusky silhouette
+against the twilight sky. And after the sausages had ceased to be, he
+lit a Red Herring cigarette and went swaggering out into the twilight
+street. All shadowy blue between its dark brick houses, was the street,
+with a bright yellow window here and there and splashes of green and red
+where the chemist’s illumination fell across the road.
+
+
+
+
+XV. AN INTERLUDE
+
+And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky Midhurst
+North Street, and return to the two folks beside the railway bridge
+between Milford and Haslemere. She was a girl of eighteen, dark,
+fine featured, with bright eyes, and a rich, swift colour under her
+warm-tinted skin. Her eyes were all the brighter for the tears that swam
+in them. The man was thirty three or four, fair, with a longish nose
+overhanging his sandy flaxen moustache, pale blue eyes, and a head that
+struck out above and behind. He stood with his feet wide apart, his hand
+on his hip, in an attitude that was equally suggestive of defiance and
+aggression. They had watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The unexpected
+interruption had stopped the flood of her tears. He tugged his abundant
+moustache and regarded her calmly. She stood with face averted,
+obstinately resolved not to speak first. “Your behaviour,” he said at
+last, “makes you conspicuous.”
+
+She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands clenched.
+“You unspeakable CAD,” she said, and choked, stamped her little foot,
+and stood panting.
+
+“Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I AM an unspeakable cad. Who
+wouldn’t be--for you?”
+
+“‘Dear girl!’ How DARE you speak to me like that? YOU--”
+
+“I would do anything--”
+
+“OH!”
+
+There was a moment’s pause. She looked squarely into his face, her eyes
+alight with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a little. He
+stroked his moustache, and by an effort maintained his cynical calm.
+“Let us be reasonable,” he said.
+
+“Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual in the
+world.”
+
+“You have always had it so--in your generalising way. But let us look at
+the facts of the case--if that pleases you better.”
+
+With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+
+“Well,” he said,--“you’ve eloped.”
+
+“I’ve left my home,” she corrected, with dignity. “I left my home
+because it was unendurable. Because that woman--”
+
+“Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me.”
+
+“You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to help me to
+earn a living by writing. It was you who said, why shouldn’t a man and
+woman be friends? And now you dare--you dare--”
+
+“Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence--”
+
+“I will go back. I forbid you--I forbid you to stand in the way--”
+
+“One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at least
+clear-headed. You don’t know everything yet, you know. Listen to me for
+a moment.”
+
+“Haven’t I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who dared
+only to talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at anything beyond.”
+
+“But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You KNEW. And you did
+not mind. MIND! You liked it. It was the fun of the whole thing for you.
+That I loved you, and could not speak to you. You played with it--”
+
+“You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?”
+
+“That isn’t all. I made up my mind--Well, to make the game more even.
+And so I suggested to you and joined with you in this expedition of
+yours, invented a sister at Midhurst--I tell you, I HAVEN’T a sister!
+For one object--”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“To compromise you.”
+
+She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute
+neither spoke. Then she began half defiantly: “Much I am compromised. Of
+course--I have made a fool of myself--”
+
+“My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and you
+know very little of this world. Less than you think. But you will learn.
+Before you write all those novels we have talked about, you will have
+to learn. And that’s one point--” He hesitated. “You started and blushed
+when the man at breakfast called you Ma’am. You thought it a funny
+mistake, but you did not say anything because he was young and
+nervous--and besides, the thought of being my wife offended your
+modesty. You didn’t care to notice it. But--you see; I gave your name
+as MRS. Beaumont.” He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical
+pose. “MRS. Beaumont,” he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and
+watching the effect.
+
+She looked into his eyes speechless. “I am learning fast,” she said
+slowly, at last.
+
+He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. “Jessie,” he said,
+with a sudden change of voice, “I know all this is mean, isvillanous.
+But do you think that I have done all this scheming, all this
+subterfuge, for any other object--”
+
+She did not seem to listen to his words. “I shall ride home,” she said
+abruptly.
+
+“To her?”
+
+She winced.
+
+“Just think,” said he, “what she could say to you after this.”
+
+“Anyhow, I shall leave you now.”
+
+“Yes? And go--”
+
+“Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live without
+conventionality--”
+
+“My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven’t money and you haven’t
+credit. No one would take you in. It’s one of two things: go back to
+your stepmother, or--trust to me.”
+
+“How CAN I?”
+
+“Then you must go back to her.” He paused momentarily, to let this
+consideration have its proper weight. “Jessie, I did not mean to say
+the things I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when I spoke so. If you
+will, forgive me. I am a man. I could not help myself. Forgive me, and I
+promise you--”
+
+“How can I trust you?”
+
+“Try me. I can assure you--”
+
+She regarded him distrustfully.
+
+“At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the shadow of
+this horrible bridge long enough.”
+
+“Oh! let me think,” she said, half turning from him and pressing her
+hand to her brow.
+
+“THINK! Look here, Jessie. It is ten o’clock. Shall we call a truce
+until one?”
+
+She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last agreed.
+
+They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and the
+heather. Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed. She was
+pale, divided between fear and anger. She perceived she was in a scrape,
+and tried in vain to think of a way of escape. Only one tangible thing
+would keep in her mind, try as she would to ignore it. That was the
+quite irrelevant fact that his head was singularly like an albino
+cocoanut. He, too, felt thwarted. He felt that this romantic business
+of seduction was, after all, unexpectedly tame. But this was only the
+beginning. At any rate, every day she spent with him was a day gained.
+Perhaps things looked worse than they were; that was some consolation.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+
+You have seen these two young people--Bechamel, by-the-bye, is the man’s
+name, and the girl’s is Jessie Milton--from the outside; you have heard
+them talking; they ride now side by side (but not too close together,
+and in an uneasy silence) towards Haslemere; and this chapter will
+concern itself with those curious little council chambers inside their
+skulls, where their motives are in session and their acts are considered
+and passed.
+
+But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester, enlarging
+upon the increase of bald heads and purblind people, has deduced a
+wonderful future for the children of men. Man, he said, was nowadays
+a hairless creature by forty or fifty, and for hair we gave him a wig;
+shrivelled, and we padded him; toothless, and lo! false teeth set in
+gold. Did he lose a limb, and a fine, new, artificial one was at his
+disposal; get indigestion, and to hand was artificial digestive fluid
+or bile or pancreatine, as the case might be. Complexions, too,
+were replaceable, spectacles superseded an inefficient eye-lens, and
+imperceptible false diaphragms were thrust into the failing ear. So
+he went over our anatomies, until, at last, he had conjured up a weird
+thing of shreds and patches, a simulacrum, an artificial body of a
+man, with but a doubtful germ of living flesh lurking somewhere in his
+recesses. To that, he held, we were coming.
+
+How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not concern
+us now. But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr. Rudyard Kipling, hath
+it that in the case of one Tomlinson, the thing, so far as the soul is
+concerned, has already been accomplished. Time was when men had
+simple souls, desires as natural as their eyes, a little reasonable
+philanthropy, a little reasonable philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a
+taste for good living, a decent, personal vanity, a healthy, satisfying
+pugnacity, and so forth. But now we are taught and disciplined for
+years and years, and thereafter we read and read for all the time some
+strenuous, nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic hypnotists,
+pulpit and platform hypnotists, book-writing hypnotists,
+newspaper-writing hypnotists, are at us all. This sugar you are eating,
+they tell us, is ink, and forthwith we reject it with infinite disgust.
+This black draught of unrequited toil is True Happiness, and down it
+goes with every symptom of pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull
+past believing, and we yawn and stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they
+interrupt, but this Ibsen is deep and delightful, and we vie with one
+another in an excess of entertainment. And when we open the heads of
+these two young people, we find, not a straightforward motive on the
+surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a soul so much as an oversoul,
+a zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas, a highway’s feast of fine,
+confused thinking. The girl is resolute to Live Her Own Life, a phrase
+you may have heard before, and the man has a pretty perverted ambition
+to be a cynical artistic person of the very calmest description. He is
+hoping for the awakening of Passion in her, among other things. He knows
+Passion ought to awaken, from the text-books he has studied. He knows
+she admires his genius, but he is unaware that she does not admire his
+head. He is quite a distinguished art critic in London, and he met her
+at that celebrated lady novelist’s, her stepmother, and here you have
+them well embarked upon the Adventure. Both are in the first stage of
+repentance, which consists, as you have probably found for yourself, in
+setting your teeth hard and saying’ “I WILL go on.”
+
+Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way
+together with a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for
+the orthodox development of the Adventure. He perceives he was too
+precipitate. But he feels his honour is involved, and meditates the
+development of a new attack. And the girl? She is unawakened. Her
+motives are bookish, written by a haphazard syndicate of authors,
+novelists, and biographers, on her white inexperience. An artificial
+oversoul she is, that may presently break down and reveal a human being
+beneath it. She is still in that schoolgirl phase when a talkative old
+man is more interesting than a tongue-tied young one, and when to be an
+eminent mathematician, say, or to edit a daily paper, seems as fine an
+ambition as any girl need aspire to. Bechaniel was to have helped her to
+attain that in the most expeditious manner, and here he is beside her,
+talking enigmatical phrases about passion, looking at her with the
+oddest expression, and once, and that was his gravest offence, offering
+to kiss her. At any rate he has apologised. She still scarcely realises,
+you see, the scrape she has got into.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+
+We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and tobacco
+shop. You must not think that a strain is put on coincidence when I
+tell you that next door to Mrs. Wardor’s--that was the name of the
+bright-eyed, little old lady with whom Mr. Hoopdriver had stopped--is
+the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel Hotel, on the night that Mr.
+Hoopdriver reached Midhurst, were ‘Mr.’ and ‘Miss’ Beaumont, our
+Bechamel and Jessie Milton. Indeed, it was a highly probable thing; for
+if one goes through Guildford, the choice of southward roads is limited;
+you may go by Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to Chichester,
+in addition to which highways there is nothing for it but minor roadways
+to Petworth or Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward. And coming to
+Midhurst from the north, the Angel’s entrance lies yawning to engulf
+your highly respectable cyclists, while Mrs. Wardor’s genial teapot is
+equally attractive to those who weigh their means in little scales.
+But to people unfamiliar with the Sussex roads--and such were the
+three persons of this story--the convergence did not appear to be so
+inevitable.
+
+Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner, was the
+first to be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver walk slowly across
+the gateway, his head enhaloed in cigarette smoke, and pass out of sight
+up the street. Incontinently a mass of cloudy uneasiness, that had been
+partly dispelled during the day, reappeared and concentrated rapidly
+into definite suspicion. He put his screw hammer into his pocket and
+walked through the archway into the street, to settle the business
+forthwith, for he prided himself on his decision. Hoopdriver was merely
+promenading, and they met face to face.
+
+At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and laughter
+seized Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his animosity. “‘Ere
+we are again!” he said, laughing insincerely in a sudden outbreak at the
+perversity of chance.
+
+The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver’s way, staring.
+Then his face assumed an expression of dangerous civility. “Is it any
+information to you,” he said, with immense politeness, “when I remark
+that you are following us?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his characteristic
+impulse to apologise. He wanted to annoy the other man in brown, and a
+sentence that had come into his head in a previous rehearsal cropped up
+appropriately. “Since when,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath,
+yet bringing the question out valiantly, nevertheless,--“since when ‘ave
+you purchased the county of Sussex?”
+
+“May I point out,” said the other man in brown, “that I object--we
+object not only to your proximity to us. To be frank--you appear to be
+following us--with an object.”
+
+“You can always,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “turn round if you don’t like it,
+and go back the way you came.”
+
+“Oh-o!” said the other man in brown. “THAT’S it! I thought as much.”
+
+“Did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily to the
+unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+
+“I see,” said the other man. “I see. I half suspected--” His manner
+changed abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. “Yes--a word with
+you. You will, I hope, give me ten minutes.”
+
+Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the other man
+take him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated. Then he thought of
+an admirable phrase. “You ‘ave some communication--”
+
+“We’ll call it a communication,” said the other man.
+
+“I can spare you the ten minutes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+
+“This way, then,” said the other man in brown, and they walked slowly
+down the North Street towards the Grammar School. There was, perhaps,
+thirty seconds’ silence. The other man stroked his moustache nervously.
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s dramatic instincts were now fully awake. He did
+not quite understand in what role he was cast, but it was evidently
+something dark and mysterious. Doctor Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and
+Alexander Dumas were well within Mr. Hoopdriver’s range of reading, and
+he had not read them for nothing.
+
+“I will be perfectly frank with you,” said the other man in brown.
+
+“Frankness is always the best course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Well, then--who the devil set you on this business?”
+
+“Set me ON this business?”
+
+“Don’t pretend to be stupid. Who’s your employer? Who engaged you for
+this job?”
+
+“Well,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. “No--I can’t say.”
+
+“Quite sure?” The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at his hand,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a yellow milled edge
+glittering in the twilight. Now your shop assistant is just above the
+tip-receiving class, and only just above it--so that he is acutely
+sensitive on the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met those
+of the other man in brown. “Stow it!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, stopping and
+facing the tempter.
+
+“What!” said the other man in brown, surprised. “Eigh?” And so saying he
+stowed it in his breeches pocket.
+
+“D’yer think I’m to be bribed?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose imagination
+was rapidly expanding the situation. “By Gosh! I’d follow you now--”
+
+“My dear sir,” said the other man in brown, “I beg your pardon. I
+misunderstood you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In your
+profession--”
+
+“What have you got to say against my profession?”
+
+“Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior
+description--watchers. The whole class. Private Inquiry--I did not
+realise--I really trust you will overlook what was, after all--you must
+admit--a natural indiscretion. Men of honour are not so common in the
+world--in any profession.”
+
+It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not light the
+lamps in the summer time, or the one they were passing had betrayed him.
+As it was, he had to snatch suddenly at his moustache and tug fiercely
+at it, to conceal the furious tumult of exultation, the passion of
+laughter, that came boiling up. Detective! Even in the shadow Bechamel
+saw that a laugh was stifled, but he put it down to the fact that the
+phrase “men of honour” amused his interlocutor. “He’ll come round yet,”
+ said Bechamel to himself. “He’s simply holding out for a fiver.” He
+coughed.
+
+“I don’t see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is.”
+
+“Don’t you? I do.”
+
+“Prompt,” said Bechamel, appreciatively. “Now here’s the thing I want to
+put to you--the kernel of the whole business. You need not answer if
+you don’t want to. There’s no harm done in my telling you what I want to
+know. Are you employed to watch me--or Miss Milton?”
+
+“I’m not the leaky sort,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret he did
+not know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her name. Perhaps
+he’d tell some more. “It’s no good pumping. Is that all you’re after?”
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to catch
+a remark by throwing out a confidence. “I take it there are two people
+concerned in watching this affair.”
+
+“Who’s the other?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling with
+enormous internal tension his self-appreciation. “Who’s the other?” was
+really brilliant, he thought.
+
+“There’s my wife and HER stepmother.”
+
+“And you want to know which it is?”
+
+“Yes,” said Bechamel.
+
+“Well--arst ‘em!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the better
+of him, and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. “Arst ‘em both.”
+
+Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. “I’d give a
+five-pound note to know just the precise state of affairs,” he said.
+
+“I told you to stow that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening tone.
+And added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery, “You don’t quite
+understand who you’re dealing with. But you will!” He spoke with such
+conviction that he half believed that that defective office of his in
+London--Baker Street, in fact--really existed.
+
+With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the Angel,
+perturbed. “Hang detectives!” It wasn’t the kind of thing he had
+anticipated at all. Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a wondering smile,
+walked down to where the mill waters glittered in the moonlight, and
+after meditating over the parapet of the bridge for a space, with
+occasional murmurs of, “Private Inquiry” and the like, returned, with
+mystery even in his paces, towards the town.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low
+whistling noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot the
+tears of the Young Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!--and a real one.
+Mr. Hoopdriver as a Private Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock Holmes in fact,
+keeping these two people ‘under observation.’ He walked slowly back from
+the bridge until he was opposite the Angel, and stood for ten minutes,
+perhaps, contemplating that establishment and enjoying all the strange
+sensations of being this wonderful, this mysterious and terrible thing.
+Everything fell into place in his scheme. He had, of course, by a kind
+of instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist, picked up the first
+old crock he came across as a means of pursuit. ‘No expense was to be
+spared.’
+
+Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was
+observing. “My wife”--“HER stepmother!” Then he remembered her swimming
+eyes. Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him, washed away the
+detective superstructure, and left him plain Mr. Hoopdriver. This man in
+brown, with his confident manner, and his proffered half sovereign (damn
+him!) was up to no good, else why should he object to being watched? He
+was married! She was not his sister. He began to understand. A horrible
+suspicion of the state of affairs came into Mr. Hoopdriver’s head.
+Surely it had not come to THAT. He was a detective!--he would find
+out. How was it to be done? He began to submit sketches on approval to
+himself. It required an effort before he could walk into the Angel bar.
+“A lemonade and bitter, please,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He cleared his throat. “Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?”
+
+“What, a gentleman and a young lady--on bicycles?”
+
+“Fairly young--a married couple.”
+
+“No,” said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions. “There’s
+no married couples stopping here. But there’s a Mr. and Miss BEAUMONT.”
+ She spelt it for precision. “Sure you’ve got the name right, young man?”
+
+“Quite,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of--What was the name you
+gave?”
+
+“Bowlong,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“No, there ain’t no Bowlong,” said the barmaid, taking up a glasscloth
+and a drying tumbler and beginning to polish the latter. “First off, I
+thought you might be asking for Beaumont--the names being similar. Were
+you expecting them on bicycles?”
+
+“Yes--they said they MIGHT be in Midhurst tonight.”
+
+“P’raps they’ll come presently. Beaumont’s here, but no Bowlong. Sure
+that Beaumont ain’t the name?”
+
+“Certain,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“It’s curious the names being so alike. I thought p’raps--”
+
+And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to find
+his horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having listened awhile
+at the staircase volunteered some particulars of the young couple
+upstairs. Her modesty was much impressed by the young lady’s costume, so
+she intimated, and Mr. Hoopdriver whispered the badinage natural to the
+occasion, at which she was coquettishly shocked. “There’ll be no knowing
+which is which, in a year or two,” said the barmaid. “And her manner
+too! She got off her machine and give it ‘im to stick up against the
+kerb, and in she marched. ‘I and my brother,’ says she, ‘want to stop
+here to-night. My brother doesn’t mind what kind of room ‘e ‘as, but I
+want a room with a good view, if there’s one to be got,’ says she. He
+comes hurrying in after and looks at her. ‘I’ve settled the rooms,’ she
+says, and ‘e says ‘damn!’ just like that. I can fancy my brother letting
+me boss the show like that.”
+
+“I dessay you do,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if the truth was known.”
+
+The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the
+tumbler, polished, and took up another that had been draining, and shook
+the drops of water into her little zinc sink.
+
+“She’ll be a nice little lot to marry,” said the barmaid. “She’ll be
+wearing the--well, b-dashes, as the sayin’ is. I can’t think what girls
+is comin’ to.”
+
+This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to Hoopdriver’s
+taste.
+
+“Fashion,” said he, taking up his change. “Fashion is all the go with
+you ladies--and always was. You’ll be wearing ‘em yourself before a
+couple of years is out.”
+
+“Nice they’d look on my figger,” said the barmaid, with a titter. “No--I
+ain’t one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I shouldn’t feel as
+if I’d anything on me, not more than if I’d forgot--Well, there! I’m
+talking.” She put down the glass abruptly. “I dessay I’m old fashioned,”
+ she said, and walked humming down the bar.
+
+“Not you,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her eye, then
+with his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and wished her good
+evening.
+
+
+
+
+XIX.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the lead-framed
+windows where he had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made,
+sat down on the box under the window, stared at the moon rising on
+the shining vicarage roof, and tried to collect his thoughts. How they
+whirled at first! It was past ten, and most of Midhurst was tucked
+away in bed, some one up the street was learning the violin, at rare
+intervals a belated inhabitant hurried home and woke the echoes, and a
+corncrake kept up a busy churning in the vicarage garden. The sky was
+deep blue, with a still luminous afterglow along the black edge of the
+hill, and the white moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars,
+had the sky to herself.
+
+At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not relationships.
+There was this malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr.
+Hoopdriver to take a hand in the game. HE was married. Did she know he
+was married? Never for a moment did a thought of evil concerning her
+cross Hoopdriver’s mind. Simple-minded people see questions of morals so
+much better than superior persons--who have read and thought themselves
+complex to impotence. He had heard her voice, seen the frank light in
+her eyes, and she had been weeping--that sufficed. The rights of the
+case he hadn’t properly grasped. But he would. And that smirking--well,
+swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the exceedingly unpleasant
+incident of the railway bridge. “Thin we won’t detain yer, thenks,”
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange, unnatural, contemptible voice,
+supposed to represent that of Bechamel. “Oh, the BEGGAR! I’ll be level
+with him yet. He’s afraid of us detectives--that I’ll SWEAR.” (If Mrs.
+Wardor should chance to be on the other side of the door within earshot,
+well and good.)
+
+For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical
+impossibilities for the most part,--Bechamel staggering headlong from
+the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver’s large, but, to tell the truth, ill
+supported fist, Bechamel’s five feet nine of height lifted from the
+ground and quivering under a vigorously applied horsewhip. So pleasant
+was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver’s peaked face under the moonlight
+was transfigured. One might have paired him with that well-known and
+universally admired triumph, ‘The Soul’s Awakening,’ so sweet was his
+ecstasy. And presently with his thirst for revenge glutted by six or
+seven violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous murders, his mind came
+round to the Young Lady in Grey again.
+
+She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid at
+the Angel had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a torrent,
+smoothed down to a mirror in which she was reflected with infinite
+clearness and detail. He’d never met anything like her before. Fancy
+that bolster of a barmaid being dressed in that way! He whuffed a
+contemptuous laugh. He compared her colour, her vigour, her voice, with
+the Young Ladies in Business with whom his lot had been cast. Even in
+tears she was beautiful, more beautiful indeed to him, for it made her
+seem softer and weaker, more accessible. And such weeping as he had seen
+before had been so much a matter of damp white faces, red noses, and
+hair coming out of curl. Your draper’s assistant becomes something of a
+judge of weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young Ladies in
+Business, when for any reason their services are dispensed with. She
+could weep--and (by Gosh!) she could smile. HE knew that, and reverting
+to acting abruptly, he smiled confidentially at the puckered pallor of
+the moon.
+
+It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver’s pensiveness lasted.
+It seemed a long time before his thoughts of action returned. Then he
+remembered he was a ‘watcher’; that to-morrow he must be busy. It would
+be in character to make notes, and he pulled out his little note-book.
+With that in hand he fell a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her the
+‘tecks were after them? If so, would she be as anxious to get away as HE
+was? He must be on the alert. If possible he must speak to her. Just
+a significant word, “Your friend--trust me!”--It occurred to him that
+to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to escape. At that he thought
+of the time and found it was half-past eleven. “Lord!” said he, “I must
+see that I wake.” He yawned and rose. The blind was up, and he pulled
+back the little chintz curtains to let the sunlight strike across to
+the bed, hung his watch within good view of his pillow, on a nail that
+supported a kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to undress. He lay
+awake for a little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities of the
+morrow, and thence he passed gloriously into the wonderland of dreams.
+
+
+
+
+XX. THE PURSUIT
+
+And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant,
+active, wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window stuck
+open, ears alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the corner panes, in
+oblique glances at the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor wanted him to have
+his breakfast downstairs in her kitchen, but that would have meant
+abandoning the watch, and he held out strongly. The bicycle, cap-a-pie,
+occupied, under protest, a strategic position in the shop. He was
+expectant by six in the morning. By nine horrible fears oppressed him
+that his quest had escaped him, and he had to reconnoitre the Angel
+yard in order to satisfy himself. There he found the ostler (How are the
+mighty fallen in these decadent days!) brushing down the bicycles of the
+chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs. Wardor’s premises. And about
+ten they emerged, and rode quietly up the North Street. He watched them
+until they turned the corner of the post office, and then out into the
+road and up after them in fine style! They went by the engine-house
+where the old stocks and the whipping posts are, and on to the
+Chichester road, and he followed gallantly. So this great chase began.
+
+They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight, getting
+down if he chanced to draw closely upon them round a corner. By riding
+vigorously he kept quite conveniently near them, for they made but
+little hurry. He grew hot indeed, and his knees were a little stiff to
+begin with, but that was all. There was little danger of losing them,
+for a thin chalky dust lay upon the road, and the track of her tire was
+milled like a shilling, and his was a chequered ribbon along the way.
+So they rode by Cobden’s monument and through the prettiest of villages,
+until at last the downs rose steeply ahead. There they stopped awhile at
+the only inn in the place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up a position which
+commanded the inn door, and mopped his face and thirsted and smoked a
+Red Herring cigarette. They remained in the inn for some time. A number
+of chubby innocents returning home from school, stopped and formed a
+line in front of him, and watched him quietly but firmly for the space
+of ten minutes or so. “Go away,” said he, and they only seemed quietly
+interested. He asked them all their names then, and they answered
+indistinct murmurs. He gave it up at last and became passive on his
+gate, and so at length they tired of him.
+
+The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr.
+Hoopdriver at the thought of their possible employment hungered as well
+as thirsted. Clearly, they were lunching. It was a cloudless day, and
+the sun at the meridian beat down upon the top of Mr. Hoopdriver’s head,
+a shower bath of sunshine, a huge jet of hot light. It made his head
+swim. At last they emerged, and the other man in brown looked back and
+saw him. They rode on to the foot of the down, and dismounting began
+to push tediously up that long nearly vertical ascent of blinding white
+road, Mr. Hoopdriver hesitated. It might take them twenty minutes to
+mount that. Beyond was empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided to
+return to the inn and snatch a hasty meal.
+
+At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading pewter
+measure of sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in the throat,
+but leaden in the legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a man of substance
+as he emerged in the blinding sunshine, but even by the foot of the down
+the sun was insisting again that his skull was too small for his brains.
+The hill had gone steeper, the chalky road blazed like a magnesium
+light, and his front wheel began an apparently incurable squeaking. He
+felt as a man from Mars would feel if he were suddenly transferred to
+this planet, about three times as heavy as he was wont to feel. The two
+little black figures had vanished over the forehead of the hill. “The
+tracks’ll be all right,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow progress
+up the hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf beside the road, to
+contemplate the Weald from the south. In a matter of two days he had
+crossed that spacious valley, with its frozen surge of green hills, its
+little villages and townships here and there, its copses and cornfields,
+its ponds and streams like jewelery of diamonds and silver glittering
+in the sun. The North Downs were hidden, far away beyond the Wealden
+Heights. Down below was the little village of Cocking, and half-way up
+the hill, a mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of sheep grazing
+together. Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue, and every
+now and then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat was tempered by
+a pleasant breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed by unreasonable
+contentment; he lit himself a cigarette and lounged more comfortably.
+Surely the Sussex ale is made of the waters of Lethe, of poppies and
+pleasant dreams. Drowsiness coiled insidiously about him.
+
+He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on the
+turf with his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes, and realised
+that he had slept. His head was still a trifle heavy. And the chase? He
+jumped to his feet and stooped to pick up his overturned machine. He
+whipped out his watch and saw that it was past two o’clock. “Lord love
+us, fancy that!--But the tracks’ll be all right,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+wheeling his machine back to the chalky road. “I must scorch till I
+overtake them.”
+
+He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering lassitude
+permitted. Now and then he had to dismount to examine the surface where
+the road forked. He enjoyed that rather. “Trackin’,” he said aloud, and
+decided in the privacy of his own mind that he had a wonderful instinct
+for ‘spoor.’ So he came past Goodwood station and Lavant, and approached
+Chichester towards four o’clock. And then came a terrible thing. In
+places the road became hard, in places were the crowded indentations of
+a recent flock of sheep, and at last in the throat of the town cobbles
+and the stony streets branching east, west, north, and south, at a stone
+cross under the shadow of the cathedral the tracks vanished. “O Cricky!”
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in dismay and standing agape. “Dropped
+anything?” said an inhabitant at the kerb. “Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+“I’ve lost the spoor,” and walked upon his way, leaving the inhabitant
+marvelling what part of a bicycle a spoor might be. Mr. Hoopdriver,
+abandoning tracking, began asking people if they had seen a Young Lady
+in Grey on a bicycle. Six casual people hadn’t, and he began to feel the
+inquiry was conspicuous, and desisted. But what was to be done?
+
+Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first gnawings of
+a monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some tea and meat, and
+in the Royal George he meditated over the business in a melancholy
+frame enough. They had passed out of his world--vanished, and all his
+wonderful dreams of some vague, crucial interference collapsed like a
+castle of cards. What a fool he had been not to stick to them like a
+leech! He might have thought! But there!--what WAS the good of that
+sort of thing now? He thought of her tears, of her helplessness, of
+the bearing of the other man in brown, and his wrath and disappointment
+surged higher. “What CAN I do?” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, bringing his
+fist down beside the teapot.
+
+What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there might be
+such things as clues in the world, albeit the age of miracles was past.
+But to look for a clue in this intricate network of cobbled streets, to
+examine every muddy interstice! There was a chance by looking about
+and inquiry at the various inns. Upon that he began. But of course they
+might have ridden straight through and scarcely a soul have marked them.
+And then came a positively brilliant idea. “‘Ow many ways are there out
+of Chichester?” said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was really equal to Sherlock
+Holmes--that. “If they’ve made tracks, I shall find those tracks. If
+not--they’re in the town.” He was then in East Street, and he started
+at once to make the circuit of the place, discovering incidentally that
+Chichester is a walled city. In passing, he made inquiries at the Black
+Swan, the Crown, and the Red Lion Hotel. At six o’clock in the evening,
+he was walking downcast, intent, as one who had dropped money, along
+the road towards Bognor, kicking up the dust with his shoes and fretting
+with disappointed pugnacity. A thwarted, crestfallen Hoopdriver it
+was, as you may well imagine. And then suddenly there jumped upon his
+attention--a broad line ribbed like a shilling, and close beside it
+one chequered, that ever and again split into two. “Found!” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver and swung round on his heel at once, and back to the Royal
+George, helter skelter, for the bicycle they were minding for him. The
+ostler thought he was confoundedly imperious, considering his machine.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. AT BOGNOR
+
+That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a crisis.
+He had started upon this elopement in a vein of fine romance, immensely
+proud of his wickedness, and really as much in love as an artificial
+oversoul can be, with Jessie. But either she was the profoundest of
+coquettes or she had not the slightest element of Passion (with a large
+P) in her composition. It warred with all his ideas of himself and the
+feminine mind to think that under their flattering circumstances she
+really could be so vitally deficient. He found her persistent coolness,
+her more or less evident contempt for himself, exasperating in the
+highest degree. He put it to himself that she was enough to provoke
+a saint, and tried to think that was piquant and enjoyable, but the
+blisters on his vanity asserted themselves. The fact is, he was, under
+this standing irritation, getting down to the natural man in himself for
+once, and the natural man in himself, in spite of Oxford and the junior
+Reviewers’ Club, was a Palaeolithic creature of simple tastes and
+violent methods. “I’ll be level with you yet,” ran like a plough through
+the soil of his thoughts.
+
+Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his wife
+he was going to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied she
+was reconciled, but how she would take this exploit was entirely
+problematical. She was a woman of peculiar moral views, and she measured
+marital infidelity largely by its proximity to herself. Out of her
+sight, and more particularly out of the sight of the other women of her
+set, vice of the recognised description was, perhaps, permissible to
+those contemptible weaklings, men, but this was Evil on the High Roads.
+She was bound to make a fuss, and these fusses invariably took the final
+form of a tightness of money for Bechamel. Albeit, and he felt it was
+heroic of him to resolve so, it was worth doing if it was to be done.
+His imagination worked on a kind of matronly Valkyrie, and the noise of
+pursuit and vengeance was in the air. The idyll still had the front of
+the stage. That accursed detective, it seemed, had been thrown off the
+scent, and that, at any rate, gave a night’s respite. But things must be
+brought to an issue forthwith.
+
+By eight o’clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the Vicuna
+Hotel, Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed and angry in the
+face and with her heart sinking, faced him again for her last struggle
+with him. He had tricked her this time, effectually, and luck had been
+on his side. She was booked as Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her refusal to
+enter their room, and her eccentricity of eating with unwashed hands,
+she had so far kept up the appearances of things before the waiter.
+But the dinner was grim enough. Now in turn she appealed to his better
+nature and made extravagant statements of her plans to fool him.
+
+He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered through
+his pose of brilliant wickedness.
+
+“I will go to the station,” she said. “I will go back--”
+
+“The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42.”
+
+“I will appeal to the police--”
+
+“You don’t know them.”
+
+“I will tell these hotel people.”
+
+“They will turn you out of doors. You’re in such a thoroughly false
+position now. They don’t understand unconventionality, down here.”
+
+She stamped her foot. “If I wander about the streets all night--” she
+said.
+
+“You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what the
+streets of a charming little holiday resort are like--”
+
+“I don’t care,” she said. “I can go to the clergyman here.”
+
+“He’s a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike than you
+think. And anyhow--”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“How CAN you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The mischief is
+done, Jessie.”
+
+“You CUR,” she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He thought
+she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone from her face.
+
+“No,” he said. “I love you.”
+
+“Love!” said she.
+
+“Yes--love.”
+
+“There are ways yet,” she said, after a pause.
+
+“Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is
+it?--not the dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don’t you think of
+it. You’ll only shirk it when the moment comes, and turn it all into
+comedy.”
+
+She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across the
+parade at the shining sea over which the afterglow of day fled before
+the rising moon. He maintained his attitude. The blinds were still up,
+for she had told the waiter not to draw them. There was silence for some
+moments.
+
+At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon. “Take it
+sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in common, quarrel
+into melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all that is bright and
+desirable to me. I am stronger than you, older; man to your woman. To
+find YOU too--conventional!”
+
+She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge of
+delight how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her cheek.
+
+“MAN!” she said. “Man to MY woman! Do MEN lie? Would a MAN use his five
+and thirty years’ experience to outwit a girl of seventeen? Man to my
+woman indeed! That surely is the last insult!”
+
+“Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do, though--all
+that and more also when their hearts were set on such a girl as
+yourself. For God’s sake drop this shrewishness! Why should you be
+so--difficult to me? Here am I with MY reputation, MY career, at your
+feet. Look here, Jessie--on my honour, I will marry you--”
+
+“God forbid,” she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had a wife,
+even then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in the flash of
+her retort, that she did not know he was married.
+
+“‘Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement,” he said, following that hint.
+
+He paused.
+
+“You must be sensible. The thing’s your own doing. Come out on the beach
+now the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon be high.”
+
+“_I_ WON’T” she said, stamping her foot.
+
+“Well, well--”
+
+“Oh! leave me alone. Let me think--”
+
+“Think,” he said, “if you want to. It’s your cry always. But you can’t
+save yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can’t save yourself in any
+way now. If saving it is--this parsimony--”
+
+“Oh, go--go.”
+
+“Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of you,
+dear.... But do you think I should do all this if I did not care?”
+
+“Go,” she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to stare
+out of the window. He stood looking at her for a moment, with a strange
+light in his eyes. He made a step towards her. “I HAVE you,”, he said.
+“You are mine. Netted--caught. But mine.” He would have gone up to her
+and laid his hand upon her, but he did not dare to do that yet. “I have
+you in my hand,” he said, “in my power. Do you hear--POWER!”
+
+She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and then,
+with a superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the door. Surely
+the instinctive abasement of her sex before Strength was upon his side.
+He told himself that his battle was won. She heard the handle move and
+the catch click as the door closed behind him.
+
+
+
+
+XXII.
+
+And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks
+hot, his eye bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous, obsequious
+Hoopdriver, to whom I introduced you some days since, has undergone a
+wonderful change. Ever since he lost that ‘spoor’ in Chichester, he has
+been tormented by the most horrible visions of the shameful insults that
+may be happening. The strangeness of new surroundings has been working
+to strip off the habitual servile from him. Here was moonlight rising
+over the memory of a red sunset, dark shadows and glowing orange lamps,
+beauty somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong in a
+brown suit and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver for
+the time, was in the world of Romance and Knight-errantry, divinely
+forgetful of his social position or hers; forgetting, too, for the time
+any of the wretched timidities that had tied him long since behind the
+counter in his proper place. He was angry and adventurous. It was all
+about him, this vivid drama he had fallen into, and it was eluding him.
+He was far too grimly in earnest to pick up that lost thread and make a
+play of it now. The man was living. He did not pose when he alighted at
+the coffee tavern even, nor when he made his hasty meal.
+
+As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade, Hoopdriver,
+disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the corner from the
+Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his heart jumped, and the
+tension of his angry suspense exploded into, rather than gave place to,
+an excited activity of mind. They were at the Vicuna, and she was there
+now alone. It was the occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no
+chance against him. He went back round the corner, sat down on the seat,
+and watched Bechamel recede into the dimness up the esplanade, before he
+got up and walked into the hotel entrance. “A lady cyclist in grey,” he
+asked for, and followed boldly on the waiter’s heels. The door of the
+dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm. And then suddenly he was
+nearly minded to turn and run for it, and his features seemed to him to
+be convulsed.
+
+She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between terror
+and hope in her eyes.
+
+“Can I--have a few words--with you, alone?” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+controlling his breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then motioned
+the waiter to withdraw.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out into
+the middle of the room, fold his arms and say, “You are in trouble. I
+am a Friend. Trust me.” Instead of which he stood panting and then spoke
+with sudden familiarity, hastily, guiltily: “Look here. I don’t know
+what the juice is up, but I think there’s something wrong. Excuse my
+intruding--if it isn’t so. I’ll do anything you like to help you out of
+the scrape--if you’re in one. That’s my meaning, I believe. What can I
+do? I would do anything to help you.”
+
+Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite emotion,
+this remarkable speech. “YOU!” she said. She was tumultuously weighing
+possibilities in her mind, and he had scarcely ceased when she had made
+her resolve.
+
+She stepped a pace forward. “You are a gentleman,” she said.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Can I trust you?”
+
+She did not wait for his assurance. “I must leave this hotel at once.
+Come here.”
+
+She took his arm and led him to the window.
+
+“You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are our
+bicycles. Go down, get them out, and I will come down to you. Dare you?
+
+“Get your bicycle out in the road?”
+
+“Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?”
+
+“Which way?”
+
+“Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one minute.”
+
+“Right!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+
+He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill
+Bechamel he would have done it. His head was a maelstrom now. He walked
+out of the hotel, along the front, and into the big, black-shadowed
+coach yard. He looked round. There were no bicycles visible. Then a
+man emerged from the dark, a short man in a short, black, shiny jacket.
+Hoopdriver was caught. He made no attempt to turn and run for it. “I’ve
+been giving your machines a wipe over, sir,” said the man, recognising
+the suit, and touching his cap. Hoopdriver’s intelligence now was a
+soaring eagle; he swooped on the situation at once. “That’s right,” he
+said, and added, before the pause became marked, “Where is mine? I want
+to look at the chain.”
+
+The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a lantern.
+Hoopdriver moved the lady’s machine out of his way to the door, and then
+laid hands on the man’s machine and wheeled it out of the shed into the
+yard. The gate stood open and beyond was the pale road and a clump of
+trees black in the twilight. He stooped and examined the chain with
+trembling fingers. How was it to be done? Something behind the gate
+seemed to flutter. The man must be got rid of anyhow.
+
+“I say,” said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, “can you get me a
+screwdriver?”
+
+The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and came
+up to the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his hand. Hoopdriver
+felt himself a lost man. He took the screwdriver with a tepid “Thanks,”
+ and incontinently had another inspiration.
+
+“I say,” he said again.
+
+“Well?”
+
+“This is miles too big.”
+
+The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it down on
+the ground. “Want a smaller screwdriver?” he said.
+
+Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt ATICHEW. It is
+the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. “As small as you
+have,” he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+
+“I ain’t got none smaller than that,” said the ostler.
+
+“Won’t do, really,” said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his
+handkerchief.
+
+“I’ll see wot they got in the ‘ouse, if you like, sir,” said the man.
+“If you would,” said Hoopdriver. And as the man’s heavily nailed boots
+went clattering down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up, took a noiseless
+step to the lady’s machine, laid trembling hands on its handle and
+saddle, and prepared for a rush.
+
+The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm, yellow
+light up the road, shut again behind the man, and forthwith Hoopdriver
+rushed the machines towards the gate. A dark grey form came fluttering
+to meet him. “Give me this,” she said, “and bring yours.”
+
+He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran back,
+seized Bechamel’s machine, and followed.
+
+The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the cobbles
+again. It was too late now to do anything but escape. He heard the
+ostler shout behind him, and came into the road. She was up and dim
+already. He got into the saddle without a blunder. In a moment the
+ostler was in the gateway with a full-throated “HI! sir! That ain’t
+allowed;” and Hoopdriver was overtaking the Young Lady in Grey. For
+some moments the earth seemed alive with shouts of, “Stop ‘em!” and the
+shadows with ambuscades of police. The road swept round, and they were
+riding out of sight of the hotel, and behind dark hedges, side by side.
+
+She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. “Brave,” she said,
+“brave!” and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He looked over
+his shoulder and about him, and saw that they were already out of
+Bognor--for the Vicuna stands at the very westernmost extremity of the
+sea front--and riding on a fair wide road.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road vociferating
+after them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna Hotel, and finding
+a group of men outside the entrance, who wanted to know what was UP,
+stopped to give them the cream of the adventure. That gave the fugitives
+five minutes. Then pushing breathlessly into the bar, he had to make it
+clear to the barmaid what the matter was, and the ‘gov’nor’ being out,
+they spent some more precious time wondering ‘what--EVER’ was to be
+done! in which the two customers returning from outside joined
+with animation. There were also moral remarks and other irrelevant
+contributions. There were conflicting ideas of telling the police and
+pursuing the flying couple on a horse. That made ten minutes. Then
+Stephen, the waiter, who had shown Hoopdriver up, came down and lit
+wonderful lights and started quite a fresh discussion by the simple
+question “WHICH?” That turned ten minutes into a quarter of an hour.
+And in the midst of this discussion, making a sudden and awestricken
+silence, appeared Bechamel in the hall beyond the bar, walked with a
+resolute air to the foot of the staircase, and passed out of sight.
+You conceive the backward pitch of that exceptionally shaped cranium?
+Incredulous eyes stared into one another’s in the bar, as his paces,
+muffled by the stair carpet, went up to the landing, turned, reached the
+passage and walked into the dining-room overhead.
+
+“It wasn’t that one at all, miss,” said the ostler, “I’d SWEAR”
+
+“Well, that’s Mr. Beaumont,” said the barmaid, “--anyhow.”
+
+Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by Bechamel.
+They listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went out of the
+diningroom. Down the passage to the bedroom. Stopped again.
+
+“Poor chap!” said the barmaid. “She’s a wicked woman!”
+
+“Sssh!” said Stephen.
+
+After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a chair
+creak under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+
+“I’m going up,” said Stephen, “to break the melancholy news to him.”
+
+Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without knocking,
+Stephen entered. Bechamel’s face suggested a different expectation. “Beg
+pardon, sir,” said Stephen, with a diplomatic cough.
+
+“Well?” said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some of her
+threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had it ready. She
+was a monomaniac. “Leave me alone with her,” he would say; “I know how
+to calm her.”
+
+“Mrs. Beaumont,” said Stephen.
+
+“WELL?”
+
+“Has gone.”
+
+He rose with a fine surprise. “Gone!” he said with a half laugh.
+
+“Gone, sir. On her bicycle.”
+
+“On her bicycle! Why?”
+
+“She went, sir, with Another Gentleman.”
+
+This time Bechamel was really startled. “An--other Gentlemen! WHO?”
+
+“Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got out the
+two bicycles, sir, and went off, sir--about twenty minutes ago.”
+
+Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips. Stephen,
+watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether this abandoned
+husband would weep or curse, or rush off at once in furious pursuit. But
+as yet he seemed merely stunned.
+
+“Brown clothes?” he said. “And fairish?”
+
+“A little like yourself, sir--in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim Duke--”
+
+Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said--But let us
+put in blank cartridge--he said, “------!”
+
+“I might have thought!”
+
+He flung himself into the armchair.
+
+“Damn her,” said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man. “I’ll
+chuck this infernal business! They’ve gone, eigh?”
+
+“Yessir.”
+
+“Well, let ‘em GO,” said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. “Let ‘em
+GO. Who cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon as fast as
+you can, there’s a good chap. I’ll take that, and then I’ll have another
+look round Bognor before I turn in.”
+
+Stephen was too surprised to say anything but “Bourbon, sir?”
+
+“Go on,” said Bechamel. “Damn you!”
+
+Stephen’s sympathies changed at once. “Yessir,” he murmured, fumbling
+for the door handle, and left the room, marvelling. Bechamel, having in
+this way satisfied his sense of appearances, and comported himself as a
+Pagan should, so soon as the waiter’s footsteps had passed, vented the
+cream of his feelings in a stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his
+wife or HER stepmother had sent the detective, SHE had evidently gone
+off with him, and that little business was over. And he was here,
+stranded and sold, an ass, and as it were, the son of many generations
+of asses. And his only ray of hope was that it seemed more probable,
+after all, that the girl had escaped through her stepmother. In
+which case the business might be hushed up yet, and the evil hour of
+explanation with his wife indefinitely postponed. Then abruptly the
+image of that lithe figure in grey knickerbockers went frisking across
+his mind again, and he reverted to his blasphemies. He started up in a
+gusty frenzy with a vague idea of pursuit, and incontinently sat down
+again with a concussion that stirred the bar below to its depths. He
+banged the arms of the chair with his fist, and swore again. “Of all the
+accursed fools that were ever spawned,” he was chanting, “I, Bechamel--”
+ when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening of the door, Stephen entered
+with the Bourbon.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+
+And so the twenty minutes’ law passed into an infinity. We leave the
+wicked Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a garment,--the
+wretched creature has already sufficiently sullied our modest but
+truthful pages,--we leave the eager little group in the bar of the
+Vicuna Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we have left all Chichester and
+Midhurst and Haslemere and Guildford and Ripley and Putney, and follow
+this dear fool of a Hoopdriver of ours and his Young Lady in Grey out
+upon the moonlight road. How they rode! How their hearts beat together
+and their breath came fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and
+every noise pursuit! For all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the world
+of Romance. Had a policeman intervened because their lamps were not lit,
+Hoopdriver had cut him down and ridden on, after the fashion of a hero
+born. Had Bechamel arisen in the way with rapiers for a duel, Hoopdriver
+had fought as one to whom Agincourt was a reality and drapery a dream.
+It was Rescue, Elopement, Glory! And she by the side of him! He had seen
+her face in shadow, with the morning sunlight tangled in her hair, he
+had seen her sympathetic with that warm light in her face, he had seen
+her troubled and her eyes bright with tears. But what light is there
+lighting a face like hers, to compare with the soft glamour of the
+midsummer moon?
+
+The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of Bognor,
+in one place dark and heavy under a thick growth of trees, then amidst
+villas again, some warm and lamplit, some white and sleeping in the
+moonlight; then between hedges, over which they saw broad wan meadows
+shrouded in a low-lying mist. They scarcely heeded whither they rode at
+first, being only anxious to get away, turning once westward when the
+spire of Chichester cathedral rose suddenly near them out of the dewy
+night, pale and intricate and high. They rode, speaking little, just a
+rare word now and then, at a turning, at a footfall, at a roughness in
+the road.
+
+She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to him,
+but after the first tumult of the adventure, as flight passed into mere
+steady ridin@@ his mind became an enormous appreciation of the position.
+The night was a warm white silence save for the subtile running of their
+chains. He looked sideways at her as she sat beside him with her ankles
+gracefully ruling the treadles. Now the road turned westward, and she
+was a dark grey outline against the shimmer of the moon; and now they
+faced northwards, and the soft cold light passed caressingly over her
+hair and touched her brow and cheek.
+
+There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is sweet
+and beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has created
+the fairies, whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises again in our
+hearts at the sight of it, the voices of the filmy route, and their
+faint, soul-piercing melodies. By the moonlight every man, dull clod
+though he be by day, tastes something of Endymion, takes something of
+the youth and strength of Enidymion, and sees the dear white goddess
+shining at him from his Lady’s eyes. The firm substantial daylight
+things become ghostly and elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of
+unsubstantial texture, the world a visible spirit, the spiritual within
+us rises out of its darkness, loses something of its weight and body,
+and swims up towards heaven. This road that was a mere rutted white
+dust, hot underfoot, blinding to the eye, is now a soft grey silence,
+with the glitter of a crystal grain set starlike in its silver here
+and there. Overhead, riding serenely through the spacious blue, is the
+mother of the silence, she who has spiritualised the world, alone save
+for two attendant steady shining stars. And in silence under her benign
+influence, under the benediction of her light, rode our two wanderers
+side by side through the transfigured and transfiguring night.
+
+Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+skull. At the turnings of the road he made his decisions with an air of
+profound promptitude (and quite haphazard). “The Right,” he would say.
+Or again “The Left,” as one who knew. So it was that in the space of an
+hour they came abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea. Grey
+beach to the right of them and to the left, and a little white cottage
+fast asleep inland of a sleeping fishing-boat. “Hullo!” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, sotto voce. They dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks and
+thorns rose out of the haze of moonlight that was tangled in the hedge
+on either side.
+
+“You are safe,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an air
+and bowing courtly.
+
+“Where are we?”
+
+“SAFE.”
+
+“But WHERE?”
+
+“Chichester Harbour.” He waved his arm seaward as though it was a goal.
+
+“Do you think they will follow us?”
+
+“We have turned and turned again.”
+
+It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly there,
+holding her machine, and he, holding his, could go no nearer to her to
+see if she sobbed for weeping or for want of breath. “What are we to do
+now?” her voice asked.
+
+“Are you tired?” he asked.
+
+“I will do what has to be done.”
+
+The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a space. “Do
+you know,” she said, “I am not afraid of you. I am sure you are honest
+to me. And I do not even know your name!”
+
+He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. “It’s an ugly
+name,” he said. “But you are right in trusting me. I would--I would do
+anything for you.... This is nothing.”
+
+She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But compared
+with Bechamel!--“We take each other on trust,” she said. “Do you want to
+know--how things are with me?”
+
+“That man,” she went on, after the assent of his listening silence,
+“promised to help and protect me. I was unhappy at home--never mind
+why. A stepmother--Idle, unoccupied, hindered, cramped, that is
+enough, perhaps. Then he came into my life, and talked to me of art
+and literature, and set my brain on fire. I wanted to come out into the
+world, to be a human being--not a thing in a hutch. And he--”
+
+“I know,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“And now here I am--”
+
+“I will do anything,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+She thought. “You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not describe
+her--”
+
+“I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my power.”
+
+“I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant.” She spoke of
+Bechamel as the Illusion.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+
+“I’m thinking,” he said, full of a rapture of protective responsibility,
+“what we had best be doing. You are tired, you know. And we can’t
+wander all night--after the day we’ve had.”
+
+“That was Chichester we were near?” she asked.
+
+“If,” he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, “you would make ME your
+brother, MISS BEAUMONT.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“We could stop there together--”
+
+She took a minute to answer. “I am going to light these lamps,” said
+Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on his shoe. She
+looked at his face in its light, grave and intent. How could she ever
+have thought him common or absurd?
+
+“But you must tell me your name--brother,” she said,
+
+“Er--Carrington,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause. Who
+would be Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+
+“But the Christian name?”
+
+“Christian name? MY Christian name. Well--Chris.” He snapped his lamp
+and stood up. “If you will hold my machine, I will light yours,” he
+said.
+
+She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment they
+stood face to face. “My name, brother Chris,” she said, “is Jessie.”
+
+He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested. “JESSIE,”
+ he repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face affected her strangely.
+She had to speak. “It’s not such a very wonderful name, is it?” she
+said, with a laugh to break the intensity.
+
+He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing of his
+features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the lantern in front of
+her machine. She looked down at him, almost kneeling in front of
+her, with an unreasonable approbation in her eyes. It was, as I have
+indicated, the hour and season of the full moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXV.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night’s journey with the same
+confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good luck and the
+fact that most roads about a town converge thereupon, that Chichester
+was at last attained. It seemed at first as though everyone had gone to
+bed, but the Red Hotel still glowed yellow and warm. It was the first
+time Hoopdriver bad dared the mysteries of a ‘first-class’ hotel.’ But
+that night he was in the mood to dare anything.
+
+“So you found your Young Lady at last,” said the ostler of the Red
+Hotel; for it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver had made
+inquiries in the afternoon.
+
+“Quite a misunderstanding,” said Hoopdriver, with splendid readiness.
+“My sister had gone to Bognor But I brought her back here. I’ve took a
+fancy to this place. And the moonlight’s simply dee-vine.”
+
+“We’ve had supper, thenks, and we’re tired,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I
+suppose you won’t take anything,--Jessie?”
+
+The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie like
+that! But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself bound to
+admit. “Good-night, Sis,” he said, “and pleasant dreams. I’ll just ‘ave
+a look at this paper before I turn in.” But this was living indeed! he
+told himself.
+
+So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very edge of
+the Most Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you will remember,
+with a vigil in a little sweetstuff shop next door to the Angel at
+Midhurst. But to think of all the things that had happened since then!
+He caught himself in the middle of a yawn, pulled out his watch, saw the
+time was halfpast eleven, and marched off, with a fine sense of heroism,
+bedward.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+
+And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a break in
+the narrative again. These absurd young people are safely tucked away
+now, their heads full of glowing nonsense, indeed, but the course of
+events at any rate is safe from any fresh developments through their
+activities for the next eight hours or more. They are both sleeping
+healthily you will perhaps be astonished to hear. Here is the girl--what
+girls are coming to nowadays only Mrs. Lynn Linton can tell!--in company
+with an absolute stranger, of low extraction and uncertain accent,
+unchaperoned and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is safe, she is,
+if anything, a little proud of her own share in these transactions. Then
+this Mr. Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot that he is! is in illegal
+possession of a stolen bicycle, a stolen young lady, and two stolen
+names, established with them in an hotel that is quite beyond his means,
+and immensely proud of himself in a somnolent way for these incomparable
+follies. There are occasions when a moralising novelist can merely wring
+his hands and leave matters to take their course. For all Hoopdriver
+knows or cares he may be locked up the very first thing to-morrow
+morning for the rape of the cycle. Then in Bognor, let alone that
+melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with whom our dealings are, thank
+Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern with a steak Mr. Hoopdriver
+ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his American-cloth parcel in a
+bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of guarantee, carefully
+locked up in the hayloft. To-morrow he will be a Mystery, and they will
+be looking for his body along the sea front. And so far we have never
+given a glance at the desolate home in Surbiton, familiar to you no
+doubt through the medium of illustrated interviews, where the unhappy
+stepmother--
+
+That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to you.
+That is a little surprise I have prepared for you. She is ‘Thomas
+Plantagenet,’ the gifted authoress of that witty and daring book, “A
+Soul Untrammelled,” and quite an excellent woman in her way,--only it
+is such a crooked way. Her real name is Milton. She is a widow and
+a charming one, only ten years older than Jessie, and she is always
+careful to dedicate her more daring works to the ‘sacred memory of my
+husband’ to show that there’s nothing personal, you know, in the matter.
+Considering her literary reputation (she was always speaking of herself
+as one I martyred for truth,’ because the critics advertised her
+written indecorums in column long ‘slates’),--considering her literary
+reputation, I say, she was one of the most respectable women it is
+possible to imagine. She furnished correctly, dressed correctly, had
+severe notions of whom she might meet, went to church, and even at times
+took the sacrament in some esoteric spirit. And Jessie she brought up so
+carefully that she never even let her read “A Soul Untrammelled.” Which,
+therefore, naturally enough, Jessie did, and went on from that to a
+feast of advanced literature. Mrs. Milton not only brought up Jessie
+carefully, but very slowly, so that at seventeen she was still a clever
+schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and quite in the background of
+the little literary circle of unimportant celebrities which ‘Thomas
+Plantagenet’ adorned. Mrs. Milton knew Bechamel’s reputation of being a
+dangerous man; but then bad men are not bad women, and she let him come
+to her house to show she was not afraid--she took no account of Jessie.
+When the elopement came, therefore, it was a double disappointment
+to her, for she perceived his hand by a kind of instinct. She did the
+correct thing. The correct thing, as you know, is to take hansom cabs,
+regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not know WHAT to do,
+round the circle of your confidential friends. She could not have ridden
+nor wept more had Jessie been her own daughter--she showed the properest
+spirit. And she not only showed it, but felt it.
+
+Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more successful
+widow of thirty-two,--“Thomas Plantagenet is a charming woman,”
+ her reviewers used to write invariably, even if they spoke ill of
+her,--found the steady growth of Jessie into womanhood an unmitigated
+nuisance and had been willing enough to keep her in the background.
+And Jessie--who had started this intercourse at fourteen with abstract
+objections to stepmothers--had been active enough in resenting this.
+Increasing rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them, until
+they could engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or
+the cutting of a book with a sharpened knife. There is very little
+deliberate wickedness in the world. The stupidity of our selfishness
+gives much the same results indeed, but in the ethical laboratory it
+shows a different nature. And when the disaster came, Mrs. Milton’s
+remorse for their gradual loss of sympathy and her share in the losing
+of it, was genuine enough.
+
+You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how West
+Kensington and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary suburbs, those
+decent penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling, hummed with the
+business, Her ‘Men’--as a charming literary lady she had, of course, an
+organised corps--were immensely excited, and were sympathetic;
+helpfully energetic, suggestive, alert, as their ideals of their various
+dispositions required them to be. “Any news of Jessie?” was the pathetic
+opening of a dozen melancholy but interesting conversations. To her Men
+she was not perhaps so damp as she was to her women friends, but in a
+quiet way she was even more touching. For three days, Wednesday that is,
+Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the fugitives. It was known
+that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with buttonup skirts, and mounted
+on a diamond frame safety with Dunlops, and a loofah covered saddle,
+had ridden forth early in the morning, taking with her about two pounds
+seven shillings in money, and a grey touring case packed, and there,
+save for a brief note to her stepmother,--a declaration of independence,
+it was said, an assertion of her Ego containing extensive and very
+annoying quotations from “A Soul Untrammelled,” and giving no definite
+intimation of her plans--knowledge ceased. That note was shown to few,
+and then only in the strictest confidence.
+
+But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery, a
+correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the first. He
+had been touring in Sussex,--his knapsack was still on his back,--and
+he testified hurriedly that at a place called Midhurst, in the bar of an
+hotel called the Angel, he had heard from a barmaid a vivid account of
+a Young Lady in Grey. Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in
+brown? “The poor, misguided girl! I must go to her at once,” she said,
+choking, and rising with her hand to her heart.
+
+“It’s impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on my
+way.”
+
+“A mother’s love,” she said. “I bear her THAT.”
+
+“I know you do.” He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his
+photographs of scenery more than Mrs. Milton. “It’s more than she
+deserves.”
+
+“Oh, don’t speak unkindly of her! She has been misled.”
+
+It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry his
+news ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back? He had come
+to her because he knew of her anxiety. “It is GOOD of you,” she said,
+and quite instinctively took and pressed his hand. “And to think of that
+poor girl--tonight! It’s dreadful.” She looked into the fire that she
+had lit when he came in, the warm light fell upon her dark purple dress,
+and left her features in a warm shadow. She looked such a slight, frail
+thing to be troubled so. “We must follow her.” Her resolution seemed
+magnificent. “I have no one to go with me.”
+
+“He must marry her,” said the man.
+
+“She has no friends. We have no one. After all--Two women.--So
+helpless.”
+
+And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who knew
+her only from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply because
+she was great-hearted--intellectual. He was overcome by the unspeakable
+pathos of her position.
+
+“Mrs. Milton,” he said. “Hetty!”
+
+She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. “Not now,” she said, “not
+now. I must find her first.”
+
+“Yes,” he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big, fat men
+who feel deeply.) “But let me help you. At least let me help you.”
+
+“But can you spare time?” she said. “For ME.”
+
+“For you--”
+
+“But what can I do? what can WE do?”
+
+“Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on Thursday
+night, last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!” he said. “We
+will save her yet!”
+
+She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+
+“Courage!” he repeated, finding it so well received.
+
+There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to the
+fire, and he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which suited his
+dimensions admirably. Then the door opened, and the girl showed in
+Dangle, who looked curiously from one to the other. There was emotion
+here, he had heard the armchair creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face
+was flushed, displayed a suspicious alacrity to explain. “You, too,” she
+said, “are one of my good friends. And we have news of her at last.”
+
+It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined to show
+himself a man of resource. In the end he, too, was accepted for the
+Midhurst Expedition, to the intense disgust of Widgery; and young
+Phipps, a callow youth of few words, faultless collars, and fervent
+devotion, was also enrolled before the evening was out. They would scour
+the country, all three of them. She appeared to brighten up a little,
+but it was evident she was profoundly touched. She did not know what
+she had done to merit such friends. Her voice broke a little, she moved
+towards the door, and young Phipps, who was a youth of action rather
+than of words, sprang and opened it--proud to be first.
+
+“She is sorely troubled,” said Dangle to Widgery. “We must do what we
+can for her.”
+
+“She is a wonderful woman,” said Dangle. “So subtle, so intricate, so
+many faceted. She feels this deeply.”
+
+Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+
+And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+
+But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers time to
+refresh themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the present, therefore,
+we will not concern ourselves with the starting of the Rescue Party,
+nor with Mrs. Milton’s simple but becoming grey dress, with the healthy
+Widgery’s Norfolk jacket and thick boots, with the slender Dangle’s
+energetic bearing, nor with the wonderful chequerings that set off the
+legs of the golf-suited Phipps. They are after us. In a little while
+they will be upon us. You must imagine as you best can the competitive
+raidings at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps. How Widgery
+was great at questions, and Dangle good at inference, and Phipps so
+conspicuously inferior in everything that he felt it, and sulked with
+Mrs. Milton most of the day, after the manner of your callow youth the
+whole world over. Mrs. Milton stopped at the Angel and was very sad and
+charming and intelligent, and Widgery paid the bill in the afternoon
+of Saturday, Chichester was attained. But by that time our fugitives--As
+you shall immediately hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and, staring
+unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and pleasant. He turned
+the peaked nose that overrides the insufficient moustache, up to the
+ceiling, a pinkish projection over the billow of white. You might see it
+wrinkle as he yawned again, and then became quiet. So matters remained
+for a space. Very slowly recollection returned to him. Then a shock
+of indeterminate brown hair appeared, and first one watery grey eye
+a-wondering, and then two; the bed upheaved, and you had him, his thin
+neck projecting abruptly from the clothes he held about him, his face
+staring about the room. He held the clothes about him, I hope I may
+explain, because his night-shirt was at Bognor in an American-cloth
+packet, derelict. He yawned a third time, rubbed his eyes, smacked his
+lips. He was recalling almost everything now. The pursuit, the hotel,
+the tremulous daring of his entry, the swift adventure of the inn
+yard, the moonlight--Abruptly he threw the clothes back and rose into
+a sitting position on the edge of the bed. Without was the noise of
+shutters being unfastened and doors unlocked, and the passing of hoofs
+and wheels in the street. He looked at his watch. Half-past six. He
+surveyed the sumptuous room again.
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t a dream, after all.”
+
+“I wonder what they charge for these Juiced rooms!” said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+nursing one rosy foot.
+
+He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache. Suddenly he
+gave vent to a noiseless laugh. “What a rush it was! Rushed in and off
+with his girl right under his nose. Planned it well too. Talk of highway
+robbery! Talk of brigands Up and off! How juiced SOLD he must be feeling
+It was a shave too--in the coach yard!”
+
+Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw fell.
+“I sa-a-ay!” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand the whirl
+he had been in overnight. But one sees things clearer in the daylight.
+“I’m hanged if I haven’t been and stolen a blessed bicycle.”
+
+“Who cares?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face supplied the
+answer.
+
+Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put a more
+heroic complexion on the business. But of an early morning, on an empty
+stomach (as with characteristic coarseness, medical men put it) heroics
+are of a more difficult growth than by moonlight. Everything had seemed
+exceptionally fine and brilliant, but quite natural, the evening before.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket, laid it
+over his knees, and took out the money from the little ticket pocket.
+“Fourteen and six-half,” he said, holding the coins in his left hand and
+stroking his chin with his right. He verified, by patting, the presence
+of a pocketbook in the breast pocket. “Five, fourteen, six-half,” said
+Mr. Hoopdriver. “Left.”
+
+With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into another
+silent meditation. “That wouldn’t matter,” he said. “It’s the bike’s the
+bother.
+
+“No good going back to Bognor.
+
+“Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the loan.
+Having no further use--” Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed into the
+silent concoction of a delightfully impudent letter. “Mr. J. Hoopdriver
+presents his compliments.” But the grave note reasserted itself.
+
+“Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange them. MY
+old crock’s so blessed shabby. He’s sure to be spiteful too. Have me
+run in, perhaps. Then she’d be in just the same old fix, only worse. You
+see, I’m her Knight-errant. It complicates things so.”
+
+His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. “What the juice
+do they want with cream pans in a bedroom?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, en
+passant.
+
+“Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible,
+anyhow. I suppose she’ll go home to her friends. That bicycle is a juicy
+nuisance, anyhow. Juicy nuisance!”
+
+He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to proceed with
+his toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered that the simple
+necessaries of that process were at Bognor! “Lord!” he remarked, and
+whistled silently for a space. “Rummy go! profit and loss; profit, one
+sister with bicycle complete, wot offers?--cheap for tooth and ‘air
+brush, vests, night-shirt, stockings, and sundries.
+
+“Make the best of it,” and presently, when it came to hair-brushing, he
+had to smooth his troubled locks with his hands. It was a poor result.
+“Sneak out and get a shave, I suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink
+again! Beard don’t show much.”
+
+He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for some
+time, and curled his insufficient moustache up with some care. Then he
+fell a-meditating on his beauty. He considered himself, three-quarter
+face, left and right. An expression of distaste crept over his features.
+“Looking won’t alter it, Hoopdriver,” he remarked. “You’re a weedy
+customer, my man. Shoulders narrow. Skimpy, anyhow.”
+
+He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with his
+chin lifted in the air. “Good Lord!” he said. “WHAT a neck! Wonder why I
+got such a thundering lump there.”
+
+He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. “If I’d been
+exercised properly, if I’d been fed reasonable, if I hadn’t been shoved
+out of a silly school into a silly shop--But there! the old folks didn’t
+know no better. The schoolmaster ought to have. But he didn’t, poor old
+fool!--Still, when it comes to meeting a girl like this--It’s ‘ARD.
+
+“I wonder what Adam’d think of me--as a specimen. Civilisation,
+eigh? Heir of the ages! I’m nothing. I know nothing. I can’t do
+anything--sketch a bit. Why wasn’t I made an artist?
+
+“Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine.”
+
+“No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don’t tell yourself any lies about it.
+Lovers ain’t your game,--anyway. But there’s other things yet. You can
+help the young lady, and you will--I suppose she’ll be going home--And
+that business of the bicycle’s to see to, too, my man. FORWARD,
+Hoopdriver! If you ain’t a beauty, that’s no reason why you should stop
+and be copped, is it?”
+
+And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of self-satisfaction,
+he had another attempt at his hair preparatory to leaving his room
+and hurrying on breakfast, for an early departure. While breakfast was
+preparing he wandered out into South Street and refurnished himself with
+the elements of luggage again. “No expense to be spared,” he murmured,
+disgorging the half-sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+
+He caused his ‘sister’ to be called repeatedly, and when she came down,
+explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to the bicycle
+in the yard. “Might be disagreeable, y’ know.” His anxiety was obvious
+enough. “Very well,” she said (quite friendly); “hurry breakfast, and
+we’ll ride out. I want to talk things over with you.” The girl seemed
+more beautiful than ever after the night’s sleep; her hair in comely
+dark waves from her forehead, her ungauntleted finger-tips pink and
+cool. And how decided she was! Breakfast was a nervous ceremony,
+conversation fraternal but thin; the waiter overawed him, and he was
+cowed by a multiplicity of forks. But she called him “Chris.” They
+discussed their route over his sixpenny county map for the sake of
+talking, but avoided a decision in the presence of the attendant. The
+five-pound note was changed for the bill, and through Hoopdriver’s
+determination to be quite the gentleman, the waiter and chambermaid got
+half a crown each and the ostler a florin. “‘Olidays,” said the ostler
+to himself, without gratitude. The public mounting of the bicycles in
+the street was a moment of trepidation. A policeman actually stopped and
+watched them from the opposite kerb. Suppose him to come across and ask:
+“Is that your bicycle, sir?” Fight? Or drop it and run? It was a time of
+bewildering apprehension, too, going through the streets of the town,
+so that a milk cart barely escaped destruction under Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+chancy wheel. That recalled him to a sense of erratic steering, and
+he pulled himself together. In the lanes he breathed freer, and a less
+formal conversation presently began.
+
+“You’ve ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry,” said Jessie.
+
+“Well, the fact of it is, I’m worried, just a little bit. About this
+machine.”
+
+“Of course,” she said. “I had forgotten that. But where are we going?”
+
+“Jest a turning or two more, if you don’t mind,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should feel more
+easy. If we was locked up, you know--Not that I should mind on my own
+account--”
+
+They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left hand.
+Every mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr. Hoopdriver
+felt a little less conscience-stricken, and a little more of the gallant
+desperado. Here he was riding on a splendid machine with a Slap-up girl
+beside him. What would they think of it in the Emporium if any of them
+were to see him? He imagined in detail the astonishment of Miss Isaacs
+and of Miss Howe. “Why! It’s Mr. Hoopdriver,” Miss Isaacs would say.
+“Never!” emphatically from Miss Howe. Then he played with Briggs, and
+then tried the ‘G.V.’ in a shay. “Fancy introducing ‘em to her--My
+sister pro tem.” He was her brother Chris--Chris what?--Confound it!
+Harringon, Hartington--something like that. Have to keep off that topic
+until he could remember. Wish he’d told her the truth now--almost. He
+glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes straight ahead of her.
+Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she seemed. He noticed how well
+she rode and that she rode with her lips closed--a thing he could never
+manage.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind came round to the future. What was she going to
+do? What were they both going to do? His thoughts took a graver colour.
+He had rescued her. This was fine, manly rescue work he was engaged
+upon. She ought to go home, in spite of that stepmother. He must insist
+gravely but firmly upon that. She was the spirited sort, of course, but
+still--Wonder if she had any money? Wonder what the second-class fare
+from Havant to London is? Of course he would have to pay that--it was
+the regular thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he take her home?
+He began to rough in a moving sketch of the return. The stepmother,
+repentant of her indescribable cruelties, would be present,--even these
+rich people have their troubles,--probably an uncle or two. The footman
+would announce, Mr.--(bother that name!) and Miss Milton. Then two women
+weeping together, and a knightly figure in the background dressed in a
+handsome Norfolk jacket, still conspicuously new. He would conceal his
+feeling until the very end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the doorway
+in such an attitude as Mr. George Alexander might assume, and say,
+slowly and dwindlingly: “Be kind to her--BE kind to her,” and so depart,
+heartbroken to the meanest intelligence. But that was a matter for the
+future. He would have to begin discussing the return soon. There was no
+traffic along the road, and he came up beside her (he had fallen behind
+in his musing). She began to talk. “Mr. Denison,” she began, and then,
+doubtfully, “That is your name? I’m very stupid--”
+
+“It is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison,
+Denison. What was she saying?)
+
+“I wonder how far you are willing to help me?” Confoundedly hard to
+answer a question like that on the spur of the moment, without steering
+wildly. “You may rely--” said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering from a violent
+wabble. “I can assure you--I want to help you very much. Don’t consider
+me at all. Leastways, consider me entirely at your service.” (Nuisance
+not to be able to say this kind of thing right.)
+
+“You see, I am so awkwardly situated.”
+
+“If I can only help you--you will make me very happy--” There was a
+pause. Round a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space between
+hedge and road, set with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a felled tree lay
+among the green. There she dismounted, and propping her machine against
+a stone, sat down. “Here, we can talk,” she said.
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+
+She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with her chin
+in her hand, and looking straight in front of her. “I don’t know--I am
+resolved to Live my Own Life.”
+
+“Of course,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Naturally.”
+
+“I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to learn.
+Everyone is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want time to
+think.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how clear and
+ready her words were. But then one might speak well with a throat and
+lips like that. He knew he was inadequate, but he tried to meet the
+occasion. “If you let them rush you into anything you might repent of,
+of course you’d be very silly.”
+
+“Don’t YOU want to learn?” she asked.
+
+“I was wondering only this morning,” he began, and stopped.
+
+She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this insufficiency.
+“I find myself in life, and it terrifies me. I seem to be like a little
+speck, whirling on a wheel, suddenly caught up. ‘What am I here for?’
+I ask. Simply to be here at a time--I asked it a week ago, I asked it
+yesterday, and I ask it to-day. And little things happen and the days
+pass. My stepmother takes me shopping, people come to tea, there is a
+new play to pass the time, or a concert, or a novel. The wheels of the
+world go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a miracle
+like Joshua and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At home--It’s
+impossible.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. “It IS so,” he said in a
+meditative tone. “Things WILL go on,” he said. The faint breath of
+summer stirred the trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted among the
+meadowsweet and struck and broke into a dozen separate threads against
+his knee. They flew on apart, and sank, as the breeze fell, among the
+grass: some to germinate, some to perish. His eye followed them until
+they had vanished.
+
+“I can’t go back to Surbiton,” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+“EIGH?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was an
+unexpected development.
+
+“I want to write, you see,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “to write Books
+and alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free Life and Own myself.
+I can’t go back. I want to obtain a position as a journalist. I have
+been told--But I know no one to help me at once. No one that I could
+go to. There is one person--She was a mistress at my school. If I could
+write to her--But then, how could I get her answer?”
+
+“H’mp,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+
+“I can’t trouble you much more. You have come--you have risked things--”
+
+“That don’t count,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It’s double pay to let me do
+it, so to speak.”
+
+“It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am
+resolved to be Unconventional--at any cost. But we are so hampered. If
+I could only burgeon out of all that hinders me! I want to struggle, to
+take my place in the world. I want to be my own mistress, to shape my
+own career. But my stepmother objects so. She does as she likes herself,
+and is strict with me to ease her conscience. And if I go back now, go
+back owning myself beaten--” She left the rest to his imagination.
+
+“I see that,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He MUST help her. Within his
+skull he was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six and
+twopence. In some vague way he inferred from all this that Jessie was
+trying to escape from an undesirable marriage, but was saying these
+things out of modesty. His circle of ideas was so limited.
+
+“You know, Mr.--I’ve forgotten your name again.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. “You can’t go back of course,
+quite like that,” he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed suddenly red and
+his cheeks flushed.
+
+“But what IS your name?”
+
+“Name!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Why!--Benson, of course.”
+
+“Mr. Benson--yes it’s really very stupid of me. But I can never remember
+names. I must make a note on my cuff.” She clicked a little silver
+pencil and wrote the name down. “If I could write to my friend. I
+believe she would be able to help me to an independent life. I could
+write to her--or telegraph. Write, I think. I could scarcely explain in
+a telegram. I know she would help me.”
+
+Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the
+circumstances. “In that case,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “if you don’t mind
+trusting yourself to a stranger, we might continue as we are perhaps.
+For a day or so. Until you heard.” (Suppose thirty shillings a day, that
+gives four days, say four thirties is hun’ and twenty, six quid,--well,
+three days, say; four ten.)
+
+“You are very good to me.”
+
+His expression was eloquent.
+
+“Very well, then, and thank you. It’s wonderful--it’s more than I
+deserve that you--” She dropped the theme abruptly. “What was our bill
+at Chichester?”
+
+“Eigh?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There was a
+brief discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her insistence in paying.
+She carried her point. Their talk came round to their immediate plans
+for the day. They decided to ride easily, through Havant, and stop,
+perhaps, at Fareham or Southampton. For the previous day had tried them
+both. Holding the map extended on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver’s eye fell
+by chance on the bicycle at his feet. “That bicycle,” he remarked, quite
+irrelevantly, “wouldn’t look the same machine if I got a big, double
+Elarum instead of that little bell.”
+
+“Why?”
+
+“Jest a thought.” A pause.
+
+“Very well, then,--Havant and lunch,” said Jessie, rising.
+
+“I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that
+machine,” said Hoopdriver. “Because it IS stealing it, you know, come to
+think of it.”
+
+“Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you--I will tell the whole world--if
+need be.”
+
+“I believe you would,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. “You’re plucky
+enough--goodness knows.”
+
+Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and picked up
+her machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road. Then he took his
+own. He paused, regarding it. “I say!” said he. “How’d this bike look,
+now, if it was enamelled grey?” She looked over her shoulder at his
+grave face. “Why try and hide it in that way?”
+
+“It was jest a passing thought,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily. “Didn’t
+MEAN anything, you know.”
+
+As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in a
+transitory manner that the interview had been quite other than his
+expectation. But that was the way with everything in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+experience. And though his Wisdom looked grave within him, and Caution
+was chinking coins, and an ancient prejudice in favour of Property shook
+her head, something else was there too, shouting in his mind to drown
+all these saner considerations, the intoxicating thought of riding
+beside Her all to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days after that.
+Of talking to her familiarly, being brother of all her slender strength
+and freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful time beyond all
+his imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave place to anticipations
+as impalpable and fluctuating and beautiful as the sunset of a summer
+day.
+
+At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at small hairdresser’s in
+the main street, a toothbrush, a pair of nail scissors, and a little
+bottle of stuff to darken the moustache, an article the shopman
+introduced to his attention, recommended highly, and sold in the
+excitement of the occasion.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+
+They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there. Jessie
+went out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then the green
+height of Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving their machines in the
+village they clambered up the slope to the silent red-brick fort that
+crowned it. Thence they had a view of Portsmouth and its cluster of
+sister towns, the crowded narrows of the harbour, the Solent and the
+Isle of Wight like a blue cloud through the hot haze. Jessie by some
+miracle had become a skirted woman in the Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver
+lounged gracefully on the turf, smoked a Red Herring cigarette, and
+lazily regarded the fortified towns that spread like a map away there,
+the inner line of defence like toy fortifications, a mile off perhaps;
+and beyond that a few little fields and then the beginnings of Landport
+suburb and the smoky cluster of the multitudinous houses. To the right
+at the head of the harbour shallows the town of Porchester rose among
+the trees. Mr. Hoopdriver’s anxiety receded to some remote corner of his
+brain and that florid half-voluntary imagination of his shared the stage
+with the image of Jessie. He began to speculate on the impression he
+was creating. He took stock of his suit in a more optimistic spirit,
+and reviewed, with some complacency, his actions for the last four
+and twenty hours. Then he was dashed at the thought of her infinite
+perfections.
+
+She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during the last
+hour or so. She did not look at him directly because he seemed always
+looking at her. Her own troubles had quieted down a little, and her
+curiosity about the chivalrous, worshipping, but singular gentleman in
+brown, was awakening. She had recalled, too, the curious incident of
+their first encounter. She found him hard to explain to herself. You
+must understand that her knowledge of the world was rather less than
+nothing, having been obtained entirely from books. You must not take a
+certain ignorance for foolishness.
+
+She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French except
+‘sivver play,’ a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good light
+table joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not such as books
+informed her distinguished the lower classes. His manners seemed to her
+good on the whole, but a trifle over-respectful and out of fashion. He
+called her I Madam’ once. He seemed a person of means and leisure, but
+he knew nothing of recent concerts, theatres, or books. How did he spend
+his time? He was certainly chivalrous, and a trifle simpleminded. She
+fancied (so much is there in a change of costume) that she had never met
+with such a man before. What COULD he be?
+
+“Mr. Benson,” she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+
+He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+
+“At your service.”
+
+“Do you paint? Are you an artist?”
+
+“Well.” Judicious pause. “I should hardly call myself a Nartist, you
+know. I DO paint a little. And sketch, you know--skitty kind of things.”
+
+He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really not
+so much lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to add, “In
+Papers, you know, and all that.”
+
+“I see,” said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a very
+heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of being a
+little odd. He avoided her eye and bit his grass. “I don’t do MUCH, you
+know.”
+
+“It’s not your profession?
+
+“Oh, no,” said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. “I don’t make a regular
+thing of it, you know. Jest now and then something comes into my head
+and down it goes. No--I’m not a regular artist.”
+
+“Then you don’t practise any regular profession?” Mr. Hoopdriver looked
+into her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He had vague
+ideas of resuming the detective role. “It’s like this,” he said, to
+gain time. “I have a sort of profession. Only there’s a kind of
+reason--nothing much, you know.”
+
+“I beg your pardon for cross-examining you.”
+
+“No trouble,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Only I can’t very well--I leave it
+to you, you know. I don’t want to make any mystery of it, so far as
+that goes.” Should he plunge boldly and be a barrister? That anyhow was
+something pretty good. But she might know about barristry.
+
+“I think I could guess what you are.”
+
+“Well--guess,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You come from one of the colonies?”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind. “How did
+you find out THAT?” (the man was born in a London suburb, dear Reader.)
+
+“I guessed,” she said.
+
+He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new piece of
+grass.
+
+“You were educated up country.”
+
+“Good again,” said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow.
+“You’re a CLAIRVOY ant.” He bit at the grass, smiling. “Which colony was
+it?”
+
+“That I don’t know.”
+
+“You must guess,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“South Africa,” she said. “I strongly incline to South Africa.”
+
+“South Africa’s quite a large place,” he said.
+
+“But South Africa is right?”
+
+“You’re warm,” said Hoopdriver, “anyhow,” and the while his imagination
+was eagerly exploring this new province.
+
+“South Africa IS right?” she insisted.
+
+He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her eyes.
+
+“What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive Schreiner’s,
+you know--‘The Story of an African Farm.’ Gregory Rose is so like you.”
+
+“I never read ‘The Story of an African Farm,’” said Hoopdriver. “I must.
+What’s he like?”
+
+“You must read the book. But it’s a wonderful place, with its mixture
+of races, and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old savagery. Were
+you near Khama?”
+
+“He was a long way off from our place,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “We had
+a little ostrich farm, you know--Just a few hundred of ‘em, out
+Johannesburg way.”
+
+“On the Karroo--was it called?”
+
+“That’s the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got along
+very well in the old days.--But there’s no ostriches on that farm now.”
+ He had a diamond mine in his head, just at the moment, but he stopped
+and left a little to the girl’s imagination. Besides which it had
+occurred to him with a kind of shock that he was lying.
+
+“What became of the ostriches?”
+
+“We sold ‘em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I have
+another cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap, you know,
+that we had this ostrich farm.”
+
+“Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?”
+
+“Lots,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and
+beginning to feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought upon
+himself.
+
+“How interesting! Do you know, I’ve never been out of England except to
+Paris and Mentone and Switzerland.”
+
+“One gets tired of travelling (puff) after a bit, of course.”
+
+“You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always stimulates
+my imagination to think of these places. I can fancy all the tall
+ostriches being driven out by a black herd--to graze, I suppose. How do
+ostriches feed?”
+
+“Well,” said Hoopdriver. “That’s rather various. They have their
+fancies, you know. There’s fruit, of course, and that kind of thing. And
+chicken food, and so forth. You have to use judgment.”
+
+“Did you ever see a lion?” “They weren’t very common in our district,”
+ said Hoopdriver, quite modestly. “But I’ve seen them, of course. Once or
+twice.”
+
+“Fancy seeing a lion! Weren’t you frightened?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that offer of
+South Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the Solent languidly
+as he settled the fate on that lion in his mind. “I scarcely had time,”
+ he said. “It all happened in a minute.”
+
+“Go on,” she said.
+
+“I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches were.”
+
+“Did you EAT ostriches, then? I did not know--”
+
+“Eat them!--often. Very nice they ARE too, properly stuffed. Well,
+we--I, rather--was going across this paddock, and I saw something
+standing up in the moonlight and looking at me.” Mr. Hoopdriver was in a
+hot perspiration now. His invention seemed to have gone limp. “Luckily
+I had my father’s gun with me. I was scared, though, I can tell you.
+(Puff.) I just aimed at the end that I thought was the head. And let
+fly. (Puff.) And over it went, you know.”
+
+“Dead?”
+
+“AS dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I wasn’t
+much over nine at the time, neither.”
+
+“_I_ should have screamed and run away.”
+
+“There’s some things you can’t run away from,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “To
+run would have been Death.”
+
+“I don’t think I ever met a lion-killer before,” she remarked, evidently
+with a heightened opinion of him.
+
+There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr.
+Hoopdriver drew his watch hastily. “I say,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, showing
+it to her, “don’t you think we ought to be getting on?”
+
+His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his confusion
+to modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens of his conscience,
+and held out his hand to assist her. They walked down into Cosham
+again, resumed their machines, and went on at a leisurely pace along
+the northern shore of the big harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no longer
+happy. This horrible, this fulsome lie, stuck in his memory. Why HAD he
+done it? She did not ask for any more South African stories, happily--at
+least until Porchester was reached--but talked instead of Living
+One’s Own Life, and how custom hung on people like chains. She talked
+wonderfully, and set Hoopdriver’s mind fermenting. By the Castle, Mr.
+Hoopdriver caught several crabs in little shore pools. At Fareham they
+stopped for a second tea, and left the place towards the hour of sunset,
+under such invigorating circumstances as you shall in due course hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+
+And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle, and
+Phipps, and of that distressed beauty, ‘Thomas Plantagenet,’ well known
+in society, so the paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We left them at
+Midhurst station, if I remember rightly, waiting, in a state of fine
+emotion, for the Chichester train. It was clearly understood by the
+entire Rescue Party that Mrs. Milton was bearing up bravely against
+almost overwhelming grief. The three gentlemen outdid one another in
+sympathetic expedients; they watched her gravely almost tenderly. The
+substantial Widgery tugged at his moustache, and looked his unspeakable
+feelings at her with those dog-like, brown eyes of his; the slender
+Dangle tugged at HIS moustache, and did what he could with unsympathetic
+grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no moustache to run any risks with, so
+he folded his arms and talked in a brave, indifferent, bearing-up tone
+about the London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway, just to cheer the
+poor woman up a little. And even Mrs. Milton really felt that exalted
+melancholy to the very bottom of her heart, and tried to show it in a
+dozen little, delicate, feminine ways.
+
+“There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester,” said Dangle.
+“Nothing.”
+
+“Nothing,” said Widgery, and aside in her ear: “You really ate scarcely
+anything, you know.”
+
+“Their trains are always late,” said Phipps, with his fingers along the
+edge of his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a sub-editor and
+reviewer, and his pride was to be Thomas Plantagenet’s intellectual
+companion. Widgery, the big man, was manager of a bank and a mighty
+golfer, and his conception of his relations to her never came into his
+mind without those charming oldlines, “Douglas, Douglas, tender and
+true,” falling hard upon its heels. His name was Douglas-Douglas
+Widgery. And Phipps, Phipps was a medical student still, and he felt
+that he laid his heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world.
+She was kind to them all in her way, and insisted on their being
+friends together, in spite of a disposition to reciprocal criticism
+they displayed. Dangle thought Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but
+coarsely the merits of “A Soul Untrammelled,” and Widgery thought Dangle
+lacked, humanity--would talk insincerely to say a clever thing. Both
+Dangle and Widgery thought Phipps a bit of a cub, and Phipps thought
+both Dangle and Widgery a couple of Thundering Bounders.
+
+“They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch,” said Dangle, in
+the train. “After, perhaps. And there’s no sufficient place in the road.
+So soon as we get there, Phipps must inquire at the chief hotels to see
+if any one answering to her description has lunched there.”
+
+“Oh, I’LL inquire,” said Phipps. “Willingly. I suppose you and Widgery
+will just hang about--”
+
+He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton’s gentle face, and stopped
+abruptly.
+
+“No,” said Dangle, “we shan’t HANG ABOUT, as you put it. There are
+two places in Chichester where tourists might go--the cathedral and a
+remarkably fine museum. I shall go to the cathedral and make an inquiry
+or so, while Widgery--”
+
+“The museum. Very well. And after that there’s a little thing or two
+I’ve thought of myself,” said Widgery.
+
+To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to the Red
+Hotel and established her there with some tea. “You are so kind to
+me,” she said. “All of you.” They signified that it was nothing, and
+dispersed to their inquiries. By six they returned, their zeal a little
+damped, without news. Widgery came back with Dangle. Phipps was the last
+to return. “You’re quite sure,” said Widgery, “that there isn’t any flaw
+in that inference of yours?”
+
+“Quite,” said Dangle, rather shortly.
+
+“Of course,” said Widgery, “their starting from Midhurst on the
+Chichester road doesn’t absolutely bind them not to change their minds.”
+
+“My dear fellow!--It does. Really it does. You must allow me to have
+enough intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you must. There
+aren’t any cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn aside here? No.
+Would they turn there? Many more things are inevitable than you fancy.”
+
+“We shall see at once,” said Widgery, at the window. “Here comes Phipps.
+For my own part--”
+
+“Phipps!” said Mrs. Milton. “Is he hurrying? Does he look--” She rose in
+her eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards the window.
+
+“No news,” said Phipps, entering.
+
+“Ah!” said Widgery.
+
+“None?” said Dangle.
+
+“Well,” said Phipps. “One fellow had got hold of a queer story of a man
+in bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question about this time
+yesterday.”
+
+“What question?” said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window. She
+spoke in a low voice, almost a whisper.
+
+“Why--Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?”
+
+Dangle caught at his lower lip. “What’s that?” he said. “Yesterday! A
+man asking after her then! What can THAT mean?”
+
+“Heaven knows,” said Phipps, sitting down wearily. “You’d better infer.”
+
+“What kind of man?” said Dangle.
+
+“How should I know?--in bicycling costume, the fellow said.”
+
+“But what height?--What complexion?”
+
+“Didn’t ask,” said Phipps. “DIDN’T ASK! Nonsense,” said Dangle.
+
+“Ask him yourself,” said Phipps. “He’s an ostler chap in the White
+Hart,--short, thick-set fellow, with a red face and a crusty manner.
+Leaning up against the stable door. Smells of whiskey. Go and ask him.”
+
+“Of course,” said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade over the
+stuffed bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the door. “I might
+have known.”
+
+Phipps’ mouth opened and shut.
+
+“You’re tired, I’m sure, Mr. Phipps,” said the lady, soothingly. “Let me
+ring for some tea for you.” It suddenly occurred to Phipps that he had
+lapsed a little from his chivalry. “I was a little annoyed at the way he
+rushed me to do all this business,” he said. “But I’d do a hundred times
+as much if it would bring you any nearer to her.” Pause. “I WOULD like a
+little tea.”
+
+“I don’t want to raise any false hopes,” said Widgery. “But I do NOT
+believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle’s a very clever fellow, of
+course, but sometimes these Inferences of his--”
+
+“Tchak!” said Phipps, suddenly.
+
+“What is it?” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“Something I’ve forgotten. I went right out from here, went to every
+other hotel in the place, and never thought--But never mind. I’ll ask
+when the waiter comes.”
+
+“You don’t mean--” A tap, and the door opened. “Tea, m’m? yes, m’m,”
+ said the waiter.
+
+“One minute,” said Phipps. “Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady--”
+
+“Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her brother,
+sir--a young gent.”
+
+“Brother!” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Thank God!”
+
+The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. “A young gent,
+sir,” he said, “very free with his money. Give the name of Beaumont.”
+ He proceeded to some rambling particulars, and was cross-examined by
+Widgery on the plans of the young couple.
+
+“Havant! Where’s Havant?” said Phipps. “I seem to remember it
+somewhere.”
+
+“Was the man tall?” said Mrs. Milton, intently, “distinguished looking?
+with a long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?”
+
+“Well,” said the waiter, and thought. “His moustache, m’m, was scarcely
+long--scrubby more, and young looking.”
+
+“About thirty-five, he was?”
+
+“No, m’m. More like five and twenty. Not that.”
+
+“Dear me!” said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice,
+fumbling for her salts, and showing the finest self-control. “It must
+have been her YOUNGER brother--must have been.”
+
+“That will do, thank you,” said Widgery, officiously, feeling that she
+would be easier under this new surprise if the man were dismissed. The
+waiter turned to go, and almost collided with Dangle, who was entering
+the room, panting excitedly and with a pocket handkerchief held to his
+right eye. “Hullo!” said dangle. “What’s up?”
+
+“What’s up with YOU?” said Phipps.
+
+“Nothing--an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of yours. He
+thought it was a plot to annoy him--that the Young Lady in Grey was
+mythical. Judged from your manner. I’ve got a piece of raw meat to keep
+over it. You have some news, I see?”
+
+“Did the man hit you?” asked Widgery.
+
+Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. “Cannot I do anything?”
+
+Dangle was heroic. “Only tell me your news,” he said, round the corner
+of the handkerchief.
+
+“It was in this way,” said Phipps, and explained rather sheepishly.
+While he was doing so, with a running fire of commentary from Widgery,
+the waiter brought in a tray of tea. “A time table,” said Dangle,
+promptly, “for Havant.” Mrs. Milton poured two cups, and Phipps and
+Dangle partook in passover form. They caught the train by a hair’s
+breadth. So to Havant and inquiries.
+
+Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right. In view
+of the fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a steep hill
+continuously on the right-hand side, and the sea on the left, he hit
+upon a magnificent scheme for heading the young folks off. He and Mrs.
+Milton would go to Fareham, Widgery and Phipps should alight one each at
+the intermediate stations of Cosham and Porchester, and come on by the
+next train if they had no news. If they did not come on, a wire to the
+Fareham post office was to explain why. It was Napoleonic, and more than
+consoled Dangle for the open derision of the Havant street boys at the
+handkerchief which still protected his damaged eye.
+
+Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives escaped by
+a hair’s breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor at Fareham, and
+preparing to mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle came round the corner
+from the station. “It’s her!” said Mrs. Milton, and would have screamed.
+“Hist!” said Dangle, gripping the lady’s arm, removing his handkerchief
+in his excitement, and leaving the piece of meat over his eye, an
+extraordinary appearance which seemed unexpectedly to calm her. “Be
+cool!” said Dangle, glaring under the meat. “They must not see us. They
+will get away else. Were there flys at the station?” The young couple
+mounted and vanished round the corner of the Winchester road. Had it not
+been for the publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would have fainted.
+“SAVE HER!” she said.
+
+“Ah! A conveyance,” said Dangle. “One minute.”
+
+He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to her
+heart, and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten minutes.
+Emerged. The meat had gone now, and one saw the cooling puffiness over
+his eye. “I will conduct you back to the station,” said Dangle; “hurry
+back here, and pursue them. You will meet Widgery and Phipps and tell
+them I am in pursuit.”
+
+She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a hard,
+blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and dreadfully
+ruffled and agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt, most energetic
+and devoted; but for a kindly, helpful manner commend her to Douglas
+Widgery.
+
+Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving (as
+well as he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing called a
+gig, northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring his swollen eye,
+was a refined-looking little man, and he wore a deerstalker cap and was
+dressed in dark grey. His neck was long and slender. Perhaps you know
+what gigs are,--huge, big, wooden things and very high and the horse,
+too, was huge and big and high, with knobby legs, a long face, a hard
+mouth, and a whacking trick of pacing. Smack, smack, smack, smack it
+went along the road, and hard by the church it shied vigorously at a
+hooded perambulator.
+
+The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It appears
+that Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton left about upon
+the Fareham platform. The day had irritated him somehow, though he
+had started with the noblest intentions, and he seemed glad to find an
+outlet for justifiable indignation. “He’s such a spasmodic creature,”
+ said Widgery. “Rushing off! And I suppose we’re to wait here until he
+comes back! It’s likely. He’s so egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants to
+mismanage everything himself.”
+
+“He means to help me,” said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully,
+touching his arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified all
+at once. “He need not prevent ME,” he said, and stopped. “It’s no good
+talking, you know, and you are tired.”
+
+“I can go on,” she said brightly, “if only we find her.” “While I
+was cooling my heels in Cosham I bought a county map.” He produced and
+opened it. “Here, you see, is the road out of Fareham.” He proceeded
+with the calm deliberation of a business man to develop a proposal
+of taking train forthwith to Winchester. “They MUST be going to
+Winchester,” he explained. It was inevitable. To-morrow Sunday,
+Winchester a cathedral town, road going nowhere else of the slightest
+importance.
+
+“But Mr. Dangle?”
+
+“He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he will
+break his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It’s scarcely likely
+a dog-cart, especially a hired dog-cart, will overtake bicycles in the
+cool of the evening. Rely upon me, Mrs. Milton--”
+
+“I am in your hands,” she said, with pathetic littleness, looking up at
+him, and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the day.
+
+Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat depressed
+attitude, leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and looking from one
+speaker to the other. The idea of leaving Dangle behind seemed to him an
+excellent one. “We might leave a message at the place where he got the
+dog-cart,” he suggested, when he saw their eyes meeting. There was a
+cheerful alacrity about all three at the proposal.
+
+But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran into the
+station, a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a shouting overhead, the
+guard stood astonished on the platform, and Phipps, thrusting his
+head out of the window, cried, “There he goes!” and sprang out of the
+carriage. Mrs. Milton, following in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it
+was hidden. Botley station lies in a cutting, overhead was the roadway,
+and across the lemon yellows and flushed pinks of the sunset, there
+whirled a great black mass, a horse like a long-nosed chess knight,
+the upper works of a gig, and Dangle in transit from front to back.
+A monstrous shadow aped him across the cutting. It was the event of a
+second. Dangle seemed to jump, hang in the air momentarily, and vanish,
+and after a moment’s pause came a heart-rending smash. Then two black
+heads running swiftly.
+
+“Better get out,” said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood fascinated in
+the doorway.
+
+In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They found
+Dangle, hatless, standing up with cut hands extended, having his hands
+brushed by an officious small boy. A broad, ugly road ran downhill in a
+long vista, and in the distance was a little group of Botley inhabitants
+holding the big, black horse. Even at that distance they could see
+the expression of conscious pride on the monster’s visage. It was as
+wooden-faced a horse as you can imagine. The beasts in the Tower of
+London, on which the men in armour are perched, are the only horses I
+have ever seen at all like it. However, we are not concerned now with
+the horse, but with Dangle. “Hurt?” asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+
+“Mr. Dangle!” cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+
+“Hullo!” said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. “Glad you’ve come.
+I may want you. Bit of a mess I’m in--eigh? But I’ve caught ‘em. At the
+very place I expected, too.”
+
+“Caught them!” said Widgery. “Where are they?”
+
+“Up there,” he said, with a backward motion of his head. “About a mile
+up the hill. I left ‘em. I HAD to.”
+
+“I don’t understand,” said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful look
+again. “Have you found Jessie?”
+
+“I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands somewhere. It
+was like this, you know. Came on them suddenly round a corner. Horse
+shied at the bicycles. They were sitting by the roadside botanising
+flowers. I just had time to shout, ‘Jessie Milton, we’ve been looking
+for you,’ and then that confounded brute bolted. I didn’t dare turn
+round. I had all my work to do to save myself being turned over, as it
+was--so long as I did, I mean. I just shouted, ‘Return to your friends.
+All will be forgiven.’ And off I came, clatter, clatter. Whether they
+heard--”
+
+“TAKE ME TO HER,” said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning towards
+Widgery.
+
+“Certainly,” said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. “How far is it,
+Dangle?”
+
+“Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you know.
+I say though--Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs. Milton.” He
+turned to Phipps. “Phipps, I say, where shall I wash the gravel out? And
+have a look at my knee?”
+
+“There’s the station,” said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made a
+step, and a damaged knee became evident. “Take my arm,” said Phipps.
+
+“Where can we get a conveyance?” asked Widgery of two small boys.
+
+The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one another.
+
+“There’s not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight,” said Widgery. “It’s a case
+of a horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse.”
+
+“There’s a harse all right,” said one of the small boys with a movement
+of the head.
+
+“Don’t you know where we can hire traps?” asked Widgery. “Or a cart
+or--anything?” asked Mrs. Milton.
+
+“John Ooker’s gart a cart, but no one can’t ‘ire’n,” said the larger of
+the small boys, partially averting his face and staring down the road
+and making a song of it. “And so’s my feyther, for’s leg us broke.”
+
+“Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?”
+
+It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for courtly
+devotion, Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. “I suppose--” she
+said, timidly. “Perhaps if you were to ask Mr. Dangle--”
+
+And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely.
+“Confound Dangle! Hasn’t he messed us up enough? He must needs drive
+after them in a trap to tell them we’re coming, and now you want me to
+ask him--”
+
+Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped abruptly.
+“I’ll go and ask Dangle,” he said, shortly. “If you wish it.” And went
+striding into the station and down the steps, leaving her in the road
+under the quiet inspection of the two little boys, and with a kind of
+ballad refrain running through her head, “Where are the Knights of the
+Olden Time?” and feeling tired to death and hungry and dusty and out of
+curl, and, in short, a martyr woman.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the fugitives
+vanished into Immensity; how there were no more trains how Botley stared
+unsympathetically with a palpable disposition to derision, denying
+conveyances how the landlord of the Heron was suspicious, how the next
+day was Sunday, and the hot summer’s day had crumpled the collar of
+Phipps and stained the skirts of Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the radiant
+emotions of the whole party. Dangle, with sticking-plaster and a black
+eye, felt the absurdity of the pose of the Wounded Knight, and abandoned
+it after the faintest efforts. Recriminations never, perhaps, held the
+foreground of the talk, but they played like summer lightning on the
+edge of the conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a galling
+sense of the ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most to blame.
+Apparently, too, the worst, which would have made the whole business
+tragic, was not happening. Here was a young woman--young woman do I say?
+a mere girl!--had chosen to leave a comfortable home in Surbiton, and
+all the delights of a refined and intellectual circle, and had rushed
+off, trailing us after her, posing hard, mutually jealous, and now tired
+and weather-worn, to flick us off at last, mere mud from her wheel, into
+this detestable village beer-house on a Saturday night! And she had
+done it, not for Love and Passion, which are serious excuses one may
+recognise even if one must reprobate, but just for a Freak, just for a
+fantastic Idea; for nothing, in fact, but the outraging of Common Sense.
+Yet withal, such was our restraint, that we talked of her still as one
+much misguided, as one who burthened us with anxiety, as a lamb astray,
+and Mrs. Milton having eaten, continued to show the finest feelings on
+the matter.
+
+She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only
+comfortable chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard,
+horsehair things having antimacassars tied to their backs by means
+of lemon-coloured bows. It was different from those dear old talks at
+Surbiton, somehow. She sat facing the window, which was open (the night
+was so tranquil and warm), and the dim light--for we did not use the
+lamp--suited her admirably. She talked in a voice that told you she was
+tired, and she seemed inclined to state a case against herself in the
+matter of “A Soul Untrammelled.” It was such an evening as might live in
+a sympathetic memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+
+“I feel,” she said, “that I am to blame. I have Developed. That first
+book of mine--I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but it has been
+misunderstood, misapplied.”
+
+“It has,” said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as to be
+visible in the dark. “Deliberately misunderstood.”
+
+“Don’t say that,” said the lady. “Not deliberately. I try and think that
+critics are honest. After their lights. I was not thinking of critics.
+But she--I mean--” She paused, an interrogation.
+
+“It is possible,” said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+
+“I write a book and state a case. I want people to THINK as I recommend,
+not to DO as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I make it into a
+story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to promulgate Ideas. Then
+when the Ideas have been spread abroad--Things will come about. Only now
+it is madness to fly in the face of the established order. Bernard Shaw,
+you know, has explained that with regard to Socialism. We all know that
+to earn all you consume is right, and that living on invested capital is
+wrong. Only we cannot begin while we are so few. It is Those Others.”
+
+“Precisely,” said Widgery. “It is Those Others. They must begin first.”
+
+“And meanwhile you go on banking--”
+
+“If I didn’t, some one else would.”
+
+“And I live on Mr. Milton’s Lotion while I try to gain a footing in
+Literature.”
+
+“TRY!” said Phipps. “You HAVE done so.” And, “That’s different,” said
+Dangle, at the same time.
+
+“You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina Griffiths
+in my book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to life classes and
+had men visitors, but then she was over twenty-one.”
+
+“Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that,” said Dangle.
+
+“It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman. And
+Georgina Griffiths never flaunted her freedom--on a bicycle, in country
+places. In this country. Where every one is so particular. Fancy,
+SLEEPING away from home. It’s dreadful--If it gets about it spells ruin
+for her.”
+
+“Ruin,” said Widgery.
+
+“No man would marry a girl like that,” said Phipps.
+
+“It must be hushed up,” said Dangle.
+
+“It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of
+individual cases. We must weigh each person against his or her
+circumstances. General rules don’t apply--”
+
+“I often feel the force of that,” said Widgery. “Those are my rules. Of
+course my books--”
+
+“It’s different, altogether different,” said Dangle. “A novel deals with
+typical cases.”
+
+“And life is not typical,” said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+
+Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and shocked
+of any in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was infectious, and the
+gathering having, as you can easily understand, talked itself weary,
+dispersed on trivial pretences. But not to sleep immediately. Directly
+Dangle was alone he began, with infinite disgust, to scrutinise his
+darkling eye, for he was a neat-minded little man in spite of his
+energy. The whole business--so near a capture--was horribly vexatious.
+Phipps sat on his bed for some time examining, with equal disgust, a
+collar he would have thought incredible for Sunday twenty-four hours
+before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of even big, fat men
+with dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because he had been so cross
+to her at the station, and because so far he did not feel that he had
+scored over Dangle. Also he was angry with Dangle. And all four of
+them, being souls living very much upon the appearances of things, had a
+painful, mental middle distance of Botley derisive and suspicious, and
+a remoter background of London humorous, and Surbiton speculative. Were
+they really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+
+
+
+
+XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+
+As Mr. Dangle bad witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him by
+the side of the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr. Dangle’s
+appearance, Mr. Hoopdriver had been learning with great interest that
+mere roadside flowers had names,--star-flowers, wind-stars, St. John’s
+wort, willow herb, lords and ladies, bachelor’s buttons,--most curious
+names, some of them. “The flowers are all different in South Africa,
+y’know,” he was explaining with a happy fluke of his imagination to
+account for his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by clattering sounds
+and a gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across the
+tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and gesticulating
+behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie by her name, had
+backed towards the hedge for no ostensible reason, and vanished to the
+accomplishment of the Fate that had been written down for him from the
+very beginning of things. Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to
+stand up and seize their machines, before this tumultuous, this swift
+and wonderful passing of Dangle was achieved. He went from side to side
+of the road,--worse even than the riding forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it
+was,--and vanished round the corner.
+
+“He knew my name,” said Jessie. “Yes--it was Mr. Dangle.”
+
+“That was our bicycles did that,” said Mr. Hoopdriver simultaneously,
+and speaking with a certain complacent concern. “I hope he won’t get
+hurt.”
+
+“That was Mr. Dangle,” repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard this
+time, with a violent start. His eyebrows went up spasmodically.
+
+“What! someone you know?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“Lord!”
+
+“He was looking for me,” said Jessie. “I could see. He began to call to
+me before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for his
+ideas were still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs. Milton. Honesty
+IS the best policy--often, he thought. He turned his head this way and
+that. He became active. “After us, eigh? Then he’ll come back. He’s gone
+down that hill, and he won’t be able to pull up for a bit, I’m certain.”
+
+Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was mounting.
+Still staring at the corner that had swallowed up Dangle, Hoopdriver
+followed suit. And so, just as the sun was setting, they began
+another flight together,--riding now towards Bishops Waltham, with Mr.
+Hoopdriver in the post of danger--the rear--ever and again looking over
+his shoulder and swerving dangerously as he did so. Occasionally Jessie
+had to slacken her pace. He breathed heavily, and hated himself because
+his mouth fell open, After nearly an hour’s hard riding, they found
+themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of Dangle nor any other
+danger was visible as they rode into the dusky, yellow-lit street.
+Though the bats had been fluttering behind thehedges and the evening
+star was bright while they were still two miles from Winchester, Mr.
+Hoopdriver pointed out the dangers of stopping in such an obvious
+abiding-place, and gently but firmly insisted upon replenishing the
+lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From Winchester, roads branch in
+every direction, and to turn abruptly westward was clearly the way to
+throw off the chase. As Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad and yellow
+through the twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that
+ride out of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the atmospheric
+effects were the same, the emotions were different. They rode in
+absolute silence, and slowly after they had cleared the outskirts of
+Winchester. Both of them were now nearly tired out,--the level was
+tedious, and even a little hill a burden; and so it came about that
+in the hamlet of Wallenstock they were beguiled to stop and ask for
+accommodation in an exceptionally prosperous-looking village inn. A
+plausible landlady rose to the occasion.
+
+Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were prepared, Mr.
+Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and floating in a reek
+of smoke, of three and a half faces--for the edge of the door cut one
+down--and an American cloth-covered table with several glasses and a
+tankard. And he also heard a remark. In the second before he heard that
+remark, Mr. Hoopdriver had been a proud and happy man, to particularize,
+a baronet’s heir incognito. He had surrendered their bicycles to the odd
+man of the place with infinite easy dignity, and had bowingly opened
+the door for Jessie. “Who’s that, then?” he imagined people saying;
+and then, “Some’n pretty well orf--judge by the bicycles.” Then the
+imaginary spectators would fall a-talking of the fashionableness of
+bicycling,--how judges And stockbrokers and actresses and, in fact, all
+the best people rode, and how that it was often the fancy of such great
+folk to shun the big hotels, the adulation of urban crowds, and seek,
+incognito, the cosy quaintnesses of village life. Then, maybe, they
+would think of a certain nameless air of distinction about the lady
+who had stepped across the doorway, and about the handsome,
+flaxen-moustached, blue-eyed Cavalier who had followed her in, and they
+would look one to another. “Tell you what it is,” one of the village
+elders would say--just as they do in novels--voicing the thought of all,
+in a low, impressive tone: “There’s such a thin’ as entertaining barranets
+unawares--not to mention no higher things--”
+
+Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr. Hoopdriver’s
+head the moment before he heard that remark. But the remark toppled
+him headlong. What the precise remark was need not concern us. It was
+a casual piece of such satire as Strephon delights in. Should you be
+curious, dear lady, as to its nature, you have merely to dress yourself
+in a really modern cycling costume, get one of the feeblest-looking
+of your men to escort you, and ride out, next Saturday evening, to any
+public house where healthy, homely people gather together. Then you
+will hear quite a lot of the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver heard. More,
+possibly, than you will desire.
+
+The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated an
+entire disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it shattered all
+the gorgeous imaginative fabric his mind had been rejoicing in. All that
+foolish happiness vanished like a dream. And there was nothing to show
+for it, as there is nothing to show for any spiteful remark that has
+ever been made. Perhaps the man who said the thing had a gleam of
+satisfaction at the idea of taking a complacent-looking fool down a peg,
+but it is just as possible he did not know at the time that his stray
+shot had hit. He had thrown it as a boy throws a stone at a bird. And it
+not only demolished a foolish, happy conceit, but it wounded. It touched
+Jessie grossly.
+
+She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing; but
+during the supper they had in the little private dining-room, though
+she talked cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of indistinct
+conversation, and now and then laughter, came in from the inn parlor
+through the pelargoniums in the open window. Hoopdriver felt it must
+all be in the same strain,--at her expense and his. He answered her
+abstractedly. She was tired, she said, and presently went to her room.
+Mr. Hoopdriver, in his courtly way, opened the door for her and bowed
+her out. He stood listening and fearing some new offence as she went
+upstairs, and round the bend where the barometer hung beneath the
+stuffed birds. Then he went back to the room, and stood on the hearthrug
+before the paper fireplace ornament. “Cads!” he said in a scathing
+undertone, as a fresh burst of laughter came floating in. All through
+supper he had been composing stinging repartee, a blistering speech of
+denunciation to be presently delivered. He would rate them as a nobleman
+should: “Call themselves Englishmen, indeed, and insult a woman!” he
+would say; take the names and addresses perhaps, threaten to speak to
+the Lord of the Manor, promise to let them hear from him again, and so
+out with consternation in his wake. It really ought to be done.
+
+“Teach ‘em better,” he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache
+painfully. What was it? He revived the objectionable remark for his own
+exasperation, and then went over the heads of his speech again.
+
+He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and went
+back to the hearthrug. He wouldn’t--after all. Yet was he not a Knight
+Errant? Should such men go unreproved, unchecked, by wandering baronets
+incognito? Magnanimity? Look at it in that way? Churls beneath one’s
+notice? No; merely a cowardly subterfuge. He WOULD after all.
+
+Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even as he
+went towards the door again. But he only went on the more resolutely. He
+crossed the hall, by the bar, and entered the room from which the remark
+had proceeded. He opened the door abruptly and stood scowling on them
+in the doorway. “You’ll only make a mess of it,” remarked the internal
+sceptic. There were five men in the room altogether: a fat person,
+with a long pipe and a great number of chins, in an armchair by the
+fireplace, who wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good evening very affably; a
+young fellow smoking a cutty and displaying crossed legs with gaiters;
+a little, bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged, comfortable
+man with bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket; and a fair young man,
+very genteel in a yellowish-brown ready-made suit and a white tie.
+
+“H’m,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And then in a
+forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties, “Good evening.”
+
+“Very pleasant day we’ve been ‘aving,” said the fair young man with the
+white tie.
+
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair, he
+planted it with great deliberation where he faced the fireplace, and sat
+down. Let’s see--how did that speech begin?
+
+“Very pleasant roads about here,” said the fair young man with the white
+tie.
+
+“Very,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin somehow.
+“The roads about here are all right, and the weather about here is
+all right, but what I’ve come in here to say is--there’s some damned
+unpleasant people--damned unpleasant people!”
+
+“Oh!” said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a mental
+inventory of his pearl buttons as he spoke. “How’s that?”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his elbows with
+extreme angularity. In his heart he was raving at his idiotic folly at
+thus bearding these lions,--indisputably they WERE lions,--but he had
+to go through with it now. Heaven send, his breath, which was already
+getting a trifle spasmodic, did not suddenly give out. He fixed his
+eye on the face of the fat man with the chins, and spoke in a low,
+impressive voice. “I came here, sir,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and paused to
+inflate his cheeks, “with a lady.”
+
+“Very nice lady,” said the man with the gaiters, putting his head on one
+side to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind the curvature
+of his calf. “Very nice lady indeed.”
+
+“I came here,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “with a lady.”
+
+“We saw you did, bless you,” said the fat man with the chins, in
+a curious wheezy voice. “I don’t see there’s anything so very
+extraordinary in that. One ‘ud think we hadn’t eyes.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. “I came, here, sir--”
+
+“We’ve ‘eard that,” said the little man with the beard, sharply and went
+off into an amiable chuckle. “We know it by ‘art,” said the little man,
+elaborating the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly at the
+little man with the beard, and tried to recover his discourse. A pause.
+
+“You were saying,” said the fair young man with the white tie, speaking
+very politely, “that you came here with a lady.”
+
+“A lady,” meditated the gaiter gazer.
+
+The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another with
+keen, bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been scored, and
+stimulated Mr. Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him with an expectant
+regard.
+
+“Some dirty cad,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his discourse,
+and suddenly growing extremely fierce, “made a remark as we went by this
+door.”
+
+“Steady on!” said the old gentleman with many chins. “Steady on! Don’t
+you go a-calling us names, please.”
+
+“One minute!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “It wasn’t I began calling names.”
+ (“Who did?” said the man with the chins.) “I’m not calling any of you
+dirty cads. Don’t run away with that impression. Only some person in
+this room made a remark that showed he wasn’t fit to wipe boots on,
+and, with all due deference to such gentlemen as ARE gentlemen” (Mr.
+Hoopdriver looked round for moral support), “I want to know which it
+was.”
+
+“Meanin’?” said the fair young man in the white tie.
+
+“That I’m going to wipe my boots on ‘im straight away,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his
+throat--than which threat of personal violence nothing had been further
+from his thoughts on entering the room. He said this because he could
+think of nothing else to say, and stuck out his elbows truculently to
+hide the sinking of his heart. It is curious how situations run away
+with us.
+
+“‘Ullo, Charlie!” said the little man, and “My eye!” said the owner of
+the chins. “You’re going to wipe your boots on ‘im?” said the fair young
+man, in a tone of mild surprise.
+
+“I am,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared in the
+young man’s face.
+
+“That’s fair and reasonable,” said the man in the velveteen jacket; “if
+you can.”
+
+The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man in the
+white tic. “Of course, if you can’t find out which it is, I suppose
+you’re prepared to wipe your boots in a liberal way on everybody in the
+room,” said this young man, in the same tone of impersonal question.
+“This gentleman, the champion lightweight--”
+
+“Own up, Charlie,” said the young man with the gaiters, looking up for a
+moment. “And don’t go a-dragging in your betters. It’s fair and square.
+You can’t get out of it.”
+
+“Was it this--gent?” began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Of course,” said the young man in the white tie, “when it comes to
+talking of wiping boots--”
+
+“I’m not talking; I’m going to do it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists; they
+were spectators. He would have to go through with it now. But this tone
+of personal aggression on the maker of the remark had somehow got rid of
+the oppressive feeling of Hoopdriver contra mundum. Apparently, he would
+have to fight someone. Would he get a black eye? Would he get very much
+hurt? Pray goodness it wasn’t that sturdy chap in the gaiters! Should
+he rise and begin? What would she think if he brought a black eye to
+breakfast to-morrow? “Is this the man?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+business-like calm, and arms more angular than ever.
+
+“Eat ‘im!” said the little man with the beard; “eat ‘im straight orf.”
+
+“Steady on!” said the young man in the white tie. “Steady on a minute.
+If I did happen to say--”
+
+“You did, did you?” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Backing out of it, Charlie?” said the young man with the gaiters.
+
+“Not a bit,” said Charlie. “Surely we can pass a bit of a joke--”
+
+“I’m going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+“Bray-vo!” said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+
+“Charlie IS a bit too free with his jokes,” said the little man with the
+beard.
+
+“It’s downright disgusting,” said Hoopdriver, falling back upon his
+speech. “A lady can’t ride a bicycle in a country road, or wear a dress
+a little out of the ordinary, but every dirty little greaser must needs
+go shouting insults--”
+
+“_I_ didn’t know the young lady would hear what I said,” said Charlie.
+“Surely one can speak friendly to one’s friends. How was I to know the
+door was open--”
+
+Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible, more
+seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself, and his
+spirits rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough lesson. “Of
+COURSE you knew the door was open,” he retorted indignantly. “Of COURSE
+you thought we should hear what you said. Don’t go telling lies about
+it. It’s no good your saying things like that. You’ve had your fun, and
+you meant to have your fun. And I mean to make an example of you, Sir.”
+
+“Ginger beer,” said the little man with the beard, in a confidential
+tone to the velveteen jacket, “is regular up this ‘ot weather. Bustin’
+its bottles it is everywhere.”
+
+“What’s the good of scrapping about in a public-house?” said Charlie,
+appealing to the company. “A fair fight without interruptions, now, I
+WOULDN’T mind, if the gentleman’s so disposed.”
+
+Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew truculent.
+
+“Where you like,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, “jest wherever you like.”
+
+“You insulted the gent,” said the man in velveteen.
+
+“Don’t be a bloomin’ funk, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “Why, you
+got a stone of him, if you got an ounce.”
+
+“What I say, is this,” said the gentleman with the excessive chins,
+trying to get a hearing by banging his chair arms. “If Charlie goes
+saying things, he ought to back ‘em up. That’s what I say. I don’t mind
+his sayin’ such things ‘t all, but he ought to be prepared to back ‘em
+up.”
+
+“I’ll BACK ‘em up all right,” said Charlie, with extremely bitter
+emphasis on ‘back.’ “If the gentleman likes to come Toosday week--”
+
+“Rot!” chopped in Hoopdriver. “Now.”
+
+“‘Ear, ‘ear,” said the owner of the chins.
+
+“Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day,” said
+the man in the velveteen coat.
+
+“You got to do it, Charlie,” said the man in gaiters. “It’s no good.”
+
+“It’s like this,” said Charlie, appealing to everyone except Hoopdriver.
+“Here’s me, got to take in her ladyship’s dinner to-morrow night. How
+should I look with a black eye? And going round with the carriage with a
+split lip?”
+
+“If you don’t want your face sp’iled, Charlie, why don’t you keep your
+mouth shut?” said the person in gaiters.
+
+“Exactly,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great fierceness.
+“Why don’t you shut your ugly mouth?”
+
+“It’s as much as my situation’s worth,” protested Charlie.
+
+“You should have thought of that before,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+“There’s no occasion to be so thunderin’ ‘ot about it. I only meant
+the thing joking,” said Charlie. “AS one gentleman to another, I’m very
+sorry if the gentleman’s annoyed--”
+
+Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his moustache.
+He felt that Charlie’s recognition of his gentlemanliness was at any
+rate a redeeming feature. But it became his pose to ride hard and heavy
+over the routed foe. He shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+
+“You’re regular abject,” the man in gaiters was saying to Charlie.
+
+More confusion.
+
+“Only don’t think I’m afraid,--not of a spindle-legged cuss like him,”
+ shouted Charlie. “Because I ain’t.”
+
+“Change of front,” thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. “Where are we
+going?”
+
+“Don’t sit there and be abusive,” said the man in velveteen. “He’s
+offered to hit you, and if I was him, I’d hit you now.”
+
+“All right, then,” said Charlie, with a sudden change of front and
+springing to his feet. “If I must, I must. Now, then!” At that,
+Hoopdriver, the child of Fate, rose too, with a horrible sense that his
+internal monitor was right. Things had taken a turn. He had made a mess
+of it, and now there was nothing for it, so far as he could see, but to
+hit the man at once. He and Charlie stood six feet apart, with a
+table between, both very breathless and fierce. A vulgar fight in
+a public-house, and with what was only too palpably a footman! Good
+Heavens! And this was the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the
+juice had it all happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But
+before the brawl could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened.
+“Not here,” he said, stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was
+standing up.
+
+“Charlie’s artful,” said the little man with the beard.
+
+“Buller’s yard,” said the man with the gaiters, taking the control
+of the entire affair with the easy readiness of an accomplished
+practitioner. “If the gentleman DON’T mind.” Buller’s yard, it seemed,
+was the very place. “We’ll do the thing regular and decent, if
+you please.” And before he completely realized what was happening,
+Hoopdriver was being marched out through the back premises of the inn,
+to the first and only fight with fists that was ever to glorify his
+life.
+
+Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr. Hoopdriver
+was quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But inwardly he was a chaos
+of conflicting purposes. It was extraordinary how things happened. One
+remark had trod so closely on the heels of another, that he had had the
+greatest difficulty in following the development of the business.
+He distinctly remembered himself walking across from one room to the
+other,--a dignified, even an aristocratic figure, primed with considered
+eloquence, intent upon a scathing remonstrance to these wretched yokels,
+regarding their manners. Then incident had flickered into incident until
+here he was out in a moonlit lane,--a slight, dark figure in a group
+of larger, indistinct figures,--marching in a quiet, business-like way
+towards some unknown horror at Buller’s yard. Fists! It was astonishing.
+It was terrible! In front of him was the pallid figure of Charles, and
+he saw that the man in gaiters held Charles kindly but firmly by the
+arm.
+
+“It’s blasted rot,” Charles was saying, “getting up a fight just for a
+thing like that; all very well for ‘im. ‘E’s got ‘is ‘olidays; ‘e ‘asn’t
+no blessed dinner to take up to-morrow night like I ‘ave.--No need to
+numb my arm, IS there?”
+
+They went into Buller’s yard through gates. There were sheds in Buller’s
+yard--sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not solve--a smell
+of cows, and a pump stood out clear and black, throwing a clear black
+shadow on the whitewashed wall. And here it was his face was to be
+battered to a pulp. He knew this was the uttermost folly, to stand up
+here and be pounded, but the way out of it was beyond his imagining. Yet
+afterwards--? Could he ever face her again? He patted his Norfolk jacket
+and took his ground with his back to the gate. How did one square? So?
+Suppose one were to turn and run even now, run straight back to the
+inn and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn’t make, him come
+out--anyhow. He could prosecute them for assault if they did. How did
+one set about prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with his face
+ghastly white under the moon, squaring in front of him.
+
+He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him. Then
+he hit with his right and with the violence of despair. It was a hit of
+his own devising,--an impromptu,--but it chanced to coincide with the
+regulation hook hit at the head. He perceived with a leap of exultation
+that the thing his fist had met was the jawbone of Charles. It was the
+sole gleam of pleasure he experienced during the fight, and it was quite
+momentary. He had hardly got home upon Charles before he was struck
+in the chest and whirled backward. He had the greatest difficulty in
+keeping his feet. He felt that his heart was smashed flat. “Gord
+darm!” said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind him. As Mr.
+Hoopdriver staggered, Charles gave a loud and fear-compelling cry. He
+seemed to tower over Hoopdriver in the moonlight. Both his fists were
+whirling. It was annihilation coming--no less. Mr. Hoopdriver ducked
+perhaps and certainly gave ground to the right, hit, and missed. Charles
+swept round to the left, missing generously. A blow glanced over Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s left ear, and the flanking movement was completed.
+Another blow behind the ear. Heaven and earth spun furiously round
+Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he became aware of a figure in a light suit
+shooting violently through an open gate into the night. The man in
+gaiters sprang forward past Mr. Hoopdriver, but too late to intercept
+the fugitive. There were shouts, laughter, and Mr. Hoopdriver, still
+solemnly squaring, realized the great and wonderful truth--Charles had
+fled. He, Hoopdriver, had fought and, by all the rules of war, had won.
+
+“That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him,” the toothless little
+man with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly friendly manner.
+
+“The fact of it is,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road to
+Salisbury, and with the sound of distant church bells in his cars, “I
+had to give the fellow a lesson; simply had to.”
+
+“It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people about,” said
+Jessie.
+
+“These louts get unbearable,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “If now and then we
+didn’t give them a lesson,--well, a lady cyclist in the roads would be
+an impossibility.”
+
+“I suppose every woman shrinks from violence,” said Jessie. “I
+suppose men ARE braver--in a way--than women. It seems to me-I can’t
+imagine--how one could bring oneself to face a roomful of rough
+characters, pick out the bravest, and give him an exemplary thrashing.
+I quail at the idea. I thought only Ouida’s guardsmen did things like
+that.”
+
+“It was nothing more than my juty--as a gentleman,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“But to walk straight into the face of danger!”
+
+“It’s habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a
+particle of cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting at the
+Golden Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of an elaborate
+doubling movement through Dorsetshire towards Ringwood, where Jessie
+anticipated an answer from her schoolmistress friend. By this time they
+had been nearly sixty hours together, and you will understand that Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s feelings had undergone a considerable intensification and
+development. At first Jessie had been only an impressionist sketch
+upon his mind, something feminine, active, and dazzling, something
+emphatically “above” him, cast into his company by a kindly fate.
+His chief idea, at the outset, as you know, had been to live up to
+her level, by pretending to be more exceptional, more wealthy, better
+educated, and, above all, better born than he was. His knowledge of the
+feminine mind was almost entirely derived from the young ladies he had
+met in business, and in that class (as in military society and among
+gentlemen’s servants) the good old tradition of a brutal social
+exclusiveness is still religiously preserved. He had an almost
+intolerable dread of her thinking him a I bounder.’ Later he began
+to perceive the distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a
+magnificent want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract
+views of the most advanced description, and her strength of conviction
+completely carried Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own Life,
+with emphasis, and Mr. Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to similar
+resolves. So soon as he grasped the tenor of her views, he perceived
+that he himself had thought as much from his earliest years. “Of
+course,” he remarked, in a flash of sexual pride, “a man is freer than a
+woman. End in the Colonies, y’know, there isn’t half the Conventionality
+you find in society in this country.”
+
+He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality, and
+was quite unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded person. He
+suppressed the habits of years and made no proposal to go to church.
+He discussed church-going in a liberal spirit. “It’s jest a habit,” he
+said, “jest a custom. I don’t see what good it does you at all, really.”
+ And he made a lot of excellent jokes at the chimney-pot hat, jokes he
+had read in the Globe ‘turnovers’ on that subject. But he showed his
+gentle breeding by keeping his gloves on all through the Sunday’s ride,
+and ostentatiously throwing away more than half a cigarette when they
+passed a church whose congregation was gathering for afternoon service.
+He cautiously avoided literary topics, except by way of compliment,
+seeing that she was presently to be writing books.
+
+It was on Jessie’s initiative that they attended service in the
+old-fashioned gallery of Blandford church. Jessie’s conscience, I may
+perhaps tell you, was now suffering the severest twinges. She perceived
+clearly that things were not working out quite along the lines she had
+designed-. She had read her Olive Schreiner and George Egerton, and so
+forth, with all the want of perfect comprehension of one who is still
+emotionally a girl. She knew the thing to do was to have a flat and
+to go to the British Museum and write leading articles for the daily
+papers until something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable
+person) had kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable
+horridness, all would have been well. Now her only hope was that
+liberal-minded woman, Miss Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her out,
+highly educated, into the world. Miss Mergle had told her at parting
+to live fearlessly and truly, and had further given her a volume of
+Emerson’s Essays and Motley’s “Dutch Republic,” to help her through the
+rapids of adolescence.
+
+Jessie’s feelings for her stepmother’s household at Surbiton amounted to
+an active detestation. There are no graver or more solemn women in the
+world than these clever girls whose scholastic advancement has retarded
+their feminine coquetry. In spite of the advanced tone of ‘Thomas
+Plantagenet’s’ antimarital novel, Jessie had speedily seen through that
+amiable woman’s amiable defences. The variety of pose necessitated by
+the corps of ‘Men’ annoyed her to an altogether unreasonable degree. To
+return to this life of ridiculous unreality--unconditional capitulation
+to ‘Conventionality’ was an exasperating prospect. Yet what else was
+there to do? You will understand, therefore, that at times she was moody
+(and Mr. Hoopdriver respectfully silent and attentive) and at times
+inclined to eloquent denunciation of the existing order of things. She
+was a Socialist, Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation
+that he went further, intending, thereby, no less than the horrors
+of anarchism. He would have owned up to the destruction of the Winter
+Palace indeed, had he had the faintest idea where the Winter Palace was,
+and had his assurance amounted to certainty that the Winter Palace was
+destroyed. He agreed with her cordially that the position of women was
+intolerable, but checked himself on the’ verge of the proposition that a
+girl ought not to expect a fellow to hand down boxes for her when he was
+getting the ‘swap’ from a customer. It was Jessie’s preoccupation
+with her own perplexities, no doubt, that delayed the unveiling of Mr.
+Hoopdriver all through Saturday and Sunday. Once or twice, however,
+there were incidents that put him about terribly--even questions that
+savoured of suspicion.
+
+On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted wakefulness
+came upon him. Unaccountably he realised he was a contemptible liar,
+All through the small hours of Monday he reviewed the tale of his
+falsehoods, and when he tried to turn his mind from that, the financial
+problem suddenly rose upon him. He heard two o’clock strike, and three.
+It is odd how unhappy some of us are at times, when we are at our
+happiest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+“Good morning, Madam,” said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the
+breakfast room of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he smiled,
+bowed, rubbed his hands together, and pulled out a chair for her, and
+rubbed his hands again.
+
+She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face. “Where HAVE
+I seen that before?” she said.
+
+“The chair?” said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+
+“No--the attitude.”
+
+She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously
+into his face. “And--Madam?”
+
+“It’s a habit,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. “A bad habit. Calling
+ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there
+up country--y’know--the ladies--so rare--we call ‘em all Madam.”
+
+“You HAVE some funny habits, brother Chris,” said Jessie. “Before you
+sell your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and stand
+for Parliament--What a fine thing it is to be a man!--you must cure
+yourself. That habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing your hands, and
+looking expectant.”
+
+“It’s a habit.”
+
+“I know. But I don’t think it a good one. You don’t mind my telling
+you?”
+
+“Not a bit. I’m grateful.”
+
+“I’m blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation,” said Jessie,
+looking at the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his hand to his
+moustache and then, thinking this might be another habit, checked his
+arm and stuck his hand into his pocket. He felt juiced awkward, to use
+his private formula. Jessie’s eye wandered to the armchair, where a
+piece of binding was loose, and, possibly to carry out her theory of an
+observant disposition, she turned and asked him for a pin.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and there,
+planted by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had impounded.
+
+“What an odd place to put pins!” exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+
+“It’s ‘andy,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I saw a chap in a shop do it once.”
+
+“You must have a careful disposition,” she said, over her shoulder,
+kneeling down to the chair.
+
+“In the centre of Africa--up country, that is--one learns to value
+pins,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause. “There weren’t
+over many pins in Africa. They don’t lie about on the ground there.” His
+face was now in a fine, red glow. Where would the draper break out next?
+He thrust his hands into his coat pockets, then took one out again,
+furtively removed the second pin and dropped it behind him gently. It
+fell with a loud ‘ping’ on the fender. Happily she made no remark, being
+preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and stood
+against it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were keeping
+breakfast a tremendous time. He took up his rolled serviette looked
+closely and scrutinisingly at the ring, then put his hand under the fold
+of the napkin and examined the texture, and put the thing down again.
+Then he had a vague impulse to finger his hollow wisdom tooth--happily
+checked. He suddenly discovered he was standing as if the table was a
+counter, and sat down forthwith. He drummed with his hand on the table.
+He felt dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+
+“Breakfast is late,” said Jessie, standing up.
+
+“Isn’t it?”
+
+Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to Ringwood.
+Then silence fell again.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing, looked
+again at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the corner of the
+tablecloth on the ends of his fingers, and regarded it. “Fifteen three,”
+ he thought, privately.
+
+“Why do you do that?” said Jessie.
+
+“WHAT?” said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+
+“Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver’s face became quite a bright red. He began pulling his
+moustache nervously. “I know,” he said. “I know. It’s a queer habit,
+I know. But out there, you know, there’s native servants, you know,
+and--it’s a queer thing to talk about--but one has to look at things to
+see, don’t y’know, whether they’re quite clean or not. It’s got to be a
+habit.”
+
+“How odd!” said Jessie.
+
+“Isn’t it?” mumbled Hoopdriver.
+
+“If I were a Sherlock Holmes,” said Jessie, “I suppose I could have told
+you were a colonial from little things like that. But anyhow, I guessed
+it, didn’t I?”
+
+“Yes,” said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, “you guessed it.”
+
+Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add, “unhappily
+in this case you guessed wrong.” Did she suspect? Then, at the
+psychological moment, the girl bumped the door open with her tray and
+brought in the coffee and scrambled eggs.
+
+“I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes,” said Jessie.
+
+Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days surged to
+the top of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+
+And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself away.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning, sat with
+his cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the coffee. His ears
+were a bright red, and his eyes bright. He took his coffee cup clumsily,
+cleared his throat, suddenly leant back in his chair, and thrust his
+hands deep into his pockets. “I’ll do it,” he said aloud.
+
+“Do what?” said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee pot. She
+was just beginning her scrambled egg.
+
+“Own up.”
+
+“Own what?”
+
+“Miss Milton--I’m a liar.” He put his head on one side and regarded her
+with a frown of tremendous resolution. Then in measured accents,
+and moving his head slowly from side to side, he announced, “Ay’m a
+deraper.”
+
+“You’re a draper? I thought--”
+
+“You thought wrong. But it’s bound to come up. Pins, attitude,
+habits--It’s plain enough.
+
+“I’m a draper’s assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a
+draper’s assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper.”
+
+“A draper’s assistant isn’t a position to be ashamed of,” she said,
+recovering, and not quite understanding yet what this all meant.
+
+“Yes, it is,” he said, “for a man, in this country now. To be just
+another man’s hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes you are told,
+and go to church to please customers, and work--There’s no other kind of
+men stand such hours. A drunken bricklayer’s a king to it.”
+
+“But why are you telling me this now?”
+
+“It’s important you should know at once.”
+
+“But, Mr. Benson--”
+
+“That isn’t all. If you don’t mind my speaking about myself a bit,
+there’s a few things I’d like to tell you. I can’t go on deceiving you.
+My name’s not Benson. WHY I told you Benson, I DON’T know. Except that
+I’m a kind of fool. Well--I wanted somehow to seem more than I was. My
+name’s Hoopdriver.”
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“And that about South Africa--and that lion.”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“Lies.”
+
+“Lies!”
+
+“And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And all the
+reminiscences of the giraffes--lies too. I never rode on no giraffes.
+I’d be afraid.”
+
+He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased his
+conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity. This was a
+new side altogether to the man. “But WHY,” she began.
+
+“Why did I tell you such things? _I_ don’t know. Silly sort of chap, I
+expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow, now, I want you
+to know the truth.”
+
+Silence. Breakfast untouched. “I thought I’d tell you,” said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. “I suppose it’s snobbishness and all that kind of thing, as
+much as anything. I lay awake pretty near all last night thinking about
+myself; thinking what a got-up imitation of a man I was, and all that.”
+
+“And you haven’t any diamond shares, and you are not going into
+Parliament, and you’re not--”
+
+“All Lies,” said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. “Lies from beginning
+to end. ‘Ow I came to tell ‘em I DON’T know.”
+
+She stared at him blankly.
+
+“I never set eyes on Africa in my life,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, completing
+the confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his pocket, and with
+the nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of death is passed, began
+to drink his coffee.
+
+“It’s a little surprising,” began Jessie, vaguely.
+
+“Think it over,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m sorry from the bottom of my
+heart.”
+
+And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little, and
+seemed lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by contrition and
+anxiety that he consumed an extraordinarily large breakfast out of pure
+nervousness, and ate his scrambled eggs for the most part with the
+spoon that belonged properly to the marmalade. His eyes were gloomily
+downcast. She glanced at him through her eyelashes. Once or twice she
+struggled with laughter, once or twice she seemed to be indignant.
+
+“I don’t know what to think,” she said at last. “I don’t know what
+to make of you--brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that you were
+perfectly honest. And somehow--”
+
+“Well?”
+
+“I think so still.”
+
+“Honest--with all those lies!”
+
+“I wonder.”
+
+“I don’t,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “I’m fair ashamed of myself. But
+anyhow--I’ve stopped deceiving you.”
+
+“I THOUGHT,” said the Young Lady in Grey, “that story of the lion--”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Don’t remind me of THAT.”
+
+“I thought, somehow, I FELT, that the things you said didn’t ring quite
+true.” She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the expression of his
+face. “Of COURSE you are honest,” she said. “How could I ever doubt it?
+As if _I_ had never pretended! I see it all now.”
+
+Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast things. He
+looked at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing friendliness in her eyes.
+He scarcely understood at first. He rose, holding the marmalade spoon,
+and took her proffered hand with abject humility. “Lord,” he broke out,
+“if you aren’t enough--but there!”
+
+“I see it all now.” A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured her
+humour. She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. “You did it,”
+ she said, “because you wanted to help me. And you thought I was too
+Conventional to take help from one I might think my social inferior.”
+
+“That was partly it,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“How you misunderstood me!” she said.
+
+“You don’t mind?”
+
+“It was noble of you. But I am sorry,” she said, “you should think me
+likely to be ashamed of you because you follow a decent trade.”
+
+“I didn’t know at first, you see,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He was
+as useful a citizen as could be,--it was proposed and carried,--and
+his lying was of the noblest. And so the breakfast concluded much more
+happily than his brightest expectation, and they rode out of ruddy
+little Blandford as though no shadow of any sort had come between them.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees half-way up a
+stretch of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood, however, Mr. Hoopdriver
+reopened the question of his worldly position.
+
+“Ju think,” he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette from his
+mouth, “that a draper’s shopman IS a decent citizen?”
+
+“Why not?”
+
+“When he puts people off with what they don’t quite want, for instance?”
+
+“Need he do that?”
+
+“Salesmanship,” said Hoopdriver. “Wouldn’t get a crib if he
+didn’t.--It’s no good your arguing. It’s not a particularly honest nor a
+particularly useful trade; it’s not very high up; there’s no freedom
+and no leisure--seven to eight-thirty every day in the week; don’t leave
+much edge to live on, does it?--real workmen laugh at us and educated
+chaps like bank clerks and solicitors’ clerks look down on us. You
+look respectable outside, and inside you are packed in dormitories like
+convicts, fed on bread and butter and bullied like slaves. You’re
+just superior enough to feel that you’re not superior. Without capital
+there’s no prospects; one draper in a hundred don’t even earn enough to
+marry on; and if he DOES marry, his G.V. can just use him to black boots
+if he likes, and he daren’t put his back up. That’s drapery! And you
+tell me to be contented. Would YOU be contented if you was a shop girl?”
+
+She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown eyes,
+and he remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+
+Presently he spoke. “I’ve been thinking,” he said, and stopped.
+
+She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand. There
+was a light in her eyes that made the expression of them tender. Mr.
+Hoopdriver had not looked in her face while he had talked. He had
+regarded the grass, and pointed his remarks with redknuckled hands held
+open and palms upwards. Now they hung limply over his knees.
+
+“Well?” she said.
+
+“I was thinking it this morning,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Yes?”
+
+“Of course it’s silly.” “Well?”
+
+“It’s like this. I’m twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all right
+to fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years behind.--Is it too
+late? I wasn’t so backward. I did algebra, and Latin up to auxiliary
+verbs, and French genders. I got a kind of grounding.”
+
+“And now you mean, should you go on working?”
+
+“Yes,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “That’s it. You can’t do much at drapery
+without capital, you know. But if I could get really educated. I’ve
+thought sometimes...”
+
+“Why not?” said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. “You think?” he
+said. “Of course. You are a Man. You are free--” She warmed. “I wish I
+were you to have the chance of that struggle.”
+
+“Am I Man ENOUGH?” said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing himself.
+“There’s that eight years,” he said to her.
+
+“You can make it up. What you call educated men--They’re not going on.
+You can catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing golf, and thinking
+of clever things to say to women like my stepmother, and dining out.
+You’re in front of them already in one thing. They think they know
+everything. You don’t. And they know such little things.”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “How you encourage a fellow!”
+
+“If I could only help you,” she said, and left an eloquent hiatus. He
+became pensive again.
+
+“It’s pretty evident you don’t think much of a draper,” he said
+abruptly.
+
+Another interval. “Hundreds of men,” she said, “have come from the very
+lowest ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and Hugh Miller, a
+stonemason; and plenty of others. Dodsley was a footman--”
+
+“But drapers! We’re too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats and
+cuffs might get crumpled--”
+
+“Wasn’t there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper.”
+
+“There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard tell
+of.”
+
+“Have you ever read ‘Hearts Insurgent’?”
+
+“Never,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context, but
+suddenly broke out with an account of his literary requirements. “The
+fact is--I’ve read precious little. One don’t get much of a chance,
+situated as I am. We have a library at business, and I’ve gone through
+that. Most Besant I’ve read, and a lot of Mrs. Braddon’s and Rider
+Haggard and Marie Corelli--and, well--a Ouida or so. They’re good
+stories, of course, and first-class writers, but they didn’t seem to
+have much to do with me. But there’s heaps of books one hears talked
+about, I HAVEN’T read.”
+
+“Don’t you read any other books but novels?”
+
+“Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can’t get the
+books. I have been to some extension lectures, of course, ‘Lizabethan
+Dramatists,’ it was, but it seemed a little high-flown, you know. And I
+went and did wood-carving at the same place. But it didn’t seem leading
+nowhere, and I cut my thumb and chucked it.”
+
+He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his hands
+limp. “It makes me sick,” he said, “to think how I’ve been fooled with.
+My old schoolmaster ought to have a juiced HIDING. He’s a thief. He
+pretended to undertake to make a man of me, and be’s stole twenty-three
+years of my life, filled me up with scraps and sweepings. Here I am! I
+don’t KNOW anything, and I can’t DO anything, and all the learning time
+is over.”
+
+“Is it?” she said; but he did not seem to hear her. “My o’ people didn’t
+know any better, and went and paid thirty pounds premium--thirty pounds
+down to have me made THIS. The G.V. promised to teach me the trade, and
+he never taught me anything but to be a Hand. It’s the way they do with
+draper’s apprentices. If every swindler was locked up--well, you’d have
+nowhere to buy tape and cotton. It’s all very well to bring up Burns and
+those chaps, but I’m not that make. Yet I’m not such muck that I might
+not have been better--with teaching. I wonder what the chaps who sneer
+and laugh at such as me would be if they’d been fooled about as I’ve
+been. At twenty-three--it’s a long start.”
+
+He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver indeed
+than him of the glorious imaginings. “It’s YOU done this,” he said.
+“You’re real. And it sets me thinking what I really am, and what I might
+have been. Suppose it was all different--”
+
+“MAKE it different.”
+
+“How?”
+
+“WORK. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man.”
+
+“Ah!” said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his eyes.
+“And even then--”
+
+“No! It’s not much good. I’m beginning too late.”
+
+And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation ended.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST
+
+At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment. There
+was no letter for her at the post office. Opposite the hotel, The
+Chequered Career, was a machine shop with a conspicuously second-hand
+Marlborough Club tandem tricycle displayed in the window, together with
+the announcement that bicycles and tricycles were on hire within. The
+establishment was impressed on Mr. Hoopdriver’s mind by the proprietor’s
+action in coming across the road and narrowly inspecting their machines.
+His action revived a number of disagreeable impressions, but, happily,
+came to nothing. While they were still lunching, a tall clergyman,
+with a heated face, entered the room and sat down at the table next to
+theirs. He was in a kind of holiday costume; that is to say, he had a
+more than usually high collar, fastened behind and rather the worse for
+the weather, and his long-tail coat had been replaced by a black jacket
+of quite remarkable brevity. He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his
+trouser legs were grey with dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw
+in the place of the customary soft felt. He was evidently socially
+inclined.
+
+“A most charming day, sir,” he said, in a ringing tenor.
+
+“Charming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+
+“You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country,” said the
+clergyman.
+
+“Touring,” explained Mr. Hoopdriver. “I can imagine that, with a
+properly oiled machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way of
+seeing the country.”
+
+“No,” said Mr. Hoopdriver; “it isn’t half a bad way of getting about.”
+
+“For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be, I
+should imagine, a delightful bond.”
+
+“Quite so,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+
+“Do you ride a tandem?”
+
+“No--we’re separate,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“The motion through the air is indisputably of a very exhilarating
+description.” With that decision, the clergyman turned to give his
+orders to the attendant, in a firm, authoritative voice, for a cup of
+tea, two gelatine lozenges, bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow.
+“The gelatine lozenges I must have. I require them to precipitate the
+tannin in my tea,” he remarked to the room at large, and folding his
+hands, remained for some time with his chin thereon, staring fixedly at
+a little picture over Mr. Hoopdriver’s head.
+
+“I myself am a cyclist,” said the clergyman, descending suddenly upon
+Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“Indeed!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. “What machine,
+may I ask?”
+
+“I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I
+regret to say, considered too--how shall I put it?--flippant by my
+parishioners. So I have a tricycle. I have just been hauling it hither.”
+
+“Hauling!” said Jessie, surprised.
+
+“With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back.”
+
+The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb. Mr.
+Hoopdriver’s face passed through several phases of surprise. Then he saw
+the explanation. “Had an accident?”
+
+“I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to go
+round. I found myself about five miles from here with an absolutely
+immobile machine.”
+
+“Ow!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie
+glanced at this insane person.
+
+“It appears,” said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he had
+created, “that my man carefully washed out the bearings with paraffin,
+and let the machine dry without oiling it again. The consequence was
+that they became heated to a considerable temperature and jammed. Even
+at the outset the machine ran stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being
+inclined to ascribe this stiffness to my own lassitude, merely redoubled
+my exertions.”
+
+“‘Ot work all round,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of life to
+do whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe, indeed, that the
+bearings became red hot. Finally one of the wheels jammed together. A
+side wheel it was, so that its stoppage necessitated an inversion of the
+entire apparatus,--an inversion in which I participated.”
+
+“Meaning, that you went over?” said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much
+amused.
+
+“Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly. You may
+understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I expostulated--playfully,
+of course. Happily the road was not overlooked. Finally, the entire
+apparatus became rigid, and I abandoned the unequal contest. For all
+practical purposes the tricycle was no better than a heavy chair without
+castors. It was a case of hauling or carrying.”
+
+The clergyman’s nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+
+“Five miles,” said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread and
+butter vigorously. “Happily,” he said, “I am an eupeptic, energetic sort
+of person on principle. I would all men were likewise.”
+
+“It’s the best way,” agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation gave
+precedence to bread and butter.
+
+“Gelatine,” said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea
+thoughtfully, “precipitates the tannin in one’s tea and renders it easy
+of digestion.”
+
+“That’s a useful sort of thing to know,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You are altogether welcome,” said the clergyman, biting generously at
+two pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+
+In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace towards
+Stoney Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South Africa being
+in abeyance. Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by disagreeable thoughts. He
+had changed the last sovereign at Ringwood. The fact had come upon him
+suddenly. Now too late he was reflecting upon his resources. There was
+twenty pounds or more in the post office savings bank in Putney, but his
+book was locked up in his box at the Antrobus establishment. Else this
+infatuated man would certainly have surreptitiously withdrawn the entire
+sum in order to prolong these journeyings even for a few days. As it
+was, the shadow of the end fell across his happiness. Strangely enough,
+in spite of his anxiety and the morning’s collapse, he was still in a
+curious emotional state that was certainly not misery. He was forgetting
+his imaginings and posings, forgetting himself altogether in his growing
+appreciation of his companion. The most tangible trouble in his mind was
+the necessity of breaking the matter to her.
+
+A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was reached,
+and they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little oak tree. Near
+the crest the road looped on itself, so that, looking back, it sloped
+below them up to the right and then came towards them. About them grew
+a rich heather with stunted oaks on the edge of a deep ditch along the
+roadside, and this road was sandy; below the steepness of the hill,
+however, it was grey and barred with shadows, for there the trees
+clustered thick and tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled clumsily with his
+cigarettes.
+
+“There’s a thing I got to tell you,” he said, trying to be perfectly
+calm.
+
+“Yes?” she said.
+
+“I’d like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y’know.”
+
+“I’m very unsettled,” said Jessie. “You are thinking of writing Books?”
+
+“Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that.”
+
+“And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?”
+
+“Yes.”
+
+“How long’d it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?”
+
+“I don’t know at all. I believe there are a great many women journalists
+and sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists. But I suppose it
+takes time. Women, you know, edit most papers nowadays, George Egerton
+says. I ought, I suppose, to communicate with a literary agent.”
+
+“Of course,” said Hoopdriver, “it’s very suitable work. Not being heavy
+like the drapery.”
+
+“There’s heavy brain labour, you must remember.”
+
+“That wouldn’t hurt YOU,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a compliment.
+
+“It’s like this,” he said, ending a pause. “It’s a juiced nuisance
+alluding to these matters, but--we got very little more money.”
+
+He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her. “I was
+counting, of course, on your friend’s writing and your being able to
+take some action to-day.” ‘Take some action’ was a phrase he had learnt
+at his last ‘swop.’
+
+“Money,” said Jessie. “I didn’t think of money.”
+
+“Hullo! Here’s a tandem bicycle,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly, and
+pointing with his cigarette.
+
+She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the trees at
+the foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly over their work and
+made a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to take the rise. The machine
+was evidently too highly geared for hill climbing, and presently the
+rearmost rider rose on his saddle and hopped off, leaving his companion
+to any fate he found proper. The foremost rider was a man unused to
+such machines and apparently undecided how to dismount. He wabbled a
+few yards up the hill with a long tail of machine wabbling behind
+him. Finally, he made an attempt to jump off as one does off a single
+bicycle, hit his boot against the backbone, and collapsed heavily,
+falling on his shoulder.
+
+She stood up. “Dear me!” she said. “I hope he isn’t hurt.”
+
+The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+
+Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up and
+wheeled out of the way, and then the fallen rider, being assisted, got
+up slowly and stood rubbing his arm. No serious injury seemed to be
+done to the man, and the couple presently turned their attention to the
+machine by the roadside. They were not in cycling clothes Hoopdriver
+observed. One wore the grotesque raiment for which the Cockney discovery
+of the game of golf seems indirectly blamable. Even at this distance the
+flopping flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at the top of his
+calves, and the chequering of his stockings were perceptible. The other,
+the rear rider, was a slender little man in grey.
+
+“Amatoors,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her eyes. She
+no longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering at the machine
+down below there.
+
+“How much have you?” she said.
+
+He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins, counted
+them with his left index finger, and held them out to her. “Thirteen
+four half,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “Every penny.”
+
+“I have half a sovereign,” she said. “Our bill wherever we stop--” The
+hiatus was more eloquent than many words.
+
+“I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this,” said Jessie.
+
+“It’s a juiced nuisance.”
+
+“Money,” said Jessie. “Is it possible--Surely! Conventionality! May only
+people of means--Live their own Lives? I never thought ...”
+
+Pause.
+
+“Here’s some more cyclists coming,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from among
+the trees emerged the massive bulk of a ‘Marlborough Club’ tandem,
+ridden by a slender woman in grey and a burly man in a Norfolk jacket.
+Following close upon this came lank black figure in a piebald straw hat,
+riding a tricycle of antiquated pattern with two large wheels in front.
+The man in grey remained bowed over the bicycle, with his stomach
+resting on the saddle, but his companion stood up and addressed some
+remark to the tricycle riders. Then it seemed as if he pointed up hill
+to where Mr. Hoopdriver and his companion stood side by side. A still
+odder thing followed; the lady in grey took out her handkerchief,
+appeared to wave it for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from her
+companion the white signal vanished.
+
+“Surely,” said Jessie, peering under her hand. “It’s never--”
+
+The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering elaborately
+from side to side to ease the ascent. It was evident, from his heaving
+shoulders and depressed head, that the burly gentleman was exerting
+himself. The clerical person on the tricycle assumed the shape of a note
+of interrogation. Then on the heels of this procession came a dogcart
+driven by a man in a billycock hat and containing a lady in dark green.
+
+“Looks like some sort of excursion,” said Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand. “Surely,”
+ she said.
+
+The clergyman’s efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious jerking
+motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself, and he partly
+dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his machine up hill again
+immediately and began to wheel it. Then the burly gentleman dismounted,
+and with a courtly attentiveness assisted the lady in grey to alight.
+There was some little difference of opinion as to assistance, she
+so clearly wished to help push. Finally she gave in, and the burly
+gentleman began impelling the machine up hill by his own unaided
+strength. His face made a dot of brilliant colour among the greys and
+greens at the foot of the hill. The tandem bicycle was now, it seems,
+repaired, and this joined the tail of the procession, its riders walking
+behind the dogcart, from which the lady in green and the driver had now
+descended.
+
+“Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie. “Those people--I’m almost sure--”
+
+“Lord!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he turned
+to pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and assisted her to
+mount.
+
+At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people coming
+up the hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie’s doubts at once.
+Two handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted. The riders of the tandem
+bicycle began to run it up hill, past the other vehicles. But our young
+people did not wait for further developments of the pursuit. In another
+moment they were out of sight, riding hard down a steady incline towards
+Stoney Cross.
+
+Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill brow,
+Jessie looked back and saw the tandem rising over the crest, with its
+rear rider just tumbling into the saddle. “They’re coming,” she said,
+and bent her head over her handles in true professional style.
+
+They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw ahead
+of them a number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the roadway.
+Involuntarily they slackened. “Shoo!” said Mr. Hoopdriver, and the
+ponies kicked up their heels derisively. At that Mr. Hoopdriver lost his
+temper and charged at them, narrowly missed one, and sent them jumping
+the ditch into the bracken under the trees, leaving the way clear for
+Jessie.
+
+Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew heavy,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver’s breath sounded like a saw. The tandem appeared,
+making frightful exertions, at the foot, while the chase was still
+climbing. Then, thank Heaven! a crest and a stretch of up and down road,
+whose only disadvantage was its pitiless exposure to the afternoon sun.
+The tandem apparently dismounted at the hill, and did not appear against
+the hot blue sky until they were already near some trees and a good mile
+away.
+
+“We’re gaining,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of
+perspiration dropping from brow to cheek. “That hill--”
+
+But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly spent.
+Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of shame
+prolonged the liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From that point the
+tandem grained upon them steadily. At the Rufus Stone, it was scarcely
+a hundred yards behind. Then one desperate spurt, and they found
+themselves upon a steady downhill stretch among thick pine woods.
+Downhill nothing can beat a highly geared tandem bicycle. Automatically
+Mr. Hoopdriver put up his feet, and Jessie slackened her pace. In
+another moment they heard the swish of the fat pneumatics behind them,
+and the tandem passed Hoopdriver and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver
+felt a mad impulse to collide with this abominable machine as it
+passed him. His only consolation was to notice that its riders, riding
+violently, were quite as dishevelled as himself and smothered in sandy
+white dust.
+
+Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders shot
+panting past them downhill. “Brake,” said Dangle, who was riding behind,
+and stood up on the pedals. For a moment the velocity of the thing
+increased, and then they saw the dust fly from the brake, as it came
+down on the front tire. Dangle’s right leg floundered in the air as he
+came off in the road. The tandem wobbled. “Hold it!” cried Phipps over
+his shoulder, going on downhill. “I can’t get off if you don’t hold it.”
+ He put on the brake until the machine stopped almost dead, and then
+feeling unstable began to pedal again. Dangle shouted after him. “Put
+out your foot, man,” said Dangle.
+
+In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards or more
+beyond their quarry. Then Phipps realized his possibilities, slacked up
+with the brake, and let the thing go over sideways, dropping on to his
+right foot. With his left leg still over the saddle, and still
+holding the handles, he looked over his shoulder and began addressing
+uncomplimentary remarks to Dangle. “You only think of yourself,” said
+Phipps, with a florid face.
+
+“They have forgotten us,” said Jessie, turning her machine.
+
+“There was a road at the top of the hill--to Lyndhurst,” said
+Hoopdriver, following her example.
+
+“It’s no good. There’s the money. We must give it up. But let us go back
+to that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don’t see why we should be led captive.”
+
+So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her companion
+mounted and rode quietly back up the hill again. As they dismounted at
+the hotel entrance, the tandem overtook them, and immediately afterwards
+the dogcart came into view in pursuit. Dangle jumped off.
+
+“Miss Milton, I believe,” said Dangle, panting and raising a damp cap
+from his wet and matted hair.
+
+“I SAY,” said Phipps, receding involuntarily. “Don’t go doing it again,
+Dangle. HELP a chap.”
+
+“One minute,” said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+
+Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the hotel
+entrance. Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp but defiant.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE
+
+He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps
+was abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now
+wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. “Miss Milton?” he
+said briefly.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+
+“Miss Milton within?” said Dangle.
+
+“AND not to be disturved,” said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“You are a scoundrel, sir,” said Mr. Dangle.
+
+“Et your service,” said Mr. Hoopdriver. “She awaits ‘er stepmother,
+sir.”
+
+Mr. Dangle hesitated. “She will be here immediately,” he said. “Here is
+her friend, Miss Mergle.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense
+calm, thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of those
+fatal hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude was
+merely vulgarly defiant he withdrew both, returned one and pulled at
+the insufficient moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in
+confusion. “Is this the man?” she said to Dangle, and forthwith, “How
+DARE you, sir? How dare you face me? That poor girl!”
+
+
+“You will permit me to observe,” began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid
+drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a
+romantic villain.
+
+“Ugh,” said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff
+with her extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the
+hall of the hotel.
+
+“Let me pass,” said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. “How dare
+you resist my passage?” and so swept by him and into the dining-room,
+wherein Jessie had sought refuge.
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand,
+Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle’s activity,
+came in upon her heels, Phipps leading. “How dare you prevent that lady
+passing?” said Phipps.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle’s sense, dangerous, but
+he made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the
+passage, guardant. “It is men of your stamp, sir,” said Phipps, “who
+discredit manhood.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. “Who the juice are
+you?” shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+
+“Who are YOU, sir?” retorted Phipps. “Who are you? That’s the question.
+What are YOU, and what are you doing, wandering at large with a young
+lady under age?”
+
+“Don’t speak to him,” said Dangle.
+
+“I’m not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me,”
+ said Hoopdriver. “Not Likely.” And added fiercely, “And that I tell you,
+sir.”
+
+He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at
+one another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if the
+long clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but deliberate.
+“Petticoated anachronism,” said the long clergyman in the doorway,
+apparently still suffering from the antiquated prejudice that demanded a
+third wheel and a black coat from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps
+and Hoopdriver for a moment, then extending his hand towards the latter,
+he waved it up and down three times, saying, “Tchak, tchak, tchak,” very
+deliberately as he did so. Then with a concluding “Ugh!” and a gesture
+of repugnance he passed on into the dining-room from which the voice
+of Miss Mergle was distinctly audible remarking that the weather was
+extremely hot even for the time of year.
+
+This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing effect
+upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed by the
+advent of the massive Widgery.
+
+“Is this the man?” said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special
+voice for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+
+“Don’t hurt him!” said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. “However much
+wrong he has done her--No violence!”
+
+“‘Ow many more of you?” said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella
+stand. “Where is she? What has he done with her?” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“I’m not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers,”
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver. “So you needn’t think it.”
+
+“Please don’t worry, Mr. Hoopdriver,” said Jessie, suddenly appearing in
+the door of the dining-room. “I’m here, mother.” Her face was white.
+
+Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional charge
+at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery moved as
+if to follow, and hesitated. “You’d better make yourself scarce,” he
+said to Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+“I shan’t do anything of the kind,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a catching
+of the breath. “I’m here defending that young lady.”
+
+“You’ve done her enough mischief, I should think,” said Widgery,
+suddenly walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind
+him, leaving Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+
+“Clear!” said Phipps, threateningly.
+
+“I shall go and sit out in the garden,” said Mr. Hoopdriver, with
+dignity. “There I shall remain.”
+
+“Don’t make a row with him,” said Dangle.
+
+And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX.
+
+So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion
+is over. In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable
+collection of wheeled instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in
+grave and stately attitudes, and by the driver of a stylish dogcart from
+Ringwood. In the garden behind, in an attitude of nervous prostration,
+Mr. Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat. Through the open window of
+a private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of men and women in
+conference. Occasionally something that might have been a girlish sob.
+
+“I fail to see what status Widgery has,” says Dangle, “thrusting himself
+in there.”
+
+“He takes too much upon himself,” said Phipps.
+
+“I’ve been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day,” said Dangle,
+and stopped.
+
+“They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon.”
+
+“Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course,” said Dangle,
+with a gloomy magnanimity.
+
+He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the man’s
+chequered legs. “Financially it wouldn’t be half bad.”
+
+“He’s so dull and heavy,” said Phipps.
+
+Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity,
+taken the chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate Jessie.
+I regret to have to say that my heroine had been appalled by the visible
+array of public opinion against her excursion, to the pitch of tears.
+She was sitting with flushed cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the
+table opposite to the clergyman. She held her handkerchief crumpled up
+in her extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as possible,
+and occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie’s hand,
+to indicate forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which
+touched Widgery very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B. A.),
+sat on the opposite side near the clergyman. She was the strong-minded
+schoolmistress to whom Jessie had written, and who had immediately
+precipitated the pursuit upon her. She had picked up the clergyman in
+Ringwood, and had told him everything forthwith, having met him once at
+a British Association meeting. He had immediately constituted himself
+administrator of the entire business. Widgery, having been foiled in an
+attempt to conduct the proceedings, stood with his legs wide apart in
+front of the fireplace ornament, and looked profound and sympathetic.
+Jessie’s account of her adventures was a chary one and given amidst
+frequent interruptions. She surprised herself by skilfully omitting any
+allusion to the Bechamel episode. She completely exonerated Hoopdriver
+from the charge of being more than an accessory to her escapade.
+But public feeling was heavy against Hoopdriver. Her narrative was
+inaccurate and sketchy, but happily the others were too anxious to pass
+opinions to pin her down to particulars. At last they had all the facts
+they would permit.
+
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “I can only ascribe this
+extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest
+misconceptions of your place in the world and of your duties and
+responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your present emotion is due
+not so much to a real and sincere penitence for your disobedience and
+folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate interference--”
+
+“Not that,” said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. “Not that.”
+
+“But WHY did she go off like this?” said Widgery. “That’s what _I_ want
+to know.”
+
+Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said “Hush!” and the
+ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. “I
+cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more
+intelligent portion of the feminine community. You had a pleasant home,
+a most refined and intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to
+cherish and protect you--”
+
+“If I HAD a mother,” gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare of
+self-pity, and sobbing.
+
+“To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it
+all alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-”
+
+“I wanted to learn,” said Jessie.
+
+“You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn.”
+
+“AH!” from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+
+“It isn’t fair for all of you to argue at me at once,” submitted Jessie,
+irrelevantly.
+
+“A world full of unknown dangers,” resumed the clergyman. “Your proper
+place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You
+have been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of
+literature which, with all due respect to distinguished authoress
+that shall be nameless, I must call the New Woman Literature. In that
+deleterious ingredient of our book boxes--”
+
+“I don’t altogether agree with you there,” said Miss Mergle, throwing
+her head back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr.
+Widgery coughed.
+
+“What HAS all this to do with me?” asked Jessie, availing herself of the
+interruption.
+
+“The point is,” said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, “that in my books--”
+
+“All I want to do,” said Jessie, “is to go about freely by myself. Girls
+do so in America. Why not here?”
+
+“Social conditions are entirely different in America,” said Miss Mergle.
+“Here we respect Class Distinctions.”
+
+“It’s very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away for
+a holiday if I want to.”
+
+“With a strange young man, socially your inferior,” said Widgery, and
+made her flush by his tone.
+
+“Why not?” she said. “With anybody.”
+
+“They don’t do that, even in America,” said Miss Mergle.
+
+“My dear young lady,” said the clergyman, “the most elementary
+principles of decorum--A day will come when you will better understand
+how entirely subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of
+our present civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing
+anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of yours.
+We can only put things down at present, in charity, to your ignorance--”
+
+“You have to consider the general body of opinion, too,” said Widgery.
+
+“Precisely,” said Miss Mergle. “There is no such thing as conduct in the
+absolute.” “If once this most unfortunate business gets about,” said the
+clergyman, “it will do you infinite harm.”
+
+“But I’VE done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
+people’s--”
+
+“The world has no charity,” said Mrs. Milton.
+
+“For a girl,” said Jessie. “No.”
+
+“Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen
+to reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you
+infinite harm, if once it is generally known. And not only that, it will
+cause infinite pain to those who care for you. But if you will return at
+once to your home, causing it to be understood that you have been with
+friends for these last few days--”
+
+“Tell lies,” said Jessie. “Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I
+understand that is how your absence is understood at present, and there
+is no reason--”
+
+Jessie’s grip tightened on her handkerchief. “I won’t go back,” she
+said, “to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books I
+need to read, to be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching--”
+
+“Anything,” said Mrs. Milton, “anything in reason.”
+
+“But will you keep your promise?” said Jessie.
+
+“Surely you won’t dictate to your mother!” said Widgery.
+
+“My stepmother! I don’t want to dictate. I want definite promises now.”
+
+“This is most unreasonable,” said the clergyman. “Very well,” said
+Jessie, swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. “Then I won’t go
+back. My life is being frittered away--”
+
+“LET her have her way,” said Widgery.
+
+“A room then. All your Men. I’m not to come down and talk away half my
+days--”
+
+“My dear child, if only to save you,” said Mrs. Milton. “If you don’t
+keep your promise--”
+
+“Then I take it the matter is practically concluded,” said the
+clergyman. “And that you very properly submit to return to your proper
+home. And now, if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we take
+tea. Freed of its tannin, nothing, I think, is more refreshing and
+stimulating.”
+
+“There’s a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six,” said
+Widgery, unfolding a time table. “That gives us about half an hour or
+three-quarters here--if a conveyance is obtainable, that is.”
+
+“A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in
+the form of tannate of gelatine,” said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in
+a confidential bray.
+
+Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and
+shoulders over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards
+the door. “While you have tea, mother,” she said, “I must tell Mr.
+Hoopdriver of our arrangements.”
+
+“Don’t you think I--” began the clergyman.
+
+“No,” said Jessie, very rudely; “I don’t.”
+
+“But, Jessie, haven’t you already--”
+
+“You are already breaking the capitulation,” said Jessie.
+
+“Will you want the whole half hour?” said Widgery, at the bell.
+
+“Every minute,” said Jessie, in the doorway. “He’s behaved very nobly to
+me.”
+
+“There’s tea,” said Widgery.
+
+“I’ve had tea.”
+
+“He may not have behaved badly,” said the clergyman. “But he’s certainly
+an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young girl--”
+
+Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It
+was over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned,
+and with the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those
+days had done for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their position.
+Of course, they would take her away to those social altitudes of hers.
+She would become an inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him
+say good-bye to her?
+
+How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had
+first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the riverside
+road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering it as if
+everything had been done of his own initiative. “Brave, brave!” she had
+called him. And afterwards, when she came down to him in the morning,
+kindly, quiet. But ought he to have persuaded her then to return to
+her home? He remembered some intention of the sort. Now these people
+snatched her away from him as though he was scarcely fit to live in the
+same world with her. No more he was! He felt he had presumed upon her
+worldly ignorance in travelling with her day after day. She was
+so dainty, so delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate her
+expressions, the light of her eyes, the turn of her face.. .
+
+He wasn’t good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was.
+Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But
+they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be
+there as--what was it? Chaperone. He’d never once had a chance of saying
+what he felt; indeed, it was only now he was beginning to realise what
+he felt. Love I he wouldn’t presume. It was worship. If only he could
+have one more chance. He must have one more chance, somewhere, somehow.
+Then he would pour out his soul to her eloquently. He felt eloquently,
+and words would come. He was dust under her feet...
+
+His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and Jessie
+appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. “Come away from here,” she
+said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. “I’m going home with them.
+We have to say good-bye.”
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a
+word.
+
+
+
+
+XL.
+
+At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
+silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw
+her ips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and
+bright. She was looking straight before her. He could think of nothing
+to say, and thrust his hands in his pockets and looked away from her
+intentionally. After a while she began to talk. They dealt disjointedly
+with scenery first, and then with the means of self-education. She took
+his address at Antrobus’s and promised to send him some books. But
+even with that it was spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for
+the fighting mood was over. She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the
+memories of her late battle, and that appearance hurt him.
+
+“It’s the end,” he whispered to himself. “It’s the end.”
+
+They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last
+to a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There,
+by a common impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch--a little
+ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of forest rolling away
+beneath them, crest beyond crest, of leafy trees, fading at last into
+blue.
+
+“The end” ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
+thoughts.
+
+“And so,” she said, presently, breaking the silence, “it comes to
+good-bye.”
+
+For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution.
+“There is one thing I MUST say.”
+
+“Well?” she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent argument.
+“I ask no return. But--”
+
+Then he stopped. “I won’t say it. It’s no good. It would be rot from
+me--now. I wasn’t going to say anything. Good-bye.”
+
+She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. “No,” she
+said. “But don’t forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris,
+you are my friend. You will work. You are not a very strong man, you
+know, now--you will forgive me--nor do you know all you should. But what
+will you be in six years’ time?”
+
+He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak mouth
+seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not say.
+
+“I’ll work,” he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment.
+Then he said, with a motion of his head, “I won’t come back to THEM. Do
+you mind? Going back alone?”
+
+She took ten seconds to think. “No.” she said, and held out her hand,
+biting her nether lip. “GOOD-BYE,” she whispered.
+
+He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand
+limply, and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She would
+have snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her movement. She felt
+the touch of his lips, and then he had dropped her fingers and turned
+from her and was striding down the slope. A dozen paces away his foot
+turned in the lip of a rabbit hole, and he stumbled forward and almost
+fell. He recovered his balance and went on, not looking back. He never
+once looked back. She stared at his receding figure until it was small
+and far below her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids now,
+turned slowly, and walked with her hands gripped hard together behind
+her, towards Stoney Cross again.
+
+“I did not know,” she whispered to herself. “I did not understand. Even
+now--No, I do not understand.”
+
+
+
+
+XLI. THE ENVOY
+
+So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there
+among the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or listening
+to what chances to his breathing. And of what came of it all, of the six
+years and afterwards, this is no place to tell. In truth, there is no
+telling it, for the years have still to run. But if you see how a mere
+counter-jumper, a cad on castors, and a fool to boot, may come to feel
+the little insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any extent won
+your sympathies, my end is attained. (If it is not attained, may Heaven
+forgive us both!) Nor will we follow this adventurous young lady of ours
+back to her home at Surbiton, to her new struggle against Widgery and
+Mrs. Milton combined. For, as she will presently hear, that devoted man
+has got his reward. For her, also, your sympathies are invited.
+
+The rest of this great holiday, too--five days there are left of it--is
+beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in
+a dusty brown suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not
+intended to be cycled in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and
+Berkshire and Surrey, going economically--for excellent reasons. Day by
+day he goes on, riding fitfully and for the most part through bye-roads,
+but getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He is a
+narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge with
+unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing expression
+sits upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he whistles
+noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, “a juiced good try,
+anyhow!” you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my liking, he
+looks irritable and hopeless. “I know,” he says, “I know. It’s over
+and done. It isn’t IN me. You ain’t man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer
+silly hands!... Oh, my God!” and a gust of passion comes upon him and he
+rides furiously for a space.
+
+Sometimes again his face softens. “Anyhow, if I’m not to see her--she’s
+going to lend me books,” he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can.
+Then again; “Books! What’s books?” Once or twice triumphant memories of
+the earlier incidents nerve his face for a while. “I put the ky-bosh on
+HIS little game,” he remarks. “I DID that,” and one might even call him
+happy in these phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has
+been enamel-painted grey and carries a sonorous gong.
+
+This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton,
+and Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth of
+an August sunset and with all the ‘prentice boys busy shutting up shop,
+and the work girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad, and
+the white ‘buses full of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to
+their dinners, we part from him. He is back. To-morrow, the early
+rising, the dusting, and drudgery, begin again--but with a difference,
+with wonderful memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions
+replacing those discrepant dreams.
+
+He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh,
+and pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard, as
+the apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words of
+greeting. “South Coast,” you hear; and “splendid weather--splendid.” He
+sighs. “Yes--swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It’s a juiced good
+machine.”
+
+The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wheels of Chance, by H. G. Wells
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+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Wheels of Chance; a Bicycling Idyll, by H.G. Wells
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wheels of Chance, by H. G. Wells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Wheels of Chance
+ A Bicycling Idyll
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: November 10, 2009 [EBook #1264]
+Last Updated: September 17, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WHEELS OF CHANCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE WHEELS OF CHANCE;<br /><br /> A BICYCLING IDYLL
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By H.G. Wells
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h3>
+ 1896
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN
+ GREY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> VII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> VIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER'S HEART
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> XI. OMISSIONS </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+ </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0015"> XV. AN INTERLUDE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0016"> XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE
+ ZEITGEIST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0017"> XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0018"> XVIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0019"> XIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0020"> XX. THE PURSUIT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> XXI. AT BOGNOR </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0022"> XXII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0023"> XXIII. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0024"> XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0025"> XXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0026"> XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> XXXI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> XXXIV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> XXXV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> XXXVI. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> XXXIX. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> XL. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> XLI. THE ENVOY </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)&mdash;if you
+ had gone into the Drapery Emporium&mdash;which is really only magnificent
+ for shop&mdash;of Messrs. Antrobus &amp; Co.&mdash;a perfectly fictitious
+ &ldquo;Co.,&rdquo; by the bye&mdash;of Putney, on the 14th of August, 1895, had turned
+ to the right-hand side, where the blocks of white linen and piles of
+ blankets rise up to the rail from which the pink and blue prints depend,
+ you might have been served by the central figure of this story that is now
+ beginning. He would have come forward, bowing and swaying, he would have
+ extended two hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over the
+ counter, and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and
+ without the slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner, what he
+ might have the pleasure of showing you. Under certain circumstances&mdash;as,
+ for instance, hats, baby linen, gloves, silks, lace, or curtains&mdash;he
+ would simply have bowed politely, and with a drooping expression, and
+ making a kind of circular sweep, invited you to &ldquo;step this way,&rdquo; and so
+ led you beyond his ken; but under other and happier conditions,&mdash;huckaback,
+ blankets, dimity, cretonne, linen, calico, are cases in point,&mdash;he
+ would have requested you to take a seat, emphasising the hospitality by
+ leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back in a spasmodic manner,
+ and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit his goods for your
+ consideration. Under which happier circumstances you might&mdash;if of an
+ observing turn of mind and not too much of a housewife to be inhuman&mdash;have
+ given the central figure of this story less cursory attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been chiefly to
+ notice how little he was noticeable. He wore the black morning coat, the
+ black tie, and the speckled grey nether parts (descending into shadow and
+ mystery below the counter) of his craft. He was of a pallid complexion,
+ hair of a kind of dirty fairness, greyish eyes, and a skimpy, immature
+ moustache under his peaked indeterminate nose. His features were all
+ small, but none ill-shaped. A rosette of pins decorated the lappel of his
+ coat. His remarks, you would observe, were entirely what people used to
+ call cliche, formulae not organic to the occasion, but stereotyped ages
+ ago and learnt years since by heart. &ldquo;This, madam,&rdquo; he would say, &ldquo;is
+ selling very well.&rdquo; &ldquo;We are doing a very good article at four three a
+ yard.&rdquo; &ldquo;We could show you something better, of course.&rdquo; &ldquo;No trouble,
+ madam, I assure you.&rdquo; Such were the simple counters of his intercourse.
+ So, I say, he would have presented himself to your superficial
+ observation. He would have danced about behind the counter, have neatly
+ refolded the goods he had shown you, have put on one side those you
+ selected, extracted a little book with a carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet
+ from a fixture, made you out a little bill in that weak flourishing hand
+ peculiar to drapers, and have bawled &ldquo;Sayn!&rdquo; Then a puffy little
+ shop-walker would have come into view, looked at the bill for a second,
+ very hard (showing you a parting down the middle of his head meanwhile),
+ have scribbled a still more flourishing J. M. all over the document, have
+ asked you if there was nothing more, have stood by you&mdash;supposing
+ that you were paying cash&mdash;until the central figure of this story
+ reappeared with the change. One glance more at him, and the puffy little
+ shop-walker would have been bowing you out, with fountains of civilities
+ at work all about you. And so the interview would have terminated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not concern
+ itself with superficial appearances alone. Literature is revelation.
+ Modern literature is indecorous revelation. It is the duty of the earnest
+ author to tell you what you would not have seen&mdash;even at the cost of
+ some blushes. And the thing that you would not have seen about this young
+ man, and the thing of the greatest moment to this story, the thing that
+ must be told if the book is to be written, was&mdash;let us face it
+ bravely&mdash;the Remarkable Condition of this Young Man's Legs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let us
+ assume something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost professorial
+ tone of the conscientious realist. Let us treat this young man's legs as a
+ mere diagram, and indicate the points of interest with the unemotional
+ precision of a lecturer's pointer. And so to our revelation. On the
+ internal aspect of the right ankle of this young man you would have
+ observed, ladies and gentlemen, a contusion and an abrasion; on the
+ internal aspect of the left ankle a contusion also; on its external aspect
+ a large yellowish bruise. On his left shin there were two bruises, one a
+ leaden yellow graduating here and there into purple, and another,
+ obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy red&mdash;tumid and
+ threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral manner, an unnatural
+ hardness and redness would have been discovered on the upper aspect of the
+ calf, and above the knee and on the inner side, an extraordinary expanse
+ of bruised surface, a kind of closely stippled shading of contused points.
+ The right leg would be found to be bruised in a marvellous manner all
+ about and under the knee, and particularly on the interior aspect of the
+ knee. So far we may proceed with our details. Fired by these discoveries,
+ an investigator might perhaps have pursued his inquiries further&mdash;to
+ bruises on the shoulders, elbows, and even the finger joints, of the
+ central figure of our story. He had indeed been bumped and battered at an
+ extraordinary number of points. But enough of realistic description is as
+ good as a feast, and we have exhibited enough for our purpose. Even in
+ literature one must know where to draw the line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young shopman
+ should have got his legs, and indeed himself generally, into such a
+ dreadful condition. One might fancy that he had been sitting with his
+ nether extremities in some complicated machinery, a threshing-machine,
+ say, or one of those hay-making furies. But Sherlock Holmes (now happily
+ dead) would have fancied nothing of the kind. He would have recognised at
+ once that the bruises on the internal aspect of the left leg, considered
+ in the light of the distribution of the other abrasions and contusions,
+ pointed unmistakably to the violent impact of the Mounting Beginner upon
+ the bicycling saddle, and that the ruinous state of the right knee was
+ equally eloquent of the concussions attendant on that person's hasty,
+ frequently causeless, and invariably ill-conceived descents. One large
+ bruise on the shin is even more characteristic of the 'prentice cyclist,
+ for upon every one of them waits the jest of the unexpected treadle. You
+ try at least to walk your machine in an easy manner, and whack!&mdash;you
+ are rubbing your shin. So out of innocence we ripen. Two bruises on that
+ place mark a certain want of aptitude in learning, such as one might
+ expect in a person unused to muscular exercise. Blisters on the hands are
+ eloquent of the nervous clutch of the wavering rider. And so forth, until
+ Sherlock is presently explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that
+ the machine ridden is an old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the
+ diamond frame, a cushioned tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and a gross
+ weight all on of perhaps three-and-forty pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the attentive
+ shopman that I had the honour of showing you at first, rises a vision of a
+ nightly struggle, of two dark figures and a machine in a dark road,&mdash;the
+ road, to be explicit, from Roehampton to Putney Hill,&mdash;and with this
+ vision is the sound of a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping and grunting,
+ a shouting of &ldquo;Steer, man, steer!&rdquo; a wavering unsteady flight, a spasmodic
+ turning of the missile edifice of man and machine, and a collapse. Then
+ you descry dimly through the dusk the central figure of this story sitting
+ by the roadside and rubbing his leg at some new place, and his friend,
+ sympathetic (but by no means depressed), repairing the displacement of the
+ handle-bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert itself,
+ and drive him against all the conditions of his calling, against the
+ counsels of prudence and the restrictions of his means, to seek the
+ wholesome delights of exertion and danger and pain. And our first
+ examination of the draper reveals beneath his draperies&mdash;the man! To
+ which initial fact (among others) we shall come again in the end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ II
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story is now
+ going along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your purchases in
+ his arms, to the warehouse, where the various articles you have selected
+ will presently be packed by the senior porter and sent to you. Returning
+ thence to his particular place, he lays hands on a folded piece of
+ gingham, and gripping the corners of the folds in his hands, begins to
+ straighten them punctiliously. Near him is an apprentice, apprenticed to
+ the same high calling of draper's assistant, a ruddy, red-haired lad in a
+ very short tailless black coat and a very high collar, who is deliberately
+ unfolding and refolding some patterns of cretonne. By twenty-one he too
+ may hope to be a full-blown assistant, even as Mr. Hoopdriver. Prints
+ depend from the brass rails above them, behind are fixtures full of white
+ packages containing, as inscriptions testify, Lino, Hd Bk, and Mull. You
+ might imagine to see them that the two were both intent upon nothing but
+ smoothness of textile and rectitude of fold. But to tell the truth,
+ neither is thinking of the mechanical duties in hand. The assistant is
+ dreaming of the delicious time&mdash;only four hours off now&mdash;when he
+ will resume the tale of his bruises and abrasions. The apprentice is
+ nearer the long long thoughts of boyhood, and his imagination rides
+ cap-a-pie through the chambers of his brain, seeking some knightly quest
+ in honour of that Fair Lady, the last but one of the girl apprentices to
+ the dress-making upstairs. He inclines rather to street fighting against
+ revolutionaries&mdash;because then she could see him from the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little shop-walker, with
+ a paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes extremely active. The
+ shopwalker eyes the goods in hand. &ldquo;Hoopdriver,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;how's that line
+ of g-sez-x ginghams?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the uncertainties of
+ dismounting. &ldquo;They're going fairly well, sir. But the larger checks seem
+ hanging.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. &ldquo;Any particular time
+ when you want your holidays?&rdquo; he asks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. &ldquo;No&mdash;Don't want them too
+ late, sir, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How about this day week?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of the gingham
+ folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of conflicting considerations.
+ Can he learn it in a week? That's the question. Otherwise Briggs will get
+ next week, and he will have to wait until September&mdash;when the weather
+ is often uncertain. He is naturally of a sanguine disposition. All drapers
+ have to be, or else they could never have the faith they show in the
+ beauty, washability, and unfading excellence of the goods they sell you.
+ The decision comes at last. &ldquo;That'll do me very well,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The die is cast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the &ldquo;dresses,&rdquo;
+ the next in the strict scale of precedence of the Drapery Emporium. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver in alternating spasms anon straightens his gingham and anon
+ becomes meditative, with his tongue in the hollow of his decaying wisdom
+ tooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ III
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr. Pritchard
+ spoke of &ldquo;Scotland,&rdquo; Miss Isaacs clamoured of Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson
+ displayed a proprietary interest in the Norfolk Broads. &ldquo;I?&rdquo; said
+ Hoopdriver when the question came to him. &ldquo;Why, cycling, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day after
+ day?&rdquo; said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the insufficient
+ moustache. &ldquo;I'm going for a Cycling Tour. Along the South Coast.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you'll get fine weather,&rdquo; said
+ Miss Howe. &ldquo;And not come any nasty croppers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag,&rdquo; said the junior
+ apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one of the lessons
+ at the top of Putney Hill.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You stow it,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and threateningly at the
+ junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a tone of bitter contempt,&mdash;&ldquo;Jampot.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm getting fairly safe upon it now,&rdquo; he told Miss Howe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the satirical
+ efforts of the apprentice, but his mind was too full of the projected Tour
+ to admit any petty delicacies of dignity. He left the supper table early,
+ so that he might put in a good hour at the desperate gymnastics up the
+ Roehampton Road before it would be time to come back for locking up. When
+ the gas was turned off for the night he was sitting on the edge of his
+ bed, rubbing arnica into his knee&mdash;a new and very big place&mdash;and
+ studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of the &ldquo;dresses,&rdquo; who
+ shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed and trying to smoke in the
+ dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle in his life, but he felt
+ Hoopdriver's inexperience and offered such advice as occurred to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have the machine thoroughly well oiled,&rdquo; said Briggs, &ldquo;carry one or two
+ lemons with you, don't tear yourself to death the first day, and sit
+ upright. Never lose control of the machine, and always sound the bell on
+ every possible opportunity. You mind those things, and nothing very much
+ can't happen to you, Hoopdriver&mdash;you take my word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a curse or so
+ at his pipe, and then break out with an entirely different set of tips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It's one of the
+ worst things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the machine buckle&mdash;there
+ was a man killed only the other day through his wheel buckling&mdash;don't
+ scorch, don't ride on the foot-path, keep your own side of the road, and
+ if you see a tramline, go round the corner at once, and hurry off into the
+ next county&mdash;and always light up before dark. You mind just a few
+ little things like that, Hoopdriver, and nothing much can't happen to you&mdash;you
+ take my word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right you are!&rdquo; said Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Good-night, old man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-night,&rdquo; said Briggs, and there was silence for a space, save for the
+ succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode off into Dreamland on
+ his machine, and was scarcely there before he was pitched back into the
+ world of sense again.&mdash;Something&mdash;what was it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never oil the steering. It's fatal,&rdquo; a voice that came from round a
+ fitful glow of light, was saying. &ldquo;And clean the chain daily with
+ black-lead. You mind just a few little things like that&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord LOVE us!&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over his ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the year
+ round, save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in the summer
+ time, know the exquisite sensations of the First Holiday Morning. All the
+ dreary, uninteresting routine drops from you suddenly, your chains fall
+ about your feet. All at once you are Lord of yourself, Lord of every hour
+ in the long, vacant day; you may go where you please, call none Sir or
+ Madame, have a lappel free of pins, doff your black morning coat, and wear
+ the colour of your heart, and be a Man. You grudge sleep, you grudge
+ eating, and drinking even, their intrusion on those exquisite moments.
+ There will be no more rising before breakfast in casual old clothing, to
+ go dusting and getting ready in a cheerless, shutter-darkened,
+ wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of, &ldquo;Forward, Hoopdriver,&rdquo; no
+ more hasty meals, and weary attendance on fitful old women, for ten
+ blessed days. The first morning is by far the most glorious, for you hold
+ your whole fortune in your hands. Thereafter, every night, comes a pang, a
+ spectre, that will not be exorcised&mdash;the premonition of the return.
+ The shadow of going back, of being put in the cage again for another
+ twelve months, lies blacker and blacker across the sunlight. But on the
+ first morning of the ten the holiday has no past, and ten days seems as
+ good as infinity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue sky with
+ dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though celestial
+ haymakers had been piling the swathes of last night's clouds into cocks
+ for a coming cartage. There were thrushes in the Richmond Road, and a lark
+ on Putney Heath. The freshness of dew was in the air; dew or the relics of
+ an overnight shower glittered on the leaves and grass. Hoopdriver had
+ breakfasted early by Mrs. Gunn's complaisance. He wheeled his machine up
+ Putney Hill, and his heart sang within him. Halfway up, a
+ dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across the road and vanished
+ under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the variegated shrubs
+ and trees had their blinds down still, and he would not have changed
+ places with a soul in any one of them for a hundred pounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had on his new brown cycling suit&mdash;a handsome Norfolk jacket thing
+ for 30/(sp.)&mdash;and his legs&mdash;those martyr legs&mdash;were more
+ than consoled by thick chequered stockings, &ldquo;thin in the foot, thick in
+ the leg,&rdquo; for all they had endured. A neat packet of American cloth behind
+ the saddle contained his change of raiment, and the bell and the
+ handle-bar and the hubs and lamp, albeit a trifle freckled by wear,
+ glittered blindingly in the rising sunlight. And at the top of the hill,
+ after only one unsuccessful attempt, which, somehow, terminated on the
+ green, Hoopdriver mounted, and with a stately and cautious restraint in
+ his pace, and a dignified curvature of path, began his great Cycling Tour
+ along the Southern Coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage, and that is&mdash;voluptuous
+ curves. He did not ride fast, he did not ride straight, an exacting critic
+ might say he did not ride well&mdash;but he rode generously, opulently,
+ using the whole road and even nibbling at the footpath. The excitement
+ never flagged. So far he had never passed or been passed by anything, but
+ as yet the day was young and the road was clear. He doubted his steering
+ so much that, for the present, he had resolved to dismount at the approach
+ of anything else upon wheels. The shadows of the trees lay very long and
+ blue across the road, the morning sunlight was like amber fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle trough
+ stands, he turned towards Kingston and set himself to scale the little bit
+ of ascent. An early heath-keeper, in his velveteen jacket, marvelled at
+ his efforts. And while he yet struggled, the head of a carter rose over
+ the brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous
+ determination, resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and the
+ machine stopped dead. He was trying to think what he did with his right
+ leg whilst getting off. He gripped the handles and released the brake,
+ standing on the left pedal and waving his right foot in the air. Then&mdash;these
+ things take so long in the telling&mdash;he found the machine was falling
+ over to the right. While he was deciding upon a plan of action,
+ gravitation appears to have been busy. He was still irresolute when he
+ found the machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon it, and a vague
+ feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly with his shin.
+ This happened when he was just level with the heathkeeper. The man in the
+ approaching cart stood up to see the ruins better.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;THAT ain't the way to get off,&rdquo; said the heathkeeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted askew again
+ He said something under his breath. He would have to unscrew the beastly
+ thing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;THAT ain't the way to get off,&rdquo; repeated the heathkeeper, after a
+ silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> know that,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to overlook
+ the new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled the wallet behind
+ the saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you know it ain't the way to get off&mdash;whaddyer do it for?&rdquo; said
+ the heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle. He was
+ annoyed. &ldquo;That's my business, I suppose,&rdquo; he said, fumbling with the
+ screw. The unusual exertion had made his hands shake frightfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his hands
+ behind his back. &ldquo;You've broken yer 'andle, ain't yer?&rdquo; he said presently.
+ Just then the screw hammer slipped off the nut. Mr. Hoopdriver used a
+ nasty, low word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They're trying things, them bicycles,&rdquo; said the heath-keeper, charitably.
+ &ldquo;Very trying.&rdquo; Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious turn and suddenly
+ stood up&mdash;he was holding the front wheel between his knees. &ldquo;I wish,&rdquo;
+ said he, with a catch in his voice, &ldquo;I wish you'd leave off staring at
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began
+ replacing the screw hammer in the wallet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows, and
+ certainly he stared harder than he did before. &ldquo;You're pretty unsociable,&rdquo;
+ he said slowly, as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles and stood ready to
+ mount as soon as the cart had passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The indignation gathered slowly but surely. &ldquo;Why don't you ride on a
+ private road of your own if no one ain't to speak to you?&rdquo; asked the
+ heath-keeper, perceiving more and more clearly the bearing of the matter.
+ &ldquo;Can't no one make a passin' remark to you, Touchy? Ain't I good enough to
+ speak to you? Been struck wooden all of a sudden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was rigid with
+ emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar Square. But the
+ heathkeeper felt his honour was at stake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you make no remarks to 'IM,&rdquo; said the keeper as the carter came up
+ broadside to them. &ldquo;'E's a bloomin' dook, 'e is. 'E don't converse with no
+ one under a earl. 'E's off to Windsor, 'e is; that's why 'e's stickin' his
+ be'ind out so haughty. Pride! Why, 'e's got so much of it, 'e has to carry
+ some of it in that there bundle there, for fear 'e'd bust if 'e didn't
+ ease hisself a bit&mdash;'E&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along the
+ road, in a spasmodic attempt to remount. He missed the treadle once and
+ swore viciously, to the keeper's immense delight. &ldquo;Nar! Nar!&rdquo; said the
+ heath-keeper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific lurch of
+ the machine, the heathkeeper dropped out of earshot. Mr. Hoopdriver would
+ have liked to look back at his enemy, but he usually twisted round and
+ upset if he tried that. He had to imagine the indignant heath-keeper
+ telling the carter all about it. He tried to infuse as much disdain
+ aspossible into his retreating aspect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up the little
+ rise to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston Vale; and so
+ remarkable is the psychology of cycling, that he rode all the straighter
+ and easier because the emotions the heathkeeper had aroused relieved his
+ mind of the constant expectation of collapse that had previously unnerved
+ him. To ride a bicycle properly is very like a love affair&mdash;chiefly
+ it is a matter of faith. Believe you do it, and the thing is done; doubt,
+ and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings towards the
+ heath-keeper were either vindictive or remorseful,&mdash;vindictive for
+ the aggravation or remorseful for his own injudicious display of ill
+ temper. As a matter of fact, they were nothing of the sort. A sudden, a
+ wonderful gratitude, possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had resumed
+ its sway with a sudden accession of splendour. At the crest of the hill he
+ put his feet upon the footrests, and now riding moderately straight, went,
+ with a palpitating brake, down that excellent descent. A new delight was
+ in his eyes, quite over and above the pleasure of rushing through the
+ keen, sweet, morning air. He reached out his thumb and twanged his bell
+ out of sheer happiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'He's a bloomin' Dook&mdash;he is!'&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself, in a
+ soft undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again, &ldquo;'He's a
+ bloomin' Dook!&rdquo;' He opened his mouth in a silent laugh. It was having a
+ decent cut did it. His social superiority had been so evident that even a
+ man like that noticed it. No more Manchester Department for ten days! Out
+ of Manchester, a Man. The draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished from
+ existence. Instead was a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a five-pound
+ note, two sovereigns, and some silver at various convenient points of his
+ person. At any rate as good as a Dook, if not precisely in the peerage.
+ Involuntarily at the thought of his funds Hoopdriver's right hand left the
+ handle and sought his breast pocket, to be immediately recalled by a
+ violent swoop of the machine towards the cemetery. Whirroo! Just missed
+ that half-brick! Mischievous brutes there were in the world to put such a
+ thing in the road. Some blooming 'Arry or other! Ought to prosecute a few
+ of these roughs, and the rest would know better. That must be the buckle
+ of the wallet was rattling on the mud-guard. How cheerfully the wheels
+ buzzed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was waking, and
+ windows rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came out of one of the
+ houses and yelped at him. He got off, rather breathless, at the foot of
+ Kingston Hill, and pushed up. Halfway up, an early milk chariot rattled by
+ him; two dirty men with bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt sure
+ they were burglars, carrying home the swag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling, a slight
+ tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top that he rode
+ straighter than he did before. The pleasure of riding straight blotted out
+ these first intimations of fatigue. A man on horseback appeared;
+ Hoopdriver, in a tumult of soul at his own temerity, passed him. Then down
+ the hill into Kingston, with the screw hammer, behind in the wallet,
+ rattling against the oil can. He passed, without misadventure, a
+ fruiterer's van and a sluggish cartload of bricks. And in Kingston
+ Hoopdriver, with the most exquisite sensations, saw the shutters half
+ removed from a draper's shop, and two yawning youths, in dusty old black
+ jackets and with dirty white comforters about their necks, clearing up the
+ planks and boxes and wrappers in the window, preparatory to dressing it
+ out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the previous day. But now, was he not
+ a bloomin' Dook, palpably in the sight of common men? Then round the
+ corner to the right&mdash;bell banged furiously&mdash;and so along the
+ road to Surbiton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with an
+ expression of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed, and to the
+ right of him for a mile or so the weltering Thames flashed and glittered.
+ Talk of your joie de vivre. Albeit with a certain cramping sensation about
+ the knees and calves slowly forcing itself upon his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your fast young
+ men. If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have profited more by his
+ mother's instructions. He regarded the feminine sex as something to bow to
+ and smirk at from a safe distance. Years of the intimate remoteness of a
+ counter leave their mark upon a man. It was an adventure for him to take
+ one of the Young Ladies of the establishment to church on a Sunday. Few
+ modern young men could have merited less the epithet &ldquo;Dorg.&rdquo; But I have
+ thought at times that his machine may have had something of the blade in
+ its metal. Decidedly it was a machine with a past. Mr. Hoopdriver had
+ bought it second-hand from Hare's in Putney, and Hare said it had had
+ several owners. Second-hand was scarcely the word for it, and Hare was
+ mildly puzzled that he should be selling such an antiquity. He said it was
+ perfectly sound, if a little old-fashioned, but he was absolutely silent
+ about its moral character. It may even have begun its career with a poet,
+ say, in his glorious youth. It may have been the bicycle of a Really Bad
+ Man. No one who has ever ridden a cycle of any kind but will witness that
+ the things are unaccountably prone to pick up bad habits&mdash;and keep
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent emotions
+ directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an absolutely
+ unprecedented Wabble&mdash;unprecedented so far as Hoopdriver's experience
+ went. It &ldquo;showed off&rdquo;&mdash;the most decadent sinuosity. It left a track
+ like one of Beardsley's feathers. He suddenly realised, too, that his cap
+ was loose on his head and his breath a mere remnant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed in a
+ beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her outline in gold and
+ left the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly aware that she was young,
+ rather slender, dark, and with a bright colour and bright eyes. Strange
+ doubts possessed him as to the nature of her nether costume. He had heard
+ of such things of course. French, perhaps. Her handles glittered; a jet of
+ sunlight splashed off her bell blindingly. She was approaching the high
+ road along an affluent from the villas of Surbiton. fee roads converged
+ slantingly. She was travelling at about the same pace as Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ The appearances pointed to a meeting at the fork of the roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By contrast with
+ her he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get off at once and pretend
+ something was wrong with his treadle? Yet even the end of getting off was
+ an uncertainty. That last occasion on Putney Heath! On the other hand,
+ what would happen if he kept on? To go very slow seemed the abnegation of
+ his manhood. To crawl after a mere schoolgirl! Besides, she was not riding
+ very fast. On the other hand, to thrust himself in front of her, consuming
+ the road in his tendril-like advance, seemed an incivility&mdash;greed. He
+ would leave her such a very little. His business training made him prone
+ to bow and step aside. If only one could take one's hands off the handles,
+ one might pass with a silent elevation of the hat, of course. But even
+ that was a little suggestive of a funeral.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was flushed, a
+ little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips fell apart. She may
+ have been riding hard, but it looked uncommonly like a faint smile. And
+ the things were&mdash;yes!&mdash;RATIONALS! Suddenly an impulse to bolt
+ from the situation became clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively,
+ intending to pass her. He jerked against some tin thing on the road, and
+ it flew up between front wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round towards
+ her. Had the machine a devil?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done wiser to
+ dismount. He gave a frantic 'whoop' and tried to get round, then, as he
+ seemed falling over, he pulled the handles straight again and to the left
+ by an instinctive motion, and shot behind her hind wheel, missing her by a
+ hair's breadth. The pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to recover, and
+ found himself jumped up on the pavement and riding squarely at a neat
+ wooden paling. He struck this with a terrific impact and shot forward off
+ his saddle into a clumsy entanglement. Then he began to tumble over
+ sideways, and completed the entire figure in a sitting position on the
+ gravel, with his feet between the fork and the stay of the machine. The
+ concussion on the gravel shook his entire being. He remained in that
+ position, wishing that he had broken his neck, wishing even more heartily
+ that he had never been born. The glory of life had departed. Bloomin'
+ Dook, indeed! These unwomanly women!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and the Young
+ Lady in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned round and come back
+ to him. The warm sunlight now was in her face. &ldquo;Are you hurt?&rdquo; she said.
+ She had a pretty, clear, girlish voice. She was really very young&mdash;quite
+ a girl, in fact. And rode so well! It was a bitter draught.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. &ldquo;Not a bit,&rdquo; he said, a little ruefully.
+ He became painfully aware that large patches of gravel scarcely improve
+ the appearance of a Norfolk suit. &ldquo;I'm very sorry indeed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's my fault,&rdquo; she said, interrupting and so saving him on the very
+ verge of calling her 'Miss.' (He knew 'Miss' was wrong, but it was
+ deep-seated habit with him.) &ldquo;I tried to pass you on the wrong side.&rdquo; Her
+ face and eyes seemed all alive. &ldquo;It's my place to be sorry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But it was my steering&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ought to have seen you were a Novice&rdquo;&mdash;with a touch of
+ superiority. &ldquo;But you rode so straight coming along there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She really was&mdash;dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver's feelings passed the
+ nadir. When he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of the
+ aristocratic in his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that's no excuse for my ah!
+ blundering&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your finger's bleeding,&rdquo; she said, abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw his knuckle was barked. &ldquo;I didn't feel it,&rdquo; he said, feeling manly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't at first. Have you any sticking-plaster? If not&mdash;&rdquo; She
+ balanced her machine against herself. She had a little side pocket, and
+ she whipped out a small packet of sticking-plaster with a pair of scissors
+ in a sheath at the side, and cut off a generous portion. He had a wild
+ impulse to ask her to stick it on for him. Controlled. &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Machine all right?&rdquo; she asked, looking past him at the prostrate vehicle,
+ her hands on her handle-bar. For the first time Hoopdriver did not feel
+ proud of his machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over his
+ shoulder, and she was gone, turned his head over the other shoulder down
+ the road, and she was riding off. &ldquo;ORF!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Well, I'm
+ blowed!&mdash;Talk about Slap Up!&rdquo; (His aristocratic refinement rarely
+ adorned his speech in his private soliloquies.) His mind was whirling. One
+ fact was clear. A most delightful and novel human being had flashed across
+ his horizon and was going out of his life again. The Holiday madness was
+ in his blood. She looked round!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty ascent.
+ Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he NEVER be able to get up on
+ the thing again? She will be round the corner in a minute. Once more. Ah!
+ Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time! He gripped the handles and put his
+ head down. He would overtake her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a moment over
+ the civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed at the pedals with
+ archaic violence. So Palaeolithic man may have ridden his simple bicycle
+ of chipped flint in pursuit of his exogamous affinity. She vanished round
+ the corner. His effort was Titanic. What should he say when he overtook
+ her? That scarcely disturbed him at first. How fine she had looked,
+ flushed with the exertion of riding, breathing a little fast, but elastic
+ and active! Talk about your ladylike, homekeeping girls with complexions
+ like cold veal! But what should he say to her? That was a bother. And he
+ could not lift his cap without risking a repetition of his previous
+ ignominy. She was a real Young Lady. No mistake about that! None of your
+ blooming shop girls. (There is no greater contempt in the world than that
+ of shop men for shop girls, unless it be that of shop girls for shop men.)
+ Phew! This was work. A certain numbness came and went at his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I ask to whom I am indebted?&rdquo; he panted to himself, trying it over.
+ That might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a shilling&mdash;while
+ you wait. He was getting winded. The road was certainly a bit uphill. He
+ turned the corner and saw a long stretch of road, and a grey dress
+ vanishing. He set his teeth. Had he gained on her at all? &ldquo;Monkey on a
+ gridiron!&rdquo; yelped a small boy. Hoopdriver redoubled his efforts. His
+ breath became audible, his steering unsteady, his pedalling positively
+ ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his eye, irritant as acid. The
+ road really was uphill beyond dispute. All his physiology began to cry out
+ at him. A last tremendous effort brought him to the corner and showed yet
+ another extent of shady roadway, empty save for a baker's van. His front
+ wheel suddenly shrieked aloud. &ldquo;Oh Lord!&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a moment his
+ legs felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his machine against the grassy
+ edge of the path and sat down panting. His hands were gnarled with swollen
+ veins and shaking palpably, his breath came viscid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm hardly in training yet,&rdquo; he remarked. His legs had gone leaden. &ldquo;I
+ don't feel as though I'd had a mouthful of breakfast.&rdquo; Presently he
+ slapped his side pocket and produced therefrom a brand-new cigarette case
+ and a packet of Vansittart's Red Herring cigarettes. He filled the case.
+ Then his eye fell with a sudden approval on the ornamental chequering of
+ his new stockings. The expression in his eyes faded slowly to abstract
+ meditation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She WAS a stunning girl,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I wonder if I shall ever set eyes on
+ her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she thought of me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The phrase 'bloomin' Dook' floated into his mind with a certain flavour of
+ comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not even look
+ up when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes before he roused
+ himself. &ldquo;What rot it is! What's the good of thinking such things,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;I'm only a blessed draper's assistant.&rdquo; (To be exact, he did not
+ say blessed. The service of a shop may polish a man's exterior ways, but
+ the 'prentices' dormitory is an indifferent school for either manners or
+ morals.) He stood up and began wheeling his machine towards Esher. It was
+ going to be a beautiful day, and the hedges and trees and the open country
+ were all glorious to his town-tired eyes. But it was a little different
+ from the elation of his start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle,&rdquo; said a nursemaid on the path to a
+ personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little. &ldquo;'Gentleman wizzer
+ bicitle,'&mdash;'bloomin' Dook'&mdash;I can't look so very seedy,&rdquo; he said
+ to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I WONDER&mdash;I should just like to know&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was something very comforting in the track of HER pneumatic running
+ straight and steady along the road before him. It must be hers. No other
+ pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It was just possible, of
+ course, that he might see her once more&mdash;coming back. Should he try
+ and say something smart? He speculated what manner of girl she might be.
+ Probably she was one of these here New Women. He had a persuasion the cult
+ had been maligned. Anyhow she was a Lady. And rich people, too! Her
+ machine couldn't have cost much under twenty pounds. His mind came round
+ and dwelt some time on her visible self. Rational dress didn't look a bit
+ unwomanly. However, he disdained to be one of your fortune-hunters. Then
+ his thoughts drove off at a tangent. He would certainly have to get
+ something to eat at the next public house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of Granby at
+ Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw the inn in front of
+ him, he mounted his machine again and rode bravely up to the doorway.
+ Burton and biscuit and cheese he had, which, indeed, is Burton in its
+ proper company; and as he was eating there came a middleaged man in a drab
+ cycling suit, very red and moist and angry in the face, and asked bitterly
+ for a lemon squash. And he sat down upon the seat in the bar and mopped
+ his face. But scarcely had he sat down before he got up again and stared
+ out of the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn!&rdquo; said he. Then, &ldquo;Damned Fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eigh?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece of cheese
+ in his cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man in drab faced him. &ldquo;I called myself a Damned Fool, sir. Have you
+ any objections?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&mdash;None. None,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I thought you spoke to me. I
+ didn't hear what you said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic temperament, sir, is
+ hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative disposition and a phlegmatic
+ temperament, all very well. But energy and philosophy&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise, gentle
+ exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And no sooner do I
+ get on the accursed machine, than off I go hammer and tongs; I never look
+ to right or left, never notice a flower, never see a view, get hot, juicy,
+ red,&mdash;like a grilled chop. Here I am, sir. Come from Guildford in
+ something under the hour. WHY, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I'm a damned fool, sir. Because I've reservoirs and reservoirs of
+ muscular energy, and one or other of them is always leaking. It's a most
+ interesting road, birds and trees, I've no doubt, and wayside flowers, and
+ there's nothing I should enjoy more than watching them. But I can't. Get
+ me on that machine, and I have to go. Get me on anything, and I have to
+ go. And I don't want to go a bit. WHY should a man rush about like a
+ rocket, all pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me furious. I can assure you,
+ sir, I go scorching along the road, and cursing aloud at myself for doing
+ it. A quiet, dignified, philosophical man, that's what I am&mdash;at
+ bottom; and here I am dancing with rage and swearing like a drunken tinker
+ at a perfect stranger&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my day's wasted. I've lost all that country road, and now I'm on the
+ fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the morning! Ugh! Thank
+ Heaven, sir, you have not the irritable temperament, that you are not
+ goaded to madness by your endogenous sneers, by the eternal wrangling of
+ an uncomfortable soul and body. I tell you, I lead a cat and dog life&mdash;But
+ what IS the use of talking?&mdash;It's all of a piece!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the lemon squash
+ into his mouth, paid for it, and without any further remark strode to the
+ door. Mr. Hoopdriver was still wondering what to say when his interlocutor
+ vanished. There was a noise of a foot spurning the gravel, and when Mr.
+ Hoopdriver reached the doorway, the man in drab was a score of yards
+ Londonward. He had already gathered pace. He pedalled with ill-suppressed
+ anger, and his head was going down. In another moment he flew swiftly out
+ of sight under the railway arch, and Mr. Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and&mdash;being now
+ a little rested about the muscles of the knees&mdash;resumed his saddle
+ and rode on in the direction of Ripley, along an excellent but undulating
+ road. He was pleased to find his command over his machine already sensibly
+ increased. He set himself little exercises as he went along and performed
+ them with variable success. There was, for instance, steering in between a
+ couple of stones, say a foot apart, a deed of little difficulty as far as
+ the front wheel is concerned. But the back wheel, not being under the sway
+ of the human eye, is apt to take a vicious jump over the obstacle, which
+ sends a violent concussion all along the spine to the skull, and will even
+ jerk a loosely fastened hat over the eyes, and so lead to much confusion.
+ And again, there was taking the hand or hands off the handlebar, a thing
+ simple in itself, but complex in its consequences. This particularly was a
+ feat Mr. Hoopdriver desired to do, for several divergent reasons; but at
+ present it simply led to convulsive balancings and novel and inelegant
+ modes of dismounting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are those
+ who consider it ornamental, and would regard a face deprived of its
+ assistance with pity or derision; but it is doubtful whether our esteem is
+ dictated so much by a sense of its absolute beauty as by the vitiating
+ effect of a universally prevalent fashion. In the case of bicycle
+ students, as in the young of both sexes, its inutility is aggravated by
+ its persistent annoyance&mdash;it requires constant attention. Until one
+ can ride with one hand, and search for, secure, and use a pocket
+ handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant series of
+ descents. Nothing can be further from the author's ambition than a wanton
+ realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver's nose is a plain and salient fact, and face
+ it we must. And, in addition to this inconvenience, there are flies. Until
+ the cyclist can steer with one hand, his face is given over to Beelzebub.
+ Contemplative flies stroll over it, and trifle absently with its most
+ sensitive surfaces. The only way to dislodge them is to shake the head
+ forcibly and to writhe one's features violently. This is not only a
+ lengthy and frequently ineffectual method, but one exceedingly terrifying
+ to foot passengers. And again, sometimes the beginner rides for a space
+ with one eye closed by perspiration, giving him a waggish air foreign to
+ his mood and ill calculated to overawe the impertinent. However, you will
+ appreciate now the motive of Mr. Hoopdriver's experiments. He presently
+ attained sufficient dexterity to slap himself smartly and violently in the
+ face with his right hand, without certainly overturning the machine; but
+ his pocket handkerchief might have been in California for any good it was
+ to him while he was in the saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little
+ uncomfortable, he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the background
+ of his consciousness was the sense that about this time Briggs would be
+ half-way through his window dressing, and Gosling, the apprentice, busy,
+ with a chair turned down over the counter and his ears very red, trying to
+ roll a piece of huckaback&mdash;only those who have rolled pieces of
+ huckaback know quite how detestable huckaback is to roll&mdash;and the
+ shop would be dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and snappy. And here
+ was quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the desire took one,
+ without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of &ldquo;Sayn,&rdquo; no folding of
+ remnants, no voice to shout, &ldquo;Hoopdriver, forward!&rdquo; And once he almost ran
+ over something wonderful, a little, low, red beast with a yellowish tail,
+ that went rushing across the road before him. It was the first weasel he
+ had ever seen in his cockney life. There were miles of this, scores of
+ miles of this before him, pinewood and oak forest, purple, heathery
+ moorland and grassy down, lush meadows, where shining rivers wound their
+ lazy way, villages with square-towered, flint churches, and rambling,
+ cheap, and hearty inns, clean, white, country towns, long downhill
+ stretches, where one might ride at one's ease (overlooking a jolt or so),
+ and far away, at the end of it all,&mdash;the sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps he had
+ been dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young Lady in Grey,
+ and perhaps the memory of it was making itself a little lair in a corner
+ of his brain from which it could distress him in the retrospect by
+ suggesting that he looked like a fool; but for the present that trouble
+ was altogether in abeyance. The man in drab&mdash;evidently a swell&mdash;had
+ spoken to him as his equal, and the knees of his brown suit and the
+ chequered stockings were ever before his eyes. (Or, rather, you could see
+ the stockings by carrying the head a little to one side.) And to feel,
+ little by little, his mastery over this delightful, treacherous machine,
+ growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his knees reasserted
+ themselves, and he dismounted and sat awhile by the roadside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where a bridge
+ crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the other cyclist in
+ brown. It is well to notice the fact here, although the interview was of
+ the slightest, because it happened that subsequently Hoopdriver saw a
+ great deal more of this other man in brown. The other cyclist in brown had
+ a machine of dazzling newness, and a punctured pneumatic lay across his
+ knees. He was a man of thirty or more, with a whitish face, an aquiline
+ nose, a lank, flaxen moustache, and very fair hair, and he scowled at the
+ job before him. At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver pulled himself
+ together, and rode by with the air of one born to the wheel. &ldquo;A splendid
+ morning,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;and a fine surface.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!&rdquo; said the
+ other man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver heard the mumble and
+ did not distinguish the words, and he felt a pleasing sense of having duly
+ asserted the wide sympathy that binds all cyclists together, of having
+ behaved himself as becomes one of the brotherhood of the wheel. The other
+ man in brown watched his receding aspect. &ldquo;Greasy proletarian,&rdquo; said the
+ other man in brown, feeling a prophetic dislike. &ldquo;Got a suit of brown, the
+ very picture of this. One would think his sole aim in life had been to
+ caricature me. It's Fortune's way with me. Look at his insteps on the
+ treadles! Why does Heaven make such men?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to the
+ business in hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that he felt
+ sure was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then he dismounted
+ and pushed his machine; until the proximity of the village and a proper
+ pride drove him into the saddle again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ VIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in its
+ beginning if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was perhaps
+ half-way between Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver dropped down a little
+ hill, where, unfenced from the road, fine mossy trees and bracken lay on
+ either side; and looking up he saw an open country before him, covered
+ with heather and set with pines, and a yellow road running across it, and
+ half a mile away perhaps, a little grey figure by the wayside waving
+ something white. &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver with his hands tightening on
+ the handles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a stone,
+ wabbled, recovered, and began riding faster at once, with his eyes ahead.
+ &ldquo;It can't be,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a limp
+ numbness had resumed possession of his legs. &ldquo;It CAN'T be,&rdquo; he repeated,
+ feeling every moment more assured that it WAS. &ldquo;Lord! I don't know even
+ now,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs awhirling), and then, &ldquo;Blow my legs!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and gathering
+ flies like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden. Then the road began to
+ rise, and the resistance of the pedals grew. As he crested the hill he saw
+ her, not a hundred yards away from him. &ldquo;It's her!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's her&mdash;right
+ enough. It's the suit's done it,&rdquo;&mdash;which was truer even than Mr.
+ Hoopdriver thought. But now she was not waving her handkerchief, she was
+ not even looking at him. She was wheeling her machine slowly along the
+ road towards him, and admiring the pretty wooded hills towards Weybridge.
+ She might have been unaware of his existence for all the recognition he
+ got.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that
+ handkerchief been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and scarlet,
+ and felt so. It must be her coquetry&mdash;the handkerchief was
+ indisputable. Should he ride up to her and get off, or get off and ride up
+ to her? It was as well she didn't look, because he would certainly capsize
+ if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was her consideration. Even as he
+ hesitated he was upon her. She must have heard his breathing. He gripped
+ the brake. Steady! His right leg waved in the air, and he came down
+ heavily and staggering, but erect. She turned her eyes upon him with
+ admirable surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine, raise his
+ cap, and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as much. He was a man
+ singularly devoid of the minutiae of self-consciousness, and he was quite
+ unaware of a tail of damp hair lying across his forehead, and just
+ clearing his eyes, and of the general disorder of his coiffure. There was
+ an interrogative pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What can I have the pleasure&mdash;&rdquo; began Mr. Haopdriver, insinuatingly.
+ &ldquo;I mean&rdquo; (remembering his emancipation and abruptly assuming his most
+ aristocratic intonation), &ldquo;can I be of any assistance to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily, &ldquo;None,
+ thank you.&rdquo; She glanced away from him and made as if she would proceed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen again. It
+ was so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was she coquetting? Or
+ had he&mdash;?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excuse me, one minute,&rdquo; he said, as she began to wheel her machine again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour in her
+ cheeks deepening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I should not have alighted if I had not&mdash;imagined that you&mdash;er,
+ waved something white&mdash;&rdquo; He paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him doubtfully. He HAD seen it! She decided that he was not
+ an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but an innocent soul
+ meaning well while seeking happiness. &ldquo;I DID wave my handkerchief,&rdquo; she
+ said. &ldquo;I'm very sorry. I am expecting&mdash;a friend, a gentleman,&rdquo;&mdash;she
+ seemed to flush pink for a minute. &ldquo;He is riding a bicycle and dressed in&mdash;in
+ brown; and at a distance, you know&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, quite!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion against his
+ bitter disappointment. &ldquo;Certainly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No trouble. 'Ssure you,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and bowing
+ over his saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could not find it in
+ his heart to tell her that the man was beyond there with a punctured
+ pneumatic. He looked back along the road and tried to think of something
+ else to say. But the gulf in the conversation widened rapidly and
+ hopelessly. &ldquo;There's nothing further,&rdquo; began Mr. Hoopdriver desperately,
+ recurring to his stock of cliches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing, thank you,&rdquo; she said decisively. And immediately, &ldquo;This IS the
+ Ripley road?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Ripley is about two miles from here.
+ According to the mile-stones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thank you,&rdquo; she said warmly. &ldquo;Thank you so much. I felt sure there was no
+ mistake. And I really am awfully sorry&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't mention it,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Don't mention it.&rdquo; He hesitated
+ and gripped his handles to mount. &ldquo;It's me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;ought to be sorry.&rdquo;
+ Should he say it? Was it an impertinence? Anyhow!&mdash;&ldquo;Not being the
+ other gentleman, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even as he
+ smiled it; felt she disapproved&mdash;that she despised him, was overcome
+ with shame at her expression, turned his back upon her, and began (very
+ clumsily) to mount. He did so with a horrible swerve, and went pedalling
+ off, riding very badly, as he was only too painfully aware. Nevertheless,
+ thank Heaven for the mounting! He could not see her because it was so
+ dangerous for him to look round, but he could imagine her indignant and
+ pitiless. He felt an unspeakable idiot. One had to be so careful what one
+ said to Young Ladies, and he'd gone and treated her just as though she was
+ only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He always WAS a fool. You could
+ tell from her manner she didn't think him a gentleman. One glance, and she
+ seemed to look clear through him and all his presence. What rot it was
+ venturing to speak to a girl like that! With her education she was bound
+ to see through him at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel what
+ slush his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What was it? 'Not
+ being the other gentleman, you know!' No point in it. And 'GENTLEMAN!'
+ What COULD she be thinking of him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from her
+ thoughts almost before he had vanished round the corner. She had thought
+ no ill of him. His manifest awe and admiration of her had given her not an
+ atom of offence. But for her just now there were weightier things to think
+ about, things that would affect all the rest of her life. She continued
+ slowly walking her machine Londonward. Presently she stopped. &ldquo;Oh! Why
+ DOESN'T he come?&rdquo; she said, and stamped her foot petulantly. Then, as if
+ in answer, coming down the hill among the trees, appeared the other man in
+ brown, dismounted and wheeling his machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came to him,
+ with an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen the last of the
+ Young Lady in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery of the machine, the
+ present machinery of Fate, the deus ex machina, so to speak, was against
+ him. The bicycle, torn from this attractive young woman, grew heavier and
+ heavier, and continually more unsteady. It seemed a choice between
+ stopping at Ripley or dying in the flower of his days. He went into the
+ Unicorn, after propping his machine outside the door, and, as he cooled
+ down and smoked his Red Herring cigarette while the cold meat was getting
+ ready, he saw from the window the Young Lady in Grey and the other man in
+ brown, entering Ripley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which sheltered
+ him, but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk and incapable
+ attitude against the doorway, humping its rackety mud-guard and leering at
+ them with its darkened lantern eye, drove them away&mdash;so it seemed to
+ Mr. Hoopdriver&mdash;to the spacious swallow of the Golden Dragon. The
+ young lady was riding very slowly, but the other man in brown had a bad
+ puncture and was wheeling his machine. Mr. Hoopdriver noted his flaxen
+ moustache, his aquiline nose, his rather bent shoulders, with a sudden,
+ vivid dislike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is jaded by
+ the incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver's mind, even as he
+ conversed with her in that cultivated voice of his&mdash;of the weather,
+ of the distance from London, and of the excellence of the Ripley road&mdash;wandered
+ to the incomparable freshness and brilliance of the Young Lady in Grey. As
+ he sat at meat he kept turning his head to the window to see what signs
+ there were of that person, but the face of the Golden Dragon displayed no
+ appreciation of the delightful morsel it had swallowed. As an incidental
+ consequence of this distraction, Mr. Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly
+ inconvenienced by a mouthful of mustard. After he had called for his
+ reckoning he went, his courage being high with meat and mustard, to the
+ door, intending to stand, with his legs wide apart and his hands deep in
+ his pockets, and stare boldly across the road. But just then the other man
+ in brown appeared in the gateway of the Golden Dragon yard&mdash;it is one
+ of those delightful inns that date from the coaching days&mdash;wheeling
+ his punctured machine. He was taking it to Flambeau's, the repairer's. He
+ looked up and saw Hoopdriver, stared for a minute, and then scowled
+ darkly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other man in
+ brown had disappeared into Flambeau's. Then he glanced momentarily at the
+ Golden Dragon, puckered his mouth into a whistle of unconcern, and
+ proceeded to wheel his machine into the road until a sufficient margin for
+ mounting was secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not of
+ seeing no more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in brown he
+ guessed was her brother, albeit that person was of a pallid fairness,
+ differing essentially from her rich colouring; and, besides, he felt he
+ had made a hopeless fool of himself. But the afternoon was against him,
+ intolerably hot, especially on the top of his head, and the virtue had
+ gone out of his legs to digest his cold meat, and altogether his ride to
+ Guildford was exceedingly intermittent. At times he would walk, at times
+ lounge by the wayside, and every public house, in spite of Briggs and a
+ sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of bitter. (For that is
+ the experience of all those who go on wheels, that drinking begets thirst,
+ even more than thirst begets drinking, until at last the man who yields
+ becomes a hell unto himself, a hell in which the fire dieth not, and the
+ thirst is not quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid green apples turned
+ the current that threatened to carry him away. Ever and again a cycle, or
+ a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering wheels and softly
+ running chains, and on each occasion, to save his self-respect, Mr.
+ Hoopdriver descended and feigned some trouble with his saddle. Each time
+ he descended with less trepidation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o'clock, and then he was so
+ much exhausted that he decided to put up there for the night, at the
+ Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern. And after he had cooled a space and refreshed
+ himself with tea and bread and butter and jam,&mdash;the tea he drank
+ noisily out of the saucer,&mdash;he went out to loiter away the rest of
+ the afternoon. Guildford is an altogether charming old town, famous, so he
+ learnt from a Guide Book, as the scene of Master Tupper's great historical
+ novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a delightful castle, all set about
+ with geraniums and brass plates commemorating the gentlemen who put them
+ up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very pleasant to see, and in
+ the afternoon the shops are busy and the people going to and fro make the
+ pavements look bright and prosperous. It was nice to peep in the windows
+ and see the heads of the men and girls in the drapers' shops, busy as
+ busy, serving away. The High Street runs down at an angle of seventy
+ degrees to the horizon (so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver, whose feeling for
+ gradients was unnaturally exalted), and it brought his heart into his
+ mouth to see a cyclist ride down it, like a fly crawling down a window
+ pane. The man hadn't even a brake. He visited the castle early in the
+ evening and paid his twopence to ascend the Keep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red roofs of
+ the town and the tower of the church, and then going to the southern side
+ sat down and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and stared away south over the
+ old bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin, at the waves of blue upland that
+ rose, one behind another, across the Weald, to the lazy altitudes of
+ Hindhead and Butser. His pale grey eyes were full of complacency and
+ pleasurable anticipation. Tomorrow he would go riding across that wide
+ valley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him until he
+ heard a soft voice behind him saying: &ldquo;Well, MISS BEAUMONT, here's the
+ view.&rdquo; Something in the accent pointed to a jest in the name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a dear old town, brother George,&rdquo; answered another voice that
+ sounded familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr. Hoopdriver saw the
+ other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, with their backs towards
+ him. She turned her smiling profile towards Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Only, you know,
+ brothers don't call their sisters&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Damn!&rdquo; said the other
+ man in brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed her glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the Weald.
+ &ldquo;Beautiful old town, isn't it?&rdquo; said the other man in brown, after a quite
+ perceptible pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it?&rdquo; said the Young Lady in Grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another pause began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can't get alone anywhere,&rdquo; said the other man in brown, looking round.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and decided
+ to retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should stumble at the
+ head of the steps and vanish with indignity. This was the third time that
+ he'd seen HIM, and the fourth time her. And of course he was too big a
+ fat-head to raise his cap to HER! He thought of that at the foot of the
+ Keep. Apparently they aimed at the South Coast just as he did, He'd get up
+ betimes the next day and hurry off to avoid her&mdash;them, that is. It
+ never occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver that Miss Beaumont and her brother might
+ do exactly the same thing, and that evening, at least, the peculiarity of
+ a brother calling his sister &ldquo;Miss Beaumont&rdquo; did not recur to him. He was
+ much too preoccupied with an analysis of his own share of these
+ encounters. He found it hard to be altogether satisfied about the figure
+ he had cut, revise his memories as he would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two people. It was
+ about seven o'clock. He stopped outside a linen draper's and peered over
+ the goods in the window at the assistants in torment. He could have spent
+ a whole day happily at that. He told himself that he was trying to see how
+ they dressed out the brass lines over their counters, in a purely
+ professional spirit, but down at the very bottom of his heart he knew
+ better. The customers were a secondary consideration, and it was only
+ after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he perceived that among them was&mdash;the
+ Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the window at once, and saw the
+ other man in brown standing at the edge of the pavement and regarding him
+ with a very curious expression of face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head the curious problem whether he was
+ to be regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or whether they were
+ to be regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He abandoned the solution at
+ last in despair, quite unable to decide upon the course he should take at
+ the next encounter, whether he should scowl savagely at the couple or
+ assume an attitude eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER'S HEART
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he had never
+ written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will describe him better.
+ Like I know not how many of those who do the fetching and carrying of
+ life,&mdash;a great number of them certainly,&mdash;his real life was
+ absolutely uninteresting, and if he had faced it as realistically as such
+ people do in Mr. Gissing's novels, he would probably have come by way of
+ drink to suicide in the course of a year. But that was just what he had
+ the natural wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he was always decorating
+ his existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses, deliberate and yet
+ quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences were mere material for a
+ romantic superstructure. If some power had given Hoopdriver the 'giftie'
+ Burns invoked, 'to see oursels as ithers see us,' he would probably have
+ given it away to some one else at the very earliest opportunity. His
+ entire life, you must understand, was not a continuous romance, but a
+ series of short stories linked only by the general resemblance of their
+ hero, a brown-haired young fellow commonly, with blue eyes and a fair
+ moustache, graceful rather than strong, sharp and resolute rather than
+ clever (cp., as the scientific books say, p. 2). Invariably this person
+ possessed an iron will. The stories fluctuated indefinitely. The smoking
+ of a cigarette converted Hoopdriver's hero into something entirely
+ worldly, subtly rakish, with a humorous twinkle in the eye and some
+ gallant sinning in the background. You should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver
+ promenading the brilliant gardens at Earl's Court on an early-closing
+ night. His meaning glances! (I dare not give the meaning.) Such an
+ influence as the eloquence of a revivalist preacher would suffice to
+ divert the story into absolutely different channels, make him a
+ white-soured hero, a man still pure, walking untainted and brave and
+ helpful through miry ways. The appearance of some daintily gloved
+ frockcoated gentleman with buttonhole and eyeglass complete, gallantly
+ attendant in the rear of customers, served again to start visions of a
+ simplicity essentially Cromwell-like, of sturdy plainness, of a strong,
+ silent man going righteously through the world. This day there had
+ predominated a fine leisurely person immaculately clothed, and riding on
+ an unexceptional machine, a mysterious person&mdash;quite unostentatious,
+ but with accidental self-revelation of something over the common, even a
+ &ldquo;bloomin' Dook,&rdquo; it might be incognito, on the tour of the South Coast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You must not think that there was any TELLING of these stories of this
+ life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that they were known
+ to a soul. If it were not for the trouble, I would, I think, go back and
+ rewrite this section from the beginning, expunging the statements that
+ Hoopdriver was a poet and a romancer, and saying instead that he was a
+ playwright and acted his own plays. He was not only the sole performer,
+ but the entire audience, and the entertainment kept him almost
+ continuously happy. Yet even that playwright comparison scarcely expresses
+ all the facts of the case. After all, very many of his dreams never got
+ acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the dreams of a solitary walk
+ for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the dreams dreamt behind the counter
+ while trade was slack and mechanical foldings and rollings occupied his
+ muscles. Most of them were little dramatic situations, crucial dialogues,
+ the return of Mr. Hoopdriver to his native village, for instance, in a
+ well-cut holiday suit and natty gloves, the unheard asides of the rival
+ neighbours, the delight of the old 'mater,' the intelligence&mdash;&ldquo;A
+ ten-pound rise all at once from Antrobus, mater. Whad d'yer think of
+ that?&rdquo; or again, the first whispering of love, dainty and witty and
+ tender, to the girl he served a few days ago with sateen, or a gallant
+ rescue of generalised beauty in distress from truculent insult or ravening
+ dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So many people do this&mdash;and you never suspect it. You see a tattered
+ lad selling matches in the street, and you think there is nothing between
+ him and the bleakness of immensity, between him and utter abasement, but a
+ few tattered rags and a feeble musculature. And all unseen by you a host
+ of heaven-sent fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they swathe
+ you about. Many men have never seen their own profiles or the backs of
+ their heads, and for the back of your own mind no mirror has been
+ invented. They swathe him about so thickly that the pricks of fate scarce
+ penetrate to him, or become but a pleasant titillation. And so, indeed, it
+ is with all of us who go on living. Self-deception is the anaesthetic of
+ life, while God is carving out our beings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver's
+ imaginings. You see now how external our view has been; we have had but
+ the slightest transitory glimpses of the drama within, of how the things
+ looked in the magic mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver's mind. On the road to
+ Guildford and during his encounters with his haunting fellow-cyclists the
+ drama had presented chiefly the quiet gentleman to whom we have alluded,
+ but at Guildford, under more varied stimuli, he burgeoned out more
+ variously. There was the house agent's window, for instance, set him upon
+ a charming little comedy. He would go in, make inquires about that
+ thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go over it&mdash;the thing
+ would stimulate the clerk's curiosity immensely. He searched his mind for
+ a reason for this proceeding and discovered that he was a dynamiter
+ needing privacy. Upon that theory he procured the key, explored the house
+ carefully, said darkly that it might suit his special needs, but that
+ there were OTHERS to consult. The clerk, however, did not understand the
+ allusion, and merely pitied him as one who had married young and paired
+ himself to a stronger mind than his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a note-book and
+ pencil, and that started the conception of an artist taking notes. That
+ was a little game Mr. Hoopdriver had, in congenial company, played in his
+ still younger days&mdash;to the infinite annoyance of quite a number of
+ respectable excursionists at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver had
+ been, as his mother proudly boasted, a 'bit of a drawer,' but a
+ conscientious and normally stupid schoolmaster perceived the incipient
+ talent and had nipped it in the bud by a series of lessons in art.
+ However, our principal character figured about quite happily in old
+ corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking out of the
+ bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a corner by a gateway,
+ note-book in hand, busily sketching the Earl's imposing features. At which
+ sight the other man in brown started back from the centre of the window,
+ so as to be hidden from him, and crouching slightly, watched him intently
+ through the interstices of the lace curtains.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XI. OMISSIONS
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the great
+ opening day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here. How he wandered
+ about the old town in the dusk, and up to the Hogsback to see the little
+ lamps below and the little stars above come out one after another; how he
+ returned through the yellow-lit streets to the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern
+ and supped bravely in the commercial room&mdash;a Man among Men; how he
+ joined in the talk about flying-machines and the possibilities of
+ electricity, witnessing that flying-machines were &ldquo;dead certain to come,&rdquo;
+ and that electricity was &ldquo;wonderful, wonderful&rdquo;; how he went and watched
+ the billiard playing and said, &ldquo;Left 'em&rdquo; several times with an oracular
+ air; how he fell a-yawning; and how he got out his cycling map and studied
+ it intently,&mdash;are things that find no mention here. Nor will I
+ enlarge upon his going into the writing-room, and marking the road from
+ London to Guildford with a fine, bright line of the reddest of red ink. In
+ his little cyclist hand-book there is a diary, and in the diary there is
+ an entry of these things&mdash;it is there to this day, and I cannot do
+ better than reproduce it here to witness that this book is indeed a true
+ one, and no lying fable written to while away an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he set
+ about finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all days must end
+ at last! ) He got his candle in the hall from a friendly waiting-maid, and
+ passed upward&mdash;whither a modest novelist, who writes for the family
+ circle, dare not follow. Yet I may tell you that he knelt down at his
+ bedside, happy and drowsy, and said, &ldquo;Our Father 'chartin' heaven,&rdquo; even
+ as he had learnt it by rote from his mother nearly twenty years ago. And
+ anon when his breathing had become deep and regular, we may creep into his
+ bedroom and catch him at his dreams. He is lying upon his left side, with
+ his arm under the pillow. It is dark, and he is hidden; but if you could
+ have seen his face, sleeping there in the darkness, I think you would have
+ perceived, in spite of that treasured, thin, and straggling moustache, in
+ spite of your memory of the coarse words he had used that day, that the
+ man before you was, after all, only a little child asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen Mr.
+ Hoopdriver's face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little, plain
+ bedroom at the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern at Guildford.
+ That was before midnight. As the night progressed he was disturbed by
+ dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory of
+ motion lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and round they seem
+ to go. You ride through Dreamland on wonderful dream bicycles that change
+ and grow; you ride down steeples and staircases and over precipices; you
+ hover in horrible suspense over inhabited towns, vainly seeking for a
+ brake your hand cannot find, to save you from a headlong fall; you plunge
+ into weltering rivers, and rush helplessly at monstrous obstacles. Anon
+ Mr. Hoopdriver found himself riding out of the darkness of non-existence,
+ pedalling Ezekiel's Wheels across the Weald of Surrey, jolting over the
+ hills and smashing villages in his course, while the other man in brown
+ cursed and swore at him and shouted to stop his career. There was the
+ Putney heath-keeper, too, and the man in drab raging at him. He felt an
+ awful fool, a&mdash;what was it?&mdash;a juggins, ah!&mdash;a Juggernaut.
+ The villages went off one after another with a soft, squashing noise. He
+ did not see the Young Lady in Grey, but he knew she was looking at his
+ back. He dared not look round. Where the devil was the brake? It must have
+ fallen off. And the bell? Right in front of him was Guildford. He tried to
+ shout and warn the town to get out of the way, but his voice was gone as
+ well. Nearer, nearer! it was fearful! and in another moment the houses
+ were cracking like nuts and the blood of the inhabitants squirting this
+ way and that. The streets were black with people running. Right under his
+ wheels he saw the Young Lady in Grey. A feeling of horror came upon Mr.
+ Hoopdriver; he flung himself sideways to descend, forgetting how high he
+ was, and forthwith he began falling; falling, falling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered a
+ little, and went to sleep again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other man in
+ brown came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew uglier and uglier
+ as he approached, and his expression was intolerably evil. He came and
+ looked close into Mr. Hoopdriver's eyes and then receded to an incredible
+ distance. His face seemed to be luminous. &ldquo;MISS BEAUMONT,&rdquo; he said, and
+ splashed up a spray of suspicion. Some one began letting off fireworks,
+ chiefly Catherine wheels, down the shop, though Mr. Hoopdriver knew it was
+ against the rules. For it seemed that the place they were in was a vast
+ shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived that the other man in brown was
+ the shop-walker, differing from most shop-walkers in the fact that he was
+ lit from within as a Chinese lantern might be. And the customer Mr.
+ Hoopdriver was going to serve was the Young Lady in Grey. Curious he
+ hadn't noticed it before. She was in grey as usual,&mdash;rationals,&mdash;and
+ she had her bicycle leaning against the counter. She smiled quite frankly
+ at him, just as she had done when she had apologised for stopping him. And
+ her form, as she leant towards him, was full of a sinuous grace he had
+ never noticed before. &ldquo;What can I have the pleasure?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver
+ at once, and she said, &ldquo;The Ripley road.&rdquo; So he got out the Ripley road
+ and unrolled it and showed it to her, and she said that would do very
+ nicely, and kept on looking at him and smiling, and he began measuring off
+ eight miles by means of the yard measure on the counter, eight miles being
+ a dress length, a rational dress length, that is; and then the other man
+ in brown came up and wanted to interfere, and said Mr. Hoopdriver was a
+ cad, besides measuring it off too slowly. And as Mr. Hoopdriver began to
+ measure faster, the other man in brown said the Young Lady in Grey had
+ been there long enough, and that he WAS her brother, or else she would not
+ be travelling with him, and he suddenly whipped his arm about her waist
+ and made off with her. It occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment
+ that this was scarcely brotherly behaviour. Of course it wasn't! The sight
+ of the other man gripping her so familiarly enraged him frightfully; he
+ leapt over the counter forthwith and gave chase. They ran round the shop
+ and up an iron staircase into the Keep, and so out upon the Ripley road.
+ For some time they kept dodging in and out of a wayside hotel with two
+ front doors and an inn yard. The other man could not run very fast because
+ he had hold of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was hampered by
+ the absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch out; they would
+ keep going round and round as if they were on the treadles of a wheel, so
+ that he made the smallest steps conceivable. This dream came to no crisis.
+ The chase seemed to last an interminable time, and all kinds of people,
+ heathkeepers, shopmen, policemen, the old man in the Keep, the angry man
+ in drab, the barmaid at the Unicorn, men with flying-machines, people
+ playing billiards in the doorways, silly, headless figures, stupid cocks
+ and hens encumbered with parcels and umbrellas and waterproofs, people
+ carrying bedroom candles, and such-like riffraff, kept getting in his way
+ and annoying him, although he sounded his electric bell, and said,
+ &ldquo;Wonderful, wonderful!&rdquo; at every corner....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver's breakfast, so that
+ after all he was not free to start out of Guildford until just upon the
+ stroke of nine. He wheeled his machine from the High Street in some
+ perplexity. He did not know whether this young lady, who had seized hold
+ of his imagination so strongly, and her unfriendly and possibly menacing
+ brother, were ahead of him or even now breakfasting somewhere in
+ Guildford. In the former case he might loiter as he chose; in the latter
+ he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in branch roads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that he would
+ leave Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but by the road
+ running through Shalford. Along this pleasant shady way he felt
+ sufficiently secure to resume his exercises in riding with one hand off
+ the handles, and in staring over his shoulder. He came over once or twice,
+ but fell on his foot each time, and perceived that he was improving.
+ Before he got to Bramley a specious byway snapped him up, ran with him for
+ half a mile or more, and dropped him as a terrier drops a walkingstick,
+ upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from Godalming. He entered
+ Godalming on his feet, for the road through that delightful town is beyond
+ dispute the vilest in the world, a mere tumult of road metal, a way of
+ peaks and precipices, and, after a successful experiment with cider at the
+ Woolpack, he pushed on to Milford.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young Lady in
+ Grey and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark is of Bogies.
+ Sometimes he could hear their pneumatics stealing upon him from behind,
+ and looking round saw a long stretch of vacant road. Once he saw far ahead
+ of him a glittering wheel, but it proved to be a workingman riding to
+ destruction on a very tall ordinary. And he felt a curious, vague
+ uneasiness about that Young Lady in Grey, for which he was altogether
+ unable to account. Now that he was awake he had forgotten that accentuated
+ Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in his dream. But the curious
+ dream conviction, that the girl was not really the man's sister, would not
+ let itself be forgotten. Why, for instance, should a man want to be alone
+ with his sister on the top of a tower? At Milford his bicycle made, so to
+ speak, an ass of itself. A finger-post suddenly jumped out at him, vainly
+ indicating an abrupt turn to the right, and Mr. Hoopdriver would have
+ slowed up and read the inscription, but no!&mdash;the bicycle would not
+ let him. The road dropped a little into Milford, and the thing shied, put
+ down its head and bolted, and Mr. Hoopdriver only thought of the brake
+ when the fingerpost was passed. Then to have recovered the point of
+ intersection would have meant dismounting. For as yet there was no road
+ wide enough for Mr. Hoopdriver to turn in. So he went on his way&mdash;or
+ to be precise, he did exactly the opposite thing. The road to the right
+ was the Portsmouth road, and this he was on went to Haslemere and
+ Midhurst. By that error it came about that he once more came upon his
+ fellow travellers of yesterday, coming on them suddenly, without the
+ slightest preliminary announcement and when they least expected it, under
+ the Southwestern Railway arch. &ldquo;It's horrible,&rdquo; said a girlish voice;
+ &ldquo;it's brutal&mdash;cowardly&mdash;&rdquo; And stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have been
+ something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of annoyance at
+ himself for the unintentional intrusion. But disconcerted as he was, he
+ was yet able to appreciate something of the peculiarity of their mutual
+ attitudes. The bicycles were lying by the roadside, and the two riders
+ stood face to face. The other man in brown's attitude, as it flashed upon
+ Hoopdriver, was a deliberate pose; he twirled his moustache and smiled
+ faintly, and he was conscientiously looking amused. And the girl stood
+ rigid, her arms straight by her side, her handkerchief clenched in her
+ hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest touch of red upon her
+ eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's sense to be indignant. But that
+ was the impression of a second. A mask of surprised recognition fell
+ across this revelation of emotion as she turned her head towards him, and
+ the pose of the other man in brown vanished too in a momentary
+ astonishment. And then he had passed them, and was riding on towards
+ Haslemere to make what he could of the swift picture that had photographed
+ itself on his brain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rum,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;It's DASHED rum!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They were having a row.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Smirking&mdash;&rdquo; What he called the other man in brown need not trouble
+ us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Annoying her!&rdquo; That any human being should do that!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;WHY?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver's mind. He
+ grasped his brake, descended, and stood looking hesitatingly back. They
+ still stood by the railway bridge, and it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's fancy
+ that she was stamping her foot. He hesitated, then turned his bicycle
+ round, mounted, and rode back towards them, gripping his courage firmly
+ lest it should slip away and leave him ridiculous. &ldquo;I'll offer 'im a screw
+ 'ammer,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. Then, with a wave of fierce emotion, he saw
+ that the girl was crying. In another moment they heard him and turned in
+ surprise. Certainly she had been crying; her eyes were swimming in tears,
+ and the other man in brown looked exceedingly disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver
+ descended and stood over his machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing wrong, I hope?&rdquo; he said, looking the other man in brown squarely
+ in the face. &ldquo;No accident?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said the other man in brown shortly. &ldquo;Nothing at all, thanks.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, &ldquo;the young lady is
+ crying. I thought perhaps&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance, and
+ covered one eye with her handkerchief. &ldquo;It's this speck,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;This
+ speck of dust in my eye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This lady,&rdquo; said the other man in brown, explaining, &ldquo;has a gnat in her
+ eye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. &ldquo;I believe
+ it's out,&rdquo; she said. The other man in brown made movements indicating
+ commiserating curiosity concerning the alleged fly. Mr. Hoopdriver&mdash;the
+ word is his own&mdash;stood flabber-gastered. He had all the intuition of
+ the simple-minded. He knew there was no fly. But the ground was suddenly
+ cut from his feet. There is a limit to knighterrantry&mdash;dragons and
+ false knights are all very well, but flies! Fictitious flies! Whatever the
+ trouble was, it was evidently not his affair. He felt he had made a fool
+ of himself again. He would have mumbled some sort of apology; but the
+ other man in brown gave him no time, turned on him abruptly, even
+ fiercely. &ldquo;I hope,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that your curiosity is satisfied?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we won't detain you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about, struggled
+ upon it, and resumed the road southward. And when he learnt that he was
+ not on the Portsmouth road, it was impossible to turn and go back, for
+ that would be to face his shame again, and so he had to ride on by Brook
+ Street up the hill to Haslemere. And away to the right the Portsmouth road
+ mocked at him and made off to its fastnesses amid the sunlit green and
+ purple masses of Hindhead, where Mr. Grant Allen writes his Hill Top
+ Novels day by day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys one saw
+ on either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the sides of the road
+ itself set about with grey heather scrub and prickly masses of gorse, and
+ pine trees with their year's growth still bright green, against the
+ darkened needles of the previous years, were fresh and delightful to Mr.
+ Hoopdriver's eyes But the brightness of the day and the day-old sense of
+ freedom fought an uphill fight against his intolerable vexation at that
+ abominable encounter, and had still to win it when he reached Haslemere. A
+ great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred of the other man in brown,
+ possessed him. He had conceived the brilliant idea of abandoning
+ Portsmouth, or at least giving up the straight way to his
+ fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the left, eastward. He did
+ not dare to stop at any of the inviting public-houses in the main street
+ of Haslemere, but turned up a side way and found a little beer-shop, the
+ Good Hope, wherein to refresh himself. And there he ate and gossipped
+ condescendingly with an aged labourer, assuming the while for his own
+ private enjoyment the attributes of a Lost Heir, and afterwards mounted
+ and rode on towards Northchapel, a place which a number of finger-posts
+ conspired to boom, but which some insidious turning prevented him from
+ attaining.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was one of my uncle's profoundest remarks that human beings are the
+ only unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far justified by Mr.
+ Hoopdriver that, after spending the morning tortuously avoiding the other
+ man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, he spent a considerable part of
+ the afternoon in thinking about the Young Lady in Grey, and contemplating
+ in an optimistic spirit the possibilities of seeing her again. Memory and
+ imagination played round her, so that his course was largely determined by
+ the windings of the road he traversed. Of one general proposition he was
+ absolutely convinced. &ldquo;There's something Juicy wrong with 'em,&rdquo; said he&mdash;once
+ even aloud. But what it was he could not imagine. He recapitulated the
+ facts. &ldquo;Miss Beaumont&mdash;brother and sister&mdash;and the stoppage to
+ quarrel and weep&mdash;&rdquo; it was perplexing material for a young man of
+ small experience. There was no exertion he hated so much as inference, and
+ after a time he gave up any attempt to get at the realities of the case,
+ and let his imagination go free. Should he ever see her again? Suppose he
+ did&mdash;with that other chap not about. The vision he found pleasantest
+ was an encounter with her, an unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing
+ Class 'Do' at the Putney Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift
+ together, and he would dance with her again and again. It was a pleasant
+ vision, for you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly
+ well. Or again, in the shop, a sudden radiance in the doorway, and she is
+ bowed towards the Manchester counter. And then to lean over that counter
+ and murmur, seemingly apropos of the goods under discussion, &ldquo;I have not
+ forgotten that morning on the Portsmouth road,&rdquo; and lower, &ldquo;I never shall
+ forget.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel and
+ weighed his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible resting-place, or
+ Pullborough; Midhurst seemed too near, and any place over the Downs
+ beyond, too far, and so he meandered towards Petworth, posing himself
+ perpetually and loitering, gathering wild flowers and wondering why they
+ had no names&mdash;for he had never heard of any&mdash;dropping them
+ furtively at the sight of a stranger, and generally 'mucking about.' There
+ were purple vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet, honeysuckle, belated
+ brambles&mdash;but the dog-roses had already gone; there were green and
+ red blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another place white
+ dead nettles, traveller's-joy, clinging bedstraw, grasses flowering, white
+ campions, and ragged robins. One cornfield was glorious with poppies,
+ bright scarlet and purple white, and the blue corn-flowers were beginning.
+ In the lanes the trees met overhead, and the wisps of hay still hung to
+ the straggling hedges. Iri one of the main roads he steered a perilous
+ passage through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and there were little
+ cottages, and picturesque beer-houses with the vivid brewers' boards of
+ blue and scarlet, and once a broad green and a church, and an expanse of
+ some hundred houses or so. Then he came to a pebbly rivulet that emerged
+ between clumps of sedge loosestrife and forget-me-nots under an arch of
+ trees, and rippled across the road, and there he dismounted, longing to
+ take off shoes and stockings&mdash;those stylish chequered stockings were
+ now all dimmed with dust&mdash;and paddle his lean legs in the chuckling
+ cheerful water. But instead he sat in a manly attitude, smoking a
+ cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in Grey should come glittering
+ round the corner. For the flavour of the Young Lady in Grey was present
+ through it all, mixing with the flowers and all the delight of it, a touch
+ that made this second day quite different from the first, an undertone of
+ expectation, anxiety, and something like regret that would not be ignored.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he began to
+ repent, vividly and decidedly, having fled these two people. He was
+ getting hungry, and that has a curious effect upon the emotional colouring
+ of our minds. The man was a sinister brute, Hoopdriver saw in a flash of
+ inspiration, and the girl&mdash;she was in some serious trouble. And he
+ who might have helped her had taken his first impulse as decisive&mdash;and
+ bolted. This new view of it depressed him dreadfully. What might not be
+ happening to her now? He thought again of her tears. Surely it was merely
+ his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his eye upon it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found himself
+ in a tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming on, emerged, not
+ at Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from Midhurst. &ldquo;I'm getting hungry,&rdquo;
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of a gamekeeper in Easebourne village.
+ &ldquo;Midhurst a mile, and Petworth five!&mdash;Thenks, I'll take Midhurst.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the North
+ Street, and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the cheerful sign of a
+ teapot, and exhibiting a brilliant array of tobaccos, sweets, and
+ children's toys in the window, struck his fancy. A neat, bright-eyed
+ little old lady made him welcome, and he was presently supping sumptuously
+ on sausages and tea, with a visitors' book full of the most humorous and
+ flattering remarks about the little old lady, in verse and prose, propped
+ up against his teapot as he ate. Regular good some of the jokes were, and
+ rhymes that read well&mdash;even with your mouth full of sausage. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing &ldquo;something&rdquo;&mdash;for his
+ judgment on the little old lady was already formed. He pictured the little
+ old lady discovering it afterwards&mdash;&ldquo;My gracious! One of them Punch
+ men,&rdquo; she would say. The room had a curtained recess and a chest of
+ drawers, for presently it was to be his bedroom, and the day part of it
+ was decorated with framed Oddfellows' certificates and giltbacked books
+ and portraits, and kettle-holders, and all kinds of beautiful things made
+ out of wool; very comfortable it was indeed. The window was lead framed
+ and diamond paned, and through it one saw the corner of the vicarage and a
+ pleasant hill crest, in dusky silhouette against the twilight sky. And
+ after the sausages had ceased to be, he lit a Red Herring cigarette and
+ went swaggering out into the twilight street. All shadowy blue between its
+ dark brick houses, was the street, with a bright yellow window here and
+ there and splashes of green and red where the chemist's illumination fell
+ across the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XV. AN INTERLUDE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky Midhurst
+ North Street, and return to the two folks beside the railway bridge
+ between Milford and Haslemere. She was a girl of eighteen, dark, fine
+ featured, with bright eyes, and a rich, swift colour under her warm-tinted
+ skin. Her eyes were all the brighter for the tears that swam in them. The
+ man was thirty three or four, fair, with a longish nose overhanging his
+ sandy flaxen moustache, pale blue eyes, and a head that struck out above
+ and behind. He stood with his feet wide apart, his hand on his hip, in an
+ attitude that was equally suggestive of defiance and aggression. They had
+ watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The unexpected interruption had stopped
+ the flood of her tears. He tugged his abundant moustache and regarded her
+ calmly. She stood with face averted, obstinately resolved not to speak
+ first. &ldquo;Your behaviour,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;makes you conspicuous.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands clenched. &ldquo;You
+ unspeakable CAD,&rdquo; she said, and choked, stamped her little foot, and stood
+ panting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I AM an unspeakable cad. Who
+ wouldn't be&mdash;for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Dear girl!' How DARE you speak to me like that? YOU&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would do anything&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;OH!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a moment's pause. She looked squarely into his face, her eyes
+ alight with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a little. He
+ stroked his moustache, and by an effort maintained his cynical calm. &ldquo;Let
+ us be reasonable,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual in the
+ world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have always had it so&mdash;in your generalising way. But let us look
+ at the facts of the case&mdash;if that pleases you better.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he said,&mdash;&ldquo;you've eloped.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've left my home,&rdquo; she corrected, with dignity. &ldquo;I left my home because
+ it was unendurable. Because that woman&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to help me to
+ earn a living by writing. It was you who said, why shouldn't a man and
+ woman be friends? And now you dare&mdash;you dare&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go back. I forbid you&mdash;I forbid you to stand in the way&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at least
+ clear-headed. You don't know everything yet, you know. Listen to me for a
+ moment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Haven't I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who dared
+ only to talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at anything beyond.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You KNEW. And you did not
+ mind. MIND! You liked it. It was the fun of the whole thing for you. That
+ I loved you, and could not speak to you. You played with it&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't all. I made up my mind&mdash;Well, to make the game more even.
+ And so I suggested to you and joined with you in this expedition of yours,
+ invented a sister at Midhurst&mdash;I tell you, I HAVEN'T a sister! For
+ one object&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To compromise you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute neither
+ spoke. Then she began half defiantly: &ldquo;Much I am compromised. Of course&mdash;I
+ have made a fool of myself&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and you know
+ very little of this world. Less than you think. But you will learn. Before
+ you write all those novels we have talked about, you will have to learn.
+ And that's one point&mdash;&rdquo; He hesitated. &ldquo;You started and blushed when
+ the man at breakfast called you Ma'am. You thought it a funny mistake, but
+ you did not say anything because he was young and nervous&mdash;and
+ besides, the thought of being my wife offended your modesty. You didn't
+ care to notice it. But&mdash;you see; I gave your name as MRS. Beaumont.&rdquo;
+ He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical pose. &ldquo;MRS.
+ Beaumont,&rdquo; he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and watching the
+ effect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked into his eyes speechless. &ldquo;I am learning fast,&rdquo; she said
+ slowly, at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. &ldquo;Jessie,&rdquo; he said,
+ with a sudden change of voice, &ldquo;I know all this is mean, isvillanous. But
+ do you think that I have done all this scheming, all this subterfuge, for
+ any other object&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not seem to listen to his words. &ldquo;I shall ride home,&rdquo; she said
+ abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She winced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Just think,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;what she could say to you after this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anyhow, I shall leave you now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes? And go&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live without
+ conventionality&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven't money and you haven't
+ credit. No one would take you in. It's one of two things: go back to your
+ stepmother, or&mdash;trust to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How CAN I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you must go back to her.&rdquo; He paused momentarily, to let this
+ consideration have its proper weight. &ldquo;Jessie, I did not mean to say the
+ things I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when I spoke so. If you will,
+ forgive me. I am a man. I could not help myself. Forgive me, and I promise
+ you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How can I trust you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Try me. I can assure you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She regarded him distrustfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the shadow of
+ this horrible bridge long enough.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! let me think,&rdquo; she said, half turning from him and pressing her hand
+ to her brow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;THINK! Look here, Jessie. It is ten o'clock. Shall we call a truce until
+ one?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last agreed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and the
+ heather. Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed. She was pale,
+ divided between fear and anger. She perceived she was in a scrape, and
+ tried in vain to think of a way of escape. Only one tangible thing would
+ keep in her mind, try as she would to ignore it. That was the quite
+ irrelevant fact that his head was singularly like an albino cocoanut. He,
+ too, felt thwarted. He felt that this romantic business of seduction was,
+ after all, unexpectedly tame. But this was only the beginning. At any
+ rate, every day she spent with him was a day gained. Perhaps things looked
+ worse than they were; that was some consolation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ You have seen these two young people&mdash;Bechamel, by-the-bye, is the
+ man's name, and the girl's is Jessie Milton&mdash;from the outside; you
+ have heard them talking; they ride now side by side (but not too close
+ together, and in an uneasy silence) towards Haslemere; and this chapter
+ will concern itself with those curious little council chambers inside
+ their skulls, where their motives are in session and their acts are
+ considered and passed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester, enlarging
+ upon the increase of bald heads and purblind people, has deduced a
+ wonderful future for the children of men. Man, he said, was nowadays a
+ hairless creature by forty or fifty, and for hair we gave him a wig;
+ shrivelled, and we padded him; toothless, and lo! false teeth set in gold.
+ Did he lose a limb, and a fine, new, artificial one was at his disposal;
+ get indigestion, and to hand was artificial digestive fluid or bile or
+ pancreatine, as the case might be. Complexions, too, were replaceable,
+ spectacles superseded an inefficient eye-lens, and imperceptible false
+ diaphragms were thrust into the failing ear. So he went over our
+ anatomies, until, at last, he had conjured up a weird thing of shreds and
+ patches, a simulacrum, an artificial body of a man, with but a doubtful
+ germ of living flesh lurking somewhere in his recesses. To that, he held,
+ we were coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not concern us
+ now. But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr. Rudyard Kipling, hath it
+ that in the case of one Tomlinson, the thing, so far as the soul is
+ concerned, has already been accomplished. Time was when men had simple
+ souls, desires as natural as their eyes, a little reasonable philanthropy,
+ a little reasonable philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a taste for good
+ living, a decent, personal vanity, a healthy, satisfying pugnacity, and so
+ forth. But now we are taught and disciplined for years and years, and
+ thereafter we read and read for all the time some strenuous,
+ nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic hypnotists, pulpit and
+ platform hypnotists, book-writing hypnotists, newspaper-writing
+ hypnotists, are at us all. This sugar you are eating, they tell us, is
+ ink, and forthwith we reject it with infinite disgust. This black draught
+ of unrequited toil is True Happiness, and down it goes with every symptom
+ of pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull past believing, and we yawn and
+ stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they interrupt, but this Ibsen is deep
+ and delightful, and we vie with one another in an excess of entertainment.
+ And when we open the heads of these two young people, we find, not a
+ straightforward motive on the surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a
+ soul so much as an oversoul, a zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas,
+ a highway's feast of fine, confused thinking. The girl is resolute to Live
+ Her Own Life, a phrase you may have heard before, and the man has a pretty
+ perverted ambition to be a cynical artistic person of the very calmest
+ description. He is hoping for the awakening of Passion in her, among other
+ things. He knows Passion ought to awaken, from the text-books he has
+ studied. He knows she admires his genius, but he is unaware that she does
+ not admire his head. He is quite a distinguished art critic in London, and
+ he met her at that celebrated lady novelist's, her stepmother, and here
+ you have them well embarked upon the Adventure. Both are in the first
+ stage of repentance, which consists, as you have probably found for
+ yourself, in setting your teeth hard and saying' &ldquo;I WILL go on.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way together
+ with a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for the orthodox
+ development of the Adventure. He perceives he was too precipitate. But he
+ feels his honour is involved, and meditates the development of a new
+ attack. And the girl? She is unawakened. Her motives are bookish, written
+ by a haphazard syndicate of authors, novelists, and biographers, on her
+ white inexperience. An artificial oversoul she is, that may presently
+ break down and reveal a human being beneath it. She is still in that
+ schoolgirl phase when a talkative old man is more interesting than a
+ tongue-tied young one, and when to be an eminent mathematician, say, or to
+ edit a daily paper, seems as fine an ambition as any girl need aspire to.
+ Bechaniel was to have helped her to attain that in the most expeditious
+ manner, and here he is beside her, talking enigmatical phrases about
+ passion, looking at her with the oddest expression, and once, and that was
+ his gravest offence, offering to kiss her. At any rate he has apologised.
+ She still scarcely realises, you see, the scrape she has got into.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and tobacco
+ shop. You must not think that a strain is put on coincidence when I tell
+ you that next door to Mrs. Wardor's&mdash;that was the name of the
+ bright-eyed, little old lady with whom Mr. Hoopdriver had stopped&mdash;is
+ the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel Hotel, on the night that Mr. Hoopdriver
+ reached Midhurst, were 'Mr.' and 'Miss' Beaumont, our Bechamel and Jessie
+ Milton. Indeed, it was a highly probable thing; for if one goes through
+ Guildford, the choice of southward roads is limited; you may go by
+ Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to Chichester, in addition to
+ which highways there is nothing for it but minor roadways to Petworth or
+ Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward. And coming to Midhurst from the
+ north, the Angel's entrance lies yawning to engulf your highly respectable
+ cyclists, while Mrs. Wardor's genial teapot is equally attractive to those
+ who weigh their means in little scales. But to people unfamiliar with the
+ Sussex roads&mdash;and such were the three persons of this story&mdash;the
+ convergence did not appear to be so inevitable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner, was the
+ first to be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver walk slowly across
+ the gateway, his head enhaloed in cigarette smoke, and pass out of sight
+ up the street. Incontinently a mass of cloudy uneasiness, that had been
+ partly dispelled during the day, reappeared and concentrated rapidly into
+ definite suspicion. He put his screw hammer into his pocket and walked
+ through the archway into the street, to settle the business forthwith, for
+ he prided himself on his decision. Hoopdriver was merely promenading, and
+ they met face to face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and laughter
+ seized Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his animosity. &ldquo;'Ere we
+ are again!&rdquo; he said, laughing insincerely in a sudden outbreak at the
+ perversity of chance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver's way, staring.
+ Then his face assumed an expression of dangerous civility. &ldquo;Is it any
+ information to you,&rdquo; he said, with immense politeness, &ldquo;when I remark that
+ you are following us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his characteristic
+ impulse to apologise. He wanted to annoy the other man in brown, and a
+ sentence that had come into his head in a previous rehearsal cropped up
+ appropriately. &ldquo;Since when,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath, yet
+ bringing the question out valiantly, nevertheless,&mdash;&ldquo;since when 'ave
+ you purchased the county of Sussex?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I point out,&rdquo; said the other man in brown, &ldquo;that I object&mdash;we
+ object not only to your proximity to us. To be frank&mdash;you appear to
+ be following us&mdash;with an object.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can always,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;turn round if you don't like it,
+ and go back the way you came.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh-o!&rdquo; said the other man in brown. &ldquo;THAT'S it! I thought as much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily to the
+ unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said the other man. &ldquo;I see. I half suspected&mdash;&rdquo; His manner
+ changed abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;a word
+ with you. You will, I hope, give me ten minutes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the other man
+ take him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated. Then he thought of
+ an admirable phrase. &ldquo;You 'ave some communication&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We'll call it a communication,&rdquo; said the other man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can spare you the ten minutes,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This way, then,&rdquo; said the other man in brown, and they walked slowly down
+ the North Street towards the Grammar School. There was, perhaps, thirty
+ seconds' silence. The other man stroked his moustache nervously. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver's dramatic instincts were now fully awake. He did not quite
+ understand in what role he was cast, but it was evidently something dark
+ and mysterious. Doctor Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and Alexander Dumas were
+ well within Mr. Hoopdriver's range of reading, and he had not read them
+ for nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will be perfectly frank with you,&rdquo; said the other man in brown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Frankness is always the best course,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, then&mdash;who the devil set you on this business?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Set me ON this business?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't pretend to be stupid. Who's your employer? Who engaged you for this
+ job?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. &ldquo;No&mdash;I can't say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite sure?&rdquo; The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at his hand,
+ and Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a yellow milled edge
+ glittering in the twilight. Now your shop assistant is just above the
+ tip-receiving class, and only just above it&mdash;so that he is acutely
+ sensitive on the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met those of
+ the other man in brown. &ldquo;Stow it!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, stopping and
+ facing the tempter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What!&rdquo; said the other man in brown, surprised. &ldquo;Eigh?&rdquo; And so saying he
+ stowed it in his breeches pocket.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;D'yer think I'm to be bribed?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose imagination was
+ rapidly expanding the situation. &ldquo;By Gosh! I'd follow you now&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear sir,&rdquo; said the other man in brown, &ldquo;I beg your pardon. I
+ misunderstood you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In your
+ profession&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What have you got to say against my profession?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior description&mdash;watchers.
+ The whole class. Private Inquiry&mdash;I did not realise&mdash;I really
+ trust you will overlook what was, after all&mdash;you must admit&mdash;a
+ natural indiscretion. Men of honour are not so common in the world&mdash;in
+ any profession.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not light the
+ lamps in the summer time, or the one they were passing had betrayed him.
+ As it was, he had to snatch suddenly at his moustache and tug fiercely at
+ it, to conceal the furious tumult of exultation, the passion of laughter,
+ that came boiling up. Detective! Even in the shadow Bechamel saw that a
+ laugh was stifled, but he put it down to the fact that the phrase &ldquo;men of
+ honour&rdquo; amused his interlocutor. &ldquo;He'll come round yet,&rdquo; said Bechamel to
+ himself. &ldquo;He's simply holding out for a fiver.&rdquo; He coughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you? I do.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prompt,&rdquo; said Bechamel, appreciatively. &ldquo;Now here's the thing I want to
+ put to you&mdash;the kernel of the whole business. You need not answer if
+ you don't want to. There's no harm done in my telling you what I want to
+ know. Are you employed to watch me&mdash;or Miss Milton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not the leaky sort,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret he did
+ not know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her name. Perhaps
+ he'd tell some more. &ldquo;It's no good pumping. Is that all you're after?&rdquo;
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to catch a
+ remark by throwing out a confidence. &ldquo;I take it there are two people
+ concerned in watching this affair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who's the other?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling with
+ enormous internal tension his self-appreciation. &ldquo;Who's the other?&rdquo; was
+ really brilliant, he thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's my wife and HER stepmother.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you want to know which it is?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Bechamel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;arst 'em!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the
+ better of him, and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. &ldquo;Arst 'em
+ both.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. &ldquo;I'd give a
+ five-pound note to know just the precise state of affairs,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I told you to stow that,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening tone. And
+ added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery, &ldquo;You don't quite
+ understand who you're dealing with. But you will!&rdquo; He spoke with such
+ conviction that he half believed that that defective office of his in
+ London&mdash;Baker Street, in fact&mdash;really existed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the Angel,
+ perturbed. &ldquo;Hang detectives!&rdquo; It wasn't the kind of thing he had
+ anticipated at all. Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a wondering smile,
+ walked down to where the mill waters glittered in the moonlight, and after
+ meditating over the parapet of the bridge for a space, with occasional
+ murmurs of, &ldquo;Private Inquiry&rdquo; and the like, returned, with mystery even in
+ his paces, towards the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XVIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low
+ whistling noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot the tears
+ of the Young Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!&mdash;and a real one. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver as a Private Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock Holmes in fact, keeping
+ these two people 'under observation.' He walked slowly back from the
+ bridge until he was opposite the Angel, and stood for ten minutes,
+ perhaps, contemplating that establishment and enjoying all the strange
+ sensations of being this wonderful, this mysterious and terrible thing.
+ Everything fell into place in his scheme. He had, of course, by a kind of
+ instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist, picked up the first old crock
+ he came across as a means of pursuit. 'No expense was to be spared.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was
+ observing. &ldquo;My wife&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;HER stepmother!&rdquo; Then he remembered her
+ swimming eyes. Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him, washed
+ away the detective superstructure, and left him plain Mr. Hoopdriver. This
+ man in brown, with his confident manner, and his proffered half sovereign
+ (damn him!) was up to no good, else why should he object to being watched?
+ He was married! She was not his sister. He began to understand. A horrible
+ suspicion of the state of affairs came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head. Surely
+ it had not come to THAT. He was a detective!&mdash;he would find out. How
+ was it to be done? He began to submit sketches on approval to himself. It
+ required an effort before he could walk into the Angel bar. &ldquo;A lemonade
+ and bitter, please,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He cleared his throat. &ldquo;Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, a gentleman and a young lady&mdash;on bicycles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fairly young&mdash;a married couple.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions. &ldquo;There's
+ no married couples stopping here. But there's a Mr. and Miss BEAUMONT.&rdquo;
+ She spelt it for precision. &ldquo;Sure you've got the name right, young man?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of&mdash;What was the name you
+ gave?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bowlong,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, there ain't no Bowlong,&rdquo; said the barmaid, taking up a glasscloth and
+ a drying tumbler and beginning to polish the latter. &ldquo;First off, I thought
+ you might be asking for Beaumont&mdash;the names being similar. Were you
+ expecting them on bicycles?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;they said they MIGHT be in Midhurst tonight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;P'raps they'll come presently. Beaumont's here, but no Bowlong. Sure that
+ Beaumont ain't the name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certain,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's curious the names being so alike. I thought p'raps&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to find his
+ horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having listened awhile at the
+ staircase volunteered some particulars of the young couple upstairs. Her
+ modesty was much impressed by the young lady's costume, so she intimated,
+ and Mr. Hoopdriver whispered the badinage natural to the occasion, at
+ which she was coquettishly shocked. &ldquo;There'll be no knowing which is
+ which, in a year or two,&rdquo; said the barmaid. &ldquo;And her manner too! She got
+ off her machine and give it 'im to stick up against the kerb, and in she
+ marched. 'I and my brother,' says she, 'want to stop here to-night. My
+ brother doesn't mind what kind of room 'e 'as, but I want a room with a
+ good view, if there's one to be got,' says she. He comes hurrying in after
+ and looks at her. 'I've settled the rooms,' she says, and 'e says 'damn!'
+ just like that. I can fancy my brother letting me boss the show like
+ that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I dessay you do,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;if the truth was known.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the tumbler,
+ polished, and took up another that had been draining, and shook the drops
+ of water into her little zinc sink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She'll be a nice little lot to marry,&rdquo; said the barmaid. &ldquo;She'll be
+ wearing the&mdash;well, b-dashes, as the sayin' is. I can't think what
+ girls is comin' to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to Hoopdriver's
+ taste.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fashion,&rdquo; said he, taking up his change. &ldquo;Fashion is all the go with you
+ ladies&mdash;and always was. You'll be wearing 'em yourself before a
+ couple of years is out.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nice they'd look on my figger,&rdquo; said the barmaid, with a titter. &ldquo;No&mdash;I
+ ain't one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I shouldn't feel as if
+ I'd anything on me, not more than if I'd forgot&mdash;Well, there! I'm
+ talking.&rdquo; She put down the glass abruptly. &ldquo;I dessay I'm old fashioned,&rdquo;
+ she said, and walked humming down the bar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not you,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her eye, then
+ with his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and wished her good
+ evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0019" id="link2H_4_0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the lead-framed
+ windows where he had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made,
+ sat down on the box under the window, stared at the moon rising on the
+ shining vicarage roof, and tried to collect his thoughts. How they whirled
+ at first! It was past ten, and most of Midhurst was tucked away in bed,
+ some one up the street was learning the violin, at rare intervals a
+ belated inhabitant hurried home and woke the echoes, and a corncrake kept
+ up a busy churning in the vicarage garden. The sky was deep blue, with a
+ still luminous afterglow along the black edge of the hill, and the white
+ moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars, had the sky to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not relationships. There
+ was this malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr. Hoopdriver
+ to take a hand in the game. HE was married. Did she know he was married?
+ Never for a moment did a thought of evil concerning her cross Hoopdriver's
+ mind. Simple-minded people see questions of morals so much better than
+ superior persons&mdash;who have read and thought themselves complex to
+ impotence. He had heard her voice, seen the frank light in her eyes, and
+ she had been weeping&mdash;that sufficed. The rights of the case he hadn't
+ properly grasped. But he would. And that smirking&mdash;well, swine was
+ the mildest for him. He recalled the exceedingly unpleasant incident of
+ the railway bridge. &ldquo;Thin we won't detain yer, thenks,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange, unnatural, contemptible voice, supposed
+ to represent that of Bechamel. &ldquo;Oh, the BEGGAR! I'll be level with him
+ yet. He's afraid of us detectives&mdash;that I'll SWEAR.&rdquo; (If Mrs. Wardor
+ should chance to be on the other side of the door within earshot, well and
+ good.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical
+ impossibilities for the most part,&mdash;Bechamel staggering headlong from
+ the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver's large, but, to tell the truth, ill
+ supported fist, Bechamel's five feet nine of height lifted from the ground
+ and quivering under a vigorously applied horsewhip. So pleasant was such
+ dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver's peaked face under the moonlight was
+ transfigured. One might have paired him with that well-known and
+ universally admired triumph, 'The Soul's Awakening,' so sweet was his
+ ecstasy. And presently with his thirst for revenge glutted by six or seven
+ violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous murders, his mind came round to
+ the Young Lady in Grey again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid at the
+ Angel had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a torrent, smoothed
+ down to a mirror in which she was reflected with infinite clearness and
+ detail. He'd never met anything like her before. Fancy that bolster of a
+ barmaid being dressed in that way! He whuffed a contemptuous laugh. He
+ compared her colour, her vigour, her voice, with the Young Ladies in
+ Business with whom his lot had been cast. Even in tears she was beautiful,
+ more beautiful indeed to him, for it made her seem softer and weaker, more
+ accessible. And such weeping as he had seen before had been so much a
+ matter of damp white faces, red noses, and hair coming out of curl. Your
+ draper's assistant becomes something of a judge of weeping, because
+ weeping is the custom of all Young Ladies in Business, when for any reason
+ their services are dispensed with. She could weep&mdash;and (by Gosh!) she
+ could smile. HE knew that, and reverting to acting abruptly, he smiled
+ confidentially at the puckered pallor of the moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver's pensiveness lasted. It
+ seemed a long time before his thoughts of action returned. Then he
+ remembered he was a 'watcher'; that to-morrow he must be busy. It would be
+ in character to make notes, and he pulled out his little note-book. With
+ that in hand he fell a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her the 'tecks
+ were after them? If so, would she be as anxious to get away as HE was? He
+ must be on the alert. If possible he must speak to her. Just a significant
+ word, &ldquo;Your friend&mdash;trust me!&rdquo;&mdash;It occurred to him that
+ to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to escape. At that he thought
+ of the time and found it was half-past eleven. &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I must
+ see that I wake.&rdquo; He yawned and rose. The blind was up, and he pulled back
+ the little chintz curtains to let the sunlight strike across to the bed,
+ hung his watch within good view of his pillow, on a nail that supported a
+ kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to undress. He lay awake for a
+ little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities of the morrow, and
+ thence he passed gloriously into the wonderland of dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XX. THE PURSUIT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant, active,
+ wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window stuck open, ears
+ alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the corner panes, in oblique
+ glances at the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor wanted him to have his breakfast
+ downstairs in her kitchen, but that would have meant abandoning the watch,
+ and he held out strongly. The bicycle, cap-a-pie, occupied, under protest,
+ a strategic position in the shop. He was expectant by six in the morning.
+ By nine horrible fears oppressed him that his quest had escaped him, and
+ he had to reconnoitre the Angel yard in order to satisfy himself. There he
+ found the ostler (How are the mighty fallen in these decadent days!)
+ brushing down the bicycles of the chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs.
+ Wardor's premises. And about ten they emerged, and rode quietly up the
+ North Street. He watched them until they turned the corner of the post
+ office, and then out into the road and up after them in fine style! They
+ went by the engine-house where the old stocks and the whipping posts are,
+ and on to the Chichester road, and he followed gallantly. So this great
+ chase began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight, getting down
+ if he chanced to draw closely upon them round a corner. By riding
+ vigorously he kept quite conveniently near them, for they made but little
+ hurry. He grew hot indeed, and his knees were a little stiff to begin
+ with, but that was all. There was little danger of losing them, for a thin
+ chalky dust lay upon the road, and the track of her tire was milled like a
+ shilling, and his was a chequered ribbon along the way. So they rode by
+ Cobden's monument and through the prettiest of villages, until at last the
+ downs rose steeply ahead. There they stopped awhile at the only inn in the
+ place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up a position which commanded the inn door,
+ and mopped his face and thirsted and smoked a Red Herring cigarette. They
+ remained in the inn for some time. A number of chubby innocents returning
+ home from school, stopped and formed a line in front of him, and watched
+ him quietly but firmly for the space of ten minutes or so. &ldquo;Go away,&rdquo; said
+ he, and they only seemed quietly interested. He asked them all their names
+ then, and they answered indistinct murmurs. He gave it up at last and
+ became passive on his gate, and so at length they tired of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr. Hoopdriver
+ at the thought of their possible employment hungered as well as thirsted.
+ Clearly, they were lunching. It was a cloudless day, and the sun at the
+ meridian beat down upon the top of Mr. Hoopdriver's head, a shower bath of
+ sunshine, a huge jet of hot light. It made his head swim. At last they
+ emerged, and the other man in brown looked back and saw him. They rode on
+ to the foot of the down, and dismounting began to push tediously up that
+ long nearly vertical ascent of blinding white road, Mr. Hoopdriver
+ hesitated. It might take them twenty minutes to mount that. Beyond was
+ empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided to return to the inn and
+ snatch a hasty meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading pewter
+ measure of sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in the throat, but
+ leaden in the legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a man of substance as he
+ emerged in the blinding sunshine, but even by the foot of the down the sun
+ was insisting again that his skull was too small for his brains. The hill
+ had gone steeper, the chalky road blazed like a magnesium light, and his
+ front wheel began an apparently incurable squeaking. He felt as a man from
+ Mars would feel if he were suddenly transferred to this planet, about
+ three times as heavy as he was wont to feel. The two little black figures
+ had vanished over the forehead of the hill. &ldquo;The tracks'll be all right,&rdquo;
+ said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow progress up
+ the hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf beside the road, to
+ contemplate the Weald from the south. In a matter of two days he had
+ crossed that spacious valley, with its frozen surge of green hills, its
+ little villages and townships here and there, its copses and cornfields,
+ its ponds and streams like jewelery of diamonds and silver glittering in
+ the sun. The North Downs were hidden, far away beyond the Wealden Heights.
+ Down below was the little village of Cocking, and half-way up the hill, a
+ mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of sheep grazing together.
+ Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue, and every now and
+ then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat was tempered by a pleasant
+ breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed by unreasonable contentment; he lit
+ himself a cigarette and lounged more comfortably. Surely the Sussex ale is
+ made of the waters of Lethe, of poppies and pleasant dreams. Drowsiness
+ coiled insidiously about him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on the turf
+ with his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes, and realised that
+ he had slept. His head was still a trifle heavy. And the chase? He jumped
+ to his feet and stooped to pick up his overturned machine. He whipped out
+ his watch and saw that it was past two o'clock. &ldquo;Lord love us, fancy that!&mdash;But
+ the tracks'll be all right,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, wheeling his machine
+ back to the chalky road. &ldquo;I must scorch till I overtake them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering lassitude
+ permitted. Now and then he had to dismount to examine the surface where
+ the road forked. He enjoyed that rather. &ldquo;Trackin',&rdquo; he said aloud, and
+ decided in the privacy of his own mind that he had a wonderful instinct
+ for 'spoor.' So he came past Goodwood station and Lavant, and approached
+ Chichester towards four o'clock. And then came a terrible thing. In places
+ the road became hard, in places were the crowded indentations of a recent
+ flock of sheep, and at last in the throat of the town cobbles and the
+ stony streets branching east, west, north, and south, at a stone cross
+ under the shadow of the cathedral the tracks vanished. &ldquo;O Cricky!&rdquo; said
+ Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in dismay and standing agape. &ldquo;Dropped
+ anything?&rdquo; said an inhabitant at the kerb. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+ &ldquo;I've lost the spoor,&rdquo; and walked upon his way, leaving the inhabitant
+ marvelling what part of a bicycle a spoor might be. Mr. Hoopdriver,
+ abandoning tracking, began asking people if they had seen a Young Lady in
+ Grey on a bicycle. Six casual people hadn't, and he began to feel the
+ inquiry was conspicuous, and desisted. But what was to be done?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first gnawings of a
+ monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some tea and meat, and in the
+ Royal George he meditated over the business in a melancholy frame enough.
+ They had passed out of his world&mdash;vanished, and all his wonderful
+ dreams of some vague, crucial interference collapsed like a castle of
+ cards. What a fool he had been not to stick to them like a leech! He might
+ have thought! But there!&mdash;what WAS the good of that sort of thing
+ now? He thought of her tears, of her helplessness, of the bearing of the
+ other man in brown, and his wrath and disappointment surged higher. &ldquo;What
+ CAN I do?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, bringing his fist down beside the
+ teapot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there might be
+ such things as clues in the world, albeit the age of miracles was past.
+ But to look for a clue in this intricate network of cobbled streets, to
+ examine every muddy interstice! There was a chance by looking about and
+ inquiry at the various inns. Upon that he began. But of course they might
+ have ridden straight through and scarcely a soul have marked them. And
+ then came a positively brilliant idea. &ldquo;'Ow many ways are there out of
+ Chichester?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was really equal to Sherlock Holmes&mdash;that.
+ &ldquo;If they've made tracks, I shall find those tracks. If not&mdash;they're
+ in the town.&rdquo; He was then in East Street, and he started at once to make
+ the circuit of the place, discovering incidentally that Chichester is a
+ walled city. In passing, he made inquiries at the Black Swan, the Crown,
+ and the Red Lion Hotel. At six o'clock in the evening, he was walking
+ downcast, intent, as one who had dropped money, along the road towards
+ Bognor, kicking up the dust with his shoes and fretting with disappointed
+ pugnacity. A thwarted, crestfallen Hoopdriver it was, as you may well
+ imagine. And then suddenly there jumped upon his attention&mdash;a broad
+ line ribbed like a shilling, and close beside it one chequered, that ever
+ and again split into two. &ldquo;Found!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver and swung round on
+ his heel at once, and back to the Royal George, helter skelter, for the
+ bicycle they were minding for him. The ostler thought he was confoundedly
+ imperious, considering his machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXI. AT BOGNOR
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a crisis. He
+ had started upon this elopement in a vein of fine romance, immensely proud
+ of his wickedness, and really as much in love as an artificial oversoul
+ can be, with Jessie. But either she was the profoundest of coquettes or
+ she had not the slightest element of Passion (with a large P) in her
+ composition. It warred with all his ideas of himself and the feminine mind
+ to think that under their flattering circumstances she really could be so
+ vitally deficient. He found her persistent coolness, her more or less
+ evident contempt for himself, exasperating in the highest degree. He put
+ it to himself that she was enough to provoke a saint, and tried to think
+ that was piquant and enjoyable, but the blisters on his vanity asserted
+ themselves. The fact is, he was, under this standing irritation, getting
+ down to the natural man in himself for once, and the natural man in
+ himself, in spite of Oxford and the junior Reviewers' Club, was a
+ Palaeolithic creature of simple tastes and violent methods. &ldquo;I'll be level
+ with you yet,&rdquo; ran like a plough through the soil of his thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his wife he was
+ going to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied she was reconciled,
+ but how she would take this exploit was entirely problematical. She was a
+ woman of peculiar moral views, and she measured marital infidelity largely
+ by its proximity to herself. Out of her sight, and more particularly out
+ of the sight of the other women of her set, vice of the recognised
+ description was, perhaps, permissible to those contemptible weaklings,
+ men, but this was Evil on the High Roads. She was bound to make a fuss,
+ and these fusses invariably took the final form of a tightness of money
+ for Bechamel. Albeit, and he felt it was heroic of him to resolve so, it
+ was worth doing if it was to be done. His imagination worked on a kind of
+ matronly Valkyrie, and the noise of pursuit and vengeance was in the air.
+ The idyll still had the front of the stage. That accursed detective, it
+ seemed, had been thrown off the scent, and that, at any rate, gave a
+ night's respite. But things must be brought to an issue forthwith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By eight o'clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the Vicuna
+ Hotel, Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed and angry in the
+ face and with her heart sinking, faced him again for her last struggle
+ with him. He had tricked her this time, effectually, and luck had been on
+ his side. She was booked as Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her refusal to enter
+ their room, and her eccentricity of eating with unwashed hands, she had so
+ far kept up the appearances of things before the waiter. But the dinner
+ was grim enough. Now in turn she appealed to his better nature and made
+ extravagant statements of her plans to fool him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered through his
+ pose of brilliant wickedness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go to the station,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I will go back&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will appeal to the police&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't know them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will tell these hotel people.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They will turn you out of doors. You're in such a thoroughly false
+ position now. They don't understand unconventionality, down here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stamped her foot. &ldquo;If I wander about the streets all night&mdash;&rdquo; she
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what the
+ streets of a charming little holiday resort are like&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't care,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I can go to the clergyman here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike than you
+ think. And anyhow&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How CAN you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The mischief is
+ done, Jessie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You CUR,&rdquo; she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He thought
+ she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone from her face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I love you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love!&rdquo; said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes&mdash;love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There are ways yet,&rdquo; she said, after a pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is it?&mdash;not
+ the dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don't you think of it. You'll
+ only shirk it when the moment comes, and turn it all into comedy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across the parade
+ at the shining sea over which the afterglow of day fled before the rising
+ moon. He maintained his attitude. The blinds were still up, for she had
+ told the waiter not to draw them. There was silence for some moments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon. &ldquo;Take it
+ sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in common, quarrel into
+ melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all that is bright and desirable to
+ me. I am stronger than you, older; man to your woman. To find YOU too&mdash;conventional!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge of
+ delight how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MAN!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Man to MY woman! Do MEN lie? Would a MAN use his five
+ and thirty years' experience to outwit a girl of seventeen? Man to my
+ woman indeed! That surely is the last insult!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do, though&mdash;all
+ that and more also when their hearts were set on such a girl as yourself.
+ For God's sake drop this shrewishness! Why should you be so&mdash;difficult
+ to me? Here am I with MY reputation, MY career, at your feet. Look here,
+ Jessie&mdash;on my honour, I will marry you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid,&rdquo; she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had a wife,
+ even then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in the flash of her
+ retort, that she did not know he was married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement,&rdquo; he said, following that hint.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He paused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must be sensible. The thing's your own doing. Come out on the beach
+ now the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon be high.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> WON'T&rdquo; she said, stamping her foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh! leave me alone. Let me think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;if you want to. It's your cry always. But you can't
+ save yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can't save yourself in any
+ way now. If saving it is&mdash;this parsimony&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, go&mdash;go.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of you,
+ dear.... But do you think I should do all this if I did not care?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go,&rdquo; she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to stare out of
+ the window. He stood looking at her for a moment, with a strange light in
+ his eyes. He made a step towards her. &ldquo;I HAVE you,&rdquo;, he said. &ldquo;You are
+ mine. Netted&mdash;caught. But mine.&rdquo; He would have gone up to her and
+ laid his hand upon her, but he did not dare to do that yet. &ldquo;I have you in
+ my hand,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;in my power. Do you hear&mdash;POWER!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and then, with
+ a superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the door. Surely the
+ instinctive abasement of her sex before Strength was upon his side. He
+ told himself that his battle was won. She heard the handle move and the
+ catch click as the door closed behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0022" id="link2H_4_0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks hot, his
+ eye bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous, obsequious Hoopdriver,
+ to whom I introduced you some days since, has undergone a wonderful
+ change. Ever since he lost that 'spoor' in Chichester, he has been
+ tormented by the most horrible visions of the shameful insults that may be
+ happening. The strangeness of new surroundings has been working to strip
+ off the habitual servile from him. Here was moonlight rising over the
+ memory of a red sunset, dark shadows and glowing orange lamps, beauty
+ somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong in a brown suit
+ and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver for the time, was in
+ the world of Romance and Knight-errantry, divinely forgetful of his social
+ position or hers; forgetting, too, for the time any of the wretched
+ timidities that had tied him long since behind the counter in his proper
+ place. He was angry and adventurous. It was all about him, this vivid
+ drama he had fallen into, and it was eluding him. He was far too grimly in
+ earnest to pick up that lost thread and make a play of it now. The man was
+ living. He did not pose when he alighted at the coffee tavern even, nor
+ when he made his hasty meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade, Hoopdriver,
+ disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the corner from the
+ Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his heart jumped, and the
+ tension of his angry suspense exploded into, rather than gave place to, an
+ excited activity of mind. They were at the Vicuna, and she was there now
+ alone. It was the occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no chance
+ against him. He went back round the corner, sat down on the seat, and
+ watched Bechamel recede into the dimness up the esplanade, before he got
+ up and walked into the hotel entrance. &ldquo;A lady cyclist in grey,&rdquo; he asked
+ for, and followed boldly on the waiter's heels. The door of the
+ dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm. And then suddenly he was
+ nearly minded to turn and run for it, and his features seemed to him to be
+ convulsed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between terror
+ and hope in her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I&mdash;have a few words&mdash;with you, alone?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+ controlling his breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then motioned
+ the waiter to withdraw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out into the
+ middle of the room, fold his arms and say, &ldquo;You are in trouble. I am a
+ Friend. Trust me.&rdquo; Instead of which he stood panting and then spoke with
+ sudden familiarity, hastily, guiltily: &ldquo;Look here. I don't know what the
+ juice is up, but I think there's something wrong. Excuse my intruding&mdash;if
+ it isn't so. I'll do anything you like to help you out of the scrape&mdash;if
+ you're in one. That's my meaning, I believe. What can I do? I would do
+ anything to help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite emotion, this
+ remarkable speech. &ldquo;YOU!&rdquo; she said. She was tumultuously weighing
+ possibilities in her mind, and he had scarcely ceased when she had made
+ her resolve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stepped a pace forward. &ldquo;You are a gentleman,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I trust you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not wait for his assurance. &ldquo;I must leave this hotel at once. Come
+ here.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took his arm and led him to the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are our
+ bicycles. Go down, get them out, and I will come down to you. Dare you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Get your bicycle out in the road?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one minute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill Bechamel
+ he would have done it. His head was a maelstrom now. He walked out of the
+ hotel, along the front, and into the big, black-shadowed coach yard. He
+ looked round. There were no bicycles visible. Then a man emerged from the
+ dark, a short man in a short, black, shiny jacket. Hoopdriver was caught.
+ He made no attempt to turn and run for it. &ldquo;I've been giving your machines
+ a wipe over, sir,&rdquo; said the man, recognising the suit, and touching his
+ cap. Hoopdriver's intelligence now was a soaring eagle; he swooped on the
+ situation at once. &ldquo;That's right,&rdquo; he said, and added, before the pause
+ became marked, &ldquo;Where is mine? I want to look at the chain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a lantern.
+ Hoopdriver moved the lady's machine out of his way to the door, and then
+ laid hands on the man's machine and wheeled it out of the shed into the
+ yard. The gate stood open and beyond was the pale road and a clump of
+ trees black in the twilight. He stooped and examined the chain with
+ trembling fingers. How was it to be done? Something behind the gate seemed
+ to flutter. The man must be got rid of anyhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, &ldquo;can you get me a
+ screwdriver?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and came up
+ to the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his hand. Hoopdriver felt
+ himself a lost man. He took the screwdriver with a tepid &ldquo;Thanks,&rdquo; and
+ incontinently had another inspiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; he said again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is miles too big.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it down on
+ the ground. &ldquo;Want a smaller screwdriver?&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt ATICHEW. It is
+ the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. &ldquo;As small as you
+ have,&rdquo; he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ain't got none smaller than that,&rdquo; said the ostler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Won't do, really,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll see wot they got in the 'ouse, if you like, sir,&rdquo; said the man. &ldquo;If
+ you would,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver. And as the man's heavily nailed boots went
+ clattering down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up, took a noiseless step to
+ the lady's machine, laid trembling hands on its handle and saddle, and
+ prepared for a rush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm, yellow light
+ up the road, shut again behind the man, and forthwith Hoopdriver rushed
+ the machines towards the gate. A dark grey form came fluttering to meet
+ him. &ldquo;Give me this,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and bring yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran back,
+ seized Bechamel's machine, and followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the cobbles
+ again. It was too late now to do anything but escape. He heard the ostler
+ shout behind him, and came into the road. She was up and dim already. He
+ got into the saddle without a blunder. In a moment the ostler was in the
+ gateway with a full-throated &ldquo;HI! sir! That ain't allowed;&rdquo; and Hoopdriver
+ was overtaking the Young Lady in Grey. For some moments the earth seemed
+ alive with shouts of, &ldquo;Stop 'em!&rdquo; and the shadows with ambuscades of
+ police. The road swept round, and they were riding out of sight of the
+ hotel, and behind dark hedges, side by side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. &ldquo;Brave,&rdquo; she said,
+ &ldquo;brave!&rdquo; and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He looked over his
+ shoulder and about him, and saw that they were already out of Bognor&mdash;for
+ the Vicuna stands at the very westernmost extremity of the sea front&mdash;and
+ riding on a fair wide road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0023" id="link2H_4_0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIII.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road vociferating
+ after them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna Hotel, and finding a
+ group of men outside the entrance, who wanted to know what was UP, stopped
+ to give them the cream of the adventure. That gave the fugitives five
+ minutes. Then pushing breathlessly into the bar, he had to make it clear
+ to the barmaid what the matter was, and the 'gov'nor' being out, they
+ spent some more precious time wondering 'what&mdash;EVER' was to be done!
+ in which the two customers returning from outside joined with animation.
+ There were also moral remarks and other irrelevant contributions. There
+ were conflicting ideas of telling the police and pursuing the flying
+ couple on a horse. That made ten minutes. Then Stephen, the waiter, who
+ had shown Hoopdriver up, came down and lit wonderful lights and started
+ quite a fresh discussion by the simple question &ldquo;WHICH?&rdquo; That turned ten
+ minutes into a quarter of an hour. And in the midst of this discussion,
+ making a sudden and awestricken silence, appeared Bechamel in the hall
+ beyond the bar, walked with a resolute air to the foot of the staircase,
+ and passed out of sight. You conceive the backward pitch of that
+ exceptionally shaped cranium? Incredulous eyes stared into one another's
+ in the bar, as his paces, muffled by the stair carpet, went up to the
+ landing, turned, reached the passage and walked into the dining-room
+ overhead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It wasn't that one at all, miss,&rdquo; said the ostler, &ldquo;I'd SWEAR&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, that's Mr. Beaumont,&rdquo; said the barmaid, &ldquo;&mdash;anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by Bechamel. They
+ listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went out of the diningroom.
+ Down the passage to the bedroom. Stopped again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor chap!&rdquo; said the barmaid. &ldquo;She's a wicked woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sssh!&rdquo; said Stephen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a chair
+ creak under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going up,&rdquo; said Stephen, &ldquo;to break the melancholy news to him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without knocking, Stephen
+ entered. Bechamel's face suggested a different expectation. &ldquo;Beg pardon,
+ sir,&rdquo; said Stephen, with a diplomatic cough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some of her
+ threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had it ready. She was
+ a monomaniac. &ldquo;Leave me alone with her,&rdquo; he would say; &ldquo;I know how to calm
+ her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Beaumont,&rdquo; said Stephen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;WELL?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has gone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose with a fine surprise. &ldquo;Gone!&rdquo; he said with a half laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gone, sir. On her bicycle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On her bicycle! Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She went, sir, with Another Gentleman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time Bechamel was really startled. &ldquo;An&mdash;other Gentlemen! WHO?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got out the two
+ bicycles, sir, and went off, sir&mdash;about twenty minutes ago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips. Stephen,
+ watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether this abandoned
+ husband would weep or curse, or rush off at once in furious pursuit. But
+ as yet he seemed merely stunned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brown clothes?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And fairish?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A little like yourself, sir&mdash;in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim Duke&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said&mdash;But let
+ us put in blank cartridge&mdash;he said, &ldquo;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I might have thought!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He flung himself into the armchair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Damn her,&rdquo; said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man. &ldquo;I'll
+ chuck this infernal business! They've gone, eigh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yessir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, let 'em GO,&rdquo; said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. &ldquo;Let 'em GO.
+ Who cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon as fast as you
+ can, there's a good chap. I'll take that, and then I'll have another look
+ round Bognor before I turn in.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen was too surprised to say anything but &ldquo;Bourbon, sir?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; said Bechamel. &ldquo;Damn you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stephen's sympathies changed at once. &ldquo;Yessir,&rdquo; he murmured, fumbling for
+ the door handle, and left the room, marvelling. Bechamel, having in this
+ way satisfied his sense of appearances, and comported himself as a Pagan
+ should, so soon as the waiter's footsteps had passed, vented the cream of
+ his feelings in a stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his wife or HER
+ stepmother had sent the detective, SHE had evidently gone off with him,
+ and that little business was over. And he was here, stranded and sold, an
+ ass, and as it were, the son of many generations of asses. And his only
+ ray of hope was that it seemed more probable, after all, that the girl had
+ escaped through her stepmother. In which case the business might be hushed
+ up yet, and the evil hour of explanation with his wife indefinitely
+ postponed. Then abruptly the image of that lithe figure in grey
+ knickerbockers went frisking across his mind again, and he reverted to his
+ blasphemies. He started up in a gusty frenzy with a vague idea of pursuit,
+ and incontinently sat down again with a concussion that stirred the bar
+ below to its depths. He banged the arms of the chair with his fist, and
+ swore again. &ldquo;Of all the accursed fools that were ever spawned,&rdquo; he was
+ chanting, &ldquo;I, Bechamel&mdash;&rdquo; when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening
+ of the door, Stephen entered with the Bourbon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0024" id="link2H_4_0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And so the twenty minutes' law passed into an infinity. We leave the
+ wicked Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a garment,&mdash;the
+ wretched creature has already sufficiently sullied our modest but truthful
+ pages,&mdash;we leave the eager little group in the bar of the Vicuna
+ Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we have left all Chichester and Midhurst and
+ Haslemere and Guildford and Ripley and Putney, and follow this dear fool
+ of a Hoopdriver of ours and his Young Lady in Grey out upon the moonlight
+ road. How they rode! How their hearts beat together and their breath came
+ fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and every noise pursuit! For
+ all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the world of Romance. Had a
+ policeman intervened because their lamps were not lit, Hoopdriver had cut
+ him down and ridden on, after the fashion of a hero born. Had Bechamel
+ arisen in the way with rapiers for a duel, Hoopdriver had fought as one to
+ whom Agincourt was a reality and drapery a dream. It was Rescue,
+ Elopement, Glory! And she by the side of him! He had seen her face in
+ shadow, with the morning sunlight tangled in her hair, he had seen her
+ sympathetic with that warm light in her face, he had seen her troubled and
+ her eyes bright with tears. But what light is there lighting a face like
+ hers, to compare with the soft glamour of the midsummer moon?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of Bognor, in
+ one place dark and heavy under a thick growth of trees, then amidst villas
+ again, some warm and lamplit, some white and sleeping in the moonlight;
+ then between hedges, over which they saw broad wan meadows shrouded in a
+ low-lying mist. They scarcely heeded whither they rode at first, being
+ only anxious to get away, turning once westward when the spire of
+ Chichester cathedral rose suddenly near them out of the dewy night, pale
+ and intricate and high. They rode, speaking little, just a rare word now
+ and then, at a turning, at a footfall, at a roughness in the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to him, but
+ after the first tumult of the adventure, as flight passed into mere steady
+ ridin@@ his mind became an enormous appreciation of the position. The
+ night was a warm white silence save for the subtile running of their
+ chains. He looked sideways at her as she sat beside him with her ankles
+ gracefully ruling the treadles. Now the road turned westward, and she was
+ a dark grey outline against the shimmer of the moon; and now they faced
+ northwards, and the soft cold light passed caressingly over her hair and
+ touched her brow and cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is sweet and
+ beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has created the
+ fairies, whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises again in our hearts
+ at the sight of it, the voices of the filmy route, and their faint,
+ soul-piercing melodies. By the moonlight every man, dull clod though he be
+ by day, tastes something of Endymion, takes something of the youth and
+ strength of Enidymion, and sees the dear white goddess shining at him from
+ his Lady's eyes. The firm substantial daylight things become ghostly and
+ elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of unsubstantial texture, the world a
+ visible spirit, the spiritual within us rises out of its darkness, loses
+ something of its weight and body, and swims up towards heaven. This road
+ that was a mere rutted white dust, hot underfoot, blinding to the eye, is
+ now a soft grey silence, with the glitter of a crystal grain set starlike
+ in its silver here and there. Overhead, riding serenely through the
+ spacious blue, is the mother of the silence, she who has spiritualised the
+ world, alone save for two attendant steady shining stars. And in silence
+ under her benign influence, under the benediction of her light, rode our
+ two wanderers side by side through the transfigured and transfiguring
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr. Hoopdriver's
+ skull. At the turnings of the road he made his decisions with an air of
+ profound promptitude (and quite haphazard). &ldquo;The Right,&rdquo; he would say. Or
+ again &ldquo;The Left,&rdquo; as one who knew. So it was that in the space of an hour
+ they came abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea. Grey beach
+ to the right of them and to the left, and a little white cottage fast
+ asleep inland of a sleeping fishing-boat. &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+ sotto voce. They dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks and thorns rose out of
+ the haze of moonlight that was tangled in the hedge on either side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are safe,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an air and
+ bowing courtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;SAFE.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But WHERE?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chichester Harbour.&rdquo; He waved his arm seaward as though it was a goal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think they will follow us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We have turned and turned again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly there,
+ holding her machine, and he, holding his, could go no nearer to her to see
+ if she sobbed for weeping or for want of breath. &ldquo;What are we to do now?&rdquo;
+ her voice asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you tired?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do what has to be done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a space. &ldquo;Do you
+ know,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I am not afraid of you. I am sure you are honest to me.
+ And I do not even know your name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. &ldquo;It's an ugly
+ name,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But you are right in trusting me. I would&mdash;I would
+ do anything for you.... This is nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But compared with
+ Bechamel!&mdash;&ldquo;We take each other on trust,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Do you want to
+ know&mdash;how things are with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That man,&rdquo; she went on, after the assent of his listening silence,
+ &ldquo;promised to help and protect me. I was unhappy at home&mdash;never mind
+ why. A stepmother&mdash;Idle, unoccupied, hindered, cramped, that is
+ enough, perhaps. Then he came into my life, and talked to me of art and
+ literature, and set my brain on fire. I wanted to come out into the world,
+ to be a human being&mdash;not a thing in a hutch. And he&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now here I am&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will do anything,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She thought. &ldquo;You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not describe
+ her&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my power.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant.&rdquo; She spoke of Bechamel
+ as the Illusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm thinking,&rdquo; he said, full of a rapture of protective responsibility,
+ &ldquo;what we had best be doing. You are tired, you know. And we can't wander
+ all night&mdash;after the day we've had.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was Chichester we were near?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If,&rdquo; he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, &ldquo;you would make ME your
+ brother, MISS BEAUMONT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We could stop there together&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took a minute to answer. &ldquo;I am going to light these lamps,&rdquo; said
+ Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on his shoe. She
+ looked at his face in its light, grave and intent. How could she ever have
+ thought him common or absurd?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you must tell me your name&mdash;brother,&rdquo; she said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Er&mdash;Carrington,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause. Who
+ would be Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the Christian name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Christian name? MY Christian name. Well&mdash;Chris.&rdquo; He snapped his lamp
+ and stood up. &ldquo;If you will hold my machine, I will light yours,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment they
+ stood face to face. &ldquo;My name, brother Chris,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is Jessie.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested. &ldquo;JESSIE,&rdquo; he
+ repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face affected her strangely. She
+ had to speak. &ldquo;It's not such a very wonderful name, is it?&rdquo; she said, with
+ a laugh to break the intensity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing of his
+ features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the lantern in front of
+ her machine. She looked down at him, almost kneeling in front of her, with
+ an unreasonable approbation in her eyes. It was, as I have indicated, the
+ hour and season of the full moon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night's journey with the same
+ confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good luck and the fact
+ that most roads about a town converge thereupon, that Chichester was at
+ last attained. It seemed at first as though everyone had gone to bed, but
+ the Red Hotel still glowed yellow and warm. It was the first time
+ Hoopdriver bad dared the mysteries of a 'first-class' hotel.' But that
+ night he was in the mood to dare anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So you found your Young Lady at last,&rdquo; said the ostler of the Red Hotel;
+ for it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver had made inquiries
+ in the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite a misunderstanding,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, with splendid readiness. &ldquo;My
+ sister had gone to Bognor But I brought her back here. I've took a fancy
+ to this place. And the moonlight's simply dee-vine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We've had supper, thenks, and we're tired,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I
+ suppose you won't take anything,&mdash;Jessie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie like
+ that! But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself bound to admit.
+ &ldquo;Good-night, Sis,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and pleasant dreams. I'll just 'ave a look at
+ this paper before I turn in.&rdquo; But this was living indeed! he told himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very edge of the
+ Most Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you will remember, with a
+ vigil in a little sweetstuff shop next door to the Angel at Midhurst. But
+ to think of all the things that had happened since then! He caught himself
+ in the middle of a yawn, pulled out his watch, saw the time was halfpast
+ eleven, and marched off, with a fine sense of heroism, bedward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a break in
+ the narrative again. These absurd young people are safely tucked away now,
+ their heads full of glowing nonsense, indeed, but the course of events at
+ any rate is safe from any fresh developments through their activities for
+ the next eight hours or more. They are both sleeping healthily you will
+ perhaps be astonished to hear. Here is the girl&mdash;what girls are
+ coming to nowadays only Mrs. Lynn Linton can tell!&mdash;in company with
+ an absolute stranger, of low extraction and uncertain accent, unchaperoned
+ and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is safe, she is, if anything, a
+ little proud of her own share in these transactions. Then this Mr.
+ Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot that he is! is in illegal possession of
+ a stolen bicycle, a stolen young lady, and two stolen names, established
+ with them in an hotel that is quite beyond his means, and immensely proud
+ of himself in a somnolent way for these incomparable follies. There are
+ occasions when a moralising novelist can merely wring his hands and leave
+ matters to take their course. For all Hoopdriver knows or cares he may be
+ locked up the very first thing to-morrow morning for the rape of the
+ cycle. Then in Bognor, let alone that melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with
+ whom our dealings are, thank Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern
+ with a steak Mr. Hoopdriver ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his
+ American-cloth parcel in a bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of
+ guarantee, carefully locked up in the hayloft. To-morrow he will be a
+ Mystery, and they will be looking for his body along the sea front. And so
+ far we have never given a glance at the desolate home in Surbiton,
+ familiar to you no doubt through the medium of illustrated interviews,
+ where the unhappy stepmother&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to you. That is
+ a little surprise I have prepared for you. She is 'Thomas Plantagenet,'
+ the gifted authoress of that witty and daring book, &ldquo;A Soul Untrammelled,&rdquo;
+ and quite an excellent woman in her way,&mdash;only it is such a crooked
+ way. Her real name is Milton. She is a widow and a charming one, only ten
+ years older than Jessie, and she is always careful to dedicate her more
+ daring works to the 'sacred memory of my husband' to show that there's
+ nothing personal, you know, in the matter. Considering her literary
+ reputation (she was always speaking of herself as one I martyred for
+ truth,' because the critics advertised her written indecorums in column
+ long 'slates'),&mdash;considering her literary reputation, I say, she was
+ one of the most respectable women it is possible to imagine. She furnished
+ correctly, dressed correctly, had severe notions of whom she might meet,
+ went to church, and even at times took the sacrament in some esoteric
+ spirit. And Jessie she brought up so carefully that she never even let her
+ read &ldquo;A Soul Untrammelled.&rdquo; Which, therefore, naturally enough, Jessie
+ did, and went on from that to a feast of advanced literature. Mrs. Milton
+ not only brought up Jessie carefully, but very slowly, so that at
+ seventeen she was still a clever schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and
+ quite in the background of the little literary circle of unimportant
+ celebrities which 'Thomas Plantagenet' adorned. Mrs. Milton knew
+ Bechamel's reputation of being a dangerous man; but then bad men are not
+ bad women, and she let him come to her house to show she was not afraid&mdash;she
+ took no account of Jessie. When the elopement came, therefore, it was a
+ double disappointment to her, for she perceived his hand by a kind of
+ instinct. She did the correct thing. The correct thing, as you know, is to
+ take hansom cabs, regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not know
+ WHAT to do, round the circle of your confidential friends. She could not
+ have ridden nor wept more had Jessie been her own daughter&mdash;she
+ showed the properest spirit. And she not only showed it, but felt it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more successful
+ widow of thirty-two,&mdash;&ldquo;Thomas Plantagenet is a charming woman,&rdquo; her
+ reviewers used to write invariably, even if they spoke ill of her,&mdash;found
+ the steady growth of Jessie into womanhood an unmitigated nuisance and had
+ been willing enough to keep her in the background. And Jessie&mdash;who
+ had started this intercourse at fourteen with abstract objections to
+ stepmothers&mdash;had been active enough in resenting this. Increasing
+ rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them, until they could
+ engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or the cutting of a
+ book with a sharpened knife. There is very little deliberate wickedness in
+ the world. The stupidity of our selfishness gives much the same results
+ indeed, but in the ethical laboratory it shows a different nature. And
+ when the disaster came, Mrs. Milton's remorse for their gradual loss of
+ sympathy and her share in the losing of it, was genuine enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how West
+ Kensington and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary suburbs, those
+ decent penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling, hummed with the
+ business, Her 'Men'&mdash;as a charming literary lady she had, of course,
+ an organised corps&mdash;were immensely excited, and were sympathetic;
+ helpfully energetic, suggestive, alert, as their ideals of their various
+ dispositions required them to be. &ldquo;Any news of Jessie?&rdquo; was the pathetic
+ opening of a dozen melancholy but interesting conversations. To her Men
+ she was not perhaps so damp as she was to her women friends, but in a
+ quiet way she was even more touching. For three days, Wednesday that is,
+ Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the fugitives. It was known
+ that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with buttonup skirts, and mounted on
+ a diamond frame safety with Dunlops, and a loofah covered saddle, had
+ ridden forth early in the morning, taking with her about two pounds seven
+ shillings in money, and a grey touring case packed, and there, save for a
+ brief note to her stepmother,&mdash;a declaration of independence, it was
+ said, an assertion of her Ego containing extensive and very annoying
+ quotations from &ldquo;A Soul Untrammelled,&rdquo; and giving no definite intimation
+ of her plans&mdash;knowledge ceased. That note was shown to few, and then
+ only in the strictest confidence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery, a
+ correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the first. He
+ had been touring in Sussex,&mdash;his knapsack was still on his back,&mdash;and
+ he testified hurriedly that at a place called Midhurst, in the bar of an
+ hotel called the Angel, he had heard from a barmaid a vivid account of a
+ Young Lady in Grey. Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in brown?
+ &ldquo;The poor, misguided girl! I must go to her at once,&rdquo; she said, choking,
+ and rising with her hand to her heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on my way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A mother's love,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I bear her THAT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know you do.&rdquo; He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his photographs
+ of scenery more than Mrs. Milton. &ldquo;It's more than she deserves.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, don't speak unkindly of her! She has been misled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry his news
+ ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back? He had come to her
+ because he knew of her anxiety. &ldquo;It is GOOD of you,&rdquo; she said, and quite
+ instinctively took and pressed his hand. &ldquo;And to think of that poor girl&mdash;tonight!
+ It's dreadful.&rdquo; She looked into the fire that she had lit when he came in,
+ the warm light fell upon her dark purple dress, and left her features in a
+ warm shadow. She looked such a slight, frail thing to be troubled so. &ldquo;We
+ must follow her.&rdquo; Her resolution seemed magnificent. &ldquo;I have no one to go
+ with me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He must marry her,&rdquo; said the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She has no friends. We have no one. After all&mdash;Two women.&mdash;So
+ helpless.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who knew her
+ only from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply because she was
+ great-hearted&mdash;intellectual. He was overcome by the unspeakable
+ pathos of her position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mrs. Milton,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Hetty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. &ldquo;Not now,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;not
+ now. I must find her first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big, fat men who
+ feel deeply.) &ldquo;But let me help you. At least let me help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But can you spare time?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;For ME.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what can I do? what can WE do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on Thursday
+ night, last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We will
+ save her yet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage!&rdquo; he repeated, finding it so well received.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to the fire,
+ and he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which suited his dimensions
+ admirably. Then the door opened, and the girl showed in Dangle, who looked
+ curiously from one to the other. There was emotion here, he had heard the
+ armchair creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face was flushed, displayed a
+ suspicious alacrity to explain. &ldquo;You, too,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;are one of my good
+ friends. And we have news of her at last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined to show
+ himself a man of resource. In the end he, too, was accepted for the
+ Midhurst Expedition, to the intense disgust of Widgery; and young Phipps,
+ a callow youth of few words, faultless collars, and fervent devotion, was
+ also enrolled before the evening was out. They would scour the country,
+ all three of them. She appeared to brighten up a little, but it was
+ evident she was profoundly touched. She did not know what she had done to
+ merit such friends. Her voice broke a little, she moved towards the door,
+ and young Phipps, who was a youth of action rather than of words, sprang
+ and opened it&mdash;proud to be first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is sorely troubled,&rdquo; said Dangle to Widgery. &ldquo;We must do what we can
+ for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She is a wonderful woman,&rdquo; said Dangle. &ldquo;So subtle, so intricate, so many
+ faceted. She feels this deeply.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers time to
+ refresh themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the present, therefore,
+ we will not concern ourselves with the starting of the Rescue Party, nor
+ with Mrs. Milton's simple but becoming grey dress, with the healthy
+ Widgery's Norfolk jacket and thick boots, with the slender Dangle's
+ energetic bearing, nor with the wonderful chequerings that set off the
+ legs of the golf-suited Phipps. They are after us. In a little while they
+ will be upon us. You must imagine as you best can the competitive raidings
+ at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps. How Widgery was great at
+ questions, and Dangle good at inference, and Phipps so conspicuously
+ inferior in everything that he felt it, and sulked with Mrs. Milton most
+ of the day, after the manner of your callow youth the whole world over.
+ Mrs. Milton stopped at the Angel and was very sad and charming and
+ intelligent, and Widgery paid the bill in the afternoon of Saturday,
+ Chichester was attained. But by that time our fugitives&mdash;As you shall
+ immediately hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and, staring
+ unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and pleasant. He turned the
+ peaked nose that overrides the insufficient moustache, up to the ceiling,
+ a pinkish projection over the billow of white. You might see it wrinkle as
+ he yawned again, and then became quiet. So matters remained for a space.
+ Very slowly recollection returned to him. Then a shock of indeterminate
+ brown hair appeared, and first one watery grey eye a-wondering, and then
+ two; the bed upheaved, and you had him, his thin neck projecting abruptly
+ from the clothes he held about him, his face staring about the room. He
+ held the clothes about him, I hope I may explain, because his night-shirt
+ was at Bognor in an American-cloth packet, derelict. He yawned a third
+ time, rubbed his eyes, smacked his lips. He was recalling almost
+ everything now. The pursuit, the hotel, the tremulous daring of his entry,
+ the swift adventure of the inn yard, the moonlight&mdash;Abruptly he threw
+ the clothes back and rose into a sitting position on the edge of the bed.
+ Without was the noise of shutters being unfastened and doors unlocked, and
+ the passing of hoofs and wheels in the street. He looked at his watch.
+ Half-past six. He surveyed the sumptuous room again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;It wasn't a dream, after all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what they charge for these Juiced rooms!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+ nursing one rosy foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache. Suddenly he
+ gave vent to a noiseless laugh. &ldquo;What a rush it was! Rushed in and off
+ with his girl right under his nose. Planned it well too. Talk of highway
+ robbery! Talk of brigands Up and off! How juiced SOLD he must be feeling
+ It was a shave too&mdash;in the coach yard!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw fell. &ldquo;I
+ sa-a-ay!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand the whirl
+ he had been in overnight. But one sees things clearer in the daylight.
+ &ldquo;I'm hanged if I haven't been and stolen a blessed bicycle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who cares?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face supplied the
+ answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put a more
+ heroic complexion on the business. But of an early morning, on an empty
+ stomach (as with characteristic coarseness, medical men put it) heroics
+ are of a more difficult growth than by moonlight. Everything had seemed
+ exceptionally fine and brilliant, but quite natural, the evening before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket, laid it over
+ his knees, and took out the money from the little ticket pocket. &ldquo;Fourteen
+ and six-half,&rdquo; he said, holding the coins in his left hand and stroking
+ his chin with his right. He verified, by patting, the presence of a
+ pocketbook in the breast pocket. &ldquo;Five, fourteen, six-half,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Left.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into another silent
+ meditation. &ldquo;That wouldn't matter,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It's the bike's the bother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No good going back to Bognor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the loan.
+ Having no further use&mdash;&rdquo; Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed into the
+ silent concoction of a delightfully impudent letter. &ldquo;Mr. J. Hoopdriver
+ presents his compliments.&rdquo; But the grave note reasserted itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange them. MY old
+ crock's so blessed shabby. He's sure to be spiteful too. Have me run in,
+ perhaps. Then she'd be in just the same old fix, only worse. You see, I'm
+ her Knight-errant. It complicates things so.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. &ldquo;What the juice do
+ they want with cream pans in a bedroom?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, en passant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible, anyhow. I
+ suppose she'll go home to her friends. That bicycle is a juicy nuisance,
+ anyhow. Juicy nuisance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to proceed with
+ his toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered that the simple
+ necessaries of that process were at Bognor! &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; he remarked, and
+ whistled silently for a space. &ldquo;Rummy go! profit and loss; profit, one
+ sister with bicycle complete, wot offers?&mdash;cheap for tooth and 'air
+ brush, vests, night-shirt, stockings, and sundries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make the best of it,&rdquo; and presently, when it came to hair-brushing, he
+ had to smooth his troubled locks with his hands. It was a poor result.
+ &ldquo;Sneak out and get a shave, I suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink
+ again! Beard don't show much.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for some
+ time, and curled his insufficient moustache up with some care. Then he
+ fell a-meditating on his beauty. He considered himself, three-quarter
+ face, left and right. An expression of distaste crept over his features.
+ &ldquo;Looking won't alter it, Hoopdriver,&rdquo; he remarked. &ldquo;You're a weedy
+ customer, my man. Shoulders narrow. Skimpy, anyhow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with his chin
+ lifted in the air. &ldquo;Good Lord!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;WHAT a neck! Wonder why I got
+ such a thundering lump there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. &ldquo;If I'd been exercised
+ properly, if I'd been fed reasonable, if I hadn't been shoved out of a
+ silly school into a silly shop&mdash;But there! the old folks didn't know
+ no better. The schoolmaster ought to have. But he didn't, poor old fool!&mdash;Still,
+ when it comes to meeting a girl like this&mdash;It's 'ARD.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder what Adam'd think of me&mdash;as a specimen. Civilisation, eigh?
+ Heir of the ages! I'm nothing. I know nothing. I can't do anything&mdash;sketch
+ a bit. Why wasn't I made an artist?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don't tell yourself any lies about it.
+ Lovers ain't your game,&mdash;anyway. But there's other things yet. You
+ can help the young lady, and you will&mdash;I suppose she'll be going home&mdash;And
+ that business of the bicycle's to see to, too, my man. FORWARD,
+ Hoopdriver! If you ain't a beauty, that's no reason why you should stop
+ and be copped, is it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of self-satisfaction, he
+ had another attempt at his hair preparatory to leaving his room and
+ hurrying on breakfast, for an early departure. While breakfast was
+ preparing he wandered out into South Street and refurnished himself with
+ the elements of luggage again. &ldquo;No expense to be spared,&rdquo; he murmured,
+ disgorging the half-sovereign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He caused his 'sister' to be called repeatedly, and when she came down,
+ explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to the bicycle in
+ the yard. &ldquo;Might be disagreeable, y' know.&rdquo; His anxiety was obvious
+ enough. &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; she said (quite friendly); &ldquo;hurry breakfast, and
+ we'll ride out. I want to talk things over with you.&rdquo; The girl seemed more
+ beautiful than ever after the night's sleep; her hair in comely dark waves
+ from her forehead, her ungauntleted finger-tips pink and cool. And how
+ decided she was! Breakfast was a nervous ceremony, conversation fraternal
+ but thin; the waiter overawed him, and he was cowed by a multiplicity of
+ forks. But she called him &ldquo;Chris.&rdquo; They discussed their route over his
+ sixpenny county map for the sake of talking, but avoided a decision in the
+ presence of the attendant. The five-pound note was changed for the bill,
+ and through Hoopdriver's determination to be quite the gentleman, the
+ waiter and chambermaid got half a crown each and the ostler a florin.
+ &ldquo;'Olidays,&rdquo; said the ostler to himself, without gratitude. The public
+ mounting of the bicycles in the street was a moment of trepidation. A
+ policeman actually stopped and watched them from the opposite kerb.
+ Suppose him to come across and ask: &ldquo;Is that your bicycle, sir?&rdquo; Fight? Or
+ drop it and run? It was a time of bewildering apprehension, too, going
+ through the streets of the town, so that a milk cart barely escaped
+ destruction under Mr. Hoopdriver's chancy wheel. That recalled him to a
+ sense of erratic steering, and he pulled himself together. In the lanes he
+ breathed freer, and a less formal conversation presently began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry,&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, the fact of it is, I'm worried, just a little bit. About this
+ machine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I had forgotten that. But where are we going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jest a turning or two more, if you don't mind,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should feel more
+ easy. If we was locked up, you know&mdash;Not that I should mind on my own
+ account&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left hand.
+ Every mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr. Hoopdriver felt
+ a little less conscience-stricken, and a little more of the gallant
+ desperado. Here he was riding on a splendid machine with a Slap-up girl
+ beside him. What would they think of it in the Emporium if any of them
+ were to see him? He imagined in detail the astonishment of Miss Isaacs and
+ of Miss Howe. &ldquo;Why! It's Mr. Hoopdriver,&rdquo; Miss Isaacs would say. &ldquo;Never!&rdquo;
+ emphatically from Miss Howe. Then he played with Briggs, and then tried
+ the 'G.V.' in a shay. &ldquo;Fancy introducing 'em to her&mdash;My sister pro
+ tem.&rdquo; He was her brother Chris&mdash;Chris what?&mdash;Confound it!
+ Harringon, Hartington&mdash;something like that. Have to keep off that
+ topic until he could remember. Wish he'd told her the truth now&mdash;almost.
+ He glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes straight ahead of her.
+ Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she seemed. He noticed how well she
+ rode and that she rode with her lips closed&mdash;a thing he could never
+ manage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver's mind came round to the future. What was she going to do?
+ What were they both going to do? His thoughts took a graver colour. He had
+ rescued her. This was fine, manly rescue work he was engaged upon. She
+ ought to go home, in spite of that stepmother. He must insist gravely but
+ firmly upon that. She was the spirited sort, of course, but still&mdash;Wonder
+ if she had any money? Wonder what the second-class fare from Havant to
+ London is? Of course he would have to pay that&mdash;it was the regular
+ thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he take her home? He began to
+ rough in a moving sketch of the return. The stepmother, repentant of her
+ indescribable cruelties, would be present,&mdash;even these rich people
+ have their troubles,&mdash;probably an uncle or two. The footman would
+ announce, Mr.&mdash;(bother that name!) and Miss Milton. Then two women
+ weeping together, and a knightly figure in the background dressed in a
+ handsome Norfolk jacket, still conspicuously new. He would conceal his
+ feeling until the very end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the doorway
+ in such an attitude as Mr. George Alexander might assume, and say, slowly
+ and dwindlingly: &ldquo;Be kind to her&mdash;BE kind to her,&rdquo; and so depart,
+ heartbroken to the meanest intelligence. But that was a matter for the
+ future. He would have to begin discussing the return soon. There was no
+ traffic along the road, and he came up beside her (he had fallen behind in
+ his musing). She began to talk. &ldquo;Mr. Denison,&rdquo; she began, and then,
+ doubtfully, &ldquo;That is your name? I'm very stupid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison, Denison.
+ What was she saying?)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder how far you are willing to help me?&rdquo; Confoundedly hard to answer
+ a question like that on the spur of the moment, without steering wildly.
+ &ldquo;You may rely&mdash;&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering from a violent
+ wabble. &ldquo;I can assure you&mdash;I want to help you very much. Don't
+ consider me at all. Leastways, consider me entirely at your service.&rdquo;
+ (Nuisance not to be able to say this kind of thing right.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You see, I am so awkwardly situated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I can only help you&mdash;you will make me very happy&mdash;&rdquo; There
+ was a pause. Round a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space
+ between hedge and road, set with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a felled
+ tree lay among the green. There she dismounted, and propping her machine
+ against a stone, sat down. &ldquo;Here, we can talk,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with her chin
+ in her hand, and looking straight in front of her. &ldquo;I don't know&mdash;I
+ am resolved to Live my Own Life.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Naturally.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to learn.
+ Everyone is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want time to think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how clear and
+ ready her words were. But then one might speak well with a throat and lips
+ like that. He knew he was inadequate, but he tried to meet the occasion.
+ &ldquo;If you let them rush you into anything you might repent of, of course
+ you'd be very silly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't YOU want to learn?&rdquo; she asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was wondering only this morning,&rdquo; he began, and stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this insufficiency. &ldquo;I
+ find myself in life, and it terrifies me. I seem to be like a little
+ speck, whirling on a wheel, suddenly caught up. 'What am I here for?' I
+ ask. Simply to be here at a time&mdash;I asked it a week ago, I asked it
+ yesterday, and I ask it to-day. And little things happen and the days
+ pass. My stepmother takes me shopping, people come to tea, there is a new
+ play to pass the time, or a concert, or a novel. The wheels of the world
+ go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a miracle like Joshua
+ and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At home&mdash;It's
+ impossible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. &ldquo;It IS so,&rdquo; he said in a meditative
+ tone. &ldquo;Things WILL go on,&rdquo; he said. The faint breath of summer stirred the
+ trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted among the meadowsweet and
+ struck and broke into a dozen separate threads against his knee. They flew
+ on apart, and sank, as the breeze fell, among the grass: some to
+ germinate, some to perish. His eye followed them until they had vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't go back to Surbiton,&rdquo; said the Young Lady in Grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;EIGH?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was an
+ unexpected development.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I want to write, you see,&rdquo; said the Young Lady in Grey, &ldquo;to write Books
+ and alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free Life and Own myself. I
+ can't go back. I want to obtain a position as a journalist. I have been
+ told&mdash;But I know no one to help me at once. No one that I could go
+ to. There is one person&mdash;She was a mistress at my school. If I could
+ write to her&mdash;But then, how could I get her answer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;H'mp,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can't trouble you much more. You have come&mdash;you have risked things&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That don't count,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;It's double pay to let me do it,
+ so to speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am resolved
+ to be Unconventional&mdash;at any cost. But we are so hampered. If I could
+ only burgeon out of all that hinders me! I want to struggle, to take my
+ place in the world. I want to be my own mistress, to shape my own career.
+ But my stepmother objects so. She does as she likes herself, and is strict
+ with me to ease her conscience. And if I go back now, go back owning
+ myself beaten&mdash;&rdquo; She left the rest to his imagination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see that,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He MUST help her. Within his skull he
+ was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six and twopence. In
+ some vague way he inferred from all this that Jessie was trying to escape
+ from an undesirable marriage, but was saying these things out of modesty.
+ His circle of ideas was so limited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know, Mr.&mdash;I've forgotten your name again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. &ldquo;You can't go back of course,
+ quite like that,&rdquo; he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed suddenly red and
+ his cheeks flushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what IS your name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Name!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Why!&mdash;Benson, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Benson&mdash;yes it's really very stupid of me. But I can never
+ remember names. I must make a note on my cuff.&rdquo; She clicked a little
+ silver pencil and wrote the name down. &ldquo;If I could write to my friend. I
+ believe she would be able to help me to an independent life. I could write
+ to her&mdash;or telegraph. Write, I think. I could scarcely explain in a
+ telegram. I know she would help me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the
+ circumstances. &ldquo;In that case,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;if you don't mind
+ trusting yourself to a stranger, we might continue as we are perhaps. For
+ a day or so. Until you heard.&rdquo; (Suppose thirty shillings a day, that gives
+ four days, say four thirties is hun' and twenty, six quid,&mdash;well,
+ three days, say; four ten.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are very good to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His expression was eloquent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, then, and thank you. It's wonderful&mdash;it's more than I
+ deserve that you&mdash;&rdquo; She dropped the theme abruptly. &ldquo;What was our
+ bill at Chichester?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eigh?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There was a
+ brief discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her insistence in paying.
+ She carried her point. Their talk came round to their immediate plans for
+ the day. They decided to ride easily, through Havant, and stop, perhaps,
+ at Fareham or Southampton. For the previous day had tried them both.
+ Holding the map extended on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver's eye fell by chance
+ on the bicycle at his feet. &ldquo;That bicycle,&rdquo; he remarked, quite
+ irrelevantly, &ldquo;wouldn't look the same machine if I got a big, double
+ Elarum instead of that little bell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jest a thought.&rdquo; A pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very well, then,&mdash;Havant and lunch,&rdquo; said Jessie, rising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that machine,&rdquo;
+ said Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Because it IS stealing it, you know, come to think of
+ it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you&mdash;I will tell the whole world&mdash;if
+ need be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I believe you would,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. &ldquo;You're plucky
+ enough&mdash;goodness knows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and picked up
+ her machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road. Then he took his
+ own. He paused, regarding it. &ldquo;I say!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;How'd this bike look,
+ now, if it was enamelled grey?&rdquo; She looked over her shoulder at his grave
+ face. &ldquo;Why try and hide it in that way?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was jest a passing thought,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily. &ldquo;Didn't MEAN
+ anything, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in a
+ transitory manner that the interview had been quite other than his
+ expectation. But that was the way with everything in Mr. Hoopdriver's
+ experience. And though his Wisdom looked grave within him, and Caution was
+ chinking coins, and an ancient prejudice in favour of Property shook her
+ head, something else was there too, shouting in his mind to drown all
+ these saner considerations, the intoxicating thought of riding beside Her
+ all to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days after that. Of talking
+ to her familiarly, being brother of all her slender strength and
+ freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful time beyond all his
+ imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave place to anticipations as
+ impalpable and fluctuating and beautiful as the sunset of a summer day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at small hairdresser's in
+ the main street, a toothbrush, a pair of nail scissors, and a little
+ bottle of stuff to darken the moustache, an article the shopman introduced
+ to his attention, recommended highly, and sold in the excitement of the
+ occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there. Jessie
+ went out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then the green height
+ of Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving their machines in the village
+ they clambered up the slope to the silent red-brick fort that crowned it.
+ Thence they had a view of Portsmouth and its cluster of sister towns, the
+ crowded narrows of the harbour, the Solent and the Isle of Wight like a
+ blue cloud through the hot haze. Jessie by some miracle had become a
+ skirted woman in the Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver lounged gracefully on the
+ turf, smoked a Red Herring cigarette, and lazily regarded the fortified
+ towns that spread like a map away there, the inner line of defence like
+ toy fortifications, a mile off perhaps; and beyond that a few little
+ fields and then the beginnings of Landport suburb and the smoky cluster of
+ the multitudinous houses. To the right at the head of the harbour shallows
+ the town of Porchester rose among the trees. Mr. Hoopdriver's anxiety
+ receded to some remote corner of his brain and that florid half-voluntary
+ imagination of his shared the stage with the image of Jessie. He began to
+ speculate on the impression he was creating. He took stock of his suit in
+ a more optimistic spirit, and reviewed, with some complacency, his actions
+ for the last four and twenty hours. Then he was dashed at the thought of
+ her infinite perfections.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during the last
+ hour or so. She did not look at him directly because he seemed always
+ looking at her. Her own troubles had quieted down a little, and her
+ curiosity about the chivalrous, worshipping, but singular gentleman in
+ brown, was awakening. She had recalled, too, the curious incident of their
+ first encounter. She found him hard to explain to herself. You must
+ understand that her knowledge of the world was rather less than nothing,
+ having been obtained entirely from books. You must not take a certain
+ ignorance for foolishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French except
+ 'sivver play,' a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good light table
+ joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not such as books informed
+ her distinguished the lower classes. His manners seemed to her good on the
+ whole, but a trifle over-respectful and out of fashion. He called her I
+ Madam' once. He seemed a person of means and leisure, but he knew nothing
+ of recent concerts, theatres, or books. How did he spend his time? He was
+ certainly chivalrous, and a trifle simpleminded. She fancied (so much is
+ there in a change of costume) that she had never met with such a man
+ before. What COULD he be?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Benson,&rdquo; she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At your service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you paint? Are you an artist?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well.&rdquo; Judicious pause. &ldquo;I should hardly call myself a Nartist, you know.
+ I DO paint a little. And sketch, you know&mdash;skitty kind of things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really not so much
+ lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to add, &ldquo;In Papers, you
+ know, and all that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see,&rdquo; said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a very
+ heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of being a little
+ odd. He avoided her eye and bit his grass. &ldquo;I don't do MUCH, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's not your profession?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, no,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. &ldquo;I don't make a regular
+ thing of it, you know. Jest now and then something comes into my head and
+ down it goes. No&mdash;I'm not a regular artist.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you don't practise any regular profession?&rdquo; Mr. Hoopdriver looked
+ into her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He had vague ideas
+ of resuming the detective role. &ldquo;It's like this,&rdquo; he said, to gain time.
+ &ldquo;I have a sort of profession. Only there's a kind of reason&mdash;nothing
+ much, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I beg your pardon for cross-examining you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No trouble,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Only I can't very well&mdash;I leave
+ it to you, you know. I don't want to make any mystery of it, so far as
+ that goes.&rdquo; Should he plunge boldly and be a barrister? That anyhow was
+ something pretty good. But she might know about barristry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think I could guess what you are.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well&mdash;guess,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You come from one of the colonies?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind. &ldquo;How did
+ you find out THAT?&rdquo; (the man was born in a London suburb, dear Reader.)
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I guessed,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new piece of
+ grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were educated up country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good again,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow. &ldquo;You're
+ a CLAIRVOY ant.&rdquo; He bit at the grass, smiling. &ldquo;Which colony was it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I don't know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must guess,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;South Africa,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I strongly incline to South Africa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;South Africa's quite a large place,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But South Africa is right?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're warm,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, &ldquo;anyhow,&rdquo; and the while his imagination
+ was eagerly exploring this new province.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;South Africa IS right?&rdquo; she insisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive Schreiner's,
+ you know&mdash;'The Story of an African Farm.' Gregory Rose is so like
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never read 'The Story of an African Farm,'&rdquo; said Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I must.
+ What's he like?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must read the book. But it's a wonderful place, with its mixture of
+ races, and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old savagery. Were you
+ near Khama?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was a long way off from our place,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;We had a
+ little ostrich farm, you know&mdash;Just a few hundred of 'em, out
+ Johannesburg way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;On the Karroo&mdash;was it called?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got along
+ very well in the old days.&mdash;But there's no ostriches on that farm
+ now.&rdquo; He had a diamond mine in his head, just at the moment, but he
+ stopped and left a little to the girl's imagination. Besides which it had
+ occurred to him with a kind of shock that he was lying.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What became of the ostriches?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We sold 'em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I have
+ another cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap, you know, that
+ we had this ostrich farm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lots,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and beginning
+ to feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought upon himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How interesting! Do you know, I've never been out of England except to
+ Paris and Mentone and Switzerland.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One gets tired of travelling (puff) after a bit, of course.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always stimulates my
+ imagination to think of these places. I can fancy all the tall ostriches
+ being driven out by a black herd&mdash;to graze, I suppose. How do
+ ostriches feed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver. &ldquo;That's rather various. They have their fancies,
+ you know. There's fruit, of course, and that kind of thing. And chicken
+ food, and so forth. You have to use judgment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you ever see a lion?&rdquo; &ldquo;They weren't very common in our district,&rdquo;
+ said Hoopdriver, quite modestly. &ldquo;But I've seen them, of course. Once or
+ twice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fancy seeing a lion! Weren't you frightened?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that offer of
+ South Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the Solent languidly as
+ he settled the fate on that lion in his mind. &ldquo;I scarcely had time,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;It all happened in a minute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches were.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you EAT ostriches, then? I did not know&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eat them!&mdash;often. Very nice they ARE too, properly stuffed. Well, we&mdash;I,
+ rather&mdash;was going across this paddock, and I saw something standing
+ up in the moonlight and looking at me.&rdquo; Mr. Hoopdriver was in a hot
+ perspiration now. His invention seemed to have gone limp. &ldquo;Luckily I had
+ my father's gun with me. I was scared, though, I can tell you. (Puff.) I
+ just aimed at the end that I thought was the head. And let fly. (Puff.)
+ And over it went, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dead?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;AS dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I wasn't much
+ over nine at the time, neither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> should have screamed and run away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's some things you can't run away from,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;To
+ run would have been Death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't think I ever met a lion-killer before,&rdquo; she remarked, evidently
+ with a heightened opinion of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr. Hoopdriver
+ drew his watch hastily. &ldquo;I say,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, showing it to her,
+ &ldquo;don't you think we ought to be getting on?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his confusion to
+ modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens of his conscience, and
+ held out his hand to assist her. They walked down into Cosham again,
+ resumed their machines, and went on at a leisurely pace along the northern
+ shore of the big harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no longer happy. This
+ horrible, this fulsome lie, stuck in his memory. Why HAD he done it? She
+ did not ask for any more South African stories, happily&mdash;at least
+ until Porchester was reached&mdash;but talked instead of Living One's Own
+ Life, and how custom hung on people like chains. She talked wonderfully,
+ and set Hoopdriver's mind fermenting. By the Castle, Mr. Hoopdriver caught
+ several crabs in little shore pools. At Fareham they stopped for a second
+ tea, and left the place towards the hour of sunset, under such
+ invigorating circumstances as you shall in due course hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle, and
+ Phipps, and of that distressed beauty, 'Thomas Plantagenet,' well known in
+ society, so the paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We left them at Midhurst
+ station, if I remember rightly, waiting, in a state of fine emotion, for
+ the Chichester train. It was clearly understood by the entire Rescue Party
+ that Mrs. Milton was bearing up bravely against almost overwhelming grief.
+ The three gentlemen outdid one another in sympathetic expedients; they
+ watched her gravely almost tenderly. The substantial Widgery tugged at his
+ moustache, and looked his unspeakable feelings at her with those dog-like,
+ brown eyes of his; the slender Dangle tugged at HIS moustache, and did
+ what he could with unsympathetic grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no
+ moustache to run any risks with, so he folded his arms and talked in a
+ brave, indifferent, bearing-up tone about the London, Brighton, and South
+ Coast Railway, just to cheer the poor woman up a little. And even Mrs.
+ Milton really felt that exalted melancholy to the very bottom of her
+ heart, and tried to show it in a dozen little, delicate, feminine ways.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ &ldquo;Nothing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing,&rdquo; said Widgery, and aside in her ear: &ldquo;You really ate scarcely
+ anything, you know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Their trains are always late,&rdquo; said Phipps, with his fingers along the
+ edge of his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a sub-editor and
+ reviewer, and his pride was to be Thomas Plantagenet's intellectual
+ companion. Widgery, the big man, was manager of a bank and a mighty
+ golfer, and his conception of his relations to her never came into his
+ mind without those charming oldlines, &ldquo;Douglas, Douglas, tender and true,&rdquo;
+ falling hard upon its heels. His name was Douglas-Douglas Widgery. And
+ Phipps, Phipps was a medical student still, and he felt that he laid his
+ heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world. She was kind to them
+ all in her way, and insisted on their being friends together, in spite of
+ a disposition to reciprocal criticism they displayed. Dangle thought
+ Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but coarsely the merits of &ldquo;A Soul
+ Untrammelled,&rdquo; and Widgery thought Dangle lacked, humanity&mdash;would
+ talk insincerely to say a clever thing. Both Dangle and Widgery thought
+ Phipps a bit of a cub, and Phipps thought both Dangle and Widgery a couple
+ of Thundering Bounders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch,&rdquo; said Dangle, in the
+ train. &ldquo;After, perhaps. And there's no sufficient place in the road. So
+ soon as we get there, Phipps must inquire at the chief hotels to see if
+ any one answering to her description has lunched there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, I'LL inquire,&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;Willingly. I suppose you and Widgery
+ will just hang about&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton's gentle face, and stopped
+ abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Dangle, &ldquo;we shan't HANG ABOUT, as you put it. There are two
+ places in Chichester where tourists might go&mdash;the cathedral and a
+ remarkably fine museum. I shall go to the cathedral and make an inquiry or
+ so, while Widgery&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The museum. Very well. And after that there's a little thing or two I've
+ thought of myself,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to the Red
+ Hotel and established her there with some tea. &ldquo;You are so kind to me,&rdquo;
+ she said. &ldquo;All of you.&rdquo; They signified that it was nothing, and dispersed
+ to their inquiries. By six they returned, their zeal a little damped,
+ without news. Widgery came back with Dangle. Phipps was the last to
+ return. &ldquo;You're quite sure,&rdquo; said Widgery, &ldquo;that there isn't any flaw in
+ that inference of yours?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite,&rdquo; said Dangle, rather shortly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Widgery, &ldquo;their starting from Midhurst on the Chichester
+ road doesn't absolutely bind them not to change their minds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear fellow!&mdash;It does. Really it does. You must allow me to have
+ enough intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you must. There aren't
+ any cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn aside here? No. Would they
+ turn there? Many more things are inevitable than you fancy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall see at once,&rdquo; said Widgery, at the window. &ldquo;Here comes Phipps.
+ For my own part&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Phipps!&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton. &ldquo;Is he hurrying? Does he look&mdash;&rdquo; She rose
+ in her eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards the window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No news,&rdquo; said Phipps, entering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None?&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;One fellow had got hold of a queer story of a man in
+ bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question about this time
+ yesterday.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What question?&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window. She spoke
+ in a low voice, almost a whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why&mdash;Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dangle caught at his lower lip. &ldquo;What's that?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Yesterday! A man
+ asking after her then! What can THAT mean?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven knows,&rdquo; said Phipps, sitting down wearily. &ldquo;You'd better infer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What kind of man?&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How should I know?&mdash;in bicycling costume, the fellow said.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what height?&mdash;What complexion?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Didn't ask,&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;DIDN'T ASK! Nonsense,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ask him yourself,&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;He's an ostler chap in the White Hart,&mdash;short,
+ thick-set fellow, with a red face and a crusty manner. Leaning up against
+ the stable door. Smells of whiskey. Go and ask him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade over the
+ stuffed bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the door. &ldquo;I might have
+ known.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phipps' mouth opened and shut.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're tired, I'm sure, Mr. Phipps,&rdquo; said the lady, soothingly. &ldquo;Let me
+ ring for some tea for you.&rdquo; It suddenly occurred to Phipps that he had
+ lapsed a little from his chivalry. &ldquo;I was a little annoyed at the way he
+ rushed me to do all this business,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;But I'd do a hundred times
+ as much if it would bring you any nearer to her.&rdquo; Pause. &ldquo;I WOULD like a
+ little tea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't want to raise any false hopes,&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;But I do NOT
+ believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle's a very clever fellow, of
+ course, but sometimes these Inferences of his&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tchak!&rdquo; said Phipps, suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Something I've forgotten. I went right out from here, went to every other
+ hotel in the place, and never thought&mdash;But never mind. I'll ask when
+ the waiter comes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't mean&mdash;&rdquo; A tap, and the door opened. &ldquo;Tea, m'm? yes, m'm,&rdquo;
+ said the waiter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One minute,&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her brother, sir&mdash;a
+ young gent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brother!&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. &ldquo;Thank God!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. &ldquo;A young gent, sir,&rdquo;
+ he said, &ldquo;very free with his money. Give the name of Beaumont.&rdquo; He
+ proceeded to some rambling particulars, and was cross-examined by Widgery
+ on the plans of the young couple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Havant! Where's Havant?&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;I seem to remember it somewhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was the man tall?&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, intently, &ldquo;distinguished looking?
+ with a long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the waiter, and thought. &ldquo;His moustache, m'm, was scarcely
+ long&mdash;scrubby more, and young looking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;About thirty-five, he was?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, m'm. More like five and twenty. Not that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice, fumbling
+ for her salts, and showing the finest self-control. &ldquo;It must have been her
+ YOUNGER brother&mdash;must have been.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will do, thank you,&rdquo; said Widgery, officiously, feeling that she
+ would be easier under this new surprise if the man were dismissed. The
+ waiter turned to go, and almost collided with Dangle, who was entering the
+ room, panting excitedly and with a pocket handkerchief held to his right
+ eye. &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said dangle. &ldquo;What's up?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's up with YOU?&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nothing&mdash;an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of yours. He
+ thought it was a plot to annoy him&mdash;that the Young Lady in Grey was
+ mythical. Judged from your manner. I've got a piece of raw meat to keep
+ over it. You have some news, I see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did the man hit you?&rdquo; asked Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. &ldquo;Cannot I do anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dangle was heroic. &ldquo;Only tell me your news,&rdquo; he said, round the corner of
+ the handkerchief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was in this way,&rdquo; said Phipps, and explained rather sheepishly. While
+ he was doing so, with a running fire of commentary from Widgery, the
+ waiter brought in a tray of tea. &ldquo;A time table,&rdquo; said Dangle, promptly,
+ &ldquo;for Havant.&rdquo; Mrs. Milton poured two cups, and Phipps and Dangle partook
+ in passover form. They caught the train by a hair's breadth. So to Havant
+ and inquiries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right. In view
+ of the fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a steep hill
+ continuously on the right-hand side, and the sea on the left, he hit upon
+ a magnificent scheme for heading the young folks off. He and Mrs. Milton
+ would go to Fareham, Widgery and Phipps should alight one each at the
+ intermediate stations of Cosham and Porchester, and come on by the next
+ train if they had no news. If they did not come on, a wire to the Fareham
+ post office was to explain why. It was Napoleonic, and more than consoled
+ Dangle for the open derision of the Havant street boys at the handkerchief
+ which still protected his damaged eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives escaped by a
+ hair's breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor at Fareham, and
+ preparing to mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle came round the corner from
+ the station. &ldquo;It's her!&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, and would have screamed.
+ &ldquo;Hist!&rdquo; said Dangle, gripping the lady's arm, removing his handkerchief in
+ his excitement, and leaving the piece of meat over his eye, an
+ extraordinary appearance which seemed unexpectedly to calm her. &ldquo;Be cool!&rdquo;
+ said Dangle, glaring under the meat. &ldquo;They must not see us. They will get
+ away else. Were there flys at the station?&rdquo; The young couple mounted and
+ vanished round the corner of the Winchester road. Had it not been for the
+ publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would have fainted. &ldquo;SAVE HER!&rdquo; she
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! A conveyance,&rdquo; said Dangle. &ldquo;One minute.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to her
+ heart, and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten minutes.
+ Emerged. The meat had gone now, and one saw the cooling puffiness over his
+ eye. &ldquo;I will conduct you back to the station,&rdquo; said Dangle; &ldquo;hurry back
+ here, and pursue them. You will meet Widgery and Phipps and tell them I am
+ in pursuit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a hard,
+ blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and dreadfully ruffled
+ and agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt, most energetic and devoted;
+ but for a kindly, helpful manner commend her to Douglas Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving (as well
+ as he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing called a gig,
+ northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring his swollen eye, was a
+ refined-looking little man, and he wore a deerstalker cap and was dressed
+ in dark grey. His neck was long and slender. Perhaps you know what gigs
+ are,&mdash;huge, big, wooden things and very high and the horse, too, was
+ huge and big and high, with knobby legs, a long face, a hard mouth, and a
+ whacking trick of pacing. Smack, smack, smack, smack it went along the
+ road, and hard by the church it shied vigorously at a hooded perambulator.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It appears that
+ Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton left about upon the
+ Fareham platform. The day had irritated him somehow, though he had started
+ with the noblest intentions, and he seemed glad to find an outlet for
+ justifiable indignation. &ldquo;He's such a spasmodic creature,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ &ldquo;Rushing off! And I suppose we're to wait here until he comes back! It's
+ likely. He's so egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants to mismanage
+ everything himself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He means to help me,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully, touching
+ his arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified all at once. &ldquo;He
+ need not prevent ME,&rdquo; he said, and stopped. &ldquo;It's no good talking, you
+ know, and you are tired.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can go on,&rdquo; she said brightly, &ldquo;if only we find her.&rdquo; &ldquo;While I was
+ cooling my heels in Cosham I bought a county map.&rdquo; He produced and opened
+ it. &ldquo;Here, you see, is the road out of Fareham.&rdquo; He proceeded with the
+ calm deliberation of a business man to develop a proposal of taking train
+ forthwith to Winchester. &ldquo;They MUST be going to Winchester,&rdquo; he explained.
+ It was inevitable. To-morrow Sunday, Winchester a cathedral town, road
+ going nowhere else of the slightest importance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Mr. Dangle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he will
+ break his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It's scarcely likely a
+ dog-cart, especially a hired dog-cart, will overtake bicycles in the cool
+ of the evening. Rely upon me, Mrs. Milton&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am in your hands,&rdquo; she said, with pathetic littleness, looking up at
+ him, and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat depressed
+ attitude, leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and looking from one
+ speaker to the other. The idea of leaving Dangle behind seemed to him an
+ excellent one. &ldquo;We might leave a message at the place where he got the
+ dog-cart,&rdquo; he suggested, when he saw their eyes meeting. There was a
+ cheerful alacrity about all three at the proposal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran into the
+ station, a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a shouting overhead, the
+ guard stood astonished on the platform, and Phipps, thrusting his head out
+ of the window, cried, &ldquo;There he goes!&rdquo; and sprang out of the carriage.
+ Mrs. Milton, following in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it was hidden.
+ Botley station lies in a cutting, overhead was the roadway, and across the
+ lemon yellows and flushed pinks of the sunset, there whirled a great black
+ mass, a horse like a long-nosed chess knight, the upper works of a gig,
+ and Dangle in transit from front to back. A monstrous shadow aped him
+ across the cutting. It was the event of a second. Dangle seemed to jump,
+ hang in the air momentarily, and vanish, and after a moment's pause came a
+ heart-rending smash. Then two black heads running swiftly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Better get out,&rdquo; said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood fascinated in the
+ doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They found Dangle,
+ hatless, standing up with cut hands extended, having his hands brushed by
+ an officious small boy. A broad, ugly road ran downhill in a long vista,
+ and in the distance was a little group of Botley inhabitants holding the
+ big, black horse. Even at that distance they could see the expression of
+ conscious pride on the monster's visage. It was as wooden-faced a horse as
+ you can imagine. The beasts in the Tower of London, on which the men in
+ armour are perched, are the only horses I have ever seen at all like it.
+ However, we are not concerned now with the horse, but with Dangle. &ldquo;Hurt?&rdquo;
+ asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Dangle!&rdquo; cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hullo!&rdquo; said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. &ldquo;Glad you've come. I
+ may want you. Bit of a mess I'm in&mdash;eigh? But I've caught 'em. At the
+ very place I expected, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Caught them!&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;Where are they?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Up there,&rdquo; he said, with a backward motion of his head. &ldquo;About a mile up
+ the hill. I left 'em. I HAD to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't understand,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful look
+ again. &ldquo;Have you found Jessie?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands somewhere. It was
+ like this, you know. Came on them suddenly round a corner. Horse shied at
+ the bicycles. They were sitting by the roadside botanising flowers. I just
+ had time to shout, 'Jessie Milton, we've been looking for you,' and then
+ that confounded brute bolted. I didn't dare turn round. I had all my work
+ to do to save myself being turned over, as it was&mdash;so long as I did,
+ I mean. I just shouted, 'Return to your friends. All will be forgiven.'
+ And off I came, clatter, clatter. Whether they heard&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;TAKE ME TO HER,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning towards
+ Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. &ldquo;How far is it,
+ Dangle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you know. I
+ say though&mdash;Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs. Milton.&rdquo; He
+ turned to Phipps. &ldquo;Phipps, I say, where shall I wash the gravel out? And
+ have a look at my knee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's the station,&rdquo; said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made a step,
+ and a damaged knee became evident. &ldquo;Take my arm,&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where can we get a conveyance?&rdquo; asked Widgery of two small boys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight,&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;It's a case
+ of a horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a harse all right,&rdquo; said one of the small boys with a movement of
+ the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you know where we can hire traps?&rdquo; asked Widgery. &ldquo;Or a cart or&mdash;anything?&rdquo;
+ asked Mrs. Milton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;John Ooker's gart a cart, but no one can't 'ire'n,&rdquo; said the larger of
+ the small boys, partially averting his face and staring down the road and
+ making a song of it. &ldquo;And so's my feyther, for's leg us broke.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for courtly
+ devotion, Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. &ldquo;I suppose&mdash;&rdquo;
+ she said, timidly. &ldquo;Perhaps if you were to ask Mr. Dangle&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely.
+ &ldquo;Confound Dangle! Hasn't he messed us up enough? He must needs drive after
+ them in a trap to tell them we're coming, and now you want me to ask him&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped abruptly. &ldquo;I'll
+ go and ask Dangle,&rdquo; he said, shortly. &ldquo;If you wish it.&rdquo; And went striding
+ into the station and down the steps, leaving her in the road under the
+ quiet inspection of the two little boys, and with a kind of ballad refrain
+ running through her head, &ldquo;Where are the Knights of the Olden Time?&rdquo; and
+ feeling tired to death and hungry and dusty and out of curl, and, in
+ short, a martyr woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the fugitives
+ vanished into Immensity; how there were no more trains how Botley stared
+ unsympathetically with a palpable disposition to derision, denying
+ conveyances how the landlord of the Heron was suspicious, how the next day
+ was Sunday, and the hot summer's day had crumpled the collar of Phipps and
+ stained the skirts of Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the radiant emotions of the
+ whole party. Dangle, with sticking-plaster and a black eye, felt the
+ absurdity of the pose of the Wounded Knight, and abandoned it after the
+ faintest efforts. Recriminations never, perhaps, held the foreground of
+ the talk, but they played like summer lightning on the edge of the
+ conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a galling sense of the
+ ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most to blame. Apparently, too, the
+ worst, which would have made the whole business tragic, was not happening.
+ Here was a young woman&mdash;young woman do I say? a mere girl!&mdash;had
+ chosen to leave a comfortable home in Surbiton, and all the delights of a
+ refined and intellectual circle, and had rushed off, trailing us after
+ her, posing hard, mutually jealous, and now tired and weather-worn, to
+ flick us off at last, mere mud from her wheel, into this detestable
+ village beer-house on a Saturday night! And she had done it, not for Love
+ and Passion, which are serious excuses one may recognise even if one must
+ reprobate, but just for a Freak, just for a fantastic Idea; for nothing,
+ in fact, but the outraging of Common Sense. Yet withal, such was our
+ restraint, that we talked of her still as one much misguided, as one who
+ burthened us with anxiety, as a lamb astray, and Mrs. Milton having eaten,
+ continued to show the finest feelings on the matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only
+ comfortable chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard, horsehair
+ things having antimacassars tied to their backs by means of lemon-coloured
+ bows. It was different from those dear old talks at Surbiton, somehow. She
+ sat facing the window, which was open (the night was so tranquil and
+ warm), and the dim light&mdash;for we did not use the lamp&mdash;suited
+ her admirably. She talked in a voice that told you she was tired, and she
+ seemed inclined to state a case against herself in the matter of &ldquo;A Soul
+ Untrammelled.&rdquo; It was such an evening as might live in a sympathetic
+ memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I feel,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;that I am to blame. I have Developed. That first book
+ of mine&mdash;I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but it has been
+ misunderstood, misapplied.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It has,&rdquo; said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as to be
+ visible in the dark. &ldquo;Deliberately misunderstood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't say that,&rdquo; said the lady. &ldquo;Not deliberately. I try and think that
+ critics are honest. After their lights. I was not thinking of critics. But
+ she&mdash;I mean&mdash;&rdquo; She paused, an interrogation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is possible,&rdquo; said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I write a book and state a case. I want people to THINK as I recommend,
+ not to DO as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I make it into a
+ story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to promulgate Ideas. Then
+ when the Ideas have been spread abroad&mdash;Things will come about. Only
+ now it is madness to fly in the face of the established order. Bernard
+ Shaw, you know, has explained that with regard to Socialism. We all know
+ that to earn all you consume is right, and that living on invested capital
+ is wrong. Only we cannot begin while we are so few. It is Those Others.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Precisely,&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;It is Those Others. They must begin first.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And meanwhile you go on banking&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I didn't, some one else would.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I live on Mr. Milton's Lotion while I try to gain a footing in
+ Literature.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;TRY!&rdquo; said Phipps. &ldquo;You HAVE done so.&rdquo; And, &ldquo;That's different,&rdquo; said
+ Dangle, at the same time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina Griffiths
+ in my book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to life classes and had
+ men visitors, but then she was over twenty-one.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman. And
+ Georgina Griffiths never flaunted her freedom&mdash;on a bicycle, in
+ country places. In this country. Where every one is so particular. Fancy,
+ SLEEPING away from home. It's dreadful&mdash;If it gets about it spells
+ ruin for her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ruin,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No man would marry a girl like that,&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It must be hushed up,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of individual
+ cases. We must weigh each person against his or her circumstances. General
+ rules don't apply&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I often feel the force of that,&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;Those are my rules. Of
+ course my books&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's different, altogether different,&rdquo; said Dangle. &ldquo;A novel deals with
+ typical cases.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And life is not typical,&rdquo; said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and shocked
+ of any in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was infectious, and the
+ gathering having, as you can easily understand, talked itself weary,
+ dispersed on trivial pretences. But not to sleep immediately. Directly
+ Dangle was alone he began, with infinite disgust, to scrutinise his
+ darkling eye, for he was a neat-minded little man in spite of his energy.
+ The whole business&mdash;so near a capture&mdash;was horribly vexatious.
+ Phipps sat on his bed for some time examining, with equal disgust, a
+ collar he would have thought incredible for Sunday twenty-four hours
+ before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of even big, fat men
+ with dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because he had been so cross
+ to her at the station, and because so far he did not feel that he had
+ scored over Dangle. Also he was angry with Dangle. And all four of them,
+ being souls living very much upon the appearances of things, had a
+ painful, mental middle distance of Botley derisive and suspicious, and a
+ remoter background of London humorous, and Surbiton speculative. Were they
+ really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As Mr. Dangle bad witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him by the
+ side of the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr. Dangle's
+ appearance, Mr. Hoopdriver had been learning with great interest that mere
+ roadside flowers had names,&mdash;star-flowers, wind-stars, St. John's
+ wort, willow herb, lords and ladies, bachelor's buttons,&mdash;most
+ curious names, some of them. &ldquo;The flowers are all different in South
+ Africa, y'know,&rdquo; he was explaining with a happy fluke of his imagination
+ to account for his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by clattering sounds
+ and a gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across the
+ tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and gesticulating
+ behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie by her name, had backed
+ towards the hedge for no ostensible reason, and vanished to the
+ accomplishment of the Fate that had been written down for him from the
+ very beginning of things. Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to stand
+ up and seize their machines, before this tumultuous, this swift and
+ wonderful passing of Dangle was achieved. He went from side to side of the
+ road,&mdash;worse even than the riding forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it was,&mdash;and
+ vanished round the corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He knew my name,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;it was Mr. Dangle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was our bicycles did that,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver simultaneously, and
+ speaking with a certain complacent concern. &ldquo;I hope he won't get hurt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was Mr. Dangle,&rdquo; repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard this
+ time, with a violent start. His eyebrows went up spasmodically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What! someone you know?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was looking for me,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;I could see. He began to call to me
+ before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for his ideas
+ were still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs. Milton. Honesty IS the
+ best policy&mdash;often, he thought. He turned his head this way and that.
+ He became active. &ldquo;After us, eigh? Then he'll come back. He's gone down
+ that hill, and he won't be able to pull up for a bit, I'm certain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was mounting.
+ Still staring at the corner that had swallowed up Dangle, Hoopdriver
+ followed suit. And so, just as the sun was setting, they began another
+ flight together,&mdash;riding now towards Bishops Waltham, with Mr.
+ Hoopdriver in the post of danger&mdash;the rear&mdash;ever and again
+ looking over his shoulder and swerving dangerously as he did so.
+ Occasionally Jessie had to slacken her pace. He breathed heavily, and
+ hated himself because his mouth fell open, After nearly an hour's hard
+ riding, they found themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of
+ Dangle nor any other danger was visible as they rode into the dusky,
+ yellow-lit street. Though the bats had been fluttering behind thehedges
+ and the evening star was bright while they were still two miles from
+ Winchester, Mr. Hoopdriver pointed out the dangers of stopping in such an
+ obvious abiding-place, and gently but firmly insisted upon replenishing
+ the lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From Winchester, roads branch
+ in every direction, and to turn abruptly westward was clearly the way to
+ throw off the chase. As Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad and yellow
+ through the twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that ride
+ out of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the atmospheric
+ effects were the same, the emotions were different. They rode in absolute
+ silence, and slowly after they had cleared the outskirts of Winchester.
+ Both of them were now nearly tired out,&mdash;the level was tedious, and
+ even a little hill a burden; and so it came about that in the hamlet of
+ Wallenstock they were beguiled to stop and ask for accommodation in an
+ exceptionally prosperous-looking village inn. A plausible landlady rose to
+ the occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were prepared, Mr.
+ Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and floating in a reek of
+ smoke, of three and a half faces&mdash;for the edge of the door cut one
+ down&mdash;and an American cloth-covered table with several glasses and a
+ tankard. And he also heard a remark. In the second before he heard that
+ remark, Mr. Hoopdriver had been a proud and happy man, to particularize, a
+ baronet's heir incognito. He had surrendered their bicycles to the odd man
+ of the place with infinite easy dignity, and had bowingly opened the door
+ for Jessie. &ldquo;Who's that, then?&rdquo; he imagined people saying; and then,
+ &ldquo;Some'n pretty well orf&mdash;judge by the bicycles.&rdquo; Then the imaginary
+ spectators would fall a-talking of the fashionableness of bicycling,&mdash;how
+ judges And stockbrokers and actresses and, in fact, all the best people
+ rode, and how that it was often the fancy of such great folk to shun the
+ big hotels, the adulation of urban crowds, and seek, incognito, the cosy
+ quaintnesses of village life. Then, maybe, they would think of a certain
+ nameless air of distinction about the lady who had stepped across the
+ doorway, and about the handsome, flaxen-moustached, blue-eyed Cavalier who
+ had followed her in, and they would look one to another. &ldquo;Tell you what it
+ is,&rdquo; one of the village elders would say&mdash;just as they do in novels&mdash;voicing
+ the thought of all, in a low, impressive tone: &ldquo;There's such a thin' as
+ entertaining barranets unawares&mdash;not to mention no higher things&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr. Hoopdriver's head
+ the moment before he heard that remark. But the remark toppled him
+ headlong. What the precise remark was need not concern us. It was a casual
+ piece of such satire as Strephon delights in. Should you be curious, dear
+ lady, as to its nature, you have merely to dress yourself in a really
+ modern cycling costume, get one of the feeblest-looking of your men to
+ escort you, and ride out, next Saturday evening, to any public house where
+ healthy, homely people gather together. Then you will hear quite a lot of
+ the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver heard. More, possibly, than you will
+ desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated an entire
+ disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it shattered all the gorgeous
+ imaginative fabric his mind had been rejoicing in. All that foolish
+ happiness vanished like a dream. And there was nothing to show for it, as
+ there is nothing to show for any spiteful remark that has ever been made.
+ Perhaps the man who said the thing had a gleam of satisfaction at the idea
+ of taking a complacent-looking fool down a peg, but it is just as possible
+ he did not know at the time that his stray shot had hit. He had thrown it
+ as a boy throws a stone at a bird. And it not only demolished a foolish,
+ happy conceit, but it wounded. It touched Jessie grossly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing; but during
+ the supper they had in the little private dining-room, though she talked
+ cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of indistinct conversation, and now
+ and then laughter, came in from the inn parlor through the pelargoniums in
+ the open window. Hoopdriver felt it must all be in the same strain,&mdash;at
+ her expense and his. He answered her abstractedly. She was tired, she
+ said, and presently went to her room. Mr. Hoopdriver, in his courtly way,
+ opened the door for her and bowed her out. He stood listening and fearing
+ some new offence as she went upstairs, and round the bend where the
+ barometer hung beneath the stuffed birds. Then he went back to the room,
+ and stood on the hearthrug before the paper fireplace ornament. &ldquo;Cads!&rdquo; he
+ said in a scathing undertone, as a fresh burst of laughter came floating
+ in. All through supper he had been composing stinging repartee, a
+ blistering speech of denunciation to be presently delivered. He would rate
+ them as a nobleman should: &ldquo;Call themselves Englishmen, indeed, and insult
+ a woman!&rdquo; he would say; take the names and addresses perhaps, threaten to
+ speak to the Lord of the Manor, promise to let them hear from him again,
+ and so out with consternation in his wake. It really ought to be done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Teach 'em better,&rdquo; he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache painfully.
+ What was it? He revived the objectionable remark for his own exasperation,
+ and then went over the heads of his speech again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and went back
+ to the hearthrug. He wouldn't&mdash;after all. Yet was he not a Knight
+ Errant? Should such men go unreproved, unchecked, by wandering baronets
+ incognito? Magnanimity? Look at it in that way? Churls beneath one's
+ notice? No; merely a cowardly subterfuge. He WOULD after all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even as he
+ went towards the door again. But he only went on the more resolutely. He
+ crossed the hall, by the bar, and entered the room from which the remark
+ had proceeded. He opened the door abruptly and stood scowling on them in
+ the doorway. &ldquo;You'll only make a mess of it,&rdquo; remarked the internal
+ sceptic. There were five men in the room altogether: a fat person, with a
+ long pipe and a great number of chins, in an armchair by the fireplace,
+ who wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good evening very affably; a young fellow
+ smoking a cutty and displaying crossed legs with gaiters; a little,
+ bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged, comfortable man with
+ bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket; and a fair young man, very
+ genteel in a yellowish-brown ready-made suit and a white tie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;H'm,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And then in a
+ forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties, &ldquo;Good evening.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very pleasant day we've been 'aving,&rdquo; said the fair young man with the
+ white tie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair, he
+ planted it with great deliberation where he faced the fireplace, and sat
+ down. Let's see&mdash;how did that speech begin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very pleasant roads about here,&rdquo; said the fair young man with the white
+ tie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin somehow.
+ &ldquo;The roads about here are all right, and the weather about here is all
+ right, but what I've come in here to say is&mdash;there's some damned
+ unpleasant people&mdash;damned unpleasant people!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a mental
+ inventory of his pearl buttons as he spoke. &ldquo;How's that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his elbows with
+ extreme angularity. In his heart he was raving at his idiotic folly at
+ thus bearding these lions,&mdash;indisputably they WERE lions,&mdash;but
+ he had to go through with it now. Heaven send, his breath, which was
+ already getting a trifle spasmodic, did not suddenly give out. He fixed
+ his eye on the face of the fat man with the chins, and spoke in a low,
+ impressive voice. &ldquo;I came here, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, and paused to
+ inflate his cheeks, &ldquo;with a lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very nice lady,&rdquo; said the man with the gaiters, putting his head on one
+ side to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind the curvature of
+ his calf. &ldquo;Very nice lady indeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I came here,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;with a lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We saw you did, bless you,&rdquo; said the fat man with the chins, in a curious
+ wheezy voice. &ldquo;I don't see there's anything so very extraordinary in that.
+ One 'ud think we hadn't eyes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. &ldquo;I came, here, sir&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We've 'eard that,&rdquo; said the little man with the beard, sharply and went
+ off into an amiable chuckle. &ldquo;We know it by 'art,&rdquo; said the little man,
+ elaborating the point.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly at the
+ little man with the beard, and tried to recover his discourse. A pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You were saying,&rdquo; said the fair young man with the white tie, speaking
+ very politely, &ldquo;that you came here with a lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A lady,&rdquo; meditated the gaiter gazer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another with
+ keen, bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been scored, and
+ stimulated Mr. Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him with an expectant
+ regard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some dirty cad,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his discourse, and
+ suddenly growing extremely fierce, &ldquo;made a remark as we went by this
+ door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Steady on!&rdquo; said the old gentleman with many chins. &ldquo;Steady on! Don't you
+ go a-calling us names, please.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One minute!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;It wasn't I began calling names.&rdquo;
+ (&ldquo;Who did?&rdquo; said the man with the chins.) &ldquo;I'm not calling any of you
+ dirty cads. Don't run away with that impression. Only some person in this
+ room made a remark that showed he wasn't fit to wipe boots on, and, with
+ all due deference to such gentlemen as ARE gentlemen&rdquo; (Mr. Hoopdriver
+ looked round for moral support), &ldquo;I want to know which it was.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meanin'?&rdquo; said the fair young man in the white tie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That I'm going to wipe my boots on 'im straight away,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver, reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his throat&mdash;than
+ which threat of personal violence nothing had been further from his
+ thoughts on entering the room. He said this because he could think of
+ nothing else to say, and stuck out his elbows truculently to hide the
+ sinking of his heart. It is curious how situations run away with us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ullo, Charlie!&rdquo; said the little man, and &ldquo;My eye!&rdquo; said the owner of the
+ chins. &ldquo;You're going to wipe your boots on 'im?&rdquo; said the fair young man,
+ in a tone of mild surprise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared in the
+ young man's face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's fair and reasonable,&rdquo; said the man in the velveteen jacket; &ldquo;if
+ you can.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man in the
+ white tic. &ldquo;Of course, if you can't find out which it is, I suppose you're
+ prepared to wipe your boots in a liberal way on everybody in the room,&rdquo;
+ said this young man, in the same tone of impersonal question. &ldquo;This
+ gentleman, the champion lightweight&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Own up, Charlie,&rdquo; said the young man with the gaiters, looking up for a
+ moment. &ldquo;And don't go a-dragging in your betters. It's fair and square.
+ You can't get out of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Was it this&mdash;gent?&rdquo; began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said the young man in the white tie, &ldquo;when it comes to
+ talking of wiping boots&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not talking; I'm going to do it,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists; they were
+ spectators. He would have to go through with it now. But this tone of
+ personal aggression on the maker of the remark had somehow got rid of the
+ oppressive feeling of Hoopdriver contra mundum. Apparently, he would have
+ to fight someone. Would he get a black eye? Would he get very much hurt?
+ Pray goodness it wasn't that sturdy chap in the gaiters! Should he rise
+ and begin? What would she think if he brought a black eye to breakfast
+ to-morrow? &ldquo;Is this the man?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a business-like
+ calm, and arms more angular than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eat 'im!&rdquo; said the little man with the beard; &ldquo;eat 'im straight orf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Steady on!&rdquo; said the young man in the white tie. &ldquo;Steady on a minute. If
+ I did happen to say&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You did, did you?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Backing out of it, Charlie?&rdquo; said the young man with the gaiters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit,&rdquo; said Charlie. &ldquo;Surely we can pass a bit of a joke&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bray-vo!&rdquo; said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charlie IS a bit too free with his jokes,&rdquo; said the little man with the
+ beard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's downright disgusting,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, falling back upon his
+ speech. &ldquo;A lady can't ride a bicycle in a country road, or wear a dress a
+ little out of the ordinary, but every dirty little greaser must needs go
+ shouting insults&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;<i>I</i> didn't know the young lady would hear what I said,&rdquo; said
+ Charlie. &ldquo;Surely one can speak friendly to one's friends. How was I to
+ know the door was open&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible, more
+ seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself, and his
+ spirits rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough lesson. &ldquo;Of
+ COURSE you knew the door was open,&rdquo; he retorted indignantly. &ldquo;Of COURSE
+ you thought we should hear what you said. Don't go telling lies about it.
+ It's no good your saying things like that. You've had your fun, and you
+ meant to have your fun. And I mean to make an example of you, Sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ginger beer,&rdquo; said the little man with the beard, in a confidential tone
+ to the velveteen jacket, &ldquo;is regular up this 'ot weather. Bustin' its
+ bottles it is everywhere.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What's the good of scrapping about in a public-house?&rdquo; said Charlie,
+ appealing to the company. &ldquo;A fair fight without interruptions, now, I
+ WOULDN'T mind, if the gentleman's so disposed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew truculent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where you like,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, &ldquo;jest wherever you like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You insulted the gent,&rdquo; said the man in velveteen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't be a bloomin' funk, Charlie,&rdquo; said the man in gaiters. &ldquo;Why, you
+ got a stone of him, if you got an ounce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What I say, is this,&rdquo; said the gentleman with the excessive chins, trying
+ to get a hearing by banging his chair arms. &ldquo;If Charlie goes saying
+ things, he ought to back 'em up. That's what I say. I don't mind his
+ sayin' such things 't all, but he ought to be prepared to back 'em up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll BACK 'em up all right,&rdquo; said Charlie, with extremely bitter emphasis
+ on 'back.' &ldquo;If the gentleman likes to come Toosday week&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rot!&rdquo; chopped in Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ear, 'ear,&rdquo; said the owner of the chins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day,&rdquo; said the
+ man in the velveteen coat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You got to do it, Charlie,&rdquo; said the man in gaiters. &ldquo;It's no good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's like this,&rdquo; said Charlie, appealing to everyone except Hoopdriver.
+ &ldquo;Here's me, got to take in her ladyship's dinner to-morrow night. How
+ should I look with a black eye? And going round with the carriage with a
+ split lip?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you don't want your face sp'iled, Charlie, why don't you keep your
+ mouth shut?&rdquo; said the person in gaiters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Exactly,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great fierceness.
+ &ldquo;Why don't you shut your ugly mouth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's as much as my situation's worth,&rdquo; protested Charlie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You should have thought of that before,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's no occasion to be so thunderin' 'ot about it. I only meant the
+ thing joking,&rdquo; said Charlie. &ldquo;AS one gentleman to another, I'm very sorry
+ if the gentleman's annoyed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his moustache. He
+ felt that Charlie's recognition of his gentlemanliness was at any rate a
+ redeeming feature. But it became his pose to ride hard and heavy over the
+ routed foe. He shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're regular abject,&rdquo; the man in gaiters was saying to Charlie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ More confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only don't think I'm afraid,&mdash;not of a spindle-legged cuss like
+ him,&rdquo; shouted Charlie. &ldquo;Because I ain't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Change of front,&rdquo; thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. &ldquo;Where are we
+ going?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't sit there and be abusive,&rdquo; said the man in velveteen. &ldquo;He's offered
+ to hit you, and if I was him, I'd hit you now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All right, then,&rdquo; said Charlie, with a sudden change of front and
+ springing to his feet. &ldquo;If I must, I must. Now, then!&rdquo; At that,
+ Hoopdriver, the child of Fate, rose too, with a horrible sense that his
+ internal monitor was right. Things had taken a turn. He had made a mess of
+ it, and now there was nothing for it, so far as he could see, but to hit
+ the man at once. He and Charlie stood six feet apart, with a table
+ between, both very breathless and fierce. A vulgar fight in a
+ public-house, and with what was only too palpably a footman! Good Heavens!
+ And this was the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the juice had it
+ all happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But before the brawl
+ could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened. &ldquo;Not here,&rdquo; he said,
+ stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was standing up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charlie's artful,&rdquo; said the little man with the beard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Buller's yard,&rdquo; said the man with the gaiters, taking the control of the
+ entire affair with the easy readiness of an accomplished practitioner. &ldquo;If
+ the gentleman DON'T mind.&rdquo; Buller's yard, it seemed, was the very place.
+ &ldquo;We'll do the thing regular and decent, if you please.&rdquo; And before he
+ completely realized what was happening, Hoopdriver was being marched out
+ through the back premises of the inn, to the first and only fight with
+ fists that was ever to glorify his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr. Hoopdriver was
+ quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But inwardly he was a chaos of
+ conflicting purposes. It was extraordinary how things happened. One remark
+ had trod so closely on the heels of another, that he had had the greatest
+ difficulty in following the development of the business. He distinctly
+ remembered himself walking across from one room to the other,&mdash;a
+ dignified, even an aristocratic figure, primed with considered eloquence,
+ intent upon a scathing remonstrance to these wretched yokels, regarding
+ their manners. Then incident had flickered into incident until here he was
+ out in a moonlit lane,&mdash;a slight, dark figure in a group of larger,
+ indistinct figures,&mdash;marching in a quiet, business-like way towards
+ some unknown horror at Buller's yard. Fists! It was astonishing. It was
+ terrible! In front of him was the pallid figure of Charles, and he saw
+ that the man in gaiters held Charles kindly but firmly by the arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's blasted rot,&rdquo; Charles was saying, &ldquo;getting up a fight just for a
+ thing like that; all very well for 'im. 'E's got 'is 'olidays; 'e 'asn't
+ no blessed dinner to take up to-morrow night like I 'ave.&mdash;No need to
+ numb my arm, IS there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went into Buller's yard through gates. There were sheds in Buller's
+ yard&mdash;sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not solve&mdash;a
+ smell of cows, and a pump stood out clear and black, throwing a clear
+ black shadow on the whitewashed wall. And here it was his face was to be
+ battered to a pulp. He knew this was the uttermost folly, to stand up here
+ and be pounded, but the way out of it was beyond his imagining. Yet
+ afterwards&mdash;? Could he ever face her again? He patted his Norfolk
+ jacket and took his ground with his back to the gate. How did one square?
+ So? Suppose one were to turn and run even now, run straight back to the
+ inn and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn't make, him come out&mdash;anyhow.
+ He could prosecute them for assault if they did. How did one set about
+ prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with his face ghastly white under
+ the moon, squaring in front of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him. Then he
+ hit with his right and with the violence of despair. It was a hit of his
+ own devising,&mdash;an impromptu,&mdash;but it chanced to coincide with
+ the regulation hook hit at the head. He perceived with a leap of
+ exultation that the thing his fist had met was the jawbone of Charles. It
+ was the sole gleam of pleasure he experienced during the fight, and it was
+ quite momentary. He had hardly got home upon Charles before he was struck
+ in the chest and whirled backward. He had the greatest difficulty in
+ keeping his feet. He felt that his heart was smashed flat. &ldquo;Gord darm!&rdquo;
+ said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind him. As Mr. Hoopdriver
+ staggered, Charles gave a loud and fear-compelling cry. He seemed to tower
+ over Hoopdriver in the moonlight. Both his fists were whirling. It was
+ annihilation coming&mdash;no less. Mr. Hoopdriver ducked perhaps and
+ certainly gave ground to the right, hit, and missed. Charles swept round
+ to the left, missing generously. A blow glanced over Mr. Hoopdriver's left
+ ear, and the flanking movement was completed. Another blow behind the ear.
+ Heaven and earth spun furiously round Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he became
+ aware of a figure in a light suit shooting violently through an open gate
+ into the night. The man in gaiters sprang forward past Mr. Hoopdriver, but
+ too late to intercept the fugitive. There were shouts, laughter, and Mr.
+ Hoopdriver, still solemnly squaring, realized the great and wonderful
+ truth&mdash;Charles had fled. He, Hoopdriver, had fought and, by all the
+ rules of war, had won.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him,&rdquo; the toothless little
+ man with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly friendly manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The fact of it is,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road to
+ Salisbury, and with the sound of distant church bells in his cars, &ldquo;I had
+ to give the fellow a lesson; simply had to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people about,&rdquo; said
+ Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These louts get unbearable,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;If now and then we
+ didn't give them a lesson,&mdash;well, a lady cyclist in the roads would
+ be an impossibility.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I suppose every woman shrinks from violence,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;I suppose men
+ ARE braver&mdash;in a way&mdash;than women. It seems to me-I can't imagine&mdash;how
+ one could bring oneself to face a roomful of rough characters, pick out
+ the bravest, and give him an exemplary thrashing. I quail at the idea. I
+ thought only Ouida's guardsmen did things like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was nothing more than my juty&mdash;as a gentleman,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But to walk straight into the face of danger!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's habit,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a particle
+ of cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting at the
+ Golden Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of an elaborate
+ doubling movement through Dorsetshire towards Ringwood, where Jessie
+ anticipated an answer from her schoolmistress friend. By this time they
+ had been nearly sixty hours together, and you will understand that Mr.
+ Hoopdriver's feelings had undergone a considerable intensification and
+ development. At first Jessie had been only an impressionist sketch upon
+ his mind, something feminine, active, and dazzling, something emphatically
+ &ldquo;above&rdquo; him, cast into his company by a kindly fate. His chief idea, at
+ the outset, as you know, had been to live up to her level, by pretending
+ to be more exceptional, more wealthy, better educated, and, above all,
+ better born than he was. His knowledge of the feminine mind was almost
+ entirely derived from the young ladies he had met in business, and in that
+ class (as in military society and among gentlemen's servants) the good old
+ tradition of a brutal social exclusiveness is still religiously preserved.
+ He had an almost intolerable dread of her thinking him a I bounder.' Later
+ he began to perceive the distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a
+ magnificent want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract
+ views of the most advanced description, and her strength of conviction
+ completely carried Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own Life,
+ with emphasis, and Mr. Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to similar
+ resolves. So soon as he grasped the tenor of her views, he perceived that
+ he himself had thought as much from his earliest years. &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; he
+ remarked, in a flash of sexual pride, &ldquo;a man is freer than a woman. End in
+ the Colonies, y'know, there isn't half the Conventionality you find in
+ society in this country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality, and was
+ quite unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded person. He
+ suppressed the habits of years and made no proposal to go to church. He
+ discussed church-going in a liberal spirit. &ldquo;It's jest a habit,&rdquo; he said,
+ &ldquo;jest a custom. I don't see what good it does you at all, really.&rdquo; And he
+ made a lot of excellent jokes at the chimney-pot hat, jokes he had read in
+ the Globe 'turnovers' on that subject. But he showed his gentle breeding
+ by keeping his gloves on all through the Sunday's ride, and ostentatiously
+ throwing away more than half a cigarette when they passed a church whose
+ congregation was gathering for afternoon service. He cautiously avoided
+ literary topics, except by way of compliment, seeing that she was
+ presently to be writing books.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on Jessie's initiative that they attended service in the
+ old-fashioned gallery of Blandford church. Jessie's conscience, I may
+ perhaps tell you, was now suffering the severest twinges. She perceived
+ clearly that things were not working out quite along the lines she had
+ designed-. She had read her Olive Schreiner and George Egerton, and so
+ forth, with all the want of perfect comprehension of one who is still
+ emotionally a girl. She knew the thing to do was to have a flat and to go
+ to the British Museum and write leading articles for the daily papers
+ until something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable person) had
+ kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable horridness, all
+ would have been well. Now her only hope was that liberal-minded woman,
+ Miss Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her out, highly educated, into the
+ world. Miss Mergle had told her at parting to live fearlessly and truly,
+ and had further given her a volume of Emerson's Essays and Motley's &ldquo;Dutch
+ Republic,&rdquo; to help her through the rapids of adolescence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie's feelings for her stepmother's household at Surbiton amounted to
+ an active detestation. There are no graver or more solemn women in the
+ world than these clever girls whose scholastic advancement has retarded
+ their feminine coquetry. In spite of the advanced tone of 'Thomas
+ Plantagenet's' antimarital novel, Jessie had speedily seen through that
+ amiable woman's amiable defences. The variety of pose necessitated by the
+ corps of 'Men' annoyed her to an altogether unreasonable degree. To return
+ to this life of ridiculous unreality&mdash;unconditional capitulation to
+ 'Conventionality' was an exasperating prospect. Yet what else was there to
+ do? You will understand, therefore, that at times she was moody (and Mr.
+ Hoopdriver respectfully silent and attentive) and at times inclined to
+ eloquent denunciation of the existing order of things. She was a
+ Socialist, Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation that he went
+ further, intending, thereby, no less than the horrors of anarchism. He
+ would have owned up to the destruction of the Winter Palace indeed, had he
+ had the faintest idea where the Winter Palace was, and had his assurance
+ amounted to certainty that the Winter Palace was destroyed. He agreed with
+ her cordially that the position of women was intolerable, but checked
+ himself on the' verge of the proposition that a girl ought not to expect a
+ fellow to hand down boxes for her when he was getting the 'swap' from a
+ customer. It was Jessie's preoccupation with her own perplexities, no
+ doubt, that delayed the unveiling of Mr. Hoopdriver all through Saturday
+ and Sunday. Once or twice, however, there were incidents that put him
+ about terribly&mdash;even questions that savoured of suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted wakefulness came
+ upon him. Unaccountably he realised he was a contemptible liar, All
+ through the small hours of Monday he reviewed the tale of his falsehoods,
+ and when he tried to turn his mind from that, the financial problem
+ suddenly rose upon him. He heard two o'clock strike, and three. It is odd
+ how unhappy some of us are at times, when we are at our happiest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morning, Madam,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the breakfast
+ room of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he smiled, bowed,
+ rubbed his hands together, and pulled out a chair for her, and rubbed his
+ hands again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face. &ldquo;Where HAVE I
+ seen that before?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The chair?&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;the attitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously
+ into his face. &ldquo;And&mdash;Madam?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a habit,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. &ldquo;A bad habit. Calling
+ ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there up
+ country&mdash;y'know&mdash;the ladies&mdash;so rare&mdash;we call 'em all
+ Madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You HAVE some funny habits, brother Chris,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Before you sell
+ your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and stand for
+ Parliament&mdash;What a fine thing it is to be a man!&mdash;you must cure
+ yourself. That habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing your hands, and
+ looking expectant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a habit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know. But I don't think it a good one. You don't mind my telling you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not a bit. I'm grateful.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation,&rdquo; said Jessie,
+ looking at the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his hand to his
+ moustache and then, thinking this might be another habit, checked his arm
+ and stuck his hand into his pocket. He felt juiced awkward, to use his
+ private formula. Jessie's eye wandered to the armchair, where a piece of
+ binding was loose, and, possibly to carry out her theory of an observant
+ disposition, she turned and asked him for a pin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver's hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and there,
+ planted by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had impounded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What an odd place to put pins!&rdquo; exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's 'andy,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I saw a chap in a shop do it once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You must have a careful disposition,&rdquo; she said, over her shoulder,
+ kneeling down to the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the centre of Africa&mdash;up country, that is&mdash;one learns to
+ value pins,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause. &ldquo;There
+ weren't over many pins in Africa. They don't lie about on the ground
+ there.&rdquo; His face was now in a fine, red glow. Where would the draper break
+ out next? He thrust his hands into his coat pockets, then took one out
+ again, furtively removed the second pin and dropped it behind him gently.
+ It fell with a loud 'ping' on the fender. Happily she made no remark,
+ being preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and stood
+ against it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were keeping
+ breakfast a tremendous time. He took up his rolled serviette looked
+ closely and scrutinisingly at the ring, then put his hand under the fold
+ of the napkin and examined the texture, and put the thing down again. Then
+ he had a vague impulse to finger his hollow wisdom tooth&mdash;happily
+ checked. He suddenly discovered he was standing as if the table was a
+ counter, and sat down forthwith. He drummed with his hand on the table. He
+ felt dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Breakfast is late,&rdquo; said Jessie, standing up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to Ringwood.
+ Then silence fell again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing, looked
+ again at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the corner of the
+ tablecloth on the ends of his fingers, and regarded it. &ldquo;Fifteen three,&rdquo;
+ he thought, privately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why do you do that?&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;WHAT?&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver's face became quite a bright red. He began pulling his
+ moustache nervously. &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I know. It's a queer habit, I
+ know. But out there, you know, there's native servants, you know, and&mdash;it's
+ a queer thing to talk about&mdash;but one has to look at things to see,
+ don't y'know, whether they're quite clean or not. It's got to be a habit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How odd!&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Isn't it?&rdquo; mumbled Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I were a Sherlock Holmes,&rdquo; said Jessie, &ldquo;I suppose I could have told
+ you were a colonial from little things like that. But anyhow, I guessed
+ it, didn't I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, &ldquo;you guessed it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add, &ldquo;unhappily
+ in this case you guessed wrong.&rdquo; Did she suspect? Then, at the
+ psychological moment, the girl bumped the door open with her tray and
+ brought in the coffee and scrambled eggs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes,&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days surged to the
+ top of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning, sat with
+ his cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the coffee. His ears were
+ a bright red, and his eyes bright. He took his coffee cup clumsily,
+ cleared his throat, suddenly leant back in his chair, and thrust his hands
+ deep into his pockets. &ldquo;I'll do it,&rdquo; he said aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do what?&rdquo; said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee pot. She
+ was just beginning her scrambled egg.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Own up.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Own what?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Milton&mdash;I'm a liar.&rdquo; He put his head on one side and regarded
+ her with a frown of tremendous resolution. Then in measured accents, and
+ moving his head slowly from side to side, he announced, &ldquo;Ay'm a deraper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You're a draper? I thought&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You thought wrong. But it's bound to come up. Pins, attitude, habits&mdash;It's
+ plain enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm a draper's assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a draper's
+ assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A draper's assistant isn't a position to be ashamed of,&rdquo; she said,
+ recovering, and not quite understanding yet what this all meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, it is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for a man, in this country now. To be just another
+ man's hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes you are told, and go to
+ church to please customers, and work&mdash;There's no other kind of men
+ stand such hours. A drunken bricklayer's a king to it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why are you telling me this now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's important you should know at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Mr. Benson&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That isn't all. If you don't mind my speaking about myself a bit, there's
+ a few things I'd like to tell you. I can't go on deceiving you. My name's
+ not Benson. WHY I told you Benson, I DON'T know. Except that I'm a kind of
+ fool. Well&mdash;I wanted somehow to seem more than I was. My name's
+ Hoopdriver.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that about South Africa&mdash;and that lion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lies!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And all the
+ reminiscences of the giraffes&mdash;lies too. I never rode on no giraffes.
+ I'd be afraid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased his
+ conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity. This was a
+ new side altogether to the man. &ldquo;But WHY,&rdquo; she began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why did I tell you such things? <i>I</i> don't know. Silly sort of chap,
+ I expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow, now, I want you
+ to know the truth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Silence. Breakfast untouched. &ldquo;I thought I'd tell you,&rdquo; said Mr.
+ Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I suppose it's snobbishness and all that kind of thing, as
+ much as anything. I lay awake pretty near all last night thinking about
+ myself; thinking what a got-up imitation of a man I was, and all that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you haven't any diamond shares, and you are not going into
+ Parliament, and you're not&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All Lies,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. &ldquo;Lies from beginning
+ to end. 'Ow I came to tell 'em I DON'T know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stared at him blankly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never set eyes on Africa in my life,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, completing
+ the confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his pocket, and with
+ the nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of death is passed, began to
+ drink his coffee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a little surprising,&rdquo; began Jessie, vaguely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think it over,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I'm sorry from the bottom of my
+ heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little, and
+ seemed lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by contrition and
+ anxiety that he consumed an extraordinarily large breakfast out of pure
+ nervousness, and ate his scrambled eggs for the most part with the spoon
+ that belonged properly to the marmalade. His eyes were gloomily downcast.
+ She glanced at him through her eyelashes. Once or twice she struggled with
+ laughter, once or twice she seemed to be indignant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know what to think,&rdquo; she said at last. &ldquo;I don't know what to make
+ of you&mdash;brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that you were
+ perfectly honest. And somehow&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I think so still.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Honest&mdash;with all those lies!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I'm fair ashamed of myself. But anyhow&mdash;I've
+ stopped deceiving you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I THOUGHT,&rdquo; said the Young Lady in Grey, &ldquo;that story of the lion&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Don't remind me of THAT.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I thought, somehow, I FELT, that the things you said didn't ring quite
+ true.&rdquo; She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the expression of his face.
+ &ldquo;Of COURSE you are honest,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;How could I ever doubt it? As if <i>I</i>
+ had never pretended! I see it all now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast things. He
+ looked at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing friendliness in her eyes. He
+ scarcely understood at first. He rose, holding the marmalade spoon, and
+ took her proffered hand with abject humility. &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; he broke out, &ldquo;if
+ you aren't enough&mdash;but there!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I see it all now.&rdquo; A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured her
+ humour. She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. &ldquo;You did it,&rdquo; she
+ said, &ldquo;because you wanted to help me. And you thought I was too
+ Conventional to take help from one I might think my social inferior.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That was partly it,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How you misunderstood me!&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You don't mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It was noble of you. But I am sorry,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;you should think me
+ likely to be ashamed of you because you follow a decent trade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I didn't know at first, you see,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He was as
+ useful a citizen as could be,&mdash;it was proposed and carried,&mdash;and
+ his lying was of the noblest. And so the breakfast concluded much more
+ happily than his brightest expectation, and they rode out of ruddy little
+ Blandford as though no shadow of any sort had come between them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVI.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees half-way up a
+ stretch of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood, however, Mr. Hoopdriver
+ reopened the question of his worldly position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ju think,&rdquo; he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette from his
+ mouth, &ldquo;that a draper's shopman IS a decent citizen?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When he puts people off with what they don't quite want, for instance?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Need he do that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Salesmanship,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Wouldn't get a crib if he didn't.&mdash;It's
+ no good your arguing. It's not a particularly honest nor a particularly
+ useful trade; it's not very high up; there's no freedom and no leisure&mdash;seven
+ to eight-thirty every day in the week; don't leave much edge to live on,
+ does it?&mdash;real workmen laugh at us and educated chaps like bank
+ clerks and solicitors' clerks look down on us. You look respectable
+ outside, and inside you are packed in dormitories like convicts, fed on
+ bread and butter and bullied like slaves. You're just superior enough to
+ feel that you're not superior. Without capital there's no prospects; one
+ draper in a hundred don't even earn enough to marry on; and if he DOES
+ marry, his G.V. can just use him to black boots if he likes, and he
+ daren't put his back up. That's drapery! And you tell me to be contented.
+ Would YOU be contented if you was a shop girl?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown eyes, and
+ he remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he spoke. &ldquo;I've been thinking,&rdquo; he said, and stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand. There was
+ a light in her eyes that made the expression of them tender. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver had not looked in her face while he had talked. He had regarded
+ the grass, and pointed his remarks with redknuckled hands held open and
+ palms upwards. Now they hung limply over his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was thinking it this morning,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course it's silly.&rdquo; &ldquo;Well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's like this. I'm twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all right to
+ fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years behind.&mdash;Is it too
+ late? I wasn't so backward. I did algebra, and Latin up to auxiliary
+ verbs, and French genders. I got a kind of grounding.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now you mean, should you go on working?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;That's it. You can't do much at drapery
+ without capital, you know. But if I could get really educated. I've
+ thought sometimes...&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; said the Young Lady in Grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. &ldquo;You think?&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;Of course. You are a Man. You are free&mdash;&rdquo; She warmed. &ldquo;I wish
+ I were you to have the chance of that struggle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Am I Man ENOUGH?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing himself.
+ &ldquo;There's that eight years,&rdquo; he said to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You can make it up. What you call educated men&mdash;They're not going
+ on. You can catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing golf, and
+ thinking of clever things to say to women like my stepmother, and dining
+ out. You're in front of them already in one thing. They think they know
+ everything. You don't. And they know such little things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;How you encourage a fellow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I could only help you,&rdquo; she said, and left an eloquent hiatus. He
+ became pensive again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's pretty evident you don't think much of a draper,&rdquo; he said abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another interval. &ldquo;Hundreds of men,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;have come from the very
+ lowest ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and Hugh Miller, a
+ stonemason; and plenty of others. Dodsley was a footman&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But drapers! We're too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats and
+ cuffs might get crumpled&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wasn't there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard tell
+ of.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you ever read 'Hearts Insurgent'?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context, but
+ suddenly broke out with an account of his literary requirements. &ldquo;The fact
+ is&mdash;I've read precious little. One don't get much of a chance,
+ situated as I am. We have a library at business, and I've gone through
+ that. Most Besant I've read, and a lot of Mrs. Braddon's and Rider Haggard
+ and Marie Corelli&mdash;and, well&mdash;a Ouida or so. They're good
+ stories, of course, and first-class writers, but they didn't seem to have
+ much to do with me. But there's heaps of books one hears talked about, I
+ HAVEN'T read.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you read any other books but novels?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can't get the
+ books. I have been to some extension lectures, of course, 'Lizabethan
+ Dramatists,' it was, but it seemed a little high-flown, you know. And I
+ went and did wood-carving at the same place. But it didn't seem leading
+ nowhere, and I cut my thumb and chucked it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his hands limp.
+ &ldquo;It makes me sick,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to think how I've been fooled with. My old
+ schoolmaster ought to have a juiced HIDING. He's a thief. He pretended to
+ undertake to make a man of me, and be's stole twenty-three years of my
+ life, filled me up with scraps and sweepings. Here I am! I don't KNOW
+ anything, and I can't DO anything, and all the learning time is over.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it?&rdquo; she said; but he did not seem to hear her. &ldquo;My o' people didn't
+ know any better, and went and paid thirty pounds premium&mdash;thirty
+ pounds down to have me made THIS. The G.V. promised to teach me the trade,
+ and he never taught me anything but to be a Hand. It's the way they do
+ with draper's apprentices. If every swindler was locked up&mdash;well,
+ you'd have nowhere to buy tape and cotton. It's all very well to bring up
+ Burns and those chaps, but I'm not that make. Yet I'm not such muck that I
+ might not have been better&mdash;with teaching. I wonder what the chaps
+ who sneer and laugh at such as me would be if they'd been fooled about as
+ I've been. At twenty-three&mdash;it's a long start.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver indeed
+ than him of the glorious imaginings. &ldquo;It's YOU done this,&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;You're real. And it sets me thinking what I really am, and what I might
+ have been. Suppose it was all different&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;MAKE it different.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;WORK. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his eyes.
+ &ldquo;And even then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No! It's not much good. I'm beginning too late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment. There was
+ no letter for her at the post office. Opposite the hotel, The Chequered
+ Career, was a machine shop with a conspicuously second-hand Marlborough
+ Club tandem tricycle displayed in the window, together with the
+ announcement that bicycles and tricycles were on hire within. The
+ establishment was impressed on Mr. Hoopdriver's mind by the proprietor's
+ action in coming across the road and narrowly inspecting their machines.
+ His action revived a number of disagreeable impressions, but, happily,
+ came to nothing. While they were still lunching, a tall clergyman, with a
+ heated face, entered the room and sat down at the table next to theirs. He
+ was in a kind of holiday costume; that is to say, he had a more than
+ usually high collar, fastened behind and rather the worse for the weather,
+ and his long-tail coat had been replaced by a black jacket of quite
+ remarkable brevity. He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his trouser legs
+ were grey with dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw in the place of
+ the customary soft felt. He was evidently socially inclined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A most charming day, sir,&rdquo; he said, in a ringing tenor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Charming,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country,&rdquo; said the
+ clergyman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Touring,&rdquo; explained Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;I can imagine that, with a properly
+ oiled machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way of seeing the
+ country.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver; &ldquo;it isn't half a bad way of getting about.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be, I should
+ imagine, a delightful bond.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quite so,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you ride a tandem?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No&mdash;we're separate,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The motion through the air is indisputably of a very exhilarating
+ description.&rdquo; With that decision, the clergyman turned to give his orders
+ to the attendant, in a firm, authoritative voice, for a cup of tea, two
+ gelatine lozenges, bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow. &ldquo;The
+ gelatine lozenges I must have. I require them to precipitate the tannin in
+ my tea,&rdquo; he remarked to the room at large, and folding his hands, remained
+ for some time with his chin thereon, staring fixedly at a little picture
+ over Mr. Hoopdriver's head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I myself am a cyclist,&rdquo; said the clergyman, descending suddenly upon Mr.
+ Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. &ldquo;What machine, may
+ I ask?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I regret to
+ say, considered too&mdash;how shall I put it?&mdash;flippant by my
+ parishioners. So I have a tricycle. I have just been hauling it hither.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hauling!&rdquo; said Jessie, surprised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb. Mr.
+ Hoopdriver's face passed through several phases of surprise. Then he saw
+ the explanation. &ldquo;Had an accident?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to go
+ round. I found myself about five miles from here with an absolutely
+ immobile machine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ow!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie glanced
+ at this insane person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It appears,&rdquo; said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he had
+ created, &ldquo;that my man carefully washed out the bearings with paraffin, and
+ let the machine dry without oiling it again. The consequence was that they
+ became heated to a considerable temperature and jammed. Even at the outset
+ the machine ran stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being inclined to
+ ascribe this stiffness to my own lassitude, merely redoubled my
+ exertions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ot work all round,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of life to do
+ whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe, indeed, that the
+ bearings became red hot. Finally one of the wheels jammed together. A side
+ wheel it was, so that its stoppage necessitated an inversion of the entire
+ apparatus,&mdash;an inversion in which I participated.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meaning, that you went over?&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much amused.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly. You may
+ understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I expostulated&mdash;playfully,
+ of course. Happily the road was not overlooked. Finally, the entire
+ apparatus became rigid, and I abandoned the unequal contest. For all
+ practical purposes the tricycle was no better than a heavy chair without
+ castors. It was a case of hauling or carrying.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergyman's nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Five miles,&rdquo; said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread and butter
+ vigorously. &ldquo;Happily,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I am an eupeptic, energetic sort of
+ person on principle. I would all men were likewise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the best way,&rdquo; agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation gave
+ precedence to bread and butter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gelatine,&rdquo; said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea thoughtfully,
+ &ldquo;precipitates the tannin in one's tea and renders it easy of digestion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That's a useful sort of thing to know,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are altogether welcome,&rdquo; said the clergyman, biting generously at two
+ pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace towards Stoney
+ Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South Africa being in
+ abeyance. Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by disagreeable thoughts. He had
+ changed the last sovereign at Ringwood. The fact had come upon him
+ suddenly. Now too late he was reflecting upon his resources. There was
+ twenty pounds or more in the post office savings bank in Putney, but his
+ book was locked up in his box at the Antrobus establishment. Else this
+ infatuated man would certainly have surreptitiously withdrawn the entire
+ sum in order to prolong these journeyings even for a few days. As it was,
+ the shadow of the end fell across his happiness. Strangely enough, in
+ spite of his anxiety and the morning's collapse, he was still in a curious
+ emotional state that was certainly not misery. He was forgetting his
+ imaginings and posings, forgetting himself altogether in his growing
+ appreciation of his companion. The most tangible trouble in his mind was
+ the necessity of breaking the matter to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was reached,
+ and they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little oak tree. Near the
+ crest the road looped on itself, so that, looking back, it sloped below
+ them up to the right and then came towards them. About them grew a rich
+ heather with stunted oaks on the edge of a deep ditch along the roadside,
+ and this road was sandy; below the steepness of the hill, however, it was
+ grey and barred with shadows, for there the trees clustered thick and
+ tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled clumsily with his cigarettes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a thing I got to tell you,&rdquo; he said, trying to be perfectly calm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'd like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y'know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm very unsettled,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;You are thinking of writing Books?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How long'd it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't know at all. I believe there are a great many women journalists
+ and sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists. But I suppose it
+ takes time. Women, you know, edit most papers nowadays, George Egerton
+ says. I ought, I suppose, to communicate with a literary agent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, &ldquo;it's very suitable work. Not being heavy
+ like the drapery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's heavy brain labour, you must remember.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That wouldn't hurt YOU,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a compliment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's like this,&rdquo; he said, ending a pause. &ldquo;It's a juiced nuisance
+ alluding to these matters, but&mdash;we got very little more money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her. &ldquo;I was
+ counting, of course, on your friend's writing and your being able to take
+ some action to-day.&rdquo; 'Take some action' was a phrase he had learnt at his
+ last 'swop.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Money,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;I didn't think of money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hullo! Here's a tandem bicycle,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly, and
+ pointing with his cigarette.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the trees at
+ the foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly over their work and
+ made a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to take the rise. The machine was
+ evidently too highly geared for hill climbing, and presently the rearmost
+ rider rose on his saddle and hopped off, leaving his companion to any fate
+ he found proper. The foremost rider was a man unused to such machines and
+ apparently undecided how to dismount. He wabbled a few yards up the hill
+ with a long tail of machine wabbling behind him. Finally, he made an
+ attempt to jump off as one does off a single bicycle, hit his boot against
+ the backbone, and collapsed heavily, falling on his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stood up. &ldquo;Dear me!&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;I hope he isn't hurt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up and
+ wheeled out of the way, and then the fallen rider, being assisted, got up
+ slowly and stood rubbing his arm. No serious injury seemed to be done to
+ the man, and the couple presently turned their attention to the machine by
+ the roadside. They were not in cycling clothes Hoopdriver observed. One
+ wore the grotesque raiment for which the Cockney discovery of the game of
+ golf seems indirectly blamable. Even at this distance the flopping
+ flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at the top of his calves,
+ and the chequering of his stockings were perceptible. The other, the rear
+ rider, was a slender little man in grey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Amatoors,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her eyes. She no
+ longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering at the machine down
+ below there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How much have you?&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins, counted
+ them with his left index finger, and held them out to her. &ldquo;Thirteen four
+ half,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Every penny.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have half a sovereign,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;Our bill wherever we stop&mdash;&rdquo;
+ The hiatus was more eloquent than many words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this,&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's a juiced nuisance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Money,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Is it possible&mdash;Surely! Conventionality! May
+ only people of means&mdash;Live their own Lives? I never thought ...&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here's some more cyclists coming,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from among
+ the trees emerged the massive bulk of a 'Marlborough Club' tandem, ridden
+ by a slender woman in grey and a burly man in a Norfolk jacket. Following
+ close upon this came lank black figure in a piebald straw hat, riding a
+ tricycle of antiquated pattern with two large wheels in front. The man in
+ grey remained bowed over the bicycle, with his stomach resting on the
+ saddle, but his companion stood up and addressed some remark to the
+ tricycle riders. Then it seemed as if he pointed up hill to where Mr.
+ Hoopdriver and his companion stood side by side. A still odder thing
+ followed; the lady in grey took out her handkerchief, appeared to wave it
+ for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from her companion the white
+ signal vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; said Jessie, peering under her hand. &ldquo;It's never&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering elaborately from
+ side to side to ease the ascent. It was evident, from his heaving
+ shoulders and depressed head, that the burly gentleman was exerting
+ himself. The clerical person on the tricycle assumed the shape of a note
+ of interrogation. Then on the heels of this procession came a dogcart
+ driven by a man in a billycock hat and containing a lady in dark green.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Looks like some sort of excursion,&rdquo; said Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand. &ldquo;Surely,&rdquo; she
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The clergyman's efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious jerking
+ motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself, and he partly
+ dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his machine up hill again
+ immediately and began to wheel it. Then the burly gentleman dismounted,
+ and with a courtly attentiveness assisted the lady in grey to alight.
+ There was some little difference of opinion as to assistance, she so
+ clearly wished to help push. Finally she gave in, and the burly gentleman
+ began impelling the machine up hill by his own unaided strength. His face
+ made a dot of brilliant colour among the greys and greens at the foot of
+ the hill. The tandem bicycle was now, it seems, repaired, and this joined
+ the tail of the procession, its riders walking behind the dogcart, from
+ which the lady in green and the driver had now descended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mr. Hoopdriver,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Those people&mdash;I'm almost sure&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he turned
+ to pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and assisted her to
+ mount.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people coming up
+ the hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie's doubts at once. Two
+ handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted. The riders of the tandem
+ bicycle began to run it up hill, past the other vehicles. But our young
+ people did not wait for further developments of the pursuit. In another
+ moment they were out of sight, riding hard down a steady incline towards
+ Stoney Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill brow,
+ Jessie looked back and saw the tandem rising over the crest, with its rear
+ rider just tumbling into the saddle. &ldquo;They're coming,&rdquo; she said, and bent
+ her head over her handles in true professional style.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw ahead of
+ them a number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the roadway.
+ Involuntarily they slackened. &ldquo;Shoo!&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, and the ponies
+ kicked up their heels derisively. At that Mr. Hoopdriver lost his temper
+ and charged at them, narrowly missed one, and sent them jumping the ditch
+ into the bracken under the trees, leaving the way clear for Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew heavy, and
+ Mr. Hoopdriver's breath sounded like a saw. The tandem appeared, making
+ frightful exertions, at the foot, while the chase was still climbing.
+ Then, thank Heaven! a crest and a stretch of up and down road, whose only
+ disadvantage was its pitiless exposure to the afternoon sun. The tandem
+ apparently dismounted at the hill, and did not appear against the hot blue
+ sky until they were already near some trees and a good mile away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We're gaining,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of
+ perspiration dropping from brow to cheek. &ldquo;That hill&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly spent.
+ Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of shame prolonged
+ the liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From that point the tandem
+ grained upon them steadily. At the Rufus Stone, it was scarcely a hundred
+ yards behind. Then one desperate spurt, and they found themselves upon a
+ steady downhill stretch among thick pine woods. Downhill nothing can beat
+ a highly geared tandem bicycle. Automatically Mr. Hoopdriver put up his
+ feet, and Jessie slackened her pace. In another moment they heard the
+ swish of the fat pneumatics behind them, and the tandem passed Hoopdriver
+ and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver felt a mad impulse to collide with
+ this abominable machine as it passed him. His only consolation was to
+ notice that its riders, riding violently, were quite as dishevelled as
+ himself and smothered in sandy white dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders shot panting
+ past them downhill. &ldquo;Brake,&rdquo; said Dangle, who was riding behind, and stood
+ up on the pedals. For a moment the velocity of the thing increased, and
+ then they saw the dust fly from the brake, as it came down on the front
+ tire. Dangle's right leg floundered in the air as he came off in the road.
+ The tandem wobbled. &ldquo;Hold it!&rdquo; cried Phipps over his shoulder, going on
+ downhill. &ldquo;I can't get off if you don't hold it.&rdquo; He put on the brake
+ until the machine stopped almost dead, and then feeling unstable began to
+ pedal again. Dangle shouted after him. &ldquo;Put out your foot, man,&rdquo; said
+ Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards or more
+ beyond their quarry. Then Phipps realized his possibilities, slacked up
+ with the brake, and let the thing go over sideways, dropping on to his
+ right foot. With his left leg still over the saddle, and still holding the
+ handles, he looked over his shoulder and began addressing uncomplimentary
+ remarks to Dangle. &ldquo;You only think of yourself,&rdquo; said Phipps, with a
+ florid face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have forgotten us,&rdquo; said Jessie, turning her machine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was a road at the top of the hill&mdash;to Lyndhurst,&rdquo; said
+ Hoopdriver, following her example.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's no good. There's the money. We must give it up. But let us go back
+ to that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don't see why we should be led captive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her companion
+ mounted and rode quietly back up the hill again. As they dismounted at the
+ hotel entrance, the tandem overtook them, and immediately afterwards the
+ dogcart came into view in pursuit. Dangle jumped off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Milton, I believe,&rdquo; said Dangle, panting and raising a damp cap from
+ his wet and matted hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I SAY,&rdquo; said Phipps, receding involuntarily. &ldquo;Don't go doing it again,
+ Dangle. HELP a chap.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One minute,&rdquo; said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the hotel
+ entrance. Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp but defiant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps was
+ abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now
+ wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. &ldquo;Miss Milton?&rdquo; he
+ said briefly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Miss Milton within?&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;AND not to be disturved,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a scoundrel, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Et your service,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;She awaits 'er stepmother, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Dangle hesitated. &ldquo;She will be here immediately,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Here is
+ her friend, Miss Mergle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense calm,
+ thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of those fatal
+ hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude was merely
+ vulgarly defiant he withdrew both, returned one and pulled at the
+ insufficient moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in
+ confusion. &ldquo;Is this the man?&rdquo; she said to Dangle, and forthwith, &ldquo;How DARE
+ you, sir? How dare you face me? That poor girl!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You will permit me to observe,&rdquo; began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid
+ drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a
+ romantic villain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ugh,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff with
+ her extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the hall of
+ the hotel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me pass,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. &ldquo;How dare you
+ resist my passage?&rdquo; and so swept by him and into the dining-room, wherein
+ Jessie had sought refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand,
+ Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle's activity,
+ came in upon her heels, Phipps leading. &ldquo;How dare you prevent that lady
+ passing?&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle's sense, dangerous, but he
+ made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the passage,
+ guardant. &ldquo;It is men of your stamp, sir,&rdquo; said Phipps, &ldquo;who discredit
+ manhood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. &ldquo;Who the juice are you?&rdquo;
+ shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are YOU, sir?&rdquo; retorted Phipps. &ldquo;Who are you? That's the question.
+ What are YOU, and what are you doing, wandering at large with a young lady
+ under age?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't speak to him,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me,&rdquo; said
+ Hoopdriver. &ldquo;Not Likely.&rdquo; And added fiercely, &ldquo;And that I tell you, sir.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at one
+ another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if the long
+ clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but deliberate.
+ &ldquo;Petticoated anachronism,&rdquo; said the long clergyman in the doorway,
+ apparently still suffering from the antiquated prejudice that demanded a
+ third wheel and a black coat from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps
+ and Hoopdriver for a moment, then extending his hand towards the latter,
+ he waved it up and down three times, saying, &ldquo;Tchak, tchak, tchak,&rdquo; very
+ deliberately as he did so. Then with a concluding &ldquo;Ugh!&rdquo; and a gesture of
+ repugnance he passed on into the dining-room from which the voice of Miss
+ Mergle was distinctly audible remarking that the weather was extremely hot
+ even for the time of year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing effect
+ upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed by the
+ advent of the massive Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is this the man?&rdquo; said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special voice
+ for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't hurt him!&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. &ldquo;However much
+ wrong he has done her&mdash;No violence!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Ow many more of you?&rdquo; said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella stand.
+ &ldquo;Where is she? What has he done with her?&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers,&rdquo; said
+ Mr. Hoopdriver. &ldquo;So you needn't think it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Please don't worry, Mr. Hoopdriver,&rdquo; said Jessie, suddenly appearing in
+ the door of the dining-room. &ldquo;I'm here, mother.&rdquo; Her face was white.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional charge
+ at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery moved as if
+ to follow, and hesitated. &ldquo;You'd better make yourself scarce,&rdquo; he said to
+ Mr. Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shan't do anything of the kind,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a catching
+ of the breath. &ldquo;I'm here defending that young lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You've done her enough mischief, I should think,&rdquo; said Widgery, suddenly
+ walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind him, leaving
+ Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Clear!&rdquo; said Phipps, threateningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall go and sit out in the garden,&rdquo; said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+ &ldquo;There I shall remain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't make a row with him,&rdquo; said Dangle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XXXIX.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion is over.
+ In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable collection of
+ wheeled instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in grave and
+ stately attitudes, and by the driver of a stylish dogcart from Ringwood.
+ In the garden behind, in an attitude of nervous prostration, Mr.
+ Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat. Through the open window of a
+ private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of men and women in
+ conference. Occasionally something that might have been a girlish sob.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I fail to see what status Widgery has,&rdquo; says Dangle, &ldquo;thrusting himself
+ in there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He takes too much upon himself,&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day,&rdquo; said Dangle, and
+ stopped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course,&rdquo; said Dangle,
+ with a gloomy magnanimity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the man's
+ chequered legs. &ldquo;Financially it wouldn't be half bad.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He's so dull and heavy,&rdquo; said Phipps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity, taken
+ the chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate Jessie. I
+ regret to have to say that my heroine had been appalled by the visible
+ array of public opinion against her excursion, to the pitch of tears. She
+ was sitting with flushed cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the table
+ opposite to the clergyman. She held her handkerchief crumpled up in her
+ extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as possible, and
+ occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie's hand, to indicate
+ forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which touched Widgery
+ very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B. A.), sat on the opposite
+ side near the clergyman. She was the strong-minded schoolmistress to whom
+ Jessie had written, and who had immediately precipitated the pursuit upon
+ her. She had picked up the clergyman in Ringwood, and had told him
+ everything forthwith, having met him once at a British Association
+ meeting. He had immediately constituted himself administrator of the
+ entire business. Widgery, having been foiled in an attempt to conduct the
+ proceedings, stood with his legs wide apart in front of the fireplace
+ ornament, and looked profound and sympathetic. Jessie's account of her
+ adventures was a chary one and given amidst frequent interruptions. She
+ surprised herself by skilfully omitting any allusion to the Bechamel
+ episode. She completely exonerated Hoopdriver from the charge of being
+ more than an accessory to her escapade. But public feeling was heavy
+ against Hoopdriver. Her narrative was inaccurate and sketchy, but happily
+ the others were too anxious to pass opinions to pin her down to
+ particulars. At last they had all the facts they would permit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear young lady,&rdquo; said the clergyman, &ldquo;I can only ascribe this
+ extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest
+ misconceptions of your place in the world and of your duties and
+ responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your present emotion is due
+ not so much to a real and sincere penitence for your disobedience and
+ folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate interference&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not that,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. &ldquo;Not that.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But WHY did she go off like this?&rdquo; said Widgery. &ldquo;That's what <i>I</i>
+ want to know.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; and the
+ ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. &ldquo;I
+ cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more
+ intelligent portion of the feminine community. You had a pleasant home, a
+ most refined and intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to
+ cherish and protect you&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I HAD a mother,&rdquo; gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare of
+ self-pity, and sobbing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it all
+ alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wanted to learn,&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;AH!&rdquo; from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It isn't fair for all of you to argue at me at once,&rdquo; submitted Jessie,
+ irrelevantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A world full of unknown dangers,&rdquo; resumed the clergyman. &ldquo;Your proper
+ place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You have
+ been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of literature
+ which, with all due respect to distinguished authoress that shall be
+ nameless, I must call the New Woman Literature. In that deleterious
+ ingredient of our book boxes&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I don't altogether agree with you there,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle, throwing her
+ head back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr. Widgery
+ coughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What HAS all this to do with me?&rdquo; asked Jessie, availing herself of the
+ interruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The point is,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, &ldquo;that in my books&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All I want to do,&rdquo; said Jessie, &ldquo;is to go about freely by myself. Girls
+ do so in America. Why not here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Social conditions are entirely different in America,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle.
+ &ldquo;Here we respect Class Distinctions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away for a
+ holiday if I want to.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With a strange young man, socially your inferior,&rdquo; said Widgery, and made
+ her flush by his tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;With anybody.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They don't do that, even in America,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear young lady,&rdquo; said the clergyman, &ldquo;the most elementary principles
+ of decorum&mdash;A day will come when you will better understand how
+ entirely subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of our
+ present civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing
+ anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of yours.
+ We can only put things down at present, in charity, to your ignorance&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have to consider the general body of opinion, too,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Precisely,&rdquo; said Miss Mergle. &ldquo;There is no such thing as conduct in the
+ absolute.&rdquo; &ldquo;If once this most unfortunate business gets about,&rdquo; said the
+ clergyman, &ldquo;it will do you infinite harm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I'VE done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
+ people's&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The world has no charity,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For a girl,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;No.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen to
+ reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you infinite
+ harm, if once it is generally known. And not only that, it will cause
+ infinite pain to those who care for you. But if you will return at once to
+ your home, causing it to be understood that you have been with friends for
+ these last few days&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell lies,&rdquo; said Jessie. &ldquo;Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I
+ understand that is how your absence is understood at present, and there is
+ no reason&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie's grip tightened on her handkerchief. &ldquo;I won't go back,&rdquo; she said,
+ &ldquo;to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books I need to
+ read, to be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Anything,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton, &ldquo;anything in reason.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But will you keep your promise?&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Surely you won't dictate to your mother!&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My stepmother! I don't want to dictate. I want definite promises now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is most unreasonable,&rdquo; said the clergyman. &ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said Jessie,
+ swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. &ldquo;Then I won't go back. My
+ life is being frittered away&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;LET her have her way,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A room then. All your Men. I'm not to come down and talk away half my
+ days&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My dear child, if only to save you,&rdquo; said Mrs. Milton. &ldquo;If you don't keep
+ your promise&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I take it the matter is practically concluded,&rdquo; said the clergyman.
+ &ldquo;And that you very properly submit to return to your proper home. And now,
+ if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we take tea. Freed of its tannin,
+ nothing, I think, is more refreshing and stimulating.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six,&rdquo; said Widgery,
+ unfolding a time table. &ldquo;That gives us about half an hour or
+ three-quarters here&mdash;if a conveyance is obtainable, that is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in
+ the form of tannate of gelatine,&rdquo; said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in a
+ confidential bray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and shoulders
+ over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards the door.
+ &ldquo;While you have tea, mother,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I must tell Mr. Hoopdriver of our
+ arrangements.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Don't you think I&mdash;&rdquo; began the clergyman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Jessie, very rudely; &ldquo;I don't.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Jessie, haven't you already&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are already breaking the capitulation,&rdquo; said Jessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Will you want the whole half hour?&rdquo; said Widgery, at the bell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Every minute,&rdquo; said Jessie, in the doorway. &ldquo;He's behaved very nobly to
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There's tea,&rdquo; said Widgery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I've had tea.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He may not have behaved badly,&rdquo; said the clergyman. &ldquo;But he's certainly
+ an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young girl&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It was
+ over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned, and
+ with the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those days
+ had done for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their position. Of
+ course, they would take her away to those social altitudes of hers. She
+ would become an inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him say
+ good-bye to her?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had
+ first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the riverside
+ road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering it as if
+ everything had been done of his own initiative. &ldquo;Brave, brave!&rdquo; she had
+ called him. And afterwards, when she came down to him in the morning,
+ kindly, quiet. But ought he to have persuaded her then to return to her
+ home? He remembered some intention of the sort. Now these people snatched
+ her away from him as though he was scarcely fit to live in the same world
+ with her. No more he was! He felt he had presumed upon her worldly
+ ignorance in travelling with her day after day. She was so dainty, so
+ delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate her expressions, the light
+ of her eyes, the turn of her face.. .
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wasn't good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was.
+ Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But
+ they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be there
+ as&mdash;what was it? Chaperone. He'd never once had a chance of saying
+ what he felt; indeed, it was only now he was beginning to realise what he
+ felt. Love I he wouldn't presume. It was worship. If only he could have
+ one more chance. He must have one more chance, somewhere, somehow. Then he
+ would pour out his soul to her eloquently. He felt eloquently, and words
+ would come. He was dust under her feet...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and Jessie
+ appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. &ldquo;Come away from here,&rdquo; she
+ said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. &ldquo;I'm going home with them. We
+ have to say good-bye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XL.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
+ silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw her
+ ips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and bright.
+ She was looking straight before her. He could think of nothing to say, and
+ thrust his hands in his pockets and looked away from her intentionally.
+ After a while she began to talk. They dealt disjointedly with scenery
+ first, and then with the means of self-education. She took his address at
+ Antrobus's and promised to send him some books. But even with that it was
+ spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for the fighting mood was over.
+ She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the memories of her late battle, and
+ that appearance hurt him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It's the end,&rdquo; he whispered to himself. &ldquo;It's the end.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last to
+ a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There, by a
+ common impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch&mdash;a little
+ ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of forest rolling away beneath
+ them, crest beyond crest, of leafy trees, fading at last into blue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The end&rdquo; ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
+ thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so,&rdquo; she said, presently, breaking the silence, &ldquo;it comes to
+ good-bye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution.
+ &ldquo;There is one thing I MUST say.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well?&rdquo; she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent argument.
+ &ldquo;I ask no return. But&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he stopped. &ldquo;I won't say it. It's no good. It would be rot from me&mdash;now.
+ I wasn't going to say anything. Good-bye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. &ldquo;No,&rdquo; she said.
+ &ldquo;But don't forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris, you are
+ my friend. You will work. You are not a very strong man, you know, now&mdash;you
+ will forgive me&mdash;nor do you know all you should. But what will you be
+ in six years' time?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak mouth
+ seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not say.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'll work,&rdquo; he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment.
+ Then he said, with a motion of his head, &ldquo;I won't come back to THEM. Do
+ you mind? Going back alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She took ten seconds to think. &ldquo;No.&rdquo; she said, and held out her hand,
+ biting her nether lip. &ldquo;GOOD-BYE,&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand limply,
+ and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She would have
+ snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her movement. She felt the
+ touch of his lips, and then he had dropped her fingers and turned from her
+ and was striding down the slope. A dozen paces away his foot turned in the
+ lip of a rabbit hole, and he stumbled forward and almost fell. He
+ recovered his balance and went on, not looking back. He never once looked
+ back. She stared at his receding figure until it was small and far below
+ her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids now, turned slowly, and
+ walked with her hands gripped hard together behind her, towards Stoney
+ Cross again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I did not know,&rdquo; she whispered to herself. &ldquo;I did not understand. Even
+ now&mdash;No, I do not understand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ XLI. THE ENVOY
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there among
+ the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or listening to what
+ chances to his breathing. And of what came of it all, of the six years and
+ afterwards, this is no place to tell. In truth, there is no telling it,
+ for the years have still to run. But if you see how a mere counter-jumper,
+ a cad on castors, and a fool to boot, may come to feel the little
+ insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any extent won your sympathies,
+ my end is attained. (If it is not attained, may Heaven forgive us both!)
+ Nor will we follow this adventurous young lady of ours back to her home at
+ Surbiton, to her new struggle against Widgery and Mrs. Milton combined.
+ For, as she will presently hear, that devoted man has got his reward. For
+ her, also, your sympathies are invited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of this great holiday, too&mdash;five days there are left of it&mdash;is
+ beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in a
+ dusty brown suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not
+ intended to be cycled in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and
+ Berkshire and Surrey, going economically&mdash;for excellent reasons. Day
+ by day he goes on, riding fitfully and for the most part through
+ bye-roads, but getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He is
+ a narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge with
+ unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing expression sits
+ upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he whistles
+ noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, &ldquo;a juiced good try,
+ anyhow!&rdquo; you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my liking, he
+ looks irritable and hopeless. &ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he says, &ldquo;I know. It's over and
+ done. It isn't IN me. You ain't man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer silly
+ hands!... Oh, my God!&rdquo; and a gust of passion comes upon him and he rides
+ furiously for a space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes again his face softens. &ldquo;Anyhow, if I'm not to see her&mdash;she's
+ going to lend me books,&rdquo; he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can. Then
+ again; &ldquo;Books! What's books?&rdquo; Once or twice triumphant memories of the
+ earlier incidents nerve his face for a while. &ldquo;I put the ky-bosh on HIS
+ little game,&rdquo; he remarks. &ldquo;I DID that,&rdquo; and one might even call him happy
+ in these phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has been
+ enamel-painted grey and carries a sonorous gong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton, and
+ Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth of an
+ August sunset and with all the 'prentice boys busy shutting up shop, and
+ the work girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad, and the
+ white 'buses full of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to their
+ dinners, we part from him. He is back. To-morrow, the early rising, the
+ dusting, and drudgery, begin again&mdash;but with a difference, with
+ wonderful memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions
+ replacing those discrepant dreams.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh, and
+ pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard, as the
+ apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words of
+ greeting. &ldquo;South Coast,&rdquo; you hear; and &ldquo;splendid weather&mdash;splendid.&rdquo;
+ He sighs. &ldquo;Yes&mdash;swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It's a juiced
+ good machine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/old/1264.txt b/old/old/1264.txt
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wheels of Chance, by H. G. Wells
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Wheels of Chance
+ A Bicycling Idyll
+
+Author: H. G. Wells
+
+Release Date: April, 1998 [Etext #1264]
+Posting Date: November 10, 2009 [EBook #1264]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WHEELS OF CHANCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Dianne Bean
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEELS OF CHANCE; A BICYCLING IDYLL
+
+By H.G. Wells
+
+
+1896
+
+
+
+
+I. THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+
+If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)--if you had
+gone into the Drapery Emporium--which is really only magnificent for
+shop--of Messrs. Antrobus & Co.--a perfectly fictitious "Co.," by
+the bye--of Putney, on the 14th of August, 1895, had turned to the
+right-hand side, where the blocks of white linen and piles of blankets
+rise up to the rail from which the pink and blue prints depend, you
+might have been served by the central figure of this story that is now
+beginning. He would have come forward, bowing and swaying, he would have
+extended two hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over the
+counter, and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and
+without the slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner, what he
+might have the pleasure of showing you. Under certain circumstances--as,
+for instance, hats, baby linen, gloves, silks, lace, or curtains--he
+would simply have bowed politely, and with a drooping expression, and
+making a kind of circular sweep, invited you to "step this way,"
+and so led you beyond his ken; but under other and happier
+conditions,--huckaback, blankets, dimity, cretonne, linen, calico, are
+cases in point,--he would have requested you to take a seat, emphasising
+the hospitality by leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back in
+a spasmodic manner, and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit
+his goods for your consideration. Under which happier circumstances you
+might--if of an observing turn of mind and not too much of a housewife
+to be inhuman--have given the central figure of this story less cursory
+attention.
+
+Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been chiefly to
+notice how little he was noticeable. He wore the black morning coat, the
+black tie, and the speckled grey nether parts (descending into shadow
+and mystery below the counter) of his craft. He was of a pallid
+complexion, hair of a kind of dirty fairness, greyish eyes, and a
+skimpy, immature moustache under his peaked indeterminate nose.
+His features were all small, but none ill-shaped. A rosette of pins
+decorated the lappel of his coat. His remarks, you would observe, were
+entirely what people used to call cliche, formulae not organic to the
+occasion, but stereotyped ages ago and learnt years since by heart.
+"This, madam," he would say, "is selling very well." "We are doing a
+very good article at four three a yard." "We could show you something
+better, of course." "No trouble, madam, I assure you." Such were the
+simple counters of his intercourse. So, I say, he would have presented
+himself to your superficial observation. He would have danced about
+behind the counter, have neatly refolded the goods he had shown you,
+have put on one side those you selected, extracted a little book with
+a carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet from a fixture, made you out a little
+bill in that weak flourishing hand peculiar to drapers, and have bawled
+"Sayn!" Then a puffy little shop-walker would have come into view,
+looked at the bill for a second, very hard (showing you a parting
+down the middle of his head meanwhile), have scribbled a still more
+flourishing J. M. all over the document, have asked you if there
+was nothing more, have stood by you--supposing that you were paying
+cash--until the central figure of this story reappeared with the change.
+One glance more at him, and the puffy little shop-walker would have been
+bowing you out, with fountains of civilities at work all about you. And
+so the interview would have terminated.
+
+But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not concern
+itself with superficial appearances alone. Literature is revelation.
+Modern literature is indecorous revelation. It is the duty of the
+earnest author to tell you what you would not have seen--even at the
+cost of some blushes. And the thing that you would not have seen about
+this young man, and the thing of the greatest moment to this story, the
+thing that must be told if the book is to be written, was--let us face
+it bravely--the Remarkable Condition of this Young Man's Legs.
+
+Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let us
+assume something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost professorial
+tone of the conscientious realist. Let us treat this young man's legs as
+a mere diagram, and indicate the points of interest with the unemotional
+precision of a lecturer's pointer. And so to our revelation. On the
+internal aspect of the right ankle of this young man you would have
+observed, ladies and gentlemen, a contusion and an abrasion; on the
+internal aspect of the left ankle a contusion also; on its external
+aspect a large yellowish bruise. On his left shin there were two
+bruises, one a leaden yellow graduating here and there into purple,
+and another, obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy red--tumid and
+threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral manner, an unnatural
+hardness and redness would have been discovered on the upper aspect of
+the calf, and above the knee and on the inner side, an extraordinary
+expanse of bruised surface, a kind of closely stippled shading of
+contused points. The right leg would be found to be bruised in a
+marvellous manner all about and under the knee, and particularly on the
+interior aspect of the knee. So far we may proceed with our details.
+Fired by these discoveries, an investigator might perhaps have pursued
+his inquiries further--to bruises on the shoulders, elbows, and even the
+finger joints, of the central figure of our story. He had indeed been
+bumped and battered at an extraordinary number of points. But enough
+of realistic description is as good as a feast, and we have exhibited
+enough for our purpose. Even in literature one must know where to draw
+the line.
+
+Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young shopman
+should have got his legs, and indeed himself generally, into such a
+dreadful condition. One might fancy that he had been sitting with his
+nether extremities in some complicated machinery, a threshing-machine,
+say, or one of those hay-making furies. But Sherlock Holmes (now happily
+dead) would have fancied nothing of the kind. He would have recognised
+at once that the bruises on the internal aspect of the left leg,
+considered in the light of the distribution of the other abrasions and
+contusions, pointed unmistakably to the violent impact of the Mounting
+Beginner upon the bicycling saddle, and that the ruinous state of the
+right knee was equally eloquent of the concussions attendant on that
+person's hasty, frequently causeless, and invariably ill-conceived
+descents. One large bruise on the shin is even more characteristic of
+the 'prentice cyclist, for upon every one of them waits the jest of the
+unexpected treadle. You try at least to walk your machine in an easy
+manner, and whack!--you are rubbing your shin. So out of innocence we
+ripen. Two bruises on that place mark a certain want of aptitude in
+learning, such as one might expect in a person unused to muscular
+exercise. Blisters on the hands are eloquent of the nervous clutch
+of the wavering rider. And so forth, until Sherlock is presently
+explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that the machine ridden
+is an old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the diamond frame, a
+cushioned tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and a gross weight all on
+of perhaps three-and-forty pounds.
+
+The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the attentive
+shopman that I had the honour of showing you at first, rises a vision
+of a nightly struggle, of two dark figures and a machine in a dark
+road,--the road, to be explicit, from Roehampton to Putney Hill,--and
+with this vision is the sound of a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping
+and grunting, a shouting of "Steer, man, steer!" a wavering unsteady
+flight, a spasmodic turning of the missile edifice of man and machine,
+and a collapse. Then you descry dimly through the dusk the central
+figure of this story sitting by the roadside and rubbing his leg at
+some new place, and his friend, sympathetic (but by no means depressed),
+repairing the displacement of the handle-bar.
+
+Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert itself,
+and drive him against all the conditions of his calling, against the
+counsels of prudence and the restrictions of his means, to seek the
+wholesome delights of exertion and danger and pain. And our first
+examination of the draper reveals beneath his draperies--the man! To
+which initial fact (among others) we shall come again in the end.
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story is now
+going along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your purchases in
+his arms, to the warehouse, where the various articles you have selected
+will presently be packed by the senior porter and sent to you. Returning
+thence to his particular place, he lays hands on a folded piece of
+gingham, and gripping the corners of the folds in his hands, begins to
+straighten them punctiliously. Near him is an apprentice, apprenticed to
+the same high calling of draper's assistant, a ruddy, red-haired lad
+in a very short tailless black coat and a very high collar, who is
+deliberately unfolding and refolding some patterns of cretonne. By
+twenty-one he too may hope to be a full-blown assistant, even as Mr.
+Hoopdriver. Prints depend from the brass rails above them, behind are
+fixtures full of white packages containing, as inscriptions testify,
+Lino, Hd Bk, and Mull. You might imagine to see them that the two were
+both intent upon nothing but smoothness of textile and rectitude of
+fold. But to tell the truth, neither is thinking of the mechanical
+duties in hand. The assistant is dreaming of the delicious time--only
+four hours off now--when he will resume the tale of his bruises and
+abrasions. The apprentice is nearer the long long thoughts of boyhood,
+and his imagination rides cap-a-pie through the chambers of his brain,
+seeking some knightly quest in honour of that Fair Lady, the last but
+one of the girl apprentices to the dress-making upstairs. He inclines
+rather to street fighting against revolutionaries--because then she
+could see him from the window.
+
+Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little shop-walker,
+with a paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes extremely active. The
+shopwalker eyes the goods in hand. "Hoopdriver," he says, "how's that
+line of g-sez-x ginghams?"
+
+Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the uncertainties of
+dismounting. "They're going fairly well, sir. But the larger checks seem
+hanging."
+
+The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. "Any particular time
+when you want your holidays?" he asks.
+
+Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. "No--Don't want them too late,
+sir, of course."
+
+"How about this day week?"
+
+Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of the
+gingham folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of conflicting
+considerations. Can he learn it in a week? That's the question.
+Otherwise Briggs will get next week, and he will have to wait until
+September--when the weather is often uncertain. He is naturally of a
+sanguine disposition. All drapers have to be, or else they could never
+have the faith they show in the beauty, washability, and unfading
+excellence of the goods they sell you. The decision comes at last.
+"That'll do me very well," said Mr. Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+
+The die is cast.
+
+The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the
+"dresses," the next in the strict scale of precedence of the Drapery
+Emporium. Mr. Hoopdriver in alternating spasms anon straightens his
+gingham and anon becomes meditative, with his tongue in the hollow of
+his decaying wisdom tooth.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr. Pritchard
+spoke of "Scotland," Miss Isaacs clamoured of Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson
+displayed a proprietary interest in the Norfolk Broads. "I?" said
+Hoopdriver when the question came to him. "Why, cycling, of course."
+
+"You're never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day after
+day?" said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+
+"I am," said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the
+insufficient moustache. "I'm going for a Cycling Tour. Along the South
+Coast."
+
+"Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you'll get fine weather,"
+said Miss Howe. "And not come any nasty croppers."
+
+"And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag," said the junior
+apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one of the lessons
+at the top of Putney Hill.)
+
+"You stow it," said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and threateningly
+at the junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a tone of bitter
+contempt,--"Jampot."
+
+"I'm getting fairly safe upon it now," he told Miss Howe.
+
+At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the satirical
+efforts of the apprentice, but his mind was too full of the projected
+Tour to admit any petty delicacies of dignity. He left the supper table
+early, so that he might put in a good hour at the desperate gymnastics
+up the Roehampton Road before it would be time to come back for locking
+up. When the gas was turned off for the night he was sitting on the edge
+of his bed, rubbing arnica into his knee--a new and very big place--and
+studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of the "dresses,"
+who shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed and trying to smoke
+in the dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle in his life, but he felt
+Hoopdriver's inexperience and offered such advice as occurred to him.
+
+"Have the machine thoroughly well oiled," said Briggs, "carry one or
+two lemons with you, don't tear yourself to death the first day, and sit
+upright. Never lose control of the machine, and always sound the bell on
+every possible opportunity. You mind those things, and nothing very much
+can't happen to you, Hoopdriver--you take my word."
+
+He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a curse or so
+at his pipe, and then break out with an entirely different set of tips.
+
+"Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It's one of
+the worst things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the machine
+buckle--there was a man killed only the other day through his wheel
+buckling--don't scorch, don't ride on the foot-path, keep your own side
+of the road, and if you see a tramline, go round the corner at once,
+and hurry off into the next county--and always light up before dark. You
+mind just a few little things like that, Hoopdriver, and nothing much
+can't happen to you--you take my word."
+
+"Right you are!" said Hoopdriver. "Good-night, old man."
+
+"Good-night," said Briggs, and there was silence for a space, save
+for the succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode off into
+Dreamland on his machine, and was scarcely there before he was pitched
+back into the world of sense again.--Something--what was it?
+
+"Never oil the steering. It's fatal," a voice that came from round
+a fitful glow of light, was saying. "And clean the chain daily with
+black-lead. You mind just a few little things like that--"
+
+"Lord LOVE us!" said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over his
+ears.
+
+
+
+
+IV. THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the year
+round, save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in the summer
+time, know the exquisite sensations of the First Holiday Morning. All
+the dreary, uninteresting routine drops from you suddenly, your chains
+fall about your feet. All at once you are Lord of yourself, Lord of
+every hour in the long, vacant day; you may go where you please, call
+none Sir or Madame, have a lappel free of pins, doff your black morning
+coat, and wear the colour of your heart, and be a Man. You grudge sleep,
+you grudge eating, and drinking even, their intrusion on those exquisite
+moments. There will be no more rising before breakfast in casual
+old clothing, to go dusting and getting ready in a cheerless,
+shutter-darkened, wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of,
+"Forward, Hoopdriver," no more hasty meals, and weary attendance on
+fitful old women, for ten blessed days. The first morning is by far
+the most glorious, for you hold your whole fortune in your hands.
+Thereafter, every night, comes a pang, a spectre, that will not be
+exorcised--the premonition of the return. The shadow of going back, of
+being put in the cage again for another twelve months, lies blacker and
+blacker across the sunlight. But on the first morning of the ten the
+holiday has no past, and ten days seems as good as infinity.
+
+And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue sky
+with dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though celestial
+haymakers had been piling the swathes of last night's clouds into cocks
+for a coming cartage. There were thrushes in the Richmond Road, and a
+lark on Putney Heath. The freshness of dew was in the air; dew or
+the relics of an overnight shower glittered on the leaves and grass.
+Hoopdriver had breakfasted early by Mrs. Gunn's complaisance. He wheeled
+his machine up Putney Hill, and his heart sang within him. Halfway up, a
+dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across the road and vanished
+under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the variegated shrubs
+and trees had their blinds down still, and he would not have changed
+places with a soul in any one of them for a hundred pounds.
+
+He had on his new brown cycling suit--a handsome Norfolk jacket thing
+for 30/(sp.)--and his legs--those martyr legs--were more than consoled
+by thick chequered stockings, "thin in the foot, thick in the leg," for
+all they had endured. A neat packet of American cloth behind the saddle
+contained his change of raiment, and the bell and the handle-bar and the
+hubs and lamp, albeit a trifle freckled by wear, glittered blindingly
+in the rising sunlight. And at the top of the hill, after only
+one unsuccessful attempt, which, somehow, terminated on the green,
+Hoopdriver mounted, and with a stately and cautious restraint in his
+pace, and a dignified curvature of path, began his great Cycling Tour
+along the Southern Coast.
+
+There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage, and that
+is--voluptuous curves. He did not ride fast, he did not ride straight,
+an exacting critic might say he did not ride well--but he rode
+generously, opulently, using the whole road and even nibbling at the
+footpath. The excitement never flagged. So far he had never passed or
+been passed by anything, but as yet the day was young and the road was
+clear. He doubted his steering so much that, for the present, he had
+resolved to dismount at the approach of anything else upon wheels. The
+shadows of the trees lay very long and blue across the road, the morning
+sunlight was like amber fire.
+
+At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle trough
+stands, he turned towards Kingston and set himself to scale the little
+bit of ascent. An early heath-keeper, in his velveteen jacket, marvelled
+at his efforts. And while he yet struggled, the head of a carter rose
+over the brow.
+
+At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous
+determination, resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and the
+machine stopped dead. He was trying to think what he did with his right
+leg whilst getting off. He gripped the handles and released the brake,
+standing on the left pedal and waving his right foot in the air.
+Then--these things take so long in the telling--he found the machine was
+falling over to the right. While he was deciding upon a plan of action,
+gravitation appears to have been busy. He was still irresolute when he
+found the machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon it, and a vague
+feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly with his
+shin. This happened when he was just level with the heathkeeper. The man
+in the approaching cart stood up to see the ruins better.
+
+"THAT ain't the way to get off," said the heathkeeper.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted askew again
+He said something under his breath. He would have to unscrew the beastly
+thing.
+
+"THAT ain't the way to get off," repeated the heathkeeper, after a
+silence.
+
+"_I_ know that," said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to overlook
+the new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled the wallet behind
+the saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+
+"If you know it ain't the way to get off--whaddyer do it for?" said the
+heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle. He was
+annoyed. "That's my business, I suppose," he said, fumbling with the
+screw. The unusual exertion had made his hands shake frightfully.
+
+The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his
+hands behind his back. "You've broken yer 'andle, ain't yer?" he
+said presently. Just then the screw hammer slipped off the nut. Mr.
+Hoopdriver used a nasty, low word.
+
+"They're trying things, them bicycles," said the heath-keeper,
+charitably. "Very trying." Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious turn
+and suddenly stood up--he was holding the front wheel between his knees.
+"I wish," said he, with a catch in his voice, "I wish you'd leave off
+staring at me."
+
+Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began
+replacing the screw hammer in the wallet.
+
+The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows,
+and certainly he stared harder than he did before. "You're pretty
+unsociable," he said slowly, as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles and
+stood ready to mount as soon as the cart had passed.
+
+The indignation gathered slowly but surely. "Why don't you ride on a
+private road of your own if no one ain't to speak to you?" asked the
+heath-keeper, perceiving more and more clearly the bearing of the
+matter. "Can't no one make a passin' remark to you, Touchy? Ain't I good
+enough to speak to you? Been struck wooden all of a sudden?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was rigid
+with emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar Square. But the
+heathkeeper felt his honour was at stake.
+
+"Don't you make no remarks to 'IM," said the keeper as the carter came
+up broadside to them. "'E's a bloomin' dook, 'e is. 'E don't converse
+with no one under a earl. 'E's off to Windsor, 'e is; that's why 'e's
+stickin' his be'ind out so haughty. Pride! Why, 'e's got so much of it,
+'e has to carry some of it in that there bundle there, for fear 'e'd
+bust if 'e didn't ease hisself a bit--'E--"
+
+But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along the
+road, in a spasmodic attempt to remount. He missed the treadle once and
+swore viciously, to the keeper's immense delight. "Nar! Nar!" said the
+heath-keeper.
+
+In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific lurch
+of the machine, the heathkeeper dropped out of earshot. Mr. Hoopdriver
+would have liked to look back at his enemy, but he usually twisted round
+and upset if he tried that. He had to imagine the indignant heath-keeper
+telling the carter all about it. He tried to infuse as much disdain
+aspossible into his retreating aspect.
+
+He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up the
+little rise to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston Vale;
+and so remarkable is the psychology of cycling, that he rode all the
+straighter and easier because the emotions the heathkeeper had aroused
+relieved his mind of the constant expectation of collapse that had
+previously unnerved him. To ride a bicycle properly is very like a love
+affair--chiefly it is a matter of faith. Believe you do it, and the
+thing is done; doubt, and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+
+Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings towards the
+heath-keeper were either vindictive or remorseful,--vindictive for the
+aggravation or remorseful for his own injudicious display of ill
+temper. As a matter of fact, they were nothing of the sort. A sudden,
+a wonderful gratitude, possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had
+resumed its sway with a sudden accession of splendour. At the crest of
+the hill he put his feet upon the footrests, and now riding moderately
+straight, went, with a palpitating brake, down that excellent descent.
+A new delight was in his eyes, quite over and above the pleasure of
+rushing through the keen, sweet, morning air. He reached out his thumb
+and twanged his bell out of sheer happiness.
+
+"'He's a bloomin' Dook--he is!'" said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself, in a
+soft undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again, "'He's a
+bloomin' Dook!"' He opened his mouth in a silent laugh. It was having a
+decent cut did it. His social superiority had been so evident that even
+a man like that noticed it. No more Manchester Department for ten days!
+Out of Manchester, a Man. The draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished
+from existence. Instead was a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a
+five-pound note, two sovereigns, and some silver at various convenient
+points of his person. At any rate as good as a Dook, if not precisely
+in the peerage. Involuntarily at the thought of his funds Hoopdriver's
+right hand left the handle and sought his breast pocket, to be
+immediately recalled by a violent swoop of the machine towards the
+cemetery. Whirroo! Just missed that half-brick! Mischievous brutes there
+were in the world to put such a thing in the road. Some blooming 'Arry
+or other! Ought to prosecute a few of these roughs, and the rest would
+know better. That must be the buckle of the wallet was rattling on the
+mud-guard. How cheerfully the wheels buzzed!
+
+The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was waking, and
+windows rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came out of one of the
+houses and yelped at him. He got off, rather breathless, at the foot of
+Kingston Hill, and pushed up. Halfway up, an early milk chariot rattled
+by him; two dirty men with bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt
+sure they were burglars, carrying home the swag.
+
+It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling, a
+slight tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top that
+he rode straighter than he did before. The pleasure of riding straight
+blotted out these first intimations of fatigue. A man on horseback
+appeared; Hoopdriver, in a tumult of soul at his own temerity, passed
+him. Then down the hill into Kingston, with the screw hammer, behind
+in the wallet, rattling against the oil can. He passed, without
+misadventure, a fruiterer's van and a sluggish cartload of bricks. And
+in Kingston Hoopdriver, with the most exquisite sensations, saw the
+shutters half removed from a draper's shop, and two yawning youths,
+in dusty old black jackets and with dirty white comforters about their
+necks, clearing up the planks and boxes and wrappers in the window,
+preparatory to dressing it out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the
+previous day. But now, was he not a bloomin' Dook, palpably in the
+sight of common men? Then round the corner to the right--bell banged
+furiously--and so along the road to Surbiton.
+
+Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with an
+expression of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed, and
+to the right of him for a mile or so the weltering Thames flashed and
+glittered. Talk of your joie de vivre. Albeit with a certain cramping
+sensation about the knees and calves slowly forcing itself upon his
+attention.
+
+
+
+
+V. THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+
+Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your fast
+young men. If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have profited more
+by his mother's instructions. He regarded the feminine sex as something
+to bow to and smirk at from a safe distance. Years of the intimate
+remoteness of a counter leave their mark upon a man. It was an adventure
+for him to take one of the Young Ladies of the establishment to church
+on a Sunday. Few modern young men could have merited less the epithet
+"Dorg." But I have thought at times that his machine may have had
+something of the blade in its metal. Decidedly it was a machine with a
+past. Mr. Hoopdriver had bought it second-hand from Hare's in Putney,
+and Hare said it had had several owners. Second-hand was scarcely the
+word for it, and Hare was mildly puzzled that he should be selling such
+an antiquity. He said it was perfectly sound, if a little old-fashioned,
+but he was absolutely silent about its moral character. It may even have
+begun its career with a poet, say, in his glorious youth. It may have
+been the bicycle of a Really Bad Man. No one who has ever ridden a cycle
+of any kind but will witness that the things are unaccountably prone to
+pick up bad habits--and keep them.
+
+It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent emotions
+directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an absolutely
+unprecedented Wabble--unprecedented so far as Hoopdriver's experience
+went. It "showed off"--the most decadent sinuosity. It left a track like
+one of Beardsley's feathers. He suddenly realised, too, that his cap was
+loose on his head and his breath a mere remnant.
+
+The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed in a
+beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her outline in gold
+and left the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly aware that she was
+young, rather slender, dark, and with a bright colour and bright eyes.
+Strange doubts possessed him as to the nature of her nether costume.
+He had heard of such things of course. French, perhaps. Her handles
+glittered; a jet of sunlight splashed off her bell blindingly. She was
+approaching the high road along an affluent from the villas of Surbiton.
+fee roads converged slantingly. She was travelling at about the same
+pace as Mr. Hoopdriver. The appearances pointed to a meeting at the fork
+of the roads.
+
+Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By contrast
+with her he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get off at once
+and pretend something was wrong with his treadle? Yet even the end of
+getting off was an uncertainty. That last occasion on Putney Heath! On
+the other hand, what would happen if he kept on? To go very slow
+seemed the abnegation of his manhood. To crawl after a mere schoolgirl!
+Besides, she was not riding very fast. On the other hand, to thrust
+himself in front of her, consuming the road in his tendril-like advance,
+seemed an incivility--greed. He would leave her such a very little.
+His business training made him prone to bow and step aside. If only one
+could take one's hands off the handles, one might pass with a silent
+elevation of the hat, of course. But even that was a little suggestive
+of a funeral.
+
+Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was flushed,
+a little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips fell apart. She
+may have been riding hard, but it looked uncommonly like a faint smile.
+And the things were--yes!--RATIONALS! Suddenly an impulse to bolt from
+the situation became clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively,
+intending to pass her. He jerked against some tin thing on the road, and
+it flew up between front wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round towards
+her. Had the machine a devil?
+
+At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done wiser
+to dismount. He gave a frantic 'whoop' and tried to get round, then, as
+he seemed falling over, he pulled the handles straight again and to the
+left by an instinctive motion, and shot behind her hind wheel, missing
+her by a hair's breadth. The pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to
+recover, and found himself jumped up on the pavement and riding squarely
+at a neat wooden paling. He struck this with a terrific impact and shot
+forward off his saddle into a clumsy entanglement. Then he began to
+tumble over sideways, and completed the entire figure in a sitting
+position on the gravel, with his feet between the fork and the stay of
+the machine. The concussion on the gravel shook his entire being. He
+remained in that position, wishing that he had broken his neck, wishing
+even more heartily that he had never been born. The glory of life had
+departed. Bloomin' Dook, indeed! These unwomanly women!
+
+There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and the
+Young Lady in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned round and
+come back to him. The warm sunlight now was in her face. "Are you hurt?"
+she said. She had a pretty, clear, girlish voice. She was really very
+young--quite a girl, in fact. And rode so well! It was a bitter draught.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. "Not a bit," he said, a little
+ruefully. He became painfully aware that large patches of gravel
+scarcely improve the appearance of a Norfolk suit. "I'm very sorry
+indeed--"
+
+"It's my fault," she said, interrupting and so saving him on the very
+verge of calling her 'Miss.' (He knew 'Miss' was wrong, but it was
+deep-seated habit with him.) "I tried to pass you on the wrong side."
+Her face and eyes seemed all alive. "It's my place to be sorry."
+
+"But it was my steering--"
+
+"I ought to have seen you were a Novice"--with a touch of superiority.
+"But you rode so straight coming along there!"
+
+She really was--dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver's feelings passed the
+nadir. When he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of the
+aristocratic in his voice.
+
+"It's my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that's no excuse for my
+ah! blundering--"
+
+"Your finger's bleeding," she said, abruptly.
+
+He saw his knuckle was barked. "I didn't feel it," he said, feeling
+manly.
+
+"You don't at first. Have you any sticking-plaster? If not--" She
+balanced her machine against herself. She had a little side pocket,
+and she whipped out a small packet of sticking-plaster with a pair of
+scissors in a sheath at the side, and cut off a generous portion. He
+had a wild impulse to ask her to stick it on for him. Controlled. "Thank
+you," he said.
+
+"Machine all right?" she asked, looking past him at the prostrate
+vehicle, her hands on her handle-bar. For the first time Hoopdriver did
+not feel proud of his machine.
+
+He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over his
+shoulder, and she was gone, turned his head over the other shoulder down
+the road, and she was riding off. "ORF!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Well,
+I'm blowed!--Talk about Slap Up!" (His aristocratic refinement rarely
+adorned his speech in his private soliloquies.) His mind was whirling.
+One fact was clear. A most delightful and novel human being had flashed
+across his horizon and was going out of his life again. The Holiday
+madness was in his blood. She looked round!
+
+At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty ascent.
+Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he NEVER be able to get up
+on the thing again? She will be round the corner in a minute. Once more.
+Ah! Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time! He gripped the handles and put
+his head down. He would overtake her.
+
+The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a moment
+over the civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed at the pedals
+with archaic violence. So Palaeolithic man may have ridden his simple
+bicycle of chipped flint in pursuit of his exogamous affinity. She
+vanished round the corner. His effort was Titanic. What should he say
+when he overtook her? That scarcely disturbed him at first. How fine
+she had looked, flushed with the exertion of riding, breathing a little
+fast, but elastic and active! Talk about your ladylike, homekeeping
+girls with complexions like cold veal! But what should he say to her?
+That was a bother. And he could not lift his cap without risking a
+repetition of his previous ignominy. She was a real Young Lady. No
+mistake about that! None of your blooming shop girls. (There is no
+greater contempt in the world than that of shop men for shop girls,
+unless it be that of shop girls for shop men.) Phew! This was work. A
+certain numbness came and went at his knees.
+
+"May I ask to whom I am indebted?" he panted to himself, trying it over.
+That might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a shilling--while
+you wait. He was getting winded. The road was certainly a bit uphill.
+He turned the corner and saw a long stretch of road, and a grey dress
+vanishing. He set his teeth. Had he gained on her at all? "Monkey on
+a gridiron!" yelped a small boy. Hoopdriver redoubled his efforts. His
+breath became audible, his steering unsteady, his pedalling positively
+ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his eye, irritant as acid.
+The road really was uphill beyond dispute. All his physiology began to
+cry out at him. A last tremendous effort brought him to the corner and
+showed yet another extent of shady roadway, empty save for a baker's
+van. His front wheel suddenly shrieked aloud. "Oh Lord!" said
+Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+
+Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a moment
+his legs felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his machine against the
+grassy edge of the path and sat down panting. His hands were gnarled
+with swollen veins and shaking palpably, his breath came viscid.
+
+"I'm hardly in training yet," he remarked. His legs had gone leaden.
+"I don't feel as though I'd had a mouthful of breakfast." Presently he
+slapped his side pocket and produced therefrom a brand-new cigarette
+case and a packet of Vansittart's Red Herring cigarettes. He filled
+the case. Then his eye fell with a sudden approval on the ornamental
+chequering of his new stockings. The expression in his eyes faded slowly
+to abstract meditation.
+
+"She WAS a stunning girl," he said. "I wonder if I shall ever set eyes
+on her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she thought of
+me."
+
+The phrase 'bloomin' Dook' floated into his mind with a certain flavour
+of comfort.
+
+He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not even look
+up when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes before he roused
+himself. "What rot it is! What's the good of thinking such things," he
+said. "I'm only a blessed draper's assistant." (To be exact, he did not
+say blessed. The service of a shop may polish a man's exterior ways, but
+the 'prentices' dormitory is an indifferent school for either manners
+or morals.) He stood up and began wheeling his machine towards Esher. It
+was going to be a beautiful day, and the hedges and trees and the open
+country were all glorious to his town-tired eyes. But it was a little
+different from the elation of his start.
+
+"Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle," said a nursemaid on the path
+to a personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little. "'Gentleman
+wizzer bicitle,'--'bloomin' Dook'--I can't look so very seedy," he said
+to himself.
+
+"I WONDER--I should just like to know--"
+
+There was something very comforting in the track of HER pneumatic
+running straight and steady along the road before him. It must be hers.
+No other pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It was just
+possible, of course, that he might see her once more--coming back.
+Should he try and say something smart? He speculated what manner of girl
+she might be. Probably she was one of these here New Women. He had a
+persuasion the cult had been maligned. Anyhow she was a Lady. And rich
+people, too! Her machine couldn't have cost much under twenty pounds.
+His mind came round and dwelt some time on her visible self. Rational
+dress didn't look a bit unwomanly. However, he disdained to be one of
+your fortune-hunters. Then his thoughts drove off at a tangent. He would
+certainly have to get something to eat at the next public house.
+
+
+
+
+VI. ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+
+In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of Granby
+at Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw the inn in front
+of him, he mounted his machine again and rode bravely up to the doorway.
+Burton and biscuit and cheese he had, which, indeed, is Burton in its
+proper company; and as he was eating there came a middleaged man in a
+drab cycling suit, very red and moist and angry in the face, and asked
+bitterly for a lemon squash. And he sat down upon the seat in the bar
+and mopped his face. But scarcely had he sat down before he got up again
+and stared out of the doorway.
+
+"Damn!" said he. Then, "Damned Fool!"
+
+"Eigh?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece of
+cheese in his cheek.
+
+The man in drab faced him. "I called myself a Damned Fool, sir. Have you
+any objections?"
+
+"Oh!--None. None," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I thought you spoke to me. I
+didn't hear what you said."
+
+"To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic temperament, sir,
+is hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative disposition and a phlegmatic
+temperament, all very well. But energy and philosophy--!"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said nothing.
+
+"There's no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise, gentle
+exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And no sooner do
+I get on the accursed machine, than off I go hammer and tongs; I never
+look to right or left, never notice a flower, never see a view, get hot,
+juicy, red,--like a grilled chop. Here I am, sir. Come from Guildford in
+something under the hour. WHY, sir?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+
+"Because I'm a damned fool, sir. Because I've reservoirs and reservoirs
+of muscular energy, and one or other of them is always leaking. It's
+a most interesting road, birds and trees, I've no doubt, and wayside
+flowers, and there's nothing I should enjoy more than watching them. But
+I can't. Get me on that machine, and I have to go. Get me on anything,
+and I have to go. And I don't want to go a bit. WHY should a man rush
+about like a rocket, all pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me furious. I
+can assure you, sir, I go scorching along the road, and cursing aloud at
+myself for doing it. A quiet, dignified, philosophical man, that's what
+I am--at bottom; and here I am dancing with rage and swearing like a
+drunken tinker at a perfect stranger--
+
+"But my day's wasted. I've lost all that country road, and now I'm on
+the fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the morning! Ugh!
+Thank Heaven, sir, you have not the irritable temperament, that you
+are not goaded to madness by your endogenous sneers, by the eternal
+wrangling of an uncomfortable soul and body. I tell you, I lead a cat
+and dog life--But what IS the use of talking?--It's all of a piece!"
+
+He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the lemon
+squash into his mouth, paid for it, and without any further remark
+strode to the door. Mr. Hoopdriver was still wondering what to say when
+his interlocutor vanished. There was a noise of a foot spurning the
+gravel, and when Mr. Hoopdriver reached the doorway, the man in drab was
+a score of yards Londonward. He had already gathered pace. He pedalled
+with ill-suppressed anger, and his head was going down. In another
+moment he flew swiftly out of sight under the railway arch, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+
+
+
+
+VII.
+
+After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and--being now
+a little rested about the muscles of the knees--resumed his saddle and
+rode on in the direction of Ripley, along an excellent but undulating
+road. He was pleased to find his command over his machine already
+sensibly increased. He set himself little exercises as he went along and
+performed them with variable success. There was, for instance, steering
+in between a couple of stones, say a foot apart, a deed of little
+difficulty as far as the front wheel is concerned. But the back wheel,
+not being under the sway of the human eye, is apt to take a vicious jump
+over the obstacle, which sends a violent concussion all along the spine
+to the skull, and will even jerk a loosely fastened hat over the eyes,
+and so lead to much confusion. And again, there was taking the hand or
+hands off the handlebar, a thing simple in itself, but complex in its
+consequences. This particularly was a feat Mr. Hoopdriver desired to
+do, for several divergent reasons; but at present it simply led to
+convulsive balancings and novel and inelegant modes of dismounting.
+
+The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are those
+who consider it ornamental, and would regard a face deprived of its
+assistance with pity or derision; but it is doubtful whether our
+esteem is dictated so much by a sense of its absolute beauty as by the
+vitiating effect of a universally prevalent fashion. In the case of
+bicycle students, as in the young of both sexes, its inutility is
+aggravated by its persistent annoyance--it requires constant attention.
+Until one can ride with one hand, and search for, secure, and use a
+pocket handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant
+series of descents. Nothing can be further from the author's ambition
+than a wanton realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver's nose is a plain and salient
+fact, and face it we must. And, in addition to this inconvenience, there
+are flies. Until the cyclist can steer with one hand, his face is
+given over to Beelzebub. Contemplative flies stroll over it, and trifle
+absently with its most sensitive surfaces. The only way to dislodge them
+is to shake the head forcibly and to writhe one's features violently.
+This is not only a lengthy and frequently ineffectual method, but one
+exceedingly terrifying to foot passengers. And again, sometimes the
+beginner rides for a space with one eye closed by perspiration, giving
+him a waggish air foreign to his mood and ill calculated to overawe
+the impertinent. However, you will appreciate now the motive of Mr.
+Hoopdriver's experiments. He presently attained sufficient dexterity
+to slap himself smartly and violently in the face with his right hand,
+without certainly overturning the machine; but his pocket handkerchief
+might have been in California for any good it was to him while he was in
+the saddle.
+
+Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little
+uncomfortable, he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the background
+of his consciousness was the sense that about this time Briggs would be
+half-way through his window dressing, and Gosling, the apprentice, busy,
+with a chair turned down over the counter and his ears very red, trying
+to roll a piece of huckaback--only those who have rolled pieces of
+huckaback know quite how detestable huckaback is to roll--and the shop
+would be dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and snappy. And here was
+quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the desire took one,
+without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of "Sayn," no folding of
+remnants, no voice to shout, "Hoopdriver, forward!" And once he almost
+ran over something wonderful, a little, low, red beast with a yellowish
+tail, that went rushing across the road before him. It was the first
+weasel he had ever seen in his cockney life. There were miles of this,
+scores of miles of this before him, pinewood and oak forest, purple,
+heathery moorland and grassy down, lush meadows, where shining rivers
+wound their lazy way, villages with square-towered, flint churches,
+and rambling, cheap, and hearty inns, clean, white, country towns, long
+downhill stretches, where one might ride at one's ease (overlooking a
+jolt or so), and far away, at the end of it all,--the sea.
+
+What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps he had
+been dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young Lady in Grey,
+and perhaps the memory of it was making itself a little lair in a corner
+of his brain from which it could distress him in the retrospect by
+suggesting that he looked like a fool; but for the present that trouble
+was altogether in abeyance. The man in drab--evidently a swell--had
+spoken to him as his equal, and the knees of his brown suit and the
+chequered stockings were ever before his eyes. (Or, rather, you could
+see the stockings by carrying the head a little to one side.) And to
+feel, little by little, his mastery over this delightful, treacherous
+machine, growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his knees reasserted
+themselves, and he dismounted and sat awhile by the roadside.
+
+It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where a
+bridge crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the other
+cyclist in brown. It is well to notice the fact here, although the
+interview was of the slightest, because it happened that subsequently
+Hoopdriver saw a great deal more of this other man in brown. The other
+cyclist in brown had a machine of dazzling newness, and a punctured
+pneumatic lay across his knees. He was a man of thirty or more, with a
+whitish face, an aquiline nose, a lank, flaxen moustache, and very fair
+hair, and he scowled at the job before him. At the sight of him Mr.
+Hoopdriver pulled himself together, and rode by with the air of one born
+to the wheel. "A splendid morning," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "and a fine
+surface."
+
+"The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!" said the
+other man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver heard the mumble
+and did not distinguish the words, and he felt a pleasing sense of
+having duly asserted the wide sympathy that binds all cyclists together,
+of having behaved himself as becomes one of the brotherhood of the
+wheel. The other man in brown watched his receding aspect. "Greasy
+proletarian," said the other man in brown, feeling a prophetic dislike.
+"Got a suit of brown, the very picture of this. One would think his sole
+aim in life had been to caricature me. It's Fortune's way with me. Look
+at his insteps on the treadles! Why does Heaven make such men?"
+
+And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to the
+business in hand.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that he felt
+sure was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then he dismounted
+and pushed his machine; until the proximity of the village and a proper
+pride drove him into the saddle again.
+
+
+
+
+VIII.
+
+Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in its
+beginning if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was perhaps
+half-way between Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver dropped down a little
+hill, where, unfenced from the road, fine mossy trees and bracken lay on
+either side; and looking up he saw an open country before him, covered
+with heather and set with pines, and a yellow road running across it,
+and half a mile away perhaps, a little grey figure by the wayside waving
+something white. "Never!" said Mr. Hoopdriver with his hands tightening
+on the handles.
+
+He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a stone,
+wabbled, recovered, and began riding faster at once, with his eyes
+ahead. "It can't be," said Hoopdriver.
+
+He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a limp
+numbness had resumed possession of his legs. "It CAN'T be," he repeated,
+feeling every moment more assured that it WAS. "Lord! I don't know even
+now," said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs awhirling), and then, "Blow my legs!"
+
+But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and gathering
+flies like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden. Then the road began
+to rise, and the resistance of the pedals grew. As he crested the hill
+he saw her, not a hundred yards away from him. "It's her!" he said.
+"It's her--right enough. It's the suit's done it,"--which was truer
+even than Mr. Hoopdriver thought. But now she was not waving her
+handkerchief, she was not even looking at him. She was wheeling her
+machine slowly along the road towards him, and admiring the pretty
+wooded hills towards Weybridge. She might have been unaware of his
+existence for all the recognition he got.
+
+For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that
+handkerchief been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and
+scarlet, and felt so. It must be her coquetry--the handkerchief was
+indisputable. Should he ride up to her and get off, or get off and ride
+up to her? It was as well she didn't look, because he would certainly
+capsize if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was her consideration. Even
+as he hesitated he was upon her. She must have heard his breathing. He
+gripped the brake. Steady! His right leg waved in the air, and he came
+down heavily and staggering, but erect. She turned her eyes upon him
+with admirable surprise.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine, raise his
+cap, and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as much. He was a
+man singularly devoid of the minutiae of self-consciousness, and he was
+quite unaware of a tail of damp hair lying across his forehead, and just
+clearing his eyes, and of the general disorder of his coiffure. There
+was an interrogative pause.
+
+"What can I have the pleasure--" began Mr. Haopdriver, insinuatingly.
+"I mean" (remembering his emancipation and abruptly assuming his most
+aristocratic intonation), "can I be of any assistance to you?"
+
+The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily, "None,
+thank you." She glanced away from him and made as if she would proceed.
+
+"Oh!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen
+again. It was so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was she
+coquetting? Or had he--?
+
+"Excuse me, one minute," he said, as she began to wheel her machine
+again.
+
+"Yes?" she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour in her
+cheeks deepening.
+
+"I should not have alighted if I had not--imagined that you--er, waved
+something white--" He paused.
+
+She looked at him doubtfully. He HAD seen it! She decided that he was
+not an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but an innocent
+soul meaning well while seeking happiness. "I DID wave my handkerchief,"
+she said. "I'm very sorry. I am expecting--a friend, a gentleman,"--she
+seemed to flush pink for a minute. "He is riding a bicycle and dressed
+in--in brown; and at a distance, you know--"
+
+"Oh, quite!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion against
+his bitter disappointment. "Certainly."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all that."
+
+"No trouble. 'Ssure you," said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and bowing
+over his saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could not find it
+in his heart to tell her that the man was beyond there with a punctured
+pneumatic. He looked back along the road and tried to think of something
+else to say. But the gulf in the conversation widened rapidly and
+hopelessly. "There's nothing further," began Mr. Hoopdriver desperately,
+recurring to his stock of cliches.
+
+"Nothing, thank you," she said decisively. And immediately, "This IS the
+Ripley road?"
+
+"Certainly," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Ripley is about two miles from here.
+According to the mile-stones."
+
+"Thank you," she said warmly. "Thank you so much. I felt sure there was
+no mistake. And I really am awfully sorry--"
+
+"Don't mention it," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Don't mention it." He
+hesitated and gripped his handles to mount. "It's me," he said, "ought
+to be sorry." Should he say it? Was it an impertinence? Anyhow!--"Not
+being the other gentleman, you know."
+
+He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even as
+he smiled it; felt she disapproved--that she despised him, was overcome
+with shame at her expression, turned his back upon her, and began (very
+clumsily) to mount. He did so with a horrible swerve, and went
+pedalling off, riding very badly, as he was only too painfully aware.
+Nevertheless, thank Heaven for the mounting! He could not see her
+because it was so dangerous for him to look round, but he could imagine
+her indignant and pitiless. He felt an unspeakable idiot. One had to be
+so careful what one said to Young Ladies, and he'd gone and treated her
+just as though she was only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He
+always WAS a fool. You could tell from her manner she didn't think him a
+gentleman. One glance, and she seemed to look clear through him and all
+his presence. What rot it was venturing to speak to a girl like that!
+With her education she was bound to see through him at once.
+
+How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel what
+slush his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What was it? 'Not
+being the other gentleman, you know!' No point in it. And 'GENTLEMAN!'
+What COULD she be thinking of him?
+
+But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from her
+thoughts almost before he had vanished round the corner. She had thought
+no ill of him. His manifest awe and admiration of her had given her not
+an atom of offence. But for her just now there were weightier things
+to think about, things that would affect all the rest of her life. She
+continued slowly walking her machine Londonward. Presently she stopped.
+"Oh! Why DOESN'T he come?" she said, and stamped her foot petulantly.
+Then, as if in answer, coming down the hill among the trees, appeared
+the other man in brown, dismounted and wheeling his machine.
+
+
+
+
+IX. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came to him,
+with an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen the last of the
+Young Lady in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery of the machine, the
+present machinery of Fate, the deus ex machina, so to speak, was against
+him. The bicycle, torn from this attractive young woman, grew heavier
+and heavier, and continually more unsteady. It seemed a choice between
+stopping at Ripley or dying in the flower of his days. He went into the
+Unicorn, after propping his machine outside the door, and, as he cooled
+down and smoked his Red Herring cigarette while the cold meat was
+getting ready, he saw from the window the Young Lady in Grey and the
+other man in brown, entering Ripley.
+
+They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which
+sheltered him, but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk and
+incapable attitude against the doorway, humping its rackety mud-guard
+and leering at them with its darkened lantern eye, drove them away--so
+it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver--to the spacious swallow of the Golden
+Dragon. The young lady was riding very slowly, but the other man in
+brown had a bad puncture and was wheeling his machine. Mr. Hoopdriver
+noted his flaxen moustache, his aquiline nose, his rather bent
+shoulders, with a sudden, vivid dislike.
+
+The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is jaded
+by the incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver's mind, even as
+he conversed with her in that cultivated voice of his--of the weather,
+of the distance from London, and of the excellence of the Ripley
+road--wandered to the incomparable freshness and brilliance of the Young
+Lady in Grey. As he sat at meat he kept turning his head to the window
+to see what signs there were of that person, but the face of the
+Golden Dragon displayed no appreciation of the delightful morsel it
+had swallowed. As an incidental consequence of this distraction, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly inconvenienced by a mouthful of
+mustard. After he had called for his reckoning he went, his courage
+being high with meat and mustard, to the door, intending to stand, with
+his legs wide apart and his hands deep in his pockets, and stare boldly
+across the road. But just then the other man in brown appeared in the
+gateway of the Golden Dragon yard--it is one of those delightful inns
+that date from the coaching days--wheeling his punctured machine. He
+was taking it to Flambeau's, the repairer's. He looked up and saw
+Hoopdriver, stared for a minute, and then scowled darkly.
+
+But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other man in
+brown had disappeared into Flambeau's. Then he glanced momentarily at
+the Golden Dragon, puckered his mouth into a whistle of unconcern, and
+proceeded to wheel his machine into the road until a sufficient margin
+for mounting was secured.
+
+Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not of
+seeing no more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in brown he
+guessed was her brother, albeit that person was of a pallid fairness,
+differing essentially from her rich colouring; and, besides, he felt he
+had made a hopeless fool of himself. But the afternoon was against him,
+intolerably hot, especially on the top of his head, and the virtue had
+gone out of his legs to digest his cold meat, and altogether his ride to
+Guildford was exceedingly intermittent. At times he would walk, at times
+lounge by the wayside, and every public house, in spite of Briggs and a
+sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of bitter. (For that
+is the experience of all those who go on wheels, that drinking begets
+thirst, even more than thirst begets drinking, until at last the man who
+yields becomes a hell unto himself, a hell in which the fire dieth
+not, and the thirst is not quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid green
+apples turned the current that threatened to carry him away. Ever and
+again a cycle, or a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering
+wheels and softly running chains, and on each occasion, to save his
+self-respect, Mr. Hoopdriver descended and feigned some trouble with his
+saddle. Each time he descended with less trepidation.
+
+He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o'clock, and then he was
+so much exhausted that he decided to put up there for the night, at
+the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern. And after he had cooled a space and
+refreshed himself with tea and bread and butter and jam,--the tea he
+drank noisily out of the saucer,--he went out to loiter away the rest of
+the afternoon. Guildford is an altogether charming old town, famous,
+so he learnt from a Guide Book, as the scene of Master Tupper's great
+historical novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a delightful castle, all
+set about with geraniums and brass plates commemorating the gentlemen
+who put them up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very pleasant to
+see, and in the afternoon the shops are busy and the people going to and
+fro make the pavements look bright and prosperous. It was nice to peep
+in the windows and see the heads of the men and girls in the drapers'
+shops, busy as busy, serving away. The High Street runs down at an angle
+of seventy degrees to the horizon (so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver, whose
+feeling for gradients was unnaturally exalted), and it brought his heart
+into his mouth to see a cyclist ride down it, like a fly crawling down a
+window pane. The man hadn't even a brake. He visited the castle early in
+the evening and paid his twopence to ascend the Keep.
+
+At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red roofs
+of the town and the tower of the church, and then going to the southern
+side sat down and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and stared away south
+over the old bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin, at the waves of blue
+upland that rose, one behind another, across the Weald, to the lazy
+altitudes of Hindhead and Butser. His pale grey eyes were full of
+complacency and pleasurable anticipation. Tomorrow he would go riding
+across that wide valley.
+
+He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him until he
+heard a soft voice behind him saying: "Well, MISS BEAUMONT, here's the
+view." Something in the accent pointed to a jest in the name.
+
+"It's a dear old town, brother George," answered another voice that
+sounded familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr. Hoopdriver saw the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, with their backs towards
+him. She turned her smiling profile towards Hoopdriver. "Only, you know,
+brothers don't call their sisters--"
+
+She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. "Damn!" said the other
+man in brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed her glance.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the Weald.
+"Beautiful old town, isn't it?" said the other man in brown, after a
+quite perceptible pause.
+
+"Isn't it?" said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Another pause began.
+
+"Can't get alone anywhere," said the other man in brown, looking round.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and
+decided to retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should
+stumble at the head of the steps and vanish with indignity. This was the
+third time that he'd seen HIM, and the fourth time her. And of course
+he was too big a fat-head to raise his cap to HER! He thought of that at
+the foot of the Keep. Apparently they aimed at the South Coast just
+as he did, He'd get up betimes the next day and hurry off to avoid
+her--them, that is. It never occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver that Miss
+Beaumont and her brother might do exactly the same thing, and that
+evening, at least, the peculiarity of a brother calling his sister "Miss
+Beaumont" did not recur to him. He was much too preoccupied with an
+analysis of his own share of these encounters. He found it hard to be
+altogether satisfied about the figure he had cut, revise his memories as
+he would.
+
+Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two people. It
+was about seven o'clock. He stopped outside a linen draper's and peered
+over the goods in the window at the assistants in torment. He could have
+spent a whole day happily at that. He told himself that he was trying
+to see how they dressed out the brass lines over their counters, in a
+purely professional spirit, but down at the very bottom of his heart he
+knew better. The customers were a secondary consideration, and it was
+only after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he perceived that among
+them was--the Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the window
+at once, and saw the other man in brown standing at the edge of the
+pavement and regarding him with a very curious expression of face.
+
+There came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head the curious problem whether he was
+to be regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or whether they were
+to be regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He abandoned the solution at
+last in despair, quite unable to decide upon the course he should take
+at the next encounter, whether he should scowl savagely at the couple or
+assume an attitude eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+
+
+
+
+X. THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER'S HEART
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he had
+never written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will describe him
+better. Like I know not how many of those who do the fetching and
+carrying of life,--a great number of them certainly,--his real life was
+absolutely uninteresting, and if he had faced it as realistically as
+such people do in Mr. Gissing's novels, he would probably have come by
+way of drink to suicide in the course of a year. But that was just what
+he had the natural wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he was always
+decorating his existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses,
+deliberate and yet quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences were
+mere material for a romantic superstructure. If some power had given
+Hoopdriver the 'giftie' Burns invoked, 'to see oursels as ithers see
+us,' he would probably have given it away to some one else at the very
+earliest opportunity. His entire life, you must understand, was not a
+continuous romance, but a series of short stories linked only by the
+general resemblance of their hero, a brown-haired young fellow commonly,
+with blue eyes and a fair moustache, graceful rather than strong, sharp
+and resolute rather than clever (cp., as the scientific books say,
+p. 2). Invariably this person possessed an iron will. The stories
+fluctuated indefinitely. The smoking of a cigarette converted
+Hoopdriver's hero into something entirely worldly, subtly rakish, with a
+humorous twinkle in the eye and some gallant sinning in the background.
+You should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver promenading the brilliant gardens at
+Earl's Court on an early-closing night. His meaning glances! (I dare not
+give the meaning.) Such an influence as the eloquence of a revivalist
+preacher would suffice to divert the story into absolutely different
+channels, make him a white-soured hero, a man still pure, walking
+untainted and brave and helpful through miry ways. The appearance of
+some daintily gloved frockcoated gentleman with buttonhole and eyeglass
+complete, gallantly attendant in the rear of customers, served again
+to start visions of a simplicity essentially Cromwell-like, of sturdy
+plainness, of a strong, silent man going righteously through the world.
+This day there had predominated a fine leisurely person immaculately
+clothed, and riding on an unexceptional machine, a mysterious
+person--quite unostentatious, but with accidental self-revelation
+of something over the common, even a "bloomin' Dook," it might be
+incognito, on the tour of the South Coast.
+
+You must not think that there was any TELLING of these stories of this
+life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that they were known
+to a soul. If it were not for the trouble, I would, I think, go back and
+rewrite this section from the beginning, expunging the statements that
+Hoopdriver was a poet and a romancer, and saying instead that he was a
+playwright and acted his own plays. He was not only the sole performer,
+but the entire audience, and the entertainment kept him almost
+continuously happy. Yet even that playwright comparison scarcely
+expresses all the facts of the case. After all, very many of his dreams
+never got acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the dreams of
+a solitary walk for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the dreams dreamt
+behind the counter while trade was slack and mechanical foldings
+and rollings occupied his muscles. Most of them were little dramatic
+situations, crucial dialogues, the return of Mr. Hoopdriver to his
+native village, for instance, in a well-cut holiday suit and natty
+gloves, the unheard asides of the rival neighbours, the delight of
+the old 'mater,' the intelligence--"A ten-pound rise all at once
+from Antrobus, mater. Whad d'yer think of that?" or again, the first
+whispering of love, dainty and witty and tender, to the girl he served
+a few days ago with sateen, or a gallant rescue of generalised beauty in
+distress from truculent insult or ravening dog.
+
+So many people do this--and you never suspect it. You see a tattered lad
+selling matches in the street, and you think there is nothing between
+him and the bleakness of immensity, between him and utter abasement, but
+a few tattered rags and a feeble musculature. And all unseen by you a
+host of heaven-sent fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they
+swathe you about. Many men have never seen their own profiles or the
+backs of their heads, and for the back of your own mind no mirror has
+been invented. They swathe him about so thickly that the pricks of fate
+scarce penetrate to him, or become but a pleasant titillation. And so,
+indeed, it is with all of us who go on living. Self-deception is the
+anaesthetic of life, while God is carving out our beings.
+
+But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver's
+imaginings. You see now how external our view has been; we have had but
+the slightest transitory glimpses of the drama within, of how the things
+looked in the magic mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver's mind. On the road to
+Guildford and during his encounters with his haunting fellow-cyclists
+the drama had presented chiefly the quiet gentleman to whom we have
+alluded, but at Guildford, under more varied stimuli, he burgeoned out
+more variously. There was the house agent's window, for instance, set
+him upon a charming little comedy. He would go in, make inquires about
+that thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go over it--the thing
+would stimulate the clerk's curiosity immensely. He searched his mind
+for a reason for this proceeding and discovered that he was a dynamiter
+needing privacy. Upon that theory he procured the key, explored the
+house carefully, said darkly that it might suit his special needs,
+but that there were OTHERS to consult. The clerk, however, did not
+understand the allusion, and merely pitied him as one who had married
+young and paired himself to a stronger mind than his own.
+
+This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a note-book
+and pencil, and that started the conception of an artist taking notes.
+That was a little game Mr. Hoopdriver had, in congenial company, played
+in his still younger days--to the infinite annoyance of quite a number
+of respectable excursionists at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver
+had been, as his mother proudly boasted, a 'bit of a drawer,' but a
+conscientious and normally stupid schoolmaster perceived the incipient
+talent and had nipped it in the bud by a series of lessons in art.
+However, our principal character figured about quite happily in old
+corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking out of
+the bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a corner by
+a gateway, note-book in hand, busily sketching the Earl's imposing
+features. At which sight the other man in brown started back from
+the centre of the window, so as to be hidden from him, and crouching
+slightly, watched him intently through the interstices of the lace
+curtains.
+
+
+
+
+XI. OMISSIONS
+
+Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the great
+opening day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here. How he
+wandered about the old town in the dusk, and up to the Hogsback to see
+the little lamps below and the little stars above come out one after
+another; how he returned through the yellow-lit streets to the Yellow
+Hammer Coffee Tavern and supped bravely in the commercial room--a Man
+among Men; how he joined in the talk about flying-machines and the
+possibilities of electricity, witnessing that flying-machines were "dead
+certain to come," and that electricity was "wonderful, wonderful"; how
+he went and watched the billiard playing and said, "Left 'em" several
+times with an oracular air; how he fell a-yawning; and how he got
+out his cycling map and studied it intently,--are things that find no
+mention here. Nor will I enlarge upon his going into the writing-room,
+and marking the road from London to Guildford with a fine, bright line
+of the reddest of red ink. In his little cyclist hand-book there is a
+diary, and in the diary there is an entry of these things--it is there
+to this day, and I cannot do better than reproduce it here to witness
+that this book is indeed a true one, and no lying fable written to while
+away an hour.
+
+At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he set
+about finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all days
+must end at last! ) He got his candle in the hall from a friendly
+waiting-maid, and passed upward--whither a modest novelist, who writes
+for the family circle, dare not follow. Yet I may tell you that he knelt
+down at his bedside, happy and drowsy, and said, "Our Father 'chartin'
+heaven," even as he had learnt it by rote from his mother nearly twenty
+years ago. And anon when his breathing had become deep and regular, we
+may creep into his bedroom and catch him at his dreams. He is lying
+upon his left side, with his arm under the pillow. It is dark, and he
+is hidden; but if you could have seen his face, sleeping there in the
+darkness, I think you would have perceived, in spite of that treasured,
+thin, and straggling moustache, in spite of your memory of the coarse
+words he had used that day, that the man before you was, after all, only
+a little child asleep.
+
+
+
+
+XII. THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen Mr.
+Hoopdriver's face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little, plain
+bedroom at the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern at Guildford.
+That was before midnight. As the night progressed he was disturbed by
+dreams.
+
+After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory of
+motion lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and round they
+seem to go. You ride through Dreamland on wonderful dream bicycles
+that change and grow; you ride down steeples and staircases and over
+precipices; you hover in horrible suspense over inhabited towns, vainly
+seeking for a brake your hand cannot find, to save you from a headlong
+fall; you plunge into weltering rivers, and rush helplessly at monstrous
+obstacles. Anon Mr. Hoopdriver found himself riding out of the darkness
+of non-existence, pedalling Ezekiel's Wheels across the Weald of Surrey,
+jolting over the hills and smashing villages in his course, while the
+other man in brown cursed and swore at him and shouted to stop his
+career. There was the Putney heath-keeper, too, and the man in drab
+raging at him. He felt an awful fool, a--what was it?--a juggins,
+ah!--a Juggernaut. The villages went off one after another with a soft,
+squashing noise. He did not see the Young Lady in Grey, but he knew she
+was looking at his back. He dared not look round. Where the devil was
+the brake? It must have fallen off. And the bell? Right in front of him
+was Guildford. He tried to shout and warn the town to get out of the
+way, but his voice was gone as well. Nearer, nearer! it was fearful! and
+in another moment the houses were cracking like nuts and the blood of
+the inhabitants squirting this way and that. The streets were black with
+people running. Right under his wheels he saw the Young Lady in Grey. A
+feeling of horror came upon Mr. Hoopdriver; he flung himself sideways
+to descend, forgetting how high he was, and forthwith he began falling;
+falling, falling.
+
+He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered a
+little, and went to sleep again.
+
+This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other man
+in brown came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew uglier and
+uglier as he approached, and his expression was intolerably evil. He
+came and looked close into Mr. Hoopdriver's eyes and then receded to an
+incredible distance. His face seemed to be luminous. "MISS BEAUMONT," he
+said, and splashed up a spray of suspicion. Some one began letting
+off fireworks, chiefly Catherine wheels, down the shop, though Mr.
+Hoopdriver knew it was against the rules. For it seemed that the place
+they were in was a vast shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived that the
+other man in brown was the shop-walker, differing from most shop-walkers
+in the fact that he was lit from within as a Chinese lantern might be.
+And the customer Mr. Hoopdriver was going to serve was the Young Lady
+in Grey. Curious he hadn't noticed it before. She was in grey as
+usual,--rationals,--and she had her bicycle leaning against the counter.
+She smiled quite frankly at him, just as she had done when she had
+apologised for stopping him. And her form, as she leant towards him, was
+full of a sinuous grace he had never noticed before. "What can I have
+the pleasure?" said Mr. Hoopdriver at once, and she said, "The Ripley
+road." So he got out the Ripley road and unrolled it and showed it to
+her, and she said that would do very nicely, and kept on looking at him
+and smiling, and he began measuring off eight miles by means of the yard
+measure on the counter, eight miles being a dress length, a rational
+dress length, that is; and then the other man in brown came up and
+wanted to interfere, and said Mr. Hoopdriver was a cad, besides
+measuring it off too slowly. And as Mr. Hoopdriver began to measure
+faster, the other man in brown said the Young Lady in Grey had been
+there long enough, and that he WAS her brother, or else she would not be
+travelling with him, and he suddenly whipped his arm about her waist and
+made off with her. It occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment that
+this was scarcely brotherly behaviour. Of course it wasn't! The sight
+of the other man gripping her so familiarly enraged him frightfully; he
+leapt over the counter forthwith and gave chase. They ran round the shop
+and up an iron staircase into the Keep, and so out upon the Ripley road.
+For some time they kept dodging in and out of a wayside hotel with
+two front doors and an inn yard. The other man could not run very fast
+because he had hold of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was
+hampered by the absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch
+out; they would keep going round and round as if they were on the
+treadles of a wheel, so that he made the smallest steps conceivable.
+This dream came to no crisis. The chase seemed to last an interminable
+time, and all kinds of people, heathkeepers, shopmen, policemen, the old
+man in the Keep, the angry man in drab, the barmaid at the Unicorn, men
+with flying-machines, people playing billiards in the doorways, silly,
+headless figures, stupid cocks and hens encumbered with parcels
+and umbrellas and waterproofs, people carrying bedroom candles, and
+such-like riffraff, kept getting in his way and annoying him, although
+he sounded his electric bell, and said, "Wonderful, wonderful!" at every
+corner....
+
+
+
+
+XIII. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+
+There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver's breakfast, so
+that after all he was not free to start out of Guildford until just upon
+the stroke of nine. He wheeled his machine from the High Street in some
+perplexity. He did not know whether this young lady, who had seized hold
+of his imagination so strongly, and her unfriendly and possibly menacing
+brother, were ahead of him or even now breakfasting somewhere in
+Guildford. In the former case he might loiter as he chose; in the latter
+he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in branch roads.
+
+It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that he would
+leave Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but by the road
+running through Shalford. Along this pleasant shady way he felt
+sufficiently secure to resume his exercises in riding with one hand
+off the handles, and in staring over his shoulder. He came over once
+or twice, but fell on his foot each time, and perceived that he was
+improving. Before he got to Bramley a specious byway snapped him up, ran
+with him for half a mile or more, and dropped him as a terrier drops
+a walkingstick, upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from
+Godalming. He entered Godalming on his feet, for the road through that
+delightful town is beyond dispute the vilest in the world, a mere tumult
+of road metal, a way of peaks and precipices, and, after a successful
+experiment with cider at the Woolpack, he pushed on to Milford.
+
+All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young Lady
+in Grey and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark is of Bogies.
+Sometimes he could hear their pneumatics stealing upon him from behind,
+and looking round saw a long stretch of vacant road. Once he saw far
+ahead of him a glittering wheel, but it proved to be a workingman riding
+to destruction on a very tall ordinary. And he felt a curious, vague
+uneasiness about that Young Lady in Grey, for which he was altogether
+unable to account. Now that he was awake he had forgotten that
+accentuated Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in his dream. But
+the curious dream conviction, that the girl was not really the man's
+sister, would not let itself be forgotten. Why, for instance, should a
+man want to be alone with his sister on the top of a tower? At Milford
+his bicycle made, so to speak, an ass of itself. A finger-post suddenly
+jumped out at him, vainly indicating an abrupt turn to the right,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver would have slowed up and read the inscription, but
+no!--the bicycle would not let him. The road dropped a little into
+Milford, and the thing shied, put down its head and bolted, and Mr.
+Hoopdriver only thought of the brake when the fingerpost was passed.
+Then to have recovered the point of intersection would have meant
+dismounting. For as yet there was no road wide enough for Mr. Hoopdriver
+to turn in. So he went on his way--or to be precise, he did exactly the
+opposite thing. The road to the right was the Portsmouth road, and this
+he was on went to Haslemere and Midhurst. By that error it came about
+that he once more came upon his fellow travellers of yesterday, coming
+on them suddenly, without the slightest preliminary announcement and
+when they least expected it, under the Southwestern Railway arch. "It's
+horrible," said a girlish voice; "it's brutal--cowardly--" And stopped.
+
+His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have been
+something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of annoyance at
+himself for the unintentional intrusion. But disconcerted as he was, he
+was yet able to appreciate something of the peculiarity of their mutual
+attitudes. The bicycles were lying by the roadside, and the two riders
+stood face to face. The other man in brown's attitude, as it flashed
+upon Hoopdriver, was a deliberate pose; he twirled his moustache and
+smiled faintly, and he was conscientiously looking amused. And the girl
+stood rigid, her arms straight by her side, her handkerchief clenched in
+her hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest touch of red upon
+her eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's sense to be indignant. But
+that was the impression of a second. A mask of surprised recognition
+fell across this revelation of emotion as she turned her head towards
+him, and the pose of the other man in brown vanished too in a momentary
+astonishment. And then he had passed them, and was riding on towards
+Haslemere to make what he could of the swift picture that had
+photographed itself on his brain.
+
+"Rum," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It's DASHED rum!"
+
+"They were having a row."
+
+"Smirking--" What he called the other man in brown need not trouble us.
+
+"Annoying her!" That any human being should do that!
+
+"WHY?"
+
+The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver's mind. He
+grasped his brake, descended, and stood looking hesitatingly back. They
+still stood by the railway bridge, and it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's
+fancy that she was stamping her foot. He hesitated, then turned his
+bicycle round, mounted, and rode back towards them, gripping his courage
+firmly lest it should slip away and leave him ridiculous. "I'll offer
+'im a screw 'ammer," said Mr. Hoopdriver. Then, with a wave of fierce
+emotion, he saw that the girl was crying. In another moment they heard
+him and turned in surprise. Certainly she had been crying; her eyes
+were swimming in tears, and the other man in brown looked exceedingly
+disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver descended and stood over his machine.
+
+"Nothing wrong, I hope?" he said, looking the other man in brown
+squarely in the face. "No accident?"
+
+"Nothing," said the other man in brown shortly. "Nothing at all,
+thanks."
+
+"But," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, "the young lady is
+crying. I thought perhaps--"
+
+The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance, and
+covered one eye with her handkerchief. "It's this speck," she said.
+"This speck of dust in my eye."
+
+"This lady," said the other man in brown, explaining, "has a gnat in her
+eye."
+
+There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. "I
+believe it's out," she said. The other man in brown made movements
+indicating commiserating curiosity concerning the alleged fly. Mr.
+Hoopdriver--the word is his own--stood flabber-gastered. He had all the
+intuition of the simple-minded. He knew there was no fly. But the
+ground was suddenly cut from his feet. There is a limit to
+knighterrantry--dragons and false knights are all very well, but flies!
+Fictitious flies! Whatever the trouble was, it was evidently not his
+affair. He felt he had made a fool of himself again. He would have
+mumbled some sort of apology; but the other man in brown gave him no
+time, turned on him abruptly, even fiercely. "I hope," he said, "that
+your curiosity is satisfied?"
+
+"Certainly," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Then we won't detain you."
+
+And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about, struggled
+upon it, and resumed the road southward. And when he learnt that he was
+not on the Portsmouth road, it was impossible to turn and go back, for
+that would be to face his shame again, and so he had to ride on by Brook
+Street up the hill to Haslemere. And away to the right the Portsmouth
+road mocked at him and made off to its fastnesses amid the sunlit green
+and purple masses of Hindhead, where Mr. Grant Allen writes his Hill Top
+Novels day by day.
+
+The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys one saw
+on either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the sides of the road
+itself set about with grey heather scrub and prickly masses of gorse,
+and pine trees with their year's growth still bright green, against the
+darkened needles of the previous years, were fresh and delightful to Mr.
+Hoopdriver's eyes But the brightness of the day and the day-old sense of
+freedom fought an uphill fight against his intolerable vexation at that
+abominable encounter, and had still to win it when he reached Haslemere.
+A great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred of the other man in brown,
+possessed him. He had conceived the brilliant idea of abandoning
+Portsmouth, or at least giving up the straight way to his
+fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the left, eastward. He
+did not dare to stop at any of the inviting public-houses in the
+main street of Haslemere, but turned up a side way and found a little
+beer-shop, the Good Hope, wherein to refresh himself. And there he ate
+and gossipped condescendingly with an aged labourer, assuming the
+while for his own private enjoyment the attributes of a Lost Heir, and
+afterwards mounted and rode on towards Northchapel, a place which a
+number of finger-posts conspired to boom, but which some insidious
+turning prevented him from attaining.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+
+It was one of my uncle's profoundest remarks that human beings are the
+only unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far justified by
+Mr. Hoopdriver that, after spending the morning tortuously avoiding the
+other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey, he spent a considerable
+part of the afternoon in thinking about the Young Lady in Grey, and
+contemplating in an optimistic spirit the possibilities of seeing her
+again. Memory and imagination played round her, so that his course was
+largely determined by the windings of the road he traversed. Of one
+general proposition he was absolutely convinced. "There's something
+Juicy wrong with 'em," said he--once even aloud. But what it was he
+could not imagine. He recapitulated the facts. "Miss Beaumont--brother
+and sister--and the stoppage to quarrel and weep--" it was perplexing
+material for a young man of small experience. There was no exertion he
+hated so much as inference, and after a time he gave up any attempt
+to get at the realities of the case, and let his imagination go free.
+Should he ever see her again? Suppose he did--with that other chap not
+about. The vision he found pleasantest was an encounter with her, an
+unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing Class 'Do' at the Putney
+Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift together, and he would dance
+with her again and again. It was a pleasant vision, for you must
+understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly well. Or again, in the
+shop, a sudden radiance in the doorway, and she is bowed towards the
+Manchester counter. And then to lean over that counter and murmur,
+seemingly apropos of the goods under discussion, "I have not forgotten
+that morning on the Portsmouth road," and lower, "I never shall forget."
+
+At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel and
+weighed his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible resting-place,
+or Pullborough; Midhurst seemed too near, and any place over the Downs
+beyond, too far, and so he meandered towards Petworth, posing himself
+perpetually and loitering, gathering wild flowers and wondering why they
+had no names--for he had never heard of any--dropping them furtively
+at the sight of a stranger, and generally 'mucking about.' There
+were purple vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet, honeysuckle, belated
+brambles--but the dog-roses had already gone; there were green and red
+blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another place white
+dead nettles, traveller's-joy, clinging bedstraw, grasses flowering,
+white campions, and ragged robins. One cornfield was glorious with
+poppies, bright scarlet and purple white, and the blue corn-flowers were
+beginning. In the lanes the trees met overhead, and the wisps of hay
+still hung to the straggling hedges. Iri one of the main roads he
+steered a perilous passage through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and
+there were little cottages, and picturesque beer-houses with the vivid
+brewers' boards of blue and scarlet, and once a broad green and a
+church, and an expanse of some hundred houses or so. Then he came to
+a pebbly rivulet that emerged between clumps of sedge loosestrife and
+forget-me-nots under an arch of trees, and rippled across the road,
+and there he dismounted, longing to take off shoes and stockings--those
+stylish chequered stockings were now all dimmed with dust--and paddle
+his lean legs in the chuckling cheerful water. But instead he sat in
+a manly attitude, smoking a cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in
+Grey should come glittering round the corner. For the flavour of the
+Young Lady in Grey was present through it all, mixing with the flowers
+and all the delight of it, a touch that made this second day quite
+different from the first, an undertone of expectation, anxiety, and
+something like regret that would not be ignored.
+
+It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he began
+to repent, vividly and decidedly, having fled these two people. He
+was getting hungry, and that has a curious effect upon the emotional
+colouring of our minds. The man was a sinister brute, Hoopdriver saw in
+a flash of inspiration, and the girl--she was in some serious trouble.
+And he who might have helped her had taken his first impulse as
+decisive--and bolted. This new view of it depressed him dreadfully. What
+might not be happening to her now? He thought again of her tears. Surely
+it was merely his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his eye upon
+it.
+
+He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found
+himself in a tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming on,
+emerged, not at Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from Midhurst. "I'm
+getting hungry," said Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of a gamekeeper in
+Easebourne village. "Midhurst a mile, and Petworth five!--Thenks, I'll
+take Midhurst."
+
+He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the North
+Street, and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the cheerful sign of
+a teapot, and exhibiting a brilliant array of tobaccos, sweets, and
+children's toys in the window, struck his fancy. A neat, bright-eyed
+little old lady made him welcome, and he was presently supping
+sumptuously on sausages and tea, with a visitors' book full of the most
+humorous and flattering remarks about the little old lady, in verse and
+prose, propped up against his teapot as he ate. Regular good some of
+the jokes were, and rhymes that read well--even with your mouth full
+of sausage. Mr. Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing
+"something"--for his judgment on the little old lady was already formed.
+He pictured the little old lady discovering it afterwards--"My gracious!
+One of them Punch men," she would say. The room had a curtained recess
+and a chest of drawers, for presently it was to be his bedroom, and the
+day part of it was decorated with framed Oddfellows' certificates and
+giltbacked books and portraits, and kettle-holders, and all kinds of
+beautiful things made out of wool; very comfortable it was indeed. The
+window was lead framed and diamond paned, and through it one saw the
+corner of the vicarage and a pleasant hill crest, in dusky silhouette
+against the twilight sky. And after the sausages had ceased to be, he
+lit a Red Herring cigarette and went swaggering out into the twilight
+street. All shadowy blue between its dark brick houses, was the street,
+with a bright yellow window here and there and splashes of green and red
+where the chemist's illumination fell across the road.
+
+
+
+
+XV. AN INTERLUDE
+
+And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky Midhurst
+North Street, and return to the two folks beside the railway bridge
+between Milford and Haslemere. She was a girl of eighteen, dark,
+fine featured, with bright eyes, and a rich, swift colour under her
+warm-tinted skin. Her eyes were all the brighter for the tears that swam
+in them. The man was thirty three or four, fair, with a longish nose
+overhanging his sandy flaxen moustache, pale blue eyes, and a head that
+struck out above and behind. He stood with his feet wide apart, his hand
+on his hip, in an attitude that was equally suggestive of defiance and
+aggression. They had watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The unexpected
+interruption had stopped the flood of her tears. He tugged his abundant
+moustache and regarded her calmly. She stood with face averted,
+obstinately resolved not to speak first. "Your behaviour," he said at
+last, "makes you conspicuous."
+
+She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands clenched.
+"You unspeakable CAD," she said, and choked, stamped her little foot,
+and stood panting.
+
+"Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I AM an unspeakable cad. Who
+wouldn't be--for you?"
+
+"'Dear girl!' How DARE you speak to me like that? YOU--"
+
+"I would do anything--"
+
+"OH!"
+
+There was a moment's pause. She looked squarely into his face, her eyes
+alight with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a little. He
+stroked his moustache, and by an effort maintained his cynical calm.
+"Let us be reasonable," he said.
+
+"Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual in the
+world."
+
+"You have always had it so--in your generalising way. But let us look at
+the facts of the case--if that pleases you better."
+
+With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+
+"Well," he said,--"you've eloped."
+
+"I've left my home," she corrected, with dignity. "I left my home
+because it was unendurable. Because that woman--"
+
+"Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me."
+
+"You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to help me to
+earn a living by writing. It was you who said, why shouldn't a man and
+woman be friends? And now you dare--you dare--"
+
+"Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence--"
+
+"I will go back. I forbid you--I forbid you to stand in the way--"
+
+"One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at least
+clear-headed. You don't know everything yet, you know. Listen to me for
+a moment."
+
+"Haven't I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who dared
+only to talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at anything beyond."
+
+"But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You KNEW. And you did
+not mind. MIND! You liked it. It was the fun of the whole thing for you.
+That I loved you, and could not speak to you. You played with it--"
+
+"You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?"
+
+"That isn't all. I made up my mind--Well, to make the game more even.
+And so I suggested to you and joined with you in this expedition of
+yours, invented a sister at Midhurst--I tell you, I HAVEN'T a sister!
+For one object--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To compromise you."
+
+She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute
+neither spoke. Then she began half defiantly: "Much I am compromised. Of
+course--I have made a fool of myself--"
+
+"My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and you
+know very little of this world. Less than you think. But you will learn.
+Before you write all those novels we have talked about, you will have
+to learn. And that's one point--" He hesitated. "You started and blushed
+when the man at breakfast called you Ma'am. You thought it a funny
+mistake, but you did not say anything because he was young and
+nervous--and besides, the thought of being my wife offended your
+modesty. You didn't care to notice it. But--you see; I gave your name
+as MRS. Beaumont." He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical
+pose. "MRS. Beaumont," he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and
+watching the effect.
+
+She looked into his eyes speechless. "I am learning fast," she said
+slowly, at last.
+
+He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. "Jessie," he said,
+with a sudden change of voice, "I know all this is mean, isvillanous.
+But do you think that I have done all this scheming, all this
+subterfuge, for any other object--"
+
+She did not seem to listen to his words. "I shall ride home," she said
+abruptly.
+
+"To her?"
+
+She winced.
+
+"Just think," said he, "what she could say to you after this."
+
+"Anyhow, I shall leave you now."
+
+"Yes? And go--"
+
+"Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live without
+conventionality--"
+
+"My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven't money and you haven't
+credit. No one would take you in. It's one of two things: go back to
+your stepmother, or--trust to me."
+
+"How CAN I?"
+
+"Then you must go back to her." He paused momentarily, to let this
+consideration have its proper weight. "Jessie, I did not mean to say
+the things I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when I spoke so. If you
+will, forgive me. I am a man. I could not help myself. Forgive me, and I
+promise you--"
+
+"How can I trust you?"
+
+"Try me. I can assure you--"
+
+She regarded him distrustfully.
+
+"At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the shadow of
+this horrible bridge long enough."
+
+"Oh! let me think," she said, half turning from him and pressing her
+hand to her brow.
+
+"THINK! Look here, Jessie. It is ten o'clock. Shall we call a truce
+until one?"
+
+She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last agreed.
+
+They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and the
+heather. Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed. She was
+pale, divided between fear and anger. She perceived she was in a scrape,
+and tried in vain to think of a way of escape. Only one tangible thing
+would keep in her mind, try as she would to ignore it. That was the
+quite irrelevant fact that his head was singularly like an albino
+cocoanut. He, too, felt thwarted. He felt that this romantic business
+of seduction was, after all, unexpectedly tame. But this was only the
+beginning. At any rate, every day she spent with him was a day gained.
+Perhaps things looked worse than they were; that was some consolation.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+
+You have seen these two young people--Bechamel, by-the-bye, is the man's
+name, and the girl's is Jessie Milton--from the outside; you have heard
+them talking; they ride now side by side (but not too close together,
+and in an uneasy silence) towards Haslemere; and this chapter will
+concern itself with those curious little council chambers inside their
+skulls, where their motives are in session and their acts are considered
+and passed.
+
+But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester, enlarging
+upon the increase of bald heads and purblind people, has deduced a
+wonderful future for the children of men. Man, he said, was nowadays
+a hairless creature by forty or fifty, and for hair we gave him a wig;
+shrivelled, and we padded him; toothless, and lo! false teeth set in
+gold. Did he lose a limb, and a fine, new, artificial one was at his
+disposal; get indigestion, and to hand was artificial digestive fluid
+or bile or pancreatine, as the case might be. Complexions, too,
+were replaceable, spectacles superseded an inefficient eye-lens, and
+imperceptible false diaphragms were thrust into the failing ear. So
+he went over our anatomies, until, at last, he had conjured up a weird
+thing of shreds and patches, a simulacrum, an artificial body of a
+man, with but a doubtful germ of living flesh lurking somewhere in his
+recesses. To that, he held, we were coming.
+
+How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not concern
+us now. But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr. Rudyard Kipling, hath
+it that in the case of one Tomlinson, the thing, so far as the soul is
+concerned, has already been accomplished. Time was when men had
+simple souls, desires as natural as their eyes, a little reasonable
+philanthropy, a little reasonable philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a
+taste for good living, a decent, personal vanity, a healthy, satisfying
+pugnacity, and so forth. But now we are taught and disciplined for
+years and years, and thereafter we read and read for all the time some
+strenuous, nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic hypnotists,
+pulpit and platform hypnotists, book-writing hypnotists,
+newspaper-writing hypnotists, are at us all. This sugar you are eating,
+they tell us, is ink, and forthwith we reject it with infinite disgust.
+This black draught of unrequited toil is True Happiness, and down it
+goes with every symptom of pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull
+past believing, and we yawn and stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they
+interrupt, but this Ibsen is deep and delightful, and we vie with one
+another in an excess of entertainment. And when we open the heads of
+these two young people, we find, not a straightforward motive on the
+surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a soul so much as an oversoul,
+a zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas, a highway's feast of fine,
+confused thinking. The girl is resolute to Live Her Own Life, a phrase
+you may have heard before, and the man has a pretty perverted ambition
+to be a cynical artistic person of the very calmest description. He is
+hoping for the awakening of Passion in her, among other things. He knows
+Passion ought to awaken, from the text-books he has studied. He knows
+she admires his genius, but he is unaware that she does not admire his
+head. He is quite a distinguished art critic in London, and he met her
+at that celebrated lady novelist's, her stepmother, and here you have
+them well embarked upon the Adventure. Both are in the first stage of
+repentance, which consists, as you have probably found for yourself, in
+setting your teeth hard and saying' "I WILL go on."
+
+Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way
+together with a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for
+the orthodox development of the Adventure. He perceives he was too
+precipitate. But he feels his honour is involved, and meditates the
+development of a new attack. And the girl? She is unawakened. Her
+motives are bookish, written by a haphazard syndicate of authors,
+novelists, and biographers, on her white inexperience. An artificial
+oversoul she is, that may presently break down and reveal a human being
+beneath it. She is still in that schoolgirl phase when a talkative old
+man is more interesting than a tongue-tied young one, and when to be an
+eminent mathematician, say, or to edit a daily paper, seems as fine an
+ambition as any girl need aspire to. Bechaniel was to have helped her to
+attain that in the most expeditious manner, and here he is beside her,
+talking enigmatical phrases about passion, looking at her with the
+oddest expression, and once, and that was his gravest offence, offering
+to kiss her. At any rate he has apologised. She still scarcely realises,
+you see, the scrape she has got into.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+
+We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and tobacco
+shop. You must not think that a strain is put on coincidence when I
+tell you that next door to Mrs. Wardor's--that was the name of the
+bright-eyed, little old lady with whom Mr. Hoopdriver had stopped--is
+the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel Hotel, on the night that Mr.
+Hoopdriver reached Midhurst, were 'Mr.' and 'Miss' Beaumont, our
+Bechamel and Jessie Milton. Indeed, it was a highly probable thing; for
+if one goes through Guildford, the choice of southward roads is limited;
+you may go by Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to Chichester,
+in addition to which highways there is nothing for it but minor roadways
+to Petworth or Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward. And coming to
+Midhurst from the north, the Angel's entrance lies yawning to engulf
+your highly respectable cyclists, while Mrs. Wardor's genial teapot is
+equally attractive to those who weigh their means in little scales.
+But to people unfamiliar with the Sussex roads--and such were the
+three persons of this story--the convergence did not appear to be so
+inevitable.
+
+Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner, was the
+first to be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver walk slowly across
+the gateway, his head enhaloed in cigarette smoke, and pass out of sight
+up the street. Incontinently a mass of cloudy uneasiness, that had been
+partly dispelled during the day, reappeared and concentrated rapidly
+into definite suspicion. He put his screw hammer into his pocket and
+walked through the archway into the street, to settle the business
+forthwith, for he prided himself on his decision. Hoopdriver was merely
+promenading, and they met face to face.
+
+At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and laughter
+seized Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his animosity. "'Ere
+we are again!" he said, laughing insincerely in a sudden outbreak at the
+perversity of chance.
+
+The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver's way, staring.
+Then his face assumed an expression of dangerous civility. "Is it any
+information to you," he said, with immense politeness, "when I remark
+that you are following us?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his characteristic
+impulse to apologise. He wanted to annoy the other man in brown, and a
+sentence that had come into his head in a previous rehearsal cropped up
+appropriately. "Since when," said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath,
+yet bringing the question out valiantly, nevertheless,--"since when 'ave
+you purchased the county of Sussex?"
+
+"May I point out," said the other man in brown, "that I object--we
+object not only to your proximity to us. To be frank--you appear to be
+following us--with an object."
+
+"You can always," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "turn round if you don't like it,
+and go back the way you came."
+
+"Oh-o!" said the other man in brown. "THAT'S it! I thought as much."
+
+"Did you?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily to the
+unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+
+"I see," said the other man. "I see. I half suspected--" His manner
+changed abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. "Yes--a word with
+you. You will, I hope, give me ten minutes."
+
+Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the other man
+take him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated. Then he thought of
+an admirable phrase. "You 'ave some communication--"
+
+"We'll call it a communication," said the other man.
+
+"I can spare you the ten minutes," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with dignity.
+
+"This way, then," said the other man in brown, and they walked slowly
+down the North Street towards the Grammar School. There was, perhaps,
+thirty seconds' silence. The other man stroked his moustache nervously.
+Mr. Hoopdriver's dramatic instincts were now fully awake. He did
+not quite understand in what role he was cast, but it was evidently
+something dark and mysterious. Doctor Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and
+Alexander Dumas were well within Mr. Hoopdriver's range of reading, and
+he had not read them for nothing.
+
+"I will be perfectly frank with you," said the other man in brown.
+
+"Frankness is always the best course," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Well, then--who the devil set you on this business?"
+
+"Set me ON this business?"
+
+"Don't pretend to be stupid. Who's your employer? Who engaged you for
+this job?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. "No--I can't say."
+
+"Quite sure?" The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at his hand,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a yellow milled edge
+glittering in the twilight. Now your shop assistant is just above the
+tip-receiving class, and only just above it--so that he is acutely
+sensitive on the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met those
+of the other man in brown. "Stow it!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, stopping and
+facing the tempter.
+
+"What!" said the other man in brown, surprised. "Eigh?" And so saying he
+stowed it in his breeches pocket.
+
+"D'yer think I'm to be bribed?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose imagination
+was rapidly expanding the situation. "By Gosh! I'd follow you now--"
+
+"My dear sir," said the other man in brown, "I beg your pardon. I
+misunderstood you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In your
+profession--"
+
+"What have you got to say against my profession?"
+
+"Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior
+description--watchers. The whole class. Private Inquiry--I did not
+realise--I really trust you will overlook what was, after all--you must
+admit--a natural indiscretion. Men of honour are not so common in the
+world--in any profession."
+
+It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not light the
+lamps in the summer time, or the one they were passing had betrayed him.
+As it was, he had to snatch suddenly at his moustache and tug fiercely
+at it, to conceal the furious tumult of exultation, the passion of
+laughter, that came boiling up. Detective! Even in the shadow Bechamel
+saw that a laugh was stifled, but he put it down to the fact that the
+phrase "men of honour" amused his interlocutor. "He'll come round yet,"
+said Bechamel to himself. "He's simply holding out for a fiver." He
+coughed.
+
+"I don't see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is."
+
+"Don't you? I do."
+
+"Prompt," said Bechamel, appreciatively. "Now here's the thing I want to
+put to you--the kernel of the whole business. You need not answer if
+you don't want to. There's no harm done in my telling you what I want to
+know. Are you employed to watch me--or Miss Milton?"
+
+"I'm not the leaky sort," said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret he did
+not know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her name. Perhaps
+he'd tell some more. "It's no good pumping. Is that all you're after?"
+said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to catch
+a remark by throwing out a confidence. "I take it there are two people
+concerned in watching this affair."
+
+"Who's the other?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling with
+enormous internal tension his self-appreciation. "Who's the other?" was
+really brilliant, he thought.
+
+"There's my wife and HER stepmother."
+
+"And you want to know which it is?"
+
+"Yes," said Bechamel.
+
+"Well--arst 'em!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the better
+of him, and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. "Arst 'em both."
+
+Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. "I'd give a
+five-pound note to know just the precise state of affairs," he said.
+
+"I told you to stow that," said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening tone.
+And added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery, "You don't quite
+understand who you're dealing with. But you will!" He spoke with such
+conviction that he half believed that that defective office of his in
+London--Baker Street, in fact--really existed.
+
+With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the Angel,
+perturbed. "Hang detectives!" It wasn't the kind of thing he had
+anticipated at all. Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a wondering smile,
+walked down to where the mill waters glittered in the moonlight, and
+after meditating over the parapet of the bridge for a space, with
+occasional murmurs of, "Private Inquiry" and the like, returned, with
+mystery even in his paces, towards the town.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII.
+
+That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low
+whistling noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot the
+tears of the Young Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!--and a real one.
+Mr. Hoopdriver as a Private Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock Holmes in fact,
+keeping these two people 'under observation.' He walked slowly back from
+the bridge until he was opposite the Angel, and stood for ten minutes,
+perhaps, contemplating that establishment and enjoying all the strange
+sensations of being this wonderful, this mysterious and terrible thing.
+Everything fell into place in his scheme. He had, of course, by a kind
+of instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist, picked up the first
+old crock he came across as a means of pursuit. 'No expense was to be
+spared.'
+
+Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was
+observing. "My wife"--"HER stepmother!" Then he remembered her swimming
+eyes. Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him, washed away the
+detective superstructure, and left him plain Mr. Hoopdriver. This man in
+brown, with his confident manner, and his proffered half sovereign (damn
+him!) was up to no good, else why should he object to being watched? He
+was married! She was not his sister. He began to understand. A horrible
+suspicion of the state of affairs came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head.
+Surely it had not come to THAT. He was a detective!--he would find
+out. How was it to be done? He began to submit sketches on approval to
+himself. It required an effort before he could walk into the Angel bar.
+"A lemonade and bitter, please," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He cleared his throat. "Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?"
+
+"What, a gentleman and a young lady--on bicycles?"
+
+"Fairly young--a married couple."
+
+"No," said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions. "There's
+no married couples stopping here. But there's a Mr. and Miss BEAUMONT."
+She spelt it for precision. "Sure you've got the name right, young man?"
+
+"Quite," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of--What was the name you
+gave?"
+
+"Bowlong," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"No, there ain't no Bowlong," said the barmaid, taking up a glasscloth
+and a drying tumbler and beginning to polish the latter. "First off, I
+thought you might be asking for Beaumont--the names being similar. Were
+you expecting them on bicycles?"
+
+"Yes--they said they MIGHT be in Midhurst tonight."
+
+"P'raps they'll come presently. Beaumont's here, but no Bowlong. Sure
+that Beaumont ain't the name?"
+
+"Certain," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"It's curious the names being so alike. I thought p'raps--"
+
+And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to find
+his horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having listened awhile
+at the staircase volunteered some particulars of the young couple
+upstairs. Her modesty was much impressed by the young lady's costume, so
+she intimated, and Mr. Hoopdriver whispered the badinage natural to the
+occasion, at which she was coquettishly shocked. "There'll be no knowing
+which is which, in a year or two," said the barmaid. "And her manner
+too! She got off her machine and give it 'im to stick up against the
+kerb, and in she marched. 'I and my brother,' says she, 'want to stop
+here to-night. My brother doesn't mind what kind of room 'e 'as, but I
+want a room with a good view, if there's one to be got,' says she. He
+comes hurrying in after and looks at her. 'I've settled the rooms,' she
+says, and 'e says 'damn!' just like that. I can fancy my brother letting
+me boss the show like that."
+
+"I dessay you do," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "if the truth was known."
+
+The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the
+tumbler, polished, and took up another that had been draining, and shook
+the drops of water into her little zinc sink.
+
+"She'll be a nice little lot to marry," said the barmaid. "She'll be
+wearing the--well, b-dashes, as the sayin' is. I can't think what girls
+is comin' to."
+
+This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to Hoopdriver's
+taste.
+
+"Fashion," said he, taking up his change. "Fashion is all the go with
+you ladies--and always was. You'll be wearing 'em yourself before a
+couple of years is out."
+
+"Nice they'd look on my figger," said the barmaid, with a titter. "No--I
+ain't one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I shouldn't feel as
+if I'd anything on me, not more than if I'd forgot--Well, there! I'm
+talking." She put down the glass abruptly. "I dessay I'm old fashioned,"
+she said, and walked humming down the bar.
+
+"Not you," said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her eye, then
+with his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and wished her good
+evening.
+
+
+
+
+XIX.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the lead-framed
+windows where he had dined, and where the bed was now comfortably made,
+sat down on the box under the window, stared at the moon rising on
+the shining vicarage roof, and tried to collect his thoughts. How they
+whirled at first! It was past ten, and most of Midhurst was tucked
+away in bed, some one up the street was learning the violin, at rare
+intervals a belated inhabitant hurried home and woke the echoes, and a
+corncrake kept up a busy churning in the vicarage garden. The sky was
+deep blue, with a still luminous afterglow along the black edge of the
+hill, and the white moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars,
+had the sky to herself.
+
+At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not relationships.
+There was this malefactor, and his victim, and it had fallen on Mr.
+Hoopdriver to take a hand in the game. HE was married. Did she know he
+was married? Never for a moment did a thought of evil concerning her
+cross Hoopdriver's mind. Simple-minded people see questions of morals so
+much better than superior persons--who have read and thought themselves
+complex to impotence. He had heard her voice, seen the frank light in
+her eyes, and she had been weeping--that sufficed. The rights of the
+case he hadn't properly grasped. But he would. And that smirking--well,
+swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the exceedingly unpleasant
+incident of the railway bridge. "Thin we won't detain yer, thenks,"
+said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange, unnatural, contemptible voice,
+supposed to represent that of Bechamel. "Oh, the BEGGAR! I'll be level
+with him yet. He's afraid of us detectives--that I'll SWEAR." (If Mrs.
+Wardor should chance to be on the other side of the door within earshot,
+well and good.)
+
+For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical
+impossibilities for the most part,--Bechamel staggering headlong from
+the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver's large, but, to tell the truth, ill
+supported fist, Bechamel's five feet nine of height lifted from the
+ground and quivering under a vigorously applied horsewhip. So pleasant
+was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver's peaked face under the moonlight
+was transfigured. One might have paired him with that well-known and
+universally admired triumph, 'The Soul's Awakening,' so sweet was his
+ecstasy. And presently with his thirst for revenge glutted by six or
+seven violent assaults, a duel and two vigorous murders, his mind came
+round to the Young Lady in Grey again.
+
+She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid at
+the Angel had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a torrent,
+smoothed down to a mirror in which she was reflected with infinite
+clearness and detail. He'd never met anything like her before. Fancy
+that bolster of a barmaid being dressed in that way! He whuffed a
+contemptuous laugh. He compared her colour, her vigour, her voice, with
+the Young Ladies in Business with whom his lot had been cast. Even in
+tears she was beautiful, more beautiful indeed to him, for it made her
+seem softer and weaker, more accessible. And such weeping as he had seen
+before had been so much a matter of damp white faces, red noses, and
+hair coming out of curl. Your draper's assistant becomes something of a
+judge of weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young Ladies in
+Business, when for any reason their services are dispensed with. She
+could weep--and (by Gosh!) she could smile. HE knew that, and reverting
+to acting abruptly, he smiled confidentially at the puckered pallor of
+the moon.
+
+It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver's pensiveness lasted.
+It seemed a long time before his thoughts of action returned. Then he
+remembered he was a 'watcher'; that to-morrow he must be busy. It would
+be in character to make notes, and he pulled out his little note-book.
+With that in hand he fell a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her the
+'tecks were after them? If so, would she be as anxious to get away as HE
+was? He must be on the alert. If possible he must speak to her. Just
+a significant word, "Your friend--trust me!"--It occurred to him that
+to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to escape. At that he thought
+of the time and found it was half-past eleven. "Lord!" said he, "I must
+see that I wake." He yawned and rose. The blind was up, and he pulled
+back the little chintz curtains to let the sunlight strike across to
+the bed, hung his watch within good view of his pillow, on a nail that
+supported a kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to undress. He lay
+awake for a little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities of the
+morrow, and thence he passed gloriously into the wonderland of dreams.
+
+
+
+
+XX. THE PURSUIT
+
+And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant,
+active, wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window stuck
+open, ears alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the corner panes, in
+oblique glances at the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor wanted him to have
+his breakfast downstairs in her kitchen, but that would have meant
+abandoning the watch, and he held out strongly. The bicycle, cap-a-pie,
+occupied, under protest, a strategic position in the shop. He was
+expectant by six in the morning. By nine horrible fears oppressed him
+that his quest had escaped him, and he had to reconnoitre the Angel
+yard in order to satisfy himself. There he found the ostler (How are the
+mighty fallen in these decadent days!) brushing down the bicycles of the
+chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs. Wardor's premises. And about
+ten they emerged, and rode quietly up the North Street. He watched them
+until they turned the corner of the post office, and then out into the
+road and up after them in fine style! They went by the engine-house
+where the old stocks and the whipping posts are, and on to the
+Chichester road, and he followed gallantly. So this great chase began.
+
+They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight, getting
+down if he chanced to draw closely upon them round a corner. By riding
+vigorously he kept quite conveniently near them, for they made but
+little hurry. He grew hot indeed, and his knees were a little stiff to
+begin with, but that was all. There was little danger of losing them,
+for a thin chalky dust lay upon the road, and the track of her tire was
+milled like a shilling, and his was a chequered ribbon along the way.
+So they rode by Cobden's monument and through the prettiest of villages,
+until at last the downs rose steeply ahead. There they stopped awhile at
+the only inn in the place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up a position which
+commanded the inn door, and mopped his face and thirsted and smoked a
+Red Herring cigarette. They remained in the inn for some time. A number
+of chubby innocents returning home from school, stopped and formed a
+line in front of him, and watched him quietly but firmly for the space
+of ten minutes or so. "Go away," said he, and they only seemed quietly
+interested. He asked them all their names then, and they answered
+indistinct murmurs. He gave it up at last and became passive on his
+gate, and so at length they tired of him.
+
+The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr.
+Hoopdriver at the thought of their possible employment hungered as well
+as thirsted. Clearly, they were lunching. It was a cloudless day, and
+the sun at the meridian beat down upon the top of Mr. Hoopdriver's head,
+a shower bath of sunshine, a huge jet of hot light. It made his head
+swim. At last they emerged, and the other man in brown looked back and
+saw him. They rode on to the foot of the down, and dismounting began
+to push tediously up that long nearly vertical ascent of blinding white
+road, Mr. Hoopdriver hesitated. It might take them twenty minutes to
+mount that. Beyond was empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided to
+return to the inn and snatch a hasty meal.
+
+At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading pewter
+measure of sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in the throat,
+but leaden in the legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a man of substance
+as he emerged in the blinding sunshine, but even by the foot of the down
+the sun was insisting again that his skull was too small for his brains.
+The hill had gone steeper, the chalky road blazed like a magnesium
+light, and his front wheel began an apparently incurable squeaking. He
+felt as a man from Mars would feel if he were suddenly transferred to
+this planet, about three times as heavy as he was wont to feel. The two
+little black figures had vanished over the forehead of the hill. "The
+tracks'll be all right," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow progress
+up the hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf beside the road, to
+contemplate the Weald from the south. In a matter of two days he had
+crossed that spacious valley, with its frozen surge of green hills, its
+little villages and townships here and there, its copses and cornfields,
+its ponds and streams like jewelery of diamonds and silver glittering
+in the sun. The North Downs were hidden, far away beyond the Wealden
+Heights. Down below was the little village of Cocking, and half-way up
+the hill, a mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of sheep grazing
+together. Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue, and every
+now and then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat was tempered by
+a pleasant breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed by unreasonable
+contentment; he lit himself a cigarette and lounged more comfortably.
+Surely the Sussex ale is made of the waters of Lethe, of poppies and
+pleasant dreams. Drowsiness coiled insidiously about him.
+
+He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on the
+turf with his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes, and realised
+that he had slept. His head was still a trifle heavy. And the chase? He
+jumped to his feet and stooped to pick up his overturned machine. He
+whipped out his watch and saw that it was past two o'clock. "Lord love
+us, fancy that!--But the tracks'll be all right," said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+wheeling his machine back to the chalky road. "I must scorch till I
+overtake them."
+
+He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering lassitude
+permitted. Now and then he had to dismount to examine the surface where
+the road forked. He enjoyed that rather. "Trackin'," he said aloud, and
+decided in the privacy of his own mind that he had a wonderful instinct
+for 'spoor.' So he came past Goodwood station and Lavant, and approached
+Chichester towards four o'clock. And then came a terrible thing. In
+places the road became hard, in places were the crowded indentations of
+a recent flock of sheep, and at last in the throat of the town cobbles
+and the stony streets branching east, west, north, and south, at a stone
+cross under the shadow of the cathedral the tracks vanished. "O Cricky!"
+said Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in dismay and standing agape. "Dropped
+anything?" said an inhabitant at the kerb. "Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+"I've lost the spoor," and walked upon his way, leaving the inhabitant
+marvelling what part of a bicycle a spoor might be. Mr. Hoopdriver,
+abandoning tracking, began asking people if they had seen a Young Lady
+in Grey on a bicycle. Six casual people hadn't, and he began to feel the
+inquiry was conspicuous, and desisted. But what was to be done?
+
+Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first gnawings of
+a monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some tea and meat, and
+in the Royal George he meditated over the business in a melancholy
+frame enough. They had passed out of his world--vanished, and all his
+wonderful dreams of some vague, crucial interference collapsed like a
+castle of cards. What a fool he had been not to stick to them like a
+leech! He might have thought! But there!--what WAS the good of that
+sort of thing now? He thought of her tears, of her helplessness, of
+the bearing of the other man in brown, and his wrath and disappointment
+surged higher. "What CAN I do?" said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, bringing his
+fist down beside the teapot.
+
+What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there might be
+such things as clues in the world, albeit the age of miracles was past.
+But to look for a clue in this intricate network of cobbled streets, to
+examine every muddy interstice! There was a chance by looking about
+and inquiry at the various inns. Upon that he began. But of course they
+might have ridden straight through and scarcely a soul have marked them.
+And then came a positively brilliant idea. "'Ow many ways are there out
+of Chichester?" said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was really equal to Sherlock
+Holmes--that. "If they've made tracks, I shall find those tracks. If
+not--they're in the town." He was then in East Street, and he started
+at once to make the circuit of the place, discovering incidentally that
+Chichester is a walled city. In passing, he made inquiries at the Black
+Swan, the Crown, and the Red Lion Hotel. At six o'clock in the evening,
+he was walking downcast, intent, as one who had dropped money, along
+the road towards Bognor, kicking up the dust with his shoes and fretting
+with disappointed pugnacity. A thwarted, crestfallen Hoopdriver it
+was, as you may well imagine. And then suddenly there jumped upon his
+attention--a broad line ribbed like a shilling, and close beside it
+one chequered, that ever and again split into two. "Found!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver and swung round on his heel at once, and back to the Royal
+George, helter skelter, for the bicycle they were minding for him. The
+ostler thought he was confoundedly imperious, considering his machine.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. AT BOGNOR
+
+That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a crisis.
+He had started upon this elopement in a vein of fine romance, immensely
+proud of his wickedness, and really as much in love as an artificial
+oversoul can be, with Jessie. But either she was the profoundest of
+coquettes or she had not the slightest element of Passion (with a large
+P) in her composition. It warred with all his ideas of himself and the
+feminine mind to think that under their flattering circumstances she
+really could be so vitally deficient. He found her persistent coolness,
+her more or less evident contempt for himself, exasperating in the
+highest degree. He put it to himself that she was enough to provoke
+a saint, and tried to think that was piquant and enjoyable, but the
+blisters on his vanity asserted themselves. The fact is, he was, under
+this standing irritation, getting down to the natural man in himself for
+once, and the natural man in himself, in spite of Oxford and the junior
+Reviewers' Club, was a Palaeolithic creature of simple tastes and
+violent methods. "I'll be level with you yet," ran like a plough through
+the soil of his thoughts.
+
+Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his wife
+he was going to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied she
+was reconciled, but how she would take this exploit was entirely
+problematical. She was a woman of peculiar moral views, and she measured
+marital infidelity largely by its proximity to herself. Out of her
+sight, and more particularly out of the sight of the other women of her
+set, vice of the recognised description was, perhaps, permissible to
+those contemptible weaklings, men, but this was Evil on the High Roads.
+She was bound to make a fuss, and these fusses invariably took the final
+form of a tightness of money for Bechamel. Albeit, and he felt it was
+heroic of him to resolve so, it was worth doing if it was to be done.
+His imagination worked on a kind of matronly Valkyrie, and the noise of
+pursuit and vengeance was in the air. The idyll still had the front of
+the stage. That accursed detective, it seemed, had been thrown off the
+scent, and that, at any rate, gave a night's respite. But things must be
+brought to an issue forthwith.
+
+By eight o'clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the Vicuna
+Hotel, Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed and angry in the
+face and with her heart sinking, faced him again for her last struggle
+with him. He had tricked her this time, effectually, and luck had been
+on his side. She was booked as Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her refusal to
+enter their room, and her eccentricity of eating with unwashed hands,
+she had so far kept up the appearances of things before the waiter.
+But the dinner was grim enough. Now in turn she appealed to his better
+nature and made extravagant statements of her plans to fool him.
+
+He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered through
+his pose of brilliant wickedness.
+
+"I will go to the station," she said. "I will go back--"
+
+"The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42."
+
+"I will appeal to the police--"
+
+"You don't know them."
+
+"I will tell these hotel people."
+
+"They will turn you out of doors. You're in such a thoroughly false
+position now. They don't understand unconventionality, down here."
+
+She stamped her foot. "If I wander about the streets all night--" she
+said.
+
+"You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what the
+streets of a charming little holiday resort are like--"
+
+"I don't care," she said. "I can go to the clergyman here."
+
+"He's a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike than you
+think. And anyhow--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"How CAN you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The mischief is
+done, Jessie."
+
+"You CUR," she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He thought
+she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone from her face.
+
+"No," he said. "I love you."
+
+"Love!" said she.
+
+"Yes--love."
+
+"There are ways yet," she said, after a pause.
+
+"Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is
+it?--not the dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don't you think of
+it. You'll only shirk it when the moment comes, and turn it all into
+comedy."
+
+She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across the
+parade at the shining sea over which the afterglow of day fled before
+the rising moon. He maintained his attitude. The blinds were still up,
+for she had told the waiter not to draw them. There was silence for some
+moments.
+
+At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon. "Take it
+sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in common, quarrel
+into melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all that is bright and
+desirable to me. I am stronger than you, older; man to your woman. To
+find YOU too--conventional!"
+
+She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge of
+delight how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her cheek.
+
+"MAN!" she said. "Man to MY woman! Do MEN lie? Would a MAN use his five
+and thirty years' experience to outwit a girl of seventeen? Man to my
+woman indeed! That surely is the last insult!"
+
+"Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do, though--all
+that and more also when their hearts were set on such a girl as
+yourself. For God's sake drop this shrewishness! Why should you be
+so--difficult to me? Here am I with MY reputation, MY career, at your
+feet. Look here, Jessie--on my honour, I will marry you--"
+
+"God forbid," she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had a wife,
+even then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in the flash of
+her retort, that she did not know he was married.
+
+"'Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement," he said, following that hint.
+
+He paused.
+
+"You must be sensible. The thing's your own doing. Come out on the beach
+now the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon be high."
+
+"_I_ WON'T" she said, stamping her foot.
+
+"Well, well--"
+
+"Oh! leave me alone. Let me think--"
+
+"Think," he said, "if you want to. It's your cry always. But you can't
+save yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can't save yourself in any
+way now. If saving it is--this parsimony--"
+
+"Oh, go--go."
+
+"Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of you,
+dear.... But do you think I should do all this if I did not care?"
+
+"Go," she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to stare
+out of the window. He stood looking at her for a moment, with a strange
+light in his eyes. He made a step towards her. "I HAVE you,", he said.
+"You are mine. Netted--caught. But mine." He would have gone up to her
+and laid his hand upon her, but he did not dare to do that yet. "I have
+you in my hand," he said, "in my power. Do you hear--POWER!"
+
+She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and then,
+with a superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the door. Surely
+the instinctive abasement of her sex before Strength was upon his side.
+He told himself that his battle was won. She heard the handle move and
+the catch click as the door closed behind him.
+
+
+
+
+XXII.
+
+And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks
+hot, his eye bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous, obsequious
+Hoopdriver, to whom I introduced you some days since, has undergone a
+wonderful change. Ever since he lost that 'spoor' in Chichester, he has
+been tormented by the most horrible visions of the shameful insults that
+may be happening. The strangeness of new surroundings has been working
+to strip off the habitual servile from him. Here was moonlight rising
+over the memory of a red sunset, dark shadows and glowing orange lamps,
+beauty somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong in a
+brown suit and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver for
+the time, was in the world of Romance and Knight-errantry, divinely
+forgetful of his social position or hers; forgetting, too, for the time
+any of the wretched timidities that had tied him long since behind the
+counter in his proper place. He was angry and adventurous. It was all
+about him, this vivid drama he had fallen into, and it was eluding him.
+He was far too grimly in earnest to pick up that lost thread and make a
+play of it now. The man was living. He did not pose when he alighted at
+the coffee tavern even, nor when he made his hasty meal.
+
+As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade, Hoopdriver,
+disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the corner from the
+Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his heart jumped, and the
+tension of his angry suspense exploded into, rather than gave place to,
+an excited activity of mind. They were at the Vicuna, and she was there
+now alone. It was the occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no
+chance against him. He went back round the corner, sat down on the seat,
+and watched Bechamel recede into the dimness up the esplanade, before he
+got up and walked into the hotel entrance. "A lady cyclist in grey," he
+asked for, and followed boldly on the waiter's heels. The door of the
+dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm. And then suddenly he was
+nearly minded to turn and run for it, and his features seemed to him to
+be convulsed.
+
+She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between terror
+and hope in her eyes.
+
+"Can I--have a few words--with you, alone?" said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+controlling his breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then motioned
+the waiter to withdraw.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out into
+the middle of the room, fold his arms and say, "You are in trouble. I
+am a Friend. Trust me." Instead of which he stood panting and then spoke
+with sudden familiarity, hastily, guiltily: "Look here. I don't know
+what the juice is up, but I think there's something wrong. Excuse my
+intruding--if it isn't so. I'll do anything you like to help you out of
+the scrape--if you're in one. That's my meaning, I believe. What can I
+do? I would do anything to help you."
+
+Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite emotion,
+this remarkable speech. "YOU!" she said. She was tumultuously weighing
+possibilities in her mind, and he had scarcely ceased when she had made
+her resolve.
+
+She stepped a pace forward. "You are a gentleman," she said.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Can I trust you?"
+
+She did not wait for his assurance. "I must leave this hotel at once.
+Come here."
+
+She took his arm and led him to the window.
+
+"You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are our
+bicycles. Go down, get them out, and I will come down to you. Dare you?
+
+"Get your bicycle out in the road?"
+
+"Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?"
+
+"Which way?"
+
+"Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one minute."
+
+"Right!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+
+He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill
+Bechamel he would have done it. His head was a maelstrom now. He walked
+out of the hotel, along the front, and into the big, black-shadowed
+coach yard. He looked round. There were no bicycles visible. Then a
+man emerged from the dark, a short man in a short, black, shiny jacket.
+Hoopdriver was caught. He made no attempt to turn and run for it. "I've
+been giving your machines a wipe over, sir," said the man, recognising
+the suit, and touching his cap. Hoopdriver's intelligence now was a
+soaring eagle; he swooped on the situation at once. "That's right," he
+said, and added, before the pause became marked, "Where is mine? I want
+to look at the chain."
+
+The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a lantern.
+Hoopdriver moved the lady's machine out of his way to the door, and then
+laid hands on the man's machine and wheeled it out of the shed into the
+yard. The gate stood open and beyond was the pale road and a clump of
+trees black in the twilight. He stooped and examined the chain with
+trembling fingers. How was it to be done? Something behind the gate
+seemed to flutter. The man must be got rid of anyhow.
+
+"I say," said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, "can you get me a
+screwdriver?"
+
+The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and came
+up to the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his hand. Hoopdriver
+felt himself a lost man. He took the screwdriver with a tepid "Thanks,"
+and incontinently had another inspiration.
+
+"I say," he said again.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"This is miles too big."
+
+The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it down on
+the ground. "Want a smaller screwdriver?" he said.
+
+Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt ATICHEW. It is
+the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. "As small as you
+have," he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+
+"I ain't got none smaller than that," said the ostler.
+
+"Won't do, really," said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his
+handkerchief.
+
+"I'll see wot they got in the 'ouse, if you like, sir," said the man.
+"If you would," said Hoopdriver. And as the man's heavily nailed boots
+went clattering down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up, took a noiseless
+step to the lady's machine, laid trembling hands on its handle and
+saddle, and prepared for a rush.
+
+The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm, yellow
+light up the road, shut again behind the man, and forthwith Hoopdriver
+rushed the machines towards the gate. A dark grey form came fluttering
+to meet him. "Give me this," she said, "and bring yours."
+
+He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran back,
+seized Bechamel's machine, and followed.
+
+The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the cobbles
+again. It was too late now to do anything but escape. He heard the
+ostler shout behind him, and came into the road. She was up and dim
+already. He got into the saddle without a blunder. In a moment the
+ostler was in the gateway with a full-throated "HI! sir! That ain't
+allowed;" and Hoopdriver was overtaking the Young Lady in Grey. For
+some moments the earth seemed alive with shouts of, "Stop 'em!" and the
+shadows with ambuscades of police. The road swept round, and they were
+riding out of sight of the hotel, and behind dark hedges, side by side.
+
+She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. "Brave," she said,
+"brave!" and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He looked over
+his shoulder and about him, and saw that they were already out of
+Bognor--for the Vicuna stands at the very westernmost extremity of the
+sea front--and riding on a fair wide road.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII.
+
+The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road vociferating
+after them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna Hotel, and finding
+a group of men outside the entrance, who wanted to know what was UP,
+stopped to give them the cream of the adventure. That gave the fugitives
+five minutes. Then pushing breathlessly into the bar, he had to make it
+clear to the barmaid what the matter was, and the 'gov'nor' being out,
+they spent some more precious time wondering 'what--EVER' was to be
+done! in which the two customers returning from outside joined
+with animation. There were also moral remarks and other irrelevant
+contributions. There were conflicting ideas of telling the police and
+pursuing the flying couple on a horse. That made ten minutes. Then
+Stephen, the waiter, who had shown Hoopdriver up, came down and lit
+wonderful lights and started quite a fresh discussion by the simple
+question "WHICH?" That turned ten minutes into a quarter of an hour.
+And in the midst of this discussion, making a sudden and awestricken
+silence, appeared Bechamel in the hall beyond the bar, walked with a
+resolute air to the foot of the staircase, and passed out of sight.
+You conceive the backward pitch of that exceptionally shaped cranium?
+Incredulous eyes stared into one another's in the bar, as his paces,
+muffled by the stair carpet, went up to the landing, turned, reached the
+passage and walked into the dining-room overhead.
+
+"It wasn't that one at all, miss," said the ostler, "I'd SWEAR"
+
+"Well, that's Mr. Beaumont," said the barmaid, "--anyhow."
+
+Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by Bechamel.
+They listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went out of the
+diningroom. Down the passage to the bedroom. Stopped again.
+
+"Poor chap!" said the barmaid. "She's a wicked woman!"
+
+"Sssh!" said Stephen.
+
+After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a chair
+creak under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+
+"I'm going up," said Stephen, "to break the melancholy news to him."
+
+Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without knocking,
+Stephen entered. Bechamel's face suggested a different expectation. "Beg
+pardon, sir," said Stephen, with a diplomatic cough.
+
+"Well?" said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some of her
+threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had it ready. She
+was a monomaniac. "Leave me alone with her," he would say; "I know how
+to calm her."
+
+"Mrs. Beaumont," said Stephen.
+
+"WELL?"
+
+"Has gone."
+
+He rose with a fine surprise. "Gone!" he said with a half laugh.
+
+"Gone, sir. On her bicycle."
+
+"On her bicycle! Why?"
+
+"She went, sir, with Another Gentleman."
+
+This time Bechamel was really startled. "An--other Gentlemen! WHO?"
+
+"Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got out the
+two bicycles, sir, and went off, sir--about twenty minutes ago."
+
+Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips. Stephen,
+watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether this abandoned
+husband would weep or curse, or rush off at once in furious pursuit. But
+as yet he seemed merely stunned.
+
+"Brown clothes?" he said. "And fairish?"
+
+"A little like yourself, sir--in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim Duke--"
+
+Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said--But let us
+put in blank cartridge--he said, "------!"
+
+"I might have thought!"
+
+He flung himself into the armchair.
+
+"Damn her," said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man. "I'll
+chuck this infernal business! They've gone, eigh?"
+
+"Yessir."
+
+"Well, let 'em GO," said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. "Let 'em
+GO. Who cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon as fast as
+you can, there's a good chap. I'll take that, and then I'll have another
+look round Bognor before I turn in."
+
+Stephen was too surprised to say anything but "Bourbon, sir?"
+
+"Go on," said Bechamel. "Damn you!"
+
+Stephen's sympathies changed at once. "Yessir," he murmured, fumbling
+for the door handle, and left the room, marvelling. Bechamel, having in
+this way satisfied his sense of appearances, and comported himself as a
+Pagan should, so soon as the waiter's footsteps had passed, vented the
+cream of his feelings in a stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his
+wife or HER stepmother had sent the detective, SHE had evidently gone
+off with him, and that little business was over. And he was here,
+stranded and sold, an ass, and as it were, the son of many generations
+of asses. And his only ray of hope was that it seemed more probable,
+after all, that the girl had escaped through her stepmother. In
+which case the business might be hushed up yet, and the evil hour of
+explanation with his wife indefinitely postponed. Then abruptly the
+image of that lithe figure in grey knickerbockers went frisking across
+his mind again, and he reverted to his blasphemies. He started up in a
+gusty frenzy with a vague idea of pursuit, and incontinently sat down
+again with a concussion that stirred the bar below to its depths. He
+banged the arms of the chair with his fist, and swore again. "Of all the
+accursed fools that were ever spawned," he was chanting, "I, Bechamel--"
+when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening of the door, Stephen entered
+with the Bourbon.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV. THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+
+And so the twenty minutes' law passed into an infinity. We leave the
+wicked Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a garment,--the
+wretched creature has already sufficiently sullied our modest but
+truthful pages,--we leave the eager little group in the bar of the
+Vicuna Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we have left all Chichester and
+Midhurst and Haslemere and Guildford and Ripley and Putney, and follow
+this dear fool of a Hoopdriver of ours and his Young Lady in Grey out
+upon the moonlight road. How they rode! How their hearts beat together
+and their breath came fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and
+every noise pursuit! For all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the world
+of Romance. Had a policeman intervened because their lamps were not lit,
+Hoopdriver had cut him down and ridden on, after the fashion of a hero
+born. Had Bechamel arisen in the way with rapiers for a duel, Hoopdriver
+had fought as one to whom Agincourt was a reality and drapery a dream.
+It was Rescue, Elopement, Glory! And she by the side of him! He had seen
+her face in shadow, with the morning sunlight tangled in her hair, he
+had seen her sympathetic with that warm light in her face, he had seen
+her troubled and her eyes bright with tears. But what light is there
+lighting a face like hers, to compare with the soft glamour of the
+midsummer moon?
+
+The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of Bognor,
+in one place dark and heavy under a thick growth of trees, then amidst
+villas again, some warm and lamplit, some white and sleeping in the
+moonlight; then between hedges, over which they saw broad wan meadows
+shrouded in a low-lying mist. They scarcely heeded whither they rode at
+first, being only anxious to get away, turning once westward when the
+spire of Chichester cathedral rose suddenly near them out of the dewy
+night, pale and intricate and high. They rode, speaking little, just a
+rare word now and then, at a turning, at a footfall, at a roughness in
+the road.
+
+She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to him,
+but after the first tumult of the adventure, as flight passed into mere
+steady ridin@@ his mind became an enormous appreciation of the position.
+The night was a warm white silence save for the subtile running of their
+chains. He looked sideways at her as she sat beside him with her ankles
+gracefully ruling the treadles. Now the road turned westward, and she
+was a dark grey outline against the shimmer of the moon; and now they
+faced northwards, and the soft cold light passed caressingly over her
+hair and touched her brow and cheek.
+
+There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is sweet
+and beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has created
+the fairies, whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises again in our
+hearts at the sight of it, the voices of the filmy route, and their
+faint, soul-piercing melodies. By the moonlight every man, dull clod
+though he be by day, tastes something of Endymion, takes something of
+the youth and strength of Enidymion, and sees the dear white goddess
+shining at him from his Lady's eyes. The firm substantial daylight
+things become ghostly and elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of
+unsubstantial texture, the world a visible spirit, the spiritual within
+us rises out of its darkness, loses something of its weight and body,
+and swims up towards heaven. This road that was a mere rutted white
+dust, hot underfoot, blinding to the eye, is now a soft grey silence,
+with the glitter of a crystal grain set starlike in its silver here
+and there. Overhead, riding serenely through the spacious blue, is the
+mother of the silence, she who has spiritualised the world, alone save
+for two attendant steady shining stars. And in silence under her benign
+influence, under the benediction of her light, rode our two wanderers
+side by side through the transfigured and transfiguring night.
+
+Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr. Hoopdriver's
+skull. At the turnings of the road he made his decisions with an air of
+profound promptitude (and quite haphazard). "The Right," he would say.
+Or again "The Left," as one who knew. So it was that in the space of an
+hour they came abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea. Grey
+beach to the right of them and to the left, and a little white cottage
+fast asleep inland of a sleeping fishing-boat. "Hullo!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, sotto voce. They dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks and
+thorns rose out of the haze of moonlight that was tangled in the hedge
+on either side.
+
+"You are safe," said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an air
+and bowing courtly.
+
+"Where are we?"
+
+"SAFE."
+
+"But WHERE?"
+
+"Chichester Harbour." He waved his arm seaward as though it was a goal.
+
+"Do you think they will follow us?"
+
+"We have turned and turned again."
+
+It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly there,
+holding her machine, and he, holding his, could go no nearer to her to
+see if she sobbed for weeping or for want of breath. "What are we to do
+now?" her voice asked.
+
+"Are you tired?" he asked.
+
+"I will do what has to be done."
+
+The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a space. "Do
+you know," she said, "I am not afraid of you. I am sure you are honest
+to me. And I do not even know your name!"
+
+He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. "It's an ugly
+name," he said. "But you are right in trusting me. I would--I would do
+anything for you.... This is nothing."
+
+She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But compared
+with Bechamel!--"We take each other on trust," she said. "Do you want to
+know--how things are with me?"
+
+"That man," she went on, after the assent of his listening silence,
+"promised to help and protect me. I was unhappy at home--never mind
+why. A stepmother--Idle, unoccupied, hindered, cramped, that is
+enough, perhaps. Then he came into my life, and talked to me of art
+and literature, and set my brain on fire. I wanted to come out into the
+world, to be a human being--not a thing in a hutch. And he--"
+
+"I know," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"And now here I am--"
+
+"I will do anything," said Hoopdriver.
+
+She thought. "You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not describe
+her--"
+
+"I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my power."
+
+"I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant." She spoke of
+Bechamel as the Illusion.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+
+"I'm thinking," he said, full of a rapture of protective responsibility,
+"what we had best be doing. You are tired, you know. And we can't
+wander all night--after the day we've had."
+
+"That was Chichester we were near?" she asked.
+
+"If," he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, "you would make ME your
+brother, MISS BEAUMONT."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"We could stop there together--"
+
+She took a minute to answer. "I am going to light these lamps," said
+Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on his shoe. She
+looked at his face in its light, grave and intent. How could she ever
+have thought him common or absurd?
+
+"But you must tell me your name--brother," she said,
+
+"Er--Carrington," said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause. Who
+would be Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+
+"But the Christian name?"
+
+"Christian name? MY Christian name. Well--Chris." He snapped his lamp
+and stood up. "If you will hold my machine, I will light yours," he
+said.
+
+She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment they
+stood face to face. "My name, brother Chris," she said, "is Jessie."
+
+He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested. "JESSIE,"
+he repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face affected her strangely.
+She had to speak. "It's not such a very wonderful name, is it?" she
+said, with a laugh to break the intensity.
+
+He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing of his
+features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the lantern in front of
+her machine. She looked down at him, almost kneeling in front of
+her, with an unreasonable approbation in her eyes. It was, as I have
+indicated, the hour and season of the full moon.
+
+
+
+
+XXV.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night's journey with the same
+confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good luck and the
+fact that most roads about a town converge thereupon, that Chichester
+was at last attained. It seemed at first as though everyone had gone to
+bed, but the Red Hotel still glowed yellow and warm. It was the first
+time Hoopdriver bad dared the mysteries of a 'first-class' hotel.' But
+that night he was in the mood to dare anything.
+
+"So you found your Young Lady at last," said the ostler of the Red
+Hotel; for it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver had made
+inquiries in the afternoon.
+
+"Quite a misunderstanding," said Hoopdriver, with splendid readiness.
+"My sister had gone to Bognor But I brought her back here. I've took a
+fancy to this place. And the moonlight's simply dee-vine."
+
+"We've had supper, thenks, and we're tired," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I
+suppose you won't take anything,--Jessie?"
+
+The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie like
+that! But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself bound to
+admit. "Good-night, Sis," he said, "and pleasant dreams. I'll just 'ave
+a look at this paper before I turn in." But this was living indeed! he
+told himself.
+
+So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very edge of
+the Most Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you will remember,
+with a vigil in a little sweetstuff shop next door to the Angel at
+Midhurst. But to think of all the things that had happened since then!
+He caught himself in the middle of a yawn, pulled out his watch, saw the
+time was halfpast eleven, and marched off, with a fine sense of heroism,
+bedward.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI. THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+
+And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a break in
+the narrative again. These absurd young people are safely tucked away
+now, their heads full of glowing nonsense, indeed, but the course of
+events at any rate is safe from any fresh developments through their
+activities for the next eight hours or more. They are both sleeping
+healthily you will perhaps be astonished to hear. Here is the girl--what
+girls are coming to nowadays only Mrs. Lynn Linton can tell!--in company
+with an absolute stranger, of low extraction and uncertain accent,
+unchaperoned and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is safe, she is,
+if anything, a little proud of her own share in these transactions. Then
+this Mr. Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot that he is! is in illegal
+possession of a stolen bicycle, a stolen young lady, and two stolen
+names, established with them in an hotel that is quite beyond his means,
+and immensely proud of himself in a somnolent way for these incomparable
+follies. There are occasions when a moralising novelist can merely wring
+his hands and leave matters to take their course. For all Hoopdriver
+knows or cares he may be locked up the very first thing to-morrow
+morning for the rape of the cycle. Then in Bognor, let alone that
+melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with whom our dealings are, thank
+Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern with a steak Mr. Hoopdriver
+ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his American-cloth parcel in a
+bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of guarantee, carefully
+locked up in the hayloft. To-morrow he will be a Mystery, and they will
+be looking for his body along the sea front. And so far we have never
+given a glance at the desolate home in Surbiton, familiar to you no
+doubt through the medium of illustrated interviews, where the unhappy
+stepmother--
+
+That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to you.
+That is a little surprise I have prepared for you. She is 'Thomas
+Plantagenet,' the gifted authoress of that witty and daring book, "A
+Soul Untrammelled," and quite an excellent woman in her way,--only it
+is such a crooked way. Her real name is Milton. She is a widow and
+a charming one, only ten years older than Jessie, and she is always
+careful to dedicate her more daring works to the 'sacred memory of my
+husband' to show that there's nothing personal, you know, in the matter.
+Considering her literary reputation (she was always speaking of herself
+as one I martyred for truth,' because the critics advertised her
+written indecorums in column long 'slates'),--considering her literary
+reputation, I say, she was one of the most respectable women it is
+possible to imagine. She furnished correctly, dressed correctly, had
+severe notions of whom she might meet, went to church, and even at times
+took the sacrament in some esoteric spirit. And Jessie she brought up so
+carefully that she never even let her read "A Soul Untrammelled." Which,
+therefore, naturally enough, Jessie did, and went on from that to a
+feast of advanced literature. Mrs. Milton not only brought up Jessie
+carefully, but very slowly, so that at seventeen she was still a clever
+schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and quite in the background of
+the little literary circle of unimportant celebrities which 'Thomas
+Plantagenet' adorned. Mrs. Milton knew Bechamel's reputation of being a
+dangerous man; but then bad men are not bad women, and she let him come
+to her house to show she was not afraid--she took no account of Jessie.
+When the elopement came, therefore, it was a double disappointment
+to her, for she perceived his hand by a kind of instinct. She did the
+correct thing. The correct thing, as you know, is to take hansom cabs,
+regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not know WHAT to do,
+round the circle of your confidential friends. She could not have ridden
+nor wept more had Jessie been her own daughter--she showed the properest
+spirit. And she not only showed it, but felt it.
+
+Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more successful
+widow of thirty-two,--"Thomas Plantagenet is a charming woman,"
+her reviewers used to write invariably, even if they spoke ill of
+her,--found the steady growth of Jessie into womanhood an unmitigated
+nuisance and had been willing enough to keep her in the background.
+And Jessie--who had started this intercourse at fourteen with abstract
+objections to stepmothers--had been active enough in resenting this.
+Increasing rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them, until
+they could engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or
+the cutting of a book with a sharpened knife. There is very little
+deliberate wickedness in the world. The stupidity of our selfishness
+gives much the same results indeed, but in the ethical laboratory it
+shows a different nature. And when the disaster came, Mrs. Milton's
+remorse for their gradual loss of sympathy and her share in the losing
+of it, was genuine enough.
+
+You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how West
+Kensington and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary suburbs, those
+decent penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling, hummed with the
+business, Her 'Men'--as a charming literary lady she had, of course, an
+organised corps--were immensely excited, and were sympathetic;
+helpfully energetic, suggestive, alert, as their ideals of their various
+dispositions required them to be. "Any news of Jessie?" was the pathetic
+opening of a dozen melancholy but interesting conversations. To her Men
+she was not perhaps so damp as she was to her women friends, but in a
+quiet way she was even more touching. For three days, Wednesday that is,
+Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the fugitives. It was known
+that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with buttonup skirts, and mounted
+on a diamond frame safety with Dunlops, and a loofah covered saddle,
+had ridden forth early in the morning, taking with her about two pounds
+seven shillings in money, and a grey touring case packed, and there,
+save for a brief note to her stepmother,--a declaration of independence,
+it was said, an assertion of her Ego containing extensive and very
+annoying quotations from "A Soul Untrammelled," and giving no definite
+intimation of her plans--knowledge ceased. That note was shown to few,
+and then only in the strictest confidence.
+
+But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery, a
+correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the first. He
+had been touring in Sussex,--his knapsack was still on his back,--and
+he testified hurriedly that at a place called Midhurst, in the bar of an
+hotel called the Angel, he had heard from a barmaid a vivid account of
+a Young Lady in Grey. Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in
+brown? "The poor, misguided girl! I must go to her at once," she said,
+choking, and rising with her hand to her heart.
+
+"It's impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on my
+way."
+
+"A mother's love," she said. "I bear her THAT."
+
+"I know you do." He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his
+photographs of scenery more than Mrs. Milton. "It's more than she
+deserves."
+
+"Oh, don't speak unkindly of her! She has been misled."
+
+It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry his
+news ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back? He had come
+to her because he knew of her anxiety. "It is GOOD of you," she said,
+and quite instinctively took and pressed his hand. "And to think of that
+poor girl--tonight! It's dreadful." She looked into the fire that she
+had lit when he came in, the warm light fell upon her dark purple dress,
+and left her features in a warm shadow. She looked such a slight, frail
+thing to be troubled so. "We must follow her." Her resolution seemed
+magnificent. "I have no one to go with me."
+
+"He must marry her," said the man.
+
+"She has no friends. We have no one. After all--Two women.--So
+helpless."
+
+And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who knew
+her only from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply because
+she was great-hearted--intellectual. He was overcome by the unspeakable
+pathos of her position.
+
+"Mrs. Milton," he said. "Hetty!"
+
+She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. "Not now," she said, "not
+now. I must find her first."
+
+"Yes," he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big, fat men
+who feel deeply.) "But let me help you. At least let me help you."
+
+"But can you spare time?" she said. "For ME."
+
+"For you--"
+
+"But what can I do? what can WE do?"
+
+"Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on Thursday
+night, last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!" he said. "We
+will save her yet!"
+
+She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+
+"Courage!" he repeated, finding it so well received.
+
+There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to the
+fire, and he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which suited his
+dimensions admirably. Then the door opened, and the girl showed in
+Dangle, who looked curiously from one to the other. There was emotion
+here, he had heard the armchair creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face
+was flushed, displayed a suspicious alacrity to explain. "You, too," she
+said, "are one of my good friends. And we have news of her at last."
+
+It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined to show
+himself a man of resource. In the end he, too, was accepted for the
+Midhurst Expedition, to the intense disgust of Widgery; and young
+Phipps, a callow youth of few words, faultless collars, and fervent
+devotion, was also enrolled before the evening was out. They would scour
+the country, all three of them. She appeared to brighten up a little,
+but it was evident she was profoundly touched. She did not know what
+she had done to merit such friends. Her voice broke a little, she moved
+towards the door, and young Phipps, who was a youth of action rather
+than of words, sprang and opened it--proud to be first.
+
+"She is sorely troubled," said Dangle to Widgery. "We must do what we
+can for her."
+
+"She is a wonderful woman," said Dangle. "So subtle, so intricate, so
+many faceted. She feels this deeply."
+
+Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+
+And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+
+But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers time to
+refresh themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the present, therefore,
+we will not concern ourselves with the starting of the Rescue Party,
+nor with Mrs. Milton's simple but becoming grey dress, with the healthy
+Widgery's Norfolk jacket and thick boots, with the slender Dangle's
+energetic bearing, nor with the wonderful chequerings that set off the
+legs of the golf-suited Phipps. They are after us. In a little while
+they will be upon us. You must imagine as you best can the competitive
+raidings at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps. How Widgery
+was great at questions, and Dangle good at inference, and Phipps so
+conspicuously inferior in everything that he felt it, and sulked with
+Mrs. Milton most of the day, after the manner of your callow youth the
+whole world over. Mrs. Milton stopped at the Angel and was very sad and
+charming and intelligent, and Widgery paid the bill in the afternoon
+of Saturday, Chichester was attained. But by that time our fugitives--As
+you shall immediately hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII. THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and, staring
+unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and pleasant. He turned
+the peaked nose that overrides the insufficient moustache, up to the
+ceiling, a pinkish projection over the billow of white. You might see it
+wrinkle as he yawned again, and then became quiet. So matters remained
+for a space. Very slowly recollection returned to him. Then a shock
+of indeterminate brown hair appeared, and first one watery grey eye
+a-wondering, and then two; the bed upheaved, and you had him, his thin
+neck projecting abruptly from the clothes he held about him, his face
+staring about the room. He held the clothes about him, I hope I may
+explain, because his night-shirt was at Bognor in an American-cloth
+packet, derelict. He yawned a third time, rubbed his eyes, smacked his
+lips. He was recalling almost everything now. The pursuit, the hotel,
+the tremulous daring of his entry, the swift adventure of the inn
+yard, the moonlight--Abruptly he threw the clothes back and rose into
+a sitting position on the edge of the bed. Without was the noise of
+shutters being unfastened and doors unlocked, and the passing of hoofs
+and wheels in the street. He looked at his watch. Half-past six. He
+surveyed the sumptuous room again.
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It wasn't a dream, after all."
+
+"I wonder what they charge for these Juiced rooms!" said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+nursing one rosy foot.
+
+He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache. Suddenly he
+gave vent to a noiseless laugh. "What a rush it was! Rushed in and off
+with his girl right under his nose. Planned it well too. Talk of highway
+robbery! Talk of brigands Up and off! How juiced SOLD he must be feeling
+It was a shave too--in the coach yard!"
+
+Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw fell.
+"I sa-a-ay!" said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand the whirl
+he had been in overnight. But one sees things clearer in the daylight.
+"I'm hanged if I haven't been and stolen a blessed bicycle."
+
+"Who cares?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face supplied the
+answer.
+
+Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put a more
+heroic complexion on the business. But of an early morning, on an empty
+stomach (as with characteristic coarseness, medical men put it) heroics
+are of a more difficult growth than by moonlight. Everything had seemed
+exceptionally fine and brilliant, but quite natural, the evening before.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket, laid it
+over his knees, and took out the money from the little ticket pocket.
+"Fourteen and six-half," he said, holding the coins in his left hand and
+stroking his chin with his right. He verified, by patting, the presence
+of a pocketbook in the breast pocket. "Five, fourteen, six-half," said
+Mr. Hoopdriver. "Left."
+
+With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into another
+silent meditation. "That wouldn't matter," he said. "It's the bike's the
+bother.
+
+"No good going back to Bognor.
+
+"Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the loan.
+Having no further use--" Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed into the
+silent concoction of a delightfully impudent letter. "Mr. J. Hoopdriver
+presents his compliments." But the grave note reasserted itself.
+
+"Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange them. MY
+old crock's so blessed shabby. He's sure to be spiteful too. Have me
+run in, perhaps. Then she'd be in just the same old fix, only worse. You
+see, I'm her Knight-errant. It complicates things so."
+
+His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. "What the juice
+do they want with cream pans in a bedroom?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, en
+passant.
+
+"Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible,
+anyhow. I suppose she'll go home to her friends. That bicycle is a juicy
+nuisance, anyhow. Juicy nuisance!"
+
+He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to proceed with
+his toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered that the simple
+necessaries of that process were at Bognor! "Lord!" he remarked, and
+whistled silently for a space. "Rummy go! profit and loss; profit, one
+sister with bicycle complete, wot offers?--cheap for tooth and 'air
+brush, vests, night-shirt, stockings, and sundries.
+
+"Make the best of it," and presently, when it came to hair-brushing, he
+had to smooth his troubled locks with his hands. It was a poor result.
+"Sneak out and get a shave, I suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink
+again! Beard don't show much."
+
+He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for some
+time, and curled his insufficient moustache up with some care. Then he
+fell a-meditating on his beauty. He considered himself, three-quarter
+face, left and right. An expression of distaste crept over his features.
+"Looking won't alter it, Hoopdriver," he remarked. "You're a weedy
+customer, my man. Shoulders narrow. Skimpy, anyhow."
+
+He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with his
+chin lifted in the air. "Good Lord!" he said. "WHAT a neck! Wonder why I
+got such a thundering lump there."
+
+He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. "If I'd been
+exercised properly, if I'd been fed reasonable, if I hadn't been shoved
+out of a silly school into a silly shop--But there! the old folks didn't
+know no better. The schoolmaster ought to have. But he didn't, poor old
+fool!--Still, when it comes to meeting a girl like this--It's 'ARD.
+
+"I wonder what Adam'd think of me--as a specimen. Civilisation,
+eigh? Heir of the ages! I'm nothing. I know nothing. I can't do
+anything--sketch a bit. Why wasn't I made an artist?
+
+"Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine."
+
+"No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don't tell yourself any lies about it.
+Lovers ain't your game,--anyway. But there's other things yet. You can
+help the young lady, and you will--I suppose she'll be going home--And
+that business of the bicycle's to see to, too, my man. FORWARD,
+Hoopdriver! If you ain't a beauty, that's no reason why you should stop
+and be copped, is it?"
+
+And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of self-satisfaction,
+he had another attempt at his hair preparatory to leaving his room
+and hurrying on breakfast, for an early departure. While breakfast was
+preparing he wandered out into South Street and refurnished himself with
+the elements of luggage again. "No expense to be spared," he murmured,
+disgorging the half-sovereign.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII. THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+
+He caused his 'sister' to be called repeatedly, and when she came down,
+explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to the bicycle
+in the yard. "Might be disagreeable, y' know." His anxiety was obvious
+enough. "Very well," she said (quite friendly); "hurry breakfast, and
+we'll ride out. I want to talk things over with you." The girl seemed
+more beautiful than ever after the night's sleep; her hair in comely
+dark waves from her forehead, her ungauntleted finger-tips pink and
+cool. And how decided she was! Breakfast was a nervous ceremony,
+conversation fraternal but thin; the waiter overawed him, and he was
+cowed by a multiplicity of forks. But she called him "Chris." They
+discussed their route over his sixpenny county map for the sake of
+talking, but avoided a decision in the presence of the attendant. The
+five-pound note was changed for the bill, and through Hoopdriver's
+determination to be quite the gentleman, the waiter and chambermaid got
+half a crown each and the ostler a florin. "'Olidays," said the ostler
+to himself, without gratitude. The public mounting of the bicycles in
+the street was a moment of trepidation. A policeman actually stopped and
+watched them from the opposite kerb. Suppose him to come across and ask:
+"Is that your bicycle, sir?" Fight? Or drop it and run? It was a time of
+bewildering apprehension, too, going through the streets of the town,
+so that a milk cart barely escaped destruction under Mr. Hoopdriver's
+chancy wheel. That recalled him to a sense of erratic steering, and
+he pulled himself together. In the lanes he breathed freer, and a less
+formal conversation presently began.
+
+"You've ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry," said Jessie.
+
+"Well, the fact of it is, I'm worried, just a little bit. About this
+machine."
+
+"Of course," she said. "I had forgotten that. But where are we going?"
+
+"Jest a turning or two more, if you don't mind," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should feel more
+easy. If we was locked up, you know--Not that I should mind on my own
+account--"
+
+They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left hand.
+Every mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr. Hoopdriver
+felt a little less conscience-stricken, and a little more of the gallant
+desperado. Here he was riding on a splendid machine with a Slap-up girl
+beside him. What would they think of it in the Emporium if any of them
+were to see him? He imagined in detail the astonishment of Miss Isaacs
+and of Miss Howe. "Why! It's Mr. Hoopdriver," Miss Isaacs would say.
+"Never!" emphatically from Miss Howe. Then he played with Briggs, and
+then tried the 'G.V.' in a shay. "Fancy introducing 'em to her--My
+sister pro tem." He was her brother Chris--Chris what?--Confound it!
+Harringon, Hartington--something like that. Have to keep off that topic
+until he could remember. Wish he'd told her the truth now--almost. He
+glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes straight ahead of her.
+Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she seemed. He noticed how well
+she rode and that she rode with her lips closed--a thing he could never
+manage.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's mind came round to the future. What was she going to
+do? What were they both going to do? His thoughts took a graver colour.
+He had rescued her. This was fine, manly rescue work he was engaged
+upon. She ought to go home, in spite of that stepmother. He must insist
+gravely but firmly upon that. She was the spirited sort, of course, but
+still--Wonder if she had any money? Wonder what the second-class fare
+from Havant to London is? Of course he would have to pay that--it was
+the regular thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he take her home?
+He began to rough in a moving sketch of the return. The stepmother,
+repentant of her indescribable cruelties, would be present,--even these
+rich people have their troubles,--probably an uncle or two. The footman
+would announce, Mr.--(bother that name!) and Miss Milton. Then two women
+weeping together, and a knightly figure in the background dressed in a
+handsome Norfolk jacket, still conspicuously new. He would conceal his
+feeling until the very end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the doorway
+in such an attitude as Mr. George Alexander might assume, and say,
+slowly and dwindlingly: "Be kind to her--BE kind to her," and so depart,
+heartbroken to the meanest intelligence. But that was a matter for the
+future. He would have to begin discussing the return soon. There was no
+traffic along the road, and he came up beside her (he had fallen behind
+in his musing). She began to talk. "Mr. Denison," she began, and then,
+doubtfully, "That is your name? I'm very stupid--"
+
+"It is," said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison,
+Denison. What was she saying?)
+
+"I wonder how far you are willing to help me?" Confoundedly hard to
+answer a question like that on the spur of the moment, without steering
+wildly. "You may rely--" said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering from a violent
+wabble. "I can assure you--I want to help you very much. Don't consider
+me at all. Leastways, consider me entirely at your service." (Nuisance
+not to be able to say this kind of thing right.)
+
+"You see, I am so awkwardly situated."
+
+"If I can only help you--you will make me very happy--" There was a
+pause. Round a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space between
+hedge and road, set with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a felled tree lay
+among the green. There she dismounted, and propping her machine against
+a stone, sat down. "Here, we can talk," she said.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+
+She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with her chin
+in her hand, and looking straight in front of her. "I don't know--I am
+resolved to Live my Own Life."
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Naturally."
+
+"I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to learn.
+Everyone is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want time to
+think."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how clear and
+ready her words were. But then one might speak well with a throat and
+lips like that. He knew he was inadequate, but he tried to meet the
+occasion. "If you let them rush you into anything you might repent of,
+of course you'd be very silly."
+
+"Don't YOU want to learn?" she asked.
+
+"I was wondering only this morning," he began, and stopped.
+
+She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this insufficiency.
+"I find myself in life, and it terrifies me. I seem to be like a little
+speck, whirling on a wheel, suddenly caught up. 'What am I here for?'
+I ask. Simply to be here at a time--I asked it a week ago, I asked it
+yesterday, and I ask it to-day. And little things happen and the days
+pass. My stepmother takes me shopping, people come to tea, there is a
+new play to pass the time, or a concert, or a novel. The wheels of the
+world go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a miracle
+like Joshua and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At home--It's
+impossible."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. "It IS so," he said in a
+meditative tone. "Things WILL go on," he said. The faint breath of
+summer stirred the trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted among the
+meadowsweet and struck and broke into a dozen separate threads against
+his knee. They flew on apart, and sank, as the breeze fell, among the
+grass: some to germinate, some to perish. His eye followed them until
+they had vanished.
+
+"I can't go back to Surbiton," said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+"EIGH?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was an
+unexpected development.
+
+"I want to write, you see," said the Young Lady in Grey, "to write Books
+and alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free Life and Own myself.
+I can't go back. I want to obtain a position as a journalist. I have
+been told--But I know no one to help me at once. No one that I could
+go to. There is one person--She was a mistress at my school. If I could
+write to her--But then, how could I get her answer?"
+
+"H'mp," said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+
+"I can't trouble you much more. You have come--you have risked things--"
+
+"That don't count," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It's double pay to let me do
+it, so to speak."
+
+"It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am
+resolved to be Unconventional--at any cost. But we are so hampered. If
+I could only burgeon out of all that hinders me! I want to struggle, to
+take my place in the world. I want to be my own mistress, to shape my
+own career. But my stepmother objects so. She does as she likes herself,
+and is strict with me to ease her conscience. And if I go back now, go
+back owning myself beaten--" She left the rest to his imagination.
+
+"I see that," agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He MUST help her. Within his
+skull he was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six and
+twopence. In some vague way he inferred from all this that Jessie was
+trying to escape from an undesirable marriage, but was saying these
+things out of modesty. His circle of ideas was so limited.
+
+"You know, Mr.--I've forgotten your name again."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. "You can't go back of course,
+quite like that," he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed suddenly red and
+his cheeks flushed.
+
+"But what IS your name?"
+
+"Name!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Why!--Benson, of course."
+
+"Mr. Benson--yes it's really very stupid of me. But I can never remember
+names. I must make a note on my cuff." She clicked a little silver
+pencil and wrote the name down. "If I could write to my friend. I
+believe she would be able to help me to an independent life. I could
+write to her--or telegraph. Write, I think. I could scarcely explain in
+a telegram. I know she would help me."
+
+Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the
+circumstances. "In that case," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "if you don't mind
+trusting yourself to a stranger, we might continue as we are perhaps.
+For a day or so. Until you heard." (Suppose thirty shillings a day, that
+gives four days, say four thirties is hun' and twenty, six quid,--well,
+three days, say; four ten.)
+
+"You are very good to me."
+
+His expression was eloquent.
+
+"Very well, then, and thank you. It's wonderful--it's more than I
+deserve that you--" She dropped the theme abruptly. "What was our bill
+at Chichester?"
+
+"Eigh?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There was a
+brief discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her insistence in paying.
+She carried her point. Their talk came round to their immediate plans
+for the day. They decided to ride easily, through Havant, and stop,
+perhaps, at Fareham or Southampton. For the previous day had tried them
+both. Holding the map extended on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver's eye fell
+by chance on the bicycle at his feet. "That bicycle," he remarked, quite
+irrelevantly, "wouldn't look the same machine if I got a big, double
+Elarum instead of that little bell."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Jest a thought." A pause.
+
+"Very well, then,--Havant and lunch," said Jessie, rising.
+
+"I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that
+machine," said Hoopdriver. "Because it IS stealing it, you know, come to
+think of it."
+
+"Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you--I will tell the whole world--if
+need be."
+
+"I believe you would," said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. "You're plucky
+enough--goodness knows."
+
+Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and picked up
+her machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road. Then he took his
+own. He paused, regarding it. "I say!" said he. "How'd this bike look,
+now, if it was enamelled grey?" She looked over her shoulder at his
+grave face. "Why try and hide it in that way?"
+
+"It was jest a passing thought," said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily. "Didn't
+MEAN anything, you know."
+
+As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in a
+transitory manner that the interview had been quite other than his
+expectation. But that was the way with everything in Mr. Hoopdriver's
+experience. And though his Wisdom looked grave within him, and Caution
+was chinking coins, and an ancient prejudice in favour of Property shook
+her head, something else was there too, shouting in his mind to drown
+all these saner considerations, the intoxicating thought of riding
+beside Her all to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days after that.
+Of talking to her familiarly, being brother of all her slender strength
+and freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful time beyond all
+his imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave place to anticipations
+as impalpable and fluctuating and beautiful as the sunset of a summer
+day.
+
+At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at small hairdresser's in
+the main street, a toothbrush, a pair of nail scissors, and a little
+bottle of stuff to darken the moustache, an article the shopman
+introduced to his attention, recommended highly, and sold in the
+excitement of the occasion.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX. THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+
+They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there. Jessie
+went out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then the green
+height of Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving their machines in the
+village they clambered up the slope to the silent red-brick fort that
+crowned it. Thence they had a view of Portsmouth and its cluster of
+sister towns, the crowded narrows of the harbour, the Solent and the
+Isle of Wight like a blue cloud through the hot haze. Jessie by some
+miracle had become a skirted woman in the Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver
+lounged gracefully on the turf, smoked a Red Herring cigarette, and
+lazily regarded the fortified towns that spread like a map away there,
+the inner line of defence like toy fortifications, a mile off perhaps;
+and beyond that a few little fields and then the beginnings of Landport
+suburb and the smoky cluster of the multitudinous houses. To the right
+at the head of the harbour shallows the town of Porchester rose among
+the trees. Mr. Hoopdriver's anxiety receded to some remote corner of his
+brain and that florid half-voluntary imagination of his shared the stage
+with the image of Jessie. He began to speculate on the impression he
+was creating. He took stock of his suit in a more optimistic spirit,
+and reviewed, with some complacency, his actions for the last four
+and twenty hours. Then he was dashed at the thought of her infinite
+perfections.
+
+She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during the last
+hour or so. She did not look at him directly because he seemed always
+looking at her. Her own troubles had quieted down a little, and her
+curiosity about the chivalrous, worshipping, but singular gentleman in
+brown, was awakening. She had recalled, too, the curious incident of
+their first encounter. She found him hard to explain to herself. You
+must understand that her knowledge of the world was rather less than
+nothing, having been obtained entirely from books. You must not take a
+certain ignorance for foolishness.
+
+She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French except
+'sivver play,' a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good light
+table joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not such as books
+informed her distinguished the lower classes. His manners seemed to her
+good on the whole, but a trifle over-respectful and out of fashion. He
+called her I Madam' once. He seemed a person of means and leisure, but
+he knew nothing of recent concerts, theatres, or books. How did he spend
+his time? He was certainly chivalrous, and a trifle simpleminded. She
+fancied (so much is there in a change of costume) that she had never met
+with such a man before. What COULD he be?
+
+"Mr. Benson," she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+
+He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+
+"At your service."
+
+"Do you paint? Are you an artist?"
+
+"Well." Judicious pause. "I should hardly call myself a Nartist, you
+know. I DO paint a little. And sketch, you know--skitty kind of things."
+
+He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really not
+so much lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to add, "In
+Papers, you know, and all that."
+
+"I see," said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a very
+heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of being a
+little odd. He avoided her eye and bit his grass. "I don't do MUCH, you
+know."
+
+"It's not your profession?
+
+"Oh, no," said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. "I don't make a regular
+thing of it, you know. Jest now and then something comes into my head
+and down it goes. No--I'm not a regular artist."
+
+"Then you don't practise any regular profession?" Mr. Hoopdriver looked
+into her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He had vague
+ideas of resuming the detective role. "It's like this," he said, to
+gain time. "I have a sort of profession. Only there's a kind of
+reason--nothing much, you know."
+
+"I beg your pardon for cross-examining you."
+
+"No trouble," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Only I can't very well--I leave it
+to you, you know. I don't want to make any mystery of it, so far as
+that goes." Should he plunge boldly and be a barrister? That anyhow was
+something pretty good. But she might know about barristry.
+
+"I think I could guess what you are."
+
+"Well--guess," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You come from one of the colonies?"
+
+"Dear me!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind. "How did
+you find out THAT?" (the man was born in a London suburb, dear Reader.)
+
+"I guessed," she said.
+
+He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new piece of
+grass.
+
+"You were educated up country."
+
+"Good again," said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow.
+"You're a CLAIRVOY ant." He bit at the grass, smiling. "Which colony was
+it?"
+
+"That I don't know."
+
+"You must guess," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"South Africa," she said. "I strongly incline to South Africa."
+
+"South Africa's quite a large place," he said.
+
+"But South Africa is right?"
+
+"You're warm," said Hoopdriver, "anyhow," and the while his imagination
+was eagerly exploring this new province.
+
+"South Africa IS right?" she insisted.
+
+He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her eyes.
+
+"What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive Schreiner's,
+you know--'The Story of an African Farm.' Gregory Rose is so like you."
+
+"I never read 'The Story of an African Farm,'" said Hoopdriver. "I must.
+What's he like?"
+
+"You must read the book. But it's a wonderful place, with its mixture
+of races, and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old savagery. Were
+you near Khama?"
+
+"He was a long way off from our place," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "We had
+a little ostrich farm, you know--Just a few hundred of 'em, out
+Johannesburg way."
+
+"On the Karroo--was it called?"
+
+"That's the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got along
+very well in the old days.--But there's no ostriches on that farm now."
+He had a diamond mine in his head, just at the moment, but he stopped
+and left a little to the girl's imagination. Besides which it had
+occurred to him with a kind of shock that he was lying.
+
+"What became of the ostriches?"
+
+"We sold 'em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I have
+another cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap, you know,
+that we had this ostrich farm."
+
+"Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?"
+
+"Lots," said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and
+beginning to feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought upon
+himself.
+
+"How interesting! Do you know, I've never been out of England except to
+Paris and Mentone and Switzerland."
+
+"One gets tired of travelling (puff) after a bit, of course."
+
+"You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always stimulates
+my imagination to think of these places. I can fancy all the tall
+ostriches being driven out by a black herd--to graze, I suppose. How do
+ostriches feed?"
+
+"Well," said Hoopdriver. "That's rather various. They have their
+fancies, you know. There's fruit, of course, and that kind of thing. And
+chicken food, and so forth. You have to use judgment."
+
+"Did you ever see a lion?" "They weren't very common in our district,"
+said Hoopdriver, quite modestly. "But I've seen them, of course. Once or
+twice."
+
+"Fancy seeing a lion! Weren't you frightened?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that offer of
+South Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the Solent languidly
+as he settled the fate on that lion in his mind. "I scarcely had time,"
+he said. "It all happened in a minute."
+
+"Go on," she said.
+
+"I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches were."
+
+"Did you EAT ostriches, then? I did not know--"
+
+"Eat them!--often. Very nice they ARE too, properly stuffed. Well,
+we--I, rather--was going across this paddock, and I saw something
+standing up in the moonlight and looking at me." Mr. Hoopdriver was in a
+hot perspiration now. His invention seemed to have gone limp. "Luckily
+I had my father's gun with me. I was scared, though, I can tell you.
+(Puff.) I just aimed at the end that I thought was the head. And let
+fly. (Puff.) And over it went, you know."
+
+"Dead?"
+
+"AS dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I wasn't
+much over nine at the time, neither."
+
+"_I_ should have screamed and run away."
+
+"There's some things you can't run away from," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "To
+run would have been Death."
+
+"I don't think I ever met a lion-killer before," she remarked, evidently
+with a heightened opinion of him.
+
+There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr.
+Hoopdriver drew his watch hastily. "I say," said Mr. Hoopdriver, showing
+it to her, "don't you think we ought to be getting on?"
+
+His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his confusion
+to modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens of his conscience,
+and held out his hand to assist her. They walked down into Cosham
+again, resumed their machines, and went on at a leisurely pace along
+the northern shore of the big harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no longer
+happy. This horrible, this fulsome lie, stuck in his memory. Why HAD he
+done it? She did not ask for any more South African stories, happily--at
+least until Porchester was reached--but talked instead of Living
+One's Own Life, and how custom hung on people like chains. She talked
+wonderfully, and set Hoopdriver's mind fermenting. By the Castle, Mr.
+Hoopdriver caught several crabs in little shore pools. At Fareham they
+stopped for a second tea, and left the place towards the hour of sunset,
+under such invigorating circumstances as you shall in due course hear.
+
+
+
+
+XXX. THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+
+And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle, and
+Phipps, and of that distressed beauty, 'Thomas Plantagenet,' well known
+in society, so the paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We left them at
+Midhurst station, if I remember rightly, waiting, in a state of fine
+emotion, for the Chichester train. It was clearly understood by the
+entire Rescue Party that Mrs. Milton was bearing up bravely against
+almost overwhelming grief. The three gentlemen outdid one another in
+sympathetic expedients; they watched her gravely almost tenderly. The
+substantial Widgery tugged at his moustache, and looked his unspeakable
+feelings at her with those dog-like, brown eyes of his; the slender
+Dangle tugged at HIS moustache, and did what he could with unsympathetic
+grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no moustache to run any risks with, so
+he folded his arms and talked in a brave, indifferent, bearing-up tone
+about the London, Brighton, and South Coast Railway, just to cheer the
+poor woman up a little. And even Mrs. Milton really felt that exalted
+melancholy to the very bottom of her heart, and tried to show it in a
+dozen little, delicate, feminine ways.
+
+"There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester," said Dangle.
+"Nothing."
+
+"Nothing," said Widgery, and aside in her ear: "You really ate scarcely
+anything, you know."
+
+"Their trains are always late," said Phipps, with his fingers along the
+edge of his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a sub-editor and
+reviewer, and his pride was to be Thomas Plantagenet's intellectual
+companion. Widgery, the big man, was manager of a bank and a mighty
+golfer, and his conception of his relations to her never came into his
+mind without those charming oldlines, "Douglas, Douglas, tender and
+true," falling hard upon its heels. His name was Douglas-Douglas
+Widgery. And Phipps, Phipps was a medical student still, and he felt
+that he laid his heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world.
+She was kind to them all in her way, and insisted on their being
+friends together, in spite of a disposition to reciprocal criticism
+they displayed. Dangle thought Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but
+coarsely the merits of "A Soul Untrammelled," and Widgery thought Dangle
+lacked, humanity--would talk insincerely to say a clever thing. Both
+Dangle and Widgery thought Phipps a bit of a cub, and Phipps thought
+both Dangle and Widgery a couple of Thundering Bounders.
+
+"They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch," said Dangle, in
+the train. "After, perhaps. And there's no sufficient place in the road.
+So soon as we get there, Phipps must inquire at the chief hotels to see
+if any one answering to her description has lunched there."
+
+"Oh, I'LL inquire," said Phipps. "Willingly. I suppose you and Widgery
+will just hang about--"
+
+He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton's gentle face, and stopped
+abruptly.
+
+"No," said Dangle, "we shan't HANG ABOUT, as you put it. There are
+two places in Chichester where tourists might go--the cathedral and a
+remarkably fine museum. I shall go to the cathedral and make an inquiry
+or so, while Widgery--"
+
+"The museum. Very well. And after that there's a little thing or two
+I've thought of myself," said Widgery.
+
+To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to the Red
+Hotel and established her there with some tea. "You are so kind to
+me," she said. "All of you." They signified that it was nothing, and
+dispersed to their inquiries. By six they returned, their zeal a little
+damped, without news. Widgery came back with Dangle. Phipps was the last
+to return. "You're quite sure," said Widgery, "that there isn't any flaw
+in that inference of yours?"
+
+"Quite," said Dangle, rather shortly.
+
+"Of course," said Widgery, "their starting from Midhurst on the
+Chichester road doesn't absolutely bind them not to change their minds."
+
+"My dear fellow!--It does. Really it does. You must allow me to have
+enough intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you must. There
+aren't any cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn aside here? No.
+Would they turn there? Many more things are inevitable than you fancy."
+
+"We shall see at once," said Widgery, at the window. "Here comes Phipps.
+For my own part--"
+
+"Phipps!" said Mrs. Milton. "Is he hurrying? Does he look--" She rose in
+her eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards the window.
+
+"No news," said Phipps, entering.
+
+"Ah!" said Widgery.
+
+"None?" said Dangle.
+
+"Well," said Phipps. "One fellow had got hold of a queer story of a man
+in bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question about this time
+yesterday."
+
+"What question?" said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window. She
+spoke in a low voice, almost a whisper.
+
+"Why--Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?"
+
+Dangle caught at his lower lip. "What's that?" he said. "Yesterday! A
+man asking after her then! What can THAT mean?"
+
+"Heaven knows," said Phipps, sitting down wearily. "You'd better infer."
+
+"What kind of man?" said Dangle.
+
+"How should I know?--in bicycling costume, the fellow said."
+
+"But what height?--What complexion?"
+
+"Didn't ask," said Phipps. "DIDN'T ASK! Nonsense," said Dangle.
+
+"Ask him yourself," said Phipps. "He's an ostler chap in the White
+Hart,--short, thick-set fellow, with a red face and a crusty manner.
+Leaning up against the stable door. Smells of whiskey. Go and ask him."
+
+"Of course," said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade over the
+stuffed bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the door. "I might
+have known."
+
+Phipps' mouth opened and shut.
+
+"You're tired, I'm sure, Mr. Phipps," said the lady, soothingly. "Let me
+ring for some tea for you." It suddenly occurred to Phipps that he had
+lapsed a little from his chivalry. "I was a little annoyed at the way he
+rushed me to do all this business," he said. "But I'd do a hundred times
+as much if it would bring you any nearer to her." Pause. "I WOULD like a
+little tea."
+
+"I don't want to raise any false hopes," said Widgery. "But I do NOT
+believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle's a very clever fellow, of
+course, but sometimes these Inferences of his--"
+
+"Tchak!" said Phipps, suddenly.
+
+"What is it?" said Mrs. Milton.
+
+"Something I've forgotten. I went right out from here, went to every
+other hotel in the place, and never thought--But never mind. I'll ask
+when the waiter comes."
+
+"You don't mean--" A tap, and the door opened. "Tea, m'm? yes, m'm,"
+said the waiter.
+
+"One minute," said Phipps. "Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady--"
+
+"Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her brother,
+sir--a young gent."
+
+"Brother!" said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. "Thank God!"
+
+The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. "A young gent,
+sir," he said, "very free with his money. Give the name of Beaumont."
+He proceeded to some rambling particulars, and was cross-examined by
+Widgery on the plans of the young couple.
+
+"Havant! Where's Havant?" said Phipps. "I seem to remember it
+somewhere."
+
+"Was the man tall?" said Mrs. Milton, intently, "distinguished looking?
+with a long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?"
+
+"Well," said the waiter, and thought. "His moustache, m'm, was scarcely
+long--scrubby more, and young looking."
+
+"About thirty-five, he was?"
+
+"No, m'm. More like five and twenty. Not that."
+
+"Dear me!" said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice,
+fumbling for her salts, and showing the finest self-control. "It must
+have been her YOUNGER brother--must have been."
+
+"That will do, thank you," said Widgery, officiously, feeling that she
+would be easier under this new surprise if the man were dismissed. The
+waiter turned to go, and almost collided with Dangle, who was entering
+the room, panting excitedly and with a pocket handkerchief held to his
+right eye. "Hullo!" said dangle. "What's up?"
+
+"What's up with YOU?" said Phipps.
+
+"Nothing--an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of yours. He
+thought it was a plot to annoy him--that the Young Lady in Grey was
+mythical. Judged from your manner. I've got a piece of raw meat to keep
+over it. You have some news, I see?"
+
+"Did the man hit you?" asked Widgery.
+
+Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. "Cannot I do anything?"
+
+Dangle was heroic. "Only tell me your news," he said, round the corner
+of the handkerchief.
+
+"It was in this way," said Phipps, and explained rather sheepishly.
+While he was doing so, with a running fire of commentary from Widgery,
+the waiter brought in a tray of tea. "A time table," said Dangle,
+promptly, "for Havant." Mrs. Milton poured two cups, and Phipps and
+Dangle partook in passover form. They caught the train by a hair's
+breadth. So to Havant and inquiries.
+
+Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right. In view
+of the fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a steep hill
+continuously on the right-hand side, and the sea on the left, he hit
+upon a magnificent scheme for heading the young folks off. He and Mrs.
+Milton would go to Fareham, Widgery and Phipps should alight one each at
+the intermediate stations of Cosham and Porchester, and come on by the
+next train if they had no news. If they did not come on, a wire to the
+Fareham post office was to explain why. It was Napoleonic, and more than
+consoled Dangle for the open derision of the Havant street boys at the
+handkerchief which still protected his damaged eye.
+
+Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives escaped by
+a hair's breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor at Fareham, and
+preparing to mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle came round the corner
+from the station. "It's her!" said Mrs. Milton, and would have screamed.
+"Hist!" said Dangle, gripping the lady's arm, removing his handkerchief
+in his excitement, and leaving the piece of meat over his eye, an
+extraordinary appearance which seemed unexpectedly to calm her. "Be
+cool!" said Dangle, glaring under the meat. "They must not see us. They
+will get away else. Were there flys at the station?" The young couple
+mounted and vanished round the corner of the Winchester road. Had it not
+been for the publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would have fainted.
+"SAVE HER!" she said.
+
+"Ah! A conveyance," said Dangle. "One minute."
+
+He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to her
+heart, and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten minutes.
+Emerged. The meat had gone now, and one saw the cooling puffiness over
+his eye. "I will conduct you back to the station," said Dangle; "hurry
+back here, and pursue them. You will meet Widgery and Phipps and tell
+them I am in pursuit."
+
+She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a hard,
+blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and dreadfully
+ruffled and agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt, most energetic
+and devoted; but for a kindly, helpful manner commend her to Douglas
+Widgery.
+
+Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving (as
+well as he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing called a
+gig, northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring his swollen eye,
+was a refined-looking little man, and he wore a deerstalker cap and was
+dressed in dark grey. His neck was long and slender. Perhaps you know
+what gigs are,--huge, big, wooden things and very high and the horse,
+too, was huge and big and high, with knobby legs, a long face, a hard
+mouth, and a whacking trick of pacing. Smack, smack, smack, smack it
+went along the road, and hard by the church it shied vigorously at a
+hooded perambulator.
+
+The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It appears
+that Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton left about upon
+the Fareham platform. The day had irritated him somehow, though he
+had started with the noblest intentions, and he seemed glad to find an
+outlet for justifiable indignation. "He's such a spasmodic creature,"
+said Widgery. "Rushing off! And I suppose we're to wait here until he
+comes back! It's likely. He's so egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants to
+mismanage everything himself."
+
+"He means to help me," said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully,
+touching his arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified all
+at once. "He need not prevent ME," he said, and stopped. "It's no good
+talking, you know, and you are tired."
+
+"I can go on," she said brightly, "if only we find her." "While I
+was cooling my heels in Cosham I bought a county map." He produced and
+opened it. "Here, you see, is the road out of Fareham." He proceeded
+with the calm deliberation of a business man to develop a proposal
+of taking train forthwith to Winchester. "They MUST be going to
+Winchester," he explained. It was inevitable. To-morrow Sunday,
+Winchester a cathedral town, road going nowhere else of the slightest
+importance.
+
+"But Mr. Dangle?"
+
+"He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he will
+break his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It's scarcely likely
+a dog-cart, especially a hired dog-cart, will overtake bicycles in the
+cool of the evening. Rely upon me, Mrs. Milton--"
+
+"I am in your hands," she said, with pathetic littleness, looking up at
+him, and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the day.
+
+Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat depressed
+attitude, leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and looking from one
+speaker to the other. The idea of leaving Dangle behind seemed to him an
+excellent one. "We might leave a message at the place where he got the
+dog-cart," he suggested, when he saw their eyes meeting. There was a
+cheerful alacrity about all three at the proposal.
+
+But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran into the
+station, a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a shouting overhead, the
+guard stood astonished on the platform, and Phipps, thrusting his
+head out of the window, cried, "There he goes!" and sprang out of the
+carriage. Mrs. Milton, following in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it
+was hidden. Botley station lies in a cutting, overhead was the roadway,
+and across the lemon yellows and flushed pinks of the sunset, there
+whirled a great black mass, a horse like a long-nosed chess knight,
+the upper works of a gig, and Dangle in transit from front to back.
+A monstrous shadow aped him across the cutting. It was the event of a
+second. Dangle seemed to jump, hang in the air momentarily, and vanish,
+and after a moment's pause came a heart-rending smash. Then two black
+heads running swiftly.
+
+"Better get out," said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood fascinated in
+the doorway.
+
+In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They found
+Dangle, hatless, standing up with cut hands extended, having his hands
+brushed by an officious small boy. A broad, ugly road ran downhill in a
+long vista, and in the distance was a little group of Botley inhabitants
+holding the big, black horse. Even at that distance they could see
+the expression of conscious pride on the monster's visage. It was as
+wooden-faced a horse as you can imagine. The beasts in the Tower of
+London, on which the men in armour are perched, are the only horses I
+have ever seen at all like it. However, we are not concerned now with
+the horse, but with Dangle. "Hurt?" asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+
+"Mr. Dangle!" cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+
+"Hullo!" said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. "Glad you've come.
+I may want you. Bit of a mess I'm in--eigh? But I've caught 'em. At the
+very place I expected, too."
+
+"Caught them!" said Widgery. "Where are they?"
+
+"Up there," he said, with a backward motion of his head. "About a mile
+up the hill. I left 'em. I HAD to."
+
+"I don't understand," said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful look
+again. "Have you found Jessie?"
+
+"I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands somewhere. It
+was like this, you know. Came on them suddenly round a corner. Horse
+shied at the bicycles. They were sitting by the roadside botanising
+flowers. I just had time to shout, 'Jessie Milton, we've been looking
+for you,' and then that confounded brute bolted. I didn't dare turn
+round. I had all my work to do to save myself being turned over, as it
+was--so long as I did, I mean. I just shouted, 'Return to your friends.
+All will be forgiven.' And off I came, clatter, clatter. Whether they
+heard--"
+
+"TAKE ME TO HER," said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning towards
+Widgery.
+
+"Certainly," said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. "How far is it,
+Dangle?"
+
+"Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you know.
+I say though--Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs. Milton." He
+turned to Phipps. "Phipps, I say, where shall I wash the gravel out? And
+have a look at my knee?"
+
+"There's the station," said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made a
+step, and a damaged knee became evident. "Take my arm," said Phipps.
+
+"Where can we get a conveyance?" asked Widgery of two small boys.
+
+The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one another.
+
+"There's not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight," said Widgery. "It's a case
+of a horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse."
+
+"There's a harse all right," said one of the small boys with a movement
+of the head.
+
+"Don't you know where we can hire traps?" asked Widgery. "Or a cart
+or--anything?" asked Mrs. Milton.
+
+"John Ooker's gart a cart, but no one can't 'ire'n," said the larger of
+the small boys, partially averting his face and staring down the road
+and making a song of it. "And so's my feyther, for's leg us broke."
+
+"Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?"
+
+It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for courtly
+devotion, Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. "I suppose--" she
+said, timidly. "Perhaps if you were to ask Mr. Dangle--"
+
+And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely.
+"Confound Dangle! Hasn't he messed us up enough? He must needs drive
+after them in a trap to tell them we're coming, and now you want me to
+ask him--"
+
+Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped abruptly.
+"I'll go and ask Dangle," he said, shortly. "If you wish it." And went
+striding into the station and down the steps, leaving her in the road
+under the quiet inspection of the two little boys, and with a kind of
+ballad refrain running through her head, "Where are the Knights of the
+Olden Time?" and feeling tired to death and hungry and dusty and out of
+curl, and, in short, a martyr woman.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI.
+
+It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the fugitives
+vanished into Immensity; how there were no more trains how Botley stared
+unsympathetically with a palpable disposition to derision, denying
+conveyances how the landlord of the Heron was suspicious, how the next
+day was Sunday, and the hot summer's day had crumpled the collar of
+Phipps and stained the skirts of Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the radiant
+emotions of the whole party. Dangle, with sticking-plaster and a black
+eye, felt the absurdity of the pose of the Wounded Knight, and abandoned
+it after the faintest efforts. Recriminations never, perhaps, held the
+foreground of the talk, but they played like summer lightning on the
+edge of the conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a galling
+sense of the ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most to blame.
+Apparently, too, the worst, which would have made the whole business
+tragic, was not happening. Here was a young woman--young woman do I say?
+a mere girl!--had chosen to leave a comfortable home in Surbiton, and
+all the delights of a refined and intellectual circle, and had rushed
+off, trailing us after her, posing hard, mutually jealous, and now tired
+and weather-worn, to flick us off at last, mere mud from her wheel, into
+this detestable village beer-house on a Saturday night! And she had
+done it, not for Love and Passion, which are serious excuses one may
+recognise even if one must reprobate, but just for a Freak, just for a
+fantastic Idea; for nothing, in fact, but the outraging of Common Sense.
+Yet withal, such was our restraint, that we talked of her still as one
+much misguided, as one who burthened us with anxiety, as a lamb astray,
+and Mrs. Milton having eaten, continued to show the finest feelings on
+the matter.
+
+She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only
+comfortable chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard,
+horsehair things having antimacassars tied to their backs by means
+of lemon-coloured bows. It was different from those dear old talks at
+Surbiton, somehow. She sat facing the window, which was open (the night
+was so tranquil and warm), and the dim light--for we did not use the
+lamp--suited her admirably. She talked in a voice that told you she was
+tired, and she seemed inclined to state a case against herself in the
+matter of "A Soul Untrammelled." It was such an evening as might live in
+a sympathetic memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+
+"I feel," she said, "that I am to blame. I have Developed. That first
+book of mine--I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but it has been
+misunderstood, misapplied."
+
+"It has," said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as to be
+visible in the dark. "Deliberately misunderstood."
+
+"Don't say that," said the lady. "Not deliberately. I try and think that
+critics are honest. After their lights. I was not thinking of critics.
+But she--I mean--" She paused, an interrogation.
+
+"It is possible," said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+
+"I write a book and state a case. I want people to THINK as I recommend,
+not to DO as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I make it into a
+story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to promulgate Ideas. Then
+when the Ideas have been spread abroad--Things will come about. Only now
+it is madness to fly in the face of the established order. Bernard Shaw,
+you know, has explained that with regard to Socialism. We all know that
+to earn all you consume is right, and that living on invested capital is
+wrong. Only we cannot begin while we are so few. It is Those Others."
+
+"Precisely," said Widgery. "It is Those Others. They must begin first."
+
+"And meanwhile you go on banking--"
+
+"If I didn't, some one else would."
+
+"And I live on Mr. Milton's Lotion while I try to gain a footing in
+Literature."
+
+"TRY!" said Phipps. "You HAVE done so." And, "That's different," said
+Dangle, at the same time.
+
+"You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina Griffiths
+in my book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to life classes and
+had men visitors, but then she was over twenty-one."
+
+"Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that," said Dangle.
+
+"It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman. And
+Georgina Griffiths never flaunted her freedom--on a bicycle, in country
+places. In this country. Where every one is so particular. Fancy,
+SLEEPING away from home. It's dreadful--If it gets about it spells ruin
+for her."
+
+"Ruin," said Widgery.
+
+"No man would marry a girl like that," said Phipps.
+
+"It must be hushed up," said Dangle.
+
+"It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of
+individual cases. We must weigh each person against his or her
+circumstances. General rules don't apply--"
+
+"I often feel the force of that," said Widgery. "Those are my rules. Of
+course my books--"
+
+"It's different, altogether different," said Dangle. "A novel deals with
+typical cases."
+
+"And life is not typical," said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+
+Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and shocked
+of any in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was infectious, and the
+gathering having, as you can easily understand, talked itself weary,
+dispersed on trivial pretences. But not to sleep immediately. Directly
+Dangle was alone he began, with infinite disgust, to scrutinise his
+darkling eye, for he was a neat-minded little man in spite of his
+energy. The whole business--so near a capture--was horribly vexatious.
+Phipps sat on his bed for some time examining, with equal disgust, a
+collar he would have thought incredible for Sunday twenty-four hours
+before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of even big, fat men
+with dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because he had been so cross
+to her at the station, and because so far he did not feel that he had
+scored over Dangle. Also he was angry with Dangle. And all four of
+them, being souls living very much upon the appearances of things, had a
+painful, mental middle distance of Botley derisive and suspicious, and
+a remoter background of London humorous, and Surbiton speculative. Were
+they really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+
+
+
+
+XXXII. MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+
+As Mr. Dangle bad witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him by
+the side of the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr. Dangle's
+appearance, Mr. Hoopdriver had been learning with great interest that
+mere roadside flowers had names,--star-flowers, wind-stars, St. John's
+wort, willow herb, lords and ladies, bachelor's buttons,--most curious
+names, some of them. "The flowers are all different in South Africa,
+y'know," he was explaining with a happy fluke of his imagination to
+account for his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by clattering sounds
+and a gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across the
+tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and gesticulating
+behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie by her name, had
+backed towards the hedge for no ostensible reason, and vanished to the
+accomplishment of the Fate that had been written down for him from the
+very beginning of things. Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to
+stand up and seize their machines, before this tumultuous, this swift
+and wonderful passing of Dangle was achieved. He went from side to side
+of the road,--worse even than the riding forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it
+was,--and vanished round the corner.
+
+"He knew my name," said Jessie. "Yes--it was Mr. Dangle."
+
+"That was our bicycles did that," said Mr. Hoopdriver simultaneously,
+and speaking with a certain complacent concern. "I hope he won't get
+hurt."
+
+"That was Mr. Dangle," repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard this
+time, with a violent start. His eyebrows went up spasmodically.
+
+"What! someone you know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Lord!"
+
+"He was looking for me," said Jessie. "I could see. He began to call to
+me before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for his
+ideas were still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs. Milton. Honesty
+IS the best policy--often, he thought. He turned his head this way and
+that. He became active. "After us, eigh? Then he'll come back. He's gone
+down that hill, and he won't be able to pull up for a bit, I'm certain."
+
+Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was mounting.
+Still staring at the corner that had swallowed up Dangle, Hoopdriver
+followed suit. And so, just as the sun was setting, they began
+another flight together,--riding now towards Bishops Waltham, with Mr.
+Hoopdriver in the post of danger--the rear--ever and again looking over
+his shoulder and swerving dangerously as he did so. Occasionally Jessie
+had to slacken her pace. He breathed heavily, and hated himself because
+his mouth fell open, After nearly an hour's hard riding, they found
+themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of Dangle nor any other
+danger was visible as they rode into the dusky, yellow-lit street.
+Though the bats had been fluttering behind thehedges and the evening
+star was bright while they were still two miles from Winchester, Mr.
+Hoopdriver pointed out the dangers of stopping in such an obvious
+abiding-place, and gently but firmly insisted upon replenishing the
+lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From Winchester, roads branch in
+every direction, and to turn abruptly westward was clearly the way to
+throw off the chase. As Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad and yellow
+through the twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that
+ride out of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the atmospheric
+effects were the same, the emotions were different. They rode in
+absolute silence, and slowly after they had cleared the outskirts of
+Winchester. Both of them were now nearly tired out,--the level was
+tedious, and even a little hill a burden; and so it came about that
+in the hamlet of Wallenstock they were beguiled to stop and ask for
+accommodation in an exceptionally prosperous-looking village inn. A
+plausible landlady rose to the occasion.
+
+Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were prepared, Mr.
+Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and floating in a reek
+of smoke, of three and a half faces--for the edge of the door cut one
+down--and an American cloth-covered table with several glasses and a
+tankard. And he also heard a remark. In the second before he heard that
+remark, Mr. Hoopdriver had been a proud and happy man, to particularize,
+a baronet's heir incognito. He had surrendered their bicycles to the odd
+man of the place with infinite easy dignity, and had bowingly opened
+the door for Jessie. "Who's that, then?" he imagined people saying;
+and then, "Some'n pretty well orf--judge by the bicycles." Then the
+imaginary spectators would fall a-talking of the fashionableness of
+bicycling,--how judges And stockbrokers and actresses and, in fact, all
+the best people rode, and how that it was often the fancy of such great
+folk to shun the big hotels, the adulation of urban crowds, and seek,
+incognito, the cosy quaintnesses of village life. Then, maybe, they
+would think of a certain nameless air of distinction about the lady
+who had stepped across the doorway, and about the handsome,
+flaxen-moustached, blue-eyed Cavalier who had followed her in, and they
+would look one to another. "Tell you what it is," one of the village
+elders would say--just as they do in novels--voicing the thought of all,
+in a low, impressive tone: "There's such a thin' as entertaining barranets
+unawares--not to mention no higher things--"
+
+Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr. Hoopdriver's
+head the moment before he heard that remark. But the remark toppled
+him headlong. What the precise remark was need not concern us. It was
+a casual piece of such satire as Strephon delights in. Should you be
+curious, dear lady, as to its nature, you have merely to dress yourself
+in a really modern cycling costume, get one of the feeblest-looking
+of your men to escort you, and ride out, next Saturday evening, to any
+public house where healthy, homely people gather together. Then you
+will hear quite a lot of the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver heard. More,
+possibly, than you will desire.
+
+The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated an
+entire disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it shattered all
+the gorgeous imaginative fabric his mind had been rejoicing in. All that
+foolish happiness vanished like a dream. And there was nothing to show
+for it, as there is nothing to show for any spiteful remark that has
+ever been made. Perhaps the man who said the thing had a gleam of
+satisfaction at the idea of taking a complacent-looking fool down a peg,
+but it is just as possible he did not know at the time that his stray
+shot had hit. He had thrown it as a boy throws a stone at a bird. And it
+not only demolished a foolish, happy conceit, but it wounded. It touched
+Jessie grossly.
+
+She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing; but
+during the supper they had in the little private dining-room, though
+she talked cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of indistinct
+conversation, and now and then laughter, came in from the inn parlor
+through the pelargoniums in the open window. Hoopdriver felt it must
+all be in the same strain,--at her expense and his. He answered her
+abstractedly. She was tired, she said, and presently went to her room.
+Mr. Hoopdriver, in his courtly way, opened the door for her and bowed
+her out. He stood listening and fearing some new offence as she went
+upstairs, and round the bend where the barometer hung beneath the
+stuffed birds. Then he went back to the room, and stood on the hearthrug
+before the paper fireplace ornament. "Cads!" he said in a scathing
+undertone, as a fresh burst of laughter came floating in. All through
+supper he had been composing stinging repartee, a blistering speech of
+denunciation to be presently delivered. He would rate them as a nobleman
+should: "Call themselves Englishmen, indeed, and insult a woman!" he
+would say; take the names and addresses perhaps, threaten to speak to
+the Lord of the Manor, promise to let them hear from him again, and so
+out with consternation in his wake. It really ought to be done.
+
+"Teach 'em better," he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache
+painfully. What was it? He revived the objectionable remark for his own
+exasperation, and then went over the heads of his speech again.
+
+He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and went
+back to the hearthrug. He wouldn't--after all. Yet was he not a Knight
+Errant? Should such men go unreproved, unchecked, by wandering baronets
+incognito? Magnanimity? Look at it in that way? Churls beneath one's
+notice? No; merely a cowardly subterfuge. He WOULD after all.
+
+Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even as he
+went towards the door again. But he only went on the more resolutely. He
+crossed the hall, by the bar, and entered the room from which the remark
+had proceeded. He opened the door abruptly and stood scowling on them
+in the doorway. "You'll only make a mess of it," remarked the internal
+sceptic. There were five men in the room altogether: a fat person,
+with a long pipe and a great number of chins, in an armchair by the
+fireplace, who wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good evening very affably; a
+young fellow smoking a cutty and displaying crossed legs with gaiters;
+a little, bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged, comfortable
+man with bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket; and a fair young man,
+very genteel in a yellowish-brown ready-made suit and a white tie.
+
+"H'm," said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And then in a
+forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties, "Good evening."
+
+"Very pleasant day we've been 'aving," said the fair young man with the
+white tie.
+
+"Very," said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair, he
+planted it with great deliberation where he faced the fireplace, and sat
+down. Let's see--how did that speech begin?
+
+"Very pleasant roads about here," said the fair young man with the white
+tie.
+
+"Very," said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin somehow.
+"The roads about here are all right, and the weather about here is
+all right, but what I've come in here to say is--there's some damned
+unpleasant people--damned unpleasant people!"
+
+"Oh!" said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a mental
+inventory of his pearl buttons as he spoke. "How's that?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his elbows with
+extreme angularity. In his heart he was raving at his idiotic folly at
+thus bearding these lions,--indisputably they WERE lions,--but he had
+to go through with it now. Heaven send, his breath, which was already
+getting a trifle spasmodic, did not suddenly give out. He fixed his
+eye on the face of the fat man with the chins, and spoke in a low,
+impressive voice. "I came here, sir," said Mr. Hoopdriver, and paused to
+inflate his cheeks, "with a lady."
+
+"Very nice lady," said the man with the gaiters, putting his head on one
+side to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind the curvature
+of his calf. "Very nice lady indeed."
+
+"I came here," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "with a lady."
+
+"We saw you did, bless you," said the fat man with the chins, in
+a curious wheezy voice. "I don't see there's anything so very
+extraordinary in that. One 'ud think we hadn't eyes."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. "I came, here, sir--"
+
+"We've 'eard that," said the little man with the beard, sharply and went
+off into an amiable chuckle. "We know it by 'art," said the little man,
+elaborating the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly at the
+little man with the beard, and tried to recover his discourse. A pause.
+
+"You were saying," said the fair young man with the white tie, speaking
+very politely, "that you came here with a lady."
+
+"A lady," meditated the gaiter gazer.
+
+The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another with
+keen, bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been scored, and
+stimulated Mr. Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him with an expectant
+regard.
+
+"Some dirty cad," said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his discourse,
+and suddenly growing extremely fierce, "made a remark as we went by this
+door."
+
+"Steady on!" said the old gentleman with many chins. "Steady on! Don't
+you go a-calling us names, please."
+
+"One minute!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It wasn't I began calling names."
+("Who did?" said the man with the chins.) "I'm not calling any of you
+dirty cads. Don't run away with that impression. Only some person in
+this room made a remark that showed he wasn't fit to wipe boots on,
+and, with all due deference to such gentlemen as ARE gentlemen" (Mr.
+Hoopdriver looked round for moral support), "I want to know which it
+was."
+
+"Meanin'?" said the fair young man in the white tie.
+
+"That I'm going to wipe my boots on 'im straight away," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his
+throat--than which threat of personal violence nothing had been further
+from his thoughts on entering the room. He said this because he could
+think of nothing else to say, and stuck out his elbows truculently to
+hide the sinking of his heart. It is curious how situations run away
+with us.
+
+"'Ullo, Charlie!" said the little man, and "My eye!" said the owner of
+the chins. "You're going to wipe your boots on 'im?" said the fair young
+man, in a tone of mild surprise.
+
+"I am," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared in the
+young man's face.
+
+"That's fair and reasonable," said the man in the velveteen jacket; "if
+you can."
+
+The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man in the
+white tic. "Of course, if you can't find out which it is, I suppose
+you're prepared to wipe your boots in a liberal way on everybody in the
+room," said this young man, in the same tone of impersonal question.
+"This gentleman, the champion lightweight--"
+
+"Own up, Charlie," said the young man with the gaiters, looking up for a
+moment. "And don't go a-dragging in your betters. It's fair and square.
+You can't get out of it."
+
+"Was it this--gent?" began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Of course," said the young man in the white tie, "when it comes to
+talking of wiping boots--"
+
+"I'm not talking; I'm going to do it," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists; they
+were spectators. He would have to go through with it now. But this tone
+of personal aggression on the maker of the remark had somehow got rid of
+the oppressive feeling of Hoopdriver contra mundum. Apparently, he would
+have to fight someone. Would he get a black eye? Would he get very much
+hurt? Pray goodness it wasn't that sturdy chap in the gaiters! Should
+he rise and begin? What would she think if he brought a black eye to
+breakfast to-morrow? "Is this the man?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+business-like calm, and arms more angular than ever.
+
+"Eat 'im!" said the little man with the beard; "eat 'im straight orf."
+
+"Steady on!" said the young man in the white tie. "Steady on a minute.
+If I did happen to say--"
+
+"You did, did you?" said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Backing out of it, Charlie?" said the young man with the gaiters.
+
+"Not a bit," said Charlie. "Surely we can pass a bit of a joke--"
+
+"I'm going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+"Bray-vo!" said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+
+"Charlie IS a bit too free with his jokes," said the little man with the
+beard.
+
+"It's downright disgusting," said Hoopdriver, falling back upon his
+speech. "A lady can't ride a bicycle in a country road, or wear a dress
+a little out of the ordinary, but every dirty little greaser must needs
+go shouting insults--"
+
+"_I_ didn't know the young lady would hear what I said," said Charlie.
+"Surely one can speak friendly to one's friends. How was I to know the
+door was open--"
+
+Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible, more
+seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself, and his
+spirits rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough lesson. "Of
+COURSE you knew the door was open," he retorted indignantly. "Of COURSE
+you thought we should hear what you said. Don't go telling lies about
+it. It's no good your saying things like that. You've had your fun, and
+you meant to have your fun. And I mean to make an example of you, Sir."
+
+"Ginger beer," said the little man with the beard, in a confidential
+tone to the velveteen jacket, "is regular up this 'ot weather. Bustin'
+its bottles it is everywhere."
+
+"What's the good of scrapping about in a public-house?" said Charlie,
+appealing to the company. "A fair fight without interruptions, now, I
+WOULDN'T mind, if the gentleman's so disposed."
+
+Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew truculent.
+
+"Where you like," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "jest wherever you like."
+
+"You insulted the gent," said the man in velveteen.
+
+"Don't be a bloomin' funk, Charlie," said the man in gaiters. "Why, you
+got a stone of him, if you got an ounce."
+
+"What I say, is this," said the gentleman with the excessive chins,
+trying to get a hearing by banging his chair arms. "If Charlie goes
+saying things, he ought to back 'em up. That's what I say. I don't mind
+his sayin' such things 't all, but he ought to be prepared to back 'em
+up."
+
+"I'll BACK 'em up all right," said Charlie, with extremely bitter
+emphasis on 'back.' "If the gentleman likes to come Toosday week--"
+
+"Rot!" chopped in Hoopdriver. "Now."
+
+"'Ear, 'ear," said the owner of the chins.
+
+"Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day," said
+the man in the velveteen coat.
+
+"You got to do it, Charlie," said the man in gaiters. "It's no good."
+
+"It's like this," said Charlie, appealing to everyone except Hoopdriver.
+"Here's me, got to take in her ladyship's dinner to-morrow night. How
+should I look with a black eye? And going round with the carriage with a
+split lip?"
+
+"If you don't want your face sp'iled, Charlie, why don't you keep your
+mouth shut?" said the person in gaiters.
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great fierceness.
+"Why don't you shut your ugly mouth?"
+
+"It's as much as my situation's worth," protested Charlie.
+
+"You should have thought of that before," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"There's no occasion to be so thunderin' 'ot about it. I only meant
+the thing joking," said Charlie. "AS one gentleman to another, I'm very
+sorry if the gentleman's annoyed--"
+
+Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his moustache.
+He felt that Charlie's recognition of his gentlemanliness was at any
+rate a redeeming feature. But it became his pose to ride hard and heavy
+over the routed foe. He shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+
+"You're regular abject," the man in gaiters was saying to Charlie.
+
+More confusion.
+
+"Only don't think I'm afraid,--not of a spindle-legged cuss like him,"
+shouted Charlie. "Because I ain't."
+
+"Change of front," thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. "Where are we
+going?"
+
+"Don't sit there and be abusive," said the man in velveteen. "He's
+offered to hit you, and if I was him, I'd hit you now."
+
+"All right, then," said Charlie, with a sudden change of front and
+springing to his feet. "If I must, I must. Now, then!" At that,
+Hoopdriver, the child of Fate, rose too, with a horrible sense that his
+internal monitor was right. Things had taken a turn. He had made a mess
+of it, and now there was nothing for it, so far as he could see, but to
+hit the man at once. He and Charlie stood six feet apart, with a
+table between, both very breathless and fierce. A vulgar fight in
+a public-house, and with what was only too palpably a footman! Good
+Heavens! And this was the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the
+juice had it all happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But
+before the brawl could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened.
+"Not here," he said, stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was
+standing up.
+
+"Charlie's artful," said the little man with the beard.
+
+"Buller's yard," said the man with the gaiters, taking the control
+of the entire affair with the easy readiness of an accomplished
+practitioner. "If the gentleman DON'T mind." Buller's yard, it seemed,
+was the very place. "We'll do the thing regular and decent, if
+you please." And before he completely realized what was happening,
+Hoopdriver was being marched out through the back premises of the inn,
+to the first and only fight with fists that was ever to glorify his
+life.
+
+Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr. Hoopdriver
+was quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But inwardly he was a chaos
+of conflicting purposes. It was extraordinary how things happened. One
+remark had trod so closely on the heels of another, that he had had the
+greatest difficulty in following the development of the business.
+He distinctly remembered himself walking across from one room to the
+other,--a dignified, even an aristocratic figure, primed with considered
+eloquence, intent upon a scathing remonstrance to these wretched yokels,
+regarding their manners. Then incident had flickered into incident until
+here he was out in a moonlit lane,--a slight, dark figure in a group
+of larger, indistinct figures,--marching in a quiet, business-like way
+towards some unknown horror at Buller's yard. Fists! It was astonishing.
+It was terrible! In front of him was the pallid figure of Charles, and
+he saw that the man in gaiters held Charles kindly but firmly by the
+arm.
+
+"It's blasted rot," Charles was saying, "getting up a fight just for a
+thing like that; all very well for 'im. 'E's got 'is 'olidays; 'e 'asn't
+no blessed dinner to take up to-morrow night like I 'ave.--No need to
+numb my arm, IS there?"
+
+They went into Buller's yard through gates. There were sheds in Buller's
+yard--sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not solve--a smell
+of cows, and a pump stood out clear and black, throwing a clear black
+shadow on the whitewashed wall. And here it was his face was to be
+battered to a pulp. He knew this was the uttermost folly, to stand up
+here and be pounded, but the way out of it was beyond his imagining. Yet
+afterwards--? Could he ever face her again? He patted his Norfolk jacket
+and took his ground with his back to the gate. How did one square? So?
+Suppose one were to turn and run even now, run straight back to the
+inn and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn't make, him come
+out--anyhow. He could prosecute them for assault if they did. How did
+one set about prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with his face
+ghastly white under the moon, squaring in front of him.
+
+He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him. Then
+he hit with his right and with the violence of despair. It was a hit of
+his own devising,--an impromptu,--but it chanced to coincide with the
+regulation hook hit at the head. He perceived with a leap of exultation
+that the thing his fist had met was the jawbone of Charles. It was the
+sole gleam of pleasure he experienced during the fight, and it was quite
+momentary. He had hardly got home upon Charles before he was struck
+in the chest and whirled backward. He had the greatest difficulty in
+keeping his feet. He felt that his heart was smashed flat. "Gord
+darm!" said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind him. As Mr.
+Hoopdriver staggered, Charles gave a loud and fear-compelling cry. He
+seemed to tower over Hoopdriver in the moonlight. Both his fists were
+whirling. It was annihilation coming--no less. Mr. Hoopdriver ducked
+perhaps and certainly gave ground to the right, hit, and missed. Charles
+swept round to the left, missing generously. A blow glanced over Mr.
+Hoopdriver's left ear, and the flanking movement was completed.
+Another blow behind the ear. Heaven and earth spun furiously round
+Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he became aware of a figure in a light suit
+shooting violently through an open gate into the night. The man in
+gaiters sprang forward past Mr. Hoopdriver, but too late to intercept
+the fugitive. There were shouts, laughter, and Mr. Hoopdriver, still
+solemnly squaring, realized the great and wonderful truth--Charles had
+fled. He, Hoopdriver, had fought and, by all the rules of war, had won.
+
+"That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him," the toothless little
+man with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly friendly manner.
+
+"The fact of it is," said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road to
+Salisbury, and with the sound of distant church bells in his cars, "I
+had to give the fellow a lesson; simply had to."
+
+"It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people about," said
+Jessie.
+
+"These louts get unbearable," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "If now and then we
+didn't give them a lesson,--well, a lady cyclist in the roads would be
+an impossibility."
+
+"I suppose every woman shrinks from violence," said Jessie. "I
+suppose men ARE braver--in a way--than women. It seems to me-I can't
+imagine--how one could bring oneself to face a roomful of rough
+characters, pick out the bravest, and give him an exemplary thrashing.
+I quail at the idea. I thought only Ouida's guardsmen did things like
+that."
+
+"It was nothing more than my juty--as a gentleman," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"But to walk straight into the face of danger!"
+
+"It's habit," said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a
+particle of cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII. THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting at the
+Golden Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of an elaborate
+doubling movement through Dorsetshire towards Ringwood, where Jessie
+anticipated an answer from her schoolmistress friend. By this time they
+had been nearly sixty hours together, and you will understand that Mr.
+Hoopdriver's feelings had undergone a considerable intensification and
+development. At first Jessie had been only an impressionist sketch
+upon his mind, something feminine, active, and dazzling, something
+emphatically "above" him, cast into his company by a kindly fate.
+His chief idea, at the outset, as you know, had been to live up to
+her level, by pretending to be more exceptional, more wealthy, better
+educated, and, above all, better born than he was. His knowledge of the
+feminine mind was almost entirely derived from the young ladies he had
+met in business, and in that class (as in military society and among
+gentlemen's servants) the good old tradition of a brutal social
+exclusiveness is still religiously preserved. He had an almost
+intolerable dread of her thinking him a I bounder.' Later he began
+to perceive the distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a
+magnificent want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract
+views of the most advanced description, and her strength of conviction
+completely carried Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own Life,
+with emphasis, and Mr. Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to similar
+resolves. So soon as he grasped the tenor of her views, he perceived
+that he himself had thought as much from his earliest years. "Of
+course," he remarked, in a flash of sexual pride, "a man is freer than a
+woman. End in the Colonies, y'know, there isn't half the Conventionality
+you find in society in this country."
+
+He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality, and
+was quite unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded person. He
+suppressed the habits of years and made no proposal to go to church.
+He discussed church-going in a liberal spirit. "It's jest a habit," he
+said, "jest a custom. I don't see what good it does you at all, really."
+And he made a lot of excellent jokes at the chimney-pot hat, jokes he
+had read in the Globe 'turnovers' on that subject. But he showed his
+gentle breeding by keeping his gloves on all through the Sunday's ride,
+and ostentatiously throwing away more than half a cigarette when they
+passed a church whose congregation was gathering for afternoon service.
+He cautiously avoided literary topics, except by way of compliment,
+seeing that she was presently to be writing books.
+
+It was on Jessie's initiative that they attended service in the
+old-fashioned gallery of Blandford church. Jessie's conscience, I may
+perhaps tell you, was now suffering the severest twinges. She perceived
+clearly that things were not working out quite along the lines she had
+designed-. She had read her Olive Schreiner and George Egerton, and so
+forth, with all the want of perfect comprehension of one who is still
+emotionally a girl. She knew the thing to do was to have a flat and
+to go to the British Museum and write leading articles for the daily
+papers until something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable
+person) had kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable
+horridness, all would have been well. Now her only hope was that
+liberal-minded woman, Miss Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her out,
+highly educated, into the world. Miss Mergle had told her at parting
+to live fearlessly and truly, and had further given her a volume of
+Emerson's Essays and Motley's "Dutch Republic," to help her through the
+rapids of adolescence.
+
+Jessie's feelings for her stepmother's household at Surbiton amounted to
+an active detestation. There are no graver or more solemn women in the
+world than these clever girls whose scholastic advancement has retarded
+their feminine coquetry. In spite of the advanced tone of 'Thomas
+Plantagenet's' antimarital novel, Jessie had speedily seen through that
+amiable woman's amiable defences. The variety of pose necessitated by
+the corps of 'Men' annoyed her to an altogether unreasonable degree. To
+return to this life of ridiculous unreality--unconditional capitulation
+to 'Conventionality' was an exasperating prospect. Yet what else was
+there to do? You will understand, therefore, that at times she was moody
+(and Mr. Hoopdriver respectfully silent and attentive) and at times
+inclined to eloquent denunciation of the existing order of things. She
+was a Socialist, Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation
+that he went further, intending, thereby, no less than the horrors
+of anarchism. He would have owned up to the destruction of the Winter
+Palace indeed, had he had the faintest idea where the Winter Palace was,
+and had his assurance amounted to certainty that the Winter Palace was
+destroyed. He agreed with her cordially that the position of women was
+intolerable, but checked himself on the' verge of the proposition that a
+girl ought not to expect a fellow to hand down boxes for her when he was
+getting the 'swap' from a customer. It was Jessie's preoccupation
+with her own perplexities, no doubt, that delayed the unveiling of Mr.
+Hoopdriver all through Saturday and Sunday. Once or twice, however,
+there were incidents that put him about terribly--even questions that
+savoured of suspicion.
+
+On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted wakefulness
+came upon him. Unaccountably he realised he was a contemptible liar,
+All through the small hours of Monday he reviewed the tale of his
+falsehoods, and when he tried to turn his mind from that, the financial
+problem suddenly rose upon him. He heard two o'clock strike, and three.
+It is odd how unhappy some of us are at times, when we are at our
+happiest.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIV.
+
+"Good morning, Madam," said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the
+breakfast room of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he smiled,
+bowed, rubbed his hands together, and pulled out a chair for her, and
+rubbed his hands again.
+
+She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face. "Where HAVE
+I seen that before?" she said.
+
+"The chair?" said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+
+"No--the attitude."
+
+She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while curiously
+into his face. "And--Madam?"
+
+"It's a habit," said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. "A bad habit. Calling
+ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial roughness. Out there
+up country--y'know--the ladies--so rare--we call 'em all Madam."
+
+"You HAVE some funny habits, brother Chris," said Jessie. "Before you
+sell your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and stand
+for Parliament--What a fine thing it is to be a man!--you must cure
+yourself. That habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing your hands, and
+looking expectant."
+
+"It's a habit."
+
+"I know. But I don't think it a good one. You don't mind my telling
+you?"
+
+"Not a bit. I'm grateful."
+
+"I'm blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation," said Jessie,
+looking at the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his hand to his
+moustache and then, thinking this might be another habit, checked his
+arm and stuck his hand into his pocket. He felt juiced awkward, to use
+his private formula. Jessie's eye wandered to the armchair, where a
+piece of binding was loose, and, possibly to carry out her theory of an
+observant disposition, she turned and asked him for a pin.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and there,
+planted by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had impounded.
+
+"What an odd place to put pins!" exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+
+"It's 'andy," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I saw a chap in a shop do it once."
+
+"You must have a careful disposition," she said, over her shoulder,
+kneeling down to the chair.
+
+"In the centre of Africa--up country, that is--one learns to value
+pins," said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause. "There weren't
+over many pins in Africa. They don't lie about on the ground there." His
+face was now in a fine, red glow. Where would the draper break out next?
+He thrust his hands into his coat pockets, then took one out again,
+furtively removed the second pin and dropped it behind him gently. It
+fell with a loud 'ping' on the fender. Happily she made no remark, being
+preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and stood
+against it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were keeping
+breakfast a tremendous time. He took up his rolled serviette looked
+closely and scrutinisingly at the ring, then put his hand under the fold
+of the napkin and examined the texture, and put the thing down again.
+Then he had a vague impulse to finger his hollow wisdom tooth--happily
+checked. He suddenly discovered he was standing as if the table was a
+counter, and sat down forthwith. He drummed with his hand on the table.
+He felt dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+
+"Breakfast is late," said Jessie, standing up.
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to Ringwood.
+Then silence fell again.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing, looked
+again at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the corner of the
+tablecloth on the ends of his fingers, and regarded it. "Fifteen three,"
+he thought, privately.
+
+"Why do you do that?" said Jessie.
+
+"WHAT?" said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+
+"Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's face became quite a bright red. He began pulling his
+moustache nervously. "I know," he said. "I know. It's a queer habit,
+I know. But out there, you know, there's native servants, you know,
+and--it's a queer thing to talk about--but one has to look at things to
+see, don't y'know, whether they're quite clean or not. It's got to be a
+habit."
+
+"How odd!" said Jessie.
+
+"Isn't it?" mumbled Hoopdriver.
+
+"If I were a Sherlock Holmes," said Jessie, "I suppose I could have told
+you were a colonial from little things like that. But anyhow, I guessed
+it, didn't I?"
+
+"Yes," said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, "you guessed it."
+
+Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add, "unhappily
+in this case you guessed wrong." Did she suspect? Then, at the
+psychological moment, the girl bumped the door open with her tray and
+brought in the coffee and scrambled eggs.
+
+"I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes," said Jessie.
+
+Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days surged to
+the top of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+
+And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself away.
+
+
+
+
+XXXV.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning, sat with
+his cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the coffee. His ears
+were a bright red, and his eyes bright. He took his coffee cup clumsily,
+cleared his throat, suddenly leant back in his chair, and thrust his
+hands deep into his pockets. "I'll do it," he said aloud.
+
+"Do what?" said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee pot. She
+was just beginning her scrambled egg.
+
+"Own up."
+
+"Own what?"
+
+"Miss Milton--I'm a liar." He put his head on one side and regarded her
+with a frown of tremendous resolution. Then in measured accents,
+and moving his head slowly from side to side, he announced, "Ay'm a
+deraper."
+
+"You're a draper? I thought--"
+
+"You thought wrong. But it's bound to come up. Pins, attitude,
+habits--It's plain enough.
+
+"I'm a draper's assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a
+draper's assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper."
+
+"A draper's assistant isn't a position to be ashamed of," she said,
+recovering, and not quite understanding yet what this all meant.
+
+"Yes, it is," he said, "for a man, in this country now. To be just
+another man's hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes you are told,
+and go to church to please customers, and work--There's no other kind of
+men stand such hours. A drunken bricklayer's a king to it."
+
+"But why are you telling me this now?"
+
+"It's important you should know at once."
+
+"But, Mr. Benson--"
+
+"That isn't all. If you don't mind my speaking about myself a bit,
+there's a few things I'd like to tell you. I can't go on deceiving you.
+My name's not Benson. WHY I told you Benson, I DON'T know. Except that
+I'm a kind of fool. Well--I wanted somehow to seem more than I was. My
+name's Hoopdriver."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"And that about South Africa--and that lion."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Lies."
+
+"Lies!"
+
+"And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And all the
+reminiscences of the giraffes--lies too. I never rode on no giraffes.
+I'd be afraid."
+
+He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased his
+conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity. This was a
+new side altogether to the man. "But WHY," she began.
+
+"Why did I tell you such things? _I_ don't know. Silly sort of chap, I
+expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow, now, I want you
+to know the truth."
+
+Silence. Breakfast untouched. "I thought I'd tell you," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. "I suppose it's snobbishness and all that kind of thing, as
+much as anything. I lay awake pretty near all last night thinking about
+myself; thinking what a got-up imitation of a man I was, and all that."
+
+"And you haven't any diamond shares, and you are not going into
+Parliament, and you're not--"
+
+"All Lies," said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. "Lies from beginning
+to end. 'Ow I came to tell 'em I DON'T know."
+
+She stared at him blankly.
+
+"I never set eyes on Africa in my life," said Mr. Hoopdriver, completing
+the confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his pocket, and with
+the nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of death is passed, began
+to drink his coffee.
+
+"It's a little surprising," began Jessie, vaguely.
+
+"Think it over," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I'm sorry from the bottom of my
+heart."
+
+And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little, and
+seemed lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by contrition and
+anxiety that he consumed an extraordinarily large breakfast out of pure
+nervousness, and ate his scrambled eggs for the most part with the
+spoon that belonged properly to the marmalade. His eyes were gloomily
+downcast. She glanced at him through her eyelashes. Once or twice she
+struggled with laughter, once or twice she seemed to be indignant.
+
+"I don't know what to think," she said at last. "I don't know what
+to make of you--brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that you were
+perfectly honest. And somehow--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I think so still."
+
+"Honest--with all those lies!"
+
+"I wonder."
+
+"I don't," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I'm fair ashamed of myself. But
+anyhow--I've stopped deceiving you."
+
+"I THOUGHT," said the Young Lady in Grey, "that story of the lion--"
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Don't remind me of THAT."
+
+"I thought, somehow, I FELT, that the things you said didn't ring quite
+true." She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the expression of his
+face. "Of COURSE you are honest," she said. "How could I ever doubt it?
+As if _I_ had never pretended! I see it all now."
+
+Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast things. He
+looked at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing friendliness in her eyes.
+He scarcely understood at first. He rose, holding the marmalade spoon,
+and took her proffered hand with abject humility. "Lord," he broke out,
+"if you aren't enough--but there!"
+
+"I see it all now." A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured her
+humour. She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. "You did it,"
+she said, "because you wanted to help me. And you thought I was too
+Conventional to take help from one I might think my social inferior."
+
+"That was partly it," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"How you misunderstood me!" she said.
+
+"You don't mind?"
+
+"It was noble of you. But I am sorry," she said, "you should think me
+likely to be ashamed of you because you follow a decent trade."
+
+"I didn't know at first, you see," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He was
+as useful a citizen as could be,--it was proposed and carried,--and
+his lying was of the noblest. And so the breakfast concluded much more
+happily than his brightest expectation, and they rode out of ruddy
+little Blandford as though no shadow of any sort had come between them.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVI.
+
+As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees half-way up a
+stretch of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood, however, Mr. Hoopdriver
+reopened the question of his worldly position.
+
+"Ju think," he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette from his
+mouth, "that a draper's shopman IS a decent citizen?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"When he puts people off with what they don't quite want, for instance?"
+
+"Need he do that?"
+
+"Salesmanship," said Hoopdriver. "Wouldn't get a crib if he
+didn't.--It's no good your arguing. It's not a particularly honest nor a
+particularly useful trade; it's not very high up; there's no freedom
+and no leisure--seven to eight-thirty every day in the week; don't leave
+much edge to live on, does it?--real workmen laugh at us and educated
+chaps like bank clerks and solicitors' clerks look down on us. You
+look respectable outside, and inside you are packed in dormitories like
+convicts, fed on bread and butter and bullied like slaves. You're
+just superior enough to feel that you're not superior. Without capital
+there's no prospects; one draper in a hundred don't even earn enough to
+marry on; and if he DOES marry, his G.V. can just use him to black boots
+if he likes, and he daren't put his back up. That's drapery! And you
+tell me to be contented. Would YOU be contented if you was a shop girl?"
+
+She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown eyes,
+and he remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+
+Presently he spoke. "I've been thinking," he said, and stopped.
+
+She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand. There
+was a light in her eyes that made the expression of them tender. Mr.
+Hoopdriver had not looked in her face while he had talked. He had
+regarded the grass, and pointed his remarks with redknuckled hands held
+open and palms upwards. Now they hung limply over his knees.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"I was thinking it this morning," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Of course it's silly." "Well?"
+
+"It's like this. I'm twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all right
+to fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years behind.--Is it too
+late? I wasn't so backward. I did algebra, and Latin up to auxiliary
+verbs, and French genders. I got a kind of grounding."
+
+"And now you mean, should you go on working?"
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "That's it. You can't do much at drapery
+without capital, you know. But if I could get really educated. I've
+thought sometimes..."
+
+"Why not?" said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. "You think?" he
+said. "Of course. You are a Man. You are free--" She warmed. "I wish I
+were you to have the chance of that struggle."
+
+"Am I Man ENOUGH?" said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing himself.
+"There's that eight years," he said to her.
+
+"You can make it up. What you call educated men--They're not going on.
+You can catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing golf, and thinking
+of clever things to say to women like my stepmother, and dining out.
+You're in front of them already in one thing. They think they know
+everything. You don't. And they know such little things."
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "How you encourage a fellow!"
+
+"If I could only help you," she said, and left an eloquent hiatus. He
+became pensive again.
+
+"It's pretty evident you don't think much of a draper," he said
+abruptly.
+
+Another interval. "Hundreds of men," she said, "have come from the very
+lowest ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and Hugh Miller, a
+stonemason; and plenty of others. Dodsley was a footman--"
+
+"But drapers! We're too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats and
+cuffs might get crumpled--"
+
+"Wasn't there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper."
+
+"There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard tell
+of."
+
+"Have you ever read 'Hearts Insurgent'?"
+
+"Never," said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context, but
+suddenly broke out with an account of his literary requirements. "The
+fact is--I've read precious little. One don't get much of a chance,
+situated as I am. We have a library at business, and I've gone through
+that. Most Besant I've read, and a lot of Mrs. Braddon's and Rider
+Haggard and Marie Corelli--and, well--a Ouida or so. They're good
+stories, of course, and first-class writers, but they didn't seem to
+have much to do with me. But there's heaps of books one hears talked
+about, I HAVEN'T read."
+
+"Don't you read any other books but novels?"
+
+"Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can't get the
+books. I have been to some extension lectures, of course, 'Lizabethan
+Dramatists,' it was, but it seemed a little high-flown, you know. And I
+went and did wood-carving at the same place. But it didn't seem leading
+nowhere, and I cut my thumb and chucked it."
+
+He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his hands
+limp. "It makes me sick," he said, "to think how I've been fooled with.
+My old schoolmaster ought to have a juiced HIDING. He's a thief. He
+pretended to undertake to make a man of me, and be's stole twenty-three
+years of my life, filled me up with scraps and sweepings. Here I am! I
+don't KNOW anything, and I can't DO anything, and all the learning time
+is over."
+
+"Is it?" she said; but he did not seem to hear her. "My o' people didn't
+know any better, and went and paid thirty pounds premium--thirty pounds
+down to have me made THIS. The G.V. promised to teach me the trade, and
+he never taught me anything but to be a Hand. It's the way they do with
+draper's apprentices. If every swindler was locked up--well, you'd have
+nowhere to buy tape and cotton. It's all very well to bring up Burns and
+those chaps, but I'm not that make. Yet I'm not such muck that I might
+not have been better--with teaching. I wonder what the chaps who sneer
+and laugh at such as me would be if they'd been fooled about as I've
+been. At twenty-three--it's a long start."
+
+He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver indeed
+than him of the glorious imaginings. "It's YOU done this," he said.
+"You're real. And it sets me thinking what I really am, and what I might
+have been. Suppose it was all different--"
+
+"MAKE it different."
+
+"How?"
+
+"WORK. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man."
+
+"Ah!" said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his eyes.
+"And even then--"
+
+"No! It's not much good. I'm beginning too late."
+
+And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation ended.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVII. IN THE NEW FOREST
+
+At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment. There
+was no letter for her at the post office. Opposite the hotel, The
+Chequered Career, was a machine shop with a conspicuously second-hand
+Marlborough Club tandem tricycle displayed in the window, together with
+the announcement that bicycles and tricycles were on hire within. The
+establishment was impressed on Mr. Hoopdriver's mind by the proprietor's
+action in coming across the road and narrowly inspecting their machines.
+His action revived a number of disagreeable impressions, but, happily,
+came to nothing. While they were still lunching, a tall clergyman,
+with a heated face, entered the room and sat down at the table next to
+theirs. He was in a kind of holiday costume; that is to say, he had a
+more than usually high collar, fastened behind and rather the worse for
+the weather, and his long-tail coat had been replaced by a black jacket
+of quite remarkable brevity. He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his
+trouser legs were grey with dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw
+in the place of the customary soft felt. He was evidently socially
+inclined.
+
+"A most charming day, sir," he said, in a ringing tenor.
+
+"Charming," said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+
+"You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country," said the
+clergyman.
+
+"Touring," explained Mr. Hoopdriver. "I can imagine that, with a
+properly oiled machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way of
+seeing the country."
+
+"No," said Mr. Hoopdriver; "it isn't half a bad way of getting about."
+
+"For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be, I
+should imagine, a delightful bond."
+
+"Quite so," said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+
+"Do you ride a tandem?"
+
+"No--we're separate," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"The motion through the air is indisputably of a very exhilarating
+description." With that decision, the clergyman turned to give his
+orders to the attendant, in a firm, authoritative voice, for a cup of
+tea, two gelatine lozenges, bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow.
+"The gelatine lozenges I must have. I require them to precipitate the
+tannin in my tea," he remarked to the room at large, and folding his
+hands, remained for some time with his chin thereon, staring fixedly at
+a little picture over Mr. Hoopdriver's head.
+
+"I myself am a cyclist," said the clergyman, descending suddenly upon
+Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. "What machine,
+may I ask?"
+
+"I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I
+regret to say, considered too--how shall I put it?--flippant by my
+parishioners. So I have a tricycle. I have just been hauling it hither."
+
+"Hauling!" said Jessie, surprised.
+
+"With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back."
+
+The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb. Mr.
+Hoopdriver's face passed through several phases of surprise. Then he saw
+the explanation. "Had an accident?"
+
+"I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to go
+round. I found myself about five miles from here with an absolutely
+immobile machine."
+
+"Ow!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie
+glanced at this insane person.
+
+"It appears," said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he had
+created, "that my man carefully washed out the bearings with paraffin,
+and let the machine dry without oiling it again. The consequence was
+that they became heated to a considerable temperature and jammed. Even
+at the outset the machine ran stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being
+inclined to ascribe this stiffness to my own lassitude, merely redoubled
+my exertions."
+
+"'Ot work all round," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of life to
+do whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe, indeed, that the
+bearings became red hot. Finally one of the wheels jammed together. A
+side wheel it was, so that its stoppage necessitated an inversion of the
+entire apparatus,--an inversion in which I participated."
+
+"Meaning, that you went over?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much
+amused.
+
+"Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly. You may
+understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I expostulated--playfully,
+of course. Happily the road was not overlooked. Finally, the entire
+apparatus became rigid, and I abandoned the unequal contest. For all
+practical purposes the tricycle was no better than a heavy chair without
+castors. It was a case of hauling or carrying."
+
+The clergyman's nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+
+"Five miles," said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread and
+butter vigorously. "Happily," he said, "I am an eupeptic, energetic sort
+of person on principle. I would all men were likewise."
+
+"It's the best way," agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation gave
+precedence to bread and butter.
+
+"Gelatine," said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea
+thoughtfully, "precipitates the tannin in one's tea and renders it easy
+of digestion."
+
+"That's a useful sort of thing to know," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You are altogether welcome," said the clergyman, biting generously at
+two pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+
+In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace towards
+Stoney Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South Africa being
+in abeyance. Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by disagreeable thoughts. He
+had changed the last sovereign at Ringwood. The fact had come upon him
+suddenly. Now too late he was reflecting upon his resources. There was
+twenty pounds or more in the post office savings bank in Putney, but his
+book was locked up in his box at the Antrobus establishment. Else this
+infatuated man would certainly have surreptitiously withdrawn the entire
+sum in order to prolong these journeyings even for a few days. As it
+was, the shadow of the end fell across his happiness. Strangely enough,
+in spite of his anxiety and the morning's collapse, he was still in a
+curious emotional state that was certainly not misery. He was forgetting
+his imaginings and posings, forgetting himself altogether in his growing
+appreciation of his companion. The most tangible trouble in his mind was
+the necessity of breaking the matter to her.
+
+A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was reached,
+and they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little oak tree. Near
+the crest the road looped on itself, so that, looking back, it sloped
+below them up to the right and then came towards them. About them grew
+a rich heather with stunted oaks on the edge of a deep ditch along the
+roadside, and this road was sandy; below the steepness of the hill,
+however, it was grey and barred with shadows, for there the trees
+clustered thick and tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled clumsily with his
+cigarettes.
+
+"There's a thing I got to tell you," he said, trying to be perfectly
+calm.
+
+"Yes?" she said.
+
+"I'd like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y'know."
+
+"I'm very unsettled," said Jessie. "You are thinking of writing Books?"
+
+"Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that."
+
+"And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How long'd it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?"
+
+"I don't know at all. I believe there are a great many women journalists
+and sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists. But I suppose it
+takes time. Women, you know, edit most papers nowadays, George Egerton
+says. I ought, I suppose, to communicate with a literary agent."
+
+"Of course," said Hoopdriver, "it's very suitable work. Not being heavy
+like the drapery."
+
+"There's heavy brain labour, you must remember."
+
+"That wouldn't hurt YOU," said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a compliment.
+
+"It's like this," he said, ending a pause. "It's a juiced nuisance
+alluding to these matters, but--we got very little more money."
+
+He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her. "I was
+counting, of course, on your friend's writing and your being able to
+take some action to-day." 'Take some action' was a phrase he had learnt
+at his last 'swop.'
+
+"Money," said Jessie. "I didn't think of money."
+
+"Hullo! Here's a tandem bicycle," said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly, and
+pointing with his cigarette.
+
+She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the trees at
+the foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly over their work and
+made a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to take the rise. The machine
+was evidently too highly geared for hill climbing, and presently the
+rearmost rider rose on his saddle and hopped off, leaving his companion
+to any fate he found proper. The foremost rider was a man unused to
+such machines and apparently undecided how to dismount. He wabbled a
+few yards up the hill with a long tail of machine wabbling behind
+him. Finally, he made an attempt to jump off as one does off a single
+bicycle, hit his boot against the backbone, and collapsed heavily,
+falling on his shoulder.
+
+She stood up. "Dear me!" she said. "I hope he isn't hurt."
+
+The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+
+Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up and
+wheeled out of the way, and then the fallen rider, being assisted, got
+up slowly and stood rubbing his arm. No serious injury seemed to be
+done to the man, and the couple presently turned their attention to the
+machine by the roadside. They were not in cycling clothes Hoopdriver
+observed. One wore the grotesque raiment for which the Cockney discovery
+of the game of golf seems indirectly blamable. Even at this distance the
+flopping flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at the top of his
+calves, and the chequering of his stockings were perceptible. The other,
+the rear rider, was a slender little man in grey.
+
+"Amatoors," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her eyes. She
+no longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering at the machine
+down below there.
+
+"How much have you?" she said.
+
+He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins, counted
+them with his left index finger, and held them out to her. "Thirteen
+four half," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Every penny."
+
+"I have half a sovereign," she said. "Our bill wherever we stop--" The
+hiatus was more eloquent than many words.
+
+"I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this," said Jessie.
+
+"It's a juiced nuisance."
+
+"Money," said Jessie. "Is it possible--Surely! Conventionality! May only
+people of means--Live their own Lives? I never thought ..."
+
+Pause.
+
+"Here's some more cyclists coming," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from among
+the trees emerged the massive bulk of a 'Marlborough Club' tandem,
+ridden by a slender woman in grey and a burly man in a Norfolk jacket.
+Following close upon this came lank black figure in a piebald straw hat,
+riding a tricycle of antiquated pattern with two large wheels in front.
+The man in grey remained bowed over the bicycle, with his stomach
+resting on the saddle, but his companion stood up and addressed some
+remark to the tricycle riders. Then it seemed as if he pointed up hill
+to where Mr. Hoopdriver and his companion stood side by side. A still
+odder thing followed; the lady in grey took out her handkerchief,
+appeared to wave it for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from her
+companion the white signal vanished.
+
+"Surely," said Jessie, peering under her hand. "It's never--"
+
+The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering elaborately
+from side to side to ease the ascent. It was evident, from his heaving
+shoulders and depressed head, that the burly gentleman was exerting
+himself. The clerical person on the tricycle assumed the shape of a note
+of interrogation. Then on the heels of this procession came a dogcart
+driven by a man in a billycock hat and containing a lady in dark green.
+
+"Looks like some sort of excursion," said Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand. "Surely,"
+she said.
+
+The clergyman's efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious jerking
+motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself, and he partly
+dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his machine up hill again
+immediately and began to wheel it. Then the burly gentleman dismounted,
+and with a courtly attentiveness assisted the lady in grey to alight.
+There was some little difference of opinion as to assistance, she
+so clearly wished to help push. Finally she gave in, and the burly
+gentleman began impelling the machine up hill by his own unaided
+strength. His face made a dot of brilliant colour among the greys and
+greens at the foot of the hill. The tandem bicycle was now, it seems,
+repaired, and this joined the tail of the procession, its riders walking
+behind the dogcart, from which the lady in green and the driver had now
+descended.
+
+"Mr. Hoopdriver," said Jessie. "Those people--I'm almost sure--"
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he turned
+to pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and assisted her to
+mount.
+
+At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people coming
+up the hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie's doubts at once.
+Two handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted. The riders of the tandem
+bicycle began to run it up hill, past the other vehicles. But our young
+people did not wait for further developments of the pursuit. In another
+moment they were out of sight, riding hard down a steady incline towards
+Stoney Cross.
+
+Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill brow,
+Jessie looked back and saw the tandem rising over the crest, with its
+rear rider just tumbling into the saddle. "They're coming," she said,
+and bent her head over her handles in true professional style.
+
+They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw ahead
+of them a number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the roadway.
+Involuntarily they slackened. "Shoo!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, and the
+ponies kicked up their heels derisively. At that Mr. Hoopdriver lost his
+temper and charged at them, narrowly missed one, and sent them jumping
+the ditch into the bracken under the trees, leaving the way clear for
+Jessie.
+
+Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew heavy,
+and Mr. Hoopdriver's breath sounded like a saw. The tandem appeared,
+making frightful exertions, at the foot, while the chase was still
+climbing. Then, thank Heaven! a crest and a stretch of up and down road,
+whose only disadvantage was its pitiless exposure to the afternoon sun.
+The tandem apparently dismounted at the hill, and did not appear against
+the hot blue sky until they were already near some trees and a good mile
+away.
+
+"We're gaining," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of
+perspiration dropping from brow to cheek. "That hill--"
+
+But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly spent.
+Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of shame
+prolonged the liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From that point the
+tandem grained upon them steadily. At the Rufus Stone, it was scarcely
+a hundred yards behind. Then one desperate spurt, and they found
+themselves upon a steady downhill stretch among thick pine woods.
+Downhill nothing can beat a highly geared tandem bicycle. Automatically
+Mr. Hoopdriver put up his feet, and Jessie slackened her pace. In
+another moment they heard the swish of the fat pneumatics behind them,
+and the tandem passed Hoopdriver and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver
+felt a mad impulse to collide with this abominable machine as it
+passed him. His only consolation was to notice that its riders, riding
+violently, were quite as dishevelled as himself and smothered in sandy
+white dust.
+
+Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders shot
+panting past them downhill. "Brake," said Dangle, who was riding behind,
+and stood up on the pedals. For a moment the velocity of the thing
+increased, and then they saw the dust fly from the brake, as it came
+down on the front tire. Dangle's right leg floundered in the air as he
+came off in the road. The tandem wobbled. "Hold it!" cried Phipps over
+his shoulder, going on downhill. "I can't get off if you don't hold it."
+He put on the brake until the machine stopped almost dead, and then
+feeling unstable began to pedal again. Dangle shouted after him. "Put
+out your foot, man," said Dangle.
+
+In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards or more
+beyond their quarry. Then Phipps realized his possibilities, slacked up
+with the brake, and let the thing go over sideways, dropping on to his
+right foot. With his left leg still over the saddle, and still
+holding the handles, he looked over his shoulder and began addressing
+uncomplimentary remarks to Dangle. "You only think of yourself," said
+Phipps, with a florid face.
+
+"They have forgotten us," said Jessie, turning her machine.
+
+"There was a road at the top of the hill--to Lyndhurst," said
+Hoopdriver, following her example.
+
+"It's no good. There's the money. We must give it up. But let us go back
+to that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don't see why we should be led captive."
+
+So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her companion
+mounted and rode quietly back up the hill again. As they dismounted at
+the hotel entrance, the tandem overtook them, and immediately afterwards
+the dogcart came into view in pursuit. Dangle jumped off.
+
+"Miss Milton, I believe," said Dangle, panting and raising a damp cap
+from his wet and matted hair.
+
+"I SAY," said Phipps, receding involuntarily. "Don't go doing it again,
+Dangle. HELP a chap."
+
+"One minute," said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+
+Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the hotel
+entrance. Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp but defiant.
+
+
+
+
+XXXVIII. AT THE RUFUS STONE
+
+He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him. Phipps
+was abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem, which he was now
+wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be quarrelsome. "Miss Milton?" he
+said briefly.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+
+"Miss Milton within?" said Dangle.
+
+"AND not to be disturved," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You are a scoundrel, sir," said Mr. Dangle.
+
+"Et your service," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "She awaits 'er stepmother,
+sir."
+
+Mr. Dangle hesitated. "She will be here immediately," he said. "Here is
+her friend, Miss Mergle."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of immense
+calm, thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then with one of those
+fatal hesitations of his, it occurred to him that this attitude was
+merely vulgarly defiant he withdrew both, returned one and pulled at
+the insufficient moustache with the other. Miss Mergle caught him in
+confusion. "Is this the man?" she said to Dangle, and forthwith, "How
+DARE you, sir? How dare you face me? That poor girl!"
+
+
+"You will permit me to observe," began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a splendid
+drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this business, as a
+romantic villain.
+
+"Ugh," said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the midriff
+with her extended palms, and sending him staggering backward into the
+hall of the hotel.
+
+"Let me pass," said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. "How dare
+you resist my passage?" and so swept by him and into the dining-room,
+wherein Jessie had sought refuge.
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the umbrella-stand,
+Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by Miss Mergle's activity,
+came in upon her heels, Phipps leading. "How dare you prevent that lady
+passing?" said Phipps.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle's sense, dangerous, but
+he made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared at the end of the
+passage, guardant. "It is men of your stamp, sir," said Phipps, "who
+discredit manhood."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. "Who the juice are
+you?" shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+
+"Who are YOU, sir?" retorted Phipps. "Who are you? That's the question.
+What are YOU, and what are you doing, wandering at large with a young
+lady under age?"
+
+"Don't speak to him," said Dangle.
+
+"I'm not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at me,"
+said Hoopdriver. "Not Likely." And added fiercely, "And that I tell you,
+sir."
+
+He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly fierce at
+one another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have happened, if the
+long clergyman had not appeared in the doorway, heated but deliberate.
+"Petticoated anachronism," said the long clergyman in the doorway,
+apparently still suffering from the antiquated prejudice that demanded a
+third wheel and a black coat from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps
+and Hoopdriver for a moment, then extending his hand towards the latter,
+he waved it up and down three times, saying, "Tchak, tchak, tchak," very
+deliberately as he did so. Then with a concluding "Ugh!" and a gesture
+of repugnance he passed on into the dining-room from which the voice
+of Miss Mergle was distinctly audible remarking that the weather was
+extremely hot even for the time of year.
+
+This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing effect
+upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately completed by the
+advent of the massive Widgery.
+
+"Is this the man?" said Widgery very grimly, and producing a special
+voice for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+
+"Don't hurt him!" said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. "However much
+wrong he has done her--No violence!"
+
+"'Ow many more of you?" said Hoopdriver, at bay before the umbrella
+stand. "Where is she? What has he done with her?" said Mrs. Milton.
+
+"I'm not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of strangers,"
+said Mr. Hoopdriver. "So you needn't think it."
+
+"Please don't worry, Mr. Hoopdriver," said Jessie, suddenly appearing in
+the door of the dining-room. "I'm here, mother." Her face was white.
+
+Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional charge
+at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room. Widgery moved as
+if to follow, and hesitated. "You'd better make yourself scarce," he
+said to Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"I shan't do anything of the kind," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a catching
+of the breath. "I'm here defending that young lady."
+
+"You've done her enough mischief, I should think," said Widgery,
+suddenly walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door behind
+him, leaving Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+
+"Clear!" said Phipps, threateningly.
+
+"I shall go and sit out in the garden," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with
+dignity. "There I shall remain."
+
+"Don't make a row with him," said Dangle.
+
+And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing dignity.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIX.
+
+So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion
+is over. In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a remarkable
+collection of wheeled instruments, watched over by Dangle and Phipps in
+grave and stately attitudes, and by the driver of a stylish dogcart from
+Ringwood. In the garden behind, in an attitude of nervous prostration,
+Mr. Hoopdriver was seated on a rustic seat. Through the open window of
+a private sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of men and women in
+conference. Occasionally something that might have been a girlish sob.
+
+"I fail to see what status Widgery has," says Dangle, "thrusting himself
+in there."
+
+"He takes too much upon himself," said Phipps.
+
+"I've been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day," said Dangle,
+and stopped.
+
+"They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon."
+
+"Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course," said Dangle,
+with a gloomy magnanimity.
+
+He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of the man's
+chequered legs. "Financially it wouldn't be half bad."
+
+"He's so dull and heavy," said Phipps.
+
+Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and dexterity,
+taken the chair and was opening the case against the unfortunate Jessie.
+I regret to have to say that my heroine had been appalled by the visible
+array of public opinion against her excursion, to the pitch of tears.
+She was sitting with flushed cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the
+table opposite to the clergyman. She held her handkerchief crumpled up
+in her extended hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as possible,
+and occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie's hand,
+to indicate forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which
+touched Widgery very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B. A.),
+sat on the opposite side near the clergyman. She was the strong-minded
+schoolmistress to whom Jessie had written, and who had immediately
+precipitated the pursuit upon her. She had picked up the clergyman in
+Ringwood, and had told him everything forthwith, having met him once at
+a British Association meeting. He had immediately constituted himself
+administrator of the entire business. Widgery, having been foiled in an
+attempt to conduct the proceedings, stood with his legs wide apart in
+front of the fireplace ornament, and looked profound and sympathetic.
+Jessie's account of her adventures was a chary one and given amidst
+frequent interruptions. She surprised herself by skilfully omitting any
+allusion to the Bechamel episode. She completely exonerated Hoopdriver
+from the charge of being more than an accessory to her escapade.
+But public feeling was heavy against Hoopdriver. Her narrative was
+inaccurate and sketchy, but happily the others were too anxious to pass
+opinions to pin her down to particulars. At last they had all the facts
+they would permit.
+
+"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "I can only ascribe this
+extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the wildest
+misconceptions of your place in the world and of your duties and
+responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your present emotion is due
+not so much to a real and sincere penitence for your disobedience and
+folly as to a positive annoyance at our most fortunate interference--"
+
+"Not that," said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. "Not that."
+
+"But WHY did she go off like this?" said Widgery. "That's what _I_ want
+to know."
+
+Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said "Hush!" and the
+ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the meeting. "I
+cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has seized upon the more
+intelligent portion of the feminine community. You had a pleasant home,
+a most refined and intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to
+cherish and protect you--"
+
+"If I HAD a mother," gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious snare of
+self-pity, and sobbing.
+
+"To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out of it
+all alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-"
+
+"I wanted to learn," said Jessie.
+
+"You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn."
+
+"AH!" from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+
+"It isn't fair for all of you to argue at me at once," submitted Jessie,
+irrelevantly.
+
+"A world full of unknown dangers," resumed the clergyman. "Your proper
+place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of you. You
+have been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by a class of
+literature which, with all due respect to distinguished authoress
+that shall be nameless, I must call the New Woman Literature. In that
+deleterious ingredient of our book boxes--"
+
+"I don't altogether agree with you there," said Miss Mergle, throwing
+her head back and regarding him firmly through her spectacles, and Mr.
+Widgery coughed.
+
+"What HAS all this to do with me?" asked Jessie, availing herself of the
+interruption.
+
+"The point is," said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, "that in my books--"
+
+"All I want to do," said Jessie, "is to go about freely by myself. Girls
+do so in America. Why not here?"
+
+"Social conditions are entirely different in America," said Miss Mergle.
+"Here we respect Class Distinctions."
+
+"It's very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go away for
+a holiday if I want to."
+
+"With a strange young man, socially your inferior," said Widgery, and
+made her flush by his tone.
+
+"Why not?" she said. "With anybody."
+
+"They don't do that, even in America," said Miss Mergle.
+
+"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "the most elementary
+principles of decorum--A day will come when you will better understand
+how entirely subservient your ideas are to the very fundamentals of
+our present civilisation, when you will better understand the harrowing
+anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by this inexplicable flight of yours.
+We can only put things down at present, in charity, to your ignorance--"
+
+"You have to consider the general body of opinion, too," said Widgery.
+
+"Precisely," said Miss Mergle. "There is no such thing as conduct in the
+absolute." "If once this most unfortunate business gets about," said the
+clergyman, "it will do you infinite harm."
+
+"But I'VE done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for other
+people's--"
+
+"The world has no charity," said Mrs. Milton.
+
+"For a girl," said Jessie. "No."
+
+"Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us listen
+to reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours will do you
+infinite harm, if once it is generally known. And not only that, it will
+cause infinite pain to those who care for you. But if you will return at
+once to your home, causing it to be understood that you have been with
+friends for these last few days--"
+
+"Tell lies," said Jessie. "Certainly not. Most certainly not. But I
+understand that is how your absence is understood at present, and there
+is no reason--"
+
+Jessie's grip tightened on her handkerchief. "I won't go back," she
+said, "to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own, what books I
+need to read, to be free to go out by myself alone, Teaching--"
+
+"Anything," said Mrs. Milton, "anything in reason."
+
+"But will you keep your promise?" said Jessie.
+
+"Surely you won't dictate to your mother!" said Widgery.
+
+"My stepmother! I don't want to dictate. I want definite promises now."
+
+"This is most unreasonable," said the clergyman. "Very well," said
+Jessie, swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. "Then I won't go
+back. My life is being frittered away--"
+
+"LET her have her way," said Widgery.
+
+"A room then. All your Men. I'm not to come down and talk away half my
+days--"
+
+"My dear child, if only to save you," said Mrs. Milton. "If you don't
+keep your promise--"
+
+"Then I take it the matter is practically concluded," said the
+clergyman. "And that you very properly submit to return to your proper
+home. And now, if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we take
+tea. Freed of its tannin, nothing, I think, is more refreshing and
+stimulating."
+
+"There's a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six," said
+Widgery, unfolding a time table. "That gives us about half an hour or
+three-quarters here--if a conveyance is obtainable, that is."
+
+"A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the tannin in
+the form of tannate of gelatine," said the clergyman to Miss Mergle, in
+a confidential bray.
+
+Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and
+shoulders over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved towards
+the door. "While you have tea, mother," she said, "I must tell Mr.
+Hoopdriver of our arrangements."
+
+"Don't you think I--" began the clergyman.
+
+"No," said Jessie, very rudely; "I don't."
+
+"But, Jessie, haven't you already--"
+
+"You are already breaking the capitulation," said Jessie.
+
+"Will you want the whole half hour?" said Widgery, at the bell.
+
+"Every minute," said Jessie, in the doorway. "He's behaved very nobly to
+me."
+
+"There's tea," said Widgery.
+
+"I've had tea."
+
+"He may not have behaved badly," said the clergyman. "But he's certainly
+an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed young girl--"
+
+Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight outside. It
+was over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as she was concerned,
+and with the swift blow that separated them, he realised all that those
+days had done for him. He tried to grasp the bearings of their position.
+Of course, they would take her away to those social altitudes of hers.
+She would become an inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him
+say good-bye to her?
+
+How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he had
+first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along the riverside
+road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor, remembering it as if
+everything had been done of his own initiative. "Brave, brave!" she had
+called him. And afterwards, when she came down to him in the morning,
+kindly, quiet. But ought he to have persuaded her then to return to
+her home? He remembered some intention of the sort. Now these people
+snatched her away from him as though he was scarcely fit to live in the
+same world with her. No more he was! He felt he had presumed upon her
+worldly ignorance in travelling with her day after day. She was
+so dainty, so delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate her
+expressions, the light of her eyes, the turn of her face.. .
+
+He wasn't good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody was.
+Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say? That? But
+they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her mother would be
+there as--what was it? Chaperone. He'd never once had a chance of saying
+what he felt; indeed, it was only now he was beginning to realise what
+he felt. Love I he wouldn't presume. It was worship. If only he could
+have one more chance. He must have one more chance, somewhere, somehow.
+Then he would pour out his soul to her eloquently. He felt eloquently,
+and words would come. He was dust under her feet...
+
+His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and Jessie
+appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. "Come away from here," she
+said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. "I'm going home with them.
+We have to say good-bye."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose without a
+word.
+
+
+
+
+XL.
+
+At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the hotel in
+silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced at her and saw
+her ips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her face was hot and
+bright. She was looking straight before her. He could think of nothing
+to say, and thrust his hands in his pockets and looked away from her
+intentionally. After a while she began to talk. They dealt disjointedly
+with scenery first, and then with the means of self-education. She took
+his address at Antrobus's and promised to send him some books. But
+even with that it was spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for
+the fighting mood was over. She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the
+memories of her late battle, and that appearance hurt him.
+
+"It's the end," he whispered to himself. "It's the end."
+
+They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at last
+to a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of country. There,
+by a common impulse, they stopped. She looked at her watch--a little
+ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of forest rolling away
+beneath them, crest beyond crest, of leafy trees, fading at last into
+blue.
+
+"The end" ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
+thoughts.
+
+"And so," she said, presently, breaking the silence, "it comes to
+good-bye."
+
+For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his resolution.
+"There is one thing I MUST say."
+
+"Well?" she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent argument.
+"I ask no return. But--"
+
+Then he stopped. "I won't say it. It's no good. It would be rot from
+me--now. I wasn't going to say anything. Good-bye."
+
+She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. "No," she
+said. "But don't forget you are going to work. Remember, brother Chris,
+you are my friend. You will work. You are not a very strong man, you
+know, now--you will forgive me--nor do you know all you should. But what
+will you be in six years' time?"
+
+He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his weak mouth
+seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he could not say.
+
+"I'll work," he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a moment.
+Then he said, with a motion of his head, "I won't come back to THEM. Do
+you mind? Going back alone?"
+
+She took ten seconds to think. "No." she said, and held out her hand,
+biting her nether lip. "GOOD-BYE," she whispered.
+
+He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand
+limply, and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips. She would
+have snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her movement. She felt
+the touch of his lips, and then he had dropped her fingers and turned
+from her and was striding down the slope. A dozen paces away his foot
+turned in the lip of a rabbit hole, and he stumbled forward and almost
+fell. He recovered his balance and went on, not looking back. He never
+once looked back. She stared at his receding figure until it was small
+and far below her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids now,
+turned slowly, and walked with her hands gripped hard together behind
+her, towards Stoney Cross again.
+
+"I did not know," she whispered to herself. "I did not understand. Even
+now--No, I do not understand."
+
+
+
+
+XLI. THE ENVOY
+
+So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down there
+among the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think, or listening
+to what chances to his breathing. And of what came of it all, of the six
+years and afterwards, this is no place to tell. In truth, there is no
+telling it, for the years have still to run. But if you see how a mere
+counter-jumper, a cad on castors, and a fool to boot, may come to feel
+the little insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any extent won
+your sympathies, my end is attained. (If it is not attained, may Heaven
+forgive us both!) Nor will we follow this adventurous young lady of ours
+back to her home at Surbiton, to her new struggle against Widgery and
+Mrs. Milton combined. For, as she will presently hear, that devoted man
+has got his reward. For her, also, your sympathies are invited.
+
+The rest of this great holiday, too--five days there are left of it--is
+beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a slender figure in
+a dusty brown suit and heather mixture stockings, and brown shoes not
+intended to be cycled in, flitting Londonward through Hampshire and
+Berkshire and Surrey, going economically--for excellent reasons. Day by
+day he goes on, riding fitfully and for the most part through bye-roads,
+but getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He is a
+narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge with
+unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing expression
+sits upon the face of this rider, you observe. Sometimes he whistles
+noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks aloud, "a juiced good try,
+anyhow!" you hear; and sometimes, and that too often for my liking, he
+looks irritable and hopeless. "I know," he says, "I know. It's over
+and done. It isn't IN me. You ain't man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer
+silly hands!... Oh, my God!" and a gust of passion comes upon him and he
+rides furiously for a space.
+
+Sometimes again his face softens. "Anyhow, if I'm not to see her--she's
+going to lend me books," he thinks, and gets such comfort as he can.
+Then again; "Books! What's books?" Once or twice triumphant memories of
+the earlier incidents nerve his face for a while. "I put the ky-bosh on
+HIS little game," he remarks. "I DID that," and one might even call him
+happy in these phases. And, by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has
+been enamel-painted grey and carries a sonorous gong.
+
+This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines, Hampton,
+and Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing with the warmth of
+an August sunset and with all the 'prentice boys busy shutting up shop,
+and the work girls going home, and the shop folks peeping abroad, and
+the white 'buses full of late clerks and city folk rumbling home to
+their dinners, we part from him. He is back. To-morrow, the early
+rising, the dusting, and drudgery, begin again--but with a difference,
+with wonderful memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions
+replacing those discrepant dreams.
+
+He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a sigh,
+and pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus stable yard, as
+the apprentice with the high collar holds them open. There are words of
+greeting. "South Coast," you hear; and "splendid weather--splendid." He
+sighs. "Yes--swapped him off for a couple of sovs. It's a juiced good
+machine."
+
+The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our ken.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Wheels of Chance, by H. G. Wells
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+*The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Wheels of Chance, by Wells*
+#14 in our series by H. G. Wells [Herbert George]
+
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+The Wheels of Chance
+
+by H. G. Wells [Herbert George]
+
+April, 1998 [Etext #1264]
+
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+*The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Wheels of Chance, by Wells*
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+The Wheels of Chance; A Bicycling Idyll by H.G. Wells
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+The Wheels of Chance; A Bicycling Idyll by H.G. Wells
+Etext prepared by Dianne Bean of Phoenix, AZ with OmnipagePro
+software donated by Caere.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE WHEELS OF CHANCE; A BICYCLING IDYLL
+
+by H.G. Wells
+
+1896
+
+
+
+
+THE PRINCIPAL CHARACTER IN THE STORY
+
+I.
+
+If you (presuming you are of the sex that does such things)--if
+you had gone into the Drapery Emporium--which is really only
+magnificent for shop--of Messrs. Antrobus & Co.--a perfectly
+fictitious "Co.," by the bye--of Putney, on the 14th of August,
+1895, had turned to the right-hand side, where the blocks of
+white linen and piles of blankets rise up to the rail from which
+the pink and blue prints depend, you might have been served by
+the central figure of this story that is now beginning. He would
+have come forward, bowing and swaying, he would have extended two
+hands with largish knuckles and enormous cuffs over the counter,
+and he would have asked you, protruding a pointed chin and
+without the slightest anticipation of pleasure in his manner,
+what he might have the pleasure of showing you. Under certain
+circumstances--as, for instance, hats, baby linen, gloves, silks,
+lace, or curtains--he would simply have bowed politely, and with
+a drooping expression, and making a kind of circular sweep,
+invited you to "step this way," and so led you beyond his ken;
+but under other and happier conditions,--huckaback, blankets,
+dimity, cretonne, linen, calico, are cases in point,--he would
+have requested you to take a seat, emphasising the hospitality by
+leaning over the counter and gripping a chair back in a spasmodic
+manner, and so proceeded to obtain, unfold, and exhibit his goods
+for your consideration. Under which happier circumstances you
+might--if of an observing turn of mind and not too much of a
+housewife to be inhuman--have given the central figure of this
+story less cursory attention.
+
+Now if you had noticed anything about him, it would have been
+chiefly to notice how little he was noticeable. He wore the black
+morning coat, the black tie, and the speckled grey nether parts
+(descending into shadow and mystery below the counter) of his
+craft. He was of a pallid complexion, hair of a kind of dirty
+fairness, greyish eyes, and a skimpy, immature moustache under
+his peaked indeterminate nose. His features were all small, but
+none ill-shaped. A rosette of pins decorated the lappel of his
+coat. His remarks, you would observe, were entirely what people
+used to call cliche, formulae not organic to the occasion, but
+stereotyped ages ago and learnt years since by heart. "This,
+madam," he would say, "is selling very well" "We are doing a very
+good article at four three a yard." "We could show you some.
+thing better, of course." "No trouble, madam, I assure you." Such
+were the simple counters of his intercourse. So, I say, he would
+have presented himself to your superficial observation. He would
+have danced about behind the counter, have neatly refolded the
+goods he had shown you, have put on one side those you selected,
+extracted a little book with a carbon leaf and a tinfoil sheet
+from a fixture, made you out a little bill in that weak
+flourishing hand peculiar to drapers, and have bawled "Sayn!"
+Then a puffy little shop-walker would have come into view, looked
+at the bill for a second, very hard (showing you a parting down
+the middle of his head meanwhile), have scribbled a still more
+flourishing J. M. all over the document, have asked you if there
+was nothing more, have stood by you--supposing that you were
+paying cash--until the central figure of this story reappeared
+with the change. One glance more at him, and the puffy little
+shop-walker would have been bowing you out, with fountains of
+civilities at work all about you. And so the interview would have
+terminated.
+
+But real literature, as distinguished from anecdote, does not
+concern itself with superficial appearances alone. Literature is
+revelation. Modern literature is indecorous revelation. It is the
+duty of the earnest author to tell you what you would not have
+seen--even at the cost of some blushes. And the thing that you
+would not have seen about this young man, and the thing of the
+greatest moment to this story, the thing that must be told if the
+book is to be written, was--let us face it bravely--the
+Remarkable Condition of this Young Man's Legs.
+
+Let us approach the business with dispassionate explicitness. Let
+us assume something of the scientific spirit, the hard, almost
+professorial tone of the conscientious realist. Let us treat this
+young man's legs as a mere diagram, and indicate the points of
+interest with the unemotional precision of a lecturer's pointer.
+And so to our revelation. On the internal aspect of the right
+ankle of this young man you would have observed, ladies and
+gentlemen, a contusion and an abrasion; on the internal aspect of
+the left ankle a contusion also; on its external aspect a large
+yellowish bruise. On his left shin there were two bruises, one a
+leaden yellow graduating here and there into purple, and another,
+obviously of more recent date, of a blotchy red--tumid and
+threatening. Proceeding up the left leg in a spiral manner, an
+unnatural hardness and redness would have been discovered on the
+upper aspect of the calf, and above the knee and on the inner
+side, an extraordinary expanse of bruised surface, a kind of
+closely stippled shading of contused points. The right leg would
+be found to be bruised in a marvellous manner all about and under
+the knee, and particularly on the interior aspect of the knee. So
+far we may proceed with our details. Fired by these discoveries,
+an investigator might perhaps have pursued his inquiries further-
+-to bruises on the shoulders, elbows, and even the finger joints,
+of the central figure of our story. He had indeed been bumped and
+battered at an extraordinary number of points. But enough of
+realistic description is as good as a feast, and we have
+exhibited enough for our purpose. Even in literature one must
+know where to draw the line.
+
+Now the reader may be inclined to wonder how a respectable young
+shopman should have got his legs, and indeed himself generally,
+into such a dreadful condition. One might fancy that he had been
+sitting with his nether extremities in some complicated
+machinery, a threshing-machine, say, or one of those hay-making
+furies. But Sherlock Holmes (now happily dead) would have fancied
+nothing of the kind. He would have recognised at once that the
+bruises on the internal aspect of the left leg, considered in the
+light of the distribution of the other abrasions and contusions,
+pointed unmistakably to the violent impact of the Mounting
+Beginner upon the bicycling saddle, and that the ruinous state of
+the right knee was equally eloquent of the concussions attendant
+on that person's hasty, frequently causeless, and invariably ill-
+conceived descents. One large bruise on the shin is even more
+characteristic of the 'prentice cyclist, for upon every one of
+them waits the jest of the unexpected treadle. You try at least
+to walk your machine in an easy manner, and whack!--you are
+rubbing your shin. So out of innocence we ripen. Two bruises on
+that place mark a certain want of aptitude in learning, such as
+one might expect in a person unused to muscular exercise.
+Blisters on the hands are eloquent of the nervous clutch of the
+wavering rider. And so forth, until Sherlock is presently
+explaining, by the help of the minor injuries, that the machine
+ridden is an old-fashioned affair with a fork instead of the
+diamond frame, a cushioned tire, well worn on the hind wheel, and
+a gross weight all on of perhaps three-and-forty pounds.
+
+The revelation is made. Behind the decorous figure of the
+attentive shopman that I had the honour of showing you at first,
+rises a vision of a nightly struggle, of two dark figures and a
+machine in a dark road,--the road, to be explicit, from
+Roehampton to Putney Hill,--and with this vision is the sound of
+a heel spurning the gravel, a gasping and grunting, a shouting of
+"Steer, man, steer!" a wavering unsteady flight, a spasmodic
+turning of the missile edifice of man and machine, and a
+collapse. Then you descry dimly through the dusk the central
+figure of this story sitting by the roadside and rubbing his leg
+at some new place, and his friend, sympathetic (but by no means
+depressed), repairing the displacement of the handle-bar.
+
+Thus even in a shop assistant does the warmth of manhood assert
+itself, and drive him against all the conditions of his calling,
+against the counsels of prudence and the restrictions of his
+means, to seek the wholesome delights of exertion and danger and
+pain. And our first examination of the draper reveals beneath his
+draperies--the man! To which initial fact (among others) we shall
+come again in the end.
+
+
+
+II
+
+But enough of these revelations. The central figure of our story
+is now going along behind the counter, a draper indeed, with your
+purchases in his arms, to the warehouse, where the various
+articles you have selected will presently be packed by the senior
+porter and sent to you. Returning thence to his particular place,
+he lays hands on a folded piece of gingham, and gripping the
+corners of the folds in his hands, begins to straighten them
+punctiliously. Near him is an apprentice, apprenticed to the same
+high calling of draper's assistant, a ruddy, red-haired lad in a
+very short tailless black coat and a very high collar, who is
+deliberately unfolding and refolding some patterns of cretonne.
+By twenty-one he too may hope to be a full-blown assistant, even
+as Mr. Hoopdriver. Prints depend from the brass rails above them,
+behind are fixtures full of white packages containing, as
+inscriptions testify, Lino, Hd Bk, and Mull. You might imagine to
+see them that the two were both intent upon nothing but
+smoothness of textile and rectitude of fold. But to tell the
+truth, neither is thinking of the mechanical duties in hand. The
+assistant is dreaming of the delicious time--only four hours off
+now--when he will resume the tale of his bruises and abrasions.
+The apprentice is nearer the long long thoughts of boyhood, and
+his imagination rides cap-a-pie through the chambers of his
+brain, seeking some knightly quest in honour of that Fair Lady,
+the last but one of the girl apprentices to the dress-making
+upstairs. He inclines rather to street fighting against
+revolutionaries--because then she could see him from the window.
+
+Jerking them back to the present comes the puffy little
+shop-walker, with a paper in his hand. The apprentice becomes
+extremely active. The shopwalker eyes the goods in hand.
+"Hoopdriver," he says, "how's that line of g-sez-x ginghams ? "
+
+Hoopdriver returns from an imaginary triumph over the
+uncertainties of dismounting. "They're going fairly well, sir.
+But the larger checks seem hanging."
+
+The shop-walker brings up parallel to the counter. "Any
+particular time when you want your holidays?" he asks.
+
+Hoopdriver pulls at his skimpy moustache. "No--Don't want them
+too late, sir, of course."
+
+"How about this day week?"
+
+Hoopdriver becomes rigidly meditative, gripping the corners of
+the gingham folds in his hands. His face is eloquent of
+conflicting considerations. Can he learn it in a week? That's the
+question. Otherwise Briggs will get next week, and he will have
+to wait until September--when the weather is often uncertain. He
+is naturally of a sanguine disposition. All drapers have to be,
+or else they could never have the faith they show in the beauty,
+washability, and unfading excellence of the goods they sell you.
+The decision comes at last. "That'll do me very well," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, terminating the pause.
+
+The die is cast.
+
+The shop-walker makes a note of it and goes on to Briggs in the
+"dresses," the next in the strict scale of precedence of the
+Drapery Emporium. Mr. Hoopdriver in alternating spasms anon
+straightens his gingham and anon becomes meditative, with his
+tongue in the hollow of his decaying wisdom tooth.
+
+
+
+III
+
+At supper that night, holiday talk held undisputed sway. Mr.
+Pritchard spoke of "Scotland," Miss Isaacs clamoured of
+Bettws-y-Coed, Mr. Judson displayed a proprietary interest in the
+Norfolk Broads. "I?" said Hoopdriver when the question came to
+him. "Why, cycling, of course."
+
+"You're never going to ride that dreadful machine of yours, day
+after day?" said Miss Howe of the Costume Department.
+
+"I am," said Hoopdriver as calmly as possible, pulling at the
+insufficient moustache. "I'm going for a Cycling Tour. Along the
+South Coast."
+
+"Well, all I hope, Mr. Hoopdriver, is that you'll get fine
+weather," said Miss Howe. "And not come any nasty croppers."
+
+"And done forget some tinscher of arnica in yer bag," said the
+junior apprentice in the very high collar. (He had witnessed one
+of the lessons at the top of Putney Hill.)
+
+"You stow it," said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking hard and
+threateningly at the junior apprentice, and suddenly adding in a
+tone of bitter contempt,-- " Jampot."
+
+"I'm getting fairly safe upon it now," he told Miss Howe.
+
+At other times Hoopdriver might have further resented the
+satirical efforts of the apprentice, but his mind was too full of
+the projected Tour to admit any petty delicacies of dignity. He
+left the supper table early, so that he might put in a good hour
+at the desperate gymnastics up the Roehampton Road before it
+would be time to come back for locking up. When the gas was
+turned off for the night he was sitting on the edge of his bed,
+rubbing arnica into his knee--a new and very big place--and
+studying a Road Map of the South of England. Briggs of the
+"dresses," who shared the room with him, was sitting up in bed
+and trying to smoke in the dark. Briggs had never been on a cycle
+in his life, but he felt Hoopdriver's inexperience and offered
+such advice as occurred to him.
+
+"Have the machine thoroughly well oiled," said Briggs, "carry one
+or two lemons with you, don't tear yourself to death the first
+day, and sit upright. Never lose control of the machine, and
+always sound the bell on every possible opportunity. You mind
+those things, and nothing very much can't happen to you,
+Hoopdriver--you take my word."
+
+He would lapse into silence for a minute, save perhaps for a
+curse or so at his pipe, and then break out with an entirely
+different set of tips.
+
+"Avoid running over dogs, Hoopdriver, whatever you do. It's one
+of the worst things you can do to run over a dog. Never let the
+machine buckle--there was a man killed only the other day through
+his wheel buckling--don't scorch, don't ride on the foot-path,
+keep your own side of the road, and if you see a tram- line, go
+round the corner at once, and hurry off into the next county--and
+always light up before dark. You mind just a few little things
+like that, Hoopdriver, and nothing much can't happen to you--you
+take my word."
+
+"Right you are!" said Hoopdriver. "Good-night, old man."
+
+"Good-night," said Briggs, and there was silence for a space,
+save for the succulent respiration of the pipe. Hoopdriver rode
+off into Dreamland on his machine, and was scarcely there before
+he was pitched back into the world of sense again.--Something--
+what was it ?
+
+"Never oil the steering. It's fatal," a voice that came from
+round a fitful glow of light, was saying. "And clean the chain
+daily with black-lead. You mind just a few little things like
+that--"
+
+"Lord LOVE us!" said Hoopdriver, and pulled the bedclothes over
+his ears.
+
+
+
+THE RIDING FORTH OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+IV.
+
+Only those who toil six long days out of the seven, and all the
+year round, save for one brief glorious fortnight or ten days in
+the summer time, know the exquisite sensations of the First
+Holiday Morning. All the dreary, uninteresting routine drops from
+you suddenly, your chains fall about your feet. All at once you
+are Lord of yourself, Lord of every hour in the long, vacant day;
+you may go where you please, call none Sir or Madame, have a
+lappel free of pins, doff your black morning coat, and wear the
+colour of your heart, and be a Man. You grudge sleep, you grudge
+eating, and drinking even, their intrusion on those exquisite
+moments. There will be no more rising before breakfast in casual
+old clothing, to go dusting and getting ready in a cheerless,
+shutterdarkened, wrappered-up shop, no more imperious cries of,
+"Forward, Hoopdriver," no more hasty meals, and weary attendance
+on fitful old women, for ten blessed days. The first morning is
+by far the most glorious, for you hold your whole fortune in your
+hands. Thereafter, every night, comes a pang, a spectre, that
+will not be exorcised--the premonition of the return. The shadow
+of going back, of being put in the cage again for another twelve
+months, lies blacker and blacker across the sunlight. But on the
+first morning of the ten the holiday has no past, and ten days
+seems as good as infinity.
+
+And it was fine, full of a promise of glorious days, a deep blue
+sky with dazzling piles of white cloud here and there, as though
+celestial haymakers had been piling the swathes of last night's
+clouds into cocks for a coming cartage. There were thrushes in
+the Richmond Road, and a lark on Putney Heath. The freshness of
+dew was in the air; dew or the relics of an overnight shower
+glittered on the leaves and grass. Hoopdriver had breakfasted
+early by Mrs. Gunn's complaisance. He wheeled his machine up
+Putney Hill, and his heart sang within him. Halfway up, a
+dissipated-looking black cat rushed home across flile road and
+vanished under a gate. All the big red-brick houses behind the
+variegated shrubs and trees had their blinds down still, and he
+would not have changed places with a soul in any one of them for
+a hundred pounds.
+
+He had on his new brown cycling suit--a handsome Norfolk jacket
+thing for 30/--and his legs--those martyr legs--were more than
+consoled by thick chequered stockings, "thin in the foot, thick
+in the leg," for all they had endured. A neat packet of American
+cloth behind the saddle contained his change of raiment, and the
+bell and the handle-bar and the hubs and lamp, albeit a trifle
+freckled by wear, glittered blindingly in the rising sunlight.
+And at the top of the hill, after only one unsuccessful attempt,
+which, somehow, terminated on the green, Hoopdriver mounted, and
+with a stately and cautious restraint in his pace, and a
+dignified curvature of path, began his great Cycling Tour along
+the Southern Coast.
+
+There is only one phrase to describe his course at this stage,
+and that is--voluptuous curves. He did not ride fast, he did not
+ride straight, an exacting critic might say he did not ride well-
+-but he rode generously, opulently, using the whole road and even
+nibbling at the footpath. The excitement never flagged. So far he
+had never passed or been passed by anything, but as yet the day
+was young and the road was clear. He doubted his steering so much
+that, for the present, he had resolved to dismount at the
+approach of anything else upon wheels. The shadows of the trees
+lay very long and blue across the road, the morning sunlight was
+like amber fire.
+
+At the cross-roads at the top of West Hill, where the cattle
+trough stands, he turned towards Kingston and set himself to
+scale the little bit of ascent. An early heath-keeper, in his
+velveteen jacket, marvelled at his efforts. And while he yet
+struggled, the head of a carter rose over the brow.
+
+At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver, according to his previous
+determination, resolved to dismount. He tightened the brake, and
+the machine stopped dead. He was trying to think what he did with
+his right leg whilst getting off. He gripped the handles and
+released the brake, standing on the left pedal and waving his
+right foot in the air. Then--these things take so long in the
+telling--he found the machine was falling over to the right.
+While he was deciding upon a plan of action, gravitation appears
+to have been busy. He was still irresolute when he found the
+machine on the ground, himself kneeling upon it, and a vague
+feeling in his mind that again Providence had dealt harshly with
+his shin. This happened when he was just level with the
+heathkeeper. The man in the approaching cart stood up to see the
+ruins better.
+
+"THAT ain't the way to get off," said the heathkeeper.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver picked up the machine. The handle was twisted
+askew again He said something under his breath. He would have to
+unscrew the beastly thing.
+
+"THAT ain't the way to get off," repeated the heathkeeper, after
+a silence.
+
+"_I_ know that," said Mr. Hoopdriver, testily, determined to
+overlook the new specimen on his shin at any cost. He unbuckled
+the wallet behind the saddle, to get out a screw hammer.
+
+"If you know it ain't the way to get off--whaddyer do it for?"
+said the heath-keeper, in a tone of friendly controversy.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver got out his screw hammer and went to the handle.
+He was annoyed. "That's my business, I suppose," he said,
+fumbling with the screw. The unusual exertion had made his hands
+shake frightfully.
+
+The heath-keeper became meditative, and twisted his stick in his
+hands behind his back. "You've broken yer 'andle, ain't yer?" he
+said presently. Just then the screw hammer slipped off the nut.
+Mr. Hoopdriver used a nasty, low word.
+
+"They're trying things, them bicycles," said the heath-keeper,
+charitably. "Very trying." Mr. Hoopdriver gave the nut a vicious
+turn and suddenly stood up--he was holding the front wheel
+between his knees. "I wish," said he, with a catch in his voice,
+"I wish you'd leave off staring at me."
+
+Then with the air of one who has delivered an ultimatum, he began
+replacing the screw hammer in the wallet.
+
+The heath-keeper never moved. Possibly he raised his eyebrows,
+and certainly he stared harder than he did before. "You're pretty
+unsociable," he said slowly, as Mr. Hoopdriver seized the handles
+and stood ready to mount as soon as the cart had passed.
+
+The indignation gathered slowly but surely. "Why don't you ride
+on a private road of your own if no one ain't to speak to you?"
+asked the heath-keeper, perceiving more and more clearly the
+bearing of the matter. "Can't no one make a passin' remark to
+you, Touchy? Ain't I good enough to speak to you? Been struck
+wooden all of a sudden?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stared into the Immensity of the Future. He was
+rigid with emotion. It was like abusing the Lions in Trafalgar
+Square. But the heathkeeper felt his honour was at stake.
+
+"Don't you make no remarks to 'IM," said the keeper as the carter
+came up broadside to them. "'E's a bloomin' dook, 'e is. 'E don't
+converse with no one under a earl. 'E's off to Windsor, 'e is;
+that's why 'e's stickin' his be'ind out so haughty. Pride! Why,
+'e's got so much of it, 'e has to carry some of it in that there
+bundle there, for fear 'e'd bust if 'e didn't ease hisself a bit-
+-'E--"
+
+But Mr. Hoopdriver heard no more. He was hopping vigorously along
+the road, in a spasmodic attempt to remount.He missed the treadle
+once and swore viciously, to the keeper's immense delight. "Nar!
+Nar!" said the heath-keeper.
+
+In another moment Mr. Hoopdriver was up, and after one terrific
+lurch of the machine, the heathkeeper dropped out of earshot.
+Mr. Hoopdriver would have liked to look back at his enemy, but he
+usually twisted round and upset if he tried that.
+He had to imagine the indignant heath-keeper telling the carter
+all about it. He tried to infuse as much disdain aspossible into
+his retreating aspect.
+
+He drove on his sinuous way down the dip by the new mere and up
+the little rise to the crest of the hill that drops into Kingston
+Vale; and so remarkable is the psychology of cycling, that he
+rode all the straighter and easier because the emotions the
+heathkeeper had aroused relieved his mind of the constant
+expectation of collapse that had previously unnerved him. To ride
+a bicycle properly is very like a love affair--chiefly it
+is a matter of faith. Believe you do it, and the thing is done;
+doubt, and, for the life of you, you cannot.
+
+Now you may perhaps imagine that as he rode on, his feelings
+towards the heath-keeper were either vindictive or
+remorseful,--vindictive for the aggravation or remorseful for his
+own injudicious display of ill temper. As a matter of fact, they
+were nothing of the sort. A sudden, a wonderful gratitude,
+possessed him. The Glory of the Holidays had resumed its sway
+with a sudden accession of splendour. At the crest of the hill he
+put his feet upon the footrests, and now riding moderately
+straight, went, with a palpitating brake, down that excellent
+descent. A new delight was in his eyes, quite over and above the
+pleasure of rushing through the keen, sweet, morning air. He
+reached out his thumb and twanged his bell out of sheer
+happiness.
+
+"'He's a bloomin' Dook--he is!'" said Mr. Hoopdriver to himself,
+in a soft undertone, as he went soaring down the hill, and again,
+"'He's a bloomin' Dook!"' He opened his mouth in a silent laugh.
+It was having a decent cut did it. His social superiority had
+been so evident that even a man like that noticed it. No more
+Manchester Department for ten days! Out of Manchester, a Man. The
+draper Hoopdriver, the Hand, had vanished from existence. Instead
+was a gentleman, a man of pleasure, with a five-pound note, two
+sovereigns, and some silver at various convenient points of his
+person. At any rate as good as a Dook, if not precisely in the
+peerage. Involuntarily at the thought of his funds Hoopdriver's
+right hand left the handle and sought his breast pocket, to be
+immediately recalled by a violent swoop of the machine towards
+the cemetery. Whirroo! Just missed that half-brick! Mischievous
+brutes there were in the world to put such a thing in the road.
+Some blooming 'Arry or other! Ought to prosecute a few of these
+roughs, and the rest would know better. That must be the buckle
+of the wallet was rattling on the mud-guard. How cheerfully the
+wheels buzzed!
+
+The cemetery was very silent and peaceful, but the Vale was
+waking, and windows rattled and squeaked up, and a white dog came
+out of one of the houses and yelped at him. He got off, rather
+breathless, at the foot of Kingston Hill, and pushed up. Halfway
+up, an early milk chariot rattled by him; two dirty men with
+bundles came hurrying down. Hoopdriver felt sure they were
+burglars, carrying home the swag.
+
+It was up Kingston Hill that he first noticed a peculiar feeling,
+a slight tightness at his knees; but he noticed, too, at the top
+that he rode straighter than he did before. The pleasure of
+riding straight blotted out these first intimations of fatigue. A
+man on horseback appeared; Hoopdriver, in a tumult of soul at his
+own temerity, passed him. Then down the hill into Kingston, with
+the screw hammer, behind in the wallet, rattling against the oil
+can. He passed, without misadventure, a fruiterer's van and a
+sluggish cartload of bricks. And in Kingston Hoopdriver, with the
+most exquisite sensations, saw the shutters half removed from a
+draper's shop, and two yawning youths, in dusty old black jackets
+and with dirty white comforters about their necks, clearing up
+the planks and boxes and wrappers in the window, preparatory to
+dressing it out. Even so had Hoopdriver been on the previous day.
+But now, was he not a bloomin' Dook, palpably in the sight of
+common men? Then round the corner to the right--bell banged
+furiously--and so along the road to Surbiton.
+
+Whoop for Freedom and Adventure! Every now and then a house with
+an expression of sleepy surprise would open its eye as he passed,
+and to the right of him for a mile or so the weltering Thames
+flashed and glittered. Talk of your joie de vivre. Albeit with a
+certain cramping sensation about the knees and calves slowly
+forcing itself upon his attention.
+
+
+
+THE SHAMEFUL EPISODE OF THE YOUNG LADY IN GREY
+
+V
+
+Now you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver was not one of your
+fast young men. If he had been King Lemuel, he could not have
+profited more by his mother's instructions. He regarded the
+feminine sex as something to bow to and smirk at from a safe
+distance. Years of the intimate remoteness of a counter leave
+their mark upon a man. It was an adventure for him to take one of
+the Young Ladies of the establishment to church on a Sunday. Few
+modern young men could have merited less the epithet "Dorg." But
+I have thought at times that his machine may have had something
+of the blade in its metal. Decidedly it was a machine with a
+past. Mr. Hoopdriver had bought it second-hand from Hare's in
+Putney, and Hare said it had had several owners. Second-hand was
+scarcely the word for it, and Elare was mildly puzzled that he
+should be selling such an antiquity. He said it was perfectly
+sound, if a little old-fashioned, but he was absolutely silent
+about its moral character. It may even have begun its career with
+a poet, say, in his glorious youth. It may have been the bicycle
+of a Really Bad Man. No one who has ever ridden a cycle of any
+kind but will witness that the things are unaccountably prone to
+pick up bad habits--and keep them.
+
+It is undeniable that it became convulsed with the most violent
+emotions directly the Young Lady in Grey appeared. It began an
+absolutely unprecedented Wabble--unprecedented so far as
+Hoopdriver's experience went. It "showed off"--the most decadent
+sinuosity. It left a track like one of Beardsley's feathers. He
+suddenly realised, too, that his cap was loose on his head and
+his breath a mere remnant.
+
+The Young Lady in Grey was also riding a bicycle. She was dressed
+in a beautiful bluish-gray, and the sun behind her drew her
+outline in gold and left the rest in shadow. Hoopdriver was dimly
+aware that she was young, rather slender, dark, and with a bright
+colour and bright eyes. Strange doubts possessed him as to the
+nature of her nether costume. He had heard of such things of
+course. French, perhaps. Her handles glittered; a jet of sunlight
+splashed off her bell blindingly. She was approaching the high
+road along an affluent from the villas of Surbiton. fee roads
+converged slantingly. She was travelling at about the same pace
+as Mr. Hoopdriver. The appearances pointed to a meeting at the
+fork of the roads.
+
+Hoopdriver was seized with a horrible conflict of doubts. By
+contrast with her he rode disgracefully. Had he not better get
+off at once and pretend something was wrong with his treadle ?
+Yet even the end of getting off was an uncertainty. That last
+occasion on Putney Heath! On the other hand, what would happen if
+he kept on? To go very slow seemed the abnegation of his
+manhood. To crawl after a mere schoolgirl! Besides, she was not
+riding very fast. On the other hand, to thrust himself in front
+of her, consuming the road in his tendril-like advance, seemed an
+incivility--greed. He would leave her such a very little. His
+business training made him prone to bow and step aside. If only
+one could take one's hands off the handles, one might pass with a
+silent elevation of the hat, of course. But even that was a
+little suggestive of a funeral.
+
+Meanwhile the roads converged. She was looking at him. She was
+flushed, a little thin, and had very bright eyes. Her red lips
+fell apart. She may have been riding hard, but it looked
+uncommonly like a faint smile. And the things were--yes!--
+RATIONALS! Suddenly an impulse to bolt from the situation became
+clamorous. Mr. Hoopdriver pedalled convulsively, intending to
+pass her. He jerked against some tin thing on the road, and it
+flew up between front wheel and mud-guard. He twisted round
+towards her. Had the machine a devil?
+
+At that supreme moment it came across him that he would have done
+wiser to dismount. He gave a frantic 'whoop' and tried to get
+round, then, as he seemed falling over, he pulled the handles
+straight again and to the left by an instinctive motion, and shot
+behind her hind wheel, missing her by a hair's breadth. The
+pavement kerb awaited him. He tried to recover, and found himself
+jumped up on the pavement and riding squarely at a neat wooden
+paling. He struck this with a terrific impact and shot forward
+off his saddle into a clumsy entanglement. Then he began to
+tumble over sideways, and completed the entire figure in a
+sitting position on the gravel, with his feet between the fork
+and the stay of the machine. The concussion on the gravel shook
+his entire being. He remained in that position, wishing that he
+had broken his neck, wishing even more heartily that he had never
+been born. The glory of life had departed. Bloomin' Dook, indeed!
+These unwomanly women!
+
+There was a soft whirr, the click of a brake, two footfalls, and
+the Young Lady in Grey stood holding her machine. She had turned
+round and come back to him. The warm sunlight now was in her
+face. "Are you hurt?" she said. She had a pretty, clear, girlish
+voice. She was really very young--quite a girl, in fact. And rode
+so well! It was a bitter draught.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stood up at once. "Not a bit," he said, a little
+ruefully. He became painfully aware that large patches of gravel
+scarcely improve the appearance of a Norfolk suit. "I'm very
+sorry indeed--"
+
+"It's my fault," she said, interrupting and so saving him on the
+very verge of calling her 'Miss.' (He knew 'Miss' was wrong, but
+it was deep-seated habit with him.) "I tried to pass you on the
+wrong side." Her face and eyes seemed all alive. "It's my place
+to be sorry."
+
+"But it was my steering--"
+
+"I ought to have seen you were a Novice"--with a touch of
+superiority. "But you rode so straight coming along there!"
+
+She really was--dashed pretty. Mr. Hoopdriver's feelings passed
+the nadir. When he spoke again there was the faintest flavour of
+the aristocratic in his voice.
+
+"It's my first ride, as a matter of fact. But that's no excuse
+for my ah! blundering--"
+
+"Your finger's bleeding," she said, abruptly.
+
+He saw his knuckle was barked. "I didn't feel it," he said,
+feeling manly.
+
+"You don't at first. Have you any stickingplaster? If not--" She
+balanced her machine against herself. She had a little side
+pocket, and she whipped out a small packet of sticking-plaster
+with a pair of scissors in a sheath at the side, and cut off a
+generous portion. He had a wild impulse to ask her to stick it on
+for him. Controlled. "Thank you," he said.
+
+"Machine all right?" she asked, looking past him at the prostrate
+vehicle, her hands on her handle-bar. For the first time
+Hoopdriver did not feel proud of his machine.
+
+He turned and began to pick up the fallen fabric. He looked over
+his shoulder, and she was gone, turned his head over the other
+shoulder down the road, and she was riding off. "ORF!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. "Well, I'm blowed!--Talk about Slap Up!" (His
+aristocratic refinement rarely adorned his speech in his private
+soliloquies.) His mind was whirling. One fact was clear. A most
+delightful and novel human being had flashed across his horizon
+and was going out of his life again. The Holiday madness was in
+his blood. She looked round!
+
+At that he rushed his machine into the road, and began a hasty
+ascent. Unsuccessful. Try again. Confound it, will he NEVER be
+able to get up on the thing again? She will be round the corner
+in a minute. Once more. Ah! Pedal! Wabble! No! Right this time!
+He gripped the handles and put his head down. He would overtake
+her.
+
+The situation was primordial. The Man beneath prevailed for a
+moment over the civilised superstructure, the Draper. He pushed
+at the pedals with archaic violence. So Palaeolithic man may have
+ridden his simple bicycle of chipped flint in pursuit of his
+exogamous affinity. She vanished round the corner. His effort was
+Titanic. What should he say when he overtook her? That scarcely
+disturbed him at first. How fine she had looked, flushed with the
+exertion of riding, breathing a little fast, but elastic and
+active! Talk about your ladylike, homekeeping girls with
+complexions like cold veal! But what should he say to her? That
+was a bother. And he could not lift his cap without risking a
+repetition of his previous ignominy. She was a real Young Lady.
+No mistake about that! None of your blooming shop girls. (There
+is no greater contempt in the world than that of shop men for
+shop girls, unless it be that of shop girls for shop men.) Phew!
+This was work. A certain numbness came and went at his knees.
+
+"May I ask to whom I am indebted?" he panted to himself, trying
+it over. That might do. Lucky he had a card case! A hundred a
+shilling--while you wait. He was getting winded. The road was
+certainly a bit uphill. He turned the corner and saw a long
+stretch of road, and a grey dress vanishing. He set his teeth.
+Had he gained on her at all? "Monkey on a gridiron!" yelped a
+small boy. Hoopdriver redoubled his efforts. His breath became
+audible, his steering unsteady, his pedalling positively
+ferocious. A drop of perspiration ran into his eye, irritant as
+acid. The road really was uphill beyond dispute. All his
+physiology began to cry out at him. A last tremendous effort
+brought him to the corner and showed yet another extent of shady
+roadway, empty save for a baker's van. His front wheel suddenly
+shrieked aloud. "Oh Lord!" said Hoopdriver, relaxing.
+
+Anyhow she was not in sight. He got off unsteadily, and for a
+moment his legs felt like wisps of cotton. He balanced his
+machine against the grassy edge of the path and sat down panting.
+His hands were gnarled with swollen veins and shaking palpably,
+his breath came viscid.
+
+"I'm hardly in training yet," he remarked. His legs had gone
+leaden. "I don't feel as though I'd had a mouthful of breakfast."
+Presently he slapped his side pocket and produced therefrom a
+brand-new cigarette case and a packet of Vansittart's Red Herring
+cigarettes. He filled the case. Then his eye fell with a sudden
+approval on the ornamental chequering of his new stockings. The
+expression in his eyes faded slowly to abstract meditation.
+
+"She WAS a stunning girl," he said. "I wonder if I shall ever set
+eyes on her again. And she knew how to ride, too! Wonder what she
+thought of me."
+
+The phrase 'bloomin' Dook' floated into his mind with a certain
+flavour of comfort.
+
+He lit a cigarette, and sat smoking and meditating. He did not
+even look up when vehicles passed. It was perhaps ten minutes
+before he roused himself. "What rot it is! What's the good of
+thinking such things," he said. "I'm only a blessed draper's
+assistant." (To be exact, he did not say blessed. The service of
+a shop may polish a man's exterior ways, but the 'prentices'
+dormitory is an indifferent school for either manners or morals.)
+He stood up and began wheeling his machine towards Esher. It was
+going to be a beautiful day, and the hedges and trees and the
+open country were all glorious to his town-tired eyes. But it was
+a little different from the elation of his start.
+
+"Look at the gentleman wizzer bicitle," said a nursemaid on the
+path to a personage in a perambulator. That healed him a little.
+"'Gentleman wizzer bicitle,'--'bloomin' Dook'--I can't look so
+very seedy," he said to himself.
+
+"I WONDER--I should just like to know--"
+
+There was something very comforting in the track of HER pneumatic
+running straight and steady along the road before him. It must be
+hers. No other pneumatic had been along the road that morning. It
+was just possible, of course, that he might see her once more--
+coming back. Should he try and say something smart? He speculated
+what manner of girl she might be. Probably she was one of these
+here New Women. He had a persuasion the cult had been maligned.
+Anyhow she was a Lady. And rich people, too! Her machine couldn't
+have cost much under twenty pounds. His mind came round and dwelt
+some time on her visible self. Rational dress didn't look a bit
+unwomanly. However, he disdained to be one of your
+fortunehunters. Then his thoughts drove off at a tangent. He
+would certainly have to get something to eat at the next public
+house.
+
+
+ON THE ROAD TO RIPLEY
+
+VI
+
+In the fulness of time, Mr. Hoopdriver drew near the Marquis of
+Granby at Esher, and as he came under the railway arch and saw
+the inn in front of him, he mounted his machine again and rode
+bravely up to the doorway. Burton and biscuit and cheese he had,
+which, indeed, is Burton in its proper company; and as he was
+eating there came a middleaged man in a drab cycling suit, very
+red and moist and angry in the face, and asked bitterly for a
+lemon squash. And he sat down upon the seat in the bar and mopped
+his face. But scarcely had he sat down before he got up again and
+stared out of the doorway.
+
+"Damn!" said he. Then, "Damned Fool!"
+
+"Eigh?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking round suddenly with a piece
+of cheese in his cheek.
+
+The man in drab faced him. "I called myself a Damned Fool, sir.
+Have you any objections?"
+
+"Oh!--None. None," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I thought you spoke to
+me. I didn't hear what you said."
+
+"To have a contemplative disposition and an energetic
+temperament, sir, is hell. Hell, I tell you. A contemplative
+disposition and a phlegmatic temperament, all very well. But
+energy and philosophy--!"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked as intelligent as he could, but said
+nothing.
+
+"There's no hurry, sir, none whatever. I came out for exercise,
+gentle exercise, and to notice the scenery and to botanise. And
+no sooner do I get on the accursed machine, than off I go hammer
+and tongs; I never look to right or left, never notice a flower,
+never see a view, get hot, juicy, red,--like a grilled chop. Here
+I am, sir. Come from Guildford in something under the hour. WHY,
+sir?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver shook his head.
+
+"Because I'm a damned fool, sir. Because I've reservoirs and
+reservoirs of muscular energy, and one or other of them is always
+leaking. It's a most interesting road, birds and trees, I've no
+doubt, and wayside flowers, and there's nothing I should enjoy
+more than watching them. But I can't. Get me on that machine, and
+I have to go. Get me on anything, and I have to go. And I don't
+want to go a bit. WHY should a man rush about like a rocket, all
+pace and fizzle? Why? It makes me furious. I can assure you, sir,
+I go scorching along the road, and cursing aloud at myself for
+doing it. A quiet, dignified, philosophical man, that's what I
+am--at bottom; and here I am dancing with rage and swearing like
+a drunken tinker at a perfect stranger--
+
+"But my day's wasted. I've lost all that country road, and now
+I'm on the fringe of London. And I might have loitered all the
+morning! Ugh! Thank Heaven, sir, you have not the irritable
+temperament, that you are not goaded to madness by your
+endogenous sneers, by the eternal wrangling of an uncomfortable
+soul and body. I tell you, I lead a cat and dog life--But what IS
+the use of talking?--It's all of a piece!"
+
+He tossed his head with unspeakable self-disgust, pitched the
+lemon squash into his mouth, paid for it, and without any further
+remark strode to the door. Mr. Hoopdriver was still wondering
+what to say when his interlocutor vanished. There was a noise of
+a foot spurning the gravel, and when Mr. Hoopdriver reached the
+doorway, the man in drab was a score of yards Londonward. He had
+already gathered pace. He pedalled with ill-suppressed anger, and
+his head was going down. In another moment he flew swiftly out of
+sight under the railway arch, and Mr. Hoopdriver saw him no more.
+
+
+
+VII
+
+After this whirlwind Mr. Hoopdriver paid his reckoning and--being
+now a little rested about the muscles of the knees--resumed his
+saddle and rode on in the direction of Ripley, along an excellent
+but undulating road. He was pleased to find his command over his
+machine already sensibly increased. He set himself little
+exercises as he went along and performed them with variable
+success. There was, for instance, steering in between a couple of
+stones, say a foot apart, a deed of little difficulty as far as
+the front wheel is concerned. But the back wheel, not being under
+the sway of the human eye, is apt to take a vicious jump over the
+obstacle, which sends a violent concussion all along the spine to
+the skull, and will even jerk a loosely fastened hat over the
+eyes, and so lead to much confusion. And again, there was taking
+the hand or hands off the handlebar, a thing simple in itself,
+but complex in its consequences. This particularly was a feat Mr.
+Hoopdriver desired to do, for several divergent reasons; but at
+present it simply led to convulsive balancings and novel and
+inelegant modes of dismounting.
+
+The human nose is, at its best, a needless excrescence. There are
+those who consider it ornamental, and would regard a face
+deprived of its assistance with pity or derision; but it is
+doubtful whether our esteem is dictated so much by a sense of its
+absolute beauty as by the vitiating effect of a universally
+prevalent fashion. In the case of bicycle students, as in the
+young of both sexes, its inutility is aggravated by its
+persistent annoyance--it requires constant attention. Until one
+can ride with one hand, and search for, secure, and use a pocket
+handkerchief with the other, cycling is necessarily a constant
+series of descents. Nothing can be further from the author's
+ambition than a wanton realism, but Mr. Hoopdriver's nose is a
+plain and salient fact, and face it we must. And, in addition to
+this inconvenience, there are flies. Until the cyclist can steer
+with one hand, his face is given over to Beelzebub. Contemplative
+flies stroll over it, and trifle absently with its most sensitive
+surfaces. The only way to dislodge them is to shake the head
+forcibly and to writhe one's features violently. This is not only
+a lengthy and frequently ineffectual method, but one exceedingly
+terrifying to foot passengers. And again, sometimes the beginner
+rides for a space with one eye closed by perspiration, giving him
+a waggish air foreign to his mood and ill calculated to overawe
+the impertinent. However, you will appreciate now the motive of
+Mr. Hoopdriver's experiments. He presently attained sufficient
+dexterity to slap himself smartly and violently in the face with
+his right hand, without certainly overturning the machine; but
+his pocket handkerchief might have been in California for any
+good it was to him while he was in the saddle.
+
+Yet you must not think that because Mr. Hoopdriver was a little
+uncomfortable, he was unhappy in the slightest degree. In the
+background of his consciousness was the sense that about this
+time Briggs would be half-way through his window dressing, and
+Gosling, the apprentice, busy, with a chair turned down over the
+counter and his ears very red, trying to roll a piece of
+huckaback--only those who have rolled pieces of huckaback know
+quite how detestable huckaback is to roll--and the shop would be
+dusty and, perhaps, the governor about and snappy. And here was
+quiet and greenery, and one mucked about as the desire took one,
+without a soul to see, and here was no wailing of "Sayn," no
+folding of remnants, no voice to shout, "Hoopdriver, forward!"
+And once he almost ran over something wonderful, a little, low,
+red beast with a yellowish tail, that went rushing across the
+road before him. It was the first weasel he had ever seen in his
+cockney life. There were miles of this, scores of miles of this
+before him, pinewood and oak forest, purple, heathery moorland
+and grassy down, lush meadows, where shining rivers wound their
+lazy way, villages with square-towered, flint churches, and
+rambling, cheap, and hearty inns, clean, white, country towns,
+long downhill stretches, where one might ride at one's ease
+(overlooking a jolt or so), and far away, at the end of it
+all,--the sea.
+
+What mattered a fly or so in the dawn of these delights? Perhaps
+he had been dashed a minute by the shameful episode of the Young
+Lady in Grey, and perhaps the memory of it was making itself a
+little lair in a corner of his brain from which it could distress
+him in the retrospect by suggesting that he looked like a fool;
+but for the present that trouble was altogether in abeyance. The
+man in drab--evidently a swell--had spoken to him as his equal,
+and the knees of his brown suit and the chequered stockings were
+ever before his eyes. (Or, rather, you could see the stockings by
+carrying the head a little to one side.) And to feel, little by
+little, his mastery over this delightful, treacherous machine,
+growing and growing! Every half-mile or so his knees reasserted
+themselves, and he dismounted and sat awhile by the roadside.
+
+It was at a charming little place between Esher and Cobham, where
+a bridge crosses a stream, that Mr. Hoopdriver came across the
+other cyclist in brown. It is well to notice the fact here,
+although the interview was of the slightest, because it happened
+that subsequently Hoopdriver saw a great deal more of this other
+man in brown. The other cyclist in brown had a machine of
+dazzling newness, and a punctured pneumatic lay across his knees.
+He was a man of thirty or more, with a whitish face, an aquiline
+nose, a lank, flaxen moustache, and very fair hair, and he
+scowled at the job before him. At the sight of him Mr. Hoopdriver
+pulled himself together, and rode by with the air of one born to
+the wheel. "A splendid morning," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "and a fine
+surface."
+
+"The morning and you and the surface be everlastingly damned!"
+said the other man in brown as Hoopdriver receded. Hoopdriver
+heard the mumble and did not distinguish the words, and he felt a
+pleasing sense of having duly asserted the wide sympathy that
+binds all cyclists together, of having behaved himself as becomes
+one of the brotherhood of the wheel. The other man in brown
+watched his receding aspect. "Greasy proletarian," said the other
+man in brown, feeling a prophetic dislike. "Got a suit of brown,
+the very picture of this. One would think his sole aim in life
+had been to caricature me. It's Fortune's way with me. Look at
+his insteps on the treadles! Why does Heaven make such men?"
+
+And having lit a cigarette, the other man in brown returned to
+the business in hand.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver worked up the hill towards Cobham to a point that
+he felt sure was out of sight of the other man in brown, and then
+he dismounted and pushed his machine; until the proximity of the
+village and a proper pride drove him into the saddle again.
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+Beyond Cobham came a delightful incident, delightful, that is, in
+its beginning if a trifle indeterminate in the retrospect. It was
+perhaps half-way between Cobham and Ripley. Mr. Hoopdriver
+dropped down a little hill, where, unfenced from the road, fine
+mossy trees and bracken lay on either side; and looking up he saw
+an open country before him, covered with heather and set with
+pines, and a yellow road runing across it, and half a mile away
+perhaps, a little grey figure by the wayside waving something
+white. "Never!" said Mr. Hoopdriver with his hands tightening on
+the handles.
+
+He resumed the treadles, staring away before him, jolted over a
+stone, wabbled, recovered, and began riding faster at once, with
+his eyes ahead. "It can't be," said Hoopdriver.
+
+He rode his straightest, and kept his pedals spinning, albeit a
+limp numbness had resumed possession of his legs." It CAN'T be,"
+he repeated, feeling every moment more assured that it WAS.
+"Lord! I don't know even now," said Mr. Hoopdriver (legs
+awhirling), and then, "Blow my legs!"
+
+But he kept on and drew nearer and nearer, breathing hard and
+gathering flies like a flypaper. In the valley he was hidden.
+Then the road began to rise, and the resistance of the pedals
+grew. As he crested the hill he saw her, not a hundred yards away
+from him. "It's her!" he said. "It's her--right enough. It's the
+suit's done it,"--which was truer even than Mr. Hoopdriver
+thought. But now she was not waving her handkerchief, she was not
+even looking at him. She was wheeling her machine slowly along
+the road towards him, and admiring the pretty wooded hills
+towards Weybridge. She might have been unaware of his existence
+for all the recognition he got.
+
+For a moment horrible doubts troubled Mr. Hoopdriver. Had that
+handkerchief been a dream? Besides which he was deliquescent and
+scarlet, and felt so. It must be her coquetry--the handkerchief
+was indisputable. Should he ride up to her and get off, or get
+off and ride up to her? It was as well she didn't look, because
+he would certainly capsize if he lifted his cap. Perhaps that was
+her consideration. Even as he hesitated he was upon her. She must
+have heard his breathing. He gripped the brake. Steady! His right
+leg waved in the air, and he came down heavily and staggering,
+but erect. She turned her eyes upon him with admirable surprise.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver tried to smile pleasantly, hold up his machine,
+raise his cap, and bow gracefully. Indeed, he felt that he did as
+much. He was a man singularly devoid of the minutiae of
+self-consciousness, and he was quite unaware of a tail of damp
+hair lying across his forehead, and just clearing his eyes, and
+of the general disorder of his coiffure. There was an
+interrogative pause.
+
+"What can I have the pleasure--" began Mr. Haopdriver,
+insinuatingly. "I mean" (remembering his emancipation and
+abruptly assuming his most aristocratic intonation), "can I be of
+any assistance to you?"
+
+The Young Lady in Grey bit her lower lip and said very prettily,
+"None, thank you." She glanced away from him and made as if she
+would proceed.
+
+"Oh!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, taken aback and suddenly crestfallen
+again. It was so unexpected. He tried to grasp the situation. Was
+she coquetting? Or had he--?
+
+"Excuse me, one minute," he said, as she began to wheel her
+machine again.
+
+"Yes?" she said, stopping and staring a little, with the colour
+in her cheeks deepening.
+
+"I should not have alighted if I had not--imagined that you--er,
+waved something white--" He paused.
+
+She looked at him doubtfully. He HAD seen it! She decided that
+he was not an unredeemed rough taking advantage of a mistake, but
+an innocent soul meaning well while seeking happiness. "I DID
+wave my handkerchief," she said. "I'm very sorry. I am
+expecting--a friend, a gentleman,"--she seemed to flush pink for
+a minute. "He is riding a bicycle and dressed in--in brown; and
+at a distance, you know--"
+
+"Oh, quite!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, bearing up in manly fashion
+against his bitter disappointment. "Certainly."
+
+"I'm awfully sorry, you know. Troubling you to dismount, and all
+that."
+
+"No trouble. 'Ssure you," said Mr. Hoopdriver, mechanically and
+bowing over his saddle as if it was a counter. Somehow he could
+not find it in his heart to tell her that the man was beyond
+there with a punctured pneumatic. He looked back along the road
+and tried to think of something else to say. But the gulf in the
+conversation widened rapidly and hopelessly. "There's nothing
+further," began Mr. Hoopdriver desperately, recurring to his
+stock of cliches.
+
+"Nothing, thank you," she said decisively. And immediately, "This
+IS the Ripley road?"
+
+"Certainly," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Ripley is about two miles from
+here. According to the mile-stones."
+
+"Thank you," she said warmly. "Thank you so much. I felt sure
+there was no mistake. And I really am awfully sorry--"
+
+"Don't mention it," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Don't mention it." He
+hesitated and gripped his handles to mount. "It's me," he said,
+"ought to be sorry." Should he say it? Was it an impertinence?
+Anyhow!--"Not being the other gentleman, you know."
+
+He tried a quietly insinuating smile that he knew for a grin even
+as he smiled it; felt she disapproved--that she despised him, was
+overcome with shame at her expression, turned his back upon her,
+and began (very clumsily) to mount. He did so with a horrible
+swerve, and went pedalling off, riding very badly, as he was only
+too painfully aware. Nevertheless, thank Heaven for the mounting!
+He could not see her because it was so dangerous for him to look
+round, but he could imagine her indignant and pitiless. He felt
+an unspeakable idiot. One had to be so careful what one said to
+Young Ladies, and he'd gone and treated her just as though she
+was only a Larky Girl. It was unforgivable. He always WAS a fool.
+You could tell from her manner she didn't think him a gentleman.
+One glance, and she seemed to look clear through him and all his
+presence. What rot it was venturing to speak to a girl like that!
+With her education she was bound to see through him at once.
+
+How nicely she spoke too! nice clear-cut words! She made him feel
+what slush his own accent was. And that last silly remark. What
+was it ? 'Not being the other gentleman, you know!' No point in
+it. And 'GENTLEMAN!' What COULD she be thinking of him?
+
+But really the Young Lady in Grey had dismissed Hoopdriver from
+her thoughts almost before he had vanished round the corner. She
+had thought no ill of him. His manifest awe and admiration of her
+had given her not an atom of offence. But for her just now there
+were weightier things to think about, things that would affect
+all the rest of her life. She continued slowly walking her
+machine Londonward. Presently she stopped. "Oh! Why DOESN'T he
+come?" she said, and stamped her foot petulantly. Then, as if in
+answer, coming down the hill among the trees, appeared the other
+man in brown, dismounted and wheeling his machine.
+
+
+
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WAS HAUNTED
+
+IX
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver rode swaggering along the Ripley road, it came
+to him, with an unwarrantable sense of comfort, that he had seen
+the last of the Young Lady in Grey. But the ill-concealed bladery
+of the machine, the present machinery of Fate, the deus ex
+machina, so to speak, was against him. The bicycle, torn from
+this attractive young woman, grew heavier and heavier, and
+continually more unsteady. It seemed a choice between stopping at
+Ripley or dying in the flower of his days. He went into the
+Unicorn, after propping his machine outside the door, and, as he
+cooled down and smoked his Red Herring cigarette while the cold
+meat was getting ready, he saw from the window the Young Lady in
+Grey and the other man in brown, entering Ripley.
+
+They filled him with apprehension by looking at the house which
+sheltered him, but the sight of his bicycle, propped in a drunk
+and incapable attitude against the doorway, humping its rackety
+mud-guard and leering at them with its darkened lantern eye,
+drove them away--so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver--to the spacious
+swallow of the Golden Dragon. The young lady was riding very
+slowly, but the other man in brown had a bad puncture and was
+wheeling his machine. Mr. Hoopdriver noted his flaxen moustache,
+his aquiline nose, his rather bent shoulders, with a sudden,
+vivid dislike.
+
+The maid at the Unicorn is naturally a pleasant girl, but she is
+jaded by the incessant incidence of cyclists, and Hoopdriver's
+mind, even as he conversed with her in that cultivated voice of
+his--of the weather, of the distance from London, and of the
+excellence of the Ripley road--wandered to the incomparable
+freshness and brilliance of the Young Lady in Grey. As he sat at
+meat he kept turning his head to the window to see what signs
+there were of that person, but the face of the Golden Dragon
+displayed no appreciation of the delightful morsel it had
+swallowed. As an incidental consequence of this distraction, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was for a minute greatly inconvenienced by a mouthful
+of mustard. After he had called for his reckoning he went, his
+courage being high with meat and mustard, to the door, intending
+to stand, with his legs wide apart and his hands deep in his
+pockets, and stare boldly across the road. But just then the
+other man in brown appeared in the gateway of the Golden Dragon
+yard--it is one of those delightful inns that date from the
+coaching days--wheeling his punctured machine. He was taking it
+to Flambeau's, the repairer's. He looked up and saw Hoopdriver,
+stared for a minute, and then scowled darkly.
+
+But Hoopdriver remained stoutly in the doorway until the other
+man in brown had disappeared into Flambeau's. Then he glanced
+momentarily at the Golden Dragon, puckered his mouth into a
+whistle of unconcern, and proceeded to wheel his machine into the
+road until a sufficient margin for mounting was secured.
+
+Now, at that time, I say, Hoopdriver was rather desirous than not
+of seeing no more of the Young Lady in Grey. The other man in
+brown he guessed was her brother, albeit that person was of a
+pallid fairness, differing essentially from her rich colouring;
+and, besides, he felt he had made a hopeless fool of himself. But
+the afternoon was against him, intolerably hot, especially on the
+top of his head, and the virtue had gone out of his legs to
+digest his cold meat, and altogether his ride to Guildford was
+exceedingly intermittent. At times he would walk, at times lounge
+by the wayside, and every public house, in spite of Briggs and a
+sentiment of economy, meant a lemonade and a dash of bitter. (For
+that is the experience of all those who go on wheels, that
+drinking begets thirst, even more than thirst begets drinking,
+until at last the man who yields becomes a hell unto himself, a
+hell in which the fire dieth not, and the thirst is not
+quenched.) Until a pennyworth of acrid green apples turned the
+current that threatened to carry him away. Ever and again a
+cycle, or a party of cyclists, would go by, with glittering
+wheels and softly running chains, and on each occasion, to save
+his self-respect, Mr. Hoopdriver descended and feigned some
+trouble with his saddle. Each time he descended with less
+trepidation.
+
+He did not reach Guildford until nearly four o'clock, and then he
+was so much exhausted that he decided to put up there for the
+night, at the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern. And after he had
+cooled a space and refreshed himself with tea and bread and
+butter and jam,--the tea he drank noisily out of the saucer,--he
+went out to loiter away the rest of the afternoon. Guildford is
+an altogether charming old town, famous, so he learnt from a
+Guide Book, as the scene of Master Tupper's great historical
+novel of Stephen Langton, and it has a delightful castle, all set
+about with geraniums and brass plates commemorating the gentlemen
+who put them up, and its Guildhall is a Tudor building, very
+pleasant to see, and in the afternoon the shops are busy and the
+people going to and fro make the pavements look bright and
+prosperous. It was nice to peep in the windows and see the heads
+of the men and girls in the drapers' shops, busy as busy, serving
+away. The High Street runs down at an angle of seventy degrees to
+the horizon (so it seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver, whose feeling for
+gradients was unnaturally exalted), and it brought his heart into
+his mouth to see a cyclist ride down it, like a fly crawling down
+a window pane. The man hadn't even a brake. He visited the castle
+early in the evening and paid his twopence to ascend the Keep.
+
+At the top, from the cage, he looked down over the clustering red
+roofs of the town and the tower of the church, and then going to
+the southern side sat down and lit a Red Herring cigarette, and
+stared away south over the old bramble-bearing, fern-beset ruin,
+at the waves of blue upland that rose, one behind another, across
+the Weald, to the lazy altitudes of Hindhead and Butser. His pale
+grey eyes were full of complacency and pleasurable anticipation.
+Tomorrow he would go riding across that wide valley.
+
+He did not notice any one else had come up the Keep after him
+until he heard a soft voice behind him saying: "Well, MISS
+BEAUMONT, here's the view." Something in the accent pointed to a
+jest in the name.
+
+"It's a dear old town, brother George," answered another voice
+that sounded familiar enough, and turning his head, Mr.
+Hoopdriver saw the other man in brown and the Young Lady in Grey,
+with their backs towards him. She turned her smiling profile
+towards Hoopdriver. "Only, you know, brothers don't call their
+sisters--"
+
+She glanced over her shoulder and saw Hoopdriver. "Damn!" said
+the other man in brown, quite audibly, starting as he followed
+her glance.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, with a fine air of indifference, resumed the
+Weald. "Beautiful old town, isn't it?" said the other man in
+brown, after a quite perceptible pause.
+
+"Isn't it?" said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Another pause began.
+
+"Can't get alone anywhere," said the other man in brown, looking
+round.
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived clearly that he was in the way, and
+decided to retreat. It was just his luck of course that he should
+stumble at the head of the steps and vanish with indignity. This
+was the third time that he'd seen HIM, and the fourth time her.
+And of course he was too big a fat-head to raise his cap to HER!
+He thought of that at the foot of the Keep. Apparently they aimed
+at the South Coast just as he did, He'd get up betimes the next
+day and hurry off to avoid her--them, that is. It never occurred
+to Mr. Hoopdriver that Miss Beaumont and her brother might do
+exactly the same thing, and that evening, at least, the
+peculiarity of a brother calling his sister "Miss Beaumont" did
+not recur to him. He was much too preoccupied with an analysis of
+his own share of these encounters. He found it hard to be
+altogether satisfied about the figure he had cut, revise his
+memories as he would.
+
+Once more quite unintentionally he stumbled upon these two
+people. It was about seven o'clock. He stopped outside a linen
+draper's and peered over the goods in the window at the
+assistants in torment. He could have spent a whole day happily at
+that. He told himself that he was trying to see how they dressed
+out the brass lines over their counters, in a purely professional
+spirit, but down at the very bottom of his heart he knew better.
+The customers were a secondary consideration, and it was only
+after the lapse of perhaps a minute that he perceived that among
+them was--the Young Lady in Grey! He turned away from the window
+at once, and saw the other man in brown standing at the edge of
+the pavement and regarding him with a very curious expression of
+face.
+
+There came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head the curious problem whether
+he was to be regarded as a nuisance haunting these people, or
+whether they were to be regarded as a nuisance haunting him. He
+abandoned the solution at last in despair, quite unable to decide
+upon the course he should take at the next encounter, whether he
+should scowl savagely at the couple or assume an attitude
+eloquent of apology and propitiation.
+
+
+
+THE IMAGININGS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER'S HEART
+
+X
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was (in the days of this story) a poet, though he
+had never written a line of verse. Or perhaps romancer will
+describe him better. Like I know not how many of those who do the
+fetching and carrying of life,--a great number of them
+certainly,--his real life was absolutely uninteresting, and if he
+had faced it as realistically as such people do in Mr. Gissing's
+novels, he would probably have come by way of drink to suicide in
+the course of a year. But that was just what he had the natural
+wisdom not to do. On the contrary, he was always decorating his
+existence with imaginative tags, hopes, and poses, deliberate and
+yet quite effectual self-deceptions; his experiences were mere
+material for a romantic superstructure. If some power had given
+Hoopdriver the 'giftie' Burns invoked, 'to see oursels as ithers
+see us,' he would probably have given it away to some one else at
+the very earliest opportunity. His entire life, you must
+understand, was not a continuous romance, but a series of short
+stories linked only by the general resemblance of their hero, a
+brown-haired young fellow commonly, with blue eyes and a fair
+moustache, graceful rather than strong, sharp and resolute rather
+than clever (cp., as the scientific books say, p. 2). Invariably
+this person possessed an iron will. The stories fluctuated
+indefinitely. The smoking of a cigarette converted Hoopdriver's
+hero into something entirely worldly, subtly rakish, with a
+humorous twinkle in the eye and some gallant sinning in the
+background. You should have seen Mr. Hoopdriver promenading the
+brilliant gardens at Earl's Court on an early-closing night. His
+meaning glances! (I dare not give the meaning.) Such an influence
+as the eloquence of a revivalist preacher would suffice to divert
+the story into absolutely different channels, make him a
+white-soured hero, a man still pure, walking untainted and brave
+and helpful through miry ways. The appearance of some daintily
+gloved frockcoated gentleman with buttonhole and eyeglass
+complete, gallantly attendant in the rear of customers, served
+again to start visions of a simplicity essentially Cromwell-like,
+of sturdy plainness, of a strong, silent man going righteously
+through the world. This day there had predominated a fine
+leisurely person immaculately clothed, and riding on an
+unexceptional machine, a mysterious person--quite unostentatious,
+but with accidental self-revelation of something over the common,
+even a "bloomin' Dook," it might be incognito, on the tour of the
+South Coast.
+
+You must not think that there was any TELLING of these stories of
+this life-long series by Mr. Hoopdriver. He never dreamt that
+they were known to a soul. If it were not for the trouble, I
+would, I think, go back and rewrite this section from the
+beginning, expunging the statements that Hoopdriver was a poet
+and a romancer, and saying instead that he was a playwright and
+acted his own plays. He was not only the sole performer, but the
+entire audience, and the entertainment kept him almost
+continuously happy. Yet even that playwright comparison scarcely
+expresses all the facts of the case. After all, very many of his
+dreams never got acted at all, possibly indeed, most of them, the
+dreams of a solitary walk for instance, or of a tramcar ride, the
+dreams dreamt behind the counter while trade was slack and
+mechanical foldings and rollings occupied his muscles. Most of
+them were little dramatic situations, crucial dialogues, the
+return of Mr. Hoopdriver to his native village, for instance, in
+a well-cut holiday suit and natty gloves, the unheard asides of
+the rival neighbours, the delight of the old 'mater,' the
+intelligence--"A ten-pound rise all at once from Antrobus,
+mater. Whad d'yer think of that?" or again, the first whispering
+of love, dainty and witty and tender, to the girl he served a few
+days ago with sateen, or a gallant rescue of generalised beauty
+in distress from truculent insult or ravening dog.
+
+So many people do this--and you never suspect it. You see a
+tattered lad selling matches in the street, and you think there
+is nothing between him and the bleakness of immensity, between
+him and utter abasement, but a few tattered rags and a feeble
+musculature. And all unseen by you a host of heaven- sent
+fatuities swathes him about, even, maybe, as they swathe you
+about. Many men have never seen their own profiles or the backs
+of their heads, and for the back of your own mind no mirror has
+been invented. They swathe him about so thickly that the pricks
+of fate scarce penetrate to him, or become but a pleasant
+titillation. And so, indeed, it is with all of us who go on
+living. Self-deception is the anaesthetic of life, while God is
+carving out our beings.
+
+But to return from this general vivisection to Mr. Hoopdriver's
+imaginings. You see now how external our view has been; we have
+had but the slightest transitory glimpses of the drama within, of
+how the things looked in the magic mirror of Mr. Hoopdriver's
+mind. On the road to Guildford and during his encounters with his
+haunting fellow-cyclists the drama had presented chiefly the
+quiet gentleman to whom we have alluded, but at Guildford, under
+more varied stimuli, he burgeoned out more variously. There was
+the house agent's window, for instance, set him upon a charming
+little comedy. He would go in, make inquires about that
+thirty-pound house, get the key possibly and go over it--the
+thing would stimulate the clerk's curiosity immensely. He
+searched his mind for a reason for this proceeding and discovered
+that he was a dynamiter needing privacy. Upon that theory he
+procured the key, explored the house carefully, said darkly that
+it might suit his special needs, but that there were OTHERS to
+consult. The clerk, however, did not understand the allusion, and
+merely pitied him as one who had married young and paired himself
+to a stronger mind than his own.
+
+This proceeding in some occult way led to the purchase of a
+note-book and pencil, and that started the conception of an
+artist taking notes. That was a little game Mr. Hoopdriver had,
+in congenial company, played in his still younger days--to the
+infinite annoyance of quite a number of respectable excursionists
+at Hastings. In early days Mr. Hoopdriver had been, as his mother
+proudly boasted, a 'bit of a drawer,' but a conscientious and
+normally stupid schoolmaster perceived the incipient talent and
+had nipped it in the bud by a series of lessons in art. However,
+our principal character figured about quite happily in old
+corners of Guildford, and once the other man in brown, looking
+out of the bay window of the Earl of Kent, saw him standing in a
+corner by a gateway, note-book in hand, busily sketching the
+Earl's imposing features. At which sight the other man in brown
+started back from the centre of the window, so as to be hidden
+from him, and crouching slightly, watched him intently through
+the interstices of the lace curtains.
+
+
+
+OMISSIONS
+
+XI
+
+Now the rest of the acts of Mr. Hoopdriver in Guildford, on the
+great opening day of his holidays, are not to be detailed here.
+How he wandered about the old town in the dusk, and up to the
+Hogsback to see the little lamps below and the little stars above
+come out one after another; how he returned through the
+yellow-lit streets to the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern and supped
+bravely in the commercial room--a Man among Men; how he joined in
+the talk about flying-machines and the possibilities of
+electricity, witnessing that fiying-machines were "dead certain
+to come," and that electricity was "wonderful, wonderful"; how he
+went and watched the billiard playing and said, "Left 'em"
+several times with an oracular air; how he fell a-yawning; and
+how he got out his cycling map and studied it intently,--are
+things that find no mention here. Nor will I enlarge upon his
+going into the writing-room, and marking the road from London to
+Guildford with a fine, bright line of the reddest of red ink. In
+his little cyclist hand-book there is a diary, and in the diary
+there is an entry of these things--it is there to this day, and I
+cannot do better than reproduce it here to witness that this book
+is indeed a true one, and no lying fable written to while away an
+hour.
+
+At last he fell a-yawning so much that very reluctantly indeed he
+set about finishing this great and splendid day. (Alas! that all
+days must end at last! ) He got his candle in the hall from a
+friendly waiting-maid, and passed upward--whither a modest
+novelist, who writes for the family circle, dare not follow. Yet
+I may tell you that he knelt down at his bedside, happy and
+drowsy, and said, "Our Father 'chartin' heaven," even as he had
+learnt it by rote from his mother nearly twenty years ago. And
+anon when his breathing had become deep and regular, we may creep
+into his bedroom and catch him at his dreams. He is lying upon
+his left side, with his arm under the pillow. It is dark, and he
+is hidden; but if you could have seen his face, sleeping there in
+the darkness, I think you would have perceived, in spite of that
+treasured, thin, and straggling moustache, in spite of your
+memory of the coarse words he had used that day, that the man
+before you was, after all, only a little child asleep.
+
+
+
+THE DREAMS OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+XII
+
+In spite of the drawn blinds and the darkness, you have just seen
+Mr. Hoopdriver's face peaceful in its beauty sleep in the little,
+plain bedroom at the very top of the Yellow Hammer Coffee Tavern
+at Guildford. That was before midnight. As the night progressed
+he was disturbed by dreams.
+
+After your first day of cycling one dream is inevitable. A memory
+of motion lingers in the muscles of your legs, and round and
+round they seem to go. You ride through Dreamland on wonderful
+dream bicycles that change and grow; you ride down steeples and
+staircases and over precipices; you hover in horrible suspense
+over inhabited towns, vainly seeking for a brake your hand cannot
+find, to save you from a headlong fall; you plunge into weltering
+rivers, and rush helplessly at monstrous obstacles. Anon Mr.
+Hoopdriver found himself riding out of the darkness of
+non-existence, pedalling Ezekiel's Wheels across the Weald of
+Surrey, jolting over the hills and smashing villages in his
+course, while the other man in brown cursed and swore at him and
+shouted to stop his career. There was the Putney heath-keeper,
+too, and the man in drab raging at him. He felt an awful fool, a-
+-what was it?--a juggins, ah!--a Juggernaut. The villages went
+off one after another with a soft, squashing noise. He did not
+see the Young Lady in Grey, but he knew she was looking at his
+back. He dared not look round. Where the devil was the brake? It
+must have fallen off. And the bell? Right in front of him was
+Guildford. He tried to shout and warn the town to get out of the
+way, but his voice was gone as well. Nearer, nearer! it was
+fearful! and in another moment the houses were cracking like nuts
+and the blood of the inhabitants squirting this way and that. The
+streets were black with people running. Right under his wheels he
+saw the Young Lady in Grey. A feeling of horror came upon Mr.
+Hoopdriver; he flung himself sideways to descend, forgetting how
+high he was, and forthwith he began falling; falling, falling.
+
+He woke up, turned over, saw the new moon on the window, wondered
+a little, and went to sleep again.
+
+This second dream went back into the first somehow, and the other
+man in brown came threatening and shouting towards him. He grew
+uglier and uglier as he approached, and his expression was
+intolerably evil. He came and looked close into Mr. Hoopdriver's
+eyes and then receded to an incredible distance. His face seemed
+to be luminous. "MISS BEAUMONT," he said, and splashed up a spray
+of suspicion. Some one began letting off fireworks, chiefly
+Catherine wheels, down the shop, though Mr. Hoopdriver knew it
+was against the rules. For it seemed that the place they were in
+was a vast shop, and then Mr. Hoopdriver perceived that the other
+man in brown was the shop-walker, differing from most
+shop-walkers in the fact that he was lit from within as a Chinese
+lantern might be. And the customer Mr. Hoopdriver was going to
+serve was the Young Lady in Grey. Curious he hadn't noticed it
+before. She was in grey as usual,--rationals,--and she had her
+bicycle leaning against the counter. She smiled quite frankly at
+him, just as she had done when she had apologised for stopping
+him. And her form, as she leant towards him, was full of a
+sinuous grace he had never noticed before. "What can I have the
+pleasure?" said Mr. Hoopdriver at once, and she said, "The Ripley
+road." So he got out the Ripley road and unrolled it and showed
+it to her, and she said that would do very nicely, and kept on
+looking at him and smiling, and he began measuring off eight
+miles by means of the yard measure on the counter, eight miles
+being a dress length, a rational dress length, that is; and then
+the other man in brown came up and wanted to interfere, and said
+Mr. Hoopdriver was a cad, besides measuring it off too slowly.
+And as Mr. Hoopdriver began to measure faster, the other man in
+brown said the Young Lady in Grey had been there long enough, and
+that he WAS her brother, or else she would not be travelling with
+him, and he suddenly whipped his arm about her waist and made off
+with her. It occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver even at the moment that
+this was scarcely brotherly behaviour. Of course it wasn't! The
+sight of the other man gripping her so familiarly enraged him
+frightfully; he leapt over the counter forthwith and gave chase.
+They ran round the shop and up an iron staircase into the Keep,
+and so out upon the Ripley road. For some time they kept dodging
+in and out of a wayside hotel with two front doors and an inn
+yard. The other man could not run very fast because he had hold
+of the Young Lady in Grey, but Mr. Hoopdriver was hampered by the
+absurd behaviour of his legs. They would not stretch out; they
+would keep going round and round as if they were on the treadles
+of a wheel, so that he made the smallest steps conceivable. This
+dream came to no crisis. The chase seemed to last an interminable
+time, and all kinds of people, heathkeepers, shopmen, policemen,
+the old man in the Keep, the angry man in drab, the barmaid at
+the Unicorn, men with flying-machines, people playing billiards
+in the doorways, silly, headless figures, stupid cocks and hens
+encumbered with parcels and umbrellas and waterproofs, people
+carrying bedroom candles, and such-like riffraff, kept getting in
+his way and annoying him, although he sounded his electric bell,
+and said, "Wonderful, wonderful!" at every corner....
+
+
+
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER WENT TO HASLEMERE
+
+XIII
+
+There was some little delay in getting Mr. Hoopdriver's
+breakfast, so that after all he was not free to start out of
+Guildford until just upon the stroke of nine. He wheeled his
+machine from the High Street in some perplexity. He did not know
+whether this young lady, who had seized hold of his imagination
+so strongly, and her unfriendly and possibly menacing brother,
+were ahead of him or even now breakfasting somewhere in
+Guildford. In the former case he might loiter as he chose; in the
+latter he must hurry, and possibly take refuge in branch roads.
+
+It occurred to him as being in some obscure way strategic, that
+he would leave Guildford not by the obvious Portsmouth road, but
+by the road running through Shalford. Along this pleasant shady
+way he felt suffficiently secure to resume his exercises in
+riding with one hand off the handles, and in staring over his
+shoulder. He came over once or twice, but fell on his foot each
+time, and perceived that he was improving. Before he got to
+Bramley a specious byway snapped him up, ran with him for half a
+mile or more, and dropped him as a terrier drops a walkingstick,
+upon the Portsmouth again, a couple of miles from Godalming. He
+entered Godalming on his feet, for the road through that
+delightful town is beyond dispute the vilest in the world, a mere
+tumult of road metal, a way of peaks and precipices, and, after a
+successful experiment with cider at the Woolpack, he pushed on to
+Milford.
+
+All this time he was acutely aware of the existence of the Young
+Lady in Grey and her companion in brown, as a child in the dark
+is of Bogies. Sometimes he could hear their pneumatics stealing
+upon him from behind, and looking round saw a long stretch of
+vacant road. Once he saw far ahead of him a glittering wheel, but
+it proved to be a workingman riding to destruction on a very tall
+ordinary. And he felt a curious, vague uneasiness about that
+Young Lady in Grey, for which he was altogether unable to
+account. Now that he was awake he had forgotten that accentuated
+"Miss Beaumont that had been quite clear in his dream. But the
+curious dream conviction, that the girl was not really the man's
+sister, would not let itself be forgotten. Why, for instance,
+should a man want to be alone with his sister on the top of a
+tower? At Milford his bicycle made, so to speak, an ass of
+itself. A finger-post suddenly jumped out at him, vainly
+indicating an abrupt turn to the right, and Mr. Hoopdriver would
+have slowed up and read the inscription, but no!--the bicycle
+would not let him. The road dropped a little into Milford, and
+the thing shied, put down its head and bolted, and Mr. Hoopdriver
+only thought of the brake when the fingerpost was passed. Then to
+have recovered the point of intersection would have meant
+dismounting. For as yet there was no road wide enough for Mr.
+Hoopdriver to turn in. So he went on his way--or to be precise,
+he did exactly the opposite thing. The road to the right was the
+Portsmouth road, and this he was on went to Haslemere and
+Midhurst. By that error it came about that he once more came upon
+his fellow travellers of yesterday, coming on them suddenly,
+without the slightest preliminary announcement and when they
+least expected it, under the Southwestern Railway arch. "It's
+horrible," said a girlish voice; "it's brutal--cowardly--" And
+stopped.
+
+His expression, as he shot out from the archway at them, may have
+been something between a grin of recognition and a scowl of
+annoyance at himself for the unintentional intrusion. But
+disconcerted as he waas, he was yet able to appreciate something
+of the peculiarity of their mutual attitudes. The bicycles were
+Iying by the roadside, and the two riders stood face to face. The
+other man in brown's attitude, as it flashed upon Hoopdriver, was
+a deliberate pose; he twirled his moustache and smiled faintly,
+and he was conscientiously looking amused. And the girl stood
+rigid, her arms straight by her side, her handkerchief clenched
+in her hand, and her face was flushed, with the faintest touch of
+red upon her eyelids. She seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's sense to be
+indignant. But that was the impression of a second. A mask of
+surprised recognition fell across this revelation of emotion as
+she turned her head towards him, and the pose of the other man in
+brown vanished too in a momentary astonishment. And then he had
+passed them, and was riding on towards Haslemere to make what he
+could of the swift picture that had photographed itself on his
+brain.
+
+"Rum," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It's DASHED rum!"
+
+"They were having a row."
+
+"Smirking--" What he called the other man in brown need not
+trouble us.
+
+"Annoying her!" That any human being should do that!
+
+"WHY?"
+
+The impulse to interfere leapt suddenly into Mr. Hoopdriver's
+mind. He grasped his brake, descended, and stood looking
+hesitatingly back. They still stood by the railway bridge, and it
+seemed to Mr. Hoopdriver's fancy that she was stamping her foot.
+He hesitated, then turned his bicycle round, mounted, and rode
+back towards them, gripping his courage firmly lest it should
+slip away and leave him ridiculous. "I'll offer 'im a screw
+'ammer," said Mr. Hoopdriver. Then, with a wave of fierce
+emotion, he saw that the girl was crying. In another moment they
+heard him and turned in surprise. Certainly she had been crying;
+her eyes were swimming in tears, and the other man in brown
+looked exceedingly disconcerted. Mr. Hoopdriver descended and
+stood over his machine.
+
+"Nothing wrong, I hope?" he said, looking the other man in brown
+squarely in the face. "No accident?"
+
+"Nothing," said the other man in brown shortly. "Nothing at all,
+thanks."
+
+"But," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a great effort, "the young lady
+is crying. I thought perhaps--"
+
+The Young Lady in Grey started, gave Hoopdriver one swift glance,
+and covered one eye with her handkerchief. "It's this speck," she
+said. "This speck of dust in my eye."
+
+"This lady," said the other man in brown, explaining, "has a gnat
+in her eye."
+
+There was a pause. The young lady busied herself with her eye. "I
+believe it's out," she said. The other man in brown made
+movements indicating commiserating curiosity concerning the
+alleged fly. Mr. Hoopdriver--the word is his own--stood
+flabber-gastered. He had all the intuition of the simple-minded.
+He knew there was no fly. But the ground was suddenly cut from
+his feet. There is a limit to knighterrantry --dragons and false
+knights are all very well, but flies! Fictitious flies! Whatever
+the trouble was, it was evidently not his affair. He felt he had
+made a fool of himself again. He would have mumbled some sort of
+apology; but the other man in brown gave him no time, turned on
+him abruptly, even fiercely. "I hope," he said, "that your
+curiosity is satisfied?"
+
+"Certainly," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Then we won't detain you."
+
+And, ignominiously, Mr. Hoopdriver turned his machine about,
+struggled upon it, and resumed the road southward. And when he
+learnt that he was not on the Portsmouth road, it was impossible
+to turn and go back, for that would be to face his shame again,
+and so he had to ride on by Brook Street up the hill to
+Haslemere. And away to the right the Portsmouth road mocked at
+him and made off to its fastnesses amid the sunlit green and
+purple masses of Hindhead, where Mr. Grant Allen writes his Hill
+Top Novels day by day.
+
+The sun shone, and the wide blue hill views and pleasant valleys
+one saw on either hand from the sandscarred roadway, even the
+sides of the road itself set about with grey heather scrub and
+prickly masses of gorse, and pine trees with their year's growth
+still bright green, against the darkened needles of the previous
+years, were fresh and delightful to Mr. Hoopdriver's eyes But the
+brightness of the day and the day-old sense of freedom fought an
+uphill fight against his intolerable vexation at that abominable
+encounter, and had still to win it when he reached Haslemere. A
+great brown shadow, a monstrous hatred of the other man in brown,
+possessed him. He had conceived the brilliant idea of abandoning
+Portsmouth, or at least giving up the straight way to his
+fellow-wayfarers, and of striking out boldly to the left,
+eastward. He did not dare to stop at any of the inviting
+public-houses in the main street of Haslemere, but turned up a
+side way and found a little beer-shop, the Good Hope, wherein to
+refresh himself. And there he ate and gossipped condescendingly
+with an aged labourer, assuming the while for his own private
+enjoyment the attributes of a Lost Heir, and afterwards mounted
+and rode on towards Northchapel, a place which a number of
+finger-posts conspired to boom, but which some insidious turning
+prevented him from attaining.
+
+
+
+HOW MR. HOOPDRIVER REACHED MIDHURST
+
+XIV
+
+It was one of my uncle's profoundest remarks that human beings
+are the only unreasonable creatures. This observation was so far
+justified by Mr. Hoopdriver that, after spending the morning
+tortuously avoiding the other man in brown and the Young Lady in
+Grey, he spent a considerable part of the afternoon in thinking
+about the Young Lady in Grey, and contemplating in an optimistic
+spirit the possibilities of seeing her again. Memory and
+imagination played round her, so that his course was largely
+determined by the windings of the road he traversed. Of one
+general proposition he was absolutely convinced. "There's
+something Juicy wrong with 'em," said he--once even aloud. But
+what it was he could not imagine. He recapitulated the facts.
+"Miss Beaumont --brother and sister--and the stoppage to quarrel
+and weep--it was perplexing material for a young man of small
+experience. There was no exertion he hated so much as inference,
+and after a time he gave up any attempt to get at the realities
+of the case, and let his imagination go free. Should he ever see
+her again? Suppose he did--with that other chap not about. The
+vision he found pleasantest was an encounter with her, an
+unexpected encounter at the annual Dancing Class 'Do' at the
+Putney Assembly Rooms. Somehow they would drift together, and he
+would dance with her again and again. It was a pleasant vision,
+for you must understand that Mr. Hoopdriver danced uncommonly
+well. Or again, in the shop, a sudden radiance in the doorway,
+and she is bowed towards the Manchester counter. And then to lean
+over that counter and murmur, seemingly apropos of the goods
+under discussion, "I have not forgotten that morning on the
+Portsmouth road," and lower, "I never shall forget."
+
+At Northchapel Mr. Hoopdriver consulted his map and took counsel
+and weighed his course of action. Petworth seemed a possible
+resting-place, or Pullborough; Midhurst seemed too near, and any
+place over the Downs beyond, too far, and so he meandered towards
+Petworth, posing himself perpetually and loitering, gathering
+wild flowers and wondering why they had no names--for he had
+never heard of any--dropping them furtively at the sight of a
+stranger, and generally 'mucking about.' There were purple
+vetches in the hedges, meadowsweet, honeysuckle, belated
+brambles--but the dog-roses had already gone; there were green
+and red blackberries, stellarias, and dandelions, and in another
+place white dead nettles, traveller's-joy, clinging bedstraw,
+grasses flowering, white campions, and ragged robins. One
+cornfield was glorious with poppies, bright scarlet and purple
+white, and the blue corn-flowers were beginning. In the lanes the
+trees met overhead, and the wisps of hay still hung to the
+straggling hedges. Iri one of the main roads he steered a
+perilous passage through a dozen surly dun oxen. Here and there
+were little cottages, and picturesque beer-houses with the vivid
+brewers' boards of blue and scarlet, and once a broad green and a
+church, and an expanse of some hundred houses or so. Then he came
+to a pebbly rivulet that emerged between clumps of sedge
+loosestrife and forget-me-nots under an arch of trees, and
+rippled across the road, and there he dismounted, longing to take
+off shoes and stockings--those stylish chequered stockings were
+now all dimmed with dust --and paddle his lean legs in the
+chuckling cheerful water. But instead he sat in a manly attitude,
+smoking a cigarette, for fear lest the Young Lady in Grey should
+come glittering round the corner. For the flavour of the Young
+Lady in Grey was present through it all, mixing with the flowers
+and all the delight of it, a touch that made this second day
+quite different from the first, an undertone of expectation,
+anxiety, and something like regret that would not be ignored.
+
+It was only late in the long evening that, quite abruptly, he
+began to repent, vividly and decidedly, having fled these two
+people. He was getting hungry, and that has a curious effect upon
+the emotional colouring of our minds. The man was a sinister
+brute, Hoopdriver saw in a flash of inspiration, and the
+girl--she was in some serious trouble. And he who might have
+helped her had taken his first impulse as decisive--and bolted.
+This new view of it depressed him dreadfully. What might not be
+happening to her now? He thought again of her tears. Surely it
+was merely his duty, seeing the trouble afoot, to keep his eye
+upon it.
+
+He began riding fast to get quit of such selfreproaches. He found
+himself in a tortuous tangle of roads, and as the dusk was coming
+on, emerged, not at Petworth but at Easebourne, a mile from
+Midhurst. "I'm getting hungry," said Mr. Hoopdriver, inquiring of
+a gamekeeper in Easebourne village. "Midhurst a mile, and
+Petworth five!--Thenks, I'll take Midhurst."
+
+He came into Midhurst by the bridge at the watermill, and up the
+North Street, and a little shop flourishing cheerfully, the
+cheerful sign of a teapot, and exhibiting a brilliant array of
+tobaccos, sweets, and children's toys in the window, struck his
+fancy. A neat, bright-eyed little old lady made him welcome, and
+he was presently supping sumptuously on sausages and tea, with a
+visitors' book full of the most humorous and flattering remarks
+about the little old lady, in verse and prose, propped up against
+his teapot as he ate. Regular good some of the jokes were, and
+rhymes that read well--even with your mouth full of sausage. Mr.
+Hoopdriver formed a vague idea of drawing " something "--for his
+judgment on the little old lady was already formed. He pictured
+the little old lady discovering it afterwards--"My gracious! One
+of them Punch men," she would say. The room had a curtained
+recess and a chest of drawers, for presently it was to be his
+bedroom, and the day part of it was decorated with framed
+Oddfellows' certificates and giltbacked books and portraits, and
+kettle-holders, and all kinds of beautiful things made out of
+wool; very comfortable it was indeed. The window was lead framed
+and diamond paned, and through it one saw the corner of the
+vicarage and a pleasant hill crest, in dusky silhouette against
+the twilight sky. And after the sausages had ceased to be, he lit
+a Red Herring cigarette and went swaggering out into the twilight
+street. All shadowy blue between its dark brick houses, was the
+street, with a bright yellow window here and there and splashes
+of green and red where the chemist's illumination fell across the
+road.
+
+
+
+AN INTERLUDE
+
+XV
+
+And now let us for a space leave Mr. Hoopdriver in the dusky
+Midhurst North Street, and return to the two folks beside the
+railway bridge between Milford and Haslemere. She was a girl of
+eighteen, dark, fine featured, with bright eyes, and a rich,
+swift colour under her warm-tinted skin. Her eyes were all the
+brighter for the tears that swam in them. The man was thirty
+three or four, fair, with a longish nose overhanging his sandy
+flaxen moustache, pale blue eyes, and a head that struck out
+above and behind. He stood with his feet wide apart, his hand on
+his hip, in an attitude that was equally suggestive of defiance
+and aggression. They had watched Hoopdriver out of sight. The
+unexpected interruption had stopped the flood of her tears. He
+tugged his abundant moustache and regarded her calmly. She stood
+with face averted, obstinately resolved not to speak first. "Your
+behaviour," he said at last, "makes you conspicuous."
+
+She turned upon him, her eyes and cheeks glowing, her hands
+clenched. "You unspeakable CAD," she said, and choked, stamped
+her little foot, and stood panting.
+
+"Unspeakable cad! My dear girl! Possible I AM an unspeakable cad.
+Who wouldn't be--for you?"
+
+"'Dear girl!' How DARE you speak to me like that? YOU--"
+
+"I would do anything--"
+
+"OH!"
+
+There was a moment's pause. She looked squarely into his face,
+her eyes alight with anger and contempt, and perhaps he flushed a
+little. He stroked his moustache, and by an effort maintained his
+cynical calm. "Let us be reasonable," he said.
+
+"Reasonable! That means all that is mean and cowardly and sensual
+in the world."
+
+"You have always had it so--in your generalising way. But let us
+look at the facts of the case--if that pleases you better."
+
+With an impatient gesture she motioned him to go on.
+
+"Well," he said,--"you've eloped."
+
+"I've left my home," she corrected, with dignity. "I left my home
+because it was unendurable. Because that woman--"
+
+"Yes, yes. But the point is, you have eloped with me."
+
+"You came with me. You pretended to be my friend. Promised to
+help me to earn a living by writing. It was you who said, why
+shouldn't a man and woman be friends? And now you dare--you
+dare--"
+
+"Really, Jessie, this pose of yours, this injured innocence--"
+
+"I will go back. I forbid you--I forbid you to stand in the
+way--"
+
+"One moment. I have always thought that my little pupil was at
+least clear-headed. You don't know everything yet, you know.
+Listen to me for a moment."
+
+"Haven't I been listening? And you have only insulted me. You who
+dared only to talk of friendship, who scarcely dared hint at
+anything beyond."
+
+"But you took the hints, nevertheless. You knew. You KNEW. And
+you did not mind. MIND! You liked it. It was the fun of the whole
+thing for you. That I loved you, and could not speak to you. You
+played with it--"
+
+"You have said all that before. Do you think that justifies you?"
+
+"That isn't all. I made up my mind--Well, to make the game more
+even. And so I suggested to you and joined with you in this
+expedition of yours, invented a sister at Midhurst--I tell you, I
+HAVEN'T a sister! For one object--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"To compromise you."
+
+She started. That was a new way of putting it. For half a minute
+neither spoke. Then she began half defiantly: "Much I am
+compromised. Of course--I have made a fool of myself--"
+
+"My dear girl, you are still on the sunny side of eighteen, and
+you know very little of this world. Less than you think. But you
+will learn. Before you write all those novels we have talked
+about, you will have to learn. And that's one point--" He
+hesitated. "You started and blushed when the man at breakfast
+called you Ma'am. You thought it a funny mistake, but you did not
+say anything because he was young and nervous--and besides, the
+thought of being my wife offended your modesty. You didn't care
+to notice it. But--you see; I gave your name as MRS. Beaumont."
+He looked almost apologetic, in spite of his cynical pose. "MRS.
+Beaumont," he repeated, pulling his flaxen moustache and watching
+the effect.
+
+She looked into his eyes speechless. "I am learning fast, " she
+said slowly, at last.
+
+He thought the time had come for an emotional attack. "Jessie,"
+he said, with a sudden change of voice, "I know all this is mean,
+isvillanous. But do you think that I have done all this scheming,
+all this subterfuge, for any other object--"
+
+She did not seem to listen to his words. "I shall ride home," she
+said abruptly.
+
+"To her?"
+
+She winced.
+
+"Just think," said he, "what she could say to you after this."
+
+"Anyhow, I shall leave you now."
+
+"Yes? And go--"
+
+"Go somewhere to earn my living, to be a free woman, to live
+without conventionality--"
+
+"My dear girl, do let us be cynical. You haven't money and you
+haven't credit. No one would take you in. It's one of two things:
+go back to your stepmother, or--trust to me."
+
+"How CAN I?"
+
+"Then you must go back to her." He paused momentarily, to let
+this consideration have its proper weight. "Jessie, I did not
+mean to say the things I did. Upon my honour, I lost my head when
+I spoke so. If you will, forgive me. I am a man. I could not help
+myself. Forgive me, and I promise you--"
+
+"How can I trust you?"
+
+"Try me. I can assure you--"
+
+She regarded him distrustfully.
+
+"At any rate, ride on with me now. Surely we have been in the
+shadow of this horrible bridge long enough."
+
+"Oh! let me think," she said, half turning from him and pressing
+her hand to her brow.
+
+"THINK! Look here, Jessie. It is ten o'clock. Shall we call a
+truce until one?"
+
+She hesitated, demanded a definition of the truce, and at last
+agreed.
+
+They mounted, and rode on in silence, through the sunlight and
+the heather. Both were extremely uncomfortable and disappointed.
+She was pale, divided between fear and anger. She perceived she
+was in a scrape, and tried in vain to think of a way of escape.
+Only one tangible thing would keep in her mind, try as she would
+to ignore it. That was the quite irrelevant fact that his head
+was singularly like an albino cocoanut. He, too, felt thwarted.
+He felt that this romantic business of seduction was, after all,
+unexpectedly tame. But this was only the beginning. At any rate,
+every day she spent with him was a day gained. Perhaps things
+looked worse than they were; that was some consolation.
+
+
+
+OF THE ARTIFICIAL IN MAN, AND OF THE ZEITGEIST
+
+XVI
+
+You have seen these two young people--Bechamel, by-the-bye, is
+the man's name, and the girl's is Jessie Milton--from the
+outside; you have heard them talking; they ride now side by side
+(but not too close together, and in an uneasy silence) towards
+Haslemere; and this chapter will concern itself with those
+curious little council chambers inside their skulls, where their
+motives are in session and their acts are considered and passed.
+
+But first a word concerning wigs and false teeth. Some jester,
+enlarging upon the increase of bald heads and purblind people,
+has deduced a wonderful future for the children of men. Man, he
+said, was nowadays a hairless creature by forty or fifty, and for
+hair we gave him a wig; shrivelled, and we padded him; toothless,
+and lo! false teeth set in gold. Did he lose a limb, and a fine,
+new, artificial one was at his disposal; get indigestion, and to
+hand was artificial digestive fluid or bile or pancreatine, as
+the case might be. Complexions, too, were replaceable, spectacles
+superseded an inefficient eye-lens, and imperceptible false
+diaphragms were thrust into the failing ear. So he went over our
+anatomies, until, at last, he had conjured up a weird thing of
+shreds and patches, a simulacrum, an artificial body of a man,
+with but a doubtful germ of living flesh lurking somewhere in his
+recesses. To that, he held, we were coming.
+
+How far such odd substitution for the body is possible need not
+concern us now. But the devil, speaking by the lips of Mr.
+Rudyard Kipling, hath it that in the case of one Tomlinson, the
+thing, so far as the soul is concerned, has already been
+accomplished. Time was when men had simple souls, desires as
+natural as their eyes, a little reasonable philanthropy, a little
+reasonable philoprogenitiveness, hunger, and a taste for good
+living, a decent, personal vanity, a healthy, satisfying
+pugnacity, and so forth. But now we are taught and disciplined
+for years and years, and thereafter we read and read for all the
+time some strenuous, nerve-destroying business permits. Pedagogic
+hypnotists, pulpit and platform hypnotists, book-writing
+hypnotists, newspaper-writing hypnotists, are at us all. This
+sugar you are eating, they tell us, is ink, and forthwith we
+reject it with infinite disgust. This black draught of unrequited
+toil is True Happiness, and down it goes with every symptom of
+pleasure. This Ibsen, they say, is dull past believing, and we
+yawn and stretch beyond endurance. Pardon! they interrupt, but
+this Ibsen is deep and delightful, and we vie with one another in
+an excess of entertainment. And when we open the heads of these
+two young people, we find, not a straightforward motive on the
+surface anywhere; we find, indeed, not a soul so much as an
+oversoul, a zeitgeist, a congestion of acquired ideas, a
+highway's feast of fine, confused thinking. The girl is resolute
+to Live Her Own Life, a phrase you may have heard before, and the
+man has a pretty perverted ambition to be a cynical artistic
+person of the very calmest description. He is hoping for the
+awakening of Passion in her, among other things. He knows Passion
+ought to awaken, from the text-books he has studied. He knows she
+admires his genius, but he is unaware that she does not admire
+his head. He is quite a distinguished art critic in London, and
+he met her at that celebrated lady novelist's, her stepmother,
+and here you have them well embarked upon the Adventure. Both are
+in the first stage of repentance, which consists, as you have
+probably found for yourself, in setting your teeth hard and
+saying' "I WILL go on."
+
+Things, you see, have jarred a little, and they ride on their way
+together with a certain aloofness of manner that promises ill for
+the orthodox development of the Adventure. He perceives he was
+too precipitate. But he feels his honour is involved, and
+meditates the development of a new attack. And the girl? She is
+unawakened. Her motives are bookish, written by a haphazard
+syndicate of authors, novelists, and biographers, on her white
+inexperience. An artificial oversoul she is, that may presently
+break down and reveal a human being beneath it. She is still in
+that schoolgirl phase when a talkative old man is more
+interesting than a tongue-tied young one, and when to be an
+eminent mathematician, say, or to edit a daily paper, seems as
+fine an ambition as any girl need aspire to. Bechaniel was to
+have helped her to attain that in the most expeditious manner,
+and here he is beside her, talking enigmatical phrases about
+passion, looking at her with the oddest expression, and once, and
+that was his gravest offence, offering to kiss her. At any rate
+he has apologised. She still scarcely realises, you see, the
+scrape she has got into.
+
+
+
+THE ENCOUNTER AT MIDHURST
+
+XVII
+
+We left Mr. Hoopdriver at the door of the little tea, toy, and
+tobacco shop. You must not think that a strain is put on
+coincidence when I tell you that next door to Mrs. Wardor's--that
+was the name of the bright-eyed, little old lady with whom Mr.
+Hoopdriver had stopped--is the Angel Hotel, and in the Angel
+Hotel, on the night that Mr. Hoopdriver reached Midhurst, were
+'Mr.' and 'Miss' Beaumont, our Bechamel and Jessie Milton.
+Indeed, it was a highly probable thing; for if one goes through
+Guildford, the choice of southward roads is limited; you may go
+by Petersfield to Portsmouth, or by Midhurst to Chichester, in
+addition to which highways there is nothing for it but minor
+roadways to Petworth or Pulborough, and cross-cuts Brightonward.
+And coming to Midhurst from the north, the Angel's entrance lies
+yawning to engulf your highly respectable cyclists, while Mrs.
+Wardor's genial teapot is equally attractive to those who weigh
+their means in little scales. But to people unfamiliar with the
+Sussex roads--and such were the three persons of this story--the
+convergence did not appear to be so inevitable.
+
+Bechamel, tightening his chain in the Angel yard after dinner,
+was the first to be aware of their reunion. He saw Hoopdriver
+walk slowly across the gateway, his head enhaloed in cigarette
+smoke, and pass out of sight up the street. Incontinently a mass
+of cloudy uneasiness, that had been partly dispelled during the
+day, reappeared and concentrated rapidly into definite suspicion.
+He put his screw hammer into his pocket and walked through the
+archway into the street, to settle the business forthwith, for he
+prided himself on his decision. Hoopdriver was merely
+promenading, and they met face to face.
+
+At the sight of his adversary, something between disgust and
+laughter seized Mr. Hoopdriver and for a moment destroyed his
+animosity. "'Ere we are again!" he said, laughing insincerely in
+a sudden outbreak at the perversity of chance.
+
+The other man in brown stopped short in Mr. Hoopdriver's way,
+staring. Then his face assumed an expression of dangerous
+civility. "Is it any information to you," he said, with immense
+politeness, "when I remark that you are following us?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, for some occult reason, resisted his
+characteristic impulse to apologise. He wanted to annoy.the other
+man in brown, and a sentence that had come into his head in a
+previous rehearsal cropped up appropriately. "Since when," said
+Mr. Hoopdriver, catching his breath, yet bringing the question
+out valiantly, nevertheless,--"since when 'ave you purchased the
+county of Sussex?"
+
+"May I point out," said the other man in brown, "that I object--
+we object not only to your proximity to us. To be frank--you
+appear to be following us--with an object."
+
+"You can always," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "turn round if you don't
+like it, and go back the way you came."
+
+"Oh-o!" said the other man in brown. "THAT'S it! I thought as
+much."
+
+"Did you?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite at sea, but rising pluckily
+to the unknown occasion. What was the man driving at?
+
+"I see," said the other man. "I see. I half suspected--" His
+manner changed abruptly to a quality suspiciously friendly. "Yes-
+-a word with you. You will, I hope, give me ten minutes."
+
+Wonderful things were dawning on Mr. Hoopdriver. What did the
+other man take him for? Here at last was reality! He hesitated.
+Then he thought of an admirable phrase. "You 'ave some
+communication--"
+
+"We'll call it a communication," said the other man.
+
+"I can spare you the ten minutes," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with
+dignity.
+
+"This way, then," said the other man in brown, and they walked
+slowly down the North Street towards the Grammar School. There
+was, perhaps, thirty seconds' silence. The other man stroked his
+moustache nervously. Mr. Hoopdriver's dramatic instincts were now
+fully awake. He did not quite understand in what role he was
+cast, but it was evidently something dark and mysterious. Doctor
+Conan Doyle, Victor Hugo, and Alexander Dumas were well within
+Mr. Hoopdriver's range of reading, and he had not read them for
+nothing.
+
+"I will be perfectly frank with you," said the other man in
+brown.
+
+"Frankness is always the best course," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Well, then--who the devil set you on this business?"
+
+"Set me ON this business?"
+
+"Don't pretend to be stupid. Who's your employer? Who engaged you
+for this job?"
+
+"Well," said Mr. Hoopdriver, confused. "No--I can't say."
+
+"Quite sure?" The other man in brown glanced meaningly down at
+his hand, and Mr. Hoopdriver, following him mechanically, saw a
+yellow milled edge glittering in the twilight. Now your shop
+assistant is just above the tip-receiving class, and only just
+above it--so that he is acutely sensitive on the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver flushed hotly, and his eyes were angry as he met
+those of the other man in brown. "Stow it!" said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+stopping and facing the tempter.
+
+"What!" said the other man in brown, surprised. "Eigh?" And so
+saying he stowed it in his breeches pocket.
+
+"D'yer think I'm to be bribed?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, whose
+imagination was rapidly expanding the situation. "By Gosh! I'd
+follow you now--"
+
+"My dear sir," said the other man in brown, "I beg your pardon. I
+misunderstood you. I really beg your pardon. Let us walk on. In
+your profession--"
+
+"What have you got to say against my profession?"
+
+"Well, really, you know. There are detectives of an inferior
+description--watchers. The whole class. Private Inquiry--I did
+not realise--I really trust you will overlook what was, after
+all--you must admit--a natural indiscretion. Men of honour are
+not so common in the world--in any profession."
+
+It was lucky for Mr. Hoopdriver that in Midhurst they do not
+light the lamps in the summer time, or the one they were passing
+had betrayed him. As it was, he had to snatch suddenly at his
+moustache and tug fiercely at it, to conceal the furious tumult
+of exultation, the passion of laughter, that came boiling up.
+Detective! Even in the shadow Bechamel saw that a laugh was
+stifled, but he put it down to the fact that the phrase "men of
+honour" amused his interlocutor. "He'll come round yet," said
+Bechamel to himself. "He's simply holding out for a fiver." He
+coughed.
+
+"I don't see that it hurts you to tell me who your employer is."
+
+"Don't you? I do."
+
+"Prompt," said Bechamel, appreciatively. "Now here's the thing I
+want to put to you--the kernel of the whole business. You need
+not answer if you don't want to. There's no harm done in my
+telling you what I want to know. Are you employed to watch me--or
+Miss Milton?"
+
+"I'm not the leaky sort," said Mr. Hoopdriver, keeping the secret
+he did not know with immense enjoyment. Miss Milton! That was her
+name. Perhaps he'd tell some more. "It's no good pumping. Is that
+all you're after?" said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Bechamel respected himself for his diplomatic gifts. He tried to
+catch a remark by throwing out a confidence. "I take it there are
+two people concerned in watching this affair."
+
+"Who's the other?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, calmly, but controlling
+with enormous internal tension his selfappreciation. "Who's the
+other?" was really brilliant, he thought.
+
+"There's my wife and HER stepmother."
+
+"And you want to know which it is?"
+
+"Yes," said Bechamel.
+
+"Well--arst 'em!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, his exultation getting the
+better of him, and with a pretty consciousness of repartee. "Arst
+'em both."
+
+Bechamel turned impatiently. Then he made a last effort. "I'd
+give a five-pound note to know just the precise state of
+affairs," he said.
+
+"I told you to stow that," said Mr. Hoopdriver, in a threatening
+tone. And added with perfect truth and a magnificent mystery,
+"You don't quite understand who you're dealing with. But you
+will!" He spoke with such conviction that he half believed that
+that defective office of his in London--Baker Street, in fact--
+really existed.
+
+With that the interview terminated. Bechamel went back to the
+Angel, perturbed. "Hang detectives!" It wasn't the kind of thing
+he had anticipated at all. Hoopdriver, with round eyes and a
+wondering smile, walked down to where the mill waters glittered
+in the moonlight, and after meditating over the parapet of the
+bridge for a space, with occasional murmurs of, "Private Inquiry"
+and the like, returned, with mystery even in his paces, towards
+the town.
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+That glee which finds expression in raised eyebrows and long, low
+whistling noises was upon Mr. Hoopdriver. For a space he forgot
+the tears of the Young Lady in Grey. Here was a new game!--and a
+real one. Mr. Hoopdriver as a Private Inquiry Agent, a Sherlock
+Holmes in fact, keeping these two people 'under observation.' He
+walked slowly back from the bridge until he was opposite the
+Angel, and stood for ten minutes, perhaps, contemplating that
+establishment and enjoying all the strange sensations of being
+this wonderful, this mysterious and terrible thing. Everything
+fell into place in his scheme. He had, of course, by a kind of
+instinct, assumed the disguise of a cyclist, picked up the first
+old crock he came across as a means of pursuit. 'No expense was
+to be spared.'
+
+Then he tried to understand what it was in particular that he was
+observing. "My wife"--"HER stepmother!" Then he remembered her
+swimming eyes. Abruptly came a wave of anger that surprised him,
+washed away the detective superstructure, and left him plain Mr.
+Hoopdriver. This man in brown, with his confident manner, and his
+proffered half sovereign (damn him!) was up to no good, else why
+should he object to being watched? He was married! She was not
+his sister. He began to understand. A horrible suspicion of the
+state of affairs came into Mr. Hoopdriver's head. Surely it had
+not come to THAT. He was a detective!--he would find out. How was
+it to be done? He began to submit sketches on approval to
+himself. It required an effort before he could walk into the
+Angel bar. "A lemonade and bitter, please," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He cleared his throat. "Are Mr. and Mrs. Bowlong stopping here?"
+
+"What, a gentleman and a young lady--on bicycles?"
+
+"Fairly young--a married couple."
+
+"No," said the barmaid, a talkative person of ample dimensions.
+"There's no married couples stopping here. But there's a Mr. and
+Miss BEAUMONT." She spelt it for precision. "Sure you've got the
+name right, young man?"
+
+"Quite," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Beaumont there is, but no one of the name of-- What was the name
+you gave?"
+
+"Bowlong," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"No, there ain't no Bowlong," said the barmaid, taking up a
+glasscloth and a drying tumbler and beginning to polish the
+latter. "First off, I thought you might be asking for Beaumont--
+the names being similar. Were you expecting them on bicycles?"
+
+"Yes--they said they MIGHT be in Midhurst tonight."
+
+"P'raps they'll come presently. Beaumont's here, but no Bowlong.
+Sure that Beaumont ain't the name?"
+
+"Certain," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"It's curious the names being so alike. I thought p'raps--"
+
+And so they conversed at some length, Mr. Hoopdriver delighted to
+find his horrible suspicion disposed of. The barmaid having
+listened awhile at the staircase volunteered some particulars of
+the young couple upstairs. Her modesty was much impressed by the
+young lady's costume, so she intimated, and Mr. Hoopdriver
+whispered the badinage natural to the occasion, at which she was
+coquettishly shocked. "There'll be no knowing which is which, in
+a year or two," said the barmaid. "And her manner too! She got
+off her machine and give it 'im to stick up against the kerb, and
+in she marched. 'I and my brother,' says she, 'want to stop here
+to-night. My brother doesn't mind what kind of room 'e 'as, but I
+want a room with a good view, if there's one to be got,' says
+she. He comes hurrying in after and looks at her. 'I've settled
+the rooms,' she says, and 'e says 'damn!' just like that. I can
+fancy my brother letting me boss the show like that."
+
+"I dessay you do," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "if the truth was known."
+
+The barmaid looked down, smiled and shook her head, put down the
+tumbler, polished, and took up another that had been draining,
+and shook the drops of water into her little zinc sink.
+
+"She'll be a nice little lot to marry," said the barmaid. "She'll
+be wearing the--well, b-dashes, as the sayin' is. I can't think
+what girls is comin' to."
+
+This depreciation of the Young Lady in Grey was hardly to
+Hoopdriver's taste.
+
+"Fashion," said he, taking up his change. "Fashion is all the go
+with you ladies--and always was. You'll be wearing 'em yourself
+before a couple of years is out."
+
+"Nice they'd look on my figger," said the barmaid, with a titter.
+"No--I ain't one of your fashionable sort. Gracious no! I
+shouldn't feel as if I'd anything on me, not more than if I'd
+forgot-- Well, there! I'm talking." She put down the glass
+abruptly. "I dessay I'm old fashioned," she said, and walked
+humming down the bar.
+
+"Not you," said Mr. Hoopdriver. He waited until he caught her
+eye, then with his native courtesy smiled, raised his cap, and
+wished her good evening.
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+Then Mr. Hoopdriver returned to the little room with the
+lead-framed windows where he had dined, and where the bed was now
+comfortably made, sat down on the box under the window, stared at
+the moon rising on the shining vicarage roof, and tried to
+collect his thoughts. How they whirled at first! It was past ten,
+and most of Midhurst was tucked away in bed, some one up the
+street was learning the violin, at rare intervals a belated
+inhabitant hurried home and woke the echoes, and a corncrake kept
+up a busy churning in the vicarage garden. The sky was deep blue,
+with a still luminous afterglow along the hlack edge of the hill,
+and the white moon overhead, save for a couple of yellow stars,
+had the sky to herself.
+
+At first his thoughts were kinetic, of deeds and not
+relationships. There was this malefactor, and his victim, and it
+had fallen on Mr. Hoopdriver to take a hand in the game. HE was
+married. Did she know he was married? Never for a moment did a
+thought of evil concerning her cross Hoopdriver's mind. Simple-
+minded people see questions of morals so much better than
+superior persons--who have read and thought themselves complex to
+impotence. He had heard her voice, seen the frank light in her
+eyes, and she had been weeping--that sufficed. The rights of the
+case he hadn't properly grasped. But he would. And that smirking-
+-well, swine was the mildest for him. He recalled the exceedingly
+unpleasant incident of the railway bridge. "Thin we won't detain
+yer, thenks," said Mr. Hoopdriver, aloud, in a strange,
+unnatural, contemptible voice, supposed to represent that of
+Bechamel. "Oh, the BEGGAR! I'll be level with him yet. He's
+afraid of us detectives--that I'll SWEAR." (If Mrs. Wardor should
+chance to be on the other side of the door within earshot, well
+and good.)
+
+For a space he meditated chastisements and revenges, physical
+impossibilities for the most part,--Bechamel staggering headlong
+from the impact of Mr. Hoopdriver's large, but, to tell the
+truth, ill supported fist, Bechamel's five feet nine of height
+lifted from the ground and quivering under a vigorously applied
+horsewhip. So pleasant was such dreaming, that Mr. Hoopdriver's
+peaked face under the moonlight was transfigured. One might have
+paired him with that well-known and universally admired triumph,
+'The Soul's Awakening,' so sweet was his ecstasy. And presently
+with his thirst for revenge glutted by six or seven violent
+assaults, a duel and two vigorous murders, his mind came round to
+the Young Lady in Grey again.
+
+She was a plucky one too. He went over the incident the barmaid
+at the Angel had described to him. His thoughts ceased to be a
+torrent, smoothed down to a mirror in which she was reflected
+with infinite clearness and detail. He'd never met anything like
+her before. Fancy that bolster of a barmaid being dressed in that
+way! He whuffed a contemptuous laugh. He compared her colour, her
+vigour, her voice, with the Young Ladies in Business with whom
+his lot had been cast. Even in tears she was beautiful, more
+beautiful indeed to him, for it made her seem softer and weaker,
+more accessible. And such weeping as he had seen before had been
+so much a matter of damp white faces, red noses, and hair coming
+out of curl. Your draper's assistant becomes something of a judge
+of weeping, because weeping is the custom of all Young Ladies in
+Business, when for any reason their services are dispensed with.
+She could weep--and (by Gosh!) she could smile. HE knew that, and
+reverting to acting abruptly, he smiled confidentially at the
+puckered pallor of the moon.
+
+It is difficult to say how long Mr. Hoopdriver's pensiveness
+lasted. It seemed a long time before his thoughts of action
+returned. Then he remembered he was a 'watcher'; that to-morrow
+he must be busy. It would be in character to make notes, and he
+pulled out his little note-book. With that in hand he fell
+a-thinking again. Would that chap tell her the 'tecks were after
+them? If so, would she be as anxious to get away as HE was? He
+must be on the alert. If possible he must speak to her. Just a
+significant word, "Your friend--trust me!"--It occurred to him
+that to-morrow these fugitives might rise early to escape. At
+that he thought of the time and found it was half-past eleven.
+"Lord!" said he, "I must see that I wake." He yawned and rose.
+The blind was up, and he pulled back the little chintz curtains
+to let the sunlight strike across to the bed, hung his watch
+within good view of his pillow, on a nail that supported a
+kettle-holder, and sat down on his bed to undress. He lay awake
+for a little while thinking of the wonderful possibilities of the
+morrow, and thence he passed gloriously into the wonderland of
+dreams.
+
+
+
+THE PURSUIT
+
+XX
+
+And now to tell of Mr. Hoopdriver, rising with the sun, vigilant,
+active, wonderful, the practicable half of the lead-framed window
+stuck open, ears alert, an eye flickering incessantly in the
+corner panes, in oblique glances at the Angel front. Mrs. Wardor
+wanted him to have his breakfast downstairs in her kitchen, but
+that would have meant abandoning the watch, and he held out
+strongly. The bicycle, cap-a-pie, occupied, under protest, a
+strategic position in the shop. He was expectant by six in the
+morning. By nine horrible fears oppressed him that his quest had
+escaped him, and he had to reconnoitre the Angel yard in order to
+satisfy himself. There he found the ostler (How are the mighty
+fallen in these decadent days!) brushing down the bicycles of the
+chase, and he returned relieved to Mrs. Wardor's premises. And
+about ten they emerged, and rode quietly up the North Street. He
+watched them until they turned the corner of the post office, and
+then out into the road and up after them in fine style! They went
+by the engine-house where the old stocks and the whipping posts
+are, and on to the Chichester road, and he followed gallantly. So
+this great chase began.
+
+They did not look round, and he kept them just within sight,
+getting down if he chanced to draw closely upon them round a
+corner. By riding vigorously he kept quite conveniently near
+them, for they made but little hurry. He grew hot indeed, and his
+knees were a little stiff to begin with, but that was all. There
+was little danger of losing them, for a thin chalky dust lay upon
+the road, and the track of her tire was milled like a shilling,
+and his was a chequered ribbon along the way. So they rode by
+Cobden's monument and through the prettiest of villages, until at
+last the downs rose steeply ahead. There they stopped awhile at
+the only inn in the place, and Mr. Hoopdriver took up a position
+which commanded the inn door, and mopped his face and thirsted
+and smoked a Red Herring cigarette. They remained in the inn for
+some time. A number of chubby innocents returning home from
+school, stopped and formed a line in front of him, and watched
+him quietly but firmly for the space of ten minutes or so. "Go
+away," said he, and they only seemed quietly interested. He asked
+them all their names then, and they answered indistinct murmurs.
+He gave it up at last and became passive on his gate, and so at
+length they tired of him.
+
+The couple under observation occupied the inn so long that Mr.
+Hoopdriver at the thought of their possible employment hungered
+as well as thirsted. Clearly, they were lunching. It was a
+cloudless day, and the sun at the meridian beat down upon the top
+of Mr. Hoopdriver's head, a shower bath of sunshine, a huge jet
+of hot light. It made his head swim. At last they emerged, and
+the other man in brown looked back and saw him. They rode on to
+the foot of the down, and dismounting began to push tediously up
+that long nearly vertical ascent of blinding white road, Mr.
+Hoopdriver hesitated. It might take them twenty minutes to mount
+that. Beyond was empty downland perhaps for miles. He decided to
+return to the inn and snatch a hasty meal.
+
+At the inn they gave him biscuits and cheese and a misleading
+pewter measure of sturdy ale, pleasant under the palate, cool in
+the throat, but leaden in the legs, of a hot afternoon. He felt a
+man of substance as he emerged in the blinding sunshine, but even
+by the foot of the down the sun was insisting again that his
+skull was too small for his brains. The hill had gone steeper,
+the chalky road blazed like a magnesium light, and his front
+wheel began an apparently incurable squeaking. He felt as a man
+from Mars would feel if he were suddenly transferred to this
+planet, about three times as heavy as he was wont to feel. The
+two little black figures had vanished over the forehead of the
+hill. "The tracks'll be all right," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+That was a comforting reflection. It not only justified a slow
+progress up the hill, but at the crest a sprawl on the turf
+beside the road, to contemplate the Weald from the south. In a
+matter of two days he had crossed that spacious valley, with its
+frozen surge of green hills, its little villages and townships
+here and there, its copses and cornfields, its ponds and streams
+like jewelery of diamonds and silver glittering in the sun. The
+North Downs were hidden, far away beyond the Wealden Heights.
+Down below was the little village of Cocking, and half-way up the
+hill, a mile perhaps to the right, hung a flock of sheep grazing
+together. Overhead an anxious peewit circled against the blue,
+and every now and then emitted its feeble cry. Up here the heat
+was tempered by a pleasant breeze. Mr. Hoopdriver was possessed
+by unreasonable contentment; he lit himself a cigarette and
+lounged more comfortably. Surely the Sussex ale is made of the
+waters of Lethe, of poppies and pleasant dreams. Drowsiness
+coiled insidiously about him.
+
+He awoke with a guilty start, to find himself sprawling prone on
+the turf with his cap over one eye. He sat up, rubbed his eyes,
+and realised that he had slept. His head was still a trifle
+heavy. And the chase? He jumped to his feet and stooped to pick.
+up his overturned machine. He whipped out his watch and saw that
+it was past two o'clock. "Lord love us, fancy that!--But the
+tracks'll be all right," said Mr. Hoopdriver, wheeling his
+machine back to the chalky road. "I must scorch till I overtake
+them."
+
+He mounted and rode as rapidly as the heat and a lingering
+lassitude permitted. Now and then he had to dismount to examine
+the surface where the road forked. He enjoyed that rather.
+"Trackin'," he said aloud, and decided in the privacy of his own
+mind that he had a wonderful instinct for 'spoor.' So he came
+past Goodwood station and Lavant, and approached Chichester
+towards four o'clock. And then came a terrible thing. In places
+the road became hard, in places were the crowded indentations of
+a recent flock of sheep, and at last in the throat of the town
+cobbles and the stony streets branching east, west, north, and
+south, at a stone cross under the shadow of the cathedral the
+tracks vanished. "O Cricky!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, dismounting in
+dismay and standing agape. "Dropped anything?" said an inhabitant
+at the kerb. "Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "I've lost the spoor,"
+and walked upon his way, leaving the inhabitant marvelling what
+part of a bicycle a spoor might be. Mr. Hoopdriver, abandoning
+tracking, began asking people if they had seen a Young Lady in
+Grey on a bicycle. Six casual people hadn't, and he began to feel
+the inquiry was conspicuous, and desisted. But what was to be
+done?
+
+Hoopdriver was hot, tired, and hungry, and full of the first
+gnawings of a monstrous remorse. He decided to get himself some
+tea and meat, and in the Royal George he meditated over the
+business in a melancholy frame enough. They had passed out of his
+world--vanished, and all his wonderful dreams of some vague,
+crucial interference collapsed like a castle of cards. What a
+fool he had been not to stick to them like a leech! He might have
+thought! But there!--what WAS the good of that sort of thing now?
+He thought of her tears, of her helplessness, of the bearing of
+the other man in brown, and his wrath and disappointment surged
+higher. "What CAN I do?" said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, bringing his
+fist down beside the teapot.
+
+What would Sherlock Holmes have done? Perhaps, after all, there
+might be such things as clues in the world, albeit the age of
+miracles was past. But to look for a clue in this intricate
+network of cobbled streets, to examine every muddy interstice!
+There was a chance by looking about and inquiry at the various
+inns. Upon that he began. But of course they might have ridden
+straight through and scarcely a soul have marked them. And then
+came a positivelybrilliant idea. "'Ow many ways are there out of
+Chichester?" said Mr. Hoopdriver. It was really equal to Sherlock
+Holmes--that." If they've made tracks, I shall find those tracks.
+If not--they're in the town." He was then in East Street, and he
+started at once to make the circuit of the place, discovering
+incidentally that Chichester is a walled city. In passing, he
+made inquiries at the Black Swan, the Crown, and the Red Lion
+Hotel. At six o'clock in the evening, he was walking downcast,
+intent, as one who had dropped money, along the road towards
+Bognor, kicking up the dust with his shoes and fretting with
+disappointed pugnacity. A thwarted, crestfallen Hoopdriver it
+was, as you may well imagine. And then suddenly there jumped upon
+his attention--a broad line ribbed like a shilling, and close
+beside it one chequered, that ever and again split into two.
+"Found!" said Mr. Hoopdriver and swung round on his heel at once,
+and back to the Royal George, helter skelter, for the bicycle
+they were minding for him. The ostler thought he was confoundedly
+imperious, considering his machine.
+
+
+
+AT BOGNOR
+
+XXI
+
+That seductive gentleman, Bechamel, had been working up to a
+crisis. He had started upon this elopement in a vein of fine
+romance, immensely proud of his wickedness, and really as much in
+love as an artificial oversoul can be, with Jessie. But either
+she was the profoundest of coquettes or she had not the slightest
+element of Passion (with a large P) in her composition. It warred
+with all his ideas of himself and the feminine mind to think that
+under their flattering circumstances she really could be so
+vitally deficient. He found her persistent coolness, her more or
+less evident contempt for himself, exasperating in the highest
+degree. He put it to himself that she was enough to provoke a
+saint, and tried to think that was piquant and enjoyable, but the
+blisters on his vanity asserted themselves. The fact is, he was,
+under this standing irritation, getting down to the natural man
+in himself for once, and the natural man in himself, in spite of
+Oxford and the junior Reviewers' Club, was a Palaeolithic
+creature of simple tastes and violent methods. "I'll be level
+with you yet," ran like a plough through the soil of his
+thoughts.
+
+Then there was this infernal detective. Bechamel had told his
+wife he was going to Davos to see Carter. To that he had fancied
+she was reconciled, but how she would take this exploit was
+entirely problematical. She was a woman of peculiar moral views,
+and she measured marital infidelity largely by its proximity to
+herself. Out of her sight, and more particularly out of the sight
+of the other women of her set, vice of the recognised description
+was, perhaps, permissible to those contemptible weaklings, men,
+but this was Evil on the High Roads. She was bound to make a
+fuss, and these fusses invariably took the final form of a
+tightness of money for Bechamel. Albeit, and he felt it was
+heroic of him to resolve so, it was worth doing if it was to be
+done. His imagination worked on a kind of matronly Valkyrie, and
+the noise of pursuit and vengeance was in the air. The idyll
+still had the front of the stage. That accursed detective, it
+seemed, had been thrown off the scent, and that, at any rate,
+gave a night's respite. But things must be brought to an issue
+forthwith.
+
+By eight o'clock in the evening, in a little dining-room in the
+Vicuna Hotel, Bognor, the crisis had come, and Jessie, flushed
+and angry in the face and with her heart sinking, faced him again
+for her last st,ruggle with him. He had tricked her this time,
+effectually, and luck had been on his side. She was booked as
+Mrs. Beaumont. Save for her refusal to enter their room, and her
+eccentricity of eating with unwashed hands, she had so far kept
+up the appearances of things before the waiter. But the dinner
+was grim enough. Now in turn she appealed to his better nature
+and made extravagant statements of her plans to fool him.
+
+He was white and vicious by this time, and his anger quivered
+through his pose of brilliant wickedness.
+
+"I will go to the station," she said. "I will go back--"
+
+"The last train for anywhere leaves at 7.42."
+
+"I will appeal to the police--"
+
+"You don't know them."
+
+"I will tell these hotel people."
+
+"They will turn you out of doors. You're in such a thoroughly
+false position now. They don't understand unconventionality, down
+here."
+
+She stamped her foot. "If I wander about the streets all night--"
+she said.
+
+"You who have never been out alone after dusk? Do you know what
+the streets of a charming little holiday resort are like--"
+
+"I don't care," she said. "I can go to the clergyman here."
+
+"He's a charming man. Unmarried. And men are really more alike
+than you think. And anyhow--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"How CAN you explain the last two nights to anyone now? The
+mischief is done, Jessie."
+
+"You CUR," she said, and suddenly put her hand to her breast. He
+thought she meant to faint, but she stood, with the colour gone
+from her face.
+
+"No," he said. "I love you."
+
+"Love!" said she.
+
+"Yes--love."
+
+"There are ways yet," she said, after a pause.
+
+"Not for you. You are too full of life and hope yet for, what is
+it?--not the dark arch nor the black flowing river. Don't you
+think of it. You'll only shirk it when the moment comes, and turn
+it all into comedy."
+
+She turned round abruptly from him and stood looking out across
+the parade at the shining sea over which the afterglow of day
+fled before the rising moon. He maintained his attitude. The
+blinds were still up, for she had told the waiter not to draw
+them. There was silence for some moments.
+
+At last he spoke in as persuasive a voice as he could summon.
+"Take it sensibly, Jessie. Why should we, who have so much in
+common, quarrel into melodrama? I swear I love you. You are all
+that is bright and desirable to me. I am stronger than you,
+older; man to your woman. To find YOU too--conventional!"
+
+She looked at him over her shoulder, and he noticed with a twinge
+of delight how her little chin came out beneath the curve of her
+cheek.
+
+"MAN!" she said. "Man to MY woman! Do MEN lie? Would a MAN use
+his five and thirty years' experience to outwit a girl of
+seventeen? Man to my woman indeed! That surely is the last
+insult!"
+
+"Your repartee is admirable, Jessie. I should say they do,
+though--all that and more also when their hearts were set on such
+a girl as yourself. For God's sake drop this shrewishness! Why
+should you be so--difficult to me? Here am I with MY reputation,
+MY career, at your feet. Look here, Jessie--on my honour, I will
+marry you--"
+
+"God forbid," she said, so promptly that she never learnt he had
+a wife, even then. It occurred to him then for the first time, in
+the flash of her retort, that she did not know he was married.
+
+"'Tis only a pre-nuptial settlement," he said, following that
+hint.
+
+He paused.
+
+"You must be sensible. The thing's your own doing. Come out on
+the beach now the beach here is splendid, and the moon will soon
+be high."
+
+"_I_ WON'T" she said, stamping her foot.
+
+"Well, well--"
+
+"Oh! leave me alone. Let me think--"
+
+"Think," he said, "if you want to. It's your cry always. But you
+can't save yourself by thinking, my dear girl. You can't save
+yourself in any way now. If saving it is--this parsimony--"
+
+"Oh, go--go."
+
+"Very well. I will go. I will go and smoke a cigar. And think of
+you, dear. . . . But do you think I should do all this if I did
+not care?"
+
+"Go," she whispered, without glancing round. She continued to
+stare out of the window. He stood looking at her for a moment,
+with a strange light in his eyes. He made a step towards her. "I
+HAVE you,", he said. "You are mine. Netted--caught. But mine." He
+would have gone up to her and laid his hand upon her, but he did
+not dare to do that yet. "I have you in my hand," he said, "in my
+power. Do you hear--POWER!"
+
+She remained impassive. He stared at her for half a minute, and
+then, with a superb gesture that was lost upon her, went to the
+door. Surely the instinctive abasement of her sex before Strength
+was upon his side. He told himself that his battle was won. She
+heard the handle move and the catch click as the door closed
+behind him.
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+And now without in the twilight behold Mr. Hoopdriver, his cheeks
+hot, his eye bright! His brain is in a tumult. The nervous,
+obsequious Hoopdriver, to whom I introduced you some days since,
+has undergone a wonderful change. Ever since he lost that 'spoor'
+in Chichester, he has been tormented by the most horrible visions
+of the shameful insults that may be happening. The strangeness of
+new surroundings has been working to strip off the habitual
+servile from him. Here was moonlight rising over the memory of a
+red sunset, dark shadows and glowing orange lamps, beauty
+somewhere mysteriously rapt away from him, tangible wrong in a
+brown suit and an unpleasant face, flouting him. Mr. Hoopdriver
+for the time, was in the world of Romance and Knight-errantry,
+divinely forgetful of his social position or hers; forgetting,
+too, for the time any of the wretched timidities that had tied
+him long since behind the counter in his proper place. He was
+angry and adventurous. It was all about him, this vivid drama he
+had fallen into, and it was eluding him. He was far too grimly in
+earnest to pick up that lost thread and make a play of it now.
+The man was living. He did not pose when he alighted at the cof
+ee tavern even, nor when he made his hasty meal.
+
+As Bechamel crossed from the Vicuna towards the esplanade,
+Hoopdriver, disappointed and exasperated, came hurrying round the
+corner from the Temperance Hotel. At the sight of Bechamel, his
+heart jumped, and the tension of his angry suspense exploded
+into, rather than gave place to, an excited activity of mind.
+They were at the Vicuna, and she was there now alone. It was the
+occasion he sought. But he would give Chance no chance against
+him. He went back round the corner, sat down on the seat, and
+watched Bechamel recede into the dimness up the esplanade, before
+he got up and walked into the hotel entrance. "A lady cyclist in
+grey," he asked for, and followed boldly on the waiter's heels.
+The door of the dining-room was opening before he felt a qualm.
+And then suddenly he was nearly minded to turn and run for it,
+and his features seemed to him to be convulsed.
+
+She turned with a start, and looked at him with something between
+terror and hope in her eyes.
+
+"Can I--have a few words--with you, alone?" said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+controlling his breath with difficulty. She hesitated, and then
+motioned the waiter to withdraw.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver watched the door shut. He had intended to step out
+into the middle of the room, fold his arms and say, "You are in
+trouble. I am a Friend. Trust me." Instead of which he stood
+panting and then spoke with sudden familiarity, hastily,
+guiltily: "Look here. I don't know what the juice is up, but I
+think there's something wrong. Excuse my intruding--if it isn't
+so. I'll do anything you like to help you out of the scrape--if
+you're in one. That's my meaning, I believe. What can I do? I
+would do anything to help you."
+
+Her brow puckered, as she watched him make, with infinite
+emotion, this remarkable speech. "YOU!" she said. She was
+tumultuously weighing possibilities in her mind, and he had
+scarcely ceased when she had made her resolve.
+
+She stepped a pace forward. "You are a gentleman," she said.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Can I trust you?"
+
+She did not wait for his assurance. "I must leave this hotel at
+once. Come here."
+
+She took his arm and led him to the window.
+
+"You can just see the gate. It is still open. Through that are
+our bicycles. Go down, get them out, and I will come down to you.
+Dare you?
+
+"Get your bicycle out in the road?"
+
+"Both. Mine alone is no good. At once. Dare you?"
+
+"Which way?"
+
+"Go out by the front door and round. I will follow in one
+minute."
+
+"Right!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, and went.
+
+He had to get those bicycles. Had he been told to go out and kill
+Bechamel he would have done it. His head was a MaeIstrom now. He
+walked out of the hotel, along the front, and into the big,
+blackshadowed coach yard. He looked round. There were no bicycles
+visible. Then a man emerged from the dark, a short man in a
+short, black, shiny jacket. Hoopdriver was caught. He made no
+attempt to turn and run for it. "I've been giving your machines a
+wipe over, sir," said the man, recognising the suit, and touching
+his cap. Hoopdriver's intelligence now was a soaring eagle; he
+swooped on the situation at once. "That's right," he said, and
+added, before the pause became marked, "Where is mine? I want to
+look at the chain."
+
+The man led him into an open shed, and went fumbling for a
+lantern. Hoopdriver moved the lady's machine out of his way to
+the door, and then laid hands on the man's machine and wheeled it
+out of the shed into the yard. The gate stood open and beyond was
+the pale road and a clump of trees black in the twilight. He
+stooped and examined the chain with trembling fingers. How was it
+to be done? Something behind the gate seemed to flutter. The man
+must be got rid of anyhow.
+
+"I say," said Hoopdriver, with an inspiration, "can you get me a
+screwdriver?"
+
+The man simply walked across the shed, opened and shut a box, and
+came up to the kneeling Hoopdriver with a screwdriver in his
+hand. Hoopdriver felt himself a lost man. He took the screwdriver
+with a tepid "Thanks," and incontinently had another inspiration.
+
+"I say," he said again.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"This is miles too big."
+
+The man lit the lantern, brought it up to Hoopdriver and put it
+down on the ground. "Want a smaller screwdriver?" he said.
+
+Hoopdriver had his handkerchief out and sneezed a prompt ATICHEW.
+It is the orthodox thing when you wish to avoid recognition. "As
+small as you have," he said, out of his pocket handkerchief.
+
+"I ain't got none smaller than that," said the ostler.
+
+"Won't do, really," said Hoopdriver, still wallowing in his
+handkerchief.
+
+"I'll see wot they got in the 'ouse, if you like, sir," said the
+man. "If you would," said Hoopdriver. And as the man's heavily
+nailed boots went clattering down the yard, Hoopdriver stood up,
+took a noiseless step to the lady's machine, laid trembling hands
+on its handle and saddle, and prepared for a rush.
+
+The scullery door opened momentarily and sent a beam of warm,
+yellow light up the road, shut again behind the man, and
+forthwith Hoopdriver rushed the machines towards the gate. A dark
+grey form came fluttering to meet him. "Give me this," she said,
+"and bring yours."
+
+He passed the thing to her, touched her hand in the darkness, ran
+back, seized Bechamel's machine, and followed.
+
+The yellow light of the scullery door suddenly flashed upon the
+cobbles again. It was too late now to do anything but escape. He
+heard the ostler shout behind him, and came into the road. She
+was up and dim already. He got into the saddle without a blunder.
+In a moment the ostler was in the gateway with a full-throated
+"HI! sir! That ain't allowed;" and Hoopdriver was overtaking the
+Young Lady in Grey. For some moments the earth seemed alive with
+shouts of, "Stop 'em!" and the shadows with ambuscades of police.
+The road swept round, and they were riding out of sight of the
+hotel, and behind dark hedges, side by side.
+
+She was weeping with excitement as he overtook her. "Brave," she
+said, "brave!" and he ceased to feel like a hunted thief. He
+looked over his shoulder and about him, and saw that they were
+already out of Bognor--for the Vicuna stands at the very
+westernmost extremity of the sea front--and riding on a fair wide
+road.
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+The ostler (being a fool) rushed violently down the road
+vociferating after them. Then he returned panting to the Vicuna
+Hotel, and finding a group of men outside the entrance, who
+wanted to know what was UP, stopped to give them the cream of the
+adventure. That gave the fugitives five minutes. Then pushing
+breathlessly into the bar, he had to make it clear to the barmaid
+what the matter was, and the 'gov'nor' being out , they spent
+some more precious time wondering 'what--EVER' was to be done! in
+which the two customers returning from outside joined with
+animation. There were also moral remarks and other irrelevant
+contributions. There were conflicting ideas of telling the police
+and pursuing the flying couple on a horse. That made ten minutes.
+Then Stephen, the waiter, who had shown Hoopdriver up, came down
+and lit wonderful lights and started quite a fresh discussion by
+the simple question "WHICH?" That turned ten minutes into a
+quarter of an hour. And in the midst of this discussion, making a
+sudden and awestricken silence, appeared Bechamel in the hall
+beyond the bar, walked with a resolute air to the foot of the
+staircase, and passed out of sight. You conceive the backward
+pitch of that exceptionally shaped cranium? Incredulous eyes
+stared into one another's in the bar, as his paces, muffled by
+the stair carpet, went up to the landing, turned, reached the
+passage and walked into the dining-room overhead.
+
+"It wasn't that one at all, miss," said the ostler,"I'd SWEAR"
+
+"Well, that's Mr. Beaumont," said the barmaid, "--anyhow."
+
+Their conversation hung comatose in the air, switched up by
+Bechamel. They listened together. His feet stopped. Turned. Went
+out of the diningroom. Down the passage to the bedroom. Stopped
+again.
+
+"Poor chap!" said the barmaid. "She's a wicked woman!"
+
+"Sssh!" said Stephen.
+
+After a pause Bechamel went back to the dining-room. They heard a
+chair creak under him. Interlude of conversational eyebrows.
+
+"I'm going up," said Stephen, "to break the melancholy news to
+him."
+
+Bechamel looked up from a week-old newspaper as, without
+knocking, Stephen entered. Bechamel's face suggested a different
+expectation. "Beg pardon, sir," said Stephen, with a diplomatic
+cough.
+
+"Well?" said Bechamel, wondering suddenly if Jessie had kept some
+of her threats. If so, he was in for an explanation. But he had
+it ready. She was a monomaniac. "Leave me alone with her," he
+would say; "I know how to calm her."
+
+"Mrs. Beaumont," said Stephen.
+
+"WELL?"
+
+"Has gone."
+
+He rose with a fine surprise. "Gone!" he said with a half laugh.
+
+"Gone, sir. On her bicycle."
+
+"On her bicycle! Why?"
+
+"She went, sir, with Another Gentleman."
+
+This time Bechamel was really startled. "An--other Gentlemen!
+WHO?"
+
+"Another gentleman in brown, sir. Went into the yard, sir, got
+out the two bicycles, sir, and went off, sir--about twenty
+minutes ago."
+
+Bechamel stood with his eyes round and his knuckle on his hips.
+Stephen, watching him with immense enjoyment, speculated whether
+this abandoned husband would weep or curse, or rush off at once
+in furious pursuit. But as yet he seemed merely stunned.
+
+"Brown clothes?" he said. "And fairish?"
+
+"A little like yourself, sir--in the dark. The ostler, sir, Jim
+Duke--"
+
+Bechamel laughed awry. Then, with infinite fervour, he said--But
+let us put in blank cartridge--he said, "--- ---!"
+
+"I might have thought!"
+
+He flung himself into the armchair.
+
+"Damn her," said Bechamel, for all the world like a common man.
+"I'll chuck this infernal business! They've gone, eigh?"
+
+"Yessir."
+
+Well, let 'em GO," said Bechamel, making a memorable saying. "Let
+'em GO. Who cares? And I wish him luck. And bring me some Bourbon
+as fast as you can, there's a good chap. I'll take that, and then
+I'll have another look round Bognor before I turn in."
+
+Stephen was too surprised to say anything but "Bourbon, sir?"
+
+"Go on," said Bechamel. "Damn you!"
+
+Stephen's sympathies changed at once. "Yessir," he murmured,
+fumbling for the door handle, and left the room, marvelling.
+Bechamel, having in this way satisfied his sense of appearances,
+and comported himself as a Pagan should, so soon as the waiter's
+footsteps had passed, vented the cream of his feelings in a
+stream of blasphemous indecency. Whether his wife or HER
+stepmother had sent the detective, SHE had evidently gone off
+with him, and that little business was over. And he was here,
+stranded and sold, an ass, and as it were, the son of many
+generations of asses. And his only ray of hope was that it seemed
+more probable, after all, that the girl had escaped through her
+stepmother. In which case the business might be hushed up yet,
+and the evil hour of explanation with his wife indefinitely
+postponed. Then abruptly the image of that lithe figure in grey
+knickerbockers went frisking across his mind again, and he
+reverted to his blasphemies. He started up in a gusty frenzy with
+a vague idea of pursuit, and incontinently sat down again with a
+concussion that stirred the bar below to its depths. He banged
+the arms of the chair with his fist, and swore again. "Of all the
+accursed fools that were ever spawned," he was chanting, "I,
+Bechamel--" when with an abrupt tap and prompt opening of the
+door, Stephen entered with the Bourbon.
+
+
+
+THE MOONLIGHT RIDE
+
+XXIV
+
+And so the twenty minutes' law passed into an infinity. We leave
+the wicked Bechamel clothing himself with cursing as with a
+garment,--the wretched creature has already sufficiently sullied
+our modest but truthful pages,--we leave the eager little group
+in the bar of the Vicuna Hotel, we leave all Bognor as we have
+left all Chichester and Midhurst and Haslemere and Guildford and
+Ripley and Putney, and follow this dear fool of a Hoopdriver of
+ours and his Young Lady in Grey out upon the moonlight road. How
+they rode! How their hearts beat together and their breath came
+fast, and how every shadow was anticipation and every noise
+pursuit! For all that flight Mr. Hoopdriver was in the world of
+Romance. Had a policeman intervened because their lamps were not
+lit, Hoopdriver had cut him down and ridden on, after the fashion
+of a hero born. Had Bechamel arisen in the way with rapiers for a
+duel, Hoopdriver had fought as one to whom Agincourt was a
+reality and drapery a dream. It was Rescue, Elopement, Glory! And
+she by the side of him! He had seen her face in shadow, with the
+morning sunlight tangled in her hair, he had seen her sympathetic
+with that warm light in her face, he had seen her troubled and
+her eyes bright with tears. But what light is there lighting a
+face like hers, to compare with the soft glamour of the midsummer
+moon?
+
+The road turned northward, going round through the outskirts of
+Bognor, in one place dark and heavy under a thick growth of
+trees, then amidst villas again, some warm and lamplit, some
+white and sleeping in the moonlight; then between hedges, over
+which they saw broad wan meadows shrouded in a low-lying mist.
+They scarcely heeded whither they rode at first, being only
+anxious to get away, turning once westward when the spire of
+Chichester cathedral rose suddenly near them out of the dewy
+night, pale and intricate and high. They rode, speaking little,
+just a rare word now and then, at a turning, at a footfall, at a
+roughness in the road.
+
+She seemed to be too intent upon escape to give much thought to
+him, but after the first tumult of the adventure, as flight
+passed into mere steady ridin@@ his mind became an enormous
+appreciation of the position. The night was a warm white silence
+save for the subtile running of their chains. He looked sideways
+at her as she sat beside him with her ankles gracefully ruling
+the treadles. Now the road turned westward, and she was a dark
+grey outline against the shimmer of the moon; and now they faced
+northwards, and the soft cold light passed caressingly over her
+hair and touched her brow and cheek.
+
+There is a magic quality in moonshine; it touches all that is
+sweet and beautiful, and the rest of the night is hidden. It has
+created the fairies, whom the sunlight kills, and fairyland rises
+again in our hearts at the sight of it, the voices of the filmy
+route, and their faint, soul-piercing melodies. By the moonlight
+every man, dull clod though he be by day, tastes something of
+Endymion, takes something of the youth and strength of Enidymion,
+and sees the dear white goddess shining at him from his Lady's
+eyes. The firm substantial daylight things become ghostly and
+elusive, the hills beyond are a sea of unsubstantial texture, the
+world a visible spirit, the spiritual within us rises out of its
+darkness, loses something of its weight and body, and swims up
+towards heaven. This road that was a mere rutted white dust, hot
+underfoot, blinding to the eye, is now a soft grey silence, with
+the glitter of a crystal grain set starlike in its silver here
+and there. Overhead, riding serenely through the spacious blue,
+is the mother of the silence, she who has spiritualised the
+world, alone save for two attendant steady shining stars. And in
+silence under her benign influence, under the benediction of her
+light, rode our two wanderers side by side through the
+transfigured and transfiguring night.
+
+Nowhere was the moon shining quite so brightly as in Mr.
+Hoopdriver's skull. At the turnings of the road he made his
+decisions with an air of profound promptitude (and quite
+haphazard). "The Right," he would say. Or again "The Left," as
+one who knew. So it was that in the space of an hour they came
+abruptly down a little lane, full tilt upon the sea. Grey beach
+to the right of them and to the left, and a little white cottage
+fast asleep inland of a sleeping fishing-boat. "Hullo!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, sotto voce. They dismounted abruptly. Stunted oaks
+and thorns rose out of the haze of moonlight that was tangled in
+the hedge on either side.
+
+"You are safe," said Mr. Hoopdriver, sweeping off his cap with an
+air and bowing courtly.
+
+"Where are we?"
+
+"SAFE."
+
+"But WHERE?"
+
+"Chichester Harbour." He waved his arm seaward as though it was a
+goal.
+
+"Do you think they will follow us?"
+
+"We have turned and turned again."
+
+It seemed to Hoopdriver that he heard her sob. She stood dimly
+there, holding her machine, and he, holding his, could go no
+nearer to her to see if she sobbed for weeping or for want of
+breath. "What are we to do now?" her voice asked.
+
+"Are you tired?" he asked.
+
+"I will do what has to be done."
+
+The two black figures in the broken light were silent for a
+space. "Do you know," she said, "I am not afraid of you. I am
+sure you are honest to me. And I do not even know your name!"
+
+He was taken with a sudden shame of his homely patronymic. "It's
+an ugly name," he said. "But you are right in trusting me. I
+would--I would do anything for you. . . . This is nothing."
+
+She caught at her breath. She did not care to ask why. But
+compared with Bechamel!--"We take each other on trust," she said.
+"Do you want to know--how things are with me?"
+
+"That man," she went on, after the assent of his listening
+silence, "promised to help and protect me. I was unhappy at
+home--never mind why. A stepmother--Idle, unoccupied, hindered,
+cramped, that is enough, perhaps. Then he came into my life, and
+talked to me of art and literature, and set my brain on fire. I
+wanted to come out into the world, to be a human being--not a
+thing in a hutch. And he--"
+
+"I know," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"And now here I am--"
+
+"I will do anything," said Hoopdriver.
+
+She thought. "You cannot imagine my stepmother. No! I could not
+describe her--"
+
+"I am entirely at your service. I will help you with all my
+power."
+
+"I have lost an Illusion and found a Knight-errant." She spoke of
+Bechamel as the Illusion.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver felt flattered. But he had no adequate answer.
+
+"I'm thinking," he said, full of a rapture of protective
+responsibility, " what we had best be doing. You are tired, you
+know. And we can't wander all night--after the day we've had."
+
+"That was Chichester we were near?" she asked.
+
+"If," he meditated, with a tremble in his voice, "you would make
+ME your brother, MISS BEAUMONT."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"We could stop there together--"
+
+She took a minute to answer. "I am going to light these lamps,"
+said Hoopdriver. He bent down to his own, and struck a match on
+his shoe. She looked at his face in its light, grave and intent.
+How could she ever have thought him common or absurd?
+
+"But you must tell me your name--brother," she said,
+
+"Er--Carrington," said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a momentary pause.
+Who would be Hoopdriver on a night like this?
+
+"But the Christian name?"
+
+"Christian name? MY Christian name. Well--Chris." He snapped his
+lamp and stood up. "If you will hold my machine, I will light
+yours," he said.
+
+She came round obediently and took his machine, and for a moment
+they stood face to face. "My name, brother Chris," she said, "is
+Jessie."
+
+He looked into her eyes, and his excitement seemed arrested.
+"JESSIE," he repeated slowly. The mute emotion of his face
+affected her strangely. She had to speak. "It's not such a very
+wonderful name, is it?" she said, with a laugh to break the
+intensity.
+
+He opened his mouth and shut it again, and, with a sudden wincing
+of his features, abruptly turned and bent down to open the
+lantern in front of her machine. She looked down at him, almost
+kneeling in front of her, with an unreasonable approbation in her
+eyes. It was, as I have indicated, the hour and season of the
+full moon.
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver conducted the rest of that night's journey with
+the same confident dignity as before, and it was chiefly by good
+luck and the fact that most roads about a town converge
+thereupon, that Chichester was at last attained. It seemed at
+first as though everyone had gone to bed, but the Red Hotel still
+glowed yellow and warm. It was the first time Hoopdriver bad
+dared the mysteries of a 'first-class' hotel.' But that night he
+was in the mood to dare anything.
+
+"So you found your Young Lady at last," said the ostler of the
+Red Hotel; for it chanced he was one of those of whom Hoopdriver
+had made inquiries in the afternoon.
+
+"Quite a misunderstanding," said Hoopdriver, with splendid
+readiness. "My sister had gone to Bognor But I brought her back
+here. I've took a fancy to this place. And the moonlight's simply
+dee-vine."
+
+"We've had supper, thenks, and we're tired," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+"I suppose you won't take anything,--Jessie?"
+
+The glory of having her, even as a sister! and to call her Jessie
+like that! But he carried it off splendidly, as he felt himself
+bound to admit. "Good-night, Sis," he said, "and pleasant dreams.
+I'll just 'ave a look at this paper before I turn in." But this
+was living indeed! he told himself.
+
+So gallantly did Mr. Hoopdriver comport himself up to the very
+edge of the Most Wonderful Day of all. It had begun early, you
+will remember, with a vigil in a little sweetstuff shop next door
+to the Angel at Midhurst. But to think of all the things that had
+happened since then! He caught himself in the middle of a yawn,
+pulled out his watch, saw the time was halfpast eleven, and
+marched off, with a fine sense of heroism, bedward.
+
+
+
+THE SURBITON INTERLUDE
+
+XXVI
+
+And here, thanks to the glorious institution of sleep, comes a
+break in the narrative again. These absurd young people are
+safely tucked away now, their heads full of glowing nonsense,
+indeed, but the course of events at any rate is safe from any
+fresh developments through their activities for the next eight
+hours or more. They are both sleeping healthily you will perhaps
+be astonished to hear. Here is the girl--what girls are coming to
+nowadays only Mrs. Lynn Linton can tell!--in company with an
+absolute stranger, of low extraction and uncertain accent,
+unchaperoned and unabashed; indeed, now she fancies she is safe,
+she is, if anything, a little proud of her own share in these
+transactions. Then this Mr. Hoopdriver of yours, roseate idiot
+that he is! is in illegal possession of a stolen bicycle, a
+stolen young lady, and two stolen names, established with them in
+an hotel that is quite beyond his means, and immensely proud of
+himself in a somnolent way for these incomparable follies. There
+are occasions when a moralising novelist can merely wring his
+hands and leave matters to take their course. For all Hoopdriver
+knows or cares he may be locked up the very first thing to-morrow
+morning for the rape of the cycle. Then in Bognor, let alone that
+melancholy vestige, Bechamel (with whom our dealings are, thank
+Goodness! over), there is a Coffee Tavern with a steak Mr.
+Hoopdriver ordered, done to a cinder long ago, his American-cloth
+parcel in a bedroom, and his own proper bicycle, by way of
+guarantee, carefully locked up in the hayloft. To-morrow he will
+be a Mystery, and they will be looking for his body along the sea
+front. And so far we have never given a glance at the desolate
+home in Surbiton, familiar to you no doubt through the medium of
+illustrated interviews, where the unhappy stepmother--
+
+That stepmother, it must be explained, is quite well known to
+you. That is a little surprise I have prepared for you. She is
+'Thomas Plantagenet,' the gifted authoress of that witty and
+daring book, "A Soul Untrammelled," and quite an excellent woman
+in her way,--only it is such a crooked way. Her real name is
+Milton. She is a widow and a charming one, only ten years older
+than Jessie, and she is always careful to dedicate her more
+daring works to the 'sacred memory of my husband' to show that
+there's nothing personal, you know, in the matter. Considering
+her literary reputation (she was always speaking of herself as
+one I martyred for truth,' because the critics advertised her
+written indecorums in column long 'slates'),--considering her
+literary reputation, I say, she was one of the most respectable
+women it is possible to imagine. She furnished correctly, dressed
+correctly, had severe notions of whom she might meet, went to
+church, and even at times took the sacrament in some esoteric
+spirit. And Jessie she brought up so carefully that she never
+even let her read "A Soul Untrammelled." Which, therefore,
+naturally enough, Jessie did, and went on from that to a feast of
+advanced literature. Mrs. Milton not only brought up Jessie
+carefully, but very slowly, so that at seventeen she was still a
+clever schoolgirl (as you have seen her) and quite in the
+background of the little literary circle of unimportant
+celebrities which 'Thomas Plantagenet' adorned. Mrs. Milton knew
+Bechamel's reputation of being a dangerous man; but then bad men
+are not bad women, and she let him come to her house to show she
+was not afraid--she took no account of Jessie. When the elopement
+came, therefore, it was a double disappointment to her, for she
+perceived his hand by a kind of instinct. She did the correct
+thing. The correct thing, as you know, is to take hansom cabs,
+regardless of expense, and weep and say you do not know WHAT to
+do, round the circle of your confidential friends. She could not
+have ridden nor wept more had Jessie been her own daughter--she
+showed the properest spirit. And she not only showed it, but felt
+it.
+
+Mrs. Milton, as a successful little authoress and still more
+successful widow of thirty-two,--"Thomas Plantagenet is a
+charming woman," her reviewers used to write invariably, even if
+they spoke ill of her,--found the steady growth of Jessie into
+womanhood an unmitigated nuisance and had been willing enough to
+keep her in the background. And Jessie--who had started this
+intercourse at fourteen with abstract objections to
+stepmothers--had been active enough in resenting this. Increasing
+rivalry and antagonism had sprung up between them, until they
+could engender quite a vivid hatred from a dropped hairpin or the
+cutting of a book with a sharpened knife. There is very little
+deliberate wickedness in the world. The stupidity of our
+selfishness gives much the same results indeed, but in the
+ethical laboratory it shows a different nature. And when the
+disaster came, Mrs. Milton's remorse for their gradual loss of
+sympathy and her share in the losing of it, was genuine enough.
+
+You may imagine the comfort she got from her friends, and how
+West Kensington and Notting Hill and Hampstead, the literary
+suburbs, those decent penitentiaries of a once Bohemian calling,
+hummed with the business, Her 'Men'--as a charming literary lady
+she had, of course, an organised corps--were immensely excited,
+and were sympathetic; helpfully energetic, suggestive, alert, as
+their ideals of their various dispositions required them to be.
+"Any news of Jessie?" was the pathetic opening of a dozen
+melancholy but interesting conversations. To her Men she was not
+perhaps so damp as she was to her women friends, but in a quiet
+way she was even more touching. For three days, Wednesday that
+is, Thursday, and Friday, nothing was heard of the fugitives. It
+was known that Jessie, wearing a patent costume with buttonup
+skirts, and mounted on a diamond frame safety with Dunlops, and a
+loofah covered saddle, had ridden forth early in the morning,
+taking with her about two pounds seven shillings in money, and a
+grey touring case packed, and there, save for a brief note to her
+stepmother,--a declaration of independence, it was said, an
+assertion of her Ego containing extensive and very annoying
+quotations from "A Soul Untrammelled," and giving no definite
+intimation of her plans--knowledge ceased. That note was shown to
+few, and then only in the strictest confidence.
+
+But on Friday evening late came a breathless Man Friend, Widgery,
+a correspondent of hers, who had heard of her trouble among the
+first. He had been touring in Sussex,--his knapsack was still on
+his back,--and he testified hurriedly that at a place called
+Midhurst, in the bar of an hotel called the Angel, he had heard
+from a barmaid a vivid account of a Young Lady in Grey.
+Descriptions tallied. But who was the man in brown?"The poor,
+misguided girl! I must go to her at once," she said, choking, and
+rising with her hand to her heart.
+
+"It's impossible to-night. There are no more trains. I looked on
+my way."
+
+"A mother's love," she said. "I bear her THAT."
+
+"I know you do." He spoke with feeling, for no one admired his
+photographs of scenery more than Mrs. Milton. "it's more than she
+deserves."
+
+"Oh, don't speak unkindly of her! She has been misled."
+
+It was really very friendly of him. He declared he was only sorry
+his news ended there. Should he follow them, and bring her back?
+He had come to her because he knew of her anxiety. "It is GOOD of
+you," she said, and quite instinctively took and pressed his
+hand. "And to think of that poor girl--tonight! It's dreadful."
+She looked into the fire that she had lit when he came in, the
+warm light fell upon her dark purple dress, and left her features
+in a warm shadow. She looked such a slight, frail thing to be
+troubled so. "We must follow her." Her resolution seemed
+magnificent. "I have no one to go with me."
+
+"He must marry her," said the man.
+
+"She has no friends. We have no one. After all--Two women.--So
+helpless."
+
+And this fair-haired little figure was the woman that people who
+knew her only from her books, called bold, prurient even! Simply
+because she was great-hearted--intellectual. He was overcome by
+the unspeakable pathos of her position.
+
+"Mrs. Milton," he said. "Hetty!"
+
+She glanced at him. The overflow was imminent. "Not now," she
+said, "not now. I must find her first."
+
+"Yes," he said with intense emotion. (He was one of those big,
+fat men who feel deeply.) "But let me help you. At least let me
+help you."
+
+ "But can you spare time?" she said. "For ME."
+
+ "For you--"
+
+ "But what can I do? what can WE do?"
+
+"Go to Midhurst. Follow her on. Trace her. She was there on
+Thursday night, last night. She cycled out of the town. Courage!"
+he said. "We will save her yet!"
+
+She put out her hand and pressed his again.
+
+"Courage!" he repeated, finding it so well received.
+
+There were alarms and excursions without. She turned her back to
+the fire, and he sat down suddenly in the big armchair, which
+suited his dimensions admirably. Then the door opened, and the
+girl showed in Dangle, who looked curiously from one to the
+other. There was emotion here, he had heard the armchair
+creaking, and Mrs. Milton, whose face was flushed, displayed a
+suspicious alacrity to explain. "You, too," she said, "are one of
+my good friends. And we have news of her at last."
+
+It was decidedly an advantage to Widgery, but Dangle determined
+to show himself a man of resource. In the end he, too, was
+accepted for the Midhurst Expedition, to the intense disgust of
+Widgery; and young Phipps, a callow youth of few words, faultless
+collars, and fervent devotion, was also enrolled before the
+evening was out. They would scour the country, all three of them.
+She appeared to brighten up a little, but it was evident she was
+profoundly touched. She did not know what she had done to merit
+such friends. Her voice broke a little, she moved towards the
+door, and young Phipps, who was a youth of action rather than of
+words, sprang and opened it--proud to be first.
+
+"She is sorely troubled," said Dangle to Widgery. "We must do
+what we can for her."
+
+"She is a wonderful woman," said Dangle. "So subtle, so
+intricate, so many faceted. She feels this deeply."
+
+Young Phipps said nothing, but he felt the more.
+
+And yet they say the age of chivalry is dead!
+
+But this is only an Interlude, introduced to give our wanderers
+time to refresh themselves by good, honest sleeping. For the
+present, therefore, we will not concern ourselves with the
+starting of the Rescue Party, nor with Mrs. Milton's simple but
+becoming grey dress, with the healthy Widgery's Norfolk jacket
+and thick boots, with the slender Dangle's energetic bearing, nor
+with the wonderful chequerings that set off the legs of the
+golf-suited Phipps. They are after us. In a little while they
+will be upon us. You must imagine as you best can the competitive
+raidings at Midhurst of Widgery, Dangle, and Phipps. How Widgery
+was great at questions, and Dangle good at inference, and Phipps
+so conspicuously inferior in everything that he felt it, and
+sulked with Mrs. Milton most of the day, after the manner of your
+callow youth the whole world over. Mrs. Milton stopped at the
+Angel and was very sad and charming and intelligent, and Widgery
+paid the bill. in the afternoon of Saturday, Chichester was
+attained. But by that time our fugitives--As you shall
+immediately hear.
+
+
+
+THE AWAKENING OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+XXVII
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stirred on his pillow, opened his eyes, and,
+staring unmeaningly, yawned. The bedclothes were soft and
+pleasant. He turned the peaked nose that overrides the
+insufficient moustache, up to the ceiling, a pinkish projection
+over the billow of white. You might see it wrinkle as he yawned
+again, and then became quiet. So matters remained for a space.
+Very slowly recollection returned to him. Then a shock of
+indeterminate brown hair appeared, and first one watery grey eye
+a-wondering, and then two ; the bed upheaved, and you had him,
+his thin neck projecting abruptly from the clothes he held about
+him, his face staring about the room. He held the clothes about
+him, I hope I may explain, because his night-shirt was at Bognor
+in an American-cloth packet, derelict. He yawned a third time,
+rubbed his eyes, smacked his lips. He was recalling almost
+everything now. The pursuit, the hotel, the tremulous daring of
+his entry, the swift adventure of the inn yard, the
+moonlight--Abruptly he threw the clothes back and rose into a
+sitting position on the edge of the bed. Without was the noise of
+shutters being unfastened and doors unlocked, and the passing of
+hoofs and wheels in the street. He looked at his watch. Half-past
+six. He surveyed the sumptuous room again.
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It wasn't a dream, after all."
+
+"I wonder what they charge for these Juiced rooms!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, nursing one rosy foot.
+
+He became meditative, tugging at his insufficient moustache.
+Suddenly he gave vent to a noiseless laugh. "What a rush it was!
+Rushed in and off with his girl right under his nose. Planned it
+well too. Talk of highway robbery! Talk of brigands Up and off!
+How juiced SOLD he must be feeling It was a shave too--in the
+coach yard!"
+
+Suddenly he became silent. Abruptly his eyebrows rose and his jaw
+fell. "I sa-a-ay!" said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He had never thought of it before. Perhaps you will understand
+the whirl he had been in overnight. But one sees things clearer
+in the daylight. "I'm hanged if I haven't been and stolen a
+blessed bicycle."
+
+"Who cares?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, presently, and his face
+supplied the answer.
+
+Then he thought of the Young Lady in Grey again, and tried to put
+a more heroic complexion on the business. But of an early
+morning, on an empty stomach (as with characteristic coarseness,
+medical men put it) heroics are of a more difficult growth than
+by moonlight. Everything had seemed exceptionally fine and
+brilliant, but quite natural, the evening before.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver reached out his hand, took his Norfolk jacket,
+laid it over his knees, and took out the money from the little
+ticket pocket. " Fourteen and six-half," he said, holding the
+coins in his left hand and stroking his chin with his right. He
+verified, by patting, the presence of a pocketbook in the breast
+pocket. "Five, fourteen, six-half," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Left."
+
+With the Norfolk jacket still on his knees, he plunged into
+another silent meditation. "That wouldn't matter," he said. "It's
+the bike's the bother.
+
+"No good going back to Bognor.
+
+"Might send it back by carrier, of course. Thanking him for the
+loan. Having no further use--" Mr. Hoopdriver chuckled and lapsed
+into the silent concoction of a delightfully impudent letter.
+"Mr. J. Hoopdriver presents his compliments." But the grave note
+reasserted itself.
+
+"Might trundle back there in an hour, of course, and exchange
+them. MY old crock's so blessed shabby. He's sure to be spiteful
+too. Have me run in, perhaps. Then she'd be in just the same old
+fix, only worse. You see, I'm her Knight-errant. It complicates
+things so."
+
+His eye, wandering loosely, rested on the sponge bath. "What the
+juice do they want with cream pans in a bedroom?" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, en passant.
+
+"Best thing we can do is to set out of here as soon as possible,
+anyhow. I suppose she'll go home to her friends. That bicycle is
+a juicy nuisance, anyhow. Juicy nuisance!"
+
+He jumped to his feet with a sudden awakening of energy, to
+proceed with his toilet. Then with a certain horror he remembered
+that the simple necessaries of that process were at
+Bognor!"Lord!" he remarked, and whistled silently for a space.
+"Rummy go! profit and loss; profit, one sister with bicycle
+complete, wot offers?--cheap for tooth and 'air brush, vests,
+night-shirt, stockings, and sundries.
+
+"Make the best of it," and presently, when it came to
+hair-brushing, he had to smooth his troubled locks with his
+hands. It was a poor result. "Sneak out and get a shave, I
+suppose, and buy a brush and so on. Chink again! Beard don't show
+much."
+
+He ran his hand over his chin, looked at himself steadfastly for
+some time, and curled his insufficient moustache up with some
+care. Then he fell a-meditating on his beauty. He considered
+himself, three-quarter face, left and right. An expression of
+distaste crept over his features. "Looking won't alter it,
+Hoopdriver," he remarked. "You're a weedy customer, my man.
+Shoulders narrow. Skimpy, anyhow."
+
+He put his knuckles on the toilet table and regarded himself with
+his chin lifted in the air. "Good Lord!" he said. "WHAT a neck!
+Wonder why I got such a thundering lump there."
+
+He sat down on the bed, his eye still on the glass. "If I'd been
+exercised properly, if I'd been fed reasonable, if I hadn't been
+shoved out of a silly school into a silly shop--But there! the
+old folks didn't know no better. The schoolmaster ought to have.
+But he didn't, poor old fool!--Still, when it comes to meeting a
+girl like this--It's 'ARD.
+
+"I wonder what Adam'd think of me--as a specimen. Civilisation,
+eigh? Heir of the ages! I'm nothing. I know nothing. I can't do
+anything--sketch a bit. Why wasn't I made an artist?
+
+"Beastly cheap, after all, this suit does look, in the sunshine."
+
+"No good, Hoopdriver. Anyhow, you don't tell yourself any lies
+about it. Lovers ain't your game,--anyway. But there's other
+things yet. You can help the young lady, and you will--I suppose
+she'll be going home--And that business of the bicycle's to see
+to, too, my man. FORWARD, Hoopdriver! If you ain't a beauty,
+that's no reason why you should stop and be copped, is it?"
+
+And having got back in this way to a gloomy kind of
+self-satisfaction, he had another attempt at his hair preparatory
+to leaving his room and hurrying on breakfast, for an early
+departure. While breakfast was preparing he wandered out into
+South Street and refurnished himself with the elements of luggage
+again. "No expense to be spared," he murmured, disgorging the
+half-sovereign.
+
+
+
+THE DEPARTURE FROM CHICHESTER
+
+XXVIII
+
+He caused his 'sister' to be called repeatedly, and when she came
+down, explained with a humorous smile his legal relationship to
+the bicycle in the yard. "Might be disagreeable, y' know." His
+anxiety was obvious enough. "Very well," she said (quite
+friendly); "hurry breakfast, and we'll ride out. I want to talk
+things over with you." The girl seemed more beautiful than ever
+after the night's sleep; her hair in comely dark waves from her
+forehead, her ungauntleted finger-tips pink and cool. And how
+decided she was! Breakfast was a nervous ceremony, conversation
+fraternal but thin; the waiter overawed him, and he was cowed by
+a multiplicity of forks. But she called him "Chris." They
+discussed their route over his sixpenny county map for the sake
+of talking, but avoided a decision in the presence of the
+attendant. The five-pound note was changed for the bill, and
+through Hoopdriver's determination to be quite the gentleman, the
+waiter and chambermaid got half a crown each and the ostler a
+florin. "'Olidays," said the ostler to himself, without
+gratitude. The public mounting of the bicycles in the street was
+a moment of trepidation. A policeman actually stopped and watched
+them from the opposite kerb. Suppose him to come across and ask:
+"Is that your bicycle, sir?" Fight? Or drop it and run? It was a
+time of bewildering apprehension, too, going through the streets
+of the town, so that a milk cart barely escaped destruction under
+Mr. Hoopdriver's chancy wheel. That recalled him to a sense of
+erratic steering, and he pulled himself together. In the lanes he
+breathed freer, and a less formal conversation presently began.
+
+"You've ridden out of Chichester in a great hurry," said Jessie.
+
+"Well, the fact of it is, I'm worried, just a little bit. About
+this machine."
+
+"Of course," she said. "I had forgotten that. But where are we
+going?"
+
+"Jest a turning or two more, if you don't mind," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"Jest a mile or so. I have to think of you, you know. I should
+feel more easy. If we was locked up, you know--Not that I should
+mind on my own account--"
+
+They rode with a streaky, grey sea coming and going on their left
+hand. Every mile they put between themselves and Chichester Mr.
+Hoopdriver felt a little less conscience-stricken, and a little
+more of the gallant desperado. Here he was riding on a splendid
+machine with a Slap-up girl beside him. What would they think of
+it in the Emporium if any of them were to see him? He imagined in
+detail the astonishment of Miss Isaacs and of Miss Howe. "Why!
+It's Mr. Hoopdriver," Miss Isaacs would say. "Never!"
+emphatically from Miss Howe. Then he played with Briggs, and then
+tried the 'G.V.' in a shay. "Fancy introducing 'em to her--My
+sister pro tem." He was her brother Chris--Chris what?--Confound
+it! Harringon, Hartington--something like that. Have to keep off
+that topic until he could remember. Wish he'd told her the truth
+now--almost. He glanced at her. She was riding with her eyes
+straight ahead of her. Thinking. A little perplexed, perhaps, she
+seemed. He noticed how well she rode and that she rode with her
+lips closed--a thing he could never manage.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's mind came round to the future. What was she
+going to do? What were they both going to do? His thoughts took a
+graver colour. He had rescued her. This was fine, manly rescue
+work he was engaged upon. She ought to go home, in spite of that
+stepmother. He must insist gravely but firmly upon that. She was
+the spirited sort, of course, but still--Wonder if she had any
+money? Wonder what the second-class fare from Havant to London
+is? Of course he would have to pay that--it was the regular
+thing, he being a gentleman. Then should he take her home? He
+began to rough in a moving sketch of the return. The stepmother,
+repentant of her indescribable cruelties, would be present,--even
+these rich people have their troubles,--probably an uncle or two.
+The footman would announce, Mr.--(bother that name!) and Miss
+Milton. Then two women weeping together, and a knightly figure in
+the background dressed in a handsome Norfolk jacket, still
+conspicuously new. He would conceal his feeling until the very
+end. Then, leaving, he would pause in the doorway in such an
+attitude as Mr. George Alexander might assume, and say, slowly
+and dwindlingly: "Be kind to her--BE kind to her," and so depart,
+heartbroken to the meanest intelligence. But that was a matter
+for the future. He would have to begin discussing the return
+soon. There was no traffic along the road, and he came up beside
+her (he had fallen behind in his musing). She began to talk. "Mr.
+Denison," she began, and then, doubtfully, "That is your name?
+I'm very stupid--"
+
+"It is," said Mr. Hoopdriver. (Denison, was it? Denison, Denison,
+Denison. What was she saying?)
+
+"I wonder how far you are willing to help me?" Confoundedly hard
+to answer a question like that on the spur of the moment, without
+steering wildly. "You may rely--" said Mr. Hoopdriver, recovering
+from a violent wabble. "I can assure you-- I want to help you
+very much. Don't consider me at all. Leastways, consider me
+entirely at your service." (Nuisance not to be able to say this
+kind of thing right.)
+
+"You see, I am so awkwardly situated."
+
+"If I can only help you--you will make me very happy--" There was
+a pause. Round a bend in the road they came upon a grassy space
+between hedge and road, set with yarrow and meadowsweet, where a
+felled tree lay among the green. There she dismounted, and
+propping her machine against a stone, sat down. "Here, we can
+talk," she said.
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver, expectant.
+
+She answered after a little while, sitting, elbow on knee, with
+her chin in her hand, and looking straight in front of her. "I
+don't know--I am resolved to Live my Own Life."
+
+"Of course," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Naturally."
+
+"I want to Live, and I want to see what life means. I want to
+learn. Everyone is hurrying me, everything is hurrying me; I want
+time to think."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was puzzled, but admiring. It was wonderful how
+clear and ready her words were. But then one might speak well
+with a throat and lips like that. He knew he was inadequate, but
+he tried to meet the occasion. "If you let them rush you into
+anything you might repent of, of course you'd be very silly."
+
+"Don't YOU want to learn?" she asked.
+
+"I was wondering only this morning," he began, and stopped.
+
+She was too intent upon her own thoughts to notice this
+insufficiency. "I find myself in life, and it terrifies me. I
+seem to be like a little speck, whirling on a wheel, suddenly
+caught up. 'What am I here for?' I ask. Simply to be here at a
+time--I asked it a week ago, I asked it yesterday, and I ask it
+to-day. And little things happen and the days pass. My stepmother
+takes me shopping, people come to tea, there is a new play to
+pass the time, or a concert, or a novel. The wheels of the world
+go on turning, turning. It is horrible. I want to do a miracle
+like Joshua and stop the whirl until I have fought it out. At
+home--It's impossible."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver stroked his moustache. "It IS so," he said in a
+meditative tone. "Things WILL go on," he said. The faint breath
+of summer stirred the trees, and a bunch of dandelion puff lifted
+among the meadowsweet and struck and broke into a dozen separate
+threads against his knee. They flew on apart, and sank, as the
+breeze fell, among the grass: some to germinate, some to perish.
+His eye followed them until they had vanished.
+
+"I can't go back to Surbiton," said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+"EIGH?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, catching at his moustache. This was
+an unexpected development.
+
+"I want to write, you see," said the Young Lady in Grey, "to
+write Books and alter things. To do Good. I want to lead a Free
+Life and Own myself. I can't go back. I want to obtain a position
+as a journalist. I have been told--But I know no one to help me
+at once. No one that I could go to. There is one person--She was
+a mistress at my school. If I could write to her--But then, how
+could I get her answer?"
+
+"H'mp," said Mr. Hoopdriver, very grave.
+
+"I can't trouble you much more. You have come--you have risked
+things--"
+
+"That don't count," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It's double pay to let
+me do it, so to speak."
+
+"It is good of you to say that. Surbiton is so Conventional. I am
+resolved to be Unconventional--at any cost. But we are so
+hampered. If I could only burgeon out of all that hinders me! I
+want to struggle, to take my place in the world. I want to be my
+own mistress, to shape my own career. But my stepmother objects
+so. She does as she likes herself, and is strict with me to ease
+her conscience. And if I go back now, go back owning myself
+beaten--" She left the rest to his imagination.
+
+"I see that," agreed Mr. Hoopdriver. He MUST help her. Within his
+skull he was doing some intricate arithmetic with five pounds six
+and twopence. In some vague way he inferred from all this that
+Jessie was trying to escape from an undesirable marriage, but was
+saying these things out of modesty. His circle of ideas was so
+limited.
+
+"You know, Mr.--I've forgotten your name again."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver seemed lost in abstraction. "You can't go back of
+course, quite like that," he said thoughtfully. His ears waxed
+suddenly red and his cheeks flushed.
+
+"But what IS your name?"
+
+"Name!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Why!--Benson, of course."
+
+"Mr. Benson--yes it's really very stupid of me. But I can never
+remember names. I must make a note on my cuff." She clicked a
+little silver pencil and wrote the name down. "If I could write
+to my friend. I believe she would be able to help me to an
+independent life. I could write to her--or telegraph. Write, I
+think. I could scarcely explain in a telegram. I know she would
+help me."
+
+Clearly there was only one course open to a gentleman under the
+circumstances. "In that case," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "if you don't
+mind trusting yourself to a stranger, we might continue as we are
+perhaps. For a day or so. Until you heard." (Suppose thirty
+shillings a day, that gives four days, say four thirties is hun'
+and twenty, six quid,--well, three days, say; four ten.)
+
+"You are very good to me."
+
+His expression was eloquent.
+
+"Very well, then, and thank you. It's wonderful--it's more than I
+deserve that you--" She dropped the theme abruptly. "What was our
+bill at Chichester?"
+
+"Eigh?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, feigning a certain stupidity. There
+was a brief discussion. Secretly he was delighted at her
+insistence in paying. She carried her point. Their talk came
+round to their immediate plans for the day. They decided to ride
+easily, through Havant, and stop, perhaps, at Fareham or
+Southampton. For the previous day had tried them both. Holding
+the map extended on his knee, Mr. Hoopdriver's eye fell by chance
+on the bicycle at his feet. "That bicycle," he remarked, quite
+irrelevantly, "wouldn't look the same machine if I got a big,
+double Elarum instead of that little bell."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Jest a thought." A pause.
+
+"Very well, then,--Havant and lunch," said Jessie, rising.
+
+"I wish, somehow, we could have managed it without stealing that
+machine," said Hoopdriver. "Because it IS stealing it, you know,
+come to think of it."
+
+"Nonsense. If Mr. Bechamel troubles you--I will tell the whole
+world--if need be."
+
+"I believe you would," said Mr. Hoopdriver, admiring her. "You're
+plucky enough--goodness knows."
+
+Discovering suddenly that she was standing, he, too, rose and
+picked up her machine. She took it and wheeled it into the road.
+Then he took his own. He paused, regarding it. "I say!"said he.
+"How'd this bike look, now, if it was enamelled grey?" She looked
+over her shoulder at his grave face. "Why try and hide it in that
+way?"
+
+"It was jest a passing thought," said Mr. Hoopdriver, airily.
+"Didn't MEAN anything, you know."
+
+As they were riding on to Havant it occurred to Mr. Hoopdriver in
+a transitory manner that the interview had been quite other than
+his expectation. But that was the way with everything in Mr.
+Hoopdriver's experience. And though his Wisdom looked grave
+within him, and Caution was chinking coins, and an ancient
+prejudice in favour of Property shook her head, something else
+was there too, shouting in his mind to drown all these saner
+considerations, the intoxicating thought of riding beside Her all
+to-day, all to-morrow, perhaps for other days after that. Of
+talking to her familiarly, being brother of all her slender
+strength and freshness, of having a golden, real, and wonderful
+time beyond all his imaginings. His old familiar fancyings gave
+place to anticipations as impalpable and fluctuating and
+beautiful as the sunset of a summer day.
+
+At Havant he took an opportunity to purchase, at small
+hairdresser's in the main street, a toothbrush,pair of nail
+scissors, and a little bottle of stuff to darken the moustache,
+an article the shopman introduced to his attention, recommended
+highly, and sold in the excitement of the occasion.
+
+
+
+THE UNEXPECTED ANECDOTE OF THE LION
+
+XXIX
+
+They rode on to Cosham and lunched lightly but expensively there.
+Jessie went out and posted her letter to her school friend. Then
+the green height of Portsdown Hill tempted them, and leaving
+their machines in the village they clambered up the slope to the
+silent red-brick fort that crowned it. Thence they had a view of
+Portsmouth and its cluster of sister towns, the crowded narrows
+of the harbour, the Solent and the Isle of Wight like a blue
+cloud through the hot haze. Jessie by some miracle had become a
+skirted woman in the Cosham inn. Mr. Hoopdriver lounged
+gracefully on the turf, smoked a Red Herring cigarette, and
+lazily regarded the fortified towns that spread like a map away
+there, the inner line of defence like toy fortifications, a mile
+off perhaps ; and beyond that a few little fields and then the
+beginnings of Landport suburb and the smoky cluster of the
+multitudinous houses. To the right at the head of the harbour
+shallows the town of Porchester rose among the trees. Mr.
+Hoopdriver's anxiety receded to some remote corner of his brain
+and that florid half-voluntary imagination of his shared the
+stage with the image of Jessie. He began to speculate on the
+impression he was creating. He took stock of his suit in a more
+optimistic spirit, and reviewed, with some complacency, his
+actions for the last four and twenty hours. Then he was dashed at
+the thought of her infinite perfections.
+
+She had been observing him quietly, rather more closely during
+the last hour or so. She did not look at him directly because he
+seemed always looking at her. Her own troubles had quieted down a
+little, and her curiosity about the chivalrous, worshipping, but
+singular gentleman in brown, was awakening. She had recalled,
+too, the curious incident of their first encounter. She found him
+hard to explain to herself. You must understand that her
+knowledge of the world was rather less than nothing, having been
+obtained entirely from books. You must not take a certain
+ignorance for foolishness.
+
+She had begun with a few experiments. He did not know French
+except 'sivver play,' a phrase he seemed to regard as a very good
+light table joke in itself. His English was uncertain, but not
+such as books informed her distinguished the lower classes. His
+manners seemed to her good on the whole, but a trifle
+over-respectful and out of fashion. He called her I Madam' once.
+He seemed a person of means and leisure, but he knew nothing of
+recent concerts, theatres, or books. How did he spend his time?
+He was certainly chivalrous, and a trifle simpleminded. She
+fancied (so much is there in a change of costume) that she had
+never met with such a man before. What COULD he be?
+
+"Mr. Benson," she said, breaking a silence devoted to landscape.
+
+He rolled over and regarded her, chin on knuckles.
+
+"At your service."
+
+"Do you paint? Are you an artist?"
+
+"Well." Judicious pause. "I should hardly call myself a Nartist."
+you know. I DO paint a little. And sketch, you know--skitty kind
+of things."
+
+He plucked and began to nibble a blade of grass. It was really
+not so much lying as his quick imagination that prompted him to
+add, "In Papers, you know, and all that."
+
+"I see," said Jessie, looking at him thoughtfully. Artists were a
+very heterogeneous class certainly, and geniuses had a trick of
+being a little odd. He avoided her eye and bit his grass. "I
+don't do MUCH, you know."
+
+"It's not your profession?
+
+"Oh, no," said Hoopdriver, anxious now to hedge. "I don't make a
+regular thing of it, you know. jest now and then something comes
+into my head and down it goes. No--I'm not a regular artist."
+
+"Then you don't practise any regular profession? Mr. Hoopdriver
+looked into her eyes and saw their quiet unsuspicious regard. He
+had vague ideas of resuming the detective role. "It's like this,"
+he said, to gain time. "I have a sort of profession. Only there's
+a kind of reason--nothing much, you know "
+
+"I beg your pardon for cross-examining you."
+
+"No trouble," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Only I can't very well--I
+leave it to you, you know. I don't want to make any mystery of
+it, so far as that goes." Should he plunge boldly and be a
+barrister? That anyhow was something pretty good. But she might
+know about barristry.
+
+"I think I could guess what you are."
+
+"Well--guess," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You come from one of the colonies?"
+
+"Dear me!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, veering round to the new wind.
+"How did you find out THAT?" (the man was born in a London
+suburb, dear Reader.)
+
+"I guessed," she said.
+
+He lifted his eyebrows as one astonished, and clutched a new
+piece of grass.
+
+"You were educated up country."
+
+"Good again," said Hoopdriver, rolling over again into her elbow.
+"You're a CLAIRVOY ant." He bit at the grass, smiling. "Which
+colony was it?"
+
+"That I don't know."
+
+"You must guess," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"South Africa," she said. "I strongly incline to South Africa."
+
+"South Africa's quite a large place," he said.
+
+"But South Africa is right?"
+
+"You're warm," said Hoopdriver, "anyhow," and the while his
+imagination was eagerly exploring this new province.
+
+"South Africa IS right?" she insisted.
+
+He turned over again and nodded, smiling reassuringly into her
+eyes.
+
+"What made me think of South Africa was that novel of Olive
+Schreiner's, you know--The Story of an African Farm.' Gregory
+Rose is so like you."
+
+"I never read 'The Story of an African Farm,'" said Hoopdriver.
+"I must. What's he like?"
+
+"You must read the book. But it's a wonderful place, with its
+mixture of races, and its brand-new civilisation jostling the old
+savagery. Were you near Khama?"
+
+"He was a long way off from our place," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "We
+had a little ostrich farm, you know--Just a few hundred of 'em,
+out Johannesburg way."
+
+"On the Karroo--was it called?"
+
+"That's the term. Some of it was freehold though. Luckily. We got
+along very well in the old days.--But there's no ostriches on
+that farm now." He had a diamond mine in his head, just at the
+moment, but he stopped and left a little to the girl's
+imagination. Besides which it had occurred to him with a kind of
+shock that he was lying.
+
+"What became of the ostriches?"
+
+"We sold 'em off, when we parted with the farm. Do you mind if I
+have another cigarette? That was when I was quite a little chap,
+you know, that we had this ostrich farm."
+
+"Did you have Blacks and Boers about you?"
+
+"Lots," said Mr. Hoopdriver, striking a match on his instep and
+beginning to feel hot at the new responsibility he had brought
+upon himself.
+
+"How interesting! Do you know, I've never been out of England
+except to Paris and Mentone and Switzerland."
+
+"One gets tired of travelling (puff) after a bit, of course."
+
+"You must tell me about your farm in South Africa. It always
+stimulates my imagination to think of these places. I can fancy
+all the tall ostriches being driven out by a black herd--to
+graze, I suppose. How do ostriches feed?"
+
+"Well," said Hoopdriver. "That's rather various. They have their
+fancies, you know. There's fruit, of course, and that kind of
+thing. And chicken food, and so forth. You have to use judgment."
+
+"Did you ever see a lion?" "They weren't very common in our
+district," said Hoopdriver, quite modestly. "But I've seen them,
+of course. Once or twice."
+
+"Fancy seeing a lion! Weren't you frightened?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was now thoroughly sorry he had accepted that
+offer of South Africa. He puffed his cigarette and regarded the
+Solent languidly as he settled the fate on that lion in his mind.
+"I scarcely had time," he said. "It all happened in a minute."
+
+"Go on," she said.
+
+"I was going across the inner paddock where the fatted ostriches
+were."
+
+"Did you EAT ostriches, then? I did not know--"
+
+"Eat them!--often. Very nice they ARE too, properly stuffed.
+Well, we--I, rather--was going across this paddock, and I saw
+something standing up in the moonlight and looking at me." Mr.
+Hoopdriver was in a hot perspiration now. His invention seemed to
+have gone limp. "Luckily I had my father's gun with me. I was
+scared, though, I can tell you. (Puff.) I just aimed at the end
+that I thought was the head. And let fly. (Puff.) And over it
+went, you know."
+
+"Dead?"
+
+"AS dead. It was one of the luckiest shots I ever fired. And I
+wasn't much over nine at the time, neither."
+
+"_I_ should have screamed and run away."
+
+"There's some things you can't run away from," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. "To run would have been Death."
+
+"I don't think I ever met a lion-killer before," she remarked,
+evidently with a heightened opinion of him.
+
+There was a pause. She seemed meditating further questions. Mr.
+Hoopdriver drew his watch hastily. "I say," said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+showing it to her, "don't you think we ought to be getting on?"
+
+His face was flushed, his ears bright red. She ascribed his
+confusion to modesty. He rose with a lion added to the burthens
+of his conscience, and held out his hand to assist her. They
+walked down into Cosham again, resumed their machines, and went
+on at a leisurely pace along the northern shore of the big
+harbour. But Mr. Hoopdriver was no longer happy. This horrible,
+this fulsome lie, stuck in his memory. Why HAD he done it? She
+did not ask for any more South African stories, happily--at least
+until Porchester was reached--but talked instead of Living One's
+Own Life, and how custom hung on people like chains. She talked
+wonderfully, and set Hoopdriver's mind fermenting. By the Castle,
+Mr. Hoopdriver caught several crabs in little shore pools. At
+Fareham they stopped for a second tea, and left the place towards
+the hour of sunset, under such invigorating circumstances as you
+shall in due course hear.
+
+
+
+THE RESCUE EXPEDITION
+
+XXX
+
+And now to tell of those energetic chevaliers, Widgery, Dangle,
+and Phipps, and of that distressed beauty, 'Thomas Plantagenet,'
+well known in society, so the paragraphs said, as Mrs. Milton. We
+left them at Midhurst station, if I remember rightly, waiting, in
+a state of fine emotion, for the Chichester train. It was clearly
+understood by the entire Rescue Party that Mrs. Milton was
+bearing up bravely against almost overwhelming grief. The three
+gentlemen outdid one another in sympathetic expedients; they
+watched her gravely almost tenderly. The substantial Widgery
+tugged at his moustache, and looked his unspeakable feelings at
+her with those dog-like, brown eyes of his; the slender Dangle
+tugged at HIS moustache, and did what he could with unsympathetic
+grey ones. Phipps, unhappily, had no moustache to run any risks
+with, so he folded his arms and talked in a brave, indifferent,
+bearing-up tone about the London, Brighton, and South Coast
+Railway, just to cheer the poor woman up a little. And even Mrs.
+Milton really felt that exalted melancholy to the very bottom of
+her heart, and tried to show it in a dozen little, delicate,
+feminine ways.
+
+"There is nothing to do until we get to Chichester," said Dangle.
+"Nothing."
+
+"Nothing," said Widgery, and aside in her ear: "You really ate
+scarcely anything, you know."
+
+"Their trains are always late," said Phipps, with his fingers
+along the edge of his collar. Dangle, you must understand, was a
+sub-editor and reviewer, and his pride was to be Thomas
+Plantagenet's intellectual companion. Widgery, the big man, was
+manager of a bank and a mighty golfer, and his conception of his
+relations to her never came into his mind without those charming
+oldlines, "Douglas, Douglas, tender and true," falling hard upon
+its heels. His name was Douglas-Douglas Widgery. And Phipps,
+Phipps was a medical student still, and he felt that he laid his
+heart at her feet, the heart of a man of the world. She was kind
+to them all in her way, and insisted on their being friends
+together, in spite of a disposition to reciprocal criticism they
+displayed. Dangle thought Widgery a Philistine, appreciating but
+coarsely the merits of "A Soul Untrammelled," and Widgery thought
+Dangle lacked, humanity--would talk insincerely to say a clever
+thing. Both Dangle and Widgery thought Phipps a bit of a cub, and
+Phipps thought both Dangle and Widgery a couple of Thundering
+Bounders.
+
+"They would have got to Chichester in time for lunch," said
+Dangle, in the train. "After, perhaps. And there's no sufficient
+place in the road. So soon as we get there, Phipps must inquire
+at the chief hotels to see if any one answering to her
+description has lunched there."
+
+"Oh, I'LL inquire," said Phipps. "Willingly. I suppose you and
+Widgery will just hang about--"
+
+He saw an expression of pain on Mrs. Milton's gentle face, and
+stopped abruptly.
+
+"No," said Dangle, "we shan't HANG ABOUT, as you put it. There
+are two places in Chichester where tourists might go--the
+cathedral and a remarkably fine museum. I shall go to the
+cathedral and make an inquiry or so, while Widgery--"
+
+"The museum. Very well. And after that there's a little thing or
+two I've thought of myself," said Widgery.
+
+To begin with they took Mrs. Milton in a kind of procession to
+the Red Hotel and established her there with some tea. "You are
+so kind to me," she said. "All of you." They signified that it
+was nothing, and dispersed to their inquiries. By six they
+returned, their zeal a little damped, without news. Widgery came
+back with Dangle. Phipps was the last to return. "You're quite
+sure," said Widgery, that there isn't any flaw in that inference
+of yours?"
+
+"Quite," said Dangle, rather shortly.
+
+"Of course," said Widgery, "their starting from Midhurst on the
+Chichester road doesn't absolutely bind them not to change their
+minds."
+
+"My dear fellow!--It does. Really it does. You must allow me to
+have enough intelligence to think of cross-roads. Really you
+must. There aren't any cross-roads to tempt them. Would they turn
+aside here? No. Would they turn there? Many more things are
+inevitable than you fancy."
+
+"We shall see at once," said Widgery, at the window. "Here comes
+Phipps. For my own part--"
+
+"Phipps!" said Mrs. Milton. "Is he hurrying? Does he look--" She
+rose in her eagerness, biting her trembling lip, and went towards
+the window.
+
+"No news," said Phipps, entering.
+
+"Ah!" said Widgery.
+
+"None?" said Dangle.
+
+"Well," said Phipps. "One fellow had got hold of a queer story of
+a man in bicycling clothes, who was asking the same question
+about this time yesterday."
+
+"What question?" said Mrs. Milton, in the shadow of the window.
+She spoke in a low voice, almost a whisper.
+
+"Why--Have you seen a young lady in a grey bicycling costume?"
+
+Dangle caught at his lower lip. "What's that?" he said.
+"Yesterday! A man asking after her then! What can THAT mean?"
+
+"Heaven knows," said Phipps, sitting down wearily. "You'd better
+infer."
+
+"What kind of man?" said Dangle.
+
+"How should I know?--in bicycling costume, the fellow said."
+
+"But what height?--What complexion?"
+
+"Didn't ask," said Phipps. "DIDN'T ASK! Nonsense," said Dangle.
+
+"Ask him yourself," said Phipps. "He's an ostler chap in the
+White Hart,--short, thick-set fellow, with a red face and a
+crusty manner. Leaning up against the stable door. Smells of
+whiskey. Go and ask him."
+
+"Of course," said Dangle, taking his straw hat from the shade
+over the stuffed bird on the chiffonier and turning towards the
+door. "I might have known."
+
+Phipps' mouth opened and shut.
+
+"You're tired, I'm sure, Mr. Phipps," said the lady, soothingly.
+"Let me ring for some tea for you." It suddenly occurred to
+Phipps that he had lapsed a little from his chivalry. "I was a
+little annoyed at the way he rushed me to do all this business,"
+he said. "But I'd do a hundred times as much if it would bring
+you any nearer to her." Pause. "I WOULD like a little tea."
+
+"I don't want to raise any false hopes," said Widgery. "But I do
+NOT believe they even came to Chichester. Dangle's a very clever
+fellow, of course, but sometimes these Inferences of his--"
+
+"Tchak!" said Phipps, suddenly.
+
+"What is it?" said Mrs. Milton.
+
+"Something I've forgotten. I went right out from here, went to
+every other hotel in the place, and never thought--But never
+mind. I'll ask when the waiter comes."
+
+"You don't mean--" A tap, and the door opened. "Tea, m'm? yes,
+m'm," said the waiter.
+
+"One minute," said Phipps. "Was a lady in grey, a cycling lady--"
+
+"Stopped here yesterday? Yessir. Stopped the night. With her
+brother, sir--a young gent."
+
+"Brother!" said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. "Thank God!"
+
+The waiter glanced at her and understood everything. "A young
+gent, sir," he said, "very free with his money. Give the name of
+Beaumont." He proceeded to some rambling particulars, and was
+cross-examined by Widgery on the plans of the young couple.
+
+"Havant! Where's Havant?" said Phipps. "I seem to remember it
+somewhere."
+
+"Was the man tall?" said Mrs. Milton, intently, "distinguished
+looking? with a long, flaxen moustache? and spoke with a drawl?"
+
+"Well," said the waiter, and thought. "His moustache, m'm, was
+scarcely long--scrubby more, and young looking."
+
+"About thirty-five, he was?"
+
+"No, m'm. More like five and twenty. Not that."
+
+"Dear me!" said Mrs. Milton, speaking in a curious, hollow voice,
+fumbling for her salts, and showing the finest self-control. "It
+must have been her YOUNGER brother--must have been."
+
+"That will do, thank you," said Widgery, officiously, feeling
+that she would be easier under this new surprise if the man were
+dismissed. The waiter turned to go, and almost collided with
+Dangle, who was entering the room, panting excitedly and with a
+pocket handkerchief held to his right eye. "Hullo!" said dangle.
+"What's up?"
+
+"What's up with YOU?" said Phipps.
+
+"Nothing--an altercation merely with that drunken ostler of
+yours. He thought it was a plot to annoy him--that the Young Lady
+in Grey was mythical. Judged from your manner. I've got a piece
+of raw meat to keep over it. You have some news, I see?"
+
+"Did the man hit you?" asked Widgery.
+
+Mrs. Milton rose and approached Dangle. "Cannot I do anything?"
+
+Dangle was heroic. "Only tell me your news," he said, round the
+corner of the handkerchief.
+
+"It was in this way," said Phipps, and explained rather
+sheepishly. While he was doing so, with a running fire of
+commentary from Widgery, the waiter brought in a tray of tea. "A
+time table," said Dangle, promptly, "for Havant." Mrs. Milton
+poured two cups, and Phipps and Dangle partook in passover form.
+They caught the train by a hair's breadth. So to Havant and
+inquiries.
+
+Dangle was puffed up to find that his guess of Havant was right.
+In view of the fact that beyond Havant the Southampton road has a
+steep hill continuously on the right-hand side, and the sea on
+the left, he hit upon a magnificent scheme for heading the young
+folks off. He and Mrs. Milton would go to Fareham, Widgery and
+Phipps should alight one each at the intermediate stations of
+Cosham and Porchester, and come on by the next train if they had
+no news. If they did not come on, a wire to the Fareham post
+office was to explain why. It was Napoleonic, and more than
+consoled Dangle for the open derision of the Havant street boys
+at the handkerchief which still protected his damaged eye.
+
+Moreover, the scheme answered to perfection. The fugitives
+escaped by a hair's breadth. They were outside the Golden Anchor
+at Fareham, and preparing to mount, as Mrs. Milton and Dangle
+came round the corner from the station. "It's her!" said Mrs.
+Milton, and would have screamed. "Hist!" said Dangle, gripping
+the lady's arm, removing his handkerchief in his excitement, and
+leaving the piece of meat over his eye, an extraordinary
+appearance which seemed unexpectedly to calm her. "Be cool!" said
+Dangle, glaring under the meat. "They must not see us. They will
+get away else. Were there flys at the station?" The young couple
+mounted and vanished round the corner of the Winchester road. Had
+it not been for the publicity of the business, Mrs. Milton would
+have fainted. "SAVE HER!" she said.
+
+"Ah! A conveyance," said Dangle. "One minute."
+
+He left her in a most pathetic attitude, with her hand pressed to
+her heart, and rushed into the Golden Anchor. Dog cart in ten
+minutes. Emerged. The meat had gone now, and one saw the cooling
+puffiness over his eye. "I will conduct you back to the station,"
+said Dangle; "hurry back here, and pursue them. You will meet
+Widgery and Phipps and tell them I am in pursuit."
+
+She was whirled back to the railway station and left there, on a
+hard, blistered, wooden seat in the sun. She felt tired and
+dreadfully ruffled and agitated and dusty. Dangle was, no doubt,
+most energetic and devoted ; but for a kindly, helpful manner
+commend her to Douglas Widgery.
+
+Meanwhile Dangle, his face golden in the evening sun, was driving
+(as well as he could) a large, black horse harnessed into a thing
+called a gig, northwestward towards Winchester. Dangle, barring
+his swollen eye, was a refined-looking little man, and be wore a
+deerstalker cap and was dressed in dark grey. His neck was long
+and slender. Perhaps you know what gigs are, --huge, big, wooden
+things and very high and the horse, too, was huge and big and
+high, with knobby legs, a long face, a hard mouth, and a whacking
+trick of pacing. Smack, smack, smack, smack it went along the
+road, and hard by the church it shied vigorously at a hooded
+perambulator.
+
+The history of the Rescue Expedition now becomes confused. It
+appears that Widgery was extremely indignant to find Mrs. Milton
+left about upon the Fareham platform. The day had irritated him
+somehow, though he had started with the noblest intentions, and
+he seemed glad to find an outlet for justifiable indignation.
+"He's such a spasmodic creature," said Widgery. "Rushing off! And
+I suppose we're to wait here until he comes back! It's likely.
+He's so egotistical, is Dangle. Always wants to mismanage
+everything himself."
+
+"He means to help me," said Mrs. Milton, a little reproachfully,
+touching his arm. Widgery was hardly in the mood to be mollified
+all at once. "He need not prevent ME," he said, and stopped.
+"It's no good talking, you know, and you are tired."
+
+"I can go on," she said brightly, "if only we find her." " While
+I was cooling my heels in Cosham I bought a county map." He
+produced and opened it. "Here, you see, is the road out of
+Fareham." He proceeded with the calm deliberation of a business
+man to develop a proposal of taking train forthwith to
+Winchester. "They MUST be going to Winchester," he explained. It
+was inevitable. To-morrow Sunday, Winchester a cathedral town,
+road going nowhere else of the slightest importance,
+
+"But Mr. Dangle?"
+
+"He will simply go on until he has to pass something, and then he
+will break his neck. I have seen Dangle drive before. It's
+scarcely likely a dog-cart, especially a hired dog-cart, will
+overtake bicycles in the cool of the evening. Rely upon me, Mrs.
+Milton--"
+
+"I am in your hands," she said, with pathetic littleness, looking
+up at him, and for the moment he forgot the exasperation of the
+day.
+
+Phipps, during this conversation, had stood in a somewhat
+depressed attitude, leaning on his stick, feeling his collar, and
+looking from one speaker to the other. The idea of leaving Dangle
+behind seemed to him an excellent one. "We might leave a message
+at the place where he got the dog-cart," he suggested, when he
+saw their eyes meeting. There was a cheerful alacrity about all
+three at the proposal.
+
+But they never got beyond Botley. For even as their train ran
+into the station, a mighty rumbling was heard, there was a
+shouting overhead, the guard stood astonished on the platform,
+and Phipps, thrusting his head out of the window, cried, "There
+he goes!" and sprang out of the carriage. Mrs. Milton, following
+in alarm, just saw it. From Widgery it was hidden. Botley station
+lies in a cutting, overhead was the roadway, and across the lemon
+yellows and flushed pinks of the sunset, there whirled a great
+black mass, a horse like a long-nosed chess knight, the upper
+works of a gig, and Dangle in transit from front to back. A
+monstrous shadow aped him across the cutting. It was the event of
+a second. Dangle seemed to jump, hang in the air momentarily, and
+vanish, and after a moment's pause came a heart-rending smash.
+Then two black heads running swiftly.
+
+"Better get out," said Phipps to Mrs. Milton, who stood
+fascinated in the doorway.
+
+In another moment all three were hurrying up the steps. They
+found Dangle, hatless, standing up with cut hands extended,
+having his hands brushed by an officious small boy. A broad, ugly
+road ran downhill in a long vista, and in the distance was a
+little group of Botley inhabitants holding the big, black horse.
+Even at that distance they could see the expression of conscious
+pride on the monster's visage. It was as wooden-faced a horse as
+you can imagine. The beasts in the Tower of London, on which the
+men in armour are perched, are the only horses I have ever seen
+at all like it. However, we are not concerned now with the horse,
+but with Dangle. " Hurt?" asked Phipps, eagerly, leading.
+
+"Mr. Dangle!" cried Mrs. Milton, clasping her hands.
+
+"Hullo!" said Dangle, not surprised in the slightest. "Glad
+you've come. I may want you. Bit of a mess I'm in--eigh? But I've
+caught 'em. At the very place I expected, too."
+
+"Caught them!" said Widgery. Where are they?"
+
+"Up there," he said, with a backward motion of his head. "About a
+mile up the hill. I left 'em. I HAD to."
+
+"I don't understand," said Mrs. Milton, with that rapt, painful
+look again. "Have you found Jessie?"
+
+"I have. I wish I could wash the gravel out of my hands
+somewhere. It was like this, you know. Came on them suddenly
+round a corner. Horse shied at the bicycles. They were sitting by
+the roadside botanising flowers. I just had time to shout,
+'Jessie Milton, we've been looking for you,' and then that
+confounded brute bolted. I didn't dare turn round. I had all my
+work to do to save myself being turned over, as it was--so long
+as I did, I mean. I just shouted, 'Return to your friends. All
+will be forgiven.' And off I came, clatter, clatter. Whether they
+heard--"
+
+"TAKE ME TO HER," said Mrs. Milton, with intensity, turning
+towards Widgery.
+
+"Certainly," said Widgery, suddenly becoming active. "How far is
+it, Dangle?"
+
+"Mile and a half or two miles. I was determined to find them, you
+know. I say though--Look at my hands! But I beg your pardon, Mrs.
+Milton." He turned to Phipps. "Phipps, I say, where shall I wash
+the gravel out? And have a look at my knee?"
+
+"There's the station," said Phipps, becoming helpful. Dangle made
+a step, and a damaged knee became evident. "Take my arm," said
+Phipps.
+
+"Where can we get a conveyance?" asked Widgery of two small boys.
+
+The two small boys failed to understand. They looked at one
+another.
+
+"There's not a cab, not a go-cart, in sight," said Widgery. "It's
+a case of a horse, a horse, my kingdom for a horse."
+
+"There's a harse all right," said one of the small boys with a
+movement of the head.
+
+"Don't you know where we can hire traps? asked Widgery. "Or a
+cart or-- anything?" asked Mrs. Milton.
+
+"John Ooker's gart a cart, but no one can't 'ire'n," said the
+larger of the small boys, partially averting his face and staring
+down the road and making a song of it. "And so's my feyther,
+for's leg us broke."
+
+"Not a cart even! Evidently. What shall we do?"
+
+It occurred to Mrs. Milton that if Widgery was the man for
+courtly devotion, Dangle was infinitely readier of resource. "I
+suppose--" she said, timidly. "Perhaps if you were to ask Mr.
+Dangle--"
+
+And then all the gilt came off Widgery. He answered quite rudely.
+"Confound Dangle! Hasn't he messed us up enough? He must needs
+drive after them in a trap to tell them we're coming, and now you
+want me to ask him--"
+
+Her beautiful blue eyes were filled with tears. He stopped
+abruptly. "I'll go and ask Dangle," he said, shortly. "If you
+wish it." And went striding into the station and down the steps,
+leaving her in the road under the quiet inspection of the two
+little boys, and with a kind of ballad refrain running through
+her head, "Where are the Knights of the Olden Time?" and feeling
+tired to death and hungry and dusty and out of curl, and, in
+short, a martyr woman.
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+It goes to my heart to tell of the end of that day, how the
+fugitives vanished into Immensity; how there were no more trains
+how Botley stared unsympathetically with a palpable disposition
+to derision, denying conveyances how the landlord of the Heron
+was suspicious, how the next day was Sunday, and the hot summer's
+day had crumpled the collar of Phipps and stained the skirts of
+Mrs. Milton, and dimmed the radiant emotions of the whole party.
+Dangle, with sticking-plaster and a black eye, felt the absurdity
+of the pose of the Wounded Knight, and abandoned it after the
+faintest efforts. Recriminations never, perhaps, held the
+foreground of the talk, but they played like summer lightning on
+the edge of the conversation. And deep in the hearts of all was a
+galling sense of the ridiculous. Jessie, they thought, was most
+to blame. Apparently, too, the worst, which would have made the
+whole business tragic, was not happening. Here was a young woman
+--young woman do I say? a mere girl!--had chosen to leave a
+comfortable home in Surbiton, and all the delights of a refined
+and intellectual circle, and had rushed off, trailing us after
+her, posing hard, mutually jealous, and now tired and
+weather-worn, to flick us off at last, mere mud from her wheel,
+into this detestable village beer-house on a Saturday night! And
+she had done it, not for Love and Passion, which are serious
+excuses one may recognise even if one must reprobate, but just
+for a Freak, just for a fantastic Idea ; for nothing, in fact,
+but the outraging of Common Sense. Yet withal, such was our
+restraint, that we talked of her still as one much misguided, as
+one who burthened us with anxiety, as a lamb astray, and Mrs.
+Milton having eaten, continued to show the finest feelings on the
+matter.
+
+She sat, I may mention, in the cushioned basket-chair, the only
+comfortable chair in the room, and we sat on incredibly hard,
+horsehair things having antimacassars tied to their backs by
+means of lemon-coloured bows. It was different from those dear
+old talks at Surbiton, somehow. She sat facing the window, which
+was open (the night was so tranquil and warm), and the dim light-
+-for we did not use the lamp--suited her admirably. She talked in
+a voice that told you she was tired, and she seemed inclined to
+state a case against herself in the matter of "A Soul
+Untrammelled." It was such an evening as might live in a
+sympathetic memoir, but it was a little dull while it lasted.
+
+"I feel," she said, "that I am to blame. I have Developed. That
+first book of mine--I do not go back upon a word of it, mind, but
+it has been misunderstood, misapplied."
+
+"It has," said Widgery, trying to look so deeply sympathetic as
+to be visible in the dark. "Deliberately misunderstood."
+
+"Don't say that," said the lady. "Not deliberately. I try and
+think that critics are honest. After their lights. I was not
+thinking of critics. But she--I mean--" She paused, an
+interrogation.
+
+"It is possible," said Dangle, scrutinising his sticking-plaster.
+
+"I write a book and state a case. I want people to THINK as I
+recommend, not to DO as I recommend. It is just Teaching. Only I
+make it into a story. I want to Teach new Ideas, new Lessons, to
+promulgate Ideas. Then when the Ideas have been spread
+abroad--Things will come about. Only now it is madness to fly in
+the face of the established order. Bernard Shaw, you know, has
+explained that with regard to Socialism. We all know that to earn
+all you consume is right, and that living on invested capital is
+wrong. Only we cannot begin while we are so few. It is Those
+Others."
+
+"Precisely," said Widgery. "It is Those Others. They must begin
+first."
+
+"And meanwhile you go on banking--"
+
+"If I didn't, some one else would."
+
+"And I live on Mr. Milton's Lotion while I try to gain a footing
+in Literature."
+
+"TRY!" said Phipps. "You HAVE done so." And, "That's different,"
+said Dangle, at the same time.
+
+"You are so kind to me. But in this matter. Of course Georgina
+Griffiths in my book lived alone in a flat in Paris and went to
+life classes and had men visitors, but then she was over
+twenty-one."
+
+"Jessica is only seventeen, and girlish for that," said Dangle.
+
+"It alters everything. That child! It is different with a woman.
+And Georgina Griffiths never flaunted her freedom-- on a bicycle,
+in country places. In this country. Where every one is so
+particular. Fancy, SLEEPING away from home. It's dreadful-- If it
+gets about it spells ruin for her."
+
+"Ruin," said Widgery.
+
+"No man would marry a girl like that," said Phipps.
+
+"It must be hushed up," said Dangle.
+
+"It always seems to me that life is made up of individuals, of
+individual cases. We must weigh each person against his or her
+circumstances. General rules don't apply--"
+
+"I often feel the force of that," said Widgery. "Those are my
+rules. Of course my books--"
+
+"It's different, altogether different," said Dangle. "A novel
+deals with typical cases."
+
+"And life is not typical," said Widgery, with immense profundity.
+
+Then suddenly, unintentionally, being himself most surprised and
+shocked of any in the room, Phipps yawned. The failing was
+infectious, and the gathering having, as you can easily
+understand, talked itself weary, dispersed on trivial pretences.
+But not to sleep immediately. Directly Dangle was alone he began,
+with infinite disgust, to scrutinise his darkling eye, for he was
+a neat-minded little man in spite of his energy. The whole
+business--so near a capture--was horribly vexatious. Phipps sat
+on his bed for some time examining, with equal disgust, a collar
+he would have thought incredible for Sunday twenty-four hours
+before. Mrs. Milton fell a-musing on the mortality of even big,
+fat men with dog-like eyes, and Widgery was unhappy because he
+had been so cross to her at the station, and because so far he
+did not feel that he had scored over Dangle. Also he was angry
+with Dangle. And all four of them, being souls living very much
+upon the appearances of things, had a painful, mental middle
+distance of Botley derisive and suspicious, and a remoter
+background of London humorous, and Surbiton speculative. Were
+they really, after all, behaving absurdly?
+
+
+
+MR. HOOPDRIVER, KNIGHT ERRANT
+
+XXXII
+
+As Mr. Dangle bad witnessed, the fugitives had been left by him
+by the side of the road about two miles from Botley. Before Mr.
+Dangle's appearance, Mr. Hoopdriver had been learning with great
+interest that mere roadside flowers had names,--star-flowers,
+wind-stars, St. John's wort, willow herb, lords and ladies,
+bachelor's buttons,--most curious names, some of them. "The
+flowers are all different in South Africa, y'know," he was
+explaining with a happy fluke of his imagination to account for
+his ignorance. Then suddenly, heralded by clattering sounds and a
+gride of wheels, Dangle had flared and thundered across the
+tranquillity of the summer evening; Dangle, swaying and
+gesticulating behind a corybantic black horse, had hailed Jessie
+by her name, had backed towards the hedge for no ostensible
+reason, and vanished to the accomplishment of the Fate that had
+been written down for him from the very beginning of things.
+Jessie and Hoopdriver had scarcely time to stand up and seize
+their machines, before this tumultuous, this swift and wonderful
+passing of Dangle was achieved. He went from side to side of the
+road,--worse even than the riding forth of Mr. Hoopdriver it was,
+--and vanished round the corner.
+
+"He knew my name," said Jessie. "Yes--it was Mr. Dangle."
+
+"That was our bicycles did that," said Mr. Hoopdriver
+simultaneously, and speaking with a certain complacent concern.
+"I hope he won't get hurt."
+
+"That was Mr. Dangle," repeated Jessie, and Mr. Hoopdriver heard
+this time, with a violent start. His eyebrows went up
+spasmodically.
+
+"What! someone you know?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Lord!"
+
+"He was looking for me," said Jessie. "I could see. He began to
+call to me before the horse shied. My stepmother has sent him."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver wished he had returned the bicycle after all, for
+his ideas were still a little hazy about Bechamel and Mrs.
+Milton. Honesty IS the best policy--often, he thought. He turned
+his head this way and that. He became active. "After us, eigh?
+Then he'll come back. He's gone down that hill, and he won't be
+able to pull up for a bit, I'm certain."
+
+Jessie, he saw, had wheeled her machine into the road and was
+mounting. Still staring at the corner that had swallowed up
+Dangle, Hoopdriver followed suit. And so, just as the sun was
+setting, they began another flight together,--riding now towards
+Bishops Waltham, with Mr. Hoopdriver in the post of danger--the
+rear--ever and again looking over his shoulder and swerving
+dangerously as he did so. Occasionally Jessie had to slacken her
+pace. He breathed heavily, and hated himself because his mouth
+fell open, After nearly an hour's hard riding, they found
+themselves uncaught at Winchester. Not a trace of Dangle nor any
+other danger was visible as they rode into the dusky, yellow-lit
+street. Though the bats had been fluttering behind thehedges and
+the evening star was bright while they were still two miles from
+Winchester, Mr. Hoopdriver pointed out the dangers of stopping in
+such an obvious abiding-place, and gently but firmly insisted
+upon replenishing the lamps and riding on towards Salisbury. From
+Winchester, roads branch in every direction, and to turn abruptly
+westward was clearly the way to throw off the chase. As
+Hoopdriver saw the moon rising broad and yellow through the
+twilight, he thought he should revive the effect of that ride out
+of Bognor; but somehow, albeit the moon and all the atmospheric
+effects were the same, the emotions were different. They rode in
+absolute silence, and slowly after they had cleared the outskirts
+of Winchester. Both of them were now nearly tired out,--the level
+was tedious, and even a little hill a burden; and so it came
+about that in the hamlet of Wallenstock they were beguiled to
+stop and ask for accommodation in an exceptionally
+prosperouslooking village inn. A plausible landlady rose to the
+occasion.
+
+Now, as they passed into the room where their suppers were
+prepared, Mr. Hoopdriver caught a glimpse through a door ajar and
+floating in a reek of smoke, of three and a half faces-- for the
+edge of the door cut one down--and an American cloth-covered
+table with several glasses and a tankard. And he also heard a
+remark. In the second before he heard that remark, Mr. Hoopdriver
+had been a proud and happy man, to particularize, a baronet's
+heir incognito. He had surrendered their bicycles to the odd man
+of the place with infinite easy dignity, and had bowingly opened
+the door for Jessie. "Who's that, then?" he imagined people
+saying; and then, "Some'n pretty well orf--judge by the
+bicycles." Then the imaginary spectators would fall a-talking of
+the fashionableness of bicycling,--how judges And stockbrokers
+and actresses and, in fact, all the best people rode, and how
+that it was often the fancy of such great folk to shun the big
+hotels, the adulation of urban crowds, and seek, incognito, the
+cosy quaintnesses of village life. Then, maybe, they would think
+of a certain nameless air of distinction about the lady who had
+stepped across the doorway, and about the handsome,
+flaxen-moustached, blue-eyed Cavalier who had followed her in,
+and they would look one to another. "Tell you what it is," one of
+the village elders would say--just as they do in novels--voicing
+the thought of all, in a low, impressive tone: "There's such a
+thinas entertaining barranets unawares-not to mention no higher
+things--"
+
+Such, I say, had been the filmy, delightful stuff in Mr.
+Hoopdriver's head the moment before he heard that remark. But the
+remark toppled him headlong. What the precise remark was need not
+concern us. It was a casual piece of such satire as Strephon
+delights in. Should you be curious, dear lady, as to its nature,
+you have merely to dress yourself in a really modern cycling
+costume, get one of the feeblest-looking of your men to escort
+you, and ride out, next Saturday evening, to any public house
+where healthy, homely people gather together. Then you will hear
+quite a lot of the kind of thing Mr. Hoopdriver heard. More,
+possibly, than you will desire.
+
+The remark, I must add, implicated Mr. Hoopdriver. It indicated
+an entire disbelief in his social standing. At a blow, it
+shattered all the gorgeous imaginative fabric his mind had been
+rejoicing in. All that foolish happiness vanished like a dream.
+And there was nothing to show for it, as there is nothing to show
+for any spiteful remark that has ever been made. Perhaps the man
+who said the thing had a gleam of satisfaction at the idea of
+taking a complacent-looking fool down a peg, but it is just as
+possible he did not know at the time that his stray shot had hit.
+He had thrown it as a boy throws a stone at a bird. And it not
+only demolished a foolish, happy conceit, but it wounded. It
+touched Jessie grossly.
+
+She did not hear it, he concluded from her subsequent bearing;
+but during the supper they had in the little private dining-room,
+though she talked cheerfully, he was preoccupied. Whiffs of
+indistinct conversation, and now and then laughter, came in from
+the inn parloiir through the pelargoniums in the open window.
+Hoopdriver felt it must all be in the same strain,--at her
+expense and his. He answered her abstractedly. She was tired, she
+said, and presently went to her room. Mr. Hoopdriver, in his
+courtly way, opened the door for her and bowed her out. He stood
+listening and fearing some new offence as she went upstairs, and
+round the bend where the barometer hung beneath the stuffed
+birds. Then he went back to the room, and stood on the hearthrug
+before the. paper fireplace ornament. "Cads!" he said in a
+scathing undertone, as a fresh burst of laughter came floating
+in. All through supper he had been composing stinging repartee, a
+blistering speech of denunciation to be presently delivered. He
+would rate them as a nobleman should: "Call themselves
+Englishmen, indeed, and insult a woman!" he would say; take the
+names and addresses perhaps, threaten to speak to the Lord of the
+Manor, promise to let them hear from him again, and so out with
+consternation in his wake. It really ought to be done.
+
+"Teach 'em better," he said fiercely, and tweaked his moustache
+painfully. What was it? He revived the objectionable remark for
+his own exasperation, and then went over the heads of his speech
+again.
+
+He coughed, made three steps towards the door, then stopped and
+went back to the hearthrug. He wouldn't--after all. Yet was he
+not a Knight Errant? Should such men go unreproved, unchecked, by
+wandering baronets incognito? Magnanimity? Look at it in that
+way? Churls beneath one's notice? No; merely a cowardly
+subterfuge. He WOULD after all.
+
+Something within him protested that he was a hot-headed ass even
+as he went towards the door again. But he only went on the more
+resolutely. He crossed the hall, by the bar, and entered the room
+from which the remark had proceeded. He opened the door abruptly
+and stood scowling on them in the doorway. "You'll only make a
+mess of it," remarked the internal sceptic. There were five men
+in the room altogether: a fat person, with a long pipe and a
+great number of chins, in an armchair by the fireplace, who
+wished Mr. Hoopdriver a good evening very affably; a young fellow
+smoking a cutty and displaying crossed legs with gaiters ; a
+little, bearded man with a toothless laugh; a middle-aged,
+comfortable man with bright eyes, who wore a velveteen jacket;
+and a fair young man, very genteel in a yellowish-brown
+ready-made suit and a white tie.
+
+"H'm," said Mr. Hoopdriver, looking very stern and harsh. And
+then in a forbidding tone, as one who consented to no liberties,
+"Good evening."
+
+"Very pleasant day we've been 'aving," said the fair young man
+with the white tie.
+
+"Very," said Mr. Hoopdriver, slowly; and taking a brown armchair,
+he planted it with great deliberation where he faced the
+fireplace, and sat down. Let's see--how did that speech begin?
+
+"Very pleasant roads about here," said the fair young man with
+the white tie.
+
+"Very," said Mr. Hoopdriver, eyeing him darkly. Have to begin
+somehow. "The roads about here are all right, and the weather
+about here is all right, but what I've come in here to say
+is--there's some damned unpleasant people--damned unpleasant
+people!"
+
+"Oh!" said the young man with the gaiters, apparently making a
+mental inventory of his pearl buttons as he spoke. "How's that?"
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver put his hands on his knees and stuck out his
+elbows with extreme angularity. In his heart he was raving at his
+idiotic folly at thus bearding these lions,--indisputably they
+WERE lions,--but he had to go through with it now. Heaven send,
+his breath, which was already getting a trifle spasmodic, did not
+suddenly give out. He fixed his eye on the face of the fat man
+with the chins, and spoke in a low, impressive voice. "I came
+here, sir," said Mr. Hoopdriver, and paused to inflate his
+cheeks, "with a lady."
+
+"Very nice lady," said the man with the gaiters, putting his head
+on one side to admire a pearl button that had been hiding behind
+the curvature of his calf. "Very nice lady indeed."
+
+"I came here," said Mr. Hoopdriver, "with a lady."
+
+"We saw you did, bless you," said the fat man with the chins, in
+a curious wheezy voice. "I don't see there's anything so very
+extraordinary in that. One 'ud think we hadn't eyes."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver coughed. "I came, here, sir--"
+
+"We've 'eard that," said the little man with the beard, sharply
+and went off into an amiable chuckle. "We know it by 'art," said
+the little man, elaborating the point.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver temporarily lost his thread. He glared malignantly
+at the little man with the beard, and tried to recover his
+discourse. A pause.
+
+"You were saying," said the fair young man with the white tie,
+speaking very politely, "that you came here with a lady."
+
+"A lady," meditated the gaiter gazer.
+
+The man in velveteen, who was looking from one speaker to another
+with keen, bright eyes, now laughed as though a point had been
+scored, and stimulated Mr. Hoopdriver to speak, by fixing him
+with an expectant regard.
+
+"Some dirty cad," said Mr. Hoopdriver, proceeding with his
+discourse, and suddenly growing extremely fierce, "made a remark
+as we went by this door."
+
+"Steady on!" said the old gentleman with many chins. ,Steady on!
+Don't you go a-calling us names, please."
+
+"One minute!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "It wasn't I began calling
+names." ("Who did? said the man with the chins.) "I'm not calling
+any of you dirty cads. Don't run away with that impression. Only
+some person in this room made a remark that showed he wasn't fit
+to wipe boots on, and, with all due deference to such gentlemen
+as ARE gentlemen" (Mr. Hoopdriver looked round for moral
+support), "I want to know which it was."
+
+"Meanin'?" said the fair young man in the white tie.
+
+"That I'm going to wipe my boots on 'im straight away," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, reverting to anger, if with a slight catch in his
+throat--than which threat of personal violence nothing had been
+further from his thoughts on entering the room. He said this
+because he could think of nothing else to say, and stuck out his
+elbows truculently to hide the sinking of his heart. It is
+curious how situations run away with us.
+
+"'Ullo, Charlie!" said the little man, and "My eye!" said the
+owner of the chins. 'You're going to wipe your boots on 'im?"
+said the fair young man, in a tone of mild surprise.
+
+"I am," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with emphatic resolution, and glared
+in the young man's face.
+
+"That's fair and reasonable," said the man in the velveteen
+jacket; "if you can."
+
+The interest of the meeting seemed transferred to the young man
+in the white tic. "Of course, if you can't find out which it is,
+I suppose you're prepared to wipe your boots in a liberal way on
+everybody in the room," said this young man, in the same tone of
+impersonal question. "This gentleman, the champion lightweight--"
+
+"Own up, Charlie," said the young man with the gaiters, looking
+up for a moment. "And don't go a-dragging in your betters. It's
+fair and square. You can't get out of it."
+
+"Was it this--gent?" began Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Of course," said the young man in the white tie, "when it comes
+to talking of wiping boots--"
+
+"I'm not talking; I'm going to do it," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+He looked round at the meeting. They were no longer antagonists;
+they were spectators. He would have to go through with it now.
+But this tone of personal aggression on the maker of the remark
+had somehow got rid of the oppressive feeling of Hoopdriver
+contra mundum. Apparently, he would have to fight someone. Would
+he get a black eye? Would he get very much hurt? Pray goodness it
+wasn't that sturdy chap in the gaiters! Should he rise and begin?
+What would she think if he brought a black eye to breakfast
+to-morrow?"Is this the man?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+business-like calm, and arms more angular than ever.
+
+"Eat 'im!" said the little man with the beard; "eat 'im straight
+orf."
+
+"Steady on!" said the young man in the white tie. "Steady on a
+minute. If I did happen to say--"
+
+"You did, did you?" said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Backing out of it, Charlie?" said the young man with the gaiters.
+
+"Not a bit," said Charlie. "Surely we can pass a bit of a joke--"
+
+"I'm going to teach you to keep your jokes to yourself," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+"Bray-vo!" said the shepherd of the flock of chins.
+
+"Charlie IS a bit too free with his jokes," said the little man
+with the beard.
+
+"It's downright disgusting," said Hoopdriver, falling back upon
+his speech. "A lady can't ride a bicycle in a country road, or
+wear a dress a little out of the ordinary, but every dirty little
+greaser must needs go shouting insults--"
+
+"_I_ didn't know the young lady would hear what I said," said
+Charlie. " Surely one can speak friendly to one's friends. How
+was I to know the door was open--"
+
+Hoopdriver began to suspect that his antagonist was, if possible,
+more seriously alarmed at the prospect of violence than himself,
+and his spirits rose again. These chaps ought to have a thorough
+lesson. "Of COURSE you knew the door was open," he retorted
+indignantly. "Of COURSE you thought we should hear what you said.
+Don't go telling lies about it. It's no good your saying things
+like that. You've had your fun, and you meant to have your fun.
+And I mean to make an example of you, Sir."
+
+"Ginger beer," said the little man with the beard, in a
+confidential tone to the velveteen jacket, "is regular up this
+'ot weather. Bustin' its bottles it is everywhere."
+
+"What's the good of scrapping about in a publichouse?" said
+Charlie, appealing to the company. "A fair fight without
+interruptions, now, I WOULDN'T mind, if the gentleman's so
+disposed."
+
+Evidently the man was horribly afraid. Mr. Hoopdriver grew
+truculent.
+
+"Where you like," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "jest wherever you like."
+
+"You insulted the gent," said the man in velveteen.
+
+"Don't be a bloomin' funk, Charlie," said the man in gaiters.
+"Why, you got a stone of him, if you got an ounce."
+
+"What I say, is this," said the gentleman with the excessive
+chins, trying to get a hearing by banging his chair arms. "If
+Charlie goes saying things, he ought to back 'em up. That's what
+I say. I don't mind his sayin' such things 't all, but he ought
+to be prepared to back 'em up."
+
+"I'll BACK 'em up all right," said Charlie, with extremely bitter
+emphasis on 'back.' "If the gentleman likes to come Toosday
+week--"
+
+"Rot!" chopped in Hoopdriver. "Now."
+
+"'Ear, 'ear," said the owner of the chins.
+
+"Never put off till to-morrow, Charlie, what you can do to-day,"
+said the man in the velveteen coat.
+
+"You got to do it, Charlie," said the man in gaiters. "It's no
+good."
+
+"It's like this," said Charlie, appealing to everyone except
+Hoopdriver. "Here's me, got to take in her ladyship's dinner
+to-morrow night. How should I look with a black eye? And going
+round with the carriage with a split lip?"
+
+"If you don't want your face sp'iled, Charlie, why don't you keep
+your mouth shut?" said the person in gaiters.
+
+"Exactly," said Mr. Hoopdriver, driving it home with great
+fierceness. "Why don't you shut your ugly mouth?"
+
+"It's as much as my situation's worth," protested Charlie.
+
+"You should have thought of that before," said Hoopdriver.
+
+"There's no occasion to be so thunderin' 'ot about it. I only
+meant the thing joking," said Charlie. "AS one gentleman to
+another, I'm very sorry if the gentleman's annoyed--"
+
+Everybody began to speak at once. Mr. Hoopdriver twirled his
+moustache. He felt that Charlie's recognition of his
+gentlemanliness was at any rate a redeeming feature. But it
+became his pose to ride hard and heavy over the routed fo c. He
+shouted some insulting phrase over the tumult.
+
+"You're regular abject," the man in gaiters was saying to
+Charlie.
+
+More confusion.
+
+"Only don't think I'm afraid,--not of a spindle-legged cuss like
+him shouted Charlie. "Because I ain't."
+
+"Change of front," thought Hoopdriver, a little startled. "Where
+are we going?"
+
+"Don't sit there and be abusive," said the man in velveteen.
+"He's offered to hit you, and if I was him, I'd hit you now."
+
+"All right, then," said Charlie, with a sudden change of front
+and springing to his feet. "If I must, I must. Now, then!" At
+that, Hoopdriver, the child of Fate, rose too, with a horrible
+sense that his internal monitor was right. Things had taken a
+turn. He had made a mess of it, and now there was nothing for it,
+so far as he could see, but to hit the man at once. He and
+Charlie stood six feet apart, with a table between, both very
+breathless and fierce. A vulgar fight in a public-house, and with
+what was only too palpably a footman! Good Heavens! And this was
+the dignified, scornful remonstrance! How the juice had it all
+happened? Go round the table at him, I suppose. But before the
+brawl could achieve itself, the man in gaiters intervened. "Not
+here," he said, stepping between the antagonists. Everyone was
+standing up.
+
+"Charlie's artful," said the little man with the beard.
+
+"Buller's yard," said the man with the gaiters, taking the
+control of the entire affair with the easy readiness of an
+accomplished practitioner. "If the gentleman DON'T mind."
+Buller's yard, it seemed, was the very place. "We'll do the thing
+regular and decent, if you please." And before he completely
+realized what was happening, Hoopdriver was being marched out
+through the back premises of the inn, to the first and only fight
+with fists that was ever to glorify his life.
+
+Outwardly, so far as the intermittent moonlight showed, Mr.
+Hoopdriver was quietly but eagerly prepared to fight. But
+inwardly he was a chaos of conflicting purposes. It was
+extraordinary how things happened. One remark had trod so closely
+on the heels of another, that he had had the greatest difficulty
+in following the development of the business. He distinctly
+remembered himself walking across from one room to the other,--a
+dignified, even an aristocratic figure, primed with considered
+eloquence, intent upon a scathing remonstrance to these wretched
+yokels, regarding their manners. Then incident had flickered into
+incident until here he was out in a moonlit lane,--a slight, dark
+figure in a group of larger, indistinct figures,--marching in a
+quiet, business-like way towards some unknown horror at Buller's
+yard. Fists! It was astonishing. It was terrible! In front of him
+was the pallid figure of Charles, and he saw that the man in
+gaiters held Charles kindly but firmly by the arm.
+
+"It's blasted rot," Charles was saying, "getting up a fight just
+for a thing like that; all very well for 'im. 'E's got 'is
+'olidays; 'e 'asn't no blessed dinner to take up to-morrow night
+like I 'ave.--No need to numb my arm, IS there?"
+
+They went into Buller's yard through gates. There were sheds in
+Buller's yard--sheds of mystery that the moonlight could not
+solve--a smell of cows, and a pump stood out clear and black,
+throwing a clear black shadow on the whitewashed wall. And here
+it was his face was to be battered to a pulp. He knew this was
+the uttermost folly, to stand up here and be pounded, but the way
+out of it was beyond his imagining. Yet afterwards--? Could he
+ever face her again? He patted his Norfolk jacket and took his
+ground with his back to the gate. How did one square? So? Suppose
+one were to turn and run even now, run straight back to the inn
+and lock himself into his bedroom? They couldn't make, him come
+out--anyhow. He could prosecute them for assault if they did. How
+did one set about prosecuting for assault? He saw Charles, with
+his face ghastly white under the moon, squaring in front of him.
+
+He caught a blow on the arm and gave ground. Charles pressed him.
+Then he hit with his right and with the violence of despair. It
+was a hit of his own devising,--an impromptu,--but it chanced to
+coincide with the regulation hook hit at the head. He perceived
+with a leap of exultation that the thing his fist had met was the
+jawbone of Charles. It was the sole gleam of pleasure he
+experienced during the fight, and it was quite momentary. He had
+hardly got home upon Charles before he was struck in the chest
+and whirled backward. He had the greatest difficulty in keeping
+his feet. He felt that his heart was smashed flat. "Gord darm!"
+said somebody, dancing toe in hand somewhere behind him. As Mr.
+Hoopdriver staggered, Charles gave a loud and fear-compelling
+cry. He seemed to tower over Hoopdriver in the moonlight. Both
+his fists were whirling. It was annihilation coming--no less. Mr.
+Hoopdriver ducked perhaps and certainly gave ground to the right,
+hit, and missed. Charles swept round to the left, missing
+generously. A blow glanced over Mr. Hoopdriver's left ear, and
+the flanking movement was completed. Another blow behind the ear.
+Heaven and earth spun furiously round Mr. Hoopdriver, and then he
+became aware of a figure in a light suit shooting violently
+through an open gate into the night. The man in gaiters sprang
+forward past Mr. Hoopdriver, but too late to intercept the
+fugitive. There were shouts, laughter, and Mr. Hoopdriver, still
+solemnly squaring, realized the great and wonderful
+truth--Charles had fled. He, Hoopdriver, had fought and, by all
+the rules of war, had won.
+
+"That was a pretty cut under the jaw you gave him," the toothless
+little man with the beard was remarking in an unexpectedly
+friendly manner.
+
+"The fact of it is," said Mr. Hoopdriver, sitting beside the road
+to Salisbury, and with the sound of distant church bells in his
+cars, "I had to give the fellow a lesson; simply had to."
+
+"It seems so dreadful that you should have to knock people
+about," said Jessie.
+
+"These louts get unbearable," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "If now and
+then we didn't give them a lesson,--well, a lady cyclist in the
+roads would be an impossibility."
+
+"I suppose every woman shrinks from violence," said Jessie. "I
+suppose men ARE braver--in a way--than women. It seems to me-I
+can't imagine -how one could bring oneself to face a roomful of
+rough characters, pick out the bravest, and. give him an
+exemplary thrashing. I quail at the idea. I thought only Ouida's
+guardsmen did things like that."
+
+"It was nothing more than my juty--as a gentleman," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver.
+
+"But to walk straight into the face of danger!"
+
+"It's habit," said Mr. Hoopdriver, quite modestly, flicking off a
+particle of cigarette ash that had settled on his knee.
+
+
+
+THE ABASEMENT OF MR. HOOPDRIVER
+
+XXXIII
+
+On Monday morning the two fugitives found themselves breakfasting
+at the Golden Pheasant in Blandford. They were in the course of
+an elaborate doubling movement through Dorsetshire towards
+Ringwood, where Jessie anticipated an answer from her
+schoolmistress friend. By this time they had been nearly sixty
+hours together, and you will understand that Mr. Hoopdriver's
+feelings had undergone a considerable intensification and
+development. At first Jessie had been only an impressionist
+sketch upon his mind, something feminine, active, and dazzling,
+something emphatically "above " him, cast into his company by a
+kindly fate. His chief idea, at the outset, as you know, had been
+to live up to her level, by pretending to be more exceptional,
+more wealthy, better educated, and, above all, better born than
+he was. His knowledge of the feminine mind was almost entirely
+derived from the young ladies he had met in business, and in that
+class (as in military society and among gentlemen's servants) the
+good old tradition of a brutal social exclusiveness is still
+religiously preserved. He had an almost intolerable dread of her
+thinking him a I bounder.' Later he began to perceive the
+distinction of her idiosyncracies. Coupled with a magnificent
+want of experience was a splendid enthusiasm for abstract views
+of the most advanced description, and her strength of conviction
+completely carried Hoopdriver away. She was going to Live her Own
+Life, with emphasis, and Mr. Hoopdriver was profoundly stirred to
+similar resolves. So soon as he grasped the tenor of her views,
+he perceived that he himself had thought as much from his
+earliest years. "Of course," he remarked, in a flash of sexual
+pride, "a man is freer than a woman. End in the Colonies, y'know,
+there isn't half the Conventionality you find in society in this
+country."
+
+He made one or two essays in the display of unconventionality,
+and was quite unaware that he impressed her as a narrow-minded
+person. He suppressed the habits of years and made no proposal to
+go to church. He discussed church-going in a liberal spirit.
+"It's jest a habit," he said, "jest a custom. I don't see what
+good it does you at all, really." And he made a lot of excellent
+jokes at the chimney-pot hat, jokes he had read in the Globe
+'turnovers' on that subject. But he showed his gentle breeding by
+keeping his gloves on all through the Sunday's ride, and
+ostentatiously throwing away more than half a cigarette when they
+passed a church whose congregation was gathering for afternoon
+service. He cautiously avoided literary topics, except by way of
+compliment, seeing that she was presently to be writing books.
+
+It was on Jessie's initiative that they attended service in the
+old-fashioned gallery of Blandford church. Jessie's conscience, I
+may perhaps tell you, was now suffering the severest twinges. She
+perceived clearly that things were not working out quite along
+the lines she had designed-. She had read her Olive Schreiner and
+George Egerton, and so forth, with all the want of perfect
+comprehension of one who is still emotionally a girl. She knew
+the thing to do was to have a flat and to go to the British
+Museum and write leading articles for the daily p,tpers until
+something better came along. If Bechamel (detestable person) had
+kept his promises, instead of behaving with unspeakable
+horridness, all would have been well. Now her only hope was that
+liberal-minded woman, Miss Mergle, who, a year ago, had sent her
+out, highly educated, into the world. Miss Mergle had told her at
+parting to live fearlessly and truly, and had further given her a
+volume of Emerson's Essays and Motley's "Dutch Republic," to help
+her through the rapids of adolescence.
+
+Jessie's feelings for her stepmother's household at Surbiton
+amounted to an active detestation. There are no graver or more
+solemn women in the world than these clever girls whose
+scholastic advancement has retarded their feminine coquetry. In
+spite of the advanced tone of 'Thomas Plantagenet's' antimarital
+novel, Jessie had speedily seen through that amiable woman's
+amiable defences. The variety of pose necessitated by the corps
+of 'Men' annoyed her to an altogether unreasonable degree. To
+return to this life of ridiculous unreality--unconditional
+capitulation to 'Conventionality' was an exasperating prospect.
+Yet what else was there to do? You will understand, therefore,
+that at times she was moody (and Mr. Hoopdriver respectfully
+silent and attentive) and at times inclined to eloquent
+denunciation of the existing order of things. She was a
+Socialist, Hoopdriver learnt, and he gave a vague intimation that
+he went further, intending, thereby, no less than the horrors of
+anarchism. He would have owned up to the destruction of the
+Winter Palace indeed, had he had the faintest idea where the
+Winter Palace was, and had his assurance amounted to certainty
+that the Winter Palace was destroyed. He agreed with her
+cordially that the position of women was intolerable, but checked
+himself on the' verge of the proposition that a girl ought not to
+expect a fellow to hand down boxes for her when he was getting
+the 'swap' from a customer. It was Jessie's preoccupation with
+her own perplexities, no doubt, that delayed the unveiling of Mr.
+Hoopdriver all through Saturday and Sunday. Once or twice,
+however, there were incidents that put him about terribly--even
+questions that savoured of suspicion.
+
+On Sunday night, for no conceivable reason, an unwonted
+wakefulness came upon him. Unaccountably he realised he was a
+contemptible liar, All through the small hours of Monday he
+reviewed the tale of his falsehoods, and when he tried to turn
+his mind from that, the financial problem suddenly rose upon him.
+He heard two o'clock strike, and three. It is odd how unhappy
+some of us are at times, when we are at our happiest.
+
+
+
+XXXIV
+
+"Good morning, Madam," said Hoopdriver, as Jessie came into the
+breakfast room of the Golden Pheasant on Monday morning, and he
+smiled, bowed, rubbed his hands together, and pulled out a chair
+for her, and rubbed his hands again.
+
+She stopped abruptly, with a puzzled expression on her face.
+"Where HAVE I seen that before?" she said.
+
+"The chair?" said Hoopdriver, flushing.
+
+"No--the attitude."
+
+She came forward and shook hands with him, looking the while
+curiously into his face. "And--Madam?"
+
+"It's a habit," said Mr. Hoopdriver, guiltily. "A bad habit.
+Calling ladies Madam. You must put it down to our colonial
+roughness. Out there up country--y'know--the ladies--so rare--we
+call 'em all Madam."
+
+"You HAVE some funny habits, brother Chris," said Jessie. "Before
+you sell your diamond shares and go into society, as you say, and
+stand for Parliament--What a fine thing it is to be a man!--you
+must cure yourself. That habit of bowing as you do, and rubbing
+your hands, and looking expectant."
+
+"It's a habit."
+
+"I know. But I don't think it a good one. You don't mind my
+telling you?"
+
+"Not a bit. I'm grateful."
+
+"I'm blessed or afflicted with a trick of observation," said
+Jessie, looking at the breakfast table. Mr. Hoopdriver put his
+hand to his moustache and then, thinking this might be another
+habit, checked his arm and stuck his hand into his pocket. He
+felt juiced awkward, to use his private formula. Jessie's eye
+wandered to the armchair, where a piece of binding was loose,
+and, possibly to carry out her theory of an observant
+disposition, she turned and asked him for a pin.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's hand fluttered instinctively to his lappel, and
+there, planted by habit, were a couple of stray pins he had
+impounded.
+
+"What an odd place to put pins!" exclaimed Jessie, taking it.
+
+"It's 'andy," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I saw a chap in a shop do it
+once."
+
+"You must have a careful disposition," she said, over her
+shoulder, kneeling down to the chair.
+
+"In the centre of Africa--up country, that is--one learns to
+value pins," said Mr. Hoopdriver, after a perceptible pause.
+"There weren't over many pins in Africa. They don't lie about on
+the ground there." His face was now in a fine, red glow. Where
+would the draper break out next? He thrust his hands into his
+coat pockets, then took one out again, furtively removed the
+second pin and dropped it behind him gently. It fell with a loud
+'ping' on the fender. Happily she made no remark, being
+preoccupied with the binding of the chair.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, instead of sitting down, went up to the table and
+stood against it, with his finger-tips upon the cloth. They were
+keeping breakfast a tremendous time. He took up his rolled
+serviette looked closely and scrutinisingly at the ring, then put
+his hand under the fold of the napkin and examined the texture,
+and put the thing down again. Then he had a vague impulse to
+finger his hollow wisdom tooth--happily checked. He suddenly
+discovered he was standing as if the table was a counter, and sat
+down forthwith. He drummed with his hand on the table. He felt
+dreadfully hot and self-conscious.
+
+"Breakfast is late," said Jessie, standing up.
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+Conversation was slack. Jessie wanted to know the distance to
+Ringwood. Then silence fell again.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver, very uncomfortable and studying an easy bearing,
+looked again at the breakfast things and then idly lifted the
+corner of the tablecloth on the ends of his fingers, and regarded
+it. "Fifteen three," he thought, privately.
+
+"Why do you do that?" said Jessie.
+
+"WHAT?" said Hoopdriver, dropping the tablecloth convulsively.
+
+"Look at the cloth like that. I saw you do it yesterday, too."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver's face became quite a bright red. He began pulling
+his moustache nervously. "I know," he said. "I know. It's a queer
+habit, I know. But out there, you know, there's native servants,
+you know, and--it's a queer thing to talk about--but one has to
+look at things to see, don't y'know, whether they're quite clean
+or not. It's got to be a habit."
+
+"How odd!" said Jessie.
+
+"Isn't it?" mumbled Hoopdriver.
+
+"If I were a Sherlock Holmes," said Jessie, "I suppose I could
+have told you were a colonial from little things like that. But
+anyhow, I guessed it, didn't I?"
+
+"Yes," said Hoopdriver, in a melancholy tone, "you guessed it."
+
+Why not seize the opportunity for a neat confession, and add,
+"unhappily in this case you guessed wrong." Did she suspect?
+Then, at the psychological moment, the girl bumped the door open
+with her tray and brought in the coffee and scrambled eggs.
+
+"I am rather lucky with my intuitions, sometimes," said Jessie.
+
+Remorse that had been accumulating in his mind for two days
+surged to the top of his mind. What a shabby liar he was!
+
+And, besides, he must sooner or later, inevitably, give himself
+away.
+
+
+
+XXXV
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver helped the eggs and then, instead of beginning,
+sat with his cheek on his hand, watching Jessie pour out the
+coffee. His ears were a bright red, and his eyes bright. He took
+his coffee cup clumsily, cleared his throat, suddenly leant back
+in his chair, and thrust his hands deep into his pockets. "I'll
+do it," he said aloud.
+
+"Do what?" said Jessie, looking up in surprise over the coffee
+pot. She was just beginning her scrambled egg.
+
+"Own up."
+
+"Own what?"
+
+"Miss Milton-- I'm a liar." He put his head on one side and
+regarded her with a frown of tremendous resolution. Then in
+measured accents, and moving his head slowly from side to side,
+he announced, "Ay'm a deraper."
+
+"You're a draper? I thought--"
+
+"You thought wrong. But it's bound to come up. Pins, attitude,
+habits--It's plain enough.
+
+"I'm a draper's assistant let out for a ten-days holiday. Jest a
+draper's assistant. Not much, is it? A counter-jumper."
+
+"A draper's assistant isn't a position to be ashamed of," she
+said, recovering, and not quite understanding yet what this all
+meant.
+
+"Yes, it is," he said, "for a man, in this country now. To be
+just another man's hand, as I am. To have to wear what clothes
+you are told, and go to church to please customers, and
+work--There's no other kind of men stand such hours. A drunken
+bricklayer's a king to it."
+
+"But why are you telling me this now?"
+
+"It's important you should know at once."
+
+"But, Mr. Benson--"
+
+"That isn't all. If you don't mind my speaking about myself a
+bit, there's a few things I'd like to tell you. I can't go on
+deceiving you. My name's not Benson. WHY I told you Benson, I
+DON'T know. Except that I'm a kind of fool. Well--I wanted
+somehow to seem more than I was. My name's Hoopdriver."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"And that about South Africa--and that lion."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Lies."
+
+"Lies!"
+
+And the discovery of diamonds on the ostrich farm. Lies too. And
+all the reminiscences of the giraffes--lies too. I never rode on
+no giraffes. I'd be afraid."
+
+He looked at her with a kind of sullen satisfaction. He had eased
+his conscience, anyhow. She regarded him in infinite perplexity.
+This was a new side altogether to the man. "But WHY," she began.
+
+"Why did I tell you such things? _I_ don't know. Silly sort of
+chap, I expect. I suppose I wanted to impress you. But somehow,
+now, I want you to know the truth."
+
+Silence. Breakfast untouched. "I thought I'd tell you," said Mr.
+Hoopdriver. "I suppose it's snobbishness and all that kind of
+thing, as much as anything. I lay awake pretty near all last
+night thinking about myself; thinking what a got-up imitation of
+a man I was, and all that."
+
+"And you haven't any diamond shares, and you are not going into
+Parliament, and you're not--"
+
+"All Lies," said Hoopdriver, in a sepulchral voice. "Lies from
+beginning to end. 'Ow I came to tell 'em I DON'T know."
+
+She stared at him blankly.
+
+"I never set eyes on Africa in my life," said Mr. Hoopdriver,
+completing the confession. Then he pulled his right hand from his
+pocket, and with the nonchalance of one to whom the bitterness of
+death is passed, began to drink his coffee.
+
+"It's a little surprising," began Jessie, vaguely.
+
+"Think it over," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I'm sorry from the bottom
+of my heart."
+
+And then breakfast proceeded in silence. Jessie ate very little,
+and seemed lost in thought. Mr. Hoopdriver was so overcome by
+contrition and anxiety that he consumed an extraordinarily large
+breakfast out of pure nervousness, and ate his scrambled eggs for
+the most part with the spoon that belonged properly to the
+marmalade. His eyes were gloomily downcast. She glanced at him
+through her eyelashes. Once or twice she struggled with laughter,
+once or twice she seemed to be indignant.
+
+"I don't know what to think," she said at last. "I don't know
+what to make of you--brother Chris. I thought, do you know? that
+you were perfectly honest. And somehow--"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I think so still."
+
+"Honest--with all those lies!"
+
+"I wonder."
+
+"I don't," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "I'm fair ashamed of myself. But
+anyhow--I've stopped deceiving you."
+
+"I THOUGHT," said the Young Lady in Grey, "that story of the
+lion--"
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Don't remind me of THAT."
+
+"I thought, somehow, I FELT, that the things you said didn't ring
+quite true." She suddenly broke out in laughter, at the
+expression of his face. "Of COURSE you are honest," she said.
+"How could I ever doubt it? As if _I_ had never pretended! I see
+it all now."
+
+Abruptly she rose, and extended her hand across the breakfast
+things. He looked at her doubtfully, and saw the dancing
+friendliness in her eyes. He scarcely understood at first. He
+rose, holding the marmalade spoon, and took her proffered hand
+with abject humility. "Lord," he broke out, "if you aren't
+enough--but there!"
+
+"I see it all now." A brilliant inspiration had suddenly obscured
+her humour. She sat down suddenly, and he sat down too. "You did
+it," she said, "because you wanted to help me. And you thought I
+was too Conventional to take help from one I might think my
+social inferior."
+
+"That was partly it," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"How you misunderstood me!" she said.
+
+"You don't mind?"
+
+"It was noble of you. But I am sorry," she said, "you should
+think me likely to be ashamed of you because you follow a decent
+trade."
+
+"I didn't know at first, you see," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+And he submitted meekly to a restoration of his self-respect. He
+was as useful a citizen as could be,--it was proposed and
+carried,--and his lying was of the noblest. And so the breakfast
+concluded much more happily than his brightest expectation, and
+they rode out of ruddy little Blandford as though no shadow of
+any sort had come between them.
+
+
+
+XXXVI
+
+As they were sitting by the roadside among the pine trees
+half-way up a stretch of hill between Wimborne and Ringwood,
+however, Mr. Hoopdriver reopened the question of his worldly
+position.
+
+"Ju think," he began abruptly, removing a meditative cigarette
+from his mouth, "that a draper's shopman IS a decent citizen?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"When he puts people off with what they don't quite want, for
+instance?"
+
+"Need he do that?"
+
+"Salesmanship," said Hoopdriver. "Wouldn't get a crib if he
+didn't.--It's no good your arguing. It's not a particularly
+honest nor a particularly useful trade; it's not very high up ;
+there's no freedom and no leisure--seven to eight-thirty every
+day in the week; don't leave much edge to live on, does it?--real
+workmen laugh at us and educated chaps like bank clerks and
+solicitors' clerks look down on us. You look respectable outside,
+and inside you are packed in dormitories like convicts, fed on
+bread and butter and bullied like slaves. You're just superior
+enough to feel that you're not superior. Without capital there's
+no prospects; one draper in a hundred don't even earn enough to
+marry on; and if he DOES marry, his G.V. can just use him to
+black boots if he likes, and he daren't put his back up. That's
+drapery! And you tell me to be contented. Would YOU be contented
+if you was a shop girl?"
+
+She did not answer. She looked at him with distress in her brown
+eyes, and he remained gloomily in possession of the field.
+
+Presently he spoke. "I've been thinking," he said, and stopped.
+
+She turned her face, resting her cheek on the palm of her hand.
+There was a light in her eyes that made the expression of them
+tender. Mr. Hoopdriver had not looked in her face while he had
+talked. He had regarded the grass, and pointed his remarks with
+redknuckled hands held open and palms upwards. Now they hung
+limply over his knees.
+
+"Well?" she said.
+
+"I was thinking it this morning," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"Of course it's silly." "Well?"
+
+"It's like this. I'm twenty-three, about. I had my schooling all
+right to fifteen, say. Well, that leaves me eight years
+behind.--Is it too late? I wasn't so backward. I did algebra, and
+Latin up to auxiliary verbs, and French genders. I got a kind of
+grounding."
+
+"And now you mean, should you go on working?"
+
+"Yes," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "That's it. You can't do much at
+drapery without capital, you know. But if I could get really
+educated. I've thought sometimes. . ."
+
+"Why not? said the Young Lady in Grey.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver was surprised to see it in that light. "You
+think?" he said. "Of course. You are a Man. You are free--" She
+warmed. "I wish I were you to have the chance of that struggle."
+
+"Am I Man ENOUGH?" said Mr. Hoopdriver aloud, but addressing
+himself. "There's that eight years," he said to her.
+
+"You can make it up. What you call educated men--They're not
+going on. You can catch them. They are quite satisfied. Playing
+golf, and thinking of clever things to say to women like my
+stepmother, and dining out. You're in front of them already in
+one thing. They think they know everything. You don't. And they
+know such little things."
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver. "How you encourage a fellow!"
+
+"If I could only help you," she said, and left an eloquent
+hiatus. He became pensive again.
+
+"It's pretty evident you don't think much of a draper," he said
+abruptly.
+
+Another interval. "Hundreds of men," she said, "have come from
+the very lowest ranks of life. There was Burns, a ploughman; and
+Hugh Miller, a stonemason; and plenty of others. Dodsley was a
+footman--"
+
+"But drapers! We're too sort of shabby genteel to rise. Our coats
+and cuffs might get crumpled--"
+
+"Wasn't there a Clarke who wrote theology? He was a draper."
+
+"There was one started a sewing cotton, the only one I ever heard
+tell of."
+
+"Have you ever read 'Hearts Insurgent'?"
+
+"Never," said Mr. Hoopdriver. He did not wait for her context,
+but suddenly broke out with an account of his literary
+requirements. "The fact is--I've read precious little. One don't
+get much of a chance, situated as I am. We have a library at
+business, and I've gone through that. Most Besant I've read, and
+a lot of Mrs. Braddon's and Rider Haggard and Marie Corelli--and,
+well--a Ouida or so. They're good stories, of course, and
+first-class writers, but they didn't seem to have much to do with
+me. But there's heaps of books one hears talked about, I HAVEN'T
+read."
+
+"Don't you read any other books but novels?"
+
+"Scarcely ever. One gets tired after business, and you can't get
+the books. I have been to some extension lectures, of course,
+'Lizabethan Dramatists,' it was, but it seemed a little
+high-flown, you know. And I went and did wood-carving at the same
+place. But it didn't seem leading nowhere, and I cut my thumb and
+chucked it."
+
+He made a depressing spectacle, with his face anxious and his
+hands limp. "It makes me sick," he said, "to think how I've been
+fooled with. My old schoolmaster ought to have a juiced HIDING.
+He's a thief. He pretended to undertake to make a man of me, and
+be's stole twenty-three years of my life, filled me up with
+scraps and sweepings. Here I am! I don't KNOW anything, and I
+can't DO anything, and all the learning time is over."
+
+"Is it?" she said ; but he did not seem to hear her. "My o'
+people didn't know any better, and went and paid thirty pounds
+premium--thirty pounds down to have me made THIS. The G.V.
+promised to teach me the trade, and he never taught me anything
+but to be a Hand. It's the way they do with draper's apprentices.
+If every swindler was locked up--well, you'd have nowhere to buy
+tape and cotton. It's all very well to bring up Burns and those
+chaps, but I'm not that make. Yet I'm not such muck that I might
+not have been better--with teaching. I wonder what the chaps who
+sneer and laugh at such as me would be if they'd been fooled
+about as I've been. At twenty-three--it's a long start."
+
+He looked up with a wintry smile, a sadder and wiser Hoopdriver
+indeed than him of the glorious imaginings. "It's YOU done this,"
+he said. "You're real. And it sets me thinking what I really am,
+and what I might have been. Suppose it was all different--"
+
+"MAKE it different."
+
+"How?"
+
+"WORK. Stop playing at life. Face it like a man."
+
+"Ah!" said Hoopdriver, glancing at her out of the corners of his
+eyes. "And even then--"
+
+"No! It's not much good. I'm beginning too late."
+
+And there, in blankly thoughtful silence, that conversation
+ended.
+
+
+
+IN THE NEW FOREST
+
+XXXVII
+
+At Ringwood they lunched, and Jessie met with a disappointment.
+There was no letter for her at the post office. Opposite the
+hotel, The Chequered Career, was a machine shop with a
+conspicuously second-hand Marlborough Club tandem tricycle
+displayed in the window, together with the announcement that
+bicycles and tricycles were on hire within. The establishment was
+impressed on Mr. Hoopdriver's mind by the proprietor's action in
+coming across the road and narrowly inspecting their machines.
+His action revived a number of disagreeable impressions, but,
+happily, came to nothing. While they were still lunching, a tall
+clergyman, with a heated face, entered the room and sat down at
+the table next to theirs. He was in a kind of holiday costume;
+that is to say, he had a more than usually high collar, fastened
+behind and rather the worse for the weather, and his long-tail
+coat had been replaced by a black jacket of quite remarkable
+brevity. He had faded brown shoes on his feet, his trouser legs
+were grey with dust, and he wore a hat of piebald straw in the
+place of the customary soft felt. He was evidently socially
+inclined.
+
+"A most charming day, sir," he said, in a ringing tenor.
+
+"Charming," said Mr. Hoopdriver, over a portion of pie.
+
+"You are, I perceive, cycling through this delightful country,"
+said the clergyman.
+
+"Touring," explained Mr. Hoopdriver. "I can imagine that, with a
+properly oiled machine, there can be no easier nor pleasanter way
+of seeing the country."
+
+"No," said Mr. Hoopdriver; "it isn't half a bad. way of getting
+about."
+
+"For a young and newly married couple, a tandem bicycle must be,
+I should imagine, a delightful bond."
+
+"Quite so," said Mr. Hoopdriver, reddening a little.
+
+"Do you ride a tandem?"
+
+"No--we're separate," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"The motion through the air is indisputably of a very
+exhilarating description." With that decision, the clergyman
+turned to give his orders to the attendant, in a firm,
+authoritative voice, for a cup of tea, two gelatine lozenges,
+bread and butter, salad, and pie to follow. "The gelatine
+lozenges I must have. I require them to precipitate the tannin in
+my tea," he remarked to the room at large, and folding his hands,
+remained for some time with his chin thereon, staring fixedly at
+a little picture over Mr. Hoopdriver's head.
+
+"I myself am a cyclist," said the clergyman, descending suddenly
+upon Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"Indeed!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, attacking the moustache. "What
+machine, may I ask?"
+
+"I have recently become possessed of a tricycle. A bicycle is, I
+regret to say, considered too--how shall I put it? --flippant by
+my parishioners. So I have a tricycle. I have just been hauling
+it hither."
+
+"Hauling!" said Jessie, surprised.
+
+"With a shoe lace. And partly carrying it on my back."
+
+The pause was unexpected. Jessie had some trouble with a crumb.
+Mr. Hoopdriver's face passed through several phases of surprise.
+Then he saw the explanation. "Had an accident?"
+
+"I can hardly call it an accident. The wheels suddenly refused to
+go round. I found myself about five miles from here with an
+absolutely immobile machine."
+
+"Ow!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, trying to seem intelligent, and Jessie
+glanced at this insane person.
+
+"It appears," said the clergyman, satisfied with the effect he
+had created, "that my man carefully washed out the bearings with
+paraffin, and let the machine dry without oiling it again. The
+consequence was that they became heated to a considerable
+temperature and jammed. Even at the outset the machine ran
+stiffly as well as noisily, and I, being inclined to ascribe this
+stiffness to my own lassitude, merely redoubled my exertions."
+
+"'Ot work all round," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You could scarcely put it more appropriately. It is my rule of
+life to do whatever I find to do with all my might. I believe,
+indeed, that the bearings became red hot. Finally one of the
+wheels jammed together. A side wheel it was, so that its stoppage
+necessitated an inversion of the entire apparatus,--an inversion
+in which I participated."
+
+"Meaning, that you went over?" said Mr. Hoopdriver, suddenly much
+amused.
+
+"Precisely. And not brooking my defeat, I suffered repeatedly.
+You may understand, perhaps, a natural impatience. I
+expostulated--playfully, of course. Happily the road was not
+overlooked. Finally, the entire apparatus became rigid, and I
+abandoned the unequal contest. For all practical purposes the
+tricycle was no better than a heavy chair without castors. It was
+a case of hauling or carrying."
+
+The clergyman's nutriment appeared in the doorway.
+
+"Five miles," said the clergyman. He began at once to eat bread
+and butter vigorously. "Happily," he said, "I am an eupeptic,
+energetic sort of person on principle. I would all men were
+likewise."
+
+"It's the best way," agreed Mr. Hoopdriver, and the conversation
+gave precedence to bread and butter.
+
+"Gelatine," said the clergyman, presently, stirring his tea
+thoughtfully, "precipitates the tannin in one's tea and renders
+it easy of digestion."
+
+"That's a useful sort of thing to know," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You are altogether welcome," said the clergyman, biting
+generously at two pieces of bread and butter folded together.
+
+In the afternoon our two wanderers rode on at an easy pace
+towards Stoney Cross. Conversation languished, the topic of South
+Africa being in abeyance. Mr. Hoopdriver was silenced by
+disagreeable thoughts. He had changed the last sovereign at
+Ringwood. The fact had come upon him suddenly. Now too late he
+was reflecting upon his resources. There was twenty pounds or
+more in the post office savings bank in Putney, but his book was
+locked up in his box at the Antrobus establishment. Else this
+infatuated man would certainly have surreptitiously withdrawn the
+entire sum in order to prolong these journeyings even for a few
+days. As it was, the shadow of the end fell across his happiness.
+Strangely enough, in spite of his anxiety and the morning's
+collapse, he was still in a curious emotional state that was
+certainly not misery. He was forgetting his imaginings and
+posings, forgetting himself altogether in his growing
+appreciation of his companion. The most tangible trouble in his
+mind was the necessity of breaking the matter to her.
+
+A long stretch up hill tired them long before Stoney Cross was
+reached, and they dismounted and sat under the shade of a little
+oak tree. Near the crest the road looped on itself, so that,
+looking back, it sloped below them up to the right and then came
+towards them. About them grew a rich heather with stunted oaks on
+the edge of a deep ditch along the roadside, and this road was
+sandy; below the steepness of the hill, however, it was grey and
+barred with shadows, for there the trees clustered thick and
+tall. Mr. Hoopdriver fumbled clumsily with his cigarettes.
+
+"There's a thing I got to tell you," he said, trying to be
+perfectly calm.
+
+"Yes?" she said.
+
+"I'd like to jest discuss your plans a bit, y'know."
+
+"I'm very unsettled," said Jessie. "You are thinking of writing
+Books?"
+
+"Or doing journalism, or teaching, or something like that."
+
+"And keeping yourself independent of your stepmother?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How long'd it take now, to get anything of that sort to do?"
+
+"I don't know at all. I believe there are a great many women
+journalists and sanitary inspectors, and black-and-white artists.
+But I suppose it takes time. Women, you know, edit most papers
+nowadays, George Egerton says. I ought, I suppose, to communicate
+with a literary agent."
+
+"Of course," said Hoopdriver, "it's very suitable work. Not being
+heavy like the drapery."
+
+"There's heavy brain labour, you must remember."
+
+"That wouldn't hurt YOU," said Mr. Hoopdriver, turning a
+compliment.
+
+"It's like this," he said, ending a pause. "It's a juiced
+nuisance alluding to these matters, but--we got very little more
+money."
+
+He perceived that Jessie started, though he did not look at her.
+"I was counting, of course, on your friend's writing and your
+being able to take some action to-day." 'Take some action' was a
+phrase he had learnt at his last 'swop.'
+
+"Money," said Jessie. "I didn't think of money."
+
+"Hullo! Here's a tandem bicycle," said Mr. Hoopdriver, abruptly,
+and pointing with his cigarette.
+
+She looked, and saw two little figures emerging from among the
+trees at the foot of the slope. The riders were bowed sternly
+over their work and made a gallant but unsuccessful attempt to
+take the rise. The machine was evidently too highly geared for
+hill climbing, and presently the rearmost rider rose on his
+saddle and hopped off, leaving his companion to any fate he found
+proper. The foremost rider was a man unused to such machines and
+apparently undecided how to dismount. He wabbled a few yards up
+the hill with a long tail of machine wabbling behind him.
+Finally, he made an attempt to jump off as one does off a single
+bicycle, hit his boot against the backbone, and collapsed
+heavily, falling on his shoulder.
+
+She stood up. "Dear me!" she said. "I hope he isn't hurt."
+
+The second rider went to the assistance of the fallen man.
+
+Hoopdriver stood up, too. The lank, shaky machine was lifted up
+and wheeled out of the way, and then the fallen rider, being
+assisted, got up slowly and stood rubbing his arm. No serious
+injury seemed to be done to the man, and the couple presently
+turned their attention to the machine by the roadside. They were
+not in cycling clothes Hoopdriver observed. One wore the
+grotesque raiment for which the Cockney discovery of the game of
+golf seems indirectly blamable. Even at this distance the
+flopping flatness of his cap, the bright brown leather at the top
+of his calves, and the chequering of his stockings were
+perceptible. The other, the rear rider, was a slender little man
+in grey.
+
+"Amatoors," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie stood staring, and a veil of thought dropped over her
+eyes. She no longer regarded the two men who were now tinkering
+at the machine down below there.
+
+"How much have you?" she said.
+
+He thrust his right hand into his pocket and produced six coins,
+counted them with his left index finger, and held them out to
+her. "Thirteen four half," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "Every penny."
+
+"I have half a sovereign," she said. "Our bill wherever we
+stop--" The hiatus was more eloquent than many words.
+
+"I never thought of money coming in to stop us like this," said
+Jessie.
+
+"It's a juiced nuisance."
+
+"Money," said Jessie. "Is it possible--Surely! Conventionality!
+May only people of means--Live their own Lives? I never thought
+..."
+
+Pause.
+
+"Here's some more cyclists coming," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+The two men were both busy with their bicycle still, but now from
+among the trees emerged the massive bulk of a 'Marlborough Club'
+tandem, ridden by a slender woman in grey and a burly man in a
+Norfolk jacket. Following close upon this came lank black figure
+in a piebald straw hat, riding a tricycle of antiquated pattern
+with two large wheels in front. The man in grey remained bowed
+over the bicycle, with his stomach resting on the saddle, but his
+companion stood up and addressed some remark to the tricycle
+riders. Then it seemed as if he pointed up hill to where Mr.
+Hoopdriver and his companion stood side by side. A still odder
+thing followed; the lady in grey took out her handkerchief,
+appeared to wave it for a moment, and then at a hasty motion from
+her companion the white signal vanished.
+
+"Surely," said Jessie, peering under her hand. "It's never--"
+
+The tandem tricycle began to ascend the hill, quartering
+elaborately from side to side to ease the ascent. It was evident,
+from his heaving shoulders and depressed head, that the burly
+gentleman was exerting himself. The clerical person on the
+tricycle assumed the shape of a note of interrogation. Then on
+the heels of this procession came a dogcart driven by a man in a
+billycock hat and containing a lady in dark green.
+
+"Looks like some sort of excursion," said Hoopdriver.
+
+Jessie did not answer. She was still peering under her hand.
+"Surely," she said.
+
+The clergyman's efforts were becoming convulsive. With a curious
+jerking motion, the tricycle he rode twisted round upon itself,
+and he partly dismounted and partly fell off. He turned his
+machine up hill again immediately and began to wheel it. Then the
+burly gentleman dismounted, and with a courtly attentiveness
+assisted the lady in grey to alight. There was some little
+difference of opinion as to assistance, she so clearly wished to
+help push. Finally she gave in, and the burly gentleman began
+impelling the machine up hill by his own unaided strength. His
+face made a dot of brilliant colour among the greys and greens at
+the foot of the hill. The tandem bicycle was now, it seems,
+repaired, and this joined the tail of the procession, its riders
+walking behind the dogcart, from which the lady in green and the
+driver had now descended.
+
+"Mr. Hoopdriver," said Jessie. "Those people--I'm almost sure--"
+
+"Lord!" said Mr. Hoopdriver, reading the rest in her face, and he
+turned to pick up his machine at once. Then he dropped it and
+assisted her to mount.
+
+At the sight of Jessie mounting against the sky line the people
+coming up the hill suddenly became excited and ended Jessie's
+doubts at once. Two handkerchiefs waved, and some one shouted.
+The riders of the tandem bicycle began to run it up hill, past
+the other vehicles. But our young people did not wait for further
+developments of the pursuit. In another moment they were out of
+sight, riding hard down a steady incline towards Stoney Cross.
+
+Before they had dropped among the trees out of sight of the hill
+brow, Jessie looked back and saw the tandem rising over the
+crest, with its rear rider just tumbling into the saddle.
+"They're coming," she said, and bent her head over her handles in
+true professional style.
+
+They whirled down into the valley, over a white bridge, and saw
+ahead of them a number of shaggy little ponies frisking in the
+roadway. Involuntarily they slackened. "Shoo!" said Mr.
+Hoopdriver, and the ponies kicked up their heels derisively. At
+that Mr. Hoopdriver lost his temper and charged at them, narrowly
+missed one, and sent them jumping the ditch into the bracken
+under the trees, leaving the way clear for Jessie.
+
+Then the road rose quietly but persistently; the treadles grew
+heavy, and Mr. Hoopdriver's breath sounded like a saw. The tandem
+appeared, making frightful exertions, at the foot, while the
+chase was still climbing. Then, thank Heaven! a crest and a
+stretch of up and down road, whose only disadvantage was its
+pitiless exposure to the afternoon sun. The tandem apparently
+dismounted at the hill, and did not appear against the hot blue
+sky until they were already near some trees and a good mile away.
+
+"We're gaining," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a little Niagara of
+perspiration dropping from brow to cheek. "That hill--"
+
+But that was their only gleam of success. They were both nearly
+spent. Hoopdriver, indeed, was quite spent, and only a feeling of
+shame prolonged the liquidation of his bankrupt physique. From
+that point the tandem grained upon them steadily. At the Rufus
+Stone, it was scarcely a hundred yards behind. Then one desperate
+spurt, and they found themselves upon a steady downhill stretch
+among thick pine woods. Downhill nothing can beat a highly geared
+tandem bicycle. Automatically Mr. Hoopdriver put up his feet, and
+Jessie slackened her pace. In another moment they heard the swish
+of the fat pneumatics behind them, and the tandem passed
+Hoopdriver and drew alongside Jessie. Hoopdriver felt a mad
+impulse to collide with this abominable machine as it passed him.
+His only consolation was to notice that its riders, riding
+violently, were quite as dishevelled as himself and smothered in
+sandy white dust.
+
+Abruptly Jessie stopped and dismounted, and the tandem riders
+shot panting past them downhill. "Brake," said Dangle, who was
+riding behind, and stood up on the pedals. For a moment the
+velocity of the thing increased, and then they saw the dust fly
+from the brake, as it came down on the front tire. Dangle's right
+leg floundered in the air as he came off in the road. The tandem
+wobbled. "Hold it!" cried Phipps over his shoulder, going on
+downhill. I can't get off if you don't hold it." He put on the
+brake until the machine stopped almost dead, and then feeling
+unstable began to pedal again. Dangle shouted after him. "Put out
+your foot, man," said Dangle.
+
+In this way the tandem riders were carried a good hundred yards
+or more beyond their quarry. Then Phipps realized his
+possibilities, slacked up with the brake, and let the thing go
+over sideways, dropping on to his right foot. With his left leg
+still over the saddle, and still holding the handles, he looked
+over his shoulder and began addressing uncomplimentary remarks to
+Dangle. "You only think of yourself," said Phipps, with a florid
+face.
+
+"They have forgotten us," said Jessie, turning her machine.
+
+"There was a road at the top of the hill--to Lyndhurst," said
+Hoopdriver, following her example.
+
+"It's no good. There's the money. We must give it up. But let us
+go back to that hotel at Rufus Stone. I don't see why we should
+be led captive."
+
+So to the consternation of the tandem riders, Jessie and her
+companion mounted and rode quietly back up the hill again. As
+they dismounted at the hotel entrance, the tandem overtook them,
+and immediately afterwards the dogcart came into view in pursuit.
+Dangle jumped off.
+
+"Miss Milton, I believe," said Dangle, panting and raising a damp
+cap from his wet and matted hair.
+
+"I SAY," said Phipps, receding involuntarily. "Don't go doing it
+again, Dangle. HELP a chap."
+
+"One minute," said Dangle, and ran after his colleague.
+
+Jessie leant her machine against the wall, and went into the
+hotel entrance. Hoopdriver remained in the hotel entrance, limp
+but defiant.
+
+
+
+AT THE RUFUS STONE
+
+XXXVIII
+
+He folded his arms as Dangle and Phipps returned towards him.
+Phipps was abashed by his inability to cope with the tandem,
+which he was now wheeling, but Dangle was inclined to be
+quarrelsome. "Miss Milton?" he said briefly.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver bowed over his folded arms.
+
+"Miss Milton within?" said Dangle.
+
+AND not to be disturved," said Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"You are a scoundrel, sir," said Mr. Dangle.
+
+"Et your service," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "She awaits 'er
+stepmother, sir."
+
+Mr. Dangle hesitated. "She will be here immediately," he said.
+"Here is her friend, Miss Mergle."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver unfolded his arms slowly, and, with an air of
+immense calm, thrust his hands into his breeches pockets. Then
+with one of those fatal hesitations of his, it occurred to him
+that this attitude was merely vulgarly defiant he withdrew both,
+returned one and pulled at the insufficient moustache with the
+other. Miss Mergle caught him in confusion. "Is this the man?"
+she said to Dangle, and forthwith, "How DARE you, sir? How dare
+you face me? That poor girl!"
+
+
+"You will permit me to observe," began Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+splendid drawl, seeing himself, for the first time in all this
+business, as a romantic villain.
+
+"Ugh," said Miss Mergle, unexpectedly striking him about the
+midriff with her extended palms, and sending him staggering
+backward into the hall of the hotel.
+
+"Let me pass said Miss Mergle, in towering indignation. "How dare
+you resist my passage?" and so swept by him and into the
+dining-room, wherein Jessie had sought refuge.
+
+As Mr. Hoopdriver struggled for equilibrium with the
+umbrella-stand, Dangle and Phipps, roused from their inertia by
+Miss Mergle's activity, came in upon her heels, Phipps leading.
+"How dare you prevent that lady passing?" said Phipps.
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver looked obstinate, and, to Dangle's sense,
+dangerous, but he made no answer. A waiter in full bloom appeared
+at the end of the passage, guardant. "It is men of your stamp,
+sir," said Phipps, "who discredit manhood."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver thrust his hands into his pockets. "Who the juice
+are you?" shouted Mr. Hoopdriver, fiercely.
+
+"Who are YOU, sir?" retorted Phipps. "Who are you? That's the
+question. What are YOU, and what are you doing, wandering at
+large with a young lady under age?"
+
+"Don't speak to him," said Dangle.
+
+"I'm not a-going to tell all my secrets to any one who comes at
+me," said Hoopdriver. "Not Likely." And added fiercely, "And that
+I tell you, sir."
+
+He and Phipps stood, legs apart and both looking exceedingly
+fierce at one another, and Heaven alone knows what might not have
+happened, if the long clergyman had not appeared in the doorway,
+heated but deliberate. "Petticoated anachronism," said the long
+clergyman in the doorway, apparently still suffering from the
+antiquated prejudice that demanded a third wheel and a black coat
+from a clerical rider. He looked at Phipps and Hoopdriver for a
+moment, then extending his hand towards the latter, he waved it
+up and down three times, saying, "Tchak, tchak, tchak," very
+deliberately as he did so. Then with a concluding "Ugh!" and a
+gesture of repugnance he passed on into the dining-room from
+which the voice of Miss Mergle was distinctly audible remarking
+that the weather was extremely hot even for the time of year.
+
+This expression of extreme disapprobation had a very demoralizing
+effect upon Hoopdriver, a demoralization that was immediately
+completed by the advent of the massive Widgery.
+
+"Is this the man?" said Widgery very grimly, and producing a
+special voice for the occasion from somewhere deep in his neck.
+
+"Don't hurt him!" said Mrs. Milton, with clasped hands. "However
+much wrong he has done her--No violence!"
+
+"'Ow many more of you?" said Hoopdriver, at bay before the
+umbrella stand. "Where is she? What has he done with her?" said
+Mrs. Milton.
+
+"I'm not going to stand here and be insulted by a lot of
+strangers," said Mr. Hoopdriver. "So you needn't think it."
+
+"Please don't worry, Mr. Hoopdriver," said Jessie, suddenly
+appearing in the door of the dining-room. "I'm here, mother." Her
+face was white.
+
+Mrs. Milton said something about her child, and made an emotional
+charge at Jessie. The embrace vanished into the dining-room.
+Widgery moved as if to follow, and hesitated. "You'd better make
+yourself scarce," he said to Mr. Hoopdriver.
+
+"I shan't do anything of the kind," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with a
+catching of the breath. "I'm here defending that young lady."
+
+"You've done her enough mischief, I should think," said Widgery,
+suddenly walking towards the dining-room, and closing the door
+behind him, leaving Dangle and Phipps with Hoopdriver.
+
+"Clear!" said Phipps, threateningly.
+
+"I shall go and sit out in the garden," said Mr. Hoopdriver, with
+dignity. "There I shall remain."
+
+"Don't make a row with him," said Dangle.
+
+And Mr. Hoopdriver retired, unassaulted, in almost sobbing
+dignity.
+
+
+
+XXXIX
+
+So here is the world with us again, and our sentimental excursion
+is over. In the front of the Rufus Stone Hotel conceive a
+remarkable collection of wheeled instruments, watched over by
+Dangle and Phipps in grave and stately attitudes, and by the
+driver of a stylish dogcart from Ringwood. In the garden behind,
+in an attitude of nervous prostration, Mr. Hoopdriver was seated
+on a rustic seat. Through the open window of a private
+sitting-room came a murmur of voices, as of men and women in
+conference. Occasionally something that might have been a girlish
+sob.
+
+"I fail to see what status Widgery has," says Dangle, "thrusting
+himself in there."
+
+"He takes too much upon himself," said Phipps.
+
+"I've been noticing little things, yesterday and to-day," said
+Dangle, and stopped.
+
+"They went to the cathedral together in the afternoon."
+
+"Financially it would be a good thing for her, of course," said
+Dangle, with a gloomy magnanimity.
+
+He felt drawn to Phipps now by the common trouble, in spite of
+the man's chequered legs. "Financially it wouldn't be half bad."
+
+"He's so dull and heavy," said Phipps.
+
+Meanwhile, within, the clergyman had, by promptitude and
+dexterity, taken the chair and was opening the case against the
+unfortunate Jessie. I regret to have to say that my heroine had
+been appalled by the visible array of public opinion against her
+excursion, to the pitch of tears. She was sitting with flushed
+cheeks and swimming eyes at the end of the table opposite to the
+clergyman. She held her handkerchief crumpled up in her extended
+hand. Mrs. Milton sat as near to her as possible, and
+occasionally made little dabs with her hand at Jessie's hand, to
+indicate forgiveness. These advances were not reciprocated, which
+touched Widgery very much. The lady in green, Miss Mergle (B.
+A.), sat on the opposite side near the clergyman. She was the
+strong-minded schoolmistress to whom Jessie had written, and who
+had immediately precipitated the pursuit upon her. She had picked
+up the clergyman in Ringwood, and had told him everything
+forthwith, having met him once at a British Association meeting.
+He had immediately constituted himself administrator of the
+entire business. Widgery, having been foiled in an attempt to
+conduct the proceedings, stood with his legs wide apart in front
+of the fireplace ornament, and looked profound and sympathetic.
+Jessie's account of her adventures was a chary one and given
+amidst frequent interruptions. She surprised herself by skilfully
+omitting any allusion to the Bechamel episode. She completely
+exonerated Hoopdriver from the charge of being more than an
+accessory to her escapade. But public feeling was heavy against
+Hoopdriver. Her narrative was inaccurate and sketchy, but happily
+the others were too anxious to pass opinions to pin her down to
+particulars. At last they had all the facts they would permit.
+
+"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "I can only ascribe
+this extravagant and regrettable expedition of yours to the
+wildest misconceptions of your place in the world and of your
+duties and responsibilities. Even now, it seems to me, your
+present emotion is due not so much to a real and sincere
+penitence for your disobedience and folly as to a positive
+annoyance at our most fortunate interference--"
+
+"Not that," said Mrs. Milton, in a low tone. "Not that."
+
+"But WHY did she go off like this?" said Widgery. "That's what
+_I_ want to know."
+
+Jessie made an attempt to speak, but Mrs. Milton said "Hush!" and
+the ringing tenor of the clergyman rode triumphantly over the
+meeting. "I cannot understand this spirit of unrest that has
+seized upon the more intelligent portion of the feminine
+community. You had a pleasant home, a most refined and
+intelligent lady in the position of your mother, to cherish and
+protect you--"
+
+"If I HAD a mother," gulped Jessie, succumbing to the obvious
+snare of self-pity, and sobbing.
+
+"To cherish, protect, and advise you. And you must needs go out
+of it all alone into a strange world of unknown dangers-"
+
+"I wanted to learn," said Jessie.
+
+"You wanted to learn. May you never have anything to UNlearn."
+
+"AH!" from Mrs. Milton, very sadly.
+
+"It isn't fair for all of you to argue at me at once," submitted
+Jessie, irrelevantly.
+
+"A world full of unknown dangers," resumed the clergyman. "Your
+proper place was surely the natural surroundings that are part of
+you. You have been unduly influenced, it is only too apparent, by
+a class of literature which, with all due respect to
+distinguished authoress that shall be nameless, I must call the
+New Woman Literature. In that deleterious ingredient of our book
+boxes--"
+
+"I don't altogether agree with you there," said Miss Mergle,
+throwing her head back and regarding him firmly through her
+spectacles, and Mr. Widgery coughed.
+
+"What HAS all this to do with me?" asked Jessie, availing herself
+of the interruption.
+
+"The point is," said Mrs. Milton, on her defence, "that in my
+books--"
+
+"All I want to do," said Jessie, "is to go about freely by
+myself. Girls do so in America. Why not here?"
+
+"Social conditions are entirely different in America," said Miss
+Mergle. "Here we respect Class Distinctions."
+
+"It's very unfortunate. What I want to know is, why I cannot go
+away for a holiday if I want to."
+
+"With a strange young man, socially your inferior," said Widgery,
+and made her flush by his tone.
+
+"Why not?" she said. "With anybody."
+
+"They don't do that, even in America," said Miss Mergle.
+
+"My dear young lady," said the clergyman, "the most elementary
+principles of decorum--A day will come when you will better
+understand how entirely subservient your ideas are to the very
+fundamentals of our present civilisation, when you will better
+understand the harrowing anxiety you have given Mrs. Milton by
+this inexplicable flight of yours. We can only put things down at
+present, in charity, to your ignorance--"
+
+"You have to consider the general body of opinion, too," said
+Widgery.
+
+"Precisely," said Miss Mergle. "There is no such thing as conduct
+in the absolute." "If once this most unfortunate business gets
+about," said the clergyman, "it will do you infinite harm."
+
+"But I'VE done nothing wrong. Why should I be responsible for
+other people's--"
+
+"The world has no charity," said Mrs. Milton.
+
+"For a girl," said Jessie. "No."
+
+"Now do let us stop arguing, my dear young lady, and let us
+listen to reason. Never mind how or why, this conduct of yours
+will do you infinite harm, if once it is generally known. And not
+only that, it will cause infinite pain to those who care for you.
+But if you will return at once to your home, causing it to be
+understood that you have been with friends for these last few
+days--"
+
+"Tell lies," said Jessie. "Certainly not. Most certainly not. But
+I understand that is how your absence is understood at present,
+and there is no reason--"
+
+Jessie's grip tightened on her handkerchief. "I won't go back,"
+she said, "to have it as I did before. I want a room of my own,
+what books I need to read, to be free to go out by myself alone,
+Teaching--"
+
+"Anything," said Mrs. Milton ,"anything in reason."
+
+"But will you keep your promise?" said Jessie.
+
+"Surely you won't dictate to your mother!" said Widgery.
+
+"My stepmother! I don't want to dictate. I want definite promises
+now."
+
+"This is most unreasonable," said the clergyman. "Very well,"
+said Jessie, swallowing a sob but with unusual resolution. "Then
+I won't go back. My life is being frittered away--"
+
+"LET her have her way," said Widgery.
+
+"A room then. All your Men. I'm not to come down and talk away
+half my days--"
+
+"My dear child, if only to save you," said Mrs. Milton. "If you
+don't keep your promise--"
+
+"Then I take it the matter is practically concluded," said the
+clergyman. "And that you very properly submit to return to your
+proper home. And now, if I may offer a suggestion, it is that we
+take tea. Freed of its tannin, nothing, I think, is more
+refreshing and stimulating."
+
+"There's a train from Lyndhurst at thirteen minutes to six," said
+Widgery, unfolding a time table. "That gives us about half an
+hour or three-quarters here--if a conveyance is obtainable, that
+is."
+
+"A gelatine lozenge dropped into the tea cup precipitates the
+tannin in the form of tannate of gelatine," said the clergyman to
+Miss Mergle, in a confidential bray.
+
+Jessie stood up, and saw through the window a depressed head and
+shoulders over the top of the back of a garden seat. She moved
+towards the door. "While you have tea, mother," she said, "I must
+tell Mr. Hoopdriver of our arrangements."
+
+"Don't you think I--" began the clergyman.
+
+"No," said Jessie, very rudely; "I don't."
+
+"But, Jessie, haven't you already--"
+
+"You are already breaking the capitulation," said Jessie.
+
+"Will you want the whole half hour?" said Widgery, at the bell.
+
+"Every minute," said Jessie, in the doorway. "He's behaved very
+nobly to me."
+
+"There's tea," said Widgery.
+
+"I've had tea."
+
+"He may not have behaved badly," said the clergyman. "But he's
+certainly an astonishingly weak person to let a wrong-headed
+young girl--"
+
+Jessie closed the door into the garden.
+
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Hoopdriver made a sad figure in the sunlight
+outside. It was over, this wonderful excursion of his, so far as
+she was concerned, and with the swift blow that separated them,
+he realised all that those days had done for him. He tried to
+grasp the bearings of their position. Of course, they would take
+her away to those social altitudes of hers. She would become an
+inaccessible young lady again. Would they let him say good-bye to
+her?
+
+How extraordinary it had all been! He recalled the moment when he
+had first seen her riding, with the sunlight behind her, along
+the riverside road; he recalled that wonderful night at Bognor,
+remembering it as if everything had been done of his own
+initiative. "Brave, brave!" she had called him. And afterwards,
+when she came down to him in the morning, kindly, quiet. But
+ought he to have persuaded her then to return to her home? He
+remembered some intention of the sort. Now these people snatched
+her away from him as though he was scarcely fit to live in the
+same world with her. No more he was! He felt he had presumed upon
+her worldly ignorance in travelling with her day after day. She
+was so dainty, so delightful, so serene. He began to recapitulate
+her expressions, the light of her eyes, the turn of her face . .
+.
+
+He wasn't good enough to walk in the same road with her. Nobody
+was. Suppose they let him say good-bye to her; what could he say?
+That? But they were sure not to let her talk to him alone; her
+mother would be there as--what was it? Chaperone. He'd never once
+had a chance of saying what he felt; indeed, it was only now he
+was beginning to realise what he felt. Love I he wouldn't
+presume. It was worship. If only he could have one more chance.
+He must have one more chance, somewhere, somehow. Then he would
+pour out his soul to her eloquently. He felt eloquently, and
+words would come. He was dust under her feet . . .
+
+His meditation was interrupted by the click of a door handle, and
+Jessie appeared in the sunlight under the verandah. "Come away
+from here," she said to Hoopdriver, as he rose to meet her. "I'm
+going home with them. We have to say good-bye."
+
+Mr. Hoopdriver winced, opened and shut his mouth, and rose
+without a word.
+
+
+
+XL
+
+At first Jessie Milton and Mr. Hoopdriver walked away from the
+hotel in silence. He heard a catching in her breath and glanced
+at her and saw her ips pressed tight and a tear on her cheek. Her
+face was hot and bright. She was looking straight before her. He
+could think of nothing to say, and thrust his hands in his
+pockets and looked away from her intentionally. After a while she
+began to talk. They dealt disjointedly with scenery first, and
+then with the means of self-education. She took his address at
+Antrobus's and promised to send him some books. But even with
+that it was spiritless, aching talk, Hoopdriver felt, for the
+fighting mood was over. She seemed, to him, preoccupied with the
+memories of her late battle, and that appearance hurt him.
+
+"It's the end," he whispered to himself. "It's the end."
+
+They went into a hollow and up a gentle wooded slope, and came at
+last to a high and open space overlooking a wide expanse of
+country. There, by a common impulse, they stopped. She looked at
+her watch--a little ostentatiously. They stared at the billows of
+forest rolling away beneath them, crest beyond crest, of leafy
+trees, fading at last into blue.
+
+"The end" ran through his mind, to the exclusion of all speakable
+thoughts.
+
+"And so," she said, presently, breaking the silence, "it comes to
+good-bye."
+
+For half a minute he did not answer. Then he gathered his
+resolution. "There is one thing I MUST say."
+
+"Well?" she said, surprised and abruptly forgetting the recent
+argument. "I ask no return. But--"
+
+Then he stopped. "I won't say it. It's no good. It would be rot
+from me--now. I wasn't going to say anything. Good-bye."
+
+She looked at him with a startled expression in her eyes. "No,"
+she said. "But don't forget you are going to work. Remember,
+brother Chris, you are my friend. You will work. You are not a
+very strong man, you know, now--you will forgive me--nor do you
+know all you should. But what will you be in six years' time?"
+
+He stared hard in front of him still, and the lines about his
+weak mouth seemed to strengthen. He knew she understood what he
+could not say.
+
+"I'll work," he said, concisely. They stood side by side for a
+moment. Then he said, with a motion of his head, "I won't come
+back to THEM. Do you mind? Going back alone?"
+
+She took ten seconds to think. "No." she said, and held out her
+hand, biting her nether lip. "GOOD-BYE," she whispered.
+
+He turned, with a white face, looked into her eyes, took her hand
+limply, and then with a sudden impulse, lifted it to his lips.
+She would have snatched it away, but his grip tightened to her
+movement. She felt the touch of his lips, and then he had dropped
+her fingers and turned from her and was striding down the slope.
+A dozen paces away his foot turned in the lip of a rabbit hole,
+and he stumbled forward and almost fell. He recovered his balance
+and went on, not looking back. He never once looked back. She
+stared at his receding figure until it was small and far below
+her, and then, the tears running over her eyelids now, turned
+slowly, and walked with her hands gripped hard together behind
+her, towards Stoney Cross again.
+
+"I did not know," she whispered to herself. "I did not
+understand. Even now--No, I do not understand."
+
+
+
+THE ENVOY
+
+XLI
+
+So the story ends, dear Reader. Mr. Hoopdriver, sprawling down
+there among the bracken, must sprawl without our prying, I think,
+or listening to what chances to his breathing. And of what came
+of it all, of the six years and afterwards, this is no place to
+tell. In truth, there is no telling it, for the years have still
+to run. But if you see how a mere counter-jumper, a cad on
+castors, and a fool to boot, may come to feel the little
+insufficiencies of life, and if he has to any extent won your
+sympathies, my end is attained. (If it is not attained, may
+Heaven forgive us both!) Nor will we follow this adventurous
+young lady of ours back to her home at Surbiton, to her new
+struggle against Widgery and Mrs. Milton combined. For, as she
+will presently hear, that devoted man has got his reward. For
+her, also, your sympathies are invited.
+
+The rest of this great holiday, too--five days there are left of
+it--is beyond the limits of our design. You see fitfully a
+slender figure in a dusty brown suit and heather mixture
+stockings, and brown shoes not intended to be cycled in, flitting
+Londonward through Hampshire and Berkshire and Surrey, going
+economically--for excellent reasons. Day by day he goes on,
+riding fitfully and for the most part through bye-roads, but
+getting a few miles to the north-eastward every day. He is a
+narrow-chested person, with a nose hot and tanned at the bridge
+with unwonted exposure, and brown, red-knuckled fists. A musing
+expression sits upon the face of this rider, you observe.
+Sometimes he whistles noiselessly to himself, sometimes he speaks
+aloud, "a juiced good try, anyhow!" you hear; and sometimes, and
+that too often for my liking, he looks irritable and hopeless. "I
+know," he says, "I know. It's over and done. It isn't IN me. You
+ain't man enough, Hoopdriver. Look at yer silly hands! . . . Oh,
+my God!" and a gust of passion comes upon him and he rides
+furiously for a space.
+
+Sometimes again his face softens. "Anyhow, if I'm not to see her-
+-she's going to lend me books," he thinks, and gets such comfort
+as he can. Then again; "Books! What's books?" Once or twice
+triumphant memories of the earlier incidents nerve his face for a
+while. "I put the ky-bosh on HIS little game," he remarks. "I DID
+that," and one might even call him happy in these phases. And,
+by-the-bye, the machine, you notice, has been enamel-painted grey
+and carries a sonorous gong.
+
+This figure passes through Basingstoke and Bagshot, Staines,
+Hampton, and Richmond. At last, in Putney High Street, glowing
+with the warmth of an August sunset and with all the 'prentice
+boys busy shutting up shop, and the work girls going home, and
+the shop folks peeping abroad, and the white 'buses full of late
+clerks and city folk rumbling home to their dinners, we part from
+him. He is back. To-morrow, the early rising, the dusting, and
+drudgery, begin again--but with a difference, with wonderful
+memories and still more wonderful desires and ambitions replacing
+those discrepant dreams.
+
+He turns out of the High Street at the corner, dismounts with a
+sigh, and pushes his machine through the gates of the Antrobus
+stable yard, as the apprentice with the high collar holds them
+open. There are words of greeting. "South Coast," you hear; and
+"splendid weather--splendid." He sighs. "Yes--swapped him off for
+a couple of sovs. It's a juiced good machine."
+
+The gate closes upon him with a slam, and he vanishes from our
+ken.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Wheels of Chance
+
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