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+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
+ </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; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
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+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
+
+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 Light That Failed
+
+Author: Rudyard Kipling
+
+Release Date: December 23, 2008 [EBook #2876]
+Last Updated: November 5, 2012
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIGHT THAT FAILED ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Reed, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ THE LIGHT THAT FAILED
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ By Rudyard Kipling
+ </h2>
+ <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="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So we settled it all when the storm was done
+ As comf'y as comf'y could be;
+ And I was to wait in the barn, my dears,
+ Because I was only three;
+ And Teddy would run to the rainbow's foot,
+ Because he was five and a man;
+ And that's how it all began, my dears,
+ And that's how it all began.
+
+ &mdash;Big Barn Stories.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'WHAT do you think she'd do if she caught us? We oughtn't to have it, you
+ know,' said Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Beat me, and lock you up in your bedroom,' Dick answered, without
+ hesitation. 'Have you got the cartridges?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; they're in my pocket, but they are joggling horribly. Do pin-fire
+ cartridges go off of their own accord?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't know. Take the revolver, if you are afraid, and let me carry them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm not afraid.' Maisie strode forward swiftly, a hand in her pocket and
+ her chin in the air. Dick followed with a small pin-fire revolver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The children had discovered that their lives would be unendurable without
+ pistol-practice. After much forethought and self-denial, Dick had saved
+ seven shillings and sixpence, the price of a badly constructed Belgian
+ revolver. Maisie could only contribute half a crown to the syndicate for
+ the purchase of a hundred cartridges. 'You can save better than I can,
+ Dick,' she explained; 'I like nice things to eat, and it doesn't matter to
+ you. Besides, boys ought to do these things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick grumbled a little at the arrangement, but went out and made the
+ purchase, which the children were then on their way to test. Revolvers did
+ not lie in the scheme of their daily life as decreed for them by the
+ guardian who was incorrectly supposed to stand in the place of a mother to
+ these two orphans. Dick had been under her care for six years, during
+ which time she had made her profit of the allowances supposed to be
+ expended on his clothes, and, partly through thoughtlessness, partly
+ through a natural desire to pain,&mdash;she was a widow of some years
+ anxious to marry again,&mdash;had made his days burdensome on his young
+ shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where he had looked for love, she gave him first aversion and then hate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where he growing older had sought a little sympathy, she gave him
+ ridicule. The many hours that she could spare from the ordering of her
+ small house she devoted to what she called the home-training of Dick
+ Heldar. Her religion, manufactured in the main by her own intelligence and
+ a keen study of the Scriptures, was an aid to her in this matter. At such
+ times as she herself was not personally displeased with Dick, she left him
+ to understand that he had a heavy account to settle with his Creator;
+ wherefore Dick learned to loathe his God as intensely as he loathed Mrs.
+ Jennett; and this is not a wholesome frame of mind for the young. Since
+ she chose to regard him as a hopeless liar, when dread of pain drove him to his first untruth, he naturally developed into a liar, but an economical and
+ self-contained one, never throwing away the least unnecessary fib, and
+ never hesitating at the blackest, were it only plausible, that might make
+ his life a little easier. The treatment taught him at least the power of
+ living alone,&mdash;a power that was of service to him when he went to a
+ public school and the boys laughed at his clothes, which were poor in
+ quality and much mended. In the holidays he returned to the teachings of
+ Mrs. Jennett, and, that the chain of discipline might not be weakened by
+ association with the world, was generally beaten, on one account or
+ another, before he had been twelve hours under her roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The autumn of one year brought him a companion in bondage, a long-haired,
+ gray-eyed little atom, as self-contained as himself, who moved about the
+ house silently and for the first few weeks spoke only to the goat that was
+ her chiefest friend on earth and lived in the back-garden. Mrs. Jennett
+ objected to the goat on the grounds that he was un-Christian,&mdash;which
+ he certainly was. 'Then,' said the atom, choosing her words very
+ deliberately, 'I shall write to my lawyer-peoples and tell them that you
+ are a very bad woman. Amomma is mine, mine, mine!' Mrs. Jennett made a
+ movement to the hall, where certain umbrellas and canes stood in a rack.
+ The atom understood as clearly as Dick what this meant. 'I have been
+ beaten before,' she said, still in the same passionless voice; 'I have
+ been beaten worse than you can ever beat me. If you beat me I shall write
+ to my lawyer-peoples and tell them that you do not give me enough to eat.
+ I am not afraid of you.' Mrs. Jennett did not go into the hall, and the
+ atom, after a pause to assure herself that all danger of war was past,
+ went out, to weep bitterly on Amomma's neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick learned to know her as Maisie, and at first mistrusted her
+ profoundly, for he feared that she might interfere with the small liberty
+ of action left to him. She did not, however; and she volunteered no
+ friendliness until Dick had taken the first steps. Long before the
+ holidays were over, the stress of punishment shared in common drove the
+ children together, if it were only to play into each other's hands as they
+ prepared lies for Mrs. Jennett's use. When Dick returned to school, Maisie
+ whispered, 'Now I shall be all alone to take care of myself; but,' and she
+ nodded her head bravely, 'I can do it. You promised to send Amomma a grass
+ collar. Send it soon.' A week later she asked for that collar by return of
+ post, and wa not pleased when she learned that it took time to make. When
+ at last Dick forwarded the gift, she forgot to thank him for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many holidays had come and gone since that day, and Dick had grown into a
+ lanky hobbledehoy more than ever conscious of his bad clothes. Not for a
+ moment had Mrs. Jennett relaxed her tender care of him, but the average
+ canings of a public school&mdash;Dick fell under punishment about three
+ times a month&mdash;filled him with contempt for her powers. 'She doesn't
+ hurt,' he explained to Maisie, who urged him to rebellion, 'and she is
+ kinder to you after she has whacked me.' Dick shambled through the days
+ unkempt in body and savage in soul, as the smaller boys of the school
+ learned to know, for when the spirit moved him he would hit them,
+ cunningly and with science. The same spirit made him more than once try to
+ tease Maisie, but the girl refused to be made unhappy. 'We are both
+ miserable as it is,' said she. 'What is the use of trying to make things
+ worse? Let's find things to do, and forget things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The pistol was the outcome of that search. It could only be used on the
+ muddiest foreshore of the beach, far away from the bathing-machines and
+ pierheads, below the grassy slopes of Fort Keeling. The tide ran out
+ nearly two miles on that coast, and the many-coloured mud-banks, touched
+ by the sun, sent up a lamentable smell of dead weed. It was late in the
+ afternoon when Dick and Maisie arrived on their ground, Amomma trotting
+ patiently behind them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Mf!' said Maisie, sniffing the air. 'I wonder what makes the sea so
+ smelly? I don't like it!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You never like anything that isn't made just for you,' said Dick bluntly.
+ 'Give me the cartridges, and I'll try first shot. How far does one of
+ these little revolvers carry?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, half a mile,' said Maisie, promptly. 'At least it makes an awful
+ noise. Be careful with the cartridges; I don't like those jagged stick-up
+ things on the rim. Dick, do be careful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All right. I know how to load. I'll fire at the breakwater out there.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fired, and Amomma ran away bleating. The bullet threw up a spurt of mud
+ to the right of the wood-wreathed piles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Throws high and to the right. You try, Maisie. Mind, it's loaded all
+ round.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie took the pistol and stepped delicately to the verge of the mud, her
+ hand firmly closed on the butt, her mouth and left eye screwed up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick sat down on a tuft of bank and laughed. Amomma returned very
+ cautiously. He was accustomed to strange experiences in his afternoon
+ walks, and, finding the cartridge-box unguarded, made investigations with
+ his nose. Maisie fired, but could not see where the bullet went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I think it hit the post,' she said, shading her eyes and looking out
+ across the sailless sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know it has gone out to the Marazion Bell-buoy,' said Dick, with a
+ chuckle. 'Fire low and to the left; then perhaps you'll get it. Oh, look
+ at Amomma!&mdash;he's eating the cartridges!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie turned, the revolver in her hand, just in time to see Amomma
+ scampering away from the pebbles Dick threw after him. Nothing is sacred
+ to a billy-goat. Being well fed and the adored of his mistress, Amomma had
+ naturally swallowed two loaded pin-fire cartridges. Maisie hurried up to
+ assure herself that Dick had not miscounted the tale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, he's eaten two.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Horrid little beast! Then they'll joggle about inside him and blow up,
+ and serve him right.... Oh, Dick! have I killed you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Revolvers are tricky things for young hands to deal with. Maisie could not
+ explain how it had happened, but a veil of reeking smoke separated her
+ from Dick, and she was quite certain that the pistol had gone off in his
+ face. Then she heard him sputter, and dropped on her knees beside him,
+ crying, 'Dick, you aren't hurt, are you? I didn't mean it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course you didn't, said Dick, coming out of the smoke and wiping his
+ cheek. 'But you nearly blinded me. That powder stuff stings awfully.' A
+ neat little splash of gray led on a stone showed where the bullet had
+ gone. Maisie began to whimper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't,' said Dick, jumping to his feet and shaking himself. 'I'm not a
+ bit hurt.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, but I might have killed you,' protested Maisie, the corners of her
+ mouth drooping. 'What should I have done then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Gone home and told Mrs. Jennett.' Dick grinned at the thought; then,
+ softening, 'Please don't worry about it. Besides, we are wasting time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We've got to get back to tea. I'll take the revolver for a bit.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie would have wept on the least encouragement, but Dick's
+ indifference, albeit his hand was shaking as he picked up the pistol,
+ restrained her. She lay panting on the beach while Dick methodically
+ bombarded the breakwater. 'Got it at last!' he exclaimed, as a lock of
+ weed flew from the wood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let me try,' said Maisie, imperiously. 'I'm all right now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They fired in turns till the rickety little revolver nearly shook itself
+ to pieces, and Amomma the outcast&mdash;because he might blow up at any
+ moment&mdash;browsed in the background and wondered why stones were thrown
+ at him. Then they found a balk of timber floating in a pool which was
+ commanded by the seaward slope of Fort Keeling, and they sat down together
+ before this new target.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Next holidays,' said Dick, as the now thoroughly fouled revolver kicked
+ wildly in his hand, 'we'll get another pistol,&mdash;central fire,&mdash;that
+ will carry farther.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There won't be any next holidays for me,' said Maisie. 'I'm going away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where to?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know. My lawyers have written to Mrs. Jennett, and I've got to be
+ educated somewhere,&mdash;in France, perhaps,&mdash;I don't know where;
+ but I shall be glad to go away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shan't like it a bit. I suppose I shall be left. Look here, Maisie, is
+ it really true you're going? Then these holidays will be the last I shall
+ see anything of you; and I go back to school next week. I wish&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young blood turned his cheeks scarlet. Maisie was picking grass-tufts
+ and throwing them down the slope at a yellow sea-poppy nodding all by
+ itself to the illimitable levels of the mud-flats and the milk-white sea
+ beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish,' she said, after a pause, 'that I could see you again sometime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You wish that, too?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, but it would have been better if&mdash;if&mdash;you had&mdash;shot
+ straight over there&mdash;down by the breakwater.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked with large eyes for a moment. And this was the boy who only
+ ten days before had decorated Amomma's horns with cut-paper ham-frills and
+ turned him out, a bearded derision, among the public ways! Then she
+ dropped her eyes: this was not the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't be stupid,' she said reprovingly, and with swift instinct attacked
+ the side-issue. 'How selfish you are! Just think what I should have felt
+ if that horrid thing had killed you! I'm quite miserable enough already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why? Because you're going away from Mrs. Jennett?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'From me, then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No answer for a long time. Dick dared not look at her. He felt, though he
+ did not know, all that the past four years had been to him, and this the
+ more acutely since he had no knowledge to put his feelings in words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know,' she said. 'I suppose it is.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maisie, you must know. I'm not supposing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let's go home,' said Maisie, weakly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Dick was not minded to retreat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can't say things,' he pleaded, 'and I'm awfully sorry for teasing you
+ about Amomma the other day. It's all different now, Maisie, can't you see?
+ And you might have told me that you were going, instead of leaving me to
+ find out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You didn't. I did tell. Oh, Dick, what's the use of worrying?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There isn't any; but we've been together years and years, and I didn't
+ know how much I cared.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't believe you ever did care.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, I didn't; but I do,&mdash;I care awfully now, Maisie,' he gulped,&mdash;'Maisie,
+ darling, say you care too, please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I do, indeed I do; but it won't be any use.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because I am going away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, but if you promise before you go. Only say&mdash;will you?' A second
+ 'darling' came to his lips more easily than the first. There were few
+ endearments in Dick's home or school life; he had to find them by
+ instinct. Dick caught the little hand blackened with the escaped gas of
+ the revolver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I promise,' she said solemnly; 'but if I care there is no need for
+ promising.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And do you care?' For the first time in the past few minutes their eyes
+ met and spoke for them who had no skill in speech....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, Dick, don't! Please don't! It was all right when we said
+ good-morning; but now it's all different!' Amomma looked on from afar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had seen his property quarrel frequently, but he had never seen kisses
+ exchanged before. The yellow sea-poppy was wiser, and nodded its head
+ approvingly. Considered as a kiss, that was a failure, but since it was
+ the first, other than those demanded by duty, in all the world that either
+ had ever given or taken, it opened to them new worlds, and every one of
+ them glorious, so that they were lifted above the consideration of any
+ worlds at all, especially those in which tea is necessary, and sat still,
+ holding each other's hands and saying not a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You can't forget now,' said Dick, at last. There was that on his cheek
+ that stung more than gunpowder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shouldn't have forgotten anyhow,' said Maisie, and they looked at each
+ other and saw that each was changed from the companion of an hour ago to a
+ wonder and a mystery they could not understand. The sun began to set, and
+ a night-wind thrashed along the bents of the foreshore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We shall be awfully late for tea,' said Maisie. 'Let's go home.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let's use the rest of the cartridges first,' said Dick; and he helped
+ Maisie down the slope of the fort to the sea,&mdash;a descent that she was
+ quite capable of covering at full speed. Equally gravely Maisie took the
+ grimy hand. Dick bent forward clumsily; Maisie drew the hand away, and
+ Dick blushed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's very pretty,' he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Pooh!' said Maisie, with a little laugh of gratified vanity. She stood
+ close to Dick as he loaded the revolver for the last time and fired over
+ the sea with a vague notion at the back of his head that he was protecting
+ Maisie from all the evils in the world. A puddle far across the mud caught
+ the last rays of the sun and turned into a wrathful red disc. The light
+ held Dick's attention for a moment, and as he raised his revolver there
+ fell upon him a renewed sense of the miraculous, in that he was standing
+ by Maisie who had promised to care for him for an indefinite length of
+ time till such date as&mdash;&mdash; A gust of the growing wind drove the
+ girl's long black hair across his face as she stood with her hand on his
+ shoulder calling Amomma 'a little beast,' and for a moment he was in the
+ dark,&mdash;a darkness that stung. The bullet went singing out to the
+ empty sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Spoilt my aim,' said he, shaking his head. 'There aren't any more
+ cartridges; we shall have to run home.' But they did not run. They walked
+ very slowly, arm in arm. And it was a matter of indifference to them
+ whether the neglected Amomma with two pin-fire cartridges in his inside
+ blew up or trotted beside them; for they had come into a golden heritage
+ and were disposing of it with all the wisdom of all their years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And I shall be&mdash;&mdash;' quoth Dick, valiantly. Then he checked
+ himself: 'I don't know what I shall be. I don't seem to be able to pass
+ any exams, but I can make awful caricatures of the masters. Ho! Ho!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be an artist, then,' said Maisie. 'You're always laughing at my trying to
+ draw; and it will do you good.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll never laugh at anything you do,' he answered. 'I'll be an artist,
+ and I'll do things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Artists always want money, don't they?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've got a hundred and twenty pounds a year of my own. My guardians tell
+ me I'm to have it when I come of age. That will be enough to begin with.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ah, I'm rich,' said Maisie. 'I've got three hundred a year all my own
+ when I'm twenty-one. That's why Mrs. Jennett is kinder to me than she is
+ to you. I wish, though, that I had somebody that belonged to me,&mdash;just
+ a father or a mother.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You belong to me,' said Dick, 'for ever and ever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, we belong&mdash;for ever. It's very nice.' She squeezed his arm. The
+ kindly darkness hid them both, and, emboldened because he could only just
+ see the profile of Maisie's cheek with the long lashes veiling the gray
+ eyes, Dick at the front door delivered himself of the words he had been
+ boggling over for the last two hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And I&mdash;love you, Maisie,' he said, in a whisper that seemed to him
+ to ring across the world,&mdash;the world that he would to-morrow or the
+ next day set out to conquer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a scene, not, for the sake of discipline, to be reported, when
+ Mrs. Jennett would have fallen upon him, first for disgraceful
+ unpunctuality, and secondly for nearly killing himself with a forbidden
+ weapon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was playing with it, and it went off by itself,' said Dick, when the
+ powder-pocked cheek could no longer be hidden, 'but if you think you're
+ going to lick me you're wrong. You are never going to touch me again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sit down and give me my tea. You can't cheat us out of that, anyhow.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mrs. Jennett gasped and became livid. Maisie said nothing, but encouraged
+ Dick with her eyes, and he behaved abominably all that evening. Mrs.
+ Jennett prophesied an immediate judgment of Providence and a descent into
+ Tophet later, but Dick walked in Paradise and would not hear. Only when he
+ was going to bed Mrs. Jennett recovered and asserted herself. He had
+ bidden Maisie good-night with down-dropped eyes and from a distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If you aren't a gentleman you might try to behave like one,' said Mrs.
+ Jennett, spitefully. 'You've been quarrelling with Maisie again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This meant that the usual good-night kiss had been omitted. Maisie, white
+ to the lips, thrust her cheek forward with a fine air of indifference, and
+ was duly pecked by Dick, who tramped out of the room red as fire. That
+ night he dreamed a wild dream. He had won all the world and brought it to
+ Maisie in a cartridge-box, but she turned it over with her foot, and,
+ instead of saying 'Thank you,' cried&mdash;'Where is the grass collar you
+ promised for Amomma? Oh, how selfish you are!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Then we brought the lances down, then the bugles blew,
+ When we went to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two,
+ Ridin', ridin', ridin', two an' two,
+ Ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra,
+ All the way to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two.
+
+ &mdash;Barrack-Room Ballad.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'I'M NOT angry with the British public, but I wish we had a few thousand
+ of them scattered among these rooks. They wouldn't be in such a hurry to
+ get at their morning papers then. Can't you imagine the regulation
+ householder&mdash;Lover of Justice, Constant Reader, Paterfamilias, and
+ all that lot&mdash;frizzling on hot gravel?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'With a blue veil over his head, and his clothes in strips. Has any man
+ here a needle? I've got a piece of sugar-sack.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll lend you a packing-needle for six square inches of it then. Both my
+ knees are worn through.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why not six square acres, while you're about it? But lend me the needle,
+ and I'll see what I can do with the selvage. I don't think there's enough
+ to protect my royal body from the cold blast as it is. What are you doing
+ with that everlasting sketch-book of yours, Dick?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Study of our Special Correspondent repairing his wardrobe,' said Dick,
+ gravely, as the other man kicked off a pair of sorely worn riding-breeches
+ and began to fit a square of coarse canvas over the most obvious open
+ space. He grunted disconsolately as the vastness of the void developed
+ itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sugar-bags, indeed! Hi! you pilot man there! lend me all the sails for
+ that whale-boat.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A fez-crowned head bobbed up in the stern-sheets, divided itself into
+ exact halves with one flashing grin, and bobbed down again. The man of the
+ tattered breeches, clad only in a Norfolk jacket and a gray flannel shirt,
+ went on with his clumsy sewing, while Dick chuckled over the sketch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some twenty whale-boats were nuzzling a sand-bank which was dotted with
+ English soldiery of half a dozen corps, bathing or washing their clothes.
+ A heap of boat-rollers, commissariat-boxes, sugar-bags, and flour- and
+ small-arm-ammunition-cases showed where one of the whale-boats had been
+ compelled to unload hastily; and a regimental carpenter was swearing aloud
+ as he tried, on a wholly insufficient allowance of white lead, to plaster
+ up the sun-parched gaping seams of the boat herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'First the bloomin' rudder snaps,' said he to the world in general; 'then
+ the mast goes; an' then, s' 'help me, when she can't do nothin' else, she
+ opens 'erself out like a cock-eyes Chinese lotus.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Exactly the case with my breeches, whoever you are,' said the tailor,
+ without looking up. 'Dick, I wonder when I shall see a decent shop again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no answer, save the incessant angry murmur of the Nile as it
+ raced round a basalt-walled bend and foamed across a rock-ridge half a
+ mile upstream. It was as though the brown weight of the river would drive
+ the white men back to their own country. The indescribable scent of Nile
+ mud in the air told that the stream was falling and the next few miles
+ would be no light thing for the whale-boats to overpass. The desert ran
+ down almost to the banks, where, among gray, red, and black hillocks, a
+ camel-corps was encamped. No man dared even for a day lose touch of the
+ slow-moving boats; there had been no fighting for weeks past, and
+ throughout all that time the Nile had never spared them. Rapid had
+ followed rapid, rock rock, and island-group island-group, till the rank
+ and file had long since lost all count of direction and very nearly of
+ time. They were moving somewhere, they did not know why, to do something,
+ they did not know what. Before them lay the Nile, and at the other end of
+ it was one Gordon, fighting for the dear life, in a town called Khartoum.
+ There were columns of British troops in the desert, or in one of the many
+ deserts; there were yet more columns waiting to embark on the river; there
+ were fresh drafts waiting at Assioot and Assuan; there were lies and
+ rumours running over the face of the hopeless land from Suakin to the
+ Sixth Cataract, and men supposed generally that there must be some one in
+ authority to direct the general scheme of the many movements. The duty of
+ that particular river-column was to keep the whale-boats afloat in the
+ water, to avoid trampling on the villagers' crops when the gangs 'tracked'
+ the boats with lines thrown from midstream, to get as much sleep and food
+ as was possible, and, above all, to press on without delay in the teeth of
+ the churning Nile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the soldiers sweated and toiled the correspondents of the newspapers,
+ and they were almost as ignorant as their companions. But it was above all
+ things necessary that England at breakfast should be amused and thrilled
+ and interested, whether Gordon lived or died, or half the British army
+ went to pieces in the sands. The Soudan campaign was a picturesque one,
+ and lent itself to vivid word-painting. Now and again a 'Special' managed
+ to get slain,&mdash;which was not altogether a disadvantage to the paper
+ that employed him,&mdash;and more often the hand-to-hand nature of the
+ fighting allowed of miraculous escapes which were worth telegraphing home
+ at eighteenpence the word. There were many correspondents with many corps
+ and columns,&mdash;from the veterans who had followed on the heels of the
+ cavalry that occupied Cairo in '82, what time Arabi Pasha called himself
+ king, who had seen the first miserable work round Suakin when the sentries
+ were cut up nightly and the scrub swarmed with spears, to youngsters
+ jerked into the business at the end of a telegraph-wire to take the places
+ of their betters killed or invalided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the seniors&mdash;those who knew every shift and change in the
+ perplexing postal arrangements, the value of the seediest, weediest
+ Egyptian garron offered for sale in Cairo or Alexandria, who could talk a
+ telegraph-clerk into amiability and soothe the ruffled vanity of a newly
+ appointed staff-officer when press regulations became burdensome&mdash;was
+ the man in the flannel shirt, the black-browed Torpenhow. He represented
+ the Central Southern Syndicate in the campaign, as he had represented it
+ in the Egyptian war, and elsewhere. The syndicate did not concern itself
+ greatly with criticisms of attack and the like. It supplied the masses,
+ and all it demanded was picturesqueness and abundance of detail; for there
+ is more joy in England over a soldier who insubordinately steps out of
+ square to rescue a comrade than over twenty generals slaving even to
+ baldness at the gross details of transport and commissariat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had met at Suakin a young man, sitting on the edge of a recently
+ abandoned redoubt about the size of a hat-box, sketching a clump of
+ shell-torn bodies on the gravel plain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are you for?' said Torpenhow. The greeting of the correspondent is
+ that of the commercial traveller on the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My own hand,' said the young man, without looking up. 'Have you any
+ tobacco?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow waited till the sketch was finished, and when he had looked at
+ it said, 'What's your business here?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing; there was a row, so I came. I'm supposed to be doing something
+ down at the painting-slips among the boats, or else I'm in charge of the
+ condenser on one of the water-ships. I've forgotten which.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've cheek enough to build a redoubt with,' said Torpenhow, and took
+ stock of the new acquaintance. 'Do you always draw like that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man produced more sketches. 'Row on a Chinese pig-boat,'
+ said he, sententiously, showing them one after another.&mdash;'Chief mate
+ dirked by a comprador.&mdash;Junk ashore off Hakodate.&mdash;Somali
+ muleteer being flogged.&mdash;Star-shelled bursting over camp at Berbera.&mdash;Slave-dhow
+ being chased round Tajurrah Bah.&mdash;Soldier lying dead in the moonlight
+ outside Suakin.&mdash;throat cut by Fuzzies.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'H'm!' said Torpenhow, 'can't say I care for Verestchagin-and-water
+ myself, but there's no accounting for tastes. Doing anything now, are
+ you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. I'm amusing myself here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow looked at the sketches again, and nodded. 'Yes, you're right to
+ take your first chance when you can get it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rode away swiftly through the Gate of the Two War-Ships, rattled across
+ the causeway into the town, and wired to his syndicate, 'Got man here,
+ picture-work. Good and cheap. Shall I arrange? Will do letterpress with
+ sketches.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man on the redoubt sat swinging his legs and murmuring, 'I knew the
+ chance would come, sooner or later. By Gad, they'll have to sweat for it
+ if I come through this business alive!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening Torpenhow was able to announce to his friend that the
+ Central Southern Agency was willing to take him on trial, paying expenses
+ for three months. 'And, by the way, what's your name?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Heldar. Do they give me a free hand?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They've taken you on chance. You must justify the choice. You'd better
+ stick to me. I'm going up-country with a column, and I'll do what I can
+ for you. Give me some of your sketches taken here, and I'll send 'em
+ along.' To himself he said, 'That's the best bargain the Central southern
+ has ever made; and they got me cheaply enough.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it came to pass that, after some purchase of horse-flesh and
+ arrangements financial and political, Dick was made free of the New and
+ Honourable Fraternity of war correspondents, who all possess the
+ inalienable right of doing as much work as they can and getting as much
+ for it as Providence and their owners shall please. To these things are
+ added in time, if the brother be worthy, the power of glib speech that
+ neither man nor woman can resist when a meal or a bed is in question, the
+ eye of a horse-cope, the skill of a cook, the constitution of a bullock,
+ the digestion of an ostrich, and an infinite adaptability to all
+ circumstances. But many die before they attain to this degree, and the
+ past-masters in the craft appear for the most part in dress-clothes when
+ they are in England, and thus their glory is hidden from the multitude.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick followed Torpenhow wherever the latter's fancy chose to lead him, and
+ between the two they managed to accomplish some work that almost satisfied
+ themselves. It was not an easy life in any way, and under its influence
+ the two were drawn ver closely together, for they ate from the same dish,
+ they shared the same water-bottle, and, most binding tie of all, their
+ mails went off together. It was Dick who managed to make gloriously drunk
+ a telegraph-clerk in a palm hut far beyond the Second Cataract, and, while
+ the man lay in bliss on the floor, possessed himself of some laboriously
+ acquired exclusive information, forwarded by a confiding correspondent of
+ an opposition syndicate, made a careful duplicate of the matter, and
+ brought the result to Torpenhow, who said that all was fair in love or war
+ correspondence, and built an excellent descriptive article from his
+ rival's riotous waste of words. It was Torpenhow who&mdash;but the tale of
+ their adventures, together and apart, from Philae to the waste wilderness
+ of Herawi and Muella, would fill many books. They had been penned into a
+ square side by side, in deadly fear of being shot by over-excited
+ soldiers; they had fought with baggage-camels in the chill dawn; they had
+ jogged along in silence under blinding sun on indefatigable little
+ Egyptian horses; and they had floundered on the shallows of the Nile when
+ the whale-boat in which they had found a berth chose to hit a hidden rock
+ and rip out half her bottom-planks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now they were sitting on the sand-bank, and the whale-boats were bringing
+ up the remainder of the column.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes,' said Torpenhow, as he put the last rude stitches into his
+ over-long-neglected gear, 'it has been a beautiful business.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The patch or the campaign?' said Dick. 'Don't think much of either,
+ myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You want the Euryalus brought up above the Third Cataract, don't you? and
+ eighty-one-ton guns at Jakdul? Now, I'm quite satisfied with my breeches.'
+ He turned round gravely to exhibit himself, after the manner of a clown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's very pretty. Specially the lettering on the sack. G.B.T. Government
+ Bullock Train. That's a sack from India.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's my initials,&mdash;Gilbert Belling Torpenhow. I stole the cloth on
+ purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What the mischief are the camel-corps doing yonder?' Torpenhow shaded his
+ eyes and looked across the scrub-strewn gravel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bugle blew furiously, and the men on the bank hurried to their arms and
+ accoutrements.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Pisan soldiery surprised while bathing,"' remarked Dick, calmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'D'you remember the picture? It's by Michael Angelo; all beginners copy
+ it. That scrub's alive with enemy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The camel-corps on the bank yelled to the infantry to come to them, and a
+ hoarse shouting down the river showed that the remainder of the column had
+ wind of the trouble and was hastening to take share in it. As swiftly as a
+ reach of still water is crisped by the wind, the rock-strewn ridges and
+ scrub-topped hills were troubled and alive with armed men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mercifully, it occurred to these to stand far off for a time, to shout and
+ gesticulate joyously. One man even delivered himself of a long story. The
+ camel-corps did not fire. They were only too glad of a little
+ breathing-space, until some sort of square could be formed. The men on the
+ sand-bank ran to their side; and the whale-boats, as they toiled up within
+ shouting distance, were thrust into the nearest bank and emptied of all
+ save the sick and a few men to guard them. The Arab orator ceased his
+ outcries, and his friends howled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They look like the Mahdi's men,' said Torpenhow, elbowing himself into
+ the crush of the square; 'but what thousands of 'em there are! The tribes
+ hereabout aren't against us, I know.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then the Mahdi's taken another town,' said Dick, 'and set all these
+ yelping devils free to show us up. Lend us your glass.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Our scouts should have told us of this. We've been trapped,' said a
+ subaltern. 'Aren't the camel guns ever going to begin? Hurry up, you men!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no need of any order. The men flung themselves panting against
+ the sides of the square, for they had good reason to know that whoso was
+ left outside when the fighting began would very probably die in an
+ extremely unpleasant fashion. The little hundred-and-fifty-pound
+ camel-guns posted at one corner of the square opened the ball as the
+ square moved forward by its right to get possession of a knoll of rising
+ ground. All had fought in this manner many times before, and there was no
+ novelty in the entertainment; always the same hot and stifling formation,
+ the smell of dust and leather, the same boltlike rush of the enemy, the
+ same pressure on the weakest side, the few minutes of hand-to-hand
+ scuffle, and then the silence of the desert, broken only by the yells of
+ those whom their handful of cavalry attempted to pursue. They had become
+ careless. The camel-guns spoke at intervals, and the square slouched
+ forward amid the protesting of the camels. Then came the attack of three
+ thousand men who had not learned from books that it is impossible for
+ troops in close order to attack against breech-loading fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few dropping shots heralded their approach, and a few horsemen led, but
+ the bulk of the force was naked humanity, mad with rage, and armed with
+ the spear and the sword. The instinct of the desert, where there is always
+ much war, told them that the right flank of the square was the weakest,
+ for they swung clear of the front. The camel-guns shelled them as they
+ passed and opened for an instant lanes through their midst, most like
+ those quick-closing vistas in a Kentish hop-garden seen when the train
+ races by at full speed; and the infantry fire, held till the opportune
+ moment, dropped them in close-packing hundreds. No civilised troops in the
+ world could have endured the hell through which they came, the living
+ leaping high to avoid the dying who clutched at their heels, the wounded
+ cursing and staggering forward, till they fell&mdash;a torrent black as
+ the sliding water above a mill-dam&mdash;full on the right flank of the
+ square.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the line of the dusty troops and the faint blue desert sky overhead
+ went out in rolling smoke, and the little stones on the heated ground and
+ the tinder-dry clumps of scrub became matters of surpassing interest, for
+ men measured their agonised retreat and recovery by these things, counting
+ mechanically and hewing their way back to chosen pebble and branch. There
+ was no semblance of any concerted fighting. For aught the men knew, the
+ enemy might be attempting all four sides of the square at once. Their
+ business was to destroy what lay in front of them, to bayonet in the back
+ those who passed over them, and, dying, to drag down the slayer till he
+ could be knocked on the head by some avenging gun-butt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick waited with Torpenhow and a young doctor till the stress grew
+ unendurable. It was hopeless to attend to the wounded till the attack was
+ repulsed, so the three moved forward gingerly towards the weakest side of
+ the square. There was a rush from without, the short hough-hough of the
+ stabbing spears, and a man on a horse, followed by thirty or forty others,
+ dashed through, yelling and hacking. The right flank of the square sucked
+ in after them, and the other sides sent help. The wounded, who knew that
+ they had but a few hours more to live, caught at the enemy's feet and
+ brought them down, or, staggering into a discarded rifle, fired blindly
+ into the scuffle that raged in the centre of the square.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was conscious that somebody had cut him violently across his helmet,
+ that he had fired his revolver into a black, foam-flecked face which
+ forthwith ceased to bear any resemblance to a face, and that Torpenhow had
+ gone down under an Arab whom he had tried to 'collar low,' and was turning
+ over and over with his captive, feeling for the man's eyes. The doctor
+ jabbed at a venture with a bayonet, and a helmetless soldier fired over
+ Dick's shoulder: the flying grains of powder stung his cheek. It was to
+ Torpenhow that Dick turned by instinct. The representative of the Central
+ Southern Syndicate had shaken himself clear of his enemy, and rose, wiping
+ his thumb on his trousers. The Arab, both hands to his forehead, screamed
+ aloud, then snatched up his spear and rushed at Torpenhow, who was panting
+ under shelter of Dick's revolver. Dick fired twice, and the man dropped
+ limply. His upturned face lacked one eye. The musketry-fire redoubled, but
+ cheers mingled with it. The rush had failed and the enemy were flying. If
+ the heart of the square were shambles, the ground beyond was a butcher's
+ shop. Dick thrust his way forward between the maddened men. The remnant of
+ the enemy were retiring, as the few&mdash;the very few&mdash;English
+ cavalry rode down the laggards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the lines of the dead, a broad blood-stained Arab spear cast aside
+ in the retreat lay across a stump of scrub, and beyond this again the
+ illimitable dark levels of the desert. The sun caught the steel and turned
+ it into a red disc. Some one behind him was saying, 'Ah, get away, you
+ brute!' Dick raised his revolver and pointed towards the desert. His eye
+ was held by the red splash in the distance, and the clamour about him
+ seemed to die down to a very far-away whisper, like the whisper of a level
+ sea. There was the revolver and the red light.... and the voice of some
+ one scaring something away, exactly as had fallen somewhere before,&mdash;a
+ darkness that stung. He fired at random, and the bullet went out across
+ the desert as he muttered, 'Spoilt my aim. There aren't any more
+ cartridges. We shall have to run home.' He put his hand to his head and
+ brought it away covered with blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Old man, you're cut rather badly,' said Torpenhow. 'I owe you something
+ for this business. Thanks. Stand up! I say, you can't be ill here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Throughout the night, when the troops were encamped by the whale-boats, a
+ black figure danced in the strong moonlight on the sand-bar and shouted
+ that Khartoum the accursed one was dead,&mdash;was dead,&mdash;was dead,&mdash;that
+ two steamers were rock-staked on the Nile outside the city, and that of
+ all their crews there remained not one; and Khartoum was dead,&mdash;was
+ dead,&mdash;was dead!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Torpenhow took no heed. He was watching Dick, who called aloud to the
+ restless Nile for Maisie,&mdash;and again Maisie!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Behold a phenomenon,' said Torpenhow, rearranging the blanket. 'Here is a
+ man, presumably human, who mentions the name of one woman only. And I've
+ seen a good deal of delirium, too.&mdash;Dick, here's some fizzy drink.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank you, Maisie,' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So he thinks he shall take to the sea again
+ For one more cruise with his buccaneers,
+ To singe the beard of the King of Spain,
+ And capture another Dean of Jaen
+ And sell him in Algiers.&mdash;A Dutch Picture.&mdash;Longfellow
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE SOUDAN campaign and Dick's broken head had been some months ended and
+ mended, and the Central Southern Syndicate had paid Dick a certain sum on
+ account for work done, which work they were careful to assure him was not
+ altogether up to their standard. Dick heaved the letter into the Nile at
+ Cairo, cashed the draft in the same town, and bade a warm farewell to
+ Torpenhow at the station.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am going to lie up for a while and rest,' said Torpenhow. 'I don't know
+ where I shall live in London, but if God brings us to meet, we shall meet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Are you starying here on the off-chance of another row? There will be none
+ till the Southern Soudan is reoccupied by our troops. Mark that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good-bye; bless you; come back when your money's spent; and give me your
+ address.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick loitered in Cairo, Alexandria, Ismailia, and Port Said,&mdash;especially
+ Port Said. There is iniquity in many parts of the world, and vice in all,
+ but the concentrated essence of all the iniquities and all the vices in
+ all the continents finds itself at Port Said. And through the heart of
+ that sand-bordered hell, where the mirage flickers day long above the
+ Bitter Lake, move, if you will only wait, most of the men and women you
+ have known in this life. Dick established himself in quarters more riotous
+ than respectable. He spent his evenings on the quay, and boarded many
+ ships, and saw very many friends,&mdash;gracious Englishwomen with whom he
+ had talked not too wisely in the veranda of Shepherd's Hotel, hurrying war
+ correspondents, skippers of the contract troop-ships employed in the
+ campaign, army officers by the score, and others of less reputable trades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had choice of all the races of the East and West for studies, and the
+ advantage of seeing his subjects under the influence of strong excitement,
+ at the gaming-tables, saloons, dancing-hells, and elsewhere. For
+ recreation there was the straight vista of the Canal, the blazing sands,
+ the procession of shipping, and the white hospitals where the English
+ soldiers lay. He strove to set down in black and white and colour all that
+ Providence sent him, and when that supply was ended sought about for fresh
+ material. It was a fascinating employment, but it ran away with his money,
+ and he had drawn in advance the hundred and twenty pounds to which he was
+ entitled yearly. 'Now I shall have to work and starve!' thought he, and
+ was addressing himself to this new fate when a mysterious telegram arrived
+ from Torpenhow in England, which said, 'Come back, quick; you have caught
+ on. Come.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A large smile overspread his face. 'So soon! that's a good hearing,' said
+ he to himself. 'There will be an orgy to-night. I'll stand or fall by my
+ luck. Faith, it's time it came!' He deposited half of his funds in the
+ hands of his well-known friends Monsieur and Madame Binat, and ordered
+ himself a Zanzibar dance of the finest. Monsieur Binat was shaking with
+ drink, but Madame smiles sympathetically&mdash;'Monsieur needs a chair, of
+ course, and of course Monsieur will sketch; Monsieur amuses himself
+ strangely.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binat raised a blue-white face from a cot in the inner room. 'I
+ understand,' he quavered. 'We all know Monsieur. Monsieur is an artist, as
+ I have been.' Dick nodded. 'In the end,' said Binat, with gravity,
+ 'Monsieur will descend alive into hell, as I have descended.' And he
+ laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You must come to the dance, too,' said Dick; 'I shall want you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For my face? I knew it would be so. For my face? My God! and for my
+ degradation so tremendous! I will not. Take him away. He is a devil. Or at
+ least do thou, Celeste, demand of him more.' The excellent Binat began to
+ kick and scream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All things are for sale in Port Said,' said Madame. 'If my husband comes
+ it will be so much more. Eh, 'how you call&mdash;'alf a sovereign.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The money was paid, and the mad dance was held at night in a walled
+ courtyard at the back of Madame Binat's house. The lady herself, in faded
+ mauve silk always about to slide from her yellow shoulders, played the
+ piano, and to the tin-pot music of a Western waltz the naked Zanzibari
+ girls danced furiously by the light of kerosene lamps. Binat sat upon a
+ chair and stared with eyes that saw nothing, till the whirl of the dance
+ and the clang of the rattling piano stole into the drink that took the
+ place of blood in his veins, and his face glistened. Dick took him by the
+ chin brutally and turned that face to the light. Madame Binat looked over
+ her shoulder and smiled with many teeth. Dick leaned against the wall and
+ sketched for an hour, till the kerosene lamps began to smell, and the
+ girls threw themselves panting on the hard-beaten ground. Then he shut his
+ book with a snap and moved away, Binat plucking feebly at his elbow. 'Show
+ me,' he whimpered. 'I too was once an artist, even I!' Dick showed him the
+ rough sketch. 'Am I that?' he screamed. 'Will you take that away with you
+ and show all the world that it is I,&mdash;Binat?' He moaned and wept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Monsieur has paid for all,' said Madame. 'To the pleasure of seeing
+ Monsieur again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The courtyard gate shut, and Dick hurried up the sandy street to the
+ nearest gambling-hell, where he was well known. 'If the luck holds, it's
+ an omen; if I lose, I must stay here.' He placed his money picturesquely
+ about the board, hardly daring to look at what he did. The luck held.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three turns of the wheel left him richer by twenty pounds, and he went
+ down to the shipping to make friends with the captain of a decayed
+ cargo-steamer, who landed him in London with fewer pounds in his pocket
+ than he cared to think about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thin gray fog hung over the city, and the streets were very cold; for
+ summer was in England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's a cheerful wilderness, and it hasn't the knack of altering much,'
+ Dick thought, as he tramped from the Docks westward. 'Now, what must I
+ do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The packed houses gave no answer. Dick looked down the long lightless
+ streets and at the appalling rush of traffic. 'Oh, you rabbit-hutches!'
+ said he, addressing a row of highly respectable semi-detached residences.
+ 'Do you know what you've got to do later on? You have to supply me with
+ men-servants and maid-servants,'&mdash;here he smacked his lips,&mdash;'and
+ the peculiar treasure of kings. Meantime I'll find clothes and boots, and
+ presently I will return and trample on you.' He stepped forward
+ energetically; he saw that one of his shoes was burst at the side. As he
+ stooped to make investigations, a man jostled him into the gutter. 'All
+ right,' he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's another nick in the score. I'll jostle you later on.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good clothes and boots are not cheap, and Dick left his last shop with the
+ certainty that he would be respectably arrayed for a time, but with only
+ fifty shillings in his pocket. He returned to streets by the Docks, and
+ lodged himself in one room, where the sheets on the bed were almost
+ audibly marked in case of theft, and where nobody seemed to go to bed at
+ all. When his clothes arrived he sought the Central Southern Syndicate for
+ Torpenhow's address, and got it, with the intimation that there was still
+ some money waiting for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How much?' said Dick, as one who habitually dealt in millions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Between thirty and forty pounds. If it would be any convenience to you,
+ of course we could let you have it at once; but we usually settle accounts
+ monthly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I show that I want anything now, I'm lost,' he said to himself. 'All I
+ need I'll take later on.' Then, aloud, 'It's hardly worth while; and I'm
+ going to the country for a month, too. Wait till I come back, and I'll see
+ about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But we trust, Mr. Heldar, that you do not intend to sever your connection
+ with us?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's business in life was the study of faces, and he watched the speaker
+ keenly. 'That man means something,' he said. 'I'll do no business till
+ I've seen Torpenhow. There's a big deal coming.' So he departed, making no
+ promises, to his one little room by the Docks. And that day was the
+ seventh of the month, and that month, he reckoned with awful distinctness,
+ had thirty-one days in it!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not easy for a man of catholic tastes and healthy appetites to exist
+ for twenty-four days on fifty shillings. Nor is it cheering to begin the
+ experiment alone in all the loneliness of London. Dick paid seven
+ shillings a week for his lodging, which left him rather less than a
+ shilling a day for food and drink. Naturally, his first purchase was of
+ the materials of his craft; he had been without them too long. Half a
+ day's investigations and comparison brought him to the conclusion that
+ sausages and mashed potatoes, twopence a plate, were the best food. Now,
+ sausages once or twice a week for breakfast are not unpleasant. As lunch,
+ even, with mashed potatoes, they become monotonous. At dinner they are
+ impertinent. At the end of three days Dick loathed sausages, and, going
+ forth, pawned his watch to revel on sheep's head, which is not as cheap as
+ it looks, owing to the bones and the gravy. Then he returned to sausages
+ and mashed potatoes. Then he confined himself entirely to mashed potatoes
+ for a day, and was unhappy because of pain in his inside. Then he pawned
+ his waistcoat and his tie, and thought regretfully of money thrown away in
+ times past. There are few things more edifying unto Art than the actual
+ belly-pinch of hunger, and Dick in his few walks abroad,&mdash;he did not
+ care for exercise; it raised desires that could not be satisfied&mdash;found
+ himself dividing mankind into two classes,&mdash;those who looked as if
+ they might give him something to eat, and those who looked otherwise. 'I
+ never knew what I had to learn about the human face before,' he thought;
+ and, as a reward for his humility, Providence caused a cab-driver at a
+ sausage-shop where Dick fed that night to leave half eaten a great chunk
+ of bread. Dick took it,&mdash;would have fought all the world for its
+ possession,&mdash;and it cheered him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The month dragged through at last, and, nearly prancing with impatience,
+ he went to draw his money. Then he hastened to Torpenhow's address and
+ smelt the smell of cooking meats all along the corridors of the chambers.
+ Torpenhow was on the top floor, and Dick burst into his room, to be
+ received with a hug which nearly cracked his ribs, as Torpenhow dragged
+ him to the light and spoke of twenty different things in the same breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But you're looking tucked up,' he concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Got anything to eat?' said Dick, his eye roaming round the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shall be having breakfast in a minute. What do you say to sausages?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, anything but sausages! Torp, I've been starving on that accursed
+ horse-flesh for thirty days and thirty nights.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now, what lunacy has been your latest?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick spoke of the last few weeks with unbridled speech. Then he opened his
+ coat; there was no waistcoat below. 'I ran it fine, awfully fine, but I've
+ just scraped through.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You haven't much sense, but you've got a backbone, anyhow. Eat, and talk
+ afterwards.' Dick fell upon eggs and bacon and gorged till he could gorge
+ no more. Torpenhow handed him a filled pipe, and he smoked as men smoke
+ who for three weeks have been deprived of good tobacco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ouf!' said he. 'That's heavenly! Well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why in the world didn't you come to me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Couldn't; I owe you too much already, old man. Besides I had a sort of
+ superstition that this temporary starvation&mdash;that's what it was, and
+ it hurt&mdash;would bring me luck later. It's over and done with now, and
+ none of the syndicate know how hard up I was. Fire away. What's the exact
+ state of affairs as regards myself?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You had my wire? You've caught on here. People like your work immensely.
+ I don't know why, but they do. They say you have a fresh touch and a new
+ way of drawing things. And, because they're chiefly home-bred English,
+ they say you have insight. You're wanted by half a dozen papers; you're
+ wanted to illustrate books.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick grunted scornfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're wanted to work up your smaller sketches and sell them to the
+ dealers. They seem to think the money sunk in you is a good investment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Good Lord! who can account for the fathomless folly of the public?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They're a remarkably sensible people.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They are subject to fits, if that's what you mean; and you happen to be
+ the object of the latest fit among those who are interested in what they
+ call Art. Just now you're a fashion, a phenomenon, or whatever you please.
+ I appeared to be the only person who knew anything about you here, and I
+ have been showing the most useful men a few of the sketches you gave me
+ from time to time. Those coming after your work on the Central Southern
+ Syndicate appear to have done your business. You're in luck.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Huh! call it luck! Do call it luck, when a man has been kicking about the
+ world like a dog, waiting for it to come! I'll luck 'em later on. I want a
+ place to work first.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come here,' said Torpenhow, crossing the landing. 'This place is a big
+ box room really, but it will do for you. There's your skylight, or your
+ north light, or whatever window you call it, and plenty of room to thrash
+ about in, and a bedroom beyond. What more do you need?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good enough,' said Dick, looking round the large room that took up a
+ third of a top story in the rickety chambers overlooking the Thames. A
+ pale yellow sun shone through the skylight and showed the much dirt of the
+ place. Three steps led from the door to the landing, and three more to
+ Torpenhow's room. The well of the staircase disappeared into darkness,
+ pricked by tiny gas-jets, and there were sounds of men talking and doors
+ slamming seven flights below, in the warm gloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do they give you a free hand here?' said Dick, cautiously. He was Ishmael
+ enough to know the value of liberty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Anything you like; latch-keys and license unlimited. We are permanent
+ tenants for the most part here. 'Tisn't a place I would recommend for a
+ Young Men's Christian Association, but it will serve. I took these rooms
+ for you when I wired.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're a great deal too kind, old man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You didn't suppose you were going away from me, did you?' Torpenhow put
+ his hand on Dick's shoulder, and the two walked up and down the room,
+ henceforward to be called the studio, in sweet and silent communion. They
+ heard rapping at Torpenhow's door. 'That's some ruffian come up for a
+ drink,' said Torpenhow; and he raised his voice cheerily. There entered no
+ one more ruffianly than a portly middle-aged gentleman in a satin-faced
+ frockcoat. His lips were parted and pale, and there were deep pouches
+ under the eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Weak heart,' said Dick to himself, and, as he shook hands, 'very weak
+ heart. His pulse is shaking his fingers.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man introduced himself as the head of the Central Southern Syndicate
+ and 'one of the most ardent admirers of your work, Mr.
+ Heldar. I assure you, in the name of the syndicate, that we are immensely
+ indebted to you; and I trust, Mr. Heldar, you won't forget that we were
+ largely instrumental in bringing you before the public.' He panted because
+ of the seven flights of stairs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick glanced at Torpenhow, whose left eyelid lay for a moment dead on his
+ cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shan't forget,' said Dick, every instinct of defence roused in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've paid me so well that I couldn't, you know. By the way, when I am
+ settled in this place I should like to send and get my sketches. There
+ must be nearly a hundred and fifty of them with you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That is er&mdash;is what I came to speak about. I fear we can't allow it
+ exactly, Mr. Heldar. In the absence of any specified agreement, the
+ sketches are our property, of course.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you mean to say that you are going to keep them?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; and we hope to have your help, on your own terms, Mr. Heldar, to
+ assist us in arranging a little exhibition, which, backed by our name and
+ the influence we naturally command among the press, should be of material
+ service to you. Sketches such as yours&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Belong to me. You engaged me by wire, you paid me the lowest rates you
+ dared. You can't mean to keep them! Good God alive, man, they're all I've
+ got in the world!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow watched Dick's face and whistled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick walked up and down, thinking. He saw the whole of his little stock in
+ trade, the first weapon of his equipment, annexed at the outset of his
+ campaign by an elderly gentleman whose name Dick had not caught aright,
+ who said that he represented a syndicate, which was a thing for which Dick
+ had not the least reverence. The injustice of the proceedings did not much
+ move him; he had seen the strong hand prevail too often in other places to
+ be squeamish over the moral aspects of right and wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he ardently desired the blood of the gentleman in the frockcoat, and
+ when he spoke again, and when he spoke again it was with a strained
+ sweetness that Torpenhow knew well for the beginning of strife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Forgive me, sir, but you have no&mdash;no younger man who can arrange
+ this business with me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I speak for the syndicate. I see no reason for a third party to&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You will in a minute. Be good enough to give back my sketches.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man stared blankly at Dick, and then at Torpenhow, who was leaning
+ against the wall. He was not used to ex-employees who ordered him to be
+ good enough to do things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, it is rather a cold-blooded steal,' said Torpenhow, critically; 'but
+ I'm afraid, I am very much afraid, you've struck the wrong man. Be
+ careful, Dick; remember, this isn't the Soudan.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Considering what services the syndicate have done you in putting your
+ name before the world&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not a fortunate remark; it reminded Dick of certain vagrant years
+ lived out in loneliness and strife and unsatisfied desires. The memory did
+ not contrast well with the prosperous gentleman who proposed to enjoy the
+ fruit of those years.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know quite what to do with you,' began Dick, meditatively. 'Of
+ course you're a thief, and you ought to be half killed, but in your case
+ you'd probably die. I don't want you dead on this floor, and, besides,
+ it's unlucky just as one's moving in. Don't hit, sir; you'll only excite
+ yourself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He put one hand on the man's forearm and ran the other down the plump body
+ beneath the coat. 'My goodness!' said he to Torpenhow, 'and this gray oaf
+ dares to be a thief! I have seen an Esneh camel-driver have the black hide
+ taken off his body in strips for stealing half a pound of wet dates, and
+ he was as tough as whipcord. This things' soft all over&mdash;like a
+ woman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are few things more poignantly humiliating than being handled by a
+ man who does not intend to strike. The head of the syndicate began to
+ breathe heavily. Dick walked round him, pawing him, as a cat paws a soft
+ hearth-rug. Then he traced with his forefinger the leaden pouches
+ underneath the eyes, and shook his head. 'You were going to steal my
+ things,&mdash;mine, mine, mine!&mdash;you, who don't know when you may
+ die.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Write a note to your office,&mdash;you say you're the head of it,&mdash;and
+ order them to give Torpenhow my sketches,&mdash;every one of them. Wait a
+ minute: your hand's shaking. Now!' He thrust a pocket-book before him. The
+ note was written. Torpenhow took it and departed without a word, while
+ Dick walked round and round the spellbound captive, giving him such advice
+ as he conceived best for the welfare of his soul. When Torpenhow returned
+ with a gigantic portfolio, he heard Dick say, almost soothingly, 'Now, I
+ hope this will be a lesson to you; and if you worry me when I have settled
+ down to work with any nonsense about actions for assault, believe me, I'll
+ catch you and manhandle you, and you'll die. You haven't very long to
+ live, anyhow. Go! Imshi, Vootsak,&mdash;get out!' The man departed,
+ staggering and dazed. Dick drew a long breath: 'Phew! what a lawless lot
+ these people are! The first thing a poor orphan meets is gang robbery,
+ organised burglary! Think of the hideous blackness of that man's mind! Are
+ my sketches all right, Torp?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; one hundred and forty-seven of them. Well, I must say, Dick, you've
+ begun well.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He was interfering with me. It only meant a few pounds to him, but it was
+ everything to me. I don't think he'll bring an action. I gave him some
+ medical advice gratis about the state of his body. It was cheap at the
+ little flurry it cost him. Now, let's look at my things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two minutes later Dick had thrown himself down on the floor and was deep
+ in the portfolio, chuckling lovingly as he turned the drawings over and
+ thought of the price at which they had been bought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The afternoon was well advanced when Torpenhow came to the door and saw
+ Dick dancing a wild saraband under the skylight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I builded better than I knew, Torp,' he said, without stopping the dance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They're good! They're damned good! They'll go like flame! I shall have an
+ exhibition of them on my own brazen hook. And that man would have cheated
+ me out of it! Do you know that I'm sorry now that I didn't actually hit
+ him?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go out,' said Torpenhow,&mdash;'go out and pray to be delivered from the
+ sin of arrogance, which you never will be. Bring your things up from
+ whatever place you're staying in, and we'll try to make this barn a little
+ more shipshape.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And then&mdash;oh, then,' said Dick, still capering, 'we will spoil the
+ Egyptians!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The wolf-cub at even lay hid in the corn,
+ When the smoke of the cooking hung gray:
+ He knew where the doe made a couch for her fawn,
+ And he looked to his strength for his prey.
+
+ But the moon swept the smoke-wreaths away.
+
+ And he turned from his meal in the villager's close,
+ And he bayed to the moon as she rose.
+
+ &mdash;In Seonee.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'WELL, and how does success taste?' said Torpenhow, some three months
+ later. He had just returned to chambers after a holiday in the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good,' said Dick, as he sat licking his lips before the easel in the
+ studio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I want more,&mdash;heaps more. The lean years have passed, and I approve
+ of these fat ones.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be careful, old man. That way lies bad work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow was sprawling in a long chair with a small fox-terrier asleep on
+ his chest, while Dick was preparing a canvas. A dais, a background, and a
+ lay-figure were the only fixed objects in the place. They rose from a
+ wreck of oddments that began with felt-covered water-bottles, belts, and
+ regimental badges, and ended with a small bale of second-hand uniforms and
+ a stand of mixed arms. The mark of muddy feet on the dais showed that a
+ military model had just gone away. The watery autumn sunlight was falling,
+ and shadows sat in the corners of the studio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes,' said Dick, deliberately, 'I like the power; I like the fun; I like
+ the fuss; and above all I like the money. I almost like the people who
+ make the fuss and pay the money. Almost. But they're a queer gang,&mdash;an
+ amazingly queer gang!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They have been good enough to you, at any rate. Than tin-pot exhibition
+ of your sketches must have paid. Did you see that the papers called it the
+ "Wild Work Show"?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind. I sold every shred of canvas I wanted to; and, on my word, I
+ believe it was because they believed I was a self-taught flagstone artist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I should have got better prices if I worked my things on wool or scratched
+ them on camel-bone instead of using mere black and white and colour.
+ Verily, they are a queer gang, these people. Limited isn't the word to
+ describe 'em. I met a fellow the other day who told me that it was
+ impossible that shadows on white sand should be blue,&mdash;ultramarine,&mdash;as
+ they are. I found out, later, that the man had been as far as Brighton
+ beach; but he knew all about Art, confound him. He gave me a lecture on
+ it, and recommended me to go to school to learn technique. I wonder what
+ old Kami would have said to that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When were you under Kami, man of extraordinary beginnings?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I studied with him for two years in Paris. He taught by personal
+ magnetism. All he ever said was, "Continuez, mes enfants," and you had to
+ make the best you could of that. He had a divine touch, and he knew
+ something about colour. Kami used to dream colour; I swear he could never
+ have seen the genuine article; but he evolved it; and it was good.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Recollect some of those views in the Soudan?' said Torpenhow, with a
+ provoking drawl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick squirmed in his place. 'Don't! It makes me want to get out there
+ again. What colour that was! Opal and umber and amber and claret and
+ brick-red and sulphur&mdash;cockatoo-crest&mdash;sulphur&mdash;against
+ brown, with a nigger-black rock sticking up in the middle of it all, and a
+ decorative frieze of camels festooning in front of a pure pale turquoise
+ sky.' He began to walk up and down. 'And yet, you know, if you try to give
+ these people the thing as God gave it, keyed down to their comprehension
+ and according to the powers He has given you&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Modest man! Go on.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Half a dozen epicene young pagans who haven't even been to Algiers will
+ tell you, first, that your notion is borrowed, and, secondly, that it
+ isn't Art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ''This comes of my leaving town for a month. Dickie, you've been
+ promenading among the toy-shops and hearing people talk.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I couldn't help it,' said Dick, penitently. 'You weren't here, and it was
+ lonely these long evenings. A man can't work for ever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A man might have gone to a pub, and got decently drunk.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish I had; but I forgathered with some men of sorts. They said they
+ were artists, and I knew some of them could draw,&mdash;but they wouldn't
+ draw. They gave me tea,&mdash;tea at five in the afternoon!&mdash;and
+ talked about Art and the state of their souls. As if their souls mattered.
+ I've heard more about Art and seen less of her in the last six months than
+ in the whole of my life. Do you remember Cassavetti, who worked for some
+ continental syndicate, out with the desert column? He was a regular
+ Christmas-tree of contraptions when he took the field in full fig, with
+ his water-bottle, lanyard, revolver, writing-case, housewife, gig-lamps,
+ and the Lord knows what all. He used to fiddle about with 'em and show us
+ how they worked; but he never seemed to do much except fudge his reports
+ from the Nilghai. See?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dear old Nilghai! He's in town, fatter than ever. He ought to be up here
+ this evening. I see the comparison perfectly. You should have kept clear
+ of all that man-millinery. Serves you right; and I hope it will unsettle
+ your mind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It won't. It has taught me what Art&mdash;holy sacred Art&mdash;means.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've learnt something while I've been away. What is Art?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Give 'em what they know, and when you've done it once do it again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick dragged forward a canvas laid face to the wall. 'Here's a sample of
+ real Art. It's going to be a facsimile reproduction for a weekly. I called
+ it "His Last Shot." It's worked up from the little water-colour I made
+ outside El Maghrib. Well, I lured my model, a beautiful rifleman, up here
+ with drink; I drored him, and I redrored him, and I redrored him, and I
+ made him a flushed, dishevelled, bedevilled scallawag, with his helmet at
+ the back of his head, and the living fear of death in his eye, and the
+ blood oozing out of a cut over his ankle-bone. He wasn't pretty, but he
+ was all soldier and very much man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Once more, modest child!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick laughed. 'Well, it's only to you I'm talking. I did him just as well
+ as I knew how, making allowance for the slickness of oils. Then the
+ art-manager of that abandoned paper said that his subscribers wouldn't
+ like it. It was brutal and coarse and violent,&mdash;man being naturally
+ gentle when he's fighting for his life. They wanted something more
+ restful, with a little more colour. I could have said a good deal, but you
+ might as well talk to a sheep as an art-manager. I took my "Last Shot"
+ back. Behold the result! I put him into a lovely red coat without a speck
+ on it. That is Art. I polished his boots,&mdash;observe the high light on
+ the toe. That is Art. I cleaned his rifle,&mdash;rifles are always clean
+ on service,&mdash;because that is Art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I pipeclayed his helmet,&mdash;pipeclay is always used on active service,
+ and is indispensable to Art. I shaved his chin, I washed his hands, and
+ gave him an air of fatted peace. Result, military tailor's pattern-plate.
+ Price, thank Heaven, twice as much as for the first sketch, which was
+ moderately decent.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And do you suppose you're going to give that thing out as your work?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why not? I did it. Alone I did it, in the interests of sacred, home-bred
+ Art and Dickenson's Weekly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow smoked in silence for a while. Then came the verdict, delivered
+ from rolling clouds: 'If you were only a mass of blathering vanity, Dick,
+ I wouldn't mind,&mdash;I'd let you go to the deuce on your own mahl-stick;
+ but when I consider what you are to me, and when I find that to vanity you
+ add the twopenny-halfpenny pique of a twelve-year-old girl, then I bestir
+ myself in your behalf. Thus!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canvas ripped as Torpenhow's booted foot shot through it, and the
+ terrier jumped down, thinking rats were about.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If you have any bad language to use, use it. You have not. I continue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You are an idiot, because no man born of woman is strong enough to take
+ liberties with his public, even though they be&mdash;which they ain't&mdash;all
+ you say they are.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But they don't know any better. What can you expect from creatures born
+ and bred in this light?' Dick pointed to the yellow fog. 'If they want
+ furniture-polish, let them have furniture-polish, so long as they pay for
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They are only men and women. You talk as if they were gods.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That sounds very fine, but it has nothing to do with the case. They are
+ the people you have to do work for, whether you like it or not. They are
+ your masters. Don't be deceived, Dickie, you aren't strong enough to
+ trifle with them,&mdash;or with yourself, which is more important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover,&mdash;Come back, Binkie: that red daub isn't going anywhere,&mdash;unless
+ you take precious good care, you will fall under the damnation of the
+ check-book, and that's worse than death. You will get drunk&mdash;you're
+ half drunk already&mdash;on easily acquired money. For that money and your
+ own infernal vanity you are willing to deliberately turn out bad work.
+ You'll do quite enough bad work without knowing it. And, Dickie, as I love
+ you and as I know you love me, I am not going to let you cut off your nose
+ to spite your face for all the gold in England. That's settled. Now
+ swear.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't know, said Dick. 'I've been trying to make myself angry, but I
+ can't, you're so abominably reasonable. There will be a row on Dickenson's
+ Weekly, I fancy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why the Dickenson do you want to work on a weekly paper? It's slow
+ bleeding of power.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It brings in the very desirable dollars,' said Dick, his hands in his
+ pockets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow watched him with large contempt. 'Why, I thought it was a man!'
+ said he. 'It's a child.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, it isn't,' said Dick, wheeling quickly. 'You've no notion what the
+ certainty of cash means to a man who has always wanted it badly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing will pay me for some of my life's joys; on that Chinese pig-boat,
+ for instance, when we ate bread and jam for every meal, because Ho-Wang
+ wouldn't allow us anything better, and it all tasted of pig,&mdash;Chinese
+ pig. I've worked for this, I've sweated and I've starved for this, line on
+ line and month after month. And now I've got it I am going to make the
+ most of it while it lasts. Let them pay&mdash;they've no knowledge.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What does Your Majesty please to want? You can't smoke more than you do;
+ you won't drink; you're a gross feeder; and you dress in the dark, by the
+ look of you. You wouldn't keep a horse the other day when I suggested,
+ because, you said, it might fall lame, and whenever you cross the street
+ you take a hansom. Even you are not foolish enough to suppose that
+ theatres and all the live things you can buy thereabouts mean Life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What earthly need have you for money?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's there, bless its golden heart,' said Dick. 'It's there all the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Providence has sent me nuts while I have teeth to crack 'em with. I
+ haven't yet found the nut I wish to crack, but I'm keeping my teeth filed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps some day you and I will go for a walk round the wide earth.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'With no work to do, nobody to worry us, and nobody to compete with? You
+ would be unfit to speak to in a week. Besides, I shouldn't go. I don't
+ care to profit by the price of a man's soul,&mdash;for that's what it
+ would mean.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick, it's no use arguing. You're a fool.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't see it. When I was on that Chinese pig-boat, our captain got credit
+ for saving about twenty-five thousand very seasick little pigs, when our
+ old tramp of a steamer fell foul of a timber-junk. Now, taking those pigs
+ as a parallel&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, confound your parallels! Whenever I try to improve your soul, you
+ always drag in some anecdote from your very shady past. Pigs aren't the
+ British public; and self-respect is self-respect the world over. Go out
+ for a walk and try to catch some self-respect. And, I say, if the Nilghai
+ comes up this evening can I show him your diggings?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Surely. You'll be asking whether you must knock at my door, next.'
+And Dick departed, to take counsel with himself in the rapidly
+ gathering London fog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half an hour after he had left, the Nilghai laboured up the staircase. He
+ was the chiefest, as he was the youngest, of the war correspondents, and
+ his experiences dated from the birth of the needle-gun. Saving only his
+ ally, Keneu the Great War Eagle, there was no man higher in the craft than
+ he, and he always opened his conversation with the news that there would
+ be trouble in the Balkans in the spring. Torpenhow laughed as he entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind the trouble in the Balkans. Those little states are always
+ screeching. You've heard about Dick's luck?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; he has been called up to notoriety, hasn't he? I hope you keep him
+ properly humble. He wants suppressing from time to time.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He does. He's beginning to take liberties with what he thinks is his
+ reputation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Already! By Jove, he has cheek! I don't know about his reputation, but
+ he'll come a cropper if he tries that sort of thing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So I told him. I don't think he believes it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They never do when they first start off. What's that wreck on the ground
+ there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Specimen of his latest impertinence.' Torpenhow thrust the torn edges of
+ the canvas together and showed the well-groomed picture to the Nilghai,
+ who looked at it for a moment and whistled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's a chromo,' said he,&mdash;'a chromo-litholeomargarine fake! What
+ possessed him to do it? And yet how thoroughly he has caught the note that
+ catches a public who think with their boots and read with their elbows!
+ The cold-blooded insolence of the work almost saves it; but he mustn't go
+ on with this. Hasn't he been praised and cockered up too much? You know
+ these people here have no sense of proportion. They'll call him a second
+ Detaille and a third-hand Meissonier while his fashion lasts. It's windy
+ diet for a colt.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't think it affects Dick much. You might as well call a young wolf a
+ lion and expect him to take the compliment in exchange for a shin-bone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's soul is in the bank. He's working for cash.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now he has thrown up war work, I suppose he doesn't see that the
+ obligations of the service are just the same, only the proprietors are
+ changed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How should he know? He thinks he is his own master.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Does he? I could undeceive him for his good, if there's any virtue in
+ print. He wants the whiplash.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lay it on with science, then. I'd flay him myself, but I like him too
+ much.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've no scruples. He had the audacity to try to cut me out with a woman
+ at Cairo once. I forgot that, but I remember now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did he cut you out?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll see when I have dealt with him. But, after all, what's the good?
+ Leave him alone and he'll come home, if he has any stuff in him, dragging
+ or wagging his tail behind him. There's more in a week of life than in a
+ lively weekly. None the less I'll slate him. I'll slate him ponderously in
+ the Cataclysm.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good luck to you; but I fancy nothing short of a crowbar would make Dick
+ wince. His soul seems to have been fired before we came across him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He's intensely suspicious and utterly lawless.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Matter of temper,' said the Nilghai. 'It's the same with horses. Some you
+ wallop and they work, some you wallop and they jib, and some you wallop
+ and they go out for a walk with their hands in their pockets.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's exactly what Dick has done,' said Torpenhow. 'Wait till he comes
+ back. In the meantime, you can begin your slating here. I'll show you some
+ of his last and worst work in his studio.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick had instinctively sought running water for a comfort to his mood of
+ mind. He was leaning over the Embankment wall, watching the rush of the
+ Thames through the arches of Westminster Bridge. He began by thinking of
+ Torpenhow's advice, but, as of custom, lost himself in the study of the
+ faces flocking past. Some had death written on their features, and Dick
+ marvelled that they could laugh. Others, clumsy and coarse-built for the
+ most part, were alight with love; others were merely drawn and lined with
+ work; but there was something, Dick knew, to be made out of them all. The
+ poor at least should suffer that he might learn, and the rich should pay
+ for the output of his learning. Thus his credit in the world and his cash
+ balance at the bank would be increased. So much the better for him. He had
+ suffered. Now he would take toll of the ills of others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fog was driven apart for a moment, and the sun shone, a blood-red
+ wafer, on the water. Dick watched the spot till he heard the voice of the
+ tide between the piers die down like the wash of the sea at low tide. A
+ girl hard pressed by her lover shouted shamelessly, 'Ah, get away, you
+ beast!' and a shift of the same wind that had opened the fog drove across
+ Dick's face the black smoke of a river-steamer at her berth below the
+ wall. He was blinded for the moment, then spun round and found himself
+ face to face with&mdash;Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no mistaking. The years had turned the child to a woman, but
+ they had not altered the dark-gray eyes, the thin scarlet lips, or the
+ firmly modelled mouth and chin; and, that all should be as it was of old,
+ she wore a closely fitting gray dress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the human soul is finite and not in the least under its own command,
+ Dick, advancing, said 'Halloo!' after the manner of schoolboys, and Maisie
+ answered, 'Oh, Dick, is that you?' Then, against his will, and before the
+ brain newly released from considerations of the cash balance had time to
+ dictate to the nerves, every pulse of Dick's body throbbed furiously and
+ his palate dried in his mouth. The fog shut down again, and Maisie's face
+ was pearl-white through it. No word was spoken, but Dick fell into step at
+ her side, and the two paced the Embankment together, keeping the step as
+ perfectly as in their afternoon excursions to the mud-flats. Then Dick, a
+ little hoarsely&mdash;'What has happened to Amomma?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He died, Dick. Not cartridges; over-eating. He was always greedy. Isn't
+ it funny?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. No. Do you mean Amomma?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ye&mdash;es. No. This. Where have you come from?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Over there,' He pointed eastward through the fog. 'And you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, I'm in the north,&mdash;the black north, across all the Park. I am
+ very busy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What do you do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I paint a great deal. That's all I have to do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why, what's happened? You had three hundred a year.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have that still. I am painting; that's all.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Are you alone, then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's a girl living with me. Don't walk so fast, Dick; you're out of
+ step.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then you noticed it too?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course I did. You're always out of step.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So I am. I'm sorry. You went on with the painting?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course. I said I should. I was at the Slade, then at Merton's in St.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ John's Wood, the big studio, then I pepper-potted,&mdash;I mean I went to
+ the National,&mdash;and now I'm working under Kami.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But Kami is in Paris surely?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No; he has his teaching studio in Vitry-sur-Marne. I work with him in the
+ summer, and I live in London in the winter. I'm a householder.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you sell much?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now and again, but not often. There is my 'bus. I must take it or lose
+ half an hour. Good-bye, Dick.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good-bye, Maisie. Won't you tell me where you live? I must see you again;
+ and perhaps I could help you. I&mdash;I paint a little myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I may be in the Park to-morrow, if there is no working light. I walk from
+ the Marble Arch down and back again; that is my little excursion. But of
+ course I shall see you again.' She stepped into the omnibus and was
+ swallowed up by the fog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well&mdash;I&mdash;am&mdash;damned!' exclaimed Dick, and returned to the
+ chambers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow and the Nilghai found him sitting on the steps to the studio
+ door, repeating the phrase with an awful gravity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll be more damned when I'm done with you,' said the Nilghai,
+ upheaving his bulk from behind Torpenhow's shoulder and waving a sheaf of
+ half-dry manuscript. 'Dick, it is of common report that you are suffering
+ from swelled head.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Halloo, Nilghai. Back again? How are the Balkans and all the little
+ Balkans? One side of your face is out of drawing, as usual.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind that. I am commissioned to smite you in print. Torpenhow
+ refuses from false delicacy. I've been overhauling the pot-boilers in your
+ studio. They are simply disgraceful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oho! that's it, is it? If you think you can slate me, you're wrong. You
+ can only describe, and you need as much room to turn in, on paper, as a P.
+ and O. cargo-boat. But continue, and be swift. I'm going to bed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'H'm! h'm! h'm! The first part only deals with your pictures. Here's the
+ peroration: "For work done without conviction, for power wasted on
+ trivialities, for labour expended with levity for the deliberate purpose
+ of winning the easy applause of a fashion-driven public&mdash;&mdash;"
+ 'That's "His Last Shot," second edition. Go on.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '&mdash;&mdash;"public, there remains but one end,&mdash;the oblivion that
+ is preceded by toleration and cenotaphed with contempt. From that fate Mr.
+ Heldar has yet to prove himself out of danger.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wow&mdash;wow&mdash;wow&mdash;wow&mdash;wow!' said Dick, profanely. 'It's
+ a clumsy ending and vile journalese, but it's quite true. And yet,'&mdash;he
+ sprang to his feet and snatched at the manuscript,&mdash;'you scarred,
+ deboshed, battered old gladiator! you're sent out when a war begins, to
+ minister to the blind, brutal, British public's bestial thirst for blood.
+ They have no arenas now, but they must have special correspondents. You're
+ a fat gladiator who comes up through a trap-door and talks of what he's
+ seen. You stand on precisely the same level as an energetic bishop, an
+ affable actress, a devastating cyclone, or&mdash;mine own sweet self. And
+ you presume to lecture me about my work! Nilghai, if it were worth while
+ I'd caricature you in four papers!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai winced. He had not thought of this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As it is, I shall take this stuff and tear it small&mdash;so!' The
+ manuscript fluttered in slips down the dark well of the staircase. 'Go
+ home, Nilghai,' said Dick; 'go home to your lonely little bed, and leave
+ me in peace. I am about to turn in till to-morrow.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why, it isn't seven yet!' said Torpenhow, with amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It shall be two in the morning, if I choose,' said Dick, backing to the
+ studio door. 'I go to grapple with a serious crisis, and I shan't want any
+ dinner.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door shut and was locked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What can you do with a man like that?' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Leave him alone. He's as mad as a hatter.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At eleven there was a kicking on the studio door. 'Is the Nilghai with you
+ still?' said a voice from within. 'Then tell him he might have condensed
+ the whole of his lumbering nonsense into an epigram: "Only the free are
+ bond, and only the bond are free." Tell him he's an idiot, Torp, and tell
+ him I'm another.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All right. Come out and have supper. You're smoking on an empty stomach.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'I have a thousand men,' said he,
+ 'To wait upon my will,
+ And towers nine upon the Tyne,
+ And three upon the Till.'
+
+ 'And what care I for you men,' said she,
+ 'Or towers from Tyne to Till,
+ Sith you must go with me,' she said,
+ 'To wait upon my will?'
+
+ Sir Hoggie and the Fairies
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ NEXT morning Torpenhow found Dick sunk in deepest repose of tobacco.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well, madman, how d'you feel?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know. I'm trying to find out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You had much better do some work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maybe; but I'm in no hurry. I've made a discovery. Torp, there's too much
+ Ego in my Cosmos.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not really! Is this revelation due to my lectures, or the Nilghai's?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It came to me suddenly, all on my own account. Much too much Ego; and now
+ I'm going to work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned over a few half-finished sketches, drummed on a new canvas,
+ cleaned three brushes, set Binkie to bite the toes of the lay figure,
+ rattled through his collection of arms and accoutrements, and then went
+ out abruptly, declaring that he had done enough for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This is positively indecent,' said Torpenhow, 'and the first time that
+ Dick has ever broken up a light morning. Perhaps he has found out that he
+ has a soul, or an artistic temperament, or something equally valuable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That comes of leaving him alone for a month. Perhaps he has been going out
+ of evenings. I must look to this.' He rang for the bald-headed old
+ housekeeper, whom nothing could astonish or annoy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Beeton, did Mr. Heldar dine out at all while I was out of town?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never laid 'is dress-clothes out once, sir, all the time. Mostly 'e dined
+ in; but 'e brought some most remarkable young gentlemen up 'ere after
+ theatres once or twice. Remarkable fancy they was. You gentlemen on the
+ top floor does very much as you likes, but it do seem to me, sir, droppin'
+ a walkin'-stick down five flights o' stairs an' then goin' down four
+ abreast to pick it up again at half-past two in the mornin', singin,'
+ "Bring back the whiskey, Willie darlin,'"&mdash;not once or twice, but
+ scores o' times,&mdash;isn't charity to the other tenants. What I say is,
+ "Do as you would be done by." That's my motto.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course! of course! I'm afraid the top floor isn't the quietest in the
+ house.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I make no complaints, sir. I have spoke to Mr. Heldar friendly, an' he
+ laughed, an' did me a picture of the missis that is as good as a coloured
+ print. It 'asn't the high shine of a photograph, but what I say is, "Never
+ look a gift-horse in the mouth." Mr. Heldar's dress-clothes 'aven't been
+ on him for weeks.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then it's all right,' said Torpenhow to himself. 'Orgies are healthy, and
+ Dick has a head of his own, but when it comes to women making eyes I'm not
+ so certain,&mdash;Binkie, never you be a man, little dorglums. They're
+ contrary brutes, and they do things without any reason.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick had turned northward across the Park, but he was walking in the
+ spirit on the mud-flats with Maisie. He laughed aloud as he remembered the
+ day when he had decked Amomma's horns with the ham-frills, and Maisie,
+ white with rage, had cuffed him. How long those four years seemed in
+ review, and how closely Maisie was connected with every hour of them!
+ Storm across the sea, and Maisie in a gray dress on the beach, sweeping
+ her drenched hair out of her eyes and laughing at the homeward race of the
+ fishing-smacks; hot sunshine on the mud-flats, and Maisie sniffing
+ scornfully, with her chin in the air; Maisie flying before the wind that
+ threshed the foreshore and drove the sand like small shot about her ears;
+ Maisie, very composed and independent, telling lies to Mrs. Jennett while
+ Dick supported her with coarser perjuries; Maisie picking her way
+ delicately from stone to stone, a pistol in her hand and her teeth
+ firm-set; and Maisie in a gray dress sitting on the grass between the
+ mouth of a cannon and a nodding yellow sea-poppy. The pictures passed
+ before him one by one, and the last stayed the longest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was perfectly happy with a quiet peace that was as new to his mind as
+ it was foreign to his experiences. It never occurred to him that there
+ might be other calls upon his time than loafing across the Park in the
+ forenoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's a good working light now,' he said, watching his shadow placidly.
+ 'Some poor devil ought to be grateful for this. And there's Maisie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was walking towards him from the Marble Arch, and he saw that no
+ mannerism of her gait had been changed. It was good to find her still
+ Maisie, and, so to speak, his next-door neighbour. No greeting passed
+ between them, because there had been none in the old days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are you doing out of your studio at this hour?' said Dick, as one
+ who was entitled to ask.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Idling. Just idling. I got angry with a chin and scraped it out. Then I
+ left it in a little heap of paint-chips and came away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know what palette-knifing means. What was the piccy?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A fancy head that wouldn't come right,&mdash;horrid thing!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't like working over scraped paint when I'm doing flesh. The grain
+ comes up woolly as the paint dries.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not if you scrape properly.' Maisie waved her hand to illustrate her
+ methods. There was a dab of paint on the white cuff. Dick laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're as untidy as ever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That comes well from you. Look at your own cuff.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By Jove, yes! It's worse than yours. I don't think we've much altered in
+ anything. Let's see, though.' He looked at Maisie critically. The pale
+ blue haze of an autumn day crept between the tree-trunks of the Park and
+ made a background for the gray dress, the black velvet toque above the
+ black hair, and the resolute profile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, there's nothing changed. How good it is! D'you remember when I
+ fastened your hair into the snap of a hand-bag?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie nodded, with a twinkle in her eyes, and turned her full face to
+ Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait a minute,' said he. 'That mouth is down at the corners a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who's been worrying you, Maisie?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No one but myself. I never seem to get on with my work, and yet I try
+ hard enough, and Kami says&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Continuez, mesdemoiselles. Continuez toujours, mes enfants." Kami is
+ depressing. I beg your pardon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, that's what he says. He told me last summer that I was doing better
+ and he'd let me exhibit this year.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not in this place, surely?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course not. The Salon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You fly high.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've been beating my wings long enough. Where do you exhibit, Dick?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't exhibit. I sell.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What is your line, then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Haven't you heard?' Dick's eyes opened. Was this thing possible? He cast
+ about for some means of conviction. They were not far from the Marble
+ Arch. 'Come up Oxford Street a little and I'll show you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A small knot of people stood round a print-shop that Dick knew well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Some reproduction of my work inside,' he said, with suppressed triumph.
+ Never before had success tasted so sweet upon the tongue. 'You see the
+ sort of things I paint. D'you like it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked at the wild whirling rush of a field-battery going into
+ action under fire. Two artillery-men stood behind her in the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They've chucked the off lead-'orse' said one to the other. ''E's tore up
+ awful, but they're makin' good time with the others. That lead-driver
+ drives better nor you, Tom. See 'ow cunnin' 'e's nursin' 'is 'orse.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Number Three'll be off the limber, next jolt,' was the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, 'e won't. See 'ow 'is foot's braced against the iron? 'E's all
+ right.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick watched Maisie's face and swelled with joy&mdash;fine, rank, vulgar
+ triumph. She was more interested in the little crowd than in the picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That was something that she could understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And I wanted it so! Oh, I did want it so!' she said at last, under her
+ breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Me,&mdash;all me!' said Dick, placidly. 'Look at their faces. It hits
+ 'em. They don't know what makes their eyes and mouths open; but I know.
+ And I know my work's right.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. I see. Oh, what a thing to have come to one!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come to one, indeed! I had to go out and look for it. What do you think?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I call it success. Tell me how you got it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They returned to the Park, and Dick delivered himself of the saga of his
+ own doings, with all the arrogance of a young man speaking to a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the beginning he told the tale, the I&mdash;I&mdash;I's flashing
+ through the records as telegraph-poles fly past the traveller. Maisie
+ listened and nodded her head. The histories of strife and privation did
+ not move her a hair's-breadth. At the end of each canto he would conclude,
+ 'And that gave me some notion of handling colour,' or light, or whatever
+ it might be that he had set out to pursue and understand. He led her
+ breathless across half the world, speaking as he had never spoken in his
+ life before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in the flood-tide of his exaltation there came upon him a great desire
+ to pick up this maiden who nodded her head and said, 'I understand. Go
+ on,'&mdash;to pick her up and carry her away with him, because she was
+ Maisie, and because she understood, and because she was his right, and a
+ woman to be desired above all women.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he checked himself abruptly. 'And so I took all I wanted,' he said,
+ 'and I had to fight for it. Now you tell.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie's tale was almost as gray as her dress. It covered years of patient
+ toil backed by savage pride that would not be broken thought dealers
+ laughed, and fogs delayed work, and Kami was unkind and even sarcastic,
+ and girls in other studios were painfully polite. It had a few bright
+ spots, in pictures accepted at provincial exhibitions, but it wound up
+ with the oft repeated wail, 'And so you see, Dick, I had no success,
+ though I worked so hard.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then pity filled Dick. Even thus had Maisie spoken when she could not hit
+ the breakwater, half an hour before she had kissed him. And that had
+ happened yesterday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind,' he said. 'I'll tell you something, if you'll believe it.'
+ The words were shaping themselves of their own accord. 'The whole thing,
+ lock, stock, and barrel, isn't worth one big yellow sea-poppy below Fort
+ Keeling.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie flushed a little. 'It's all very well for you to talk, but you've
+ had the success and I haven't.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let me talk, then. I know you'll understand. Maisie, dear, it sounds a
+ bit absurd, but those ten years never existed, and I've come back again.
+ It really is just the same. Can't you see? You're alone now and I'm alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What's the use of worrying? Come to me instead, darling.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie poked the gravel with her parasol. They were sitting on a bench.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I understand,' she said slowly. 'But I've got my work to do, and I must
+ do it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do it with me, then, dear. I won't interrupt.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, I couldn't. It's my work,&mdash;mine,&mdash;mine,&mdash;mine! I've
+ been alone all my life in myself, and I'm not going to belong to anybody
+ except myself. I remember things as well as you do, but that doesn't
+ count. We were babies then, and we didn't know what was before us. Dick,
+ don't be selfish. I think I see my way to a little success next year.
+ Don't take it away from me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I beg your pardon, darling. It's my fault for speaking stupidly. I can't
+ expect you to throw up all your life just because I'm back. I'll go to my
+ own place and wait a little.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But, Dick, I don't want you to&mdash;go&mdash;out of&mdash;my life, now
+ you've just come back.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm at your orders; forgive me.' Dick devoured the troubled little face
+ with his eyes. There was triumph in them, because he could not conceive
+ that Maisie should refuse sooner or later to love him, since he loved her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's wrong of me,' said Maisie, more slowly than before; 'it's wrong and
+ selfish; but, oh, I've been so lonely! No, you misunderstand. Now I've
+ seen you again,&mdash;it's absurd, but I want to keep you in my life.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Naturally. We belong.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We don't; but you always understood me, and there is so much in my work
+ that you could help me in. You know things and the ways of doing things.
+ You must.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I do, I fancy, or else I don't know myself. Then you won't care to lose
+ sight of me altogether, and&mdash;you want me to help you in your work?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; but remember, Dick, nothing will ever come of it. That's why I feel
+ so selfish. Can't things stay as they are? I do want your help.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You shall have it. But let's consider. I must see your pics first, and
+ overhaul your sketches, and find out about your tendencies. You should see
+ what the papers say about my tendencies! Then I'll give you good advice,
+ and you shall paint according. Isn't that it, Maisie?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again there was triumph in Dick's eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's too good of you,&mdash;much too good. Because you are consoling
+ yourself with what will never happen, and I know that, and yet I want to
+ keep you. Don't blame me later, please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm going into the matter with my eyes open. Moreover the Queen can do no
+ wrong. It isn't your selfishness that impresses me. It's your audacity in
+ proposing to make use of me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Pooh! You're only Dick,&mdash;and a print-shop.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very good: that's all I am. But, Maisie, you believe, don't you, that I
+ love you? I don't want you to have any false notions about brothers and
+ sisters.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked up for a moment and dropped her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's absurd, but&mdash;I believe. I wish I could send you away before you
+ get angry with me. But&mdash;but the girl that lives with me is
+ red-haired, and an impressionist, and all our notions clash.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So do ours, I think. Never mind. Three months from to-day we shall be
+ laughing at this together.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie shook her head mournfully. 'I knew you wouldn't understand, and it
+ will only hurt you more when you find out. Look at my face, Dick, and tell
+ me what you see.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They stood up and faced each other for a moment. The fog was gathering,
+ and it stifled the roar of the traffic of London beyond the railings. Dick
+ brought all his painfully acquired knowledge of faces to bear on the eyes,
+ mouth, and chin underneath the black velvet toque.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's the same Maisie, and it's the same me,' he said. 'We've both nice
+ little wills of our own, and one or other of us has to be broken. Now
+ about the future. I must come and see your pictures some day,&mdash;I
+ suppose when the red-haired girl is on the premises.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sundays are my best times. You must come on Sundays. There are such heaps
+ of things I want to talk about and ask your advice about. Now I must get
+ back to work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Try to find out before next Sunday what I am,' said Dick. 'Don't take my
+ word for anything I've told you. Good-bye, darling, and bless you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie stole away like a little gray mouse. Dick watched her till she was
+ out of sight, but he did not hear her say to herself, very soberly, 'I'm a
+ wretch,&mdash;a horrid, selfish wretch. But it's Dick, and Dick will
+ understand.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one has yet explained what actually happens when an irresistible force
+ meets the immovable post, though many have thought deeply, even as Dick
+ thought. He tried to assure himself that Maisie would be led in a few
+ weeks by his mere presence and discourse to a better way of thinking. Then
+ he remembered much too distinctly her face and all that was written on it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I know anything of heads,' he said, 'there's everything in that face
+ but love. I shall have to put that in myself; and that chin and mouth
+ won't be won for nothing. But she's right. She knows what she wants, and
+ she's going to get it. What insolence! Me! Of all the people in the wide
+ world, to use me! But then she's Maisie. There's no getting over that
+ fact; and it's good to see her again. This business must have been
+ simmering at the back of my head for years.... She'll use me as I used
+ Binat at Port Said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She's quite right. It will hurt a little. I shall have to see her every
+ Sunday,&mdash;like a young man courting a housemaid. She's sure to come
+ around; and yet&mdash;that mouth isn't a yielding mouth. I shall be
+ wanting to kiss her all the time, and I shall have to look at her
+ pictures,&mdash;I don't even know what sort of work she does yet,&mdash;and
+ I shall have to talk about Art,&mdash;Woman's Art! Therefore, particularly
+ and perpetually, damn all varieties of Art. It did me a good turn once,
+ and now it's in my way. I'll go home and do some Art.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Half-way to the studio, Dick was smitten with a terrible thought. The
+ figure of a solitary woman in the fog suggested it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She's all alone in London, with a red-haired impressionist girl, who
+ probably has the digestion of an ostrich. Most red-haired people have.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie's a bilious little body. They'll eat like lone women,&mdash;meals
+ at all hours, and tea with all meals. I remember how the students in Paris
+ used to pig along. She may fall ill at any minute, and I shan't be able to
+ help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whew! this is ten times worse than owning a wife.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow entered the studio at dusk, and looked at Dick with eyes full of
+ the austere love that springs up between men who have tugged at the same
+ oar together and are yoked by custom and use and the intimacies of toil.
+ This is a good love, and, since it allows, and even encourages, strife,
+ recrimination, and brutal sincerity, does not die, but grows, and is proof
+ against any absence and evil conduct.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was silent after he handed Torpenhow the filled pipe of council. He
+ thought of Maisie and her possible needs. It was a new thing to think of
+ anybody but Torpenhow, who could think for himself. Here at last was an
+ outlet for that cash balance. He could adorn Maisie barbarically with
+ jewelry,&mdash;a thick gold necklace round that little neck, bracelets
+ upon the rounded arms, and rings of price upon her hands,&mdash;the cool,
+ temperate, ringless hands that he had taken between his own. It was an
+ absurd thought, for Maisie would not even allow him to put one ring on one
+ finger, and she would laugh at golden trappings. It would be better to sit
+ with her quietly in the dusk, his arm around her neck and her face on his
+ shoulder, as befitted husband and wife. Torpenhow's boots creaked that
+ night, and his strong voice jarred. Dick's brows contracted and he
+ murmured an evil word because he had taken all his success as a right and
+ part payment for past discomfort, and now he was checked in his stride by
+ a woman who admitted all the success and did not instantly care for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I say, old man,' said Torpenhow, who had made one or two vain attempts at
+ conversation, 'I haven't put your back up by anything I've said lately,
+ have I?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You! No. How could you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Liver out of order?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a liver. I'm only a bit worried
+ about things in general. I suppose it's my soul.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a soul. What business have you
+ with luxuries of that kind?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It came of itself. Who's the man that says that we're all islands
+ shouting lies to each other across seas of misunderstanding?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's right, whoever he is,&mdash;except about the misunderstanding. I
+ don't think we could misunderstand each other.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blue smoke curled back from the ceiling in clouds. Then Torpenhow,
+ insinuatingly&mdash;'Dick, is it a woman?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be hanged if it's anything remotely resembling a woman; and if you begin
+ to talk like that, I'll hire a red-brick studio with white paint
+ trimmings, and begonias and petunias and blue Hungarias to play among
+ three-and-sixpenny pot-palms, and I'll mount all my pics in aniline-dye
+ plush plasters, and I'll invite every woman who maunders over what her
+ guide-books tell her is Art, and you shall receive 'em, Torp,&mdash;in a
+ snuff-brown velvet coat with yellow trousers and an orange tie. You'll
+ like that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Too thin, Dick. A better man than you once denied with cursing and
+ swearing. You've overdone it, just as he did. It's no business of mine, of
+ course, but it's comforting to think that somewhere under the stars
+ there's saving up for you a tremendous thrashing. Whether it'll come from
+ heaven or earth, I don't know, but it's bound to come and break you up a
+ little. You want hammering.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick shivered. 'All right,' said he. 'When this island is disintegrated,
+ it will call for you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shall come round the corner and help to disintegrate it some more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We're talking nonsense. Come along to a theatre.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'And you may lead a thousand men,
+ Nor ever draw the rein,
+ But ere ye lead the Faery Queen
+ 'Twill burst your heart in twain.'
+
+ He has slipped his foot from the stirrup-bar,
+ The bridle from his hand,
+ And he is bound by hand and foot
+ To the Queen o' Faery-land.
+
+ Sir Hoggie and the Fairies.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ SOME weeks later, on a very foggy Sunday, Dick was returning across the
+ Park to his studio. 'This,' he said, 'is evidently the thrashing that Torp
+ meant. It hurts more than I expected; but the Queen can do no wrong; and
+ she certainly has some notion of drawing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had just finished a Sunday visit to Maisie,&mdash;always under the
+ green eyes of the red-haired impressionist girl, whom he learned to hate
+ at sight,&mdash;and was tingling with a keen sense of shame. Sunday after
+ Sunday, putting on his best clothes, he had walked over to the untidy
+ house north of the Park, first to see Maisie's pictures, and then to
+ criticise and advise upon them as he realised that they were productions
+ on which advice would not be wasted. Sunday after Sunday, and his love
+ grew with each visit, he had been compelled to cram his heart back from
+ between his lips when it prompted him to kiss Maisie several times and
+ very much indeed. Sunday after Sunday, the head above the heart had warned
+ him that Maisie was not yet attainable, and that it would be better to
+ talk as connectedly as possible upon the mysteries of the craft that was
+ all in all to her. Therefore it was his fate to endure weekly torture in
+ the studio built out over the clammy back garden of a frail stuffy little
+ villa where nothing was ever in its right place and nobody every called,&mdash;to
+ endure and to watch Maisie moving to and fro with the teacups. He abhorred
+ tea, but, since it gave him a little longer time in her presence, he drank
+ it devoutly, and the red-haired girl sat in an untidy heap and eyed him
+ without speaking. She was always watching him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once, and only once, when she had left the studio, Maisie showed him an
+ album that held a few poor cuttings from provincial papers,&mdash;the
+ briefest of hurried notes on some of her pictures sent to outlying
+ exhibitions. Dick stooped and kissed the paint-smudged thumb on the open
+ page. 'Oh, my love, my love,' he muttered, 'do you value these things?
+ Chuck 'em into the waste-paper basket!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not till I get something better,' said Maisie, shutting the book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Dick, moved by no respect for his public and a very deep regard for
+ the maiden, did deliberately propose, in order to secure more of these
+ coveted cuttings, that he should paint a picture which Maisie should sign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's childish,' said Maisie, 'and I didn't think it of you. It must be
+ my work. Mine,&mdash;mine,&mdash;mine!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go and design decorative medallions for rich brewers' houses. You are
+ thoroughly good at that.' Dick was sick and savage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Better things than medallions, Dick,' was the answer, in tones that
+ recalled a gray-eyed atom's fearless speech to Mrs. Jennett. Dick would
+ have abased himself utterly, but that other girl trailed in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next Sunday he laid at Maisie's feet small gifts of pencils that could
+ almost draw of themselves and colours in whose permanence he believed, and
+ he was ostentatiously attentive to the work in hand. It demanded, among
+ other things, an exposition of the faith that was in him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow's hair would have stood on end had he heard the fluency with
+ which Dick preached his own gospel of Art.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A month before, Dick would have been equally astonished; but it was
+ Maisie's will and pleasure, and he dragged his words together to make
+ plain to her comprehension all that had been hidden to himself of the whys
+ and wherefores of work. There is not the least difficulty in doing a thing
+ if you only know how to do it; the trouble is to explain your method.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I could put this right if I had a brush in my hand,' said Dick,
+ despairingly, over the modelling of a chin that Maisie complained would
+ not 'look flesh,'&mdash;it was the same chin that she had scraped out with
+ the palette knife,&mdash;'but I find it almost impossible to teach you.
+ There's a queer grim, Dutch touch about your painting that I like; but
+ I've a notion that you're weak in drawing. You foreshorten as though you
+ never used the model, and you've caught Kami's pasty way of dealing with
+ flesh in shadow. Then, again, though you don't know it yourself, you shirk
+ hard work. Suppose you spend some of your time on line alone. Line doesn't
+ allow of shirking. Oils do, and three square inches of flashy, tricky
+ stuff in the corner of a pic sometimes carry a bad thing off,&mdash;as I
+ know. That's immoral. Do line-work for a little while, and then I can tell
+ more about your powers, as old Kami used to say.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie protested; she did not care for the pure line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know,' said Dick. 'You want to do your fancy heads with a bunch of
+ flowers at the base of the neck to hide bad modelling.' The red-haired
+ girl laughed a little. 'You want to do landscapes with cattle knee-deep in
+ grass to hide bad drawing. You want to do a great deal more than you can
+ do. You have sense of colour, but you want form. Colour's a gift,&mdash;put
+ it aside and think no more about it,&mdash;but form you can be drilled
+ into.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, all your fancy heads&mdash;and some of them are very good&mdash;will
+ keep you exactly where you are. With line you must go forward or backward,
+ and it will show up all your weaknesses.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But other people&mdash;&mdash;' began Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You mustn't mind what other people do. If their souls were your soul, it
+ would be different. You stand and fall by your own work, remember, and
+ it's waste of time to think of any one else in this battle.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick paused, and the longing that had been so resolutely put away came
+ back into his eyes. He looked at Maisie, and the look asked as plainly as
+ words, Was it not time to leave all this barren wilderness of canvas and
+ counsel and join hands with Life and Love?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie assented to the new programme of schooling so adorably that Dick
+ could hardly restrain himself from picking her up then and there and
+ carrying her off to the nearest registrar's office. It was the implicit
+ obedience to the spoken word and the blank indifference to the unspoken
+ desire that baffled and buffeted his soul. He held authority in that
+ house,&mdash;authority limited, indeed, to one-half of one afternoon in
+ seven, but very real while it lasted. Maisie had learned to appeal to him
+ on many subjects, from the proper packing of pictures to the condition of
+ a smoky chimney. The red-haired girl never consulted him about anything.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the other hand, she accepted his appearances without protest, and
+ watched him always. He discovered that the meals of the establishment were
+ irregular and fragmentary. They depended chiefly on tea, pickles, and
+ biscuit, as he had suspected from the beginning. The girls were supposed
+ to market week and week about, but they lived, with the help of a
+ charwoman, as casually as the young ravens. Maisie spent most of her
+ income on models, and the other girl revelled in apparatus as refined as
+ her work was rough. Armed with knowledge, dear-bought from the Docks, Dick
+ warned Maisie that the end of semi-starvation meant the crippling of power
+ to work, which was considerably worse than death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie took the warning, and gave more thought to what she ate and drank.
+ When his trouble returned upon him, as it generally did in the long winter
+ twilights, the remembrance of that little act of domestic authority and
+ his coercion with a hearth-brush of the smoky drawing-room chimney stung
+ Dick like a whip-lash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He conceived that this memory would be the extreme of his sufferings, till
+ one Sunday, the red-haired girl announced that she would make a study of
+ Dick's head, and that he would be good enough to sit still, and&mdash;quite
+ as an afterthought&mdash;look at Maisie. He sat, because he could not well
+ refuse, and for the space of half an hour he reflected on all the people
+ in the past whom he had laid open for the purposes of his own craft. He
+ remembered Binat most distinctly,&mdash;that Binat who had once been an
+ artist and talked about degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the merest monochrome roughing in of a head, but it presented the
+ dumb waiting, the longing, and, above all, the hopeless enslavement of the
+ man, in a spirit of bitter mockery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll buy it,' said Dick, promptly, 'at your own price.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My price is too high, but I dare say you'll be as grateful if&mdash;&mdash;'
+ The wet sketch, fluttered from the girl's hand and fell into the ashes of
+ the studio stove. When she picked it up it was hopelessly smudged.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, it's all spoiled!' said Maisie. 'And I never saw it. Was it like?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank you,' said Dick under his breath to the red-haired girl, and he
+ removed himself swiftly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How that man hates me!' said the girl. 'And how he loves you, Maisie!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What nonsense? I knew Dick's very fond of me, but he had his work to do,
+ and I have mine.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, he is fond of you, and I think he knows there is something in
+ impressionism, after all. Maisie, can't you see?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'See? See what?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing; only, I know that if I could get any man to look at me as that
+ man looks at you, I'd&mdash;I don't know what I'd do. But he hates me. Oh,
+ how he hates me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was not altogether correct. Dick's hatred was tempered with gratitude
+ for a few moments, and then he forgot the girl entirely. Only the sense of
+ shame remained, and he was nursing it across the Park in the fog.
+ 'There'll be an explosion one of these days,' he said wrathfully. 'But it
+ isn't Maisie's fault; she's right, quite right, as far as she knows, and I
+ can't blame her. This business has been going on for three months nearly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Three months!&mdash;and it cost me ten years' knocking about to get at the
+ notion, the merest raw notion, of my work. That's true; but then I didn't
+ have pins, drawing-pins, and palette-knives, stuck into me every Sunday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, my little darling, if ever I break you, somebody will have a very bad
+ time of it. No, she won't. I'd be as big a fool about her as I am now.
+ I'll poison that red-haired girl on my wedding-day,&mdash;she's
+ unwholesome,&mdash;and now I'll pass on these present bad times to Torp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow had been moved to lecture Dick more than once lately on the sin
+ of levity, and Dick and listened and replied not a word. In the weeks
+ between the first few Sundays of his discipline he had flung himself
+ savagely into his work, resolved that Maisie should at least know the full
+ stretch of his powers. Then he had taught Maisie that she must not pay the
+ least attention to any work outside her own, and Maisie had obeyed him all
+ too well. She took his counsels, but was not interested in his pictures.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Your things smell of tobacco and blood,' she said once. 'Can't you do
+ anything except soldiers?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I could do a head of you that would startle you,' thought Dick,&mdash;this
+ was before the red-haired girl had brought him under the guillotine,&mdash;but
+ he only said, 'I am very sorry,' and harrowed Torpenhow's soul that
+ evening with blasphemies against Art. Later, insensibly and to a large
+ extent against his own will, he ceased to interest himself in his own
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For Maisie's sake, and to soothe the self-respect that it seemed to him he
+ lost each Sunday, he would not consciously turn out bad stuff, but, since
+ Maisie did not care even for his best, it were better not to do anything
+ at all save wait and mark time between Sunday and Sunday. Torpenhow was
+ disgusted as the weeks went by fruitless, and then attacked him one Sunday
+ evening when Dick felt utterly exhausted after three hours' biting
+ self-restraint in Maisie's presence. There was Language, and Torpenhow
+ withdrew to consult the Nilghai, who had come it to talk continental
+ politics.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Bone-idle, is he? Careless, and touched in the temper?' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It isn't worth worrying over. Dick is probably playing the fool with a
+ woman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Isn't that bad enough?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. She may throw him out of gear and knock his work to pieces for a
+ while. She may even turn up here some day and make a scene on the
+ staircase: one never knows. But until Dick speaks of his own accord you
+ had better not touch him. He is no easy-tempered man to handle.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No; I wish he were. He is such an aggressive, cocksure, you-be-damned
+ fellow.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He'll get that knocked out of him in time. He must learn that he can't
+ storm up and down the world with a box of moist tubes and a slick brush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You're fond of him?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'd take any punishment that's in store for him if I could; but the worst
+ of it is, no man can save his brother.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, and the worser of it is, there is no discharge in this war. Dick must
+ learn his lesson like the rest of us. Talking of war, there'll be trouble
+ in the Balkans in the spring.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That trouble is long coming. I wonder if we could drag Dick out there
+ when it comes off?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick entered the room soon afterwards, and the question was put to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not good enough,' he said shortly. 'I'm too comf'y where I am.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Surely you aren't taking all the stuff in the papers seriously?' said the
+ Nilghai. 'Your vogue will be ended in less than six months,&mdash;the
+ public will know your touch and go on to something new,&mdash;and where
+ will you be then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Here, in England.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When you might be doing decent work among us out there? Nonsense! I shall
+ go, the Keneu will be there, Torp will be there, Cassavetti will be there,
+ and the whole lot of us will be there, and we shall have as much as ever
+ we can do, with unlimited fighting and the chance for you of seeing things
+ that would make the reputation of three Verestchagins.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Um!' said Dick, pulling at his pipe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You prefer to stay here and imagine that all the world is gaping at your
+ pictures? Just think how full an average man's life is of his own pursuits
+ and pleasures. When twenty thousand of him find time to look up between
+ mouthfuls and grunt something about something they aren't the least
+ interested in, the net result is called fame, reputation, or notoriety,
+ according to the taste and fancy of the speller my lord.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know that as well as you do. Give me credit for a little gumption.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be hanged if I do!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be hanged, then; you probably will be,&mdash;for a spy, by excited Turks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Heigh-ho! I'm weary, dead weary, and virtue has gone out of me.' Dick
+ dropped into a chair, and was fast asleep in a minute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's a bad sign,' said the Nilghai, in an undertone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow picked the pipe from the waistcoat where it was beginning to
+ burn, and put a pillow behind the head. 'We can't help; we can't help,' he
+ said. 'It's a good ugly sort of old cocoanut, and I'm fond of it. There's
+ the scar of the wipe he got when he was cut over in the square.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Shouldn't wonder if that has made him a trifle mad.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should. He's a most businesslike madman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Dick began to snore furiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, here, no affection can stand this sort of thing. Wake up, Dick, and
+ go and sleep somewhere else, if you intend to make a noise about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When a cat has been out on the tiles all night,' said the Nilghai, in his
+ beard, 'I notice that she usually sleeps all day. This is natural
+ history.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick staggered away rubbing his eyes and yawning. In the night-watches he
+ was overtaken with an idea, so simple and so luminous that he wondered he
+ had never conceived it before. It was full of craft. He would seek Maisie
+ on a week-day,&mdash;would suggest an excursion, and would take her by
+ train to Fort Keeling, over the very ground that they two had trodden
+ together ten years ago.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As a general rule,' he explained to his chin-lathered reflection in the
+ morning, 'it isn't safe to cross an old trail twice. Things remind one of
+ things, and a cold wind gets up, and you feel said; but this is an
+ exception to every rule that ever was. I'll go to Maisie at once.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, the red-haired girl was out shopping when he arrived, and
+ Maisie in a paint-spattered blouse was warring with her canvas. She was
+ not pleased to see him; for week-day visits were a stretch of the bond;
+ and it needed all his courage to explain his errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know you've been working too hard,' he concluded, with an air of
+ authority. 'If you do that, you'll break down. You had much better come.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where?' said Maisie, wearily. She had been standing before her easel too
+ long, and was very tired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Anywhere you please. We'll take a train to-morrow and see where it stops.
+ We'll have lunch somewhere, and I'll bring you back in the evening.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If there's a good working light to-morrow, I lose a day.' Maisie balanced
+ the heavy white chestnut palette irresolutely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick bit back an oath that was hurrying to his lips. He had not yet
+ learned patience with the maiden to whom her work was all in all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll lose ever so many more, dear, if you use every hour of working
+ light. Overwork's only murderous idleness. Don't be unreasonable. I'll
+ call for you to-morrow after breakfast early.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But surely you are going to ask&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, I am not. I want you and nobody else. Besides, she hates me as much
+ as I hate her. She won't care to come. To-morrow, then; and pray that we
+ get sunshine.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick went away delighted, and by consequence did no work whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He strangled a wild desire to order a special train, but bought a great
+ gray kangaroo cloak lined with glossy black marten, and then retired into
+ himself to consider things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm going out for the day to-morrow with Dick,' said Maisie to the
+ red-haired girl when the latter returned, tired, from marketing in the
+ Edgware road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He deserves it. I shall have the studio floor thoroughly scrubbed while
+ you're away. It's very dirty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie had enjoyed no sort of holiday for months and looked forward to the
+ little excitement, but not without misgivings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's nobody nicer than Dick when he talks sensibly, she though, but
+ I'm sure he'll be silly and worry me, and I'm sure I can't tell him
+ anything he'd like to hear. If he'd only be sensible, I should like him so
+ much better.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's eyes were full of joy when he made his appearance next morning and
+ saw Maisie, gray-ulstered and black-velvet-hatted, standing in the
+ hallway. Palaces of marble, and not sordid imitation of grained wood, were
+ surely the fittest background for such a divinity. The red-haired girl
+ drew her into the studio for a moment and kissed her hurriedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie's eyebrows climbed to the top of her forehead; she was altogether
+ unused to these demonstrations. 'Mind my hat,' she said, hurrying away,
+ and ran down the steps to Dick waiting by the hansom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Are you quite warm enough! Are you sure you wouldn't like some more
+ breakfast? Put the cloak over you knees.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm quite comf'y, thanks. Where are we going, Dick? Oh, do stop singing
+ like that. People will think we're mad.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let 'em think,&mdash;if the exertion doesn't kill them. They don't know
+ who we are, and I'm sure I don't care who they are. My faith, Maisie,
+ you're looking lovely!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie stared directly in front of her and did not reply. The wind of a
+ keen clear winter morning had put colour into her cheeks. Overhead, the
+ creamy-yellow smoke-clouds were thinning away one by one against a
+ pale-blue sky, and the improvident sparrows broke off from water-spout
+ committees and cab-rank cabals to clamour of the coming of spring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It will be lovely weather in the country,' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But where are we going?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait and see.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stopped at Victoria, and Dick sought tickets. For less than half the
+ fraction of an instant it occurred to Maisie, comfortably settled by the
+ waiting-room fire, that it was much more pleasant to send a man to the
+ booking-office than to elbow one's own way through the crowd. Dick put her
+ into a Pullman,&mdash;solely on account of the warmth there; and she
+ regarded the extravagance with grave scandalised eyes as the train moved
+ out into the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish I knew where we are going,' she repeated for the twentieth time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The name of a well-remembered station flashed by, towards the end of the
+ run, and Maisie was delighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, Dick, you villain!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well, I thought you might like to see the place again. You haven't been
+ here since the old times, have you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. I never cared to see Mrs. Jennett again; and she was all that was
+ ever there.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not quite. Look out a minute. There's the windmill above the
+ potato-fields; they haven't built villas there yet; d'you remember when I
+ shut you up in it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. How she beat you for it! I never told it was you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She guessed. I jammed a stick under the door and told you that I was
+ burying Amomma alive in the potatoes, and you believed me. You had a
+ trusting nature in those days.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They laughed and leaned to look out, identifying ancient landmarks with
+ many reminiscences. Dick fixed his weather eye on the curve of Maisie's
+ cheek, very near his own, and watched the blood rise under the clear skin.
+ He congratulated himself upon his cunning, and looked that the evening
+ would bring him a great reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the train stopped they went out to look at an old town with new eyes.
+ First, but from a distance, they regarded the house of Mrs. Jennett.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Suppose she should come out now, what would you do?' said Dick, with mock
+ terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should make a face.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Show, then,' said Dick, dropping into the speech of childhood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie made that face in the direction of the mean little villa, and Dick
+ laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"This is disgraceful,"' said Maisie, mimicking Mrs. Jennett's tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Maisie, you run in at once, and learn the collect, gospel, and epistle
+ for the next three Sundays. After all I've taught you, too, and three
+ helps every Sunday at dinner! Dick's always leading you into mischief. If
+ you aren't a gentleman, Dick, you might at least&mdash;"'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sentence ended abruptly. Maisie remembered when it had last been used.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Try to behave like one,"' said Dick, promptly. 'Quite right. Now we'll
+ get some lunch and go on to Fort Keeling,&mdash;unless you'd rather drive
+ there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We must walk, out of respect to the place. How little changed it all is!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They turned in the direction of the sea through unaltered streets, and the
+ influence of old things lay upon them. Presently they passed a
+ confectioner's shop much considered in the days when their joint
+ pocket-money amounted to a shilling a week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick, have you any pennies?' said Maisie, half to herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Only three; and if you think you're going to have two of 'em to buy
+ peppermints with, you're wrong. She says peppermints aren't ladylike.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again they laughed, and again the colour came into Maisie's cheeks as the
+ blood boiled through Dick's heart. After a large lunch they went down to
+ the beach and to Fort Keeling across the waste, wind-bitten land that no
+ builder had thought it worth his while to defile. The winter breeze came
+ in from the sea and sang about their ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maisie,' said Dick, 'your nose is getting a crude Prussian blue at the
+ tip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'll race you as far as you please for as much as you please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked round cautiously, and with a laugh set off, swiftly as the
+ ulster allowed, till she was out of breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We used to run miles,' she panted. 'It's absurd that we can't run now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Old age, dear. This it is to get fat and sleek in town. When I wished to
+ pull you hair you generally ran for three miles, shrieking at the top of
+ your voice. I ought to know, because those shrieks of yours were meant to
+ call up Mrs. Jennett with a cane and&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick, I never got you a beating on purpose in my life.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, of course you never did. Good heavens! look at the sea.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why, it's the same as ever!' said Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow had gathered from Mr. Beeton that Dick, properly dressed and
+ shaved, had left the house at half-past eight in the morning with a
+ travelling-rug over his arm. The Nilghai rolled in at mid-day for chess
+ and polite conversation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's worse than anything I imagined,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, the everlasting Dick, I suppose! You fuss over him like a hen with
+ one chick. Let him run riot if he thinks it'll amuse him. You can whip a
+ young pup off feather, but you can't whip a young man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It isn't a woman. It's one woman; and it's a girl.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where's your proof?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He got up and went out at eight this morning,&mdash;got up in the middle
+ of the night, by Jove! a thing he never does except when he's on service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even then, remember, we had to kick him out of his blankets before the
+ fight began at El-Maghrib. It's disgusting.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It looks odd; but maybe he's decided to buy a horse at last. He might get
+ up for that, mightn't he?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Buy a blazing wheelbarrow! He'd have told us if there was a horse in the
+ wind. It's a girl.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't be certain. Perhaps it's only a married woman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick has some sense of humour, if you haven't. Who gets up in the gray
+ dawn to call on another man's wife? It's a girl.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let it be a girl, then. She may teach him that there's somebody else in
+ the world besides himself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She'll spoil his hand. She'll waste his time, and she'll marry him, and
+ ruin his work for ever. He'll be a respectable married man before we can
+ stop him, and&mdash;he'll ever go on the long trail again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All quite possible, but the earth won't spin the other way when that
+ happens.... No! ho! I'd give something to see Dick "go wooing with the
+ boys." Don't worry about it. These things be with Allah, and we can only
+ look on. Get the chessmen.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red-haired girl was lying down in her own room, staring at the
+ ceiling. The footsteps of people on the pavement sounded, as they grew
+ indistinct in the distance, like a many-times-repeated kiss that was all
+ one long kiss. Her hands were by her side, and they opened and shut
+ savagely from time to time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The charwoman in charge of the scrubbing of the studio knocked at her
+ door: 'Beg y' pardon, miss, but in cleanin' of a floor there's two, not to
+ say three, kind of soap, which is yaller, an' mottled, an' disinfectink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, jist before I took my pail into the passage I though it would be
+ pre'aps jest as well if I was to come up 'ere an' ask you what sort of
+ soap you was wishful that I should use on them boards. The yaller soap,
+ miss&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was nothing in the speech to have caused the paroxysm of fury that
+ drove the red-haired girl into the middle of the room, almost shouting&mdash;'Do
+ you suppose I care what you use? Any kind will do!&mdash;any kind!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The woman fled, and the red-haired girl looked at her own reflection in
+ the glass for an instant and covered her face with her hands. It was as
+ though she had shouted some shameless secret aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Roses red and roses white
+ Plucked I for my love's delight.
+
+ She would none of all my posies,&mdash;
+ Bade me gather her blue roses.
+
+ Half the world I wandered through,
+ Seeking where such flowers grew;
+ Half the world unto my quest
+ Answered but with laugh and jest.
+
+ It may be beyond the grave
+ She shall find what she would have.
+
+ Mine was but an idle quest,&mdash;
+ Roses white and red are best!&mdash;Blue Roses
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE SEA had not changed. Its waters were low on the mud-banks, and the
+ Marazion Bell-buoy clanked and swung in the tide-way. On the white
+ beach-sand dried stumps of sea-poppy shivered and chattered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't see the old breakwater,' said Maisie, under her breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let's be thankful that we have as much as we have. I don't believe
+ they've mounted a single new gun on the fort since we were here. Come and
+ look.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They came to the glacis of Fort Keeling, and sat down in a nook sheltered
+ from the wind under the tarred throat of a forty-pounder cannon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now, if Ammoma were only here!' said Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a long time both were silent. Then Dick took Maisie's hand and called
+ her by her name.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She shook her head and looked out to sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maisie, darling, doesn't it make any difference?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No!' between clenched teeth. 'I'd&mdash;I'd tell you if it did; but it
+ doesn't, Oh, Dick, please be sensible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't you think that it ever will?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, I'm sure it won't.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie rested her chin on her hand, and, still regarding the sea, spoke
+ hurriedly&mdash;'I know what you want perfectly well, but I can't give it
+ to you, Dick. It isn't my fault; indeed, it isn't. If I felt that I could
+ care for any one&mdash;&mdash;But I don't feel that I care. I simply don't
+ understand what the feeling means.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is that true, dear?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've been very good to me, Dickie; and the only way I can pay you back
+ is by speaking the truth. I daren't tell a fib. I despise myself quit
+ enough as it is.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What in the world for?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because&mdash;because I take everything that you give me and I give you
+ nothing in return. It's mean and selfish of me, and whenever I think of it
+ it worries me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Understand once for all, then, that I can manage my own affairs, and if I
+ choose to do anything you aren't to blame. You haven't a single thing to
+ reproach yourself with, darling.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, I have, and talking only makes it worse.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then don't talk about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How can I help myself? If you find me alone for a minute you are always
+ talking about it; and when you aren't you look it. You don't know how I
+ despise myself sometimes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Great goodness!' said Dick, nearly jumping to his feet. 'Speak the truth
+ now, Maisie, if you never speak it again! Do I&mdash;does this worrying
+ bore you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. It does not.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'd tell me if it did?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should let you know, I think.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank you. The other thing is fatal. But you must learn to forgive a man
+ when he's in love. He's always a nuisance. You must have known that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie did not consider the last question worth answering, and Dick was
+ forced to repeat it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There were other men, of course. They always worried just when I was in
+ the middle of my work, and wanted me to listen to them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did you listen?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'At first; and they couldn't understand why I didn't care. And they used
+ to praise my pictures; and I thought they meant it. I used to be proud of
+ the praise, and tell Kami, and&mdash;I shall never forget&mdash;once Kami
+ laughed at me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't like being laughed at, Maisie, do you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I hate it. I never laugh at other people unless&mdash;unless they do bad
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick, tell me honestly what you think of my pictures generally,&mdash;of
+ everything of mine that you've seen.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Honest, honest, and honest over!"' quoted Dick from a catchword of long
+ ago. 'Tell me what Kami always says.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie hesitated. 'He&mdash;he says that there is feeling in them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How dare you tell me a fib like that? Remember, I was under Kami for two
+ years. I know exactly what he says.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It isn't a fib.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's worse; it's a half-truth. Kami says, when he puts his head on one
+ side,&mdash;so,&mdash;"Il y a du sentiment, mais il n'y a pas de parti
+ pris."' He rolled the r threateningly, as Kami used to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, that is what he says; and I'm beginning to think that he is right.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Certainly he is.' Dick admitted that two people in the world could do and
+ say no wrong. Kami was the man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And now you say the same thing. It's so disheartening.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry, but you asked me to speak the truth. Besides, I love you too
+ much to pretend about your work. It's strong, it's patient sometimes,&mdash;not
+ always,&mdash;and sometimes there's power in it, but there's no special
+ reason why it should be done at all. At least, that's how it strikes me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's no special reason why anything in the world should ever be done.
+ You know that as well as I do. I only want success.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're going the wrong way to get it, then. Hasn't Kami ever told you
+ so?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't quote Kami to me. I want to know what you think. My work's bad, to
+ begin with.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't say that, and I don't think it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's amateurish, then.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That it most certainly is not. You're a work-woman, darling, to your
+ boot-heels, and I respect you for that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't laugh at me behind my back?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, dear. You see, you are more to me than any one else. Put this cloak
+ thing round you, or you'll get chilled.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie wrapped herself in the soft marten skins, turning the gray kangaroo
+ fur to the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This is delicious,' she said, rubbing her chin thoughtfully along the
+ fur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well? Why am I wrong in trying to get a little success?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Just because you try. Don't you understand, darling? Good work has
+ nothing to do with&mdash;doesn't belong to&mdash;the person who does it.
+ It's put into him or her from outside.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But how does that affect&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait a minute. All we can do is to learn how to do our work, to be
+ masters of our materials instead of servants, and never to be afraid of
+ anything.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I understand that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Everything else comes from outside ourselves. Very good. If we sit down
+ quietly to work out notions that are sent to us, we may or we may not do
+ something that isn't bad. A great deal depends on being master of the
+ bricks and mortar of the trade. But the instant we begin to think about
+ success and the effect of our work&mdash;to play with one eye on the
+ gallery&mdash;we lose power and touch and everything else. At least that's
+ how I have found it. Instead of being quiet and giving every power you
+ possess to your work, you're fretting over something which you can neither
+ help no hinder by a minute. See?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's so easy for you to talk in that way. People like what you do. Don't
+ you ever think about the gallery?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Much too often; but I'm always punished for it by loss of power. It's as
+ simple as the Rule of Three. If we make light of our work by using it for
+ our own ends, our work will make light of us, and, as we're the weaker, we
+ shall suffer.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't treat my work lightly. You know that it's everything to me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course; but, whether you realise it or not, you give two strokes for
+ yourself to one for your work. It isn't your fault, darling. I do exactly
+ the same thing, and know that I'm doing it. Most of the French schools,
+ and all the schools here, drive the students to work for their own credit,
+ and for the sake of their pride. I was told that all the world was
+ interested in my work, and everybody at Kami's talked turpentine, and I
+ honestly believed that the world needed elevating and influencing, and all
+ manner of impertinences, by my brushes. By Jove, I actually believed that!
+ When my little head was bursting with a notion that I couldn't handle
+ because I hadn't sufficient knowledge of my craft, I used to run about
+ wondering at my own magnificence and getting ready to astonish the world.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But surely one can do that sometimes?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very seldom with malice aforethought, darling. And when it's done it's
+ such a tiny thing, and the world's so big, and all but a millionth part of
+ it doesn't care. Maisie, come with me and I'll show you something of the
+ size of the world. One can no more avoid working than eating,&mdash;that
+ goes on by itself,&mdash;but try to see what you are working for. I know
+ such little heavens that I could take you to,&mdash;islands tucked away
+ under the Line.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You sight them after weeks of crashing through water as black as black
+ marble because it's so deep, and you sit in the fore-chains day after day
+ and see the sun rise almost afraid because the sea's so lonely.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who is afraid?&mdash;you, or the sun?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The sun, of course. And there are noises under the sea, and sounds
+ overhead in a clear sky. Then you find your island alive with hot moist
+ orchids that make mouths at you and can do everything except talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There's a waterfall in it three hundred feet high, just like a sliver of
+ green jade laced with silver; and millions of wild bees live up in the
+ rocks; and you can hear the fat cocoanuts falling from the palms; and you
+ order an ivory-white servant to sling you a long yellow hammock with
+ tassels on it like ripe maize, and you put up your feet and hear the bees
+ hum and the water fall till you go to sleep.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Can one work there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Certainly. One must do something always. You hang your canvas up in a
+ palm tree and let the parrots criticise. When the scuffle you heave a ripe
+ custard-apple at them, and it bursts in a lather of cream. There are
+ hundreds of places. Come and see them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't quite like that place. It sounds lazy. Tell me another.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What do you think of a big, red, dead city built of red sandstone, with
+ raw green aloes growing between the stones, lying out neglected on
+ honey-coloured sands? There are forty dead kings there, Maisie, each in a
+ gorgeous tomb finer than all the others. You look at the palaces and
+ streets and shops and tanks, and think that men must live there, till you
+ find a wee gray squirrel rubbing its nose all alone in the market-place,
+ and a jewelled peacock struts out of a carved doorway and spreads its tail
+ against a marble screen as fine pierced as point-lace. Then a monkey&mdash;a
+ little black monkey&mdash;walks through the main square to get a drink
+ from a tank forty feet deep. He slides down the creepers to the water's
+ edge, and a friend holds him by the tail, in case he should fall in.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is that all true?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have been there and seen. Then evening comes, and the lights change
+ till it's just as though you stood in the heart of a king-opal. A little
+ before sundown, as punctually as clockwork, a big bristly wild boar, with
+ all his family following, trots through the city gate, churning the foam
+ on his tusks. You climb on the shoulder of a blind black stone god and
+ watch that pig choose himself a palace for the night and stump in wagging
+ his tail. Then the night-wind gets up, and the sands move, and you hear
+ the desert outside the city singing, "Now I lay me down to sleep," and
+ everything is dark till the moon rises. Maisie, darling, come with me and
+ see what the world is really like. It's very lovely, and it's very
+ horrible,&mdash;but I won't let you see anything horrid,&mdash;and it
+ doesn't care your life or mine for pictures or anything else except doing
+ its own work and making love. Come, and I'll show you how to brew
+ sangaree, and sling a hammock, and&mdash;oh, thousands of things, and
+ you'll see for yourself what colour means, and we'll find out together
+ what love means, and then, maybe, we shall be allowed to do some good
+ work. Come away!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why?' said Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How can you do anything until you have seen everything, or as much as you
+ can? And besides, darling, I love you. Come along with me. You have no
+ business here; you don't belong to this place; you're half a gipsy,&mdash;your
+ face tells that; and I&mdash;even the smell of open water makes me
+ restless. Come across the sea and be happy!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had risen to his feet, and stood in the shadow of the gun, looking down
+ at the girl. The very short winter afternoon had worn away, and, before
+ they knew, the winter moon was walking the untroubled sea. Long ruled
+ lines of silver showed where a ripple of the rising tide was turning over
+ the mud-banks. The wind had dropped, and in the intense stillness they
+ could hear a donkey cropping the frosty grass many yards away. A faint
+ beating, like that of a muffled drum, came out of the moon-haze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's that?' said Maisie, quickly. 'It sounds like a heart beating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Where is it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was so angry at this sudden wrench to his pleadings that he could not
+ trust himself to speak, and in this silence caught the sound. Maisie from
+ her seat under the gun watched him with a certain amount of fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She wished so much that he would be sensible and cease to worry her with
+ over-sea emotion that she both could and could not understand. She was not
+ prepared, however, for the change in his face as he listened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's a steamer,' he said,&mdash;'a twin-screw steamer, by the beat. I
+ can't make her out, but she must be standing very close in-shore. Ah!' as
+ the red of a rocket streaked the haze, 'she's standing in to signal before
+ she clears the Channel.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is it a wreck?' said Maisie, to whom these words were as Greek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's eyes were turned to the sea. 'Wreck! What nonsense! She's only
+ reporting herself. Red rocket forward&mdash;there's a green light aft now,
+ and two red rockets from the bridge.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What does that mean?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's the signal of the Cross Keys Line running to Australia. I wonder
+ which steamer it is.' The note of his voice had changed; he seemed to be
+ talking to himself, and Maisie did not approve of it. The moonlight broke
+ the haze for a moment, touching the black sides of a long steamer working
+ down Channel. 'Four masts and three funnels&mdash;she's in deep draught,
+ too. That must be the Barralong, or the Bhutia. No, the Bhutia has a
+ clopper bow. It's the Barralong, to Australia. She'll lift the Southern
+ Cross in a week,&mdash;lucky old tub!&mdash;oh, lucky old tub!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stared intently, and moved up the slope of the fort to get a better
+ view, but the mist on the sea thickened again, and the beating of the
+ screws grew fainter. Maisie called to him a little angrily, and he
+ returned, still keeping his eyes to seaward. 'Have you ever seen the
+ Southern Cross blazing right over your head?' he asked. 'It's superb!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No,' she said shortly, 'and I don't want to. If you think it's so lovely,
+ why don't you go and see it yourself?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She raised her face from the soft blackness of the marten skins about her
+ throat, and her eyes shone like diamonds. The moonlight on the gray
+ kangaroo fur turned it to frosted silver of the coldest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By Jove, Maisie, you look like a little heathen idol tucked up there.'
+ The eyes showed that they did not appreciate the compliment. 'I'm sorry,'
+ he continued. 'The Southern Cross isn't worth looking at unless someone
+ helps you to see. That steamer's out of hearing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick,' she said quietly, 'suppose I were to come to you now,&mdash;be
+ quiet a minute,&mdash;just as I am, and caring for you just as much as I
+ do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not as a brother, though You said you didn't&mdash;in the Park.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I never had a brother. Suppose I said, "Take me to those places, and in
+ time, perhaps, I might really care for you," what would you do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Send you straight back to where you came from, in a cab. No, I wouldn't;
+ I'd let you walk. But you couldn't do it, dear. And I wouldn't run the
+ risk. You're worth waiting for till you can come without reservation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you honestly believe that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have a hazy sort of idea that I do. Has it never struck you in that
+ light?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ye&mdash;es. I feel so wicked about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wickeder than usual?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't know all I think. It's almost too awful to tell.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind. You promised to tell me the truth&mdash;at least.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's so ungrateful of me, but&mdash;but, though I know you care for me,
+ and I like to have you with me, I'd&mdash;I'd even sacrifice you, if that
+ would bring me what I want.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My poor little darling! I know that state of mind. It doesn't lead to
+ good work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You aren't angry? Remember, I do despise myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm not exactly flattered,&mdash;I had guessed as much before,&mdash;but
+ I'm not angry. I'm sorry for you. Surely you ought to have left a
+ littleness like that behind you, years ago.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've no right to patronise me! I only want what I have worked for so
+ long. It came to you without any trouble, and&mdash;and I don't think it's
+ fair.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What can I do? I'd give ten years of my life to get you what you want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I can't help you; even I can't help.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A murmur of dissent from Maisie. He went on&mdash;'And I know by what you
+ have just said that you're on the wrong road to success. It isn't got at
+ by sacrificing other people,&mdash;I've had that much knocked into me; you
+ must sacrifice yourself, and live under orders, and never think for
+ yourself, and never have real satisfaction in your work except just at the
+ beginning, when you're reaching out after a notion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How can you believe all that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's no question of belief or disbelief. That's the law, and you take
+ it or refuse it as you please. I try to obey, but I can't, and then my
+ work turns bad on my hands. Under any circumstances, remember, four-fifths
+ of everybody's work must be bad. But the remnant is worth the trouble for
+ it's own sake.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Isn't it nice to get credit even for bad work?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's much too nice. But&mdash;&mdash; May I tell you something? It isn't
+ a pretty tale, but you're so like a man that I forget when I'm talking to
+ you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tell me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Once when I was out in the Soudan I went over some ground that we had
+ been fighting on for three days. There were twelve hundred dead; and we
+ hadn't time to bury them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How ghastly!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I had been at work on a big double-sheet sketch, and I was wondering what
+ people would think of it at home. The sight of that field taught me a good
+ deal. It looked just like a bed of horrible toadstools in all colours, and&mdash;I'd
+ never seen men in bulk go back to their beginnings before. So I began to
+ understand that men and women were only material to work with, and that
+ what they said or did was of no consequence. See? Strictly speaking, you
+ might just as well put your ear down to the palette to catch what your
+ colours are saying.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick, that's disgraceful!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait a minute. I said, strictly speaking. Unfortunately, everybody must
+ be either a man or a woman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm glad you allow that much.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In your case I don't. You aren't a woman. But ordinary people, Maisie,
+ must behave and work as such. That's what makes me so savage.' He hurled a
+ pebble towards the sea as he spoke. 'I know that it is outside my business
+ to care what people say; I can see that it spoils my output if I listen to
+ 'em; and yet, confound it all,'&mdash;another pebble flew seaward,&mdash;'I
+ can't help purring when I'm rubbed the right way. Even when I can see on a
+ man's forehead that he is lying his way through a clump of pretty
+ speeches, those lies make me happy and play the mischief with my hand.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And when he doesn't say pretty things?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then, belovedest,'&mdash;Dick grinned,&mdash;'I forget that I am the
+ steward of these gifts, and I want to make that man love and appreciate my
+ work with a thick stick. It's too humiliating altogether; but I suppose
+ even if one were an angel and painted humans altogether from outside, one
+ would lose in touch what one gained in grip.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie laughed at the idea of Dick as an angel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But you seem to think,' she said, 'that everything nice spoils your
+ hand.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't think. It's the law,&mdash;just the same as it was at Mrs.
+ Jennett's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything that is nice does spoil your hand. I'm glad you see so
+ clearly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't like the view.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nor I. But&mdash;have got orders: what can do? Are you strong enough to
+ face it alone?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I suppose I must.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let me help, darling. We can hold each other very tight and try to walk
+ straight. We shall blunder horribly, but it will be better than stumbling
+ apart. Maisie, can't you see reason?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't think we should get on together. We should be two of a trade, so
+ we should never agree.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How I should like to meet the man who made that proverb! He lived in a
+ cave and ate raw bear, I fancy. I'd make him chew his own arrow-heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should be only half married to you. I should worry and fuss about my
+ work, as I do now. Four days out of the seven I'm not fit to speak to.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You talk as if no one else in the world had ever used a brush. D'you
+ suppose that I don't know the feeling of worry and bother and
+ can't-get-at-ness? You're lucky if you only have it four days out of the
+ seven. What difference would that make?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A great deal&mdash;if you had it too.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, but I could respect it. Another man might not. He might laugh at
+ you. But there's no use talking about it. If you can think in that way you
+ can't care for me&mdash;yet.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tide had nearly covered the mud-banks and twenty little ripples broke
+ on the beach before Maisie chose to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick,' she said slowly, 'I believe very much that you are better than I
+ am.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This doesn't seem to bear on the argument&mdash;but in what way?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't quite know, but in what you said about work and things; and then
+ you're so patient. Yes, you're better than I am.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick considered rapidly the murkiness of an average man's life. There was
+ nothing in the review to fill him with a sense of virtue. He lifted the
+ hem of the cloak to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why,' said Maisie, making as though she had not noticed, 'can you see
+ things that I can't? I don't believe what you believe; but you're right, I
+ believe.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I've seen anything, God knows I couldn't have seen it but for you, and
+ I know that I couldn't have said it except to you. You seemed to make
+ everything clear for a minute; but I don't practice what I preach. You
+ would help me.... There are only us two in the world for all purposes, and&mdash;and
+ you like to have me with you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course I do. I wonder if you can realise how utterly lonely I am!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Darling, I think I can.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Two years ago, when I first took the little house, I used to walk up and
+ down the back-garden trying to cry. I never can cry. Can you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's some time since I tried. What was the trouble? Overwork?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know; but I used to dream that I had broken down, and had no
+ money, and was starving in London. I thought about it all day, and it
+ frightened me&mdash;oh, how it frightened me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know that fear. It's the most terrible of all. It wakes me up in the
+ night sometimes. You oughtn't to know anything about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How do you know?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind. Is your three hundred a year safe?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's in Consols.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very well. If any one comes to you and recommends a better investment,&mdash;even
+ if I should come to you,&mdash;don't you listen. Never shift the money for
+ a minute, and never lend a penny of it,&mdash;even to the red-haired
+ girl.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't scold me so! I'm not likely to be foolish.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The earth is full of men who'd sell their souls for three hundred a year;
+ and women come and talk, and borrow a five-pound note here and a ten-pound
+ note there; and a woman has no conscience in a money debt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stick to your money, Maisie, for there's nothing more ghastly in the world
+ than poverty in London. It's scared me. By Jove, it put the fear into me!
+ And one oughtn't to be afraid of anything.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To each man is appointed his particular dread,&mdash;the terror that, if
+ he does not fight against it, must cow him even to the loss of his
+ manhood. Dick's experience of the sordid misery of want had entered into
+ the deeps of him, and, lest he might find virtue too easy, that memory
+ stood behind him, tempting to shame, when dealers came to buy his wares.
+ As the Nilghai quaked against his will at the still green water of a lake
+ or a mill-dam, as Torpenhow flinched before any white arm that could cut
+ or stab and loathed himself for flinching, Dick feared the poverty he had
+ once tasted half in jest. His burden was heavier than the burdens of his
+ companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie watched the face working in the moonlight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've plenty of pennies now,' she said soothingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shall never have enough,' he began, with vicious emphasis. Then,
+ laughing, 'I shall always be three-pence short in my accounts.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why threepence?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I carried a man's bag once from Liverpool Street Station to Blackfriar's
+ Bridge. It was a sixpenny job,&mdash;you needn't laugh; indeed it was,&mdash;and
+ I wanted the money desperately. He only gave me threepence; and he hadn't
+ even the decency to pay in silver. Whatever money I make, I shall never
+ get that odd threepence out of the world.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not language befitting the man who had preached of the sanctity
+ of work. It jarred on Maisie, who preferred her payment in applause,
+ which, since all men desire it, must be of he right. She hunted for her
+ little purse and gravely took out a threepenny bit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There it is,' she said. 'I'll pay you, Dickie; and don't worry any more;
+ it isn't worth while. Are you paid?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am,' said the very human apostle of fair craft, taking the coin. 'I'm
+ paid a thousand times, and we'll close that account. It shall live on my
+ watch-chain; and you're an angel, Maisie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm very cramped, and I'm feeling a little cold. Good gracious! the cloak
+ is all white, and so is your moustache! I never knew it was so chilly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A light frost lay white on the shoulder of Dick's ulster. He, too, had
+ forgotten the state of the weather. They laughed together, and with that
+ laugh ended all serious discourse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They ran inland across the waste to warm themselves, then turned to look
+ at the glory of the full tide under the moonlight and the intense black
+ shadows of the furze bushes. It was an additional joy to Dick that Maisie
+ could see colour even as he saw it,&mdash;could see the blue in the white
+ of the mist, the violet that is in gray palings, and all things else as
+ they are,&mdash;not of one hue, but a thousand. And the moonlight came
+ into Maisie's soul, so that she, usually reserved, chattered of herself
+ and of the things she took interest in,&mdash;of Kami, wisest of teachers,
+ and of the girls in the studio,&mdash;of the Poles, who will kill
+ themselves with overwork if they are not checked; of the French, who talk
+ at great length of much more than they will ever accomplish; of the
+ slovenly English, who toil hopelessly and cannot understand that
+ inclination does not imply power; of the Americans, whose rasping voices
+ in the hush of a hot afternoon strain tense-drawn nerves to
+ breaking-point, and whose suppers lead to indigestion; of tempestuous
+ Russians, neither to hold nor to bind, who tell the girls ghost-stories
+ till the girls shriek; of stolid Germans, who come to learn one thing,
+ and, having mastered that much, stolidly go away and copy pictures for
+ evermore. Dick listened enraptured because it was Maisie who spoke. He
+ knew the old life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It hasn't changed much,' he said. 'Do they still steal colours at
+ lunch-time?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not steal. Attract is the word. Of course they do. I'm good&mdash;I only
+ attract ultramarine; but there are students who'd attract flake-white.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've done it myself. You can't help it when the palettes are hung up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every colour is common property once it runs down,&mdash;even though you
+ do start it with a drop of oil. It teaches people not to waste their
+ tubes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should like to attract some of your colours, Dick. Perhaps I might
+ catch your success with them.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I mustn't say a bad word, but I should like to. What in the world, which
+ you've just missed a lovely chance of seeing, does success or want of
+ success, or a three-storied success, matter compared with&mdash;&mdash;
+ No, I won't open that question again. It's time to go back to town.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry, Dick, but&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're much more interested in that than you are in me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know, I don't think I am.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What will you give me if I tell you a sure short-cut to everything you
+ want,&mdash;the trouble and the fuss and the tangle and all the rest? Will
+ you promise to obey me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In the first place, you must never forget a meal because you happen to be
+ at work. You forgot your lunch twice last week,' said Dick, at a venture,
+ for he knew with whom he was dealing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, no,&mdash;only once, really.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's bad enough. And you mustn't take a cup of tea and a biscuit in
+ place of a regular dinner, because dinner happens to be a trouble.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're making fun of me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I never was more in earnest in my life. Oh, my love, my love, hasn't it
+ dawned on you yet what you are to me? Here's the whole earth in a
+ conspiracy to give you a chill, or run over you, or drench you to the
+ skin, or cheat you out of your money, or let you die of overwork and
+ underfeeding, and I haven't the mere right to look after you. Why, I don't
+ even know if you have sense enough to put on warm things when the
+ weather's cold.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick, you're the most awful boy to talk to&mdash;really! How do you
+ suppose I managed when you were away?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wasn't here, and I didn't know. But now I'm back I'd give everything I
+ have for the right of telling you to come in out of the rain.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Your success too?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This time it cost Dick a severe struggle to refrain from bad words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As Mrs. Jennett used to say, you're a trial, Maisie! You've been cooped
+ up in the schools too long, and you think every one is looking at you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There aren't twelve hundred people in the world who understand pictures.
+ The others pretend and don't care. Remember, I've seen twelve hundred men
+ dead in toadstool-beds. It's only the voice of the tiniest little fraction
+ of people that makes success. The real world doesn't care a tinker's&mdash;doesn't
+ care a bit. For aught you or I know, every man in the world may be arguing
+ with a Maisie of his own.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Poor Maisie!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Poor Dick, I think. Do you believe while he's fighting for what's dearer
+ than his life he wants to look at a picture? And even if he did, and if
+ all the world did, and a thousand million people rose up and shouted hymns
+ to my honour and glory, would that make up to me for the knowledge that
+ you were out shopping in the Edgware Road on a rainy day without an
+ umbrella? Now we'll go to the station.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But you said on the beach&mdash;&mdash;' persisted Maisie, with a certain
+ fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick groaned aloud: 'Yes, I know what I said. My work is everything I
+ have, or am, or hope to be, to me, and I believe I've learnt the law that
+ governs it; but I've some lingering sense of fun left,&mdash;though you've
+ nearly knocked it out of me. I can just see that it isn't everything to
+ all the world. Do what I say, and not what I do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie was careful not to reopen debatable matters, and they returned to
+ London joyously. The terminus stopped Dick in the midst of an eloquent
+ harangue on the beauties of exercise. He would buy Maisie a horse,&mdash;such
+ a horse as never yet bowed head to bit,&mdash;would stable it, with a
+ companion, some twenty miles from London, and Maisie, solely for her
+ health's sake should ride with him twice or thrice a week.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's absurd,' said she. 'It wouldn't be proper.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now, who in all London to-night would have sufficient interest or
+ audacity to call us two to account for anything we chose to do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked at the lamps, the fog, and the hideous turmoil. Dick was
+ right; but horseflesh did not make for Art as she understood it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're very nice sometimes, but you're very foolish more times. I'm not
+ going to let you give me horses, or take you out of your way to-night.
+ I'll go home by myself. Only I want you to promise me something. You won't
+ think any more about that extra threepence, will you? Remember, you've
+ been paid; and I won't allow you to be spiteful and do bad work for a
+ little thing like that. You can be so big that you mustn't be tiny.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was turning the tables with a vengeance. There remained only to put
+ Maisie into her hansom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good-bye,' she said simply. 'You'll come on Sunday. It has been a
+ beautiful day, Dick. Why can't it be like this always?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because love's like line-work: you must go forward or backward; you can't
+ stand still. By the way, go on with your line-work. Good-night, and, for
+ my&mdash;for my sake, take care of yourself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned to walk home, meditating. The day had brought him nothing that
+ he hoped for, but&mdash;surely this was worth many days&mdash;it had
+ brought him nearer to Maisie. The end was only a question of time now, and
+ the prize well worth the waiting. By instinct, once more, he turned to the
+ river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And she understood at once,' he said, looking at the water. 'She found
+ out my pet besetting sin on the spot, and paid it off. My God, how she
+ understood! And she said I was better than she was! Better than she was!'
+ He laughed at the absurdity of the notion. 'I wonder if girls guess at
+ one-half a man's life. They can't, or&mdash;they wouldn't marry us.' He
+ took her gift out of his pocket, and considered it in the light of a
+ miracle and a pledge of the comprehension that, one day, would lead to
+ perfect happiness. Meantime, Maisie was alone in London, with none to save
+ her from danger. And the packed wilderness was very full of danger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick made his prayer to Fate disjointedly after the manner of the heathen
+ as he threw the piece of silver into the river. If any evil were to befal,
+ let him bear the burden and let Maisie go unscathed, since the threepenny
+ piece was dearest to him of all his possessions. It was a small coin in
+ itself, but Maisie had given it, and the Thames held it, and surely the
+ Fates would be bribed for this once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drowning of the coin seemed to cut him free from thought of Maisie for
+ the moment. He took himself off the bridge and went whistling to his
+ chambers with a strong yearning for some man-talk and tobacco after his
+ first experience of an entire day spent in the society of a woman. There
+ was a stronger desire at his heart when there rose before him an
+ unsolicited vision of the Barralong dipping deep and sailing free for the
+ Southern Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And these two, as I have told you,
+ Were the friends of Hiawatha,
+ Chibiabos, the musician,
+ And the very strong man, Kwasind.
+
+ &mdash;Hiawatha.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ TORPENHOW was paging the last sheets of some manuscript, while the
+ Nilghai, who had come for chess and remained to talk tactics, was reading
+ through the first part, commenting scornfully the while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's picturesque enough and it's sketchy,' said he; 'but as a serious
+ consideration of affairs in Eastern Europe, it's not worth much.'
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+'It's off my hands at any rate.... Thirty-seven, thirty-eight,
+thirty-nine slips altogether, aren't there? That should make between
+eleven and twelve pages of valuable misinformation. Heigho!' Torpenhow
+shuffled the writing together and hummed&mdash;
+
+ Young lambs to sell, young lambs to sell,
+ If I'd as much money as I could tell,
+ I never would cry, Young lambs to sell!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Dick entered, self-conscious and a little defiant, but in the best of
+ tempers with all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Back at last?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'More or less. What have you been doing?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Work. Dickie, you behave as though the Bank of England were behind you.
+ Here's Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday gone and you haven't done a line. It's
+ scandalous.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The notions come and go, my children&mdash;they come and go like our
+ 'baccy,' he answered, filling his pipe. 'Moreover,' he stooped to thrust a
+ spill into the grate, 'Apollo does not always stretch his&mdash;&mdash;
+ Oh, confound your clumsy jests, Nilghai!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This is not the place to preach the theory of direct inspiration,' said
+ the Nilghai, returning Torpenhow's large and workmanlike bellows to their
+ nail on the wall. 'We believe in cobblers' wax. La!&mdash;where you sit
+ down.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If you weren't so big and fat,' said Dick, looking round for a weapon,
+ 'I'd&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No skylarking in my rooms. You two smashed half my furniture last time
+ you threw the cushions about. You might have the decency to say How d'you
+ do? to Binkie. Look at him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie had jumped down from the sofa and was fawning round Dick's knee,
+ and scratching at his boots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dear man!' said Dick, snatching him up, and kissing him on the black
+ patch above his right eye. 'Did ums was, Binks? Did that ugly Nilghai turn
+ you off the sofa? Bite him, Mr. Binkie.' He pitched him on the Nilghai's
+ stomach, as the big man lay at ease, and Binkie pretended to destroy the
+ Nilghai inch by inch, till a sofa cushion extinguished him, and panting he
+ stuck out his tongue at the company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The Binkie-boy went for a walk this morning before you were up, Torp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I saw him making love to the butcher at the corner when the shutters were
+ being taken down&mdash;just as if he hadn't enough to eat in his own
+ proper house,' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Binks, is that a true bill?' said Torpenhow, severely. The little dog
+ retreated under the sofa cushion, and showed by the fat white back of him
+ that he really had no further interest in the discussion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Strikes me that another disreputable dog went for a walk, too,' said the
+ Nilghai. 'What made you get up so early? Torp said you might be buying a
+ horse.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He knows it would need three of us for a serious business like that. No,
+ I felt lonesome and unhappy, so I went out to look at the sea, and watch
+ the pretty ships go by.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where did you go?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Somewhere on the Channel. Progly or Snigly, or some watering-place was
+ its name; I've forgotten; but it was only two hours' run from London and
+ the ships went by.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did you see anything you knew?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Only the Barralong outwards to Australia, and an Odessa grain-boat loaded
+ down by the head. It was a thick day, but the sea smelt good.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wherefore put on one's best trousers to see the Barralong?' said
+ Torpenhow, pointing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because I've nothing except these things and my painting duds. Besides, I
+ wanted to do honour to the sea.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did She make you feel restless?' asked the Nilghai, keenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Crazy. Don't speak of it. I'm sorry I went.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow and the Nilghai exchanged a look as Dick, stooping, busied
+ himself among the former's boots and trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'These will do,' he said at last; 'I can't say I think much of your taste
+ in slippers, but the fit's the thing.' He slipped his feet into a pair of
+ sock-like sambhur-skin foot coverings, found a long chair, and lay at
+ length.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They're my own pet pair,' Torpenhow said. 'I was just going to put them
+ on myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All your reprehensible selfishness. Just because you see me happy for a
+ minute, you want to worry me and stir me up. Find another pair.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good for you that Dick can't wear your clothes, Torp. You two live
+ communistically,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick never has anything that I can wear. He's only useful to sponge
+ upon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Confound you, have you been rummaging round among my clothes, then?' said
+ Dick. 'I put a sovereign in the tobacco-jar yesterday. How do you expect a
+ man to keep his accounts properly if you&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Nilghai began to laugh, and Torpenhow joined him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hid a sovereign yesterday! You're no sort of financier. You lent me a
+ fiver about a month back. Do you remember?' Torpenhow said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, of course.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you remember that I paid it you ten days later, and you put it at the
+ bottom of the tobacco?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By Jove, did I? I thought it was in one of my colour-boxes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You thought! About a week ago I went into your studio to get some 'baccy
+ and found it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What did you do with it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Took the Nilghai to a theatre and fed him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You couldn't feed the Nilghai under twice the money&mdash;not though you
+ gave him Army beef. Well, I suppose I should have found it out sooner or
+ later. What is there to laugh at?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're a most amazing cuckoo in many directions,' said the Nilghai, still
+ chuckling over the thought of the dinner. 'Never mind. We had both been
+ working very hard, and it was your unearned increment we spent, and as
+ you're only a loafer it didn't matter.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's pleasant&mdash;from the man who is bursting with my meat, too.
+ I'll get that dinner back one of these days. Suppose we go to a theatre
+ now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Put our boots on,&mdash;and dress,&mdash;and wash?' The Nilghai spoke
+ very lazily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I withdraw the motion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Suppose, just for a change&mdash;as a startling variety, you know&mdash;we,
+ that is to say we, get our charcoal and our canvas and go on with our
+ work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow spoke pointedly, but Dick only wriggled his toes inside the soft
+ leather moccasins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a one-ideaed clucker that is! If I had any unfinished figures on
+ hand, I haven't any model; if I had my model, I haven't any spray, and I
+ never leave charcoal unfixed overnight; and if I had my spray and twenty
+ photographs of backgrounds, I couldn't do anything to-night. I don't feel
+ that way.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Binkie-dog, he's a lazy hog, isn't he?' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very good, I will do some work,' said Dick, rising swiftly. 'I'll fetch
+ the Nungapunga Book, and we'll add another picture to the Nilghai Saga.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Aren't you worrying him a little too much?' asked the Nilghai, when Dick
+ had left the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Perhaps, but I know what he can turn out if he likes. It makes me savage
+ to hear him praised for past work when I know what he ought to do. You and
+ I are arranged for&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By Kismet and our own powers, more's the pity. I have dreamed of a good
+ deal.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So have I, but we know our limitations now. I'm dashed if I know what
+ Dick's may be when he gives himself to his work. That's what makes me so
+ keen about him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And when all's said and done, you will be put aside&mdash;quite rightly&mdash;for
+ a female girl.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wonder... Where do you think he has been to-day?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'To the sea. Didn't you see the look in his eyes when he talked about her?
+ He's as restless as a swallow in autumn.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; but did he go alone?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know, and I don't care, but he has the beginnings of the go-fever
+ upon him. He wants to up-stakes and move out. There's no mistaking the
+ signs. Whatever he may have said before, he has the call upon him now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It might be his salvation,' Torpenhow said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Perhaps&mdash;if you care to take the responsibility of being a saviour.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick returned with the big clasped sketch-book that the Nilghai knew well
+ and did not love too much. In it Dick had drawn all manner of moving
+ incidents, experienced by himself or related to him by the others, of all
+ the four corners of the earth. But the wider range of the Nilghai's body
+ and life attracted him most. When truth failed he fell back on fiction of
+ the wildest, and represented incidents in the Nilghai's career that were
+ unseemly,&mdash;his marriages with many African princesses, his shameless
+ betrayal, for Arab wives, of an army corps to the Mahdi, his tattooment by
+ skilled operators in Burmah, his interview (and his fears) with the yellow
+ headsman in the blood-stained execution-ground of Canton, and finally, the
+ passings of his spirit into the bodies of whales, elephants, and toucans.
+ Torpenhow from time to time had added rhymed descriptions, and the whole
+ was a curious piece of art, because Dick decided, having regard to the
+ name of the book which being interpreted means 'naked,' that it would be
+ wrong to draw the Nilghai with any clothes on, under any circumstances.
+ Consequently the last sketch, representing that much-enduring man calling
+ on the War Office to press his claims to the Egyptian medal, was hardly
+ delicate. He settled himself comfortably on Torpenhow's table and turned
+ over the pages.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a fortune you would have been to Blake, Nilghai!' he said. 'There's
+ a succulent pinkness about some of these sketches that's more than
+ life-like. "The Nilghai surrounded while bathing by the Mahdieh"&mdash;that
+ was founded on fact, eh?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was very nearly my last bath, you irreverent dauber. Has Binkie come
+ into the Saga yet?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No; the Binkie-boy hasn't done anything except eat and kill cats. Let's
+ see. Here you are as a stained-glass saint in a church. Deuced decorative
+ lines about your anatomy; you ought to be grateful for being handed down
+ to posterity in this way. Fifty years hence you'll exist in rare and
+ curious facsimiles at ten guineas each. What shall I try this time? The
+ domestic life of the Nilghai?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hasn't got any.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The undomestic life of the Nilghai, then. Of course. Mass-meeting of his
+ wives in Trafalgar Square. That's it. They came from the ends of the earth
+ to attend Nilghai's wedding to an English bride. This shall be an epic.
+ It's a sweet material to work with.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's a scandalous waste of time,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't worry; it keeps one's hand in&mdash;specially when you begin
+ without the pencil.' He set to work rapidly. 'That's Nelson's Column.
+ Presently the Nilghai will appear shinning up it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Give him some clothes this time.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Certainly&mdash;a veil and an orange-wreath, because he's been married.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Gad, that's clever enough!' said Torpenhow over his shoulder, as Dick
+ brought out of the paper with three twirls of the brush a very fat back
+ and labouring shoulder pressed against stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Just imagine,' Dick continued, 'if we could publish a few of these dear
+ little things every time the Nilghai subsidises a man who can write, to
+ give the public an honest opinion of my pictures.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well, you'll admit I always tell you when I have done anything of that
+ kind. I know I can't hammer you as you ought to be hammered, so I give the
+ job to another. Young Maclagan, for instance&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No-o&mdash;one half-minute, old man; stick your hand out against the dark
+ of the wall-paper&mdash;you only burble and call me names. That left
+ shoulder's out of drawing. I must literally throw a veil over that.
+ Where's my pen-knife? Well, what about Maclagan?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I only gave him his riding-orders to&mdash;to lambast you on general
+ principles for not producing work that will last.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Whereupon that young fool,'&mdash;Dick threw back his head and shut one
+ eye as he shifted the page under his hand,&mdash;'being left alone with an
+ ink-pot and what he conceived were his own notions, went and spilt them
+ both over me in the papers. You might have engaged a grown man for the
+ business, Nilghai. How do you think the bridal veil looks now, Torp?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How the deuce do three dabs and two scratches make the stuff stand away
+ from the body as it does?' said Torpenhow, to whom Dick's methods were
+ always new.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It just depends on where you put 'em. If Maclagan had know that much
+ about his business he might have done better.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why don't you put the damned dabs into something that will stay, then?'
+ insisted the Nilghai, who had really taken considerable trouble in hiring
+ for Dick's benefit the pen of a young gentleman who devoted most of his
+ waking hours to an anxious consideration of the aims and ends of Art,
+ which, he wrote, was one and indivisible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait a minute till I see how I am going to manage my procession of wives.
+ You seem to have married extensively, and I must rough 'em in with the
+ pencil&mdash;Medes, Parthians, Edomites.... Now, setting aside the
+ weakness and the wickedness and&mdash;and the fat-headedness of
+ deliberately trying to do work that will live, as they call it, I'm
+ content with the knowledge that I've done my best up to date, and I shan't
+ do anything like it again for some hours at least&mdash;probably years.
+ Most probably never.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What! any stuff you have in stock your best work?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Anything you've sold?' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh no. It isn't here and it isn't sold. Better than that, it can't be
+ sold, and I don't think any one knows where it is. I'm sure I don't....
+ And yet more and more wives, on the north side of the square. Observe the
+ virtuous horror of the lions!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You may as well explain,' said Torpenhow, and Dick lifted his head from
+ the paper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The sea reminded me of it,' he said slowly. 'I wish it hadn't. It weighs
+ some few thousand tons&mdash;unless you cut it out with a cold chisel.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't be an idiot. You can't pose with us here,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's no pose in the matter at all. It's a fact. I was loafing from
+ Lima to Auckland in a big, old, condemned passenger-ship turned into a
+ cargo-boat and owned by a second-had Italian firm. She was a crazy basket.
+ We were cut down to fifteen ton of coal a day, and we thought ourselves
+ lucky when we kicked seven knots an hour out of her. Then we used to stop
+ and let the bearings cool down, and wonder whether the crack in the shaft
+ was spreading.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Were you a steward or a stoker in those days?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was flush for the time being, so I was a passenger, or else I should
+ have been a steward, I think,' said Dick, with perfect gravity, returning
+ to the procession of angry wives. 'I was the only other passenger from
+ Lima, and the ship was half empty, and full of rats and cockroaches and
+ scorpions.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But what has this to do with the picture?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wait a minute. She had been in the China passenger trade and her lower
+ decks had bunks for two thousand pigtails. Those were all taken down, and
+ she was empty up to her nose, and the lights came through the port holes&mdash;most
+ annoying lights to work in till you got used to them. I hadn't anything to
+ do for weeks. The ship's charts were in pieces and our skipper daren't run
+ south for fear of catching a storm. So he did his best to knock all the
+ Society Islands out of the water one by one, and I went into the lower
+ deck, and did my picture on the port side as far forward in her as I could
+ go. There was some brown paint and some green paint that they used for the
+ boats, and some black paint for ironwork, and that was all I had.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The passengers must have thought you mad.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There was only one, and it was a woman; but it gave me the notion of my
+ picture.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What was she like?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She was a sort of Negroid-Jewess-Cuban; with morals to match. She
+ couldn't read or write, and she didn't want to, but she used to come down
+ and watch me paint, and the skipper didn't like it, because he was paying
+ her passage and had to be on the bridge occasionally.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I see. That must have been cheerful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was the best time I ever had. To begin with, we didn't know whether we
+ should go up or go down any minute when there was a sea on; and when it
+ was calm it was paradise; and the woman used to mix the paints and talk
+ broken English, and the skipper used to steal down every few minutes to
+ the lower deck, because he said he was afraid of fire. So, you see, we
+ could never tell when we might be caught, and I had a splendid notion to
+ work out in only three keys of colour.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What was the notion?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Two lines in Poe&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Neither the angles in Heaven above nor the demons down under the sea, Can
+ ever dissever my soul from the soul of the beautiful Annabel Lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It came out of the sea&mdash;all by itself. I drew that fight, fought out
+ in green water over the naked, choking soul, and the woman served as the
+ model for the devils and the angels both&mdash;sea-devils and sea-angels,
+ and the soul half drowned between them. It doesn't sound much, but when
+ there was a good light on the lower deck it looked very fine and creepy.
+ It was seven by fourteen feet, all done in shifting light for shifting
+ light.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did the woman inspire you much?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She and the sea between them&mdash;immensely. There was a heap of bad
+ drawing in that picture. I remember I went out of my way to foreshorten
+ for sheer delight of doing it, and I foreshortened damnably, but for all
+ that it's the best thing I've ever done; and now I suppose the ship's
+ broken up or gone down. Whew! What a time that was!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What happened after all?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It all ended. They were loading her with wool when I left the ship, but
+ even the stevedores kept the picture clear to the last. The eyes of the
+ demons scared them, I honestly believe.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And the woman?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She was scared too when it was finished. She used to cross herself before
+ she went down to look at it. Just three colours and no chance of getting
+ any more, and the sea outside and unlimited love-making inside, and the
+ fear of death atop of everything else, O Lord!' He had ceased to look at
+ the sketch, but was staring straight in front of him across the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why don't you try something of the same kind now?' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because those things come not by fasting and prayer. When I find a
+ cargo-boat and a Jewess-Cuban and another notion and the same old life, I
+ may.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You won't find them here,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, I shall not.' Dick shut the sketch-book with a bang. 'This room's as
+ hot as an oven. Open the window, some one.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He leaned into the darkness, watching the greater darkness of London below
+ him. The chambers stood much higher than the other houses, commanding a
+ hundred chimneys&mdash;crooked cowls that looked like sitting cats as they
+ swung round, and other uncouth brick and zinc mysteries supported by iron
+ stanchions and clamped by 8-pieces. Northward the lights of Piccadilly
+ Circus and Leicester Square threw a copper-coloured glare above the black
+ roofs, and southward by all the orderly lights of the Thames. A train
+ rolled out across one of the railway bridges, and its thunder drowned for
+ a minute the dull roar of the streets. The Nilghai looked at his watch and
+ said shortly, 'That's the Paris night-mail. You can book from here to St.
+ Petersburg if you choose.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick crammed head and shoulders out of the window and looked across the
+ river. Torpenhow came to his side, while the Nilghai passed over quietly
+ to the piano and opened it. Binkie, making himself as large as possible,
+ spread out upon the sofa with the air of one who is not to be lightly
+ disturbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well,' said the Nilghai to the two pairs of shoulders, 'have you never
+ seen this place before?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A steam-tug on the river hooted as she towed her barges to wharf. Then the
+ boom of the traffic came into the room. Torpenhow nudged Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good place to bank in&mdash;bad place to bunk in, Dickie, isn't it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's chin was in his hand as he answered, in the words of a general not
+ without fame, still looking out on the darkness&mdash;'"My God, what a
+ city to loot!"'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie found the night air tickling his whiskers and sneezed plaintively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We shall give the Binkie-dog a cold,' said Torpenhow. 'Come in,' and they
+ withdrew their heads. 'You'll be buried in Kensal Green, Dick, one of
+ these days, if it isn't closed by the time you want to go there&mdash;buried
+ within two feet of some one else, his wife and his family.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Allah forbid! I shall get away before that time comes. Give a man room to
+ stretch his legs, Mr. Binkie.' Dick flung himself down on the sofa and
+ tweaked Binkie's velvet ears, yawning heavily the while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll find that wardrobe-case very much out of tune,' Torpenhow said to
+ the Nilghai. 'It's never touched except by you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A piece of gross extravagance,' Dick grunted. 'The Nilghai only comes
+ when I'm out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's because you're always out. Howl, Nilghai, and let him hear.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The life of the Nilghai is fraud and slaughter, His writings are watered
+ Dickens and water; But the voice of the Nilghai raised on high Makes even
+ the Mahdieh glad to die!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick quoted from Torpenhow's letterpress in the Nungapunga Book.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How do they call moose in Canada, Nilghai?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man laughed. Singing was his one polite accomplishment, as many
+ Press-tents in far-off lands had known.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What shall I sing?' said he, turning in the chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Moll Roe in the Morning,"' said Torpenhow, at a venture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No,' said Dick, sharply, and the Nilghai opened his eyes. The old chanty
+ whereof he, among a very few, possessed all the words was not a pretty
+ one, but Dick had heard it many times before without wincing. Without
+ prelude he launched into that stately tune that calls together and
+ troubles the hearts of the gipsies of the sea&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies, Farewell and adieu to you,
+ ladies of Spain.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick turned uneasily on the sofa, for he could hear the bows of the
+ Barralong crashing into the green seas on her way to the Southern Cross.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the chorus&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We'll rant and we'll roar like true British sailors, We'll rant and we'll
+ roar across the salt seas, Until we take soundings in the Channel of Old
+ England From Ushant to Scilly 'tis forty-five leagues.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thirty-five-thirty-five,' said Dick, petulantly. 'Don't tamper with Holy
+ Writ. Go on, Nilghai.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The first land we made it was called the Deadman,' and they sang to the
+ end very vigourously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That would be a better song if her head were turned the other way&mdash;to
+ the Ushant light, for instance,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Flinging his arms about like a mad windmill,' said Torpenhow. 'Give us
+ something else, Nilghai. You're in fine fog-horn form tonight.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Give us the "Ganges Pilot"; you sang that in the square the night before
+ El-Maghrib. By the way, I wonder how many of the chorus are alive
+ to-night,' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow considered for a minute. 'By Jove! I believe only you and I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Raynor, Vicery, and Deenes&mdash;all dead; Vincent caught smallpox in
+ Cairo, carried it here and died of it. Yes, only you and I and the
+ Nilghai.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Umph! And yet the men here who've done their work in a well-warmed studio
+ all their lives, with a policeman at each corner, say that I charge too
+ much for my pictures.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They are buying your work, not your insurance policies, dear child,' said
+ the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I gambled with one to get at the other. Don't preach. Go on with the
+ "Pilot." Where in the world did you get that song?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'On a tombstone,' said the Nilghai. 'On a tombstone in a distant land. I
+ made it an accompaniment with heaps of base chords.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, Vanity! Begin.' And the Nilghai began&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have slipped my cable, messmates, I'm drifting down with the tide, I
+ have my sailing orders, while yet an anchor ride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And never on fair June morning have I put out to sea With clearer
+ conscience or better hope, or a heart more light and free.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Shoulder to shoulder, Joe, my boy, into the crowd like a wedge Strike
+ with the hangers, messmates, but do not cut with the edge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cries Charnock, "Scatter the faggots, double that Brahmin in two, The tall
+ pale widow for me, Joe, the little brown girl for you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Young Joe (you're nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark? Katie has
+ soft fair blue eyes, who blackened yours?&mdash;Why, hark!'
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+They were all singing now, Dick with the roar of the wind of the open
+sea about his ears as the deep bass voice let itself go.
+
+ 'The morning gun&mdash;
+ Ho, steady! the arquebuses to me!
+ I ha' sounded the Dutch High Admiral's heart
+ As my lead doth sound the sea.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'Sounding, sounding the Ganges, floating down with the tide, Moore me
+ close to Charnock, next to my nut-brown bride.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My blessing to Kate at Fairlight&mdash;Holwell, my thanks to you; Steady!
+ We steer for heaven, through sand-drifts cold and blue.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now what is there in that nonsense to make a man restless?' said Dick,
+ hauling Binkie from his feet to his chest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It depends on the man,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The man who has been down to look at the sea,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't know she was going to upset me in this fashion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's what men say when they go to say good-bye to a woman. It's more
+ easy though to get rid of three women than a piece of one's life and
+ surroundings.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But a woman can be&mdash;&mdash;' began Dick, unguardedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A piece of one's life,' continued Torpenhow. 'No, she can't. His face
+ darkened for a moment. 'She says she wants to sympathise with you and help
+ you in your work, and everything else that clearly a man must do for
+ himself. Then she sends round five notes a day to ask why the dickens you
+ haven't been wasting your time with her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't generalise,' said the Nilghai. 'By the time you arrive at five
+ notes a day you must have gone through a good deal and behaved
+ accordingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shouldn't begin these things, my son.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shouldn't have gone down to the sea,' said Dick, just a little anxious
+ to change the conversation. 'And you shouldn't have sung.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The sea isn't sending you five notes a day,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, but I'm fatally compromised. She's an enduring old hag, and I'm sorry
+ I ever met her. Why wasn't I born and bred and dead in a three-pair back?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hear him blaspheming his first love! Why in the world shouldn't you
+ listen to her?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Dick could reply the Nilghai lifted up his voice with a shout that
+ shook the windows, in 'The Men of the Sea,' that begins, as all know, 'The
+ sea is a wicked old woman,' and after rading through eight lines whose
+ imagery is truthful, ends in a refrain, slow as the clacking of a capstan
+ when the boat comes unwillingly up to the bars where the men sweat and
+ tramp in the shingle.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ '"Ye that bore us, O restore us!
+ She is kinder than ye;
+ For the call is on our heart-strings!"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai sang that verse twice, with simple cunning, intending that
+ Dick should hear. But Dick was waiting for the farewell of the men to
+ their wives.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ '"Ye that love us, can ye move us?
+ She is dearer than ye;
+ And your sleep will be the sweeter,"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The rough words beat like the blows of the waves on the bows of the
+ rickety boat from Lima in the days when Dick was mixing paints, making
+ love, drawing devils and angels in the half dark, and wondering whether
+ the next minute would put the Italian captain's knife between his
+ shoulder-blades. And the go-fever which is more real than many doctors'
+ diseases, waked and raged, urging him who loved Maisie beyond anything in
+ the world, to go away and taste the old hot, unregenerate life again,&mdash;to
+ scuffle, swear, gamble, and love light loves with his fellows; to take
+ ship and know the sea once more, and by her beget pictures; to talk to
+ Binat among the sands of Port Said while Yellow 'Tina mixed the drinks; to
+ hear the crackle of musketry, and see the smoke roll outward, thin and
+ thicken again till the shining black faces came through, and in that hell
+ every man was strictly responsible for his own head, and his own alone,
+ and struck with an unfettered arm. It was impossible, utterly impossible,
+ but&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ '"Oh, our fathers in the churchyard,
+ She is older than ye,
+ And our graves will be the greener,"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'What is there to hinder?' said Torpenhow, in the long hush that followed
+ the song.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You said a little time since that you wouldn't come for a walk round the
+ world, Torp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That was months ago, and I only objected to your making money for
+ travelling expenses. You've shot your bolt here and it has gone home. Go
+ away and do some work, and see some things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Get some of the fat off you; you're disgracefully out of condition,' said
+ the Nilghai, making a plunge from the chair and grasping a handful of Dick
+ generally over the right ribs. 'Soft as putty&mdash;pure tallow born of
+ over-feeding. Train it off, Dickie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We're all equally gross, Nilghai. Next time you have to take the field
+ you'll sit down, wink your eyes, gasp, and die in a fit.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind. You go away on a ship. Go to Lima again, or to Brazil.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There's always trouble in South America.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you suppose I want to be told where to go? Great Heavens, the only
+ difficulty is to know where I'm to stop. But I shall stay here, as I told
+ you before.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then you'll be buried in Kensal Green and turn into adipocere with the
+ others,' said Torpenhow. 'Are you thinking of commissions in hand? Pay
+ forfeit and go. You've money enough to travel as a king if you please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've the grisliest notions of amusement, Torp. I think I see myself
+ shipping first class on a six-thousand-ton hotel, and asking the third
+ engineer what makes the engines go round, and whether it isn't very warm
+ in the stokehold. Ho! ho! I should ship as a loafer if ever I shipped at
+ all, which I'm not going to do. I shall compromise, and go for a small
+ trip to begin with.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's something at any rate. Where will you go?' said Torpenhow. 'It
+ would do you all the good in the world, old man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai saw the twinkle in Dick's eye, and refrained from speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shall go in the first place to Rathray's stable, where I shall hire one
+ horse, and take him very carefully as far as Richmond Hill. Then I shall
+ walk him back again, in case he should accidentally burst into a lather
+ and make Rathray angry. I shall do that to-morrow, for the sake of air and
+ exercise.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Bah!' Dick had barely time to throw up his arm and ward off the cushion
+ that the disgusted Torpenhow heaved at his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Air and exercise indeed,' said the Nilghai, sitting down heavily on Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let's give him a little of both. Get the bellows, Torp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point the conference broke up in disorder, because Dick would not
+ open his mouth till the Nilghai held his nose fast, and there was some
+ trouble in forcing the nozzle of the bellows between his teeth; and even
+ when it was there he weakly tried to puff against the force of the blast,
+ and his cheeks blew up with a great explosion; and the enemy becoming
+ helpless with laughter he so beat them over the head with a soft sofa
+ cushion that that became unsewn and distributed its feathers, and Binkie,
+ interfering in Torpenhow's interests, was bundled into the half-empty bag
+ and advised to scratch his way out, which he did after a while, travelling
+ rapidly up and down the floor in the shape of an agitated green haggis,
+ and when he came out looking for satisfaction, the three pillars of his
+ world were picking feathers out of their hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A prophet has no honour in his own country,' said Dick, ruefully, dusting
+ his knees. 'This filthy fluff will never brush off my legs.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was all for your own good,' said the Nilghai. 'Nothing like air and
+ exercise.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All for your good,' said Torpenhow, not in the least with reference to
+ past clowning. 'It would let you focus things at their proper worth and
+ prevent your becoming slack in this hothouse of a town. Indeed it would,
+ old man. I shouldn't have spoken if I hadn't thought so. Only, you make a
+ joke of everything.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Before God I do no such thing,' said Dick, quickly and earnestly. 'You
+ don't know me if you think that.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don't think it,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How can fellows like ourselves, who know what life and death really mean,
+ dare to make a joke of anything? I know we pretend it, to save ourselves
+ from breaking down or going to the other extreme. Can't I see, old man,
+ how you're always anxious about me, and try to advise me to make my work
+ better? Do you suppose I don't think about that myself? But you can't help
+ me&mdash;you can't help me&mdash;not even you. I must play my own hand
+ alone in my own way.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hear, hear,' from the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the one thing in the Nilghai Saga that I've never drawn in the
+ Nungapunga Book?' Dick continued to Torpenhow, who was a little astonished
+ at the outburst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there was one blank page in the book given over to the sketch that
+ Dick had not drawn of the crowning exploit in the Nilghai's life; when
+ that man, being young and forgetting that his body and bones belonged to
+ the paper that employed him, had ridden over sunburned slippery grass in
+ the rear of Bredow's brigade on the day that the troopers flung themselves
+ at Caurobert's artillery, and for aught they knew twenty battalions in
+ front, to save the battered 24th German Infantry, to give time to decide
+ the fate of Vionville, and to learn ere their remnant came back to
+ Flavigay that cavalry can attack and crumple and break unshaken infantry.
+ Whenever he was inclined to think over a life that might have been better,
+ an income that might have been larger, and a soul that might have been
+ considerably cleaner, the Nilghai would comfort himself with the thought,
+ 'I rode with Bredow's brigade at Vionville,' and take heart for any lesser
+ battle the next day might bring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know,' he said very gravely. 'I was always glad that you left it out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I left it out because Nilghai taught me what the Germany army learned
+ then, and what Schmidt taught their cavalry. I don't know German.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What is it? "Take care of the time and the dressing will take care of
+ itself." I must ride my own line to my own beat, old man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tempe ist richtung. You've learned your lesson well,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He must go alone. He speaks truth, Torp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maybe I'm as wrong as I can be&mdash;hideously wrong. I must find that
+ out for myself, as I have to think things out for myself, but I daren't
+ turn my head to dress by the next man. It hurts me a great deal more than
+ you know not to be able to go, but I cannot, that's all. I must do my own
+ work and live my own life in my own way, because I'm responsible for both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only don't think I frivol about it, Torp. I have my own matches and
+ sulphur, and I'll make my own hell, thanks.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was an uncomfortable pause. Then Torpenhow said blandly, 'What did
+ the Governor of North Carolina say to the Governor of South Carolina?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Excellent notion. It is a long time between drinks. There are the makings
+ of a very fine prig in you, Dick,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've liberated my mind, estimable Binkie, with the feathers in his
+ mouth.' Dick picked up the still indignant one and shook him tenderly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're tied up in a sack and made to run about blind, Binkie-wee, without
+ any reason, and it has hurt your little feelings. Never mind. Sic volo,
+ sic jubeo, stet pro ratione voluntas, and don't sneeze in my eye because I
+ talk Latin. Good-night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's distinctly one for you,' said the Nilghai. 'I told you it was
+ hopeless to meddle with him. He's not pleased.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He'd swear at me if he weren't. I can't make it out. He has the go-fever
+ upon him and he won't go. I only hope that he mayn't have to go some day
+ when he doesn't want to,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ In his own room Dick was settling a question with himself&mdash;and the
+ question was whether all the world, and all that was therein, and a
+ burning desire to exploit both, was worth one threepenny piece thrown into
+ the Thames.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It came of seeing the sea, and I'm a cur to think about it,' he decided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'After all, the honeymoon will be that tour&mdash;with reservations;
+ only... only I didn't realise that the sea was so strong. I didn't feel it
+ so much when I was with Maisie. These damnable songs did it. He's
+ beginning again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was only Herrick's Nightpiece to Julia that the Nilghai sang, and
+ before it was ended Dick reappeared on the threshold, not altogether
+ clothed indeed, but in his right mind, thirsty and at peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mood had come and gone with the rising and the falling of the tide by
+ Fort Keeling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'If I have taken the common clay
+ And wrought it cunningly
+ In the shape of a god that was digged a clod,
+ The greater honour to me.'
+
+ 'If thou hast taken the common clay,
+ And thy hands be not free
+ From the taint of the soil, thou hast made thy spoil
+ The greater shame to thee.'&mdash;The Two Potters.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ HE DID no work of any kind for the rest of the week. Then came another
+ Sunday. He dreaded and longed for the day always, but since the red-haired
+ girl had sketched him there was rather more dread than desire in his mind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He found that Maisie had entirely neglected his suggestions about
+ line-work. She had gone off at score filed with some absurd notion for a
+ 'fancy head.' It cost Dick something to command his temper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the good of suggesting anything?' he said pointedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ah, but this will be a picture,&mdash;a real picture; and I know that
+ Kami will let me send it to the Salon. You don't mind, do you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I suppose not. But you won't have time for the Salon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie hesitated a little. She even felt uncomfortable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We're going over to France a month sooner because of it. I shall get the
+ idea sketched out here and work it up at Kami's.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's heart stood still, and he came very near to being disgusted with
+ his queen who could do no wrong. 'Just when I thought I had made some
+ headway, she goes off chasing butterflies. It's too maddening!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no possibility of arguing, for the red-haired girl was in the
+ studio. Dick could only look unutterable reproach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry,' he said, 'and I think you make a mistake. But what's the idea
+ of your new picture?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I took it from a book.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's bad, to begin with. Books aren't the places for pictures. And&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's this,' said the red-haired girl behind him. 'I was reading it to
+ Maisie the other day from The City of Dreadful Night. D'you know the
+ book?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A little. I am sorry I spoke. There are pictures in it. What has taken
+ her fancy?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The description of the Melancolia&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Her folded wings as of a mighty eagle,
+ But all too impotent to lift the regal
+ Robustness of her earth-born strength and pride.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And here again. (Maisie, get the tea, dear.)
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'The forehead charged with baleful thoughts and dreams,
+ The household bunch of keys, the housewife's gown,
+ Voluminous indented, and yet rigid
+ As though a shell of burnished metal frigid,
+ Her feet thick-shod to tread all weakness down.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ There was no attempt to conceal the scorn of the lazy voice. Dick winced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But that has been done already by an obscure artist by the name of
+ Durer,' said he. 'How does the poem run?&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Three centuries and threescore years ago, With phantasies of his peculiar
+ thought.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You might as well try to rewrite Hamlet. It will be a waste of time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, it won't,' said Maisie, putting down the teacups with a clatter to
+ reassure herself. 'And I mean to do it. Can't you see what a beautiful
+ thing it would make?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How in perdition can one do work when one hasn't had the proper training?
+ Any fool can get a notion. It needs training to drive the thing through,&mdash;training
+ and conviction; not rushing after the first fancy.' Dick spoke between his
+ teeth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't understand,' said Maisie. 'I think I can do it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the voice of the girl behind him&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Baffled and beaten back, she works on still; Weary and sick of soul, she
+ works the more.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Sustained by her indomitable will,
+ The hands shall fashion, and the brain shall pore,
+ And all her sorrow shall be turned to labour&mdash;&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I fancy Maisie means to embody herself in the picture.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sitting on a throne of rejected pictures? No, I shan't, dear. The notion
+ in itself has fascinated me.&mdash;Of course you don't care for fancy
+ heads, Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I don't think you could do them. You like blood and bones.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's a direct challenge. If you can do a Melancolia that isn't merely a
+ sorrowful female head, I can do a better one; and I will, too. What d'you
+ know about Melacolias?' Dick firmly believed that he was even then tasting
+ three-quarters of all the sorrow in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She was a woman,' said Maisie, 'and she suffered a great deal,&mdash;till
+ she could suffer no more. Then she began to laugh at it all, and then I
+ painted her and sent her to the Salon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The red-haired girl rose up and left the room, laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick looked at Maisie humbly and hopelessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind about the picture,' he said. 'Are you really going back to
+ Kami's for a month before your time?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must, if I want to get the picture done.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And that's all you want?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course. Don't be stupid, Dick.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You haven't the power. You have only the ideas&mdash;the ideas and the
+ little cheap impulses. How you could have kept at your work for ten years
+ steadily is a mystery to me. So you are really going,&mdash;a month before
+ you need?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must do my work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Your work&mdash;bah!... No, I didn't mean that. It's all right, dear. Of
+ course you must do your work, and&mdash;I think I'll say good-bye for this
+ week.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Won't you even stay for tea? 'No, thank you. Have I your leave to go,
+ dear? There's nothing more you particularly want me to do, and the
+ line-work doesn't matter.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish you could stay, and then we could talk over my picture. If only
+ one single picture's a success, it draws attention to all the others. I
+ know some of my work is good, if only people could see. And you needn't
+ have been so rude about it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry. We'll talk the Melancolia over some one of the other Sundays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There are four more&mdash;yes, one, two, three, four&mdash;before you go.
+ Good-bye, Maisie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie stood by the studio window, thinking, till the red-haired girl
+ returned, a little white at the corners of her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick's gone off,' said Maisie. 'Just when I wanted to talk about the
+ picture. Isn't it selfish of him?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her companion opened her lips as if to speak, shut them again, and went on
+ reading The City of Dreadful Night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was in the Park, walking round and round a tree that he had chosen as
+ his confidante for many Sundays past. He was swearing audibly, and when he
+ found that the infirmities of the English tongue hemmed in his rage, he
+ sought consolation in Arabic, which is expressly designed for the use of
+ the afflicted. He was not pleased with the reward of his patient service;
+ nor was he pleased with himself; and it was long before he arrived at the
+ proposition that the queen could do no wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's a losing game,' he said. 'I'm worth nothing when a whim of hers is
+ in question. But in a losing game at Port Said we used to double the
+ stakes and go on. She do a Melancolia! She hasn't the power, or the
+ insight, or the training. Only the desire. She's cursed with the curse of
+ Reuben. She won't do line-work, because it means real work; and yet she's
+ stronger than I am. I'll make her understand that I can beat her on her
+ own Melancolia. Even then she wouldn't care. She says I can only do blood
+ and bones. I don't believe she has blood in her veins. All the same I
+ lover her; and I must go on loving her; and if I can humble her inordinate
+ vanity I will. I'll do a Melancolia that shall be something like a
+ Melancolia&mdash;"the Melancolia that transcends all wit." I'll do it at
+ once, con&mdash;bless her.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He discovered that the notion would not come to order, and that he could
+ not free his mind for an hour from the thought of Maisie's departure. He
+ took very small interest in her rough studies for the Melancolia when she
+ showed them next week. The Sundays were racing past, and the time was at
+ hand when all the church bells in London could not ring Maisie back to
+ him. Once or twice he said something to Binkie about 'hermaphroditic
+ futilities,' but the little dog received so many confidences both from
+ Torpenhow and Dick that he did not trouble his tulip-ears to listen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was permitted to see the girls off. They were going by the Dover
+ night-boat; and they hoped to return in August. It was then February, and
+ Dick felt that he was being hardly used. Maisie was so busy stripping the
+ small house across the Park, and packing her canvases, that she had not
+ time for thought. Dick went down to Dover and wasted a day there fretting
+ over a wonderful possibility. Would Maisie at the very last allow him one
+ small kiss? He reflected that he might capture her by the strong arm, as
+ he had seem women captured in the Southern Soudan, and lead her away; but
+ Maisie would never be led. She would turn her gray eyes upon him and say,
+ 'Dick, how selfish you are!' Then his courage would fail him. It would be
+ better, after all, to beg for that kiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked more than usually kissable as she stepped from the
+ night-mail on to the windy pier, in a gray waterproof and a little gray
+ cloth travelling-cap. The red-haired girl was not so lovely. Her green
+ eyes were hollow and her lips were dry. Dick saw the trunks aboard, and
+ went to Maisie's side in the darkness under the bridge. The mail-bags were
+ thundering into the forehold, and the red-haired girl was watching them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll have a rough passage to-night,' said Dick. 'It's blowing outside.
+ I suppose I may come over and see you if I'm good?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You mustn't. I shall be busy. At least, if I want you I'll send for you.
+ But I shall write from Vitry-sur-Marne. I shall have heaps of things to
+ consult you about. Oh, Dick, you have been so good to me!&mdash;so good to
+ me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank you for that, dear. It hasn't made any difference, has it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can't tell a fib. It hasn't&mdash;in that way. But don't think I'm not
+ grateful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Damn the gratitude!' said Dick, huskily, to the paddle-box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the use of worrying? You know I should ruin your life, and you'd
+ ruin mine, as things are now. You remember what you said when you were so
+ angry that day in the Park? One of us has to be broken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Can't you wait till that day comes?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, love. I want you unbroken&mdash;all to myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie shook her head. 'My poor Dick, what can I say!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't say anything. Give me a kiss. Only one kiss, Maisie. I'll swear I
+ won't take any more. You might as well, and then I can be sure you're
+ grateful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie put her cheek forward, and Dick took his reward in the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was only one kiss, but, since there was no time-limit specified, it was
+ a long one. Maisie wrenched herself free angrily, and Dick stood abashed
+ and tingling from head to toe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good-bye, darling. I didn't mean to scare you. I'm sorry. Only&mdash;keep
+ well and do good work,&mdash;specially the Melancolia. I'm going to do
+ one, too. Remember me to Kami, and be careful what you drink. Country
+ drinking-water is bad everywhere, but it's worse in France. Write to me if
+ you want anything, and good-bye. Say good-bye to the whatever-you-call-um
+ girl, and&mdash;can't I have another kiss? No. You're quite right.
+ Good-bye.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A should told him that it was not seemly to charge of the mail-bag
+ incline. He reached the pier as the steamer began to move off, and he
+ followed her with his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And there's nothing&mdash;nothing in the wide world&mdash;to keep us
+ apart except her obstinacy. These Calais night-boats are much too small.
+ I'll get Torp to write to the papers about it. She's beginning to pitch
+ already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie stood where Dick had left her till she heard a little gasping cough
+ at her elbow. The red-haired girl's eyes were alight with cold flame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He kissed you!' she said. 'How could you let him, when he wasn't anything
+ to you? How dared you to take a kiss from him? Oh, Maisie, let's go to the
+ ladies' cabin. I'm sick,&mdash;deadly sick.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We aren't into open water yet. Go down, dear, and I'll stay here. I don't
+ like the smell of the engines.... Poor Dick! He deserved one,&mdash;only
+ one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I didn't think he'd frighten me so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick returned to town next day just in time for lunch, for which he had
+ telegraphed. To his disgust, there were only empty plates in the studio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifted up his voice like the bears in the fairy-tale, and Torpenhow
+ entered, looking guilty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'H'sh!' said he. 'Don't make such a noise. I took it. Come into my rooms,
+ and I'll show you why.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick paused amazed at the threshold, for on Torpenhow's sofa lay a girl
+ asleep and breathing heavily. The little cheap sailor-hat, the
+ blue-and-white dress, fitter for June than for February, dabbled with mud
+ at the skirts, the jacket trimmed with imitation Astrakhan and ripped at
+ the shoulder-seams, the one-and-elevenpenny umbrella, and, above all, the
+ disgraceful condition of the kid-topped boots, declared all things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, I say, old man, this is too bad! You mustn't bring this sort up here.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They steal things from the rooms.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It looks bad, I admit, but I was coming in after lunch, and she staggered
+ into the hall. I thought she was drunk at first, but it was collapse. I
+ couldn't leave her as she was, so I brought her up here and gave her your
+ lunch. She was fainting from want of food. She went fast asleep the minute
+ she had finished.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know something of that complaint. She's been living on sausages, I
+ suppose. Torp, you should have handed her over to a policeman for
+ presuming to faint in a respectable house. Poor little wretch! Look at the
+ face! There isn't an ounce of immorality in it. Only folly,&mdash;slack,
+ fatuous, feeble, futile folly. It's a typical head. D'you notice how the
+ skull begins to show through the flesh padding on the face and
+ cheek-bone?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a cold-blooded barbarian it is! Don't hit a woman when she's down.
+ Can't we do anything? She was simply dropping with starvation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She almost fell into my arms, and when she got to the food she ate like a
+ wild beast. It was horrible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can give her money, which she would probably spend in drinks. Is she
+ going to sleep for ever?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl opened her eyes and glared at the men between terror and
+ effrontery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Feeling better?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. Thank you. There aren't many gentlemen that are as kind as you are.
+ Thank you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When did you leave service?' said Dick, who had been watching the scarred
+ and chapped hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How did you know I was in service? I was. General servant. I didn't like
+ it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And how do you like being your own mistress?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do I look as if I liked it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I suppose not. One moment. Would you be good enough to turn your face to
+ the window?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl obeyed, and Dick watched her face keenly,&mdash;so keenly that
+ she made as if to hide behind Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The eyes have it,' said Dick, walking up and down. 'They are superb eyes
+ for my business. And, after all, every head depends on the eyes. This has
+ been sent from heaven to make up for&mdash;what was taken away. Now the
+ weekly strain's off my shoulders, I can get to work in earnest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evidently sent from heaven. Yes. Raise your chin a little, please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Gently, old man, gently. You're scaring somebody out of her wits,' said
+ Torpenhow, who could see the girl trembling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't let him hit me! Oh, please don't let him hit me! I've been hit
+ cruel to-day because I spoke to a man. Don't let him look at me like that!
+ He's reg'lar wicked, that one. Don't let him look at me like that,
+ neither! Oh, I feel as if I hadn't nothing on when he looks at me like
+ that!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The overstrained nerves in the frail body gave way, and the girl wept like
+ a little child and began to scream. Dick threw open the window, and
+ Torpenhow flung the door back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There you are,' said Dick, soothingly. 'My friend here can call for a
+ policeman, and you can run through that door. Nobody is going to hurt
+ you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl sobbed convulsively for a few minutes, and then tried to laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing in the world to hurt you. Now listen to me for a minute. I'm what
+ they call an artist by profession. You know what artists do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They draw the things in red and black ink on the pop-shop labels.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I dare say. I haven't risen to pop-shop labels yet. Those are done by the
+ Academicians. I want to draw your head.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What for?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because it's pretty. That is why you will come to the room across the
+ landing three times a week at eleven in the morning, and I'll give you
+ three quid a week just for sitting still and being drawn. And there's a
+ quid on account.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For nothing? Oh, my!' The girl turned the sovereign in her hand, and with
+ more foolish tears, 'Ain't neither o' you two gentlemen afraid of my
+ bilking you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. Only ugly girls do that. Try and remember this place. And, by the
+ way, what's your name?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm Bessic,&mdash;Bessie&mdash;&mdash; It's no use giving the rest.
+ Bessie Broke,&mdash;Stone-broke, if you like. What's your names? But
+ there,&mdash;no one ever gives the real ones.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick consulted Torpenhow with his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My name's Heldar, and my friend's called Torpenhow; and you must be sure
+ to come here. Where do you live?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'South-the-water,&mdash;one room,&mdash;five and sixpence a week. Aren't
+ you making fun of me about that three quid?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll see later on. And, Bessie, next time you come, remember, you
+ needn't wear that paint. It's bad for the skin, and I have all the colours
+ you'll be likely to need.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie withdrew, scrubbing her cheek with a ragged pocket-handkerchief.
+ The two men looked at each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're a man,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm afraid I've been a fool. It isn't our business to run about the earth
+ reforming Bessie Brokes. And a woman of any kind has no right on this
+ landing.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Perhaps she won't come back.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She will if she thinks she can get food and warmth here. I know she will,
+ worse luck. But remember, old man, she isn't a woman; she's my model; and
+ be careful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The idea! She's a dissolute little scarecrow,&mdash;a gutter-snippet and
+ nothing more.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So you think. Wait till she has been fed a little and freed from fear.
+ That fair type recovers itself very quickly. You won't know her in a week
+ or two, when that abject fear has died out of her eyes. She'll be too
+ happy and smiling for my purposes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But surely you're not taking her out of charity?&mdash;to please me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am not in the habit of playing with hot coals to please anybody. She
+ has been sent from heaven, as I may have remarked before, to help me with
+ my Melancolia.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never heard a word about the lady before.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the use of having a friend, if you must sling your notions at him
+ in words? You ought to know what I'm thinking about. You've heard me grunt
+ lately?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Even so; but grunts mean anything in your language, from bad 'baccy to
+ wicked dealers. And I don't think I've been much in your confidence for
+ some time.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was a high and soulful grunt. You ought to have understood that it
+ meant the Melancolia.' Dick walked Torpenhow up and down the room, keeping
+ silence. Then he smote him in the ribs, 'Now don't you see it? Bessie's
+ abject futility, and the terror in her eyes, welded on to one or two
+ details in the way of sorrow that have come under my experience lately.
+ Likewise some orange and black,&mdash;two keys of each. But I can't
+ explain on an empty stomach.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It sounds mad enough. You'd better stick to your soldiers, Dick, instead
+ of maundering about heads and eyes and experiences.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Think so?' Dick began to dance on his heels, singing&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They're as proud as a turkey when they hold the ready cash, You ought to
+ 'ear the way they laugh an' joke; They are tricky an' they're funny when
+ they've got the ready money,&mdash;Ow! but see 'em when they're all
+ stone-broke.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he sat down to pour out his heart to Maisie in a four-sheet letter of
+ counsel and encouragement, and registered an oath that he would get to
+ work with an undivided heart as soon as Bessie should reappear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl kept her appointment unpainted and unadorned, afraid and overbold
+ by turns. When she found that she was merely expected to sit still, she
+ grew calmer, and criticised the appointments of the studio with freedom
+ and some point. She liked the warmth and the comfort and the release from
+ fear of physical pain. Dick made two or three studies of her head in
+ monochrome, but the actual notion of the Melancolia would not arrive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a mess you keep your things in!' said Bessie, some days later, when
+ she felt herself thoroughly at home. 'I s'pose your clothes are just as
+ bad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gentlemen never think what buttons and tape are made for.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I buy things to wear, and wear 'em till they go to pieces. I don't know
+ what Torpenhow does.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie made diligent inquiry in the latter's room, and unearthed a bale of
+ disreputable socks. 'Some of these I'll mend now,' she said, 'and some
+ I'll take home. D'you know, I sit all day long at home doing nothing, just
+ like a lady, and no more noticing them other girls in the house than if
+ they was so many flies. I don't have any unnecessary words, but I put 'em
+ down quick, I can tell you, when they talk to me. No; it's quite nice
+ these days. I lock my door, and they can only call me names through the
+ keyhole, and I sit inside, just like a lady, mending socks. Mr. Torpenhow
+ wears his socks out both ends at once.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Three quid a week from me, and the delights of my society. No socks
+ mended. Nothing from Torp except a nod on the landing now and again, and
+ all his socks mended. Bessie is very much a woman,' thought Dick; and he
+ looked at her between half-shut eyes. Food and rest had transformed the
+ girl, as Dick knew they would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are you looking at me like that for?' she said quickly. 'Don't. You
+ look reg'lar bad when you look that way. You don't think much o' me, do
+ you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That depends on how you behave.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie behaved beautifully. Only it was difficult at the end of a sitting
+ to bid her go out into the gray streets. She very much preferred the
+ studio and a big chair by the stove, with some socks in her lap as an
+ excuse for delay. Then Torpenhow would come in, and Bessie would be moved
+ to tell strange and wonderful stories of her past, and still stranger ones
+ of her present improved circumstances. She would make them tea as though
+ she had a right to make it; and once or twice on these occasions Dick
+ caught Torpenhow's eyes fixed on the trim little figure, and because
+ Bessie'' flittings about the room made Dick ardently long for Maisie, he
+ realised whither Torpenhow's thoughts were tending. And Bessie was
+ exceedingly careful of the condition of Torpenhow's linen. She spoke very
+ little to him, but sometimes they talked together on the landing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was a great fool,' Dick said to himself. 'I know what red firelight
+ looks like when a man's tramping through a strange town; and ours is a
+ lonely, selfish sort of life at the best. I wonder Maisie doesn't feel
+ that sometimes. But I can't order Bessie away. That's the worst of
+ beginning things. One never knows where they stop.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One evening, after a sitting prolonged to the last limit of the light,
+ Dick was roused from a nap by a broken voice in Torpenhow's room. He
+ jumped to his feet. 'Now what ought I to do? It looks foolish to go in.&mdash;Oh,
+ bless you, Binkie!' The little terrier thrust Torpenhow's door open with
+ his nose and came out to take possession of Dick's chair. The door swung
+ wide unheeded, and Dick across the landing could see Bessie in the
+ half-light making her little supplication to Torpenhow. She was kneeling
+ by his side, and her hands were clasped across his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know,&mdash;I know,' she said thickly. ''Tisn't right o' me to do this,
+ but I can't help it; and you were so kind,&mdash;so kind; and you never
+ took any notice o' me. And I've mended all your things so carefully,&mdash;I
+ did. Oh, please, 'tisn't as if I was asking you to marry me. I wouldn't
+ think of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But you&mdash;couldn't you take and live with me till Miss Right comes
+ along? I'm only Miss Wrong, I know, but I'd work my hands to the bare bone
+ for you. And I'm not ugly to look at. Say you will!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick hardly recognised Torpenhow's voice in reply&mdash;'But look here.
+ It's no use. I'm liable to be ordered off anywhere at a minute's notice if
+ a war breaks out. At a minute's notice&mdash;dear.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What does that matter? Until you go, then. Until you go. 'Tisn't much I'm
+ asking, and&mdash;you don't know how good I can cook.' She had put an arm
+ round his neck and was drawing his head down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Until&mdash;I&mdash;go, then.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp,' said Dick, across the landing. He could hardly steady his voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come here a minute, old man. I'm in trouble'&mdash;'Heaven send he'll
+ listen to me!' There was something very like an oath from Bessie's lips.
+ She was afraid of Dick, and disappeared down the staircase in panic, but
+ it seemed an age before Torpenhow entered the studio. He went to the
+ mantelpiece, buried his head on his arms, and groaned like a wounded bull.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What the devil right have you to interfere?' he said, at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who's interfering with which? Your own sense told you long ago you
+ couldn't be such a fool. It was a tough rack, St. Anthony, but you're all
+ right now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I oughtn't to have seen her moving about these rooms as if they belonged
+ to her. That's what upset me. It gives a lonely man a sort of hankering,
+ doesn't it?' said Torpenhow, piteously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now you talk sense. It does. But, since you aren't in a condition to
+ discuss the disadvantages of double housekeeping, do you know what you're
+ going to do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't. I wish I did.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're going away for a season on a brilliant tour to regain tone. You're
+ going to Brighton, or Scarborough, or Prawle Point, to see the ships go
+ by. And you're going at once. Isn't it odd? I'll take care of Binkie, but
+ out you go immediately. Never resist the devil. He holds the bank. Fly
+ from him. Pack your things and go.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I believe you're right. Where shall I go?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And you call yourself a special correspondent! Pack first and inquire
+ afterwards.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour later Torpenhow was despatched into the night for a hansom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'll probably think of some place to go to while you're moving,' said
+ Dick. 'On to Euston, to begin with, and&mdash;oh yes&mdash;get drunk
+ to-night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He returned to the studio, and lighted more candles, for he found the room
+ very dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, you Jezebel! you futile little Jezebel! Won't you hate me to-morrow!&mdash;Binkie,
+ come here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie turned over on his back on the hearth-rug, and Dick stirred him
+ with a meditative foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I said she was not immoral. I was wrong. She said she could cook. That
+ showed premeditated sin. Oh, Binkie, if you are a man you will go to
+ perdition; but if you are a woman, and say that you can cook, you will go
+ to a much worse place.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ What's you that follows at my side?&mdash;
+ The foe that ye must fight, my lord.&mdash;
+ That hirples swift as I can ride?&mdash;
+ The shadow of the night, my lord.&mdash;
+ Then wheel my horse against the foe!&mdash;
+ He's down and overpast, my lord.
+
+ Ye war against the sunset glow;
+ The darkness gathers fast, my lord.
+
+ &mdash;The Fight of Heriot's Ford.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'THIS is a cheerful life,' said Dick, some days later. 'Torp's away;
+ Bessie hates me; I can't get at the notion of the Melancolia; Maisie's
+ letters are scrappy; and I believe I have indigestion. What give a man
+ pains across the head and spots before his eyes, Binkie? Shall us take
+ some liver pills?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick had just gone through a lively scene with Bessie. She had for the
+ fiftieth time reproached him for sending Torpenhow away. She explained her
+ enduring hatred for Dick, and made it clear to him that she only sat for
+ the sake of his money. 'And Mr. Torpenhow's ten times a better man than
+ you,' she concluded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He is. That's why he went away. I should have stayed and made love to
+ you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl sat with her chin on her hand, scowling. 'To me! I'd like to
+ catch you! If I wasn't afraid o' being hung I'd kill you. That's what I'd
+ do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ D'you believe me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick smiled wearily. It is not pleasant to live in the company of a notion
+ that will not work out, a fox-terrier that cannot talk, and a woman who
+ talks too much. He would have answered, but at that moment there unrolled
+ itself from one corner of the studio a veil, as it were, of the flimsiest
+ gauze. He rubbed his eyes, but the gray haze would not go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This is disgraceful indigestion. Binkie, we will go to a medicine-man. We
+ can't have our eyes interfered with, for by these we get our bread; also
+ mutton-chop bones for little dogs.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor was an affable local practitioner with white hair, and he said
+ nothing till Dick began to describe the gray film in the studio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We all want a little patching and repairing from time to time,' he
+ chirped. 'Like a ship, my dear sir,&mdash;exactly like a ship. Sometimes
+ the hull is out of order, and we consult the surgeon; sometimes the
+ rigging, and then I advise; sometimes the engines, and we go to the
+ brain-specialist; sometimes the look-out on the bridge is tired, and then
+ we see an oculist. I should recommend you to see an oculist. A little
+ patching and repairing from time to time is all we want. An oculist, by
+ all means.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick sought an oculist,&mdash;the best in London. He was certain that the
+ local practitioner did not know anything about his trade, and more certain
+ that Maisie would laugh at him if he were forced to wear spectacles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've neglected the warnings of my lord the stomach too long. Hence these
+ spots before the eyes, Binkie. I can see as well as I ever could.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he entered the dark hall that led to the consulting-room a man cannoned
+ against him. Dick saw the face as it hurried out into the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's the writer-type. He has the same modelling of the forehead as
+ Torp. He looks very sick. Probably heard something he didn't like.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even as he thought, a great fear came upon Dick, a fear that made him hold
+ his breath as he walked into the oculist's waiting room, with the heavy
+ carved furniture, the dark-green paper, and the sober-hued prints on the
+ wall. He recognised a reproduction of one of his own sketches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many people were waiting their turn before him. His eye was caught by a
+ flaming red-and-gold Christmas-carol book. Little children came to that
+ eye-doctor, and they needed large-type amusement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's idolatrous bad Art,' he said, drawing the book towards himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'From the anatomy of the angels, it has been made in Germany.' He opened
+ in mechanically, and there leaped to his eyes a verse printed in red ink&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The next good joy that Mary had,
+ It was the joy of three,
+ To see her good Son Jesus Christ
+ Making the blind to see;
+ Making the blind to see, good Lord,
+ And happy we may be.
+
+ Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
+ To all eternity!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Dick read and re-read the verse till his turn came, and the doctor was
+ bending above him seated in an arm-chair. The blaze of the gas-microscope
+ in his eyes made him wince. The doctor's hand touched the scar of the
+ sword-cut on Dick's head, and Dick explained briefly how he had come by
+ it. When the flame was removed, Dick saw the doctor's face, and the fear
+ came upon him again. The doctor wrapped himself in a mist of words. Dick
+ caught allusions to 'scar,' 'frontal bone,' 'optic nerve,' 'extreme
+ caution,' and the 'avoidance of mental anxiety.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Verdict?' he said faintly. 'My business is painting, and I daren't waste
+ time. What do you make of it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the whirl of words, but this time they conveyed a meaning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Can you give me anything to drink?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many sentences were pronounced in that darkened room, and the prisoners
+ often needed cheering. Dick found a glass of liqueur brandy in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As far as I can gather,' he said, coughing above the spirit, 'you call it
+ decay of the optic nerve, or something, and therefore hopeless. What is my
+ time-limit, avoiding all strain and worry?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Perhaps one year.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My God! And if I don't take care of myself?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I really could not say. One cannot ascertain the exact amount of injury
+ inflicted by the sword-cut. The scar is an old one, and&mdash;exposure to
+ the strong light of the desert, did you say?&mdash;with excessive
+ application to fine work? I really could not say?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I beg your pardon, but it has come without any warning. If you will let
+ me, I'll sit here for a minute, and then I'll go. You have been very good
+ in telling me the truth. Without any warning; without any warning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thanks.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick went into the street, and was rapturously received by Binkie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We've got it very badly, little dog! Just as badly as we can get it.
+ We'll go to the Park to think it out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They headed for a certain tree that Dick knew well, and they sat down to
+ thin, because his legs were trembling under him and there was cold fear at
+ the pit of his stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How could it have come without any warning? It's as sudden as being shot.
+ It's the living death, Binkie. We're to be shut up in the dark in one year
+ if we're careful, and we shan't see anybody, and we shall never have
+ anything we want, not though we live to be a hundred!' Binkie wagged his
+ tail joyously. 'Binkie, we must think. Let's see how it feels to be
+ blind.' Dick shut his eyes, and flaming commas and Catherine-wheels
+ floated inside the lids. Yet when he looked across the Park the scope of
+ his vision was not contracted. He could see perfectly, until a procession
+ of slow-wheeling fireworks defiled across his eyeballs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Little dorglums, we aren't at all well. Let's go home. If only Torp were
+ back, now!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Torpenhow was in the south of England, inspecting dockyards in the
+ company of the Nilghai. His letters were brief and full of mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick had never asked anybody to help him in his joys or his sorrows. He
+ argued, in the loneliness of his studio, henceforward to be decorated with
+ a film of gray gauze in one corner, that, if his fate were blindness, all
+ the Torpenhows in the world could not save him. 'I can't call him off his
+ trip to sit down and sympathise with me. I must pull through this business
+ alone,' he said. He was lying on the sofa, eating his moustache and
+ wondering what the darkness of the night would be like. Then came to his
+ mind the memory of a quaint scene in the Soudan. A soldier had been nearly
+ hacked in two by a broad-bladed Arab spear. For one instant the man felt
+ no pain. Looking down, he saw that his life-blood was going from him. The
+ stupid bewilderment on his face was so intensely comic that both Dick and
+ Torpenhow, still panting and unstrung from a fight for life, had roared
+ with laughter, in which the man seemed as if he would join, but, as his
+ lips parted in a sheepish grin, the agony of death came upon him, and he
+ pitched grunting at their feet. Dick laughed again, remembering the
+ horror. It seemed so exactly like his own case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But I have a little more time allowed me,' he said. He paced up and down
+ the room, quietly at first, but afterwards with the hurried feet of fear.
+ It was as though a black shadow stood at his elbow and urged him to go
+ forward; and there were only weaving circles and floating pin-dots before
+ his eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We need to be calm, Binkie; we must be calm.' He talked aloud for the
+ sake of distraction. 'This isn't nice at all. What shall we do? We must do
+ something. Our time is short. I shouldn't have believed that this morning;
+ but now things are different. Binkie, where was Moses when the light went
+ out?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie smiled from ear to ear, as a well-bred terrier should, but made no
+ suggestion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ '"Were there but world enough and time, This coyness, Binkie, were not
+ crime.... But at my back I always hear&mdash;&mdash;"' He wiped his
+ forehead, which was unpleasantly damp. 'What can I do? What can I do? I
+ haven't any notions left, and I can't think connectedly, but I must do
+ something, or I shall go off my head.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hurried walk recommenced, Dick stopping every now and again to drag
+ forth long-neglected canvases and old note-books; for he turned to his
+ work by instinct, as a thing that could not fail. 'You won't do, and you
+ won't do,' he said, at each inspection. 'No more soldiers. I couldn't
+ paint 'em. Sudden death comes home too nearly, and this is battle and
+ murder for me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day was failing, and Dick thought for a moment that the twilight of
+ the blind had come upon him unaware. 'Allah Almighty!' he cried
+ despairingly, 'help me through the time of waiting, and I won't whine when
+ my punishment comes. What can I do now, before the light goes?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no answer. Dick waited till he could regain some sort of control
+ over himself. His hands were shaking, and he prided himself on their
+ steadiness; he could feel that his lips were quivering, and the sweat was
+ running down his face. He was lashed by fear, driven forward by the desire
+ to get to work at once and accomplish something, and maddened by the
+ refusal of his brain to do more than repeat the news that he was about to
+ go blind. 'It's a humiliating exhibition,' he thought, 'and I'm glad Torp
+ isn't here to see. The doctor said I was to avoid mental worry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Come here and let me pet you, Binkie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little dog yelped because Dick nearly squeezed the bark out of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he heard the man speaking in the twilight, and, doglike, understood
+ that his trouble stood off from him&mdash;'Allah is good, Binkie. Not
+ quite so gentle as we could wish, but we'll discuss that later. I think I
+ see my way to it now. All those studies of Bessie's head were nonsense,
+ and they nearly brought your master into a scrape. I hold the notion now
+ as clear as crystal,&mdash;"the Melancolia that transcends all wit." There
+ shall be Maisie in that head, because I shall never get Maisie; and Bess,
+ of course, because she knows all about Melancolia, though she doesn't know
+ she knows; and there shall be some drawing in it, and it shall all end up
+ with a laugh. That's for myself. Shall she giggle or grin? No, she shall
+ laugh right out of the canvas, and every man and woman that ever had a
+ sorrow of their own shall&mdash;what is it the poem says?&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'Understand the speech and feel a stir
+ Of fellowship in all disastrous fight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ "In all disastrous fight"? That's better than painting the thing merely to
+ pique Maisie. I can do it now because I have it inside me. Binkie, I'm
+ going to hold you up by your tail. You're an omen. Come here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie swung head downward for a moment without speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Rather like holding a guinea-pig; but you're a brave little dog, and you
+ don't yelp when you're hung up. It is an omen.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binkie went to his own chair, and as often as he looked saw Dick walking
+ up and down, rubbing his hands and chuckling. That night Dick wrote a
+ letter to Maisie full of the tenderest regard for her health, but saying
+ very little about his own, and dreamed of the Melancolia to be born. Not
+ till morning did he remember that something might happen to him in the
+ future.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He fell to work, whistling softly, and was swallowed up in the clean,
+ clear joy of creation, which does not come to man too often, lest he
+ should consider himself the equal of his God, and so refuse to die at the
+ appointed time. He forgot Maisie, Torpenhow, and Binkie at his feet, but
+ remembered to stir Bessie, who needed very little stirring, into a
+ tremendous rage, that he might watch the smouldering lights in her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He threw himself without reservation into his work, and did not think of
+ the doom that was to overtake him, for he was possessed with his notion,
+ and the things of this world had no power upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're pleased to-day,' said Bessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick waved his mahl-stick in mystic circles and went to the sideboard for
+ a drink. In the evening, when the exaltation of the day had died down, he
+ went to the sideboard again, and after some visits became convinced that
+ the eye-doctor was a liar, since he could still see everything very
+ clearly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was of opinion that he would even make a home for Maisie, and that
+ whether she liked it or not she should be his wife. The mood passed next
+ morning, but the sideboard and all upon it remained for his comfort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again he set to work, and his eyes troubled him with spots and dashes and
+ blurs till he had taken counsel with the sideboard, and the Melancolia
+ both on the canvas and in his own mind appeared lovelier than ever. There
+ was a delightful sense of irresponsibility upon him, such as they feel who
+ walking among their fellow-men know that the death-sentence of disease is
+ upon them, and, seeing that fear is but waste of the little time left, are
+ riotously happy. The days passed without event.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie arrived punctually always, and, though her voice seemed to Dick to
+ come from a distance, her face was always very near. The Melancolia began
+ to flame on the canvas, in the likeness of a woman who had known all the
+ sorrow in the world and was laughing at it. It was true that the corners
+ of the studio draped themselves in gray film and retired into the
+ darkness, that the spots in his eyes and the pains across his head were
+ very troublesome, and that Maisie's letters were hard to read and harder
+ still to answer. He could not tell her of his trouble, and he could not
+ laugh at her accounts of her own Melancolia which was always going to be
+ finished. But the furious days of toil and the nights of wild dreams made
+ amends for all, and the sideboard was his best friend on earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie was singularly dull. She used to shriek with rage when Dick stared
+ at her between half-closed eyes. Now she sulked, or watched him with
+ disgust, saying very little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow had been absent for six weeks. An incoherent note heralded his
+ return. 'News! great news!' he wrote. 'The Nilghai knows, and so does the
+ Keneu. We're all back on Thursday. Get lunch and clean your
+ accoutrements.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick showed Bessie the letter, and she abused him for that he had ever
+ sent Torpenhow away and ruined her life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well,' said Dick, brutally, 'you're better as you are, instead of making
+ love to some drunken beast in the street.' He felt that he had rescued
+ Torpenhow from great temptation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know if that's any worse than sitting to a drunken beast in a
+ studio. You haven't been sober for three weeks. You've been soaking the
+ whole time; and yet you pretend you're better than me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What d'you mean?' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Mean! You'll see when Mr. Torpenhow comes back.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not long to wait. Torpenhow met Bessie on the staircase without a
+ sign of feeling. He had news that was more to him than many Bessies, and
+ the Keneu and the Nilghai were trampling behind him, calling for Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Drinking like a fish,' Bessie whispered. 'He's been at it for nearly a
+ month.' She followed the men stealthily to hear judgment done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They came into the studio, rejoicing, to be welcomed over effusively by a
+ drawn, lined, shrunken, haggard wreck,&mdash;unshaven, blue-white about
+ the nostrils, stooping in the shoulders, and peering under his eyebrows
+ nervously. The drink had been at work as steadily as Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is this you?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All that's left of me. Sit down. Binkie's quite well, and I've been doing
+ some good work.' He reeled where he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've done some of the worst work you've ever done in your life. Man
+ alive, you're&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow turned to his companions appealingly, and they left the room to
+ find lunch elsewhere. Then he spoke; but, since the reproof of a friend is
+ much too sacred and intimate a thing to be printed, and since Torpenhow
+ used figures and metaphors which were unseemly, and contempt
+ untranslatable, it will never be known what was actually said to Dick, who
+ blinked and winked and picked at his hands. After a time the culprit began
+ to feel the need of a little self-respect. He was quite sure that he had
+ not in any way departed from virtue, and there were reasons, too, of which
+ Torpenhow knew nothing. He would explain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rose, tried to straighten his shoulders, and spoke to the face he could
+ hardly see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You are right,' he said. 'But I am right, too. After you went away I had
+ some trouble with my eyes. So I went to an oculist, and he turned a
+ gasogene&mdash;I mean a gas-engine&mdash;into my eye. That was very long
+ ago. He said, "Scar on the head,&mdash;sword-cut and optic nerve." Make a
+ note of that. So I am going blind. I have some work to do before I go
+ blind, and I suppose that I must do it. I cannot see much now, but I can
+ see best when I am drunk. I did not know I was drunk till I was told, but
+ I must go on with my work. If you want to see it, there it is.' He pointed
+ to the all but finished Melancolia and looked for applause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow said nothing, and Dick began to whimper feebly, for joy at
+ seeing Torpenhow again, for grief at misdeeds&mdash;if indeed they were
+ misdeeds&mdash;that made Torpenhow remote and unsympathetic, and for
+ childish vanity hurt, since Torpenhow had not given a word of praise to
+ his wonderful picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie looked through the keyhole after a long pause, and saw the two
+ walking up and down as usual, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereat she said something so improper that it shocked even Binkie, who was
+ dribbling patiently on the landing with the hope of seeing his master
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The lark will make her hymn to God,
+ The partridge call her brood,
+ While I forget the heath I trod,
+ The fields wherein I stood.
+
+ 'Tis dule to know not night from morn,
+ But deeper dule to know
+ I can but hear the hunter's horn
+ That once I used to blow.
+
+ &mdash;The Only Son.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ IT WAS the third day after Torpenhow's return, and his heart was heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you mean to tell me that you can't see to work without whiskey? It's
+ generally the other way about.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Can a drunkard swear on his honour?' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, if he has been as god a man as you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then I give you my word of honour,' said Dick, speaking hurriedly through
+ parched lips. 'Old man, I can hardly see your face now. You've kept me
+ sober for two days,&mdash;if I ever was drunk,&mdash;and I've done no
+ work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Don't keep me back any more. I don't know when my eyes may give out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The spots and dots and the pains and things are crowding worse than ever.
+ I swear I can see all right when I'm&mdash;when I'm moderately screwed, as
+ you say. Give me three more sittings from Bessie and all&mdash;the stuff I
+ want, and the picture will be done. I can't kill myself in three days. It
+ only means a touch of D. T. at the worst.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I give you three days more will you promise me to stop work and&mdash;the
+ other thing, whether the picture's finished or not?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can't. You don't know what that picture means to me. But surely you
+ could get the Nilghai to help you, and knock me down and tie me up. I
+ shouldn't fight for the whiskey, but I should for the work.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go on, then. I give you three days; but you're nearly breaking my heart.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick returned to his work, toiling as one possessed; and the yellow devil
+ of whiskey stood by him and chased away the spots in his eyes. The
+ Melancolia was nearly finished, and was all or nearly all that he had
+ hoped she would be. Dick jested with Bessie, who reminded him that he was
+ 'a drunken beast'; but the reproof did not move him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You can't understand, Bess. We are in sight of land now, and soon we
+ shall lie back and think about what we've done. I'll give you three
+ months' pay when the picture's finished, and next time I have any more
+ work in hand&mdash;but that doesn't matter. Won't three months' pay make
+ you hate me less?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, it won't! I hate you, and I'll go on hating you. Mr. Torpenhow won't
+ speak to me any more. He's always looking at maps.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie did not say that she had again laid siege to Torpenhow, or that at
+ the end of our passionate pleading he had picked her up, given her a kiss,
+ and put her outside the door with the recommendation not to be a little
+ fool. He spent most of his time in the company of the Nilghai, and their
+ talk was of war in the near future, the hiring of transports, and secret
+ preparations among the dockyards. He did not wish to see Dick till the
+ picture was finished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's doing first-class work,' he said to the Nilghai, 'and it's quite out
+ of his regular line. But, for the matter of that, so's his infernal
+ soaking.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind. Leave him alone. When he has come to his senses again we'll
+ carry him off from this place and let him breathe clean air. Poor Dick! I
+ don't envy you, Torp, when his eyes fail.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, it will be a case of "God help the man who's chained to our Davie."
+ The worst is that we don't know when it will happen, and I believe the
+ uncertainty and the waiting have sent Dick to the whiskey more than
+ anything else.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How the Arab who cut his head open would grin if he knew!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's at perfect liberty to grin if he can. He's dead. That's poor
+ consolation now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon of the third day Torpenhow heard Dick calling for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All finished!' he shouted. 'I've done it! Come in! Isn't she a beauty?
+ Isn't she a darling? I've been down to hell to get her; but isn't she
+ worth it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow looked at the head of a woman who laughed,&mdash;a full-lipped,
+ hollow-eyed woman who laughed from out of the canvas as Dick had intended
+ she would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who taught you how to do it?' said Torpenhow. 'The touch and notion have
+ nothing to do with your regular work. What a face it is! What eyes, and
+ what insolence!' Unconsciously he threw back his head and laughed with
+ her. 'She's seen the game played out,&mdash;I don't think she had a good
+ time of it,&mdash;and now she doesn't care. Isn't that the idea?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Exactly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where did you get the mouth and chin from? They don't belong to Bess.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They're&mdash;some one else's. But isn't it good? Isn't it thundering
+ good? Wasn't it worth the whiskey? I did it. Alone I did it, and it's the
+ best I can do.' He drew his breath sharply, and whispered, 'Just God! what
+ could I not do ten years hence, if I can do this now!&mdash;By the way,
+ what do you think of it, Bess?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The girl was biting her lips. She loathed Torpenhow because he had taken
+ no notice of her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I think it's just the horridest, beastliest thing I ever saw,' she
+ answered, and turned away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'More than you will be of that way of thinking, young woman.&mdash;Dick,
+ there's a sort of murderous, viperine suggestion in the poise of the head
+ that I don't understand,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That's trick-work,' said Dick, chuckling with delight at being completely
+ understood. 'I couldn't resist one little bit of sheer swagger. It's a
+ French trick, and you wouldn't understand; but it's got at by slewing
+ round the head a trifle, and a tiny, tiny foreshortening of one side of
+ the face from the angle of the chin to the top of the left ear. That, and
+ deepening the shadow under the lobe of the ear. It was flagrant
+ trick-work; but, having the notion fixed, I felt entitled to play with it,&mdash;Oh,
+ you beauty!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Amen! She is a beauty. I can feel it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So will every man who has any sorrow of his own,' said Dick, slapping his
+ thigh. 'He shall see his trouble there, and, by the Lord Harry, just when
+ he's feeling properly sorry for himself he shall throw back his head and
+ laugh,&mdash;as she is laughing. I've put the life of my heart and the
+ light of my eyes into her, and I don't care what comes.... I'm tired,&mdash;awfully
+ tired. I think I'll get to sleep. Take away the whiskey, it has served its
+ turn, and give Bessie thirty-six quid, and three over for luck. Cover the
+ picture.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dropped asleep in the long chair, hid face white and haggard, almost
+ before he had finished the sentence. Bessie tried to take Torpenhow's
+ hand. 'Aren't you never going to speak to me any more?' she said; but
+ Torpenhow was looking at Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a stock of vanity the man has! I'll take him in hand to-morrow and
+ make much of him. He deserves it.&mdash;Eh! what was that, Bess?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing. I'll put things tidy here a little, and then I'll go. You
+ couldn't give the that three months' pay now, could you? He said you were
+ to.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow gave her a check and went to his own rooms. Bessie faithfully
+ tidied up the studio, set the door ajar for flight, emptied half a bottle
+ of turpentine on a duster, and began to scrub the face of the Melancolia
+ viciously. The paint did not smudge quickly enough. She took a
+ palette-knife and scraped, following each stroke with the wet duster. In
+ five minutes the picture was a formless, scarred muddle of colours. She
+ threw the paint-stained duster into the studio stove, stuck out her tongue
+ at the sleeper, and whispered, 'Bilked!' as she turned to run down the
+ staircase. She would never see Torpenhow any more, but she had at least
+ done harm to the man who had come between her and her desire and who used
+ to make fun of her. Cashing the check was the very cream of the jest to
+ Bessie. Then the little privateer sailed across the Thames, to be
+ swallowed up in the gray wilderness of South-the-Water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick slept till late in the evening, when Torpenhow dragged him off to
+ bed. His eyes were as bright as his voice was hoarse. 'Let's have another
+ look at the picture,' he said, insistently as a child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You&mdash;go&mdash;to&mdash;bed,' said Torpenhow. 'You aren't at all
+ well, though you mayn't know it. You're as jumpy as a cat.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I reform to-morrow. Good-night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he repassed through the studio, Torpenhow lifted the cloth above the
+ picture, and almost betrayed himself by outcries: 'Wiped out!&mdash;scraped
+ out and turped out! He's on the verge of jumps as it is. That's Bess,&mdash;the
+ little fiend! Only a woman could have done that!-with the ink not dry on
+ the check, too! Dick will be raving mad to-morrow. It was all my fault for
+ trying to help gutter-devils. Oh, my poor Dick, the Lord is hitting you
+ very hard!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick could not sleep that night, partly for pure joy, and partly because
+ the well-known Catherine-wheels inside his eyes had given place to
+ crackling volcanoes of many-coloured fire. 'Spout away,' he said aloud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've done my work, and now you can do what you please.' He lay still,
+ staring at the ceiling, the long-pent-up delirium of drink in his veins,
+ his brain on fire with racing thoughts that would not stay to be
+ considered, and his hands crisped and dry. He had just discovered that he
+ was painting the face of the Melancolia on a revolving dome ribbed with
+ millions of lights, and that all his wondrous thoughts stood embodied
+ hundreds of feet below his tiny swinging plank, shouting together in his
+ honour, when something cracked inside his temples like an overstrained
+ bowstring, the glittering dome broke inward, and he was alone in the thick
+ night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll go to sleep. The room's very dark. Let's light a lamp and see how
+ the Melancolia looks. There ought to have been a moon.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was then that Torpenhow heard his name called by a voice that he did
+ not know,&mdash;in the rattling accents of deadly fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's looked at the picture,' was his first thought, as he hurried into
+ the bedroom and found Dick sitting up and beating the air with his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp! Torp! where are you? For pity's sake, come to me!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the matter?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick clutched at his shoulder. 'Matter! I've been lying here for hours in
+ the dark, and you never heard me. Torp, old man, don't go away. I'm all in
+ the dark. In the dark, I tell you!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow held the candle within a foot of Dick's eyes, but there was no
+ light in those eyes. He lit the gas, and Dick heard the flame catch. The
+ grip of his fingers on Torpenhow's shoulder made Torpenhow wince.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't leave me. You wouldn't leave me alone now, would you? I can't see.
+ D'you understand? It's black,&mdash;quite black,&mdash;and I feel as if I
+ was falling through it all.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Steady does it.' Torpenhow put his arm round Dick and began to rock him
+ gently to and fro.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's good. Now don't talk. If I keep very quiet for a while, this
+ darkness will lift. It seems just on the point of breaking. H'sh!' Dick
+ knit his brows and stared desperately in front of him. The night air was
+ chilling Torpenhow's toes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Can you stay like that a minute?' he said. 'I'll get my dressing-gown and
+ some slippers.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick clutched the bed-head with both hands and waited for the darkness to
+ clear away. 'What a time you've been!' he cried, when Torpenhow returned.
+ 'It's as black as ever. What are you banging about in the door-way?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Long chair,&mdash;horse-blanket,&mdash;pillow. Going to sleep by you. Lie
+ down now; you'll be better in the morning.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shan't!' The voice rose to a wail. 'My God! I'm blind! I'm blind, and
+ the darkness will never go away.' He made as if to leap from the bed, but
+ Torpenhow's arms were round him, and Torpenhow's chin was on his shoulder,
+ and his breath was squeezed out of him. He could only gasp, 'Blind!' and
+ wriggle feebly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Steady, Dickie, steady!' said the deep voice in his ear, and the grip
+ tightened. 'Bite on the bullet, old man, and don't let them think you're
+ afraid,' The grip could draw no closer. Both men were breathing heavily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick threw his head from side to side and groaned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let me go,' he panted. 'You're cracking my ribs. We-we mustn't let them
+ think we're afraid, must we,&mdash;all the powers of darkness and that
+ lot?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lie down. It's all over now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes,' said Dick, obediently. 'But would you mind letting me hold your
+ hand? I feel as if I wanted something to hold on to. One drops through the
+ dark so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow thrust out a large and hairy paw from the long chair. Dick
+ clutched it tightly, and in half an hour had fallen asleep. Torpenhow
+ withdrew his hand, and, stooping over Dick, kissed him lightly on the
+ forehead, as men do sometimes kiss a wounded comrade in the hour of death,
+ to ease his departure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the gray dawn Torpenhow heard Dick talking to himself. He was adrift on
+ the shoreless tides of delirium, speaking very quickly&mdash;'It's a pity,&mdash;a
+ great pity; but it's helped, and it must be eaten, Master George.
+ Sufficient unto the day is the blindness thereof, and, further, putting
+ aside all Melancolias and false humours, it is of obvious notoriety&mdash;such
+ as mine was&mdash;that the queen can do no wrong. Torp doesn't know that.
+ I'll tell him when we're a little farther into the desert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What a bungle those boatmen are making of the steamer-ropes! They'll have
+ that four-inch hawser chafed through in a minute. I told you so&mdash;there
+ she goes! White foam on green water, and the steamer slewing round. How
+ good that looks! I'll sketch it. No, I can't. I'm afflicted with
+ ophthalmia. That was one of the ten plagues of Egypt, and it extends up
+ the Nile in the shape of cataract. Ha! that's a joke, Torp. Laugh, you
+ graven image, and stand clear of the hawser.... It'll knock you into the
+ water and make your dress all dirty, Maisie dear.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh!' said Torpenhow. 'This happened before. That night on the river.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She'll be sure to say it's my fault if you get muddy, and you're quite
+ near enough to the breakwater. Maisie, that's not fair. Ah! I knew you'd
+ miss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Low and to the left, dear. But you've no conviction. Don't be angry,
+ darling. I'd cut my hand off if it would give you anything more than
+ obstinacy. My right hand, if it would serve.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now we mustn't listen. Here's an island shouting across seas of
+ misunderstanding with a vengeance. But it's shouting truth, I fancy,' said
+ Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The babble continued. It all bore upon Maisie. Sometimes Dick lectured at
+ length on his craft, then he cursed himself for his folly in being
+ enslaved. He pleaded to Maisie for a kiss&mdash;only one kiss&mdash;before
+ she went away, and called to her to come back from Vitry-sur-Marne, if she
+ would; but through all his ravings he bade heaven and earth witness that
+ the queen could do no wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow listened attentively, and learned every detail of Dick's life
+ that had been hidden from him. For three days Dick raved through the past,
+ and then a natural sleep. 'What a strain he has been running under, poor
+ chap!' said Torpenhow. 'Dick, of all men, handing himself over like a dog!
+ And I was lecturing him on arrogance! I ought to have known that it was no
+ use to judge a man. But I did it. What a demon that girl must be! Dick's
+ given her his life,&mdash;confound him!&mdash;and she's given him one kiss
+ apparently.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp,' said Dick, from the bed, 'go out for a walk. You've been here too
+ long. I'll get up. Hi! This is annoying. I can't dress myself. Oh, it's
+ too absurd!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow helped him into his clothes and led him to the big chair in the
+ studio. He sat quietly waiting under strained nerves for the darkness to
+ lift. It did not lift that day, nor the next. Dick adventured on a voyage
+ round the walls. He hit his shins against the stove, and this suggested to
+ him that it would be better to crawl on all fours, one hand in front of
+ him. Torpenhow found him on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm trying to get the geography of my new possessions,' said he. 'D'you
+ remember that nigger you gouged in the square? Pity you didn't keep the
+ odd eye. It would have been useful. Any letters for me? Give me all the
+ ones in fat gray envelopes with a sort of crown thing outside. They're of
+ no importance.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow gave him a letter with a black M. on the envelope flap. Dick put
+ it into his pocket. There was nothing in it that Torpenhow might not have
+ read, but it belonged to himself and to Maisie, who would never belong to
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When she finds that I don't write, she'll stop writing. It's better so. I
+ couldn't be any use to her now,' Dick argued, and the tempter suggested
+ that he should make known his condition. Every nerve in him revolted. 'I
+ have fallen low enough already. I'm not going to beg for pity. Besides, it
+ would be cruel to her.' He strove to put Maisie out of his thoughts; but
+ the blind have many opportunities for thinking, and as the tides of his
+ strength came back to him in the long employless days of dead darkness,
+ Dick's soul was troubled to the core. Another letter, and another, came
+ from Maisie. Then there was silence, and Dick sat by the window, the pulse
+ of summer in the air, and pictured her being won by another man, stronger
+ than himself. His imagination, the keener for the dark background it
+ worked against, spared him no single detail that might send him raging up
+ and down the studio, to stumble over the stove that seemed to be in four
+ places at once. Worst of all, tobacco would not taste in the darkness. The
+ arrogance of the man had disappeared, and in its place were settled
+ despair that Torpenhow knew, and blind passion that Dick confided to his
+ pillow at night. The intervals between the paroxysms were filled with
+ intolerable waiting and the weight of intolerable darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come out into the Park,' said Torpenhow. 'You haven't stirred out since
+ the beginning of things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the use? There's no movement in the dark; and, besides,'&mdash;he
+ paused irresolutely at the head of the stairs,&mdash;'something will run
+ over me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not if I'm with you. Proceed gingerly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The roar of the streets filled Dick with nervous terror, and he clung to
+ Torpenhow's arm. 'Fancy having to feel for a gutter with your foot!' he
+ said petulantly, as he turned into the Park. 'Let's curse God and die.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sentries are forbidden to pay unauthorised compliments. By Jove, there
+ are the Guards!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's figure straightened. 'Let's get near 'em. Let's go in and look.
+ Let's get on the grass and run. I can smell the trees.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Mind the low railing. That's all right!' Torpenhow kicked out a tuft of
+ grass with his heel. 'Smell that,' he said. 'Isn't it good?' Dick sniffed
+ luxuriously. 'Now pick up your feet and run.' They approached as near to
+ the regiment as was possible. The clank of bayonets being unfixed made
+ Dick's nostrils quiver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let's get nearer. They're in column, aren't they?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. How did you know?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Felt it. Oh, my men!&mdash;my beautiful men!' He edged forward as though
+ he could see. 'I could draw those chaps once. Who'll draw 'em now?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They'll move off in a minute. Don't jump when the band begins.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Huh! I'm not a new charger. It's the silences that hurt. Nearer, Torp!&mdash;nearer!
+ Oh, my God, what wouldn't I give to see 'em for a minute!&mdash;one
+ half-minute!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could hear the armed life almost within reach of him, could hear the
+ slings tighten across the bandsman's chest as he heaved the big drum from
+ the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sticks crossed above his head,' whispered Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know. I know! Who should know if I don't? H'sh!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The drum-sticks fell with a boom, and the men swung forward to the crash
+ of the band. Dick felt the wind of the massed movement in his face, heard
+ the maddening tramp of feet and the friction of the pouches on the belts.
+ The big drum pounded out the tune. It was a music-hall refrain that made a
+ perfect quickstep&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He must be a man of decent height,
+ He must be a man of weight,
+ He must come home on a Saturday night
+ In a thoroughly sober state;
+ He must know how to love me,
+ And he must know how to kiss;
+ And if he's enough to keep us both
+ I can't refuse him bliss.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the matter?' said Torpenhow, as he saw Dick's head fall when the
+ last of the regiment had departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing. I feel a little bit out of the running,&mdash;that's all. Torp,
+ take me back. Why did you bring me out?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There were three friends that buried the fourth,
+ The mould in his mouth and the dust in his eyes
+ And they went south and east, and north,&mdash;
+ The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.
+
+ There were three friends that spoke of the dead,&mdash;
+ The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.&mdash;
+ 'And would he were with us now,' they said,
+ 'The sun in our face and the wind in our eyes.'
+
+ &mdash;Ballad.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE NILGHAI was angry with Torpenhow. Dick had been sent to bed,&mdash;blind
+ men are ever under the orders of those who can see,&mdash;and since he had
+ returned from the Park had fluently sworn at Torpenhow because he was
+ alive, and all the world because it was alive and could see, while he,
+ Dick, was dead in the death of the blind, who, at the best, are only
+ burdens upon their associates. Torpenhow had said something about a Mrs.
+ Gummidge, and Dick had retired in a black fury to handle and re-handle
+ three unopened letters from Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai, fat, burly, and aggressive, was in Torpenhow's rooms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Behind him sat the Keneu, the Great War Eagle, and between them lay a
+ large map embellished with black-and-white-headed pins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was wrong about the Balkans,' said the Nilghai. 'But I'm not wrong
+ about this business. The whole of our work in the Southern Soudan must be
+ done over again. The public doesn't care, of course, but the government
+ does, and they are making their arrangements quietly. You know that as
+ well as I do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I remember how the people cursed us when our troops withdrew from
+ Omdurman. It was bound to crop up sooner or later. But I can't go,' said
+ Torpenhow. He pointed through the open door; it was a hot night. 'Can you
+ blame me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Keneu purred above his pipe like a large and very happy cat&mdash;'Don't
+ blame you in the least. It's uncommonly good of you, and all the rest of
+ it, but every man&mdash;even you, Torp&mdash;must consider his work. I
+ know it sounds brutal, but Dick's out of the race,&mdash;down,&mdash;gastados
+ expended, finished, done for. He has a little money of his own. He won't
+ starve, and you can't pull out of your slide for his sake. Think of your
+ own reputation.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick's was five times bigger than mine and yours put together.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That was because he signed his name to everything he did. It's all ended
+ now. You must hold yourself in readiness to move out. You can command your
+ own prices, and you do better work than any three of us.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't tell me how tempting it is. I'll stay here to look after Dick for a
+ while. He's as cheerful as a bear with a sore head, but I think he likes
+ to have me near him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai said something uncomplimentary about soft-headed fools who
+ throw away their careers for other fools. Torpenhow flushed angrily. The
+ constant strain of attendance on Dick had worn his nerves thin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There remains a third fate,' said the Keneu, thoughtfully. 'Consider
+ this, and be not larger fools than necessary. Dick is&mdash;or rather was&mdash;an
+ able-bodied man of moderate attractions and a certain amount of audacity.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oho!' said the Nilghai, who remembered an affair at Cairo. 'I begin to
+ see,&mdash;Torp, I'm sorry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow nodded forgiveness: 'You were more sorry when he cut you out,
+ though.&mdash;Go on, Keneu.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've often thought, when I've seen men die out in the desert, that if the
+ news could be sent through the world, and the means of transport were
+ quick enough, there would be one woman at least at each man's bedside.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There would be some mighty quaint revelations. Let us be grateful things
+ are as they are,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let us rather reverently consider whether Torp's three-cornered
+ ministrations are exactly what Dick needs just now.&mdash;What do you
+ think yourself, Torp?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know they aren't. But what can I do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lay the matter before the board. We are all Dick's friends here. You've
+ been most in his life.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But I picked it up when he was off his head.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The greater chance of its being true. I thought we should arrive. Who is
+ she?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Torpenhow told a tale in plain words, as a special correspondent who
+ knows how to make a verbal precis should tell it. The men listened without
+ interruption.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is it possible that a man can come back across the years to his
+ calf-love?' said the Keneu. 'Is it possible?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I give the facts. He says nothing about it now, but he sits fumbling
+ three letters from her when he thinks I'm not looking. What am I to do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Speak to him,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh yes! Write to her,&mdash;I don't know her full name, remember,&mdash;and
+ ask her to accept him out of pity. I believe you once told Dick you were
+ sorry for him, Nilghai. You remember what happened, eh? Go into the
+ bedroom and suggest full confession and an appeal to this Maisie girl,
+ whoever she is. I honestly believe he'd try to kill you; and the blindness
+ has made him rather muscular.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torpenhow's course is perfectly clear,' said the Keneu. 'He will go to
+ Vitry-sur-Marne, which is on the Bezieres-Landes Railway,&mdash;single
+ track from Tourgas. The Prussians shelled it out in '70 because there was
+ a poplar on the top of a hill eighteen hundred yards from the church spire
+ There's a squadron of cavalry quartered there,&mdash;or ought to be. Where
+ this studio Torp spoke about may be I cannot tell. That is Torp's
+ business. I have given him his route. He will dispassionately explain the
+ situation to the girl, and she will come back to Dick,&mdash;the more
+ especially because, to use Dick's words, "there is nothing but her damned
+ obstinacy to keep them apart."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And they have four hundred and twenty pounds a year between 'em.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick never lost his head for figures, even in his delirium. You haven't
+ the shadow of an excuse for not going,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow looked very uncomfortable. 'But it's absurd and impossible. I
+ can't drag her back by the hair.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Our business&mdash;the business for which we draw our money&mdash;is to
+ do absurd and impossible things,&mdash;generally with no reason whatever
+ except to amuse the public. Here we have a reason. The rest doesn't
+ matter. I shall share these rooms with the Nilghai till Torpenhow returns.
+ There will be a batch of unbridled "specials" coming to town in a little
+ while, and these will serve as their headquarters. Another reason for
+ sending Torpenhow away. Thus Providence helps those who help others, and'&mdash;here
+ the Keneu dropped his measured speech&mdash;'we can't have you tied by the
+ leg to Dick when the trouble begins. It's your only chance of getting
+ away; and Dick will be grateful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He will,&mdash;worse luck! I can but go and try. I can't conceive a woman
+ in her senses refusing Dick.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Talk that out with the girl. I have seen you wheedle an angry Mahdieh
+ woman into giving you dates. This won't be a tithe as difficult. You had
+ better not be here to-morrow afternoon, because the Nilghai and I will be
+ in possession. It is an order. Obey.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick,' said Torpenhow, next morning, 'can I do anything for you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No! Leave me alone. How often must I remind you that I'm blind?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing I could go for to fetch for to carry for to bring?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. Take those infernal creaking boots of yours away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Poor chap!' said Torpenhow to himself. 'I must have been sitting on his
+ nerves lately. He wants a lighter step.' Then, aloud, 'Very well. Since
+ you're so independent, I'm going off for four or five days. Say good-bye
+ at least. The housekeeper will look after you, and Keneu has my rooms.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's face fell. 'You won't be longer than a week at the outside? I know
+ I'm touched in the temper, but I can't get on without you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Can't you? You'll have to do without me in a little time, and you'll be
+ glad I'm gone.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick felt his way back to the big chair, and wondered what these things
+ might mean. He did not wish to be tended by the housekeeper, and yet
+ Torpenhow's constant tenderness jarred on him. He did not exactly know
+ what he wanted. The darkness would not lift, and Maisie's unopened letters
+ felt worn and old from much handling. He could never read them for himself
+ as long as life endured; but Maisie might have sent him some fresh ones to
+ play with. The Nilghai entered with a gift,&mdash;a piece of red
+ modelling-wax. He fancied that Dick might find interest in using his
+ hands. Dick poked and patted the stuff for a few minutes, and, 'Is it like
+ anything in the world?' he said drearily. 'Take it away. I may get the
+ touch of the blind in fifty years. Do you know where Torpenhow has gone?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai knew nothing. 'We're staying in his rooms till he comes back.
+ Can we do anything for you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'd like to be left alone, please. Don't think I'm ungrateful; but I'm
+ best alone.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai chuckled, and Dick resumed his drowsy brooding and sullen
+ rebellion against fate. He had long since ceased to think about the work
+ he had done in the old days, and the desire to do more work had departed
+ from him. He was exceedingly sorry for himself, and the completeness of
+ his tender grief soothed him. But his soul and his body cried for Maisie&mdash;Maisie
+ who would understand. His mind pointed out that Maisie, having her own
+ work to do, would not care. His experience had taught him that when money
+ was exhausted women went away, and that when a man was knocked out of the
+ race the others trampled on him. 'Then at the least,' said Dick, in reply,
+ 'she could use me as I used Binat,&mdash;for some sort of a study. I
+ wouldn't ask more than to be near her again, even though I knew that
+ another man was making love to her. Ugh! what a dog I am!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A voice on the staircase began to sing joyfully&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When we go&mdash;go&mdash;go away from here, Our creditors will weep and
+ they will wail, Our absence much regretting when they find that they've
+ been getting Out of England by next Tuesday's Indian mail.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Following the trampling of feet, slamming of Torpenhow's door, and the
+ sound of voices in strenuous debate, some one squeaked, 'And see, you good
+ fellows, I have found a new water-bottle&mdash;firs'-class patent&mdash;eh,
+ how you say? Open himself inside out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick sprang to his feet. He knew the voice well. 'That's Cassavetti, come
+ back from the Continent. Now I know why Torp went away. There's a row
+ somewhere, and&mdash;I'm out of it!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Nilghai commanded silence in vain. 'That's for my sake,' Dick said
+ bitterly. 'The birds are getting ready to fly, and they wouldn't tell me.
+ I can hear Morten-Sutherland and Mackaye. Half the War Correspondents in
+ London are there;&mdash;and I'm out of it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stumbled across the landing and plunged into Torpenhow's room. He could
+ feel that it was full of men. 'Where's the trouble?' said he. 'In the
+ Balkans at last? Why didn't some one tell me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We thought you wouldn't be interested,' said the Nilghai, shamefacedly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's in the Soudan, as usual.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You lucky dogs! Let me sit here while you talk. I shan't be a skeleton at
+ the feast.&mdash;Cassavetti, where are you? Your English is as bad as
+ ever.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was led into a chair. He heard the rustle of the maps, and the talk
+ swept forward, carrying him with it. Everybody spoke at once, discussing
+ press censorships, railway-routes, transport, water-supply, the capacities
+ of generals,&mdash;these in language that would have horrified a trusting
+ public,&mdash;rangint, asserting, denouncing, and laughing at the top of
+ their voices. There was the glorious certainty of war in the Soudan at any
+ moment. The Nilghai said so, and it was well to be in readiness. The Keneu
+ had telegraphed to Cairo for horses; Cassavetti had stolen a perfectly
+ inaccurate list of troops that would be ordered forward, and was reading
+ it out amid profane interruptions, and the Keneu introduced to Dick some
+ man unknown who would be employed as war artist by the Central Southern
+ Syndicate. 'It's his first outing,' said the Keneu. 'Give him some tips&mdash;about
+ riding camels.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, those camels!' groaned Cassavetti. 'I shall learn to ride him again,
+ and now I am so much all soft! Listen, you good fellows. I know your
+ military arrangement very well. There will go the Royal Argalshire
+ Sutherlanders. So it was read to me upon best authority.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A roar of laughter interrupted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Sit down,' said the Nilghai. 'The lists aren't even made out in the War
+ Office.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Will there be any force at Suakin?' aid a voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the outcries redoubled, and grew mixed, thus: 'How many Egyptian
+ troops will they use?&mdash;God help the Fellaheen!&mdash;There's a
+ railway in Plumstead marshes doing duty as a fives-court.&mdash;We shall
+ have the Suakin-Berber line built at last.&mdash;Canadian voyageurs are
+ too careful. Give me a half-drunk Krooman in a whale-boat.&mdash;Who
+ commands the Desert column?&mdash;No, they never blew up the big rock in
+ the Ghineh bend. We shall have to be hauled up, as usual.&mdash;Somebody
+ tell me if there's an Indian contingent, or I'll break everybody's head.&mdash;Don't
+ tear the map in two.&mdash;It's a war of occupation, I tell you, to
+ connect with the African companies in the South.&mdash;There's Guinea-worm
+ in most of the wells on that route.' Then the Nilghai, despairing of
+ peace, bellowed like a fog-horn and beat upon the table with both hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But what becomes of Torpenhow?' said Dick, in the silence that followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp's in abeyance just now. He's off love-making somewhere, I suppose,'
+ said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He said he was going to stay at home,' said the Keneu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is he?' said Dick, with an oath. 'He won't. I'm not much good now, but if
+ you and the Nilghai hold him down I'll engage to trample on him till he
+ sees reason. He'll stay behind, indeed! He's the best of you all. There'll
+ be some tough work by Omdurman. We shall come there to stay, this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I forgot. I wish I were going with you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So do we all, Dickie,' said the Keneu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And I most of all,' said the new artist of the Central Southern
+ Syndicate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Could you tell me&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll give you one piece of advice,' Dick answered, moving towards the
+ door. 'If you happen to be cut over the head in a scrimmage, don't guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tell the man to go on cutting. You'll find it cheapest in the end. Thanks
+ for letting me look in.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's grit in Dick,' said the Nilghai, an hour later, when the room was
+ emptied of all save the Keneu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was the sacred call of the war-trumpet. Did you notice how he answered
+ to it? Poor fellow! Let's look at him,' said the Keneu.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The excitement of the talk had died away. Dick was sitting by the studio
+ table, with his head on his arms, when the men came in. He did not change
+ his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It hurts,' he moaned. 'God forgive me, but it hurts cruelly; and yet,
+ y'know, the world has a knack of spinning round all by itself. Shall I see
+ Torp before he goes?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, yes. You'll see him,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The sun went down an hour ago,
+ I wonder if I face towards home;
+ If I lost my way in the light of day
+ How shall I find it now night is come?
+
+ &mdash;Old Song.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'MAISIE, come to bed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's so hot I can't sleep. Don't worry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie put her elbows on the window-sill and looked at the moonlight on
+ the straight, poplar-flanked road. Summer had come upon Vitry-sur-Marne
+ and parched it to the bone. The grass was dry-burnt in the meadows, the
+ clay by the bank of the river was caked to brick, the roadside flowers
+ were long since dead, and the roses in the garden hung withered on their
+ stalks. The heat in the little low bedroom under the eaves was almost
+ intolerable. The very moonlight on the wall of Kami's studio across the
+ road seemed to make the night hotter, and the shadow of the big
+ bell-handle by the closed gate cast a bar of inky black that caught
+ Maisie's eye and annoyed her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Horrid thing! It should be all white,' she murmured. 'And the gate isn't
+ in the middle of the wall, either. I never noticed that before.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie was hard to please at that hour. First, the heat of the past few
+ weeks had worn her down; secondly, her work, and particularly the study of
+ a female head intended to represent the Melancolia and not finished in
+ time for the Salon, was unsatisfactory; thirdly, Kami had said as much two
+ days before; fourthly,&mdash;but so completely fourthly that it was hardly
+ worth thinking about,&mdash;Dick, her property, had not written to her for
+ more than six weeks. She was angry with the heat, with Kami, and with her
+ work, but she was exceedingly angry with Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had written to him three times,&mdash;each time proposing a fresh
+ treatment of her Melancolia. Dick had taken no notice of these
+ communications. She had resolved to write no more. When she returned to
+ England in the autumn&mdash;for her pride's sake she could not return
+ earlier&mdash;she would speak to him. She missed the Sunday afternoon
+ conferences more than she cared to admit. All that Kami said was,
+ 'Continuez, mademoiselle, continuez toujours,' and he had been repeating
+ the wearisome counsel through the hot summer, exactly like a cicada,&mdash;an
+ old gray cicada in a black alpaca coat, white trousers, and a huge felt
+ hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Dick had tramped masterfully up and down her little studio north of
+ the cool green London park, and had said things ten times worse than
+ continuez, before he snatched the brush out of her hand and showed her
+ where the error lay. His last letter, Maisie remembered, contained some
+ trivial advice about not sketching in the sun or drinking water at wayside
+ farmhouses; and he had said that not once, but three times,&mdash;as if he
+ did not know that Maisie could take care of herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what was he doing, that he could not trouble to write? A murmur of
+ voices in the road made her lean from the window. A cavalryman of the
+ little garrison in the town was talking to Kami's cook. The moonlight
+ glittered on the scabbard of his sabre, which he was holding in his hand
+ lest it should clank inopportunely. The cook's cap cast deep shadows on
+ her face, which was close to the conscript's. He slid his arm round her
+ waist, and there followed the sound of a kiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Faugh!' said Maisie, stepping back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's that?' said the red-haired girl, who was tossing uneasily outside
+ her bed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Only a conscript kissing the cook,' said Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They've gone away now.' She leaned out of the window again, and put a
+ shawl over her nightgown to guard against chills. There was a very small
+ night-breeze abroad, and a sun-baked rose below nodded its head as one who
+ knew unutterable secrets. Was it possible that Dick should turn his
+ thoughts from her work and his own and descend to the degradation of
+ Suzanne and the conscript? He could not! The rose nodded its head and one
+ leaf therewith. It looked like a naughty little devil scratching its ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick could not, 'because,' thought Maisie, 'he is mind,&mdash;mine,&mdash;mine.
+ He said he was. I'm sure I don't care what he does. It will only spoil his
+ work if he does; and it will spoil mine too.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rose continued to nod it the futile way peculiar to flowers. There was
+ no earthly reason why Dick should not disport himself as he chose, except
+ that he was called by Providence, which was Maisie, to assist Maisie in
+ her work. And her work was the preparation of pictures that went sometimes
+ to English provincial exhibitions, as the notices in the scrap-book
+ proved, and that were invariably rejected by the Salon when Kami was
+ plagued into allowing her to send them up. Her work in the future, it
+ seemed, would be the preparation of pictures on exactly similar lines
+ which would be rejected in exactly the same way&mdash;&mdash;The
+ red-haired girl threshed distressfully across the sheets. 'It's too hot to
+ sleep,' she moaned; and the interruption jarred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Exactly the same way. Then she would divide her years between the little
+ studio in England and Kami's big studio at Vitry-sur-Marne. No, she would
+ go to another master, who should force her into the success that was her
+ right, if patient toil and desperate endeavour gave one a right to
+ anything. Dick had told her that he had worked ten years to understand his
+ craft. She had worked ten years, and ten years were nothing. Dick had said
+ that ten years were nothing,&mdash;but that was in regard to herself only.
+ He had said&mdash;this very man who could not find time to write&mdash;that
+ he would wait ten years for her, and that she was bound to come back to
+ him sooner or later. He had said this in the absurd letter about sunstroke
+ and diphtheria; and then he had stopped writing. He was wandering up and
+ down moonlit streets, kissing cooks. She would like to lecture him now,&mdash;not
+ in her nightgown, of course, but properly dressed, severely and from a
+ height. Yet if he was kissing other girls he certainly would not care
+ whether she lecture him or not. He would laugh at her. Very good.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She would go back to her studio and prepare pictures that went, etc., etc.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mill-wheel of thought swung round slowly, that no section of it might
+ be slurred over, and the red-haired girl tossed and turned behind her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie put her chin in her hands and decided that there could be no doubt
+ whatever of the villainy of Dick. To justify herself, she began,
+ unwomanly, to weigh the evidence. There was a boy, and he had said he
+ loved her. And he kissed her,&mdash;kissed her on the cheek,&mdash;by a
+ yellow sea-poppy that nodded its head exactly like the maddening dry rose
+ in the garden. Then there was an interval, and men had told her that they
+ loved her&mdash;just when she was busiest with her work. Then the boy came
+ back, and at their very second meeting had told her that he loved her.
+ Then he had&mdash;&mdash; But there was no end to the things he had done.
+ He had given her his time and his powers. He had spoken to her of Art,
+ housekeeping, technique, teacups, the abuse of pickles as a stimulant,&mdash;that
+ was rude,&mdash;sable hair-brushes,&mdash;he had given her the best in her
+ stock,&mdash;she used them daily; he had given her advice that she
+ profited by, and now and again&mdash;a look. Such a look! The look of a
+ beaten hound waiting for the word to crawl to his mistress's feet. In
+ return she had given him nothing whatever, except&mdash;here she brushed
+ her mouth against the open-work sleeve f her nightgown&mdash;the privilege
+ of kissing her once. And on the mouth, too. Disgraceful! Was that not
+ enough, and more than enough? and if it was not, had he not cancelled the
+ debt by not writing and&mdash;probably kissing other girls? 'Maisie,
+ you'll catch a chill. Do go and lie down,' said the wearied voice of her
+ companion. 'I can't sleep a wink with you at the window.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie shrugged her shoulders and did not answer. She was reflecting on
+ the meannesses of Dick, and on other meannesses with which he had nothing
+ to do. The moonlight would not let her sleep. It lay on the skylight of
+ the studio across the road in cold silver; she stared at it intently and
+ her thoughts began to slide one into the other. The shadow of the big
+ bell-handle in the wall grew short, lengthened again, and faded out as the
+ moon went down behind the pasture and a hare came limping home across the
+ road. Then the dawn-wind washed through the upland grasses, and brought
+ coolness with it, and the cattle lowed by the drought-shrunk river.
+ Maisie's head fell forward on the window-sill, and the tangle of black
+ hair covered her arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maisie, wake up. You'll catch a chill.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, dear; yes, dear.' She staggered to her bed like a wearied child, and
+ as she buried her face in the pillows she muttered, 'I think&mdash;I
+ think....
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he ought to have written.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Day brought the routine of the studio, the smell of paint and turpentine,
+ and the monotone wisdom of Kami, who was a leaden artist, but a golden
+ teacher if the pupil were only in sympathy with him. Maisie was not in
+ sympathy that day, and she waited impatiently for the end of the work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She knew when it was coming; for Kami would gather his black alpaca coat
+ into a bunch behind him, and, with faded flue eyes that saw neither pupils
+ nor canvas, look back into the past to recall the history of one Binat.
+ 'You have all done not so badly,' he would say. 'But you shall remember
+ that it is not enough to have the method, and the art, and the power, nor
+ even that which is touch, but you shall have also the conviction that
+ nails the work to the wall. Of the so many I taught,'&mdash;here the
+ students would begin to unfix drawing-pins or get their tubes together,&mdash;'the
+ very so many that I have taught, the best was Binat. All that comes of the
+ study and the work and the knowledge was to him even when he came. After
+ he left me he should have done all that could be done with the colour, the
+ form, and the knowledge. Only, he had not the conviction. So to-day I hear
+ no more of Binat,&mdash;the best of my pupils,&mdash;and that is long ago.
+ So to-day, too, you will be glad to hear no more of me. Continuez,
+ mesdemoiselles, and, above all, with conviction.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He went into the garden to smoke and mourn over the lost Binat as the
+ pupils dispersed to their several cottages or loitered in the studio to
+ make plans for the cool of the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie looked at her very unhappy Melancolia, restrained a desire to
+ grimace before it, and was hurrying across the road to write a letter to
+ Dick, when she was aware of a large man on a white troop-horse. How
+ Torpenhow had managed in the course of twenty hours to find his way to the
+ hearts of the cavalry officers in quarters at Vitry-sur-Marne, to discuss
+ with them the certainty of a glorious revenge for France, to reduce the
+ colonel to tears of pure affability, and to borrow the best horse in the
+ squadron for the journey to Kami's studio, is a mystery that only special
+ correspondents can unravel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I beg your pardon,' said he. 'It seems an absurd question to ask, but the
+ fact is that I don't know her by any other name: Is there any young lady
+ here that is called Maisie?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am Maisie,' was the answer from the depths of a great sun-hat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I ought to introduce myself,' he said, as the horse capered in the
+ blinding white dust. 'My name is Torpenhow. Dick Heldar is my best friend,
+ and&mdash;and&mdash;the fact is that he has gone blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Blind!' said Maisie, stupidly. 'He can't be blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He has been stone-blind for nearly two months.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie lifted up her face, and it was pearly white. 'No! No! Not blind! I
+ won't have him blind!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Would you care to see for yourself?' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now,&mdash;at once?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, no! The Paris train doesn't go through this place till to-night.
+ There will be ample time.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Did Mr. Heldar send you to me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Certainly not. Dick wouldn't do that sort of thing. He's sitting in his
+ studio, turning over some letters that he can't read because he's blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sound of choking from the sun-hat. Maisie bowed her head and
+ went into the cottage, where the red-haired girl was on a sofa,
+ complaining of a headache.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Dick's blind!' said Maisie, taking her breath quickly as she steadied
+ herself against a chair-back. 'My Dick's blind!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What?' The girl was on the sofa no longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A man has come from England to tell me. He hasn't written to me for six
+ weeks.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Are you going to him?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must think.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Think! I should go back to London and see him and I should kiss his eyes
+ and kiss them and kiss them until they got well again! If you don't go I
+ shall. Oh, what am I talking about? You wicked little idiot! Go to him at
+ once. Go!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow's neck was blistering, but he preserved a smile of infinite
+ patience as Maisie's appeared bareheaded in the sunshine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am coming,' said she, her eyes on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You will be at Vitry Station, then, at seven this evening.' This was an
+ order delivered by one who was used to being obeyed. Maisie said nothing,
+ but she felt grateful that there was no chance of disputing with this big
+ man who took everything for granted and managed a squealing horse with one
+ hand. She returned to the red-haired girl, who was weeping bitterly, and
+ between tears, kisses,&mdash;very few of those,&mdash;menthol, packing,
+ and an interview with Kami, the sultry afternoon wore away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thought might come afterwards. Her present duty was to go to Dick,&mdash;Dick
+ who owned the wondrous friend and sat in the dark playing with her
+ unopened letters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But what will you do,' she said to her companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I? Oh, I shall stay here and&mdash;finish your Melancolia,' she said,
+ smiling pitifully. 'Write to me afterwards.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night there ran a legend through Vitry-sur-Marne of a mad Englishman,
+ doubtless suffering from sunstroke, who had drunk all the officers of the
+ garrison under the table, had borrowed a horse from the lines, and had
+ then and there eloped, after the English custom, with one of those more
+ mad English girls who drew pictures down there under the care of that good
+ Monsieur Kami.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They are very droll,' said Suzanne to the conscript in the moonlight by
+ the studio wall. 'She walked always with those big eyes that saw nothing,
+ and yet she kisses me on both cheeks as though she were my sister, and
+ gives me&mdash;see&mdash;ten francs!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conscript levied a contribution on both gifts; for he prided himself
+ on being a good soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow spoke very little to Maisie during the journey to Calais; but he
+ was careful to attend to all her wants, to get her a compartment entirely
+ to herself, and to leave her alone. He was amazed of the ease with which
+ the matter had been accomplished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The safest thing would be to let her think things out. By Dick's showing,&mdash;when
+ he was off his head,&mdash;she must have ordered him about very
+ thoroughly. Wonder how she likes being under orders.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie never told. She sat in the empty compartment often with her eyes
+ shut, that she might realise the sensation of blindness. It was an order
+ that she should return to London swiftly, and she found herself at last
+ almost beginning to enjoy the situation. This was better than looking
+ after luggage and a red-haired friend who never took any interest in her
+ surroundings. But there appeared to be a feeling in the air that she,
+ Maisie,&mdash;of all people,&mdash;was in disgrace. Therefore she
+ justified her conduct to herself with great success, till Torpenhow came
+ up to her on the steamer and without preface began to tell the story of
+ Dick's blindness, suppressing a few details, but dwelling at length on the
+ miseries of delirium. He stopped before he reached the end, as though he
+ had lost interest in the subject, and went forward to smoke. Maisie was
+ furious with him and with herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was hurried on from Dover to London almost before she could ask for
+ breakfast, and&mdash;she was past any feeling of indignation now&mdash;was
+ bidden curtly to wait in a hall at the foot of some lead-covered stairs
+ while Torpenhow went up to make inquiries. Again the knowledge that she
+ was being treated like a naughty little girl made her pale cheeks flame.
+ It was all Dick's fault for being so stupid as to go blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow led her up to a shut door, which he opened very softly. Dick was
+ sitting by the window, with his chin on his chest. There were three
+ envelopes in his hand, and he turned them over and over. The big man who
+ gave orders was no longer by her side, and the studio door snapped behind
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick thrust the letters into his pocket as he heard the sound. 'Hullo,
+ Topr! Is that you? I've been so lonely.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His voice had taken the peculiar flatness of the blind. Maisie pressed
+ herself up into a corner of the room. Her heart was beating furiously, and
+ she put one hand on her breast to keep it quiet. Dick was staring directly
+ at her, and she realised for the first time that he was blind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shutting her eyes in a rail-way carriage to open them when she pleased was
+ child's play. This man was blind though his eyes were wide open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp, is that you? They said you were coming.' Dick looked puzzled and a
+ little irritated at the silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No; it's only me,' was the answer, in a strained little whisper. Maisie
+ could hardly move her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'H'm!' said Dick, composedly, without moving. 'This is a new phenomenon.
+ Darkness I'm getting used to; but I object to hearing voices.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was he mad, then, as well as blind, that he talked to himself? Maisie's
+ heart beat more wildly, and she breathed in gasps. Dick rose and began to
+ feel his way across the room, touching each table and chair as he passed.
+ Once he caught his foot on a rug, and swore, dropping on his knees to feel
+ what the obstruction might be. Maisie remembered him walking in the Park
+ as though all the earth belonged to him, tramping up and down her studio
+ two months ago, and flying up the gangway of the Channel steamer. The
+ beating of her heart was making her sick, and Dick was coming nearer,
+ guided by the sound of her breathing. She put out a hand mechanically to
+ ward him off or to draw him to herself, she did not know which. It touched
+ his chest, and he stepped back as though he had been shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's Maisie!' said he, with a dry sob. 'What are you doing here?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I came&mdash;I came&mdash;to see you, please.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's lips closed firmly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Won't you sit down, then? You see, I've had some bother with my eyes, and&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know. I know. Why didn't you tell me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I couldn't write.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You might have told Mr. Torpenhow.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What has he to do with my affairs?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He&mdash;he brought me from Vitry-sur-Marne. He thought I ought to see
+ you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why, what has happened? Can I do anything for you? No, I can't. I
+ forgot.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, Dick, I'm so sorry! I've come to tell you, and&mdash;&mdash; Let me
+ take you back to your chair.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't! I'm not a child. You only do that out of pity. I never meant to
+ tell you anything about it. I'm no good now. I'm down and done for. Let me
+ alone!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He groped back to his chair, his chest labouring as he sat down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie watched him, and the fear went out of her heart, to be followed by
+ a very bitter shame. He had spoken a truth that had been hidden from the
+ girl through every step of the impetuous flight to London; for he was,
+ indeed, down and done for&mdash;masterful no longer but rather a little
+ abject; neither an artist stronger than she, nor a man to be looked up to&mdash;only
+ some blind one that sat in a chair and seemed on the point of crying. She
+ was immensely and unfeignedly sorry for him&mdash;more sorry than she had
+ ever been for any one in her life, but not sorry enough to deny his words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she stood still and felt ashamed and a little hurt, because she had
+ honestly intended that her journey should end triumphantly; and now she
+ was only filled with pity most startlingly distinct from love.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well?' said Dick, his face steadily turned away. 'I never meant to worry
+ you any more. What's the matter?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was conscious that Maisie was catching her breath, but was as
+ unprepared as herself for the torrent of emotion that followed. She had
+ dropped into a chair and was sobbing with her face hidden in her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can't&mdash;I can't!' she cried desperately. 'Indeed, I can't. It isn't
+ my fault.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm so sorry. Oh, Dickie, I'm so sorry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick's shoulders straightened again, for the words lashed like a whip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still the sobbing continued. It is not good to realise that you have
+ failed in the hour of trial or flinched before the mere possibility of
+ making sacrifices.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I do despise myself&mdash;indeed I do. But I can't. Oh, Dickie, you
+ wouldn't ask me&mdash;would you?' wailed Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She looked up for a minute, and by chance it happened that Dick's eyes
+ fell on hers. The unshaven face was very white and set, and the lips were
+ trying to force themselves into a smile. But it was the worn-out eyes that
+ Maisie feared. Her Dick had gone blind and left in his place some one that
+ she could hardly recognise till he spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who is asking you to do anything, Maisie? I told you how it would be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What's the use of worrying? For pity's sake don't cry like that; it isn't
+ worth it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't know how I hate myself. Oh, Dick, help me&mdash;help me!' The
+ passion of tears had grown beyond her control and was beginning to alarm
+ the man. He stumbled forward and put his arm round her, and her head fell
+ on his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hush, dear, hush! Don't cry. You're quite right, and you've nothing to
+ reproach yourself with&mdash;you never had. You're only a little upset by
+ the journey, and I don't suppose you've had any breakfast. What a brute
+ Torp was to bring you over.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wanted to come. I did indeed,' she protested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very well. And now you've come and seen, and I'm&mdash;immensely
+ grateful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When you're better you shall go away and get something to eat. What sort
+ of a passage did you have coming over?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maisie was crying more subduedly, for the first time in her life glad that
+ she had something to lean against. Dick patted her on the shoulder
+ tenderly but clumsily, for he was not quite sure where her shoulder might
+ be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She drew herself out of his arms at last and waited, trembling and most
+ unhappy. He had felt his way to the window to put the width of the room
+ between them, and to quiet a little the tumult in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Are you better now?' he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, but&mdash;don't you hate me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I hate you? My God! I?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Isn't&mdash;isn't there anything I could do for you, then? I'll stay here
+ in England to do it, if you like. Perhaps I could come and see you
+ sometimes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I think not, dear. It would be kindest not to see me any more, please. I
+ don't want to seem rude, but&mdash;don't you think&mdash;perhaps you had
+ almost better go now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was conscious that he could not bear himself as a man if the strain
+ continued much longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't deserve anything else. I'll go, Dick. Oh, I'm so miserable.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nonsense. You've nothing to worry about; I'd tell you if you had. Wait a
+ moment, dear. I've got something to give you first. I meant it for you
+ ever since this little trouble began. It's my Melancolia; she was a beauty
+ when I last saw her. You can keep her for me, and if ever you're poor you
+ can sell her. She's worth a few hundreds at any state of the market.' He
+ groped among his canvases. 'She's framed in black. Is this a black frame
+ that I have my hand on? There she is. What do you think of her?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned a scarred formless muddle of paint towards Maisie, and the eyes
+ strained as though they would catch her wonder and surprise. One thing and
+ one thing only could she do for him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice was fuller and more rounded, because the man knew he was
+ speaking of his best work. Maisie looked at the blur, and a lunatic desire
+ to laugh caught her by the throat. But for Dick's sake&mdash;whatever this
+ mad blankness might mean&mdash;she must make no sign. Her voice choked
+ with hard-held tears as she answered, still gazing at the wreck&mdash;'Oh,
+ Dick, it is good!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He heard the little hysterical gulp and took it for tribute. 'Won't you
+ have it, then? I'll send it over to your house if you will.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I? Oh yes&mdash;thank you. Ha! ha!' If she did not fly at once the
+ laughter that was worse than tears would kill her. She turned and ran,
+ choking and blinded, down the staircases that were empty of life to take
+ refuge in a cab and go to her house across the Parks. There she sat down
+ in the dismantled drawing-room and thought of Dick in his blindness,
+ useless till the end of life, and of herself in her own eyes. Behind the
+ sorrow, the shame, and the humiliation, lay fear of the cold wrath of the
+ red-haired girl when Maisie should return. Maisie had never feared her
+ companion before. Not until she found herself saying, 'Well, he never
+ asked me,' did she realise her scorn of herself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is the end of Maisie.
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ For Dick was reserved more searching torment. He could not realise at
+ first that Maisie, whom he had ordered to go had left him without a word
+ of farewell. He was savagely angry against Torpenhow, who had brought upon
+ him this humiliation and troubled his miserable peace. Then his dark hour
+ came and he was alone with himself and his desires to get what help he
+ could from the darkness. The queen could do no wrong, but in following the
+ right, so far as it served her work, she had wounded her one subject more
+ than his own brain would let him know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's all I had and I've lost it,' he said, as soon as the misery
+ permitted clear thinking. 'And Torp will think that he has been so
+ infernally clever that I shan't have the heart to tell him. I must think
+ this out quietly.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hullo!' said Torpenhow, entering the studio after Dick had enjoyed two
+ hours of thought. 'I'm back. Are you feeling any better?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Torp, I don't know what to say. Come here.' Dick coughed huskily,
+ wondering, indeed, what he should say, and how to say it temperately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the need for saying anything? Get up and tramp.' Torpenhow was
+ perfectly satisfied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They walked up and down as of custom, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's shoulder,
+ and Dick buried in his own thoughts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How in the world did you find it all out?' said Dick, at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You shouldn't go off your head if you want to keep secrets, Dickie. It
+ was absolutely impertinent on my part; but if you'd seen me rocketing
+ about on a half-trained French troop-horse under a blazing sun you'd have
+ laughed. There will be a charivari in my rooms to-night. Seven other
+ devils&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know&mdash;the row in the Southern Soudan. I surprised their councils
+ the other day, and it made me unhappy. Have you fixed your flint to go?
+ Who d'you work for?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Haven't signed any contracts yet. I wanted to see how your business would
+ turn out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Would you have stayed with me, then, if&mdash;things had gone wrong?' He
+ put his question cautiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't ask me too much. I'm only a man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You've tried to be an angel very successfully.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh ye&mdash;es!... Well, do you attend the function to-night? We shall be
+ half screwed before the morning. All the men believe the war's a
+ certainty.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't think I will, old man, if it's all the same to you. I'll stay
+ quiet here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And meditate? I don't blame you. You observe a good time if ever a man
+ did.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night there was a tumult on the stairs. The correspondents poured in
+ from theatre, dinner, and music-hall to Torpenhow's room that they might
+ discuss their plan of campaign in the event of military operations
+ becoming a certainty. Torpenhow, the Keneu, and the Nilghai had bidden all
+ the men they had worked with to the orgy; and Mr. Beeton, the housekeeper,
+ declared that never before in his checkered experience had he seen quite
+ such a fancy lot of gentlemen. They waked the chambers with shoutings and
+ song; and the elder men were quite as bad as the younger. For the chances
+ of war were in front of them, and all knew what those meant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sitting in his own room a little perplexed by the noise across the
+ landing, Dick suddenly began to laugh to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When one comes to think of it the situation is intensely comic. Maisie's
+ quite right&mdash;poor little thing. I didn't know she could cry like that
+ before; but now I know what Torp thinks, I'm sure he'd be quite fool
+ enough to stay at home and try to console me&mdash;if he knew. Besides, it
+ isn't nice to own that you've been thrown over like a broken chair. I must
+ carry this business through alone&mdash;as usual. If there isn't a war,
+ and Torp finds out, I shall look foolish, that's all. If there is a way I
+ mustn't interfere with another man's chances. Business is business, and I
+ want to be alone&mdash;I want to be alone. What a row they're making!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Somebody hammered at the studio door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come out and frolic, Dickie,' said the Nilghai.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should like to, but I can't. I'm not feeling frolicsome.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then, I'll tell the boys and they'll drag you like a badger.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Please not, old man. On my word, I'd sooner be left alone just now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very good. Can we send anything in to you? Fizz, for instance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cassavetti is beginning to sing songs of the Sunny South already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For one minute Dick considered the proposition seriously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, thanks, I've a headache already.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Virtuous child. That's the effect of emotion on the young. All my
+ congratulations, Dick. I also was concerned in the conspiracy for your
+ welfare.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go to the devil&mdash;oh, send Binkie in here.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The little dog entered on elastic feet, riotous from having been made much
+ of all the evening. He had helped to sing the choruses; but scarcely
+ inside the studio he realised that this was no place for tail-wagging, and
+ settled himself on Dick's lap till it was bedtime. Then he went to bed
+ with Dick, who counted every hour as it struck, and rose in the morning
+ with a painfully clear head to receive Torpenhow's more formal
+ congratulations and a particular account of the last night's revels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You aren't looking very happy for a newly accepted man,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind that&mdash;it's my own affair, and I'm all right. Do you
+ really go?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. With the old Central Southern as usual. They wired, and I accepted
+ on better terms than before.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When do you start?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The day after to-morrow&mdash;for Brindisi.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank God.' Dick spoke from the bottom of his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well, that's not a pretty way of saying you're glad to get rid of me. But
+ men in your condition are allowed to be selfish.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't mean that. Will you get a hundred pounds cashed for me before
+ you leave?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's a slender amount for housekeeping, isn't it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, it's only for&mdash;marriage expenses.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow brought him the money, counted it out in fives and tens, and
+ carefully put it away in the writing table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now I suppose I shall have to listen to his ravings about his girl until
+ I go. Heaven send us patience with a man in love!' he said to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But never a word did Dick say of Maisie or marriage. He hung in the
+ doorway of Torpenhow's room when the latter was packing and asked
+ innumerable questions about the coming campaign, till Torpenhow began to
+ feel annoyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're a secretive animal, Dickie, and you consume your own smoke, don't
+ you?' he said on the last evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I&mdash;I suppose so. By the way, how long do you think this war will
+ last?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Days, weeks, or months. One can never tell. It may go on for years.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish I were going.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good Heavens! You're the most unaccountable creature! Hasn't it occurred
+ to you that you're going to be married&mdash;thanks to me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course, yes. I'm going to be married&mdash;so I am. Going to be
+ married.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I'm awfully grateful to you. Haven't I told you that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You might be going to be hanged by the look of you,' said Torpenhow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the next day Torpenhow bade him good-bye and left him to the
+ loneliness he had so much desired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Yet at the last, ere our spearmen had found him,
+ Yet at the last, ere a sword-thrust could save,
+ Yet at the last, with his masters around him,
+ He of the Faith spoke as master to slave;
+ Yet at the last, tho' the Kafirs had maimed him,
+ Broken by bondage and wrecked by the reiver,&mdash;
+ Yet at the last, tho' the darkness had claimed him,
+ He called upon Allah and died a believer.
+
+ &mdash;Kizzilbashi.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'BEG your pardon, Mr. Heldar, but&mdash;but isn't nothin' going to
+ happen?' said Mr. Beeton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No!' Dick had just waked to another morning of blank despair and his
+ temper was of the shortest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ''Tain't my regular business, o' course, sir; and what I say is, "Mind
+ your own business and let other people mind theirs;" but just before Mr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow went away he give me to understand, like, that you might be
+ moving into a house of your own, so to speak&mdash;a sort of house with
+ rooms upstairs and downstairs where you'd be better attended to, though I
+ try to act just by all our tenants. Don't I?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ah! That must have been a mad-house. I shan't trouble you to take me
+ there yet. Get me my breakfast, please, and leave me alone.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I hope I haven't done anything wrong, sir, but you know I hope that as
+ far as a man can I tries to do the proper thing by all the gentlemen in
+ chambers&mdash;and more particular those whose lot is hard&mdash;such as
+ you, for instance, Mr. Heldar. You likes soft-roe bloater, don't you?
+ Soft-roe bloaters is scarcer than hard-roe, but what I says is, "Never
+ mind a little extra trouble so long as you give satisfaction to the
+ tenants."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton withdrew and left Dick to himself. Torpenhow had been long
+ away; there was no more rioting in the chambers, and Dick had settled down
+ to his new life, which he was weak enough to consider nothing better than
+ death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is hard to live alone in the dark, confusing the day and night;
+ dropping to sleep through sheer weariness at mid-day, and rising restless
+ in the chill of the dawn. At first Dick, on his awakenings, would grope
+ along the corridors of the chambers till he heard some one snore. Then he
+ would know that the day had not yet come, and return wearily to his
+ bedroom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later he learned not to stir till there was a noise and movement in the
+ house and Mr. Beeton advised him to get up. Once dressed&mdash;and
+ dressing, now that Torpenhow was away, was a lengthy business, because
+ collars, ties, and the like hid themselves in far corners of the room, and
+ search meant head-beating against chairs and trunks&mdash;once dressed,
+ there was nothing whatever to do except to sit still and brood till the
+ three daily meals came. Centuries separated breakfast from lunch and lunch
+ from dinner, and though a man prayed for hundreds of years that his mind
+ might be taken from him, God would never hear. Rather the mind was
+ quickened and the revolving thoughts ground against each other as
+ millstones grind when there is no corn between; and yet the brain would
+ not wear out and give him rest. It continued to think, at length, with
+ imagery and all manner of reminiscences. It recalled Maisie and past
+ success, reckless travels by land and sea, the glory of doing work and
+ feeling that it was good, and suggested all that might have happened had
+ the eyes only been faithful to their duty. When thinking ceased through
+ sheer weariness, there poured into Dick's soul tide on tide of
+ overwhelming, purposeless fear&mdash;dread of starvation always, terror
+ lest the unseen ceiling should crush down upon him, fear of fire in the
+ chambers and a louse's death in red flame, and agonies of fiercer horror
+ that had nothing to do with any fear of death. Then Dick bowed his head,
+ and clutching the arms of his chair fought with his sweating self till the
+ tinkle of plates told him that something to eat was being set before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton would bring the meal when he had time to spare, and Dick
+ learned to hang upon his speech, which dealt with badly fitted gas-plugs,
+ waste-pipes out of repair, little tricks for driving picture-nails into
+ walls, and the sins of the charwoman or the housemaids. In the lack of
+ better things the small gossip of a servant'' hall becomes immensely
+ interesting, and the screwing of a washer on a tap an event to be talked
+ over for days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once or twice a week, too, Mr. Beeton would take Dick out with him when he
+ went marketing in the morning to haggle with tradesmen over fish,
+ lamp-wicks, mustard, tapioca, and so forth, while Dick rested his weight
+ first on one foot and then on the other and played aimlessly with the tins
+ and string-ball on the counter. Then they would perhaps meet one of Mr.
+ Beeton's friends, and Dick, standing aside a little, would hold his peace
+ till Mr. Beeton was willing to go on again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The life did not increase his self-respect. He abandoned shaving as a
+ dangerous exercise, and being shaved in a barber's shop meant exposure of
+ his infirmity. He could not see that his clothes were properly brushed,
+ and since he had never taken any care of his personal appearance he became
+ every known variety of sloven. A blind man cannot deal with cleanliness
+ till he has been some months used to the darkness. If he demand attendance
+ and grow angry at the want of it, he must assert himself and stand
+ upright. Then the meanest menial can see that he is blind and, therefore,
+ of no consequence. A wise man will keep his eyes on the floor and sit
+ still. For amusement he may pick coal lump by lump out of the scuttle with
+ the tongs and pile it in a little heap in the fender, keeping count of the
+ lumps, which must all be put back again, one by one and very carefully. He
+ may set himself sums if he cares to work them out; he may talk to himself
+ or to the cat if she chooses to visit him; and if his trade has been that
+ of an artist, he may sketch in the air with his forefinger; but that is
+ too much like drawing a pig with the eyes shut. He may go to his
+ bookshelves and count his books, ranging them in order of their size; or
+ to his wardrobe and count his shirts, laying them in piles of two or three
+ on the bed, as they suffer from frayed cuffs or lost buttons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Even this entertainment wearies after a time; and all the times are very,
+ very long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was allowed to sort a tool-chest where Mr. Beeton kept hammers, taps
+ and nuts, lengths of gas-pipes, oil-bottles, and string.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If I don't have everything just where I know where to look for it, why,
+ then, I can't find anything when I do want it. You've no idea, sir, the
+ amount of little things that these chambers uses up,' said Mr. Beeton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fumbling at the handle of the door as he went out: 'It's hard on you, sir,
+ I do think it's hard on you. Ain't you going to do anything, sir?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll pay my rent and messing. Isn't that enough?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wasn't doubting for a moment that you couldn't pay your way, sir; but I
+ 'ave often said to my wife, "It's 'ard on 'im because it isn't as if he
+ was an old man, nor yet a middle-aged one, but quite a young gentleman.
+ That's where it comes so 'ard."'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I suppose so,' said Dick, absently. This particular nerve through long
+ battering had ceased to feel&mdash;much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was thinking,' continued Mr. Beeton, still making as if to go, 'that
+ you might like to hear my boy Alf read you the papers sometimes of an
+ evening. He do read beautiful, seeing he's only nine.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should be very grateful,' said Dick. 'Only let me make it worth his
+ while.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We wasn't thinking of that, sir, but of course it's in your own 'ands;
+ but only to 'ear Alf sing "A Boy's best Friend is 'is Mother!" Ah!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll hear him sing that too. Let him come this evening with the
+ newspapers.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alf was not a nice child, being puffed up with many school-board
+ certificates for good conduct, and inordinately proud of his singing. Mr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beeton remained, beaming, while the child wailed his way through a song of
+ some eight eight-line verses in the usual whine of a young Cockney, and,
+ after compliments, left him to read Dick the foreign telegrams. Ten
+ minutes later Alf returned to his parents rather pale and scared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ''E said 'e couldn't stand it no more,' he explained.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He never said you read badly, Alf?' Mrs. Beeton spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. 'E said I read beautiful. Said 'e never 'eard any one read like that,
+ but 'e said 'e couldn't abide the stuff in the papers.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'P'raps he's lost some money in the Stocks. Were you readin' him about
+ Stocks, Alf?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No; it was all about fightin' out there where the soldiers is gone&mdash;a
+ great long piece with all the lines close together and very hard words in
+ it. 'E give me 'arf a crown because I read so well. And 'e says the next
+ time there's anything 'e wants read 'e'll send for me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's good hearing, but I do think for all the half-crown&mdash;put it
+ into the kicking-donkey money-box, Alf, and let me see you do it&mdash;he
+ might have kept you longer. Why, he couldn't have begun to understand how
+ beautiful you read.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's best left to hisself&mdash;gentlemen always are when they're
+ downhearted,' said Mr. Beeton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Alf's rigorously limited powers of comprehending Torpenhow's special
+ correspondence had waked the devil of unrest in Dick. He could hear,
+ through the boy's nasal chant, the camels grunting in the squares behind
+ the soldiers outside Suakin; could hear the men swearing and chaffing
+ across the cooking pots, and could smell the acrid wood-smoke as it
+ drifted over camp before the wind of the desert.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night he prayed to God that his mind might be taken from him,
+ offering for proof that he was worthy of this favour the fact that he had
+ not shot himself long ago. That prayer was not answered, and indeed Dick
+ knew in his heart of hearts that only a lingering sense of humour and no
+ special virtue had kept him alive. Suicide, he had persuaded himself,
+ would be a ludicrous insult to the gravity of the situation as well as a
+ weak-kneed confession of fear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Just for the fun of the thing,' he said to the cat, who had taken
+ Binkie's place in his establishment, 'I should like to know how long this
+ is going to last. I can live for a year on the hundred pounds Torp cashed
+ for me. I must have two or three thousand at least in the Bank&mdash;twenty
+ or thirty years more provided for, that is to say. Then I fall back on my
+ hundred and twenty a year, which will be more by that time. Let's
+ consider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-five&mdash;thirty-five&mdash;a man's in his prime then, they say&mdash;forty-five&mdash;a
+ middle-aged man just entering politics&mdash;fifty-five&mdash;"died at the
+ comparatively early age of fifty-five," according to the newspapers. Bah!
+ How these Christians funk death! Sixty-five&mdash;we're only getting on in
+ years. Seventy-five is just possible, though. Great hell, cat O! fifty
+ years more of solitary confinement in the dark! You'll die, and Beeton
+ will die, and Torp will die, and Mai&mdash;everybody else will die, but I
+ shall be alive and kicking with nothing to do. I'm very sorry for myself.
+ I should like some one else to be sorry for me. Evidently I'm not going ma
+ before I die, but the pain's just as bad as ever. Some day when you're
+ vivisected, cat O! they'll tie you down on a little table and cut you open&mdash;but
+ don't be afraid; they'll take precious good care that you don't die.
+ You'll live, and you'll be very sorry then that you weren't sorry for me.
+ Perhaps Torp will come back or... I wish I could go to Torp and the
+ Nilghai, even though I were in their way.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pussy left the room before the speech was ended, and Alf, as he entered,
+ found Dick addressing the empty hearth-rug.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's a letter for you, sir,' he said. 'Perhaps you'd like me to read
+ it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lend it to me for a minute and I'll tell you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outstretched hand shook just a little and the voice was not
+ over-steady. It was within the limits of human possibility that&mdash;that
+ was no letter from Maisie. He knew the heft of three closed envelopes only
+ too well. It was a foolish hope that the girl should write to him, for he
+ did not realise that there is a wrong which admits of no reparation though
+ the evildoer may with tears and the heart's best love strive to mend all.
+ It is best to forget that wrong whether it be caused or endured, since it
+ is as remediless as bad work once put forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Read it, then,' said Dick, and Alf began intoning according to the rules
+ of the Board School&mdash;'"I could have given you love, I could have
+ given you loyalty, such as you never dreamed of. Do you suppose I cared
+ what you were? But you chose to whistle everything down the wind for
+ nothing. My only excuse for you is that you are so young." 'That's all,'
+ he said, returning the paper to be dropped into the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What was in the letter?' asked Mrs. Beeton, when Alf returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know. I think it was a circular or a tract about not whistlin' at
+ everything when you're young.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must have stepped on something when I was alive and walking about and
+ it has bounced up and hit me. God help it, whatever it is&mdash;unless it
+ was all a joke. But I don't know any one who'd take the trouble to play a
+ joke on me.... Love and loyalty for nothing. It sounds tempting enough.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I wonder whether I have lost anything really?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick considered for a long time but could not remember when or how he had
+ put himself in the way of winning these trifles at a woman's hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still, the letter as touching on matters that he preferred not to think
+ about stung him into a fit of frenzy that lasted for a day and night. When
+ his heart was so full of despair that it would hold no more, body and soul
+ together seemed to be dropping without check through the darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came fear of darkness and desperate attempts to reach the light
+ again. But there was no light to be reached. When that agony had left him
+ sweating and breathless, the downward flight would recommence till the
+ gathering torture of it spurred him into another fight as hopeless as the
+ first. Followed some few minutes of sleep in which he dreamed that he saw.
+ Then the procession of events would repeat itself till he was utterly worn
+ out and the brain took up its everlasting consideration of Maisie and
+ might-have-beens.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the end of everything Mr. Beeton came to his room and volunteered to
+ take him out. 'Not marketing this time, but we'll go into the Parks if you
+ like.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Be damned if I do,' quoth Dick. 'Keep to the streets and walk up and
+ down. I like to hear the people round me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not altogether true. The blind in the first stages of their
+ infirmity dislike those who can move with a free stride and unlifted arms&mdash;but
+ Dick had no earthly desire to go to the Parks. Once and only once since
+ Maisie had shut her door he had gone there under Alf's charge. Alf forgot
+ him and fished for minnows in the Serpentine with some companions. After
+ half an hour's waiting Dick, almost weeping with rage and wrath, caught a
+ passer-by, who introduced him to a friendly policeman, who led him to a
+ four-wheeler opposite the Albert Hall. He never told Mr. Beeton of Alf's
+ forgetfulness, but... this was not the manner in which he was used to walk
+ the Parks aforetime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What streets would you like to walk down, then?' said Mr. Beeton,
+ sympathetically. His own ideas of a riotous holiday meant picnicking on
+ the grass of Green Park with his family, and half a dozen paper bags full
+ of food.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Keep to the river,' said Dick, and they kept to the river, and the rush
+ of it was in his ears till they came to Blackfriars Bridge and struck
+ thence on to the Waterloo Road, Mr. Beeton explaining the beauties of the
+ scenery as he went on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And walking on the other side of the pavement,' said he, 'unless I'm much
+ mistaken, is the young woman that used to come to your rooms to be drawed.
+ I never forgets a face and I never remembers a name, except paying
+ tenants, o' course!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Stop her,' said Dick. 'It's Bessie Broke. Tell her I'd like to speak to
+ her again. Quick, man!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton crossed the road under the noses of the omnibuses and arrested
+ Bessie then on her way northward. She recognised him as the man in
+ authority who used to glare at her when she passed up Dick's staircase,
+ and her first impulse was to run.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Wasn't you Mr. Heldar's model?' said Mr. Beeton, planting himself in
+ front of her. 'You was. He's on the other side of the road and he'd like
+ to see you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Why?' said Bessie, faintly. She remembered&mdash;indeed had never for
+ long forgotten&mdash;an affair connected with a newly finished picture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because he has asked me to do so, and because he's most particular
+ blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Drunk?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. 'Orspital blind. He can't see. That's him over there.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was leaning against the parapet of the bridge as Mr. Beeton pointed
+ him out&mdash;a stub-bearded, bowed creature wearing a dirty
+ magenta-coloured neckcloth outside an unbrushed coat. There was nothing to
+ fear from such an one. Even if he chased her, Bessie thought, he could not
+ follow far. She crossed over, and Dick's face lighted up. It was long
+ since a woman of any kind had taken the trouble to speak to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I hope you're well, Mr. Heldar?' said Bessie, a little puzzled. Mr.
+ Beeton stood by with the air of an ambassador and breathed responsibly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm very well indeed, and, by Jove! I'm glad to see&mdash;hear you, I
+ mean, Bess. You never thought it worth while to turn up and see us again
+ after you got your money. I don't know why you should. Are you going
+ anywhere in particular just now?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was going for a walk,' said Bessie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not the old business?' Dick spoke under his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lor, no! I paid my premium'&mdash;Bessie was very proud of that word&mdash;'for
+ a barmaid, sleeping in, and I'm at the bar now quite respectable. Indeed I
+ am.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton had no special reason to believe in the loftiness of human
+ nature. Therefore he dissolved himself like a mist and returned to his
+ gas-plugs without a word of apology. Bessie watched the flight with a
+ certain uneasiness; but so long as Dick appeared to be ignorant of the
+ harm that had been done to him...
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's hard work pulling the beer-handles,' she went on, 'and they've got
+ one of them penny-in-the-slot cash-machines, so if you get wrong by a
+ penny at the end of the day&mdash;but then I don't believe the machinery
+ is right. Do you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've only seen it work. Mr. Beeton.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He's gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm afraid I must ask you to help me home, then. I'll make it worth your
+ while. You see.' The sightless eyes turned towards her and Bessie saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It isn't taking you out of your way?' he said hesitatingly. 'I can ask a
+ policeman if it is.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not at all. I come on at seven and I'm off at four. That's easy hours.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good God!&mdash;but I'm on all the time. I wish I had some work to do
+ too.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let's go home, Bess.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He turned and cannoned into a man on the sidewalk, recoiling with an oath.
+ Bessie took his arm and said nothing&mdash;as she had said nothing when he
+ had ordered her to turn her face a little more to the light. They walked
+ for some time in silence, the girl steering him deftly through the crowd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And where's&mdash;where's Mr. Torpenhow?' she inquired at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He has gone away to the desert.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Where's that?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick pointed to the right. 'East&mdash;out of the mouth of the river,'
+ said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then west, then south, and then east again, all along the under-side of
+ Europe. Then south again, God knows how far.' The explanation did not
+ enlighten Bessie in the least, but she held her tongue and looked to
+ Dick's patch till they came to the chambers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We'll have tea and muffins,' he said joyously. 'I can't tell you, Bessie,
+ how glad I am to find you again. What made you go away so suddenly?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't think you'd want me any more,' she said, emboldened by his
+ ignorance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't, as a matter of fact&mdash;but afterwards&mdash;At any rate I'm
+ glad you've come. You know the stairs.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Bessie led him home to his own place&mdash;there was no one to hinder&mdash;and
+ shut the door of the studio.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a mess!' was her first word. 'All these things haven't been looked
+ after for months and months.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No, only weeks, Bess. You can't expect them to care.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know what you expect them to do. They ought to know what you've
+ paid them for. The dust's just awful. It's all over the easel.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't use it much now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All over the pictures and the floor, and all over your coat. I'd like to
+ speak to them housemaids.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ring for tea, then.' Dick felt his way to the one chair he used by
+ custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie saw the action and, as far as in her lay, was touched. But there
+ remained always a keen sense of new-found superiority, and it was in her
+ voice when she spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How long have you been like this?' she said wrathfully, as though the
+ blindness were some fault of the housemaids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As you are.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The day after you went away with the check, almost as soon as my picture
+ was finished; I hardly saw her alive.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then they've been cheating you ever since, that's all. I know their nice
+ little ways.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A woman may love one man and despise another, but on general feminine
+ principles she will do her best to save the man she despises from being
+ defrauded. Her loved one can look to himself, but the other man, being
+ obviously an idiot, needs protection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't think Mr. Beeton cheats much,' said Dick. Bessie was flouncing up
+ and down the room, and he was conscious of a keen sense of enjoyment as he
+ heard the swish of her skirts and the light step between.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tea and muffins,' she said shortly, when the ring at the bell was
+ answered; 'two teaspoonfuls and one over for the pot. I don't want the old
+ teapot that was here when I used to come. It don't draw. Get another.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The housemaid went away scandalised, and Dick chuckled. Then he began to
+ cough as Bessie banged up and down the studio disturbing the dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are you trying to do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Put things straight. This is like unfurnished lodgings. How could you let
+ it go so?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How could I help it? Dust away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She dusted furiously, and in the midst of all the pother entered Mrs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beeton. Her husband on his return had explained the situation, winding up
+ with the peculiarly felicitous proverb, 'Do unto others as you would be
+ done by.' She had descended to put into her place the person who demanded
+ muffins and an uncracked teapot as though she had a right to both.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Muffins ready yet?' said Bess, still dusting. She was no longer a drab of
+ the streets but a young lady who, thanks to Dick's check, had paid her
+ premium and was entitled to pull beer-handles with the best. Being neatly
+ dressed in black she did not hesitate to face Mrs. Beeton, and there
+ passed between the two women certain regards that Dick would have
+ appreciated. The situation adjusted itself by eye. Bessie had won, and
+ Mrs. Beeton returned to cook muffins and make scathing remarks about
+ models, hussies, trollops, and the like, to her husband.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's nothing to be got of interfering with him, Liza,' he said. 'Alf,
+ you go along into the street to play. When he isn't crossed he's as kindly
+ as kind, but when he's crossed he's the devil and all. We took too many
+ little things out of his rooms since he was blind to be that particular
+ about what he does. They ain't no objects to a blind man, of course, but
+ if it was to come into court we'd get the sack. Yes, I did introduce him
+ to that girl because I'm a feelin' man myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Much too feelin'!' Mrs. Beeton slapped the muffins into the dish, and
+ thought of comely housemaids long since dismissed on suspicion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I ain't ashamed of it, and it isn't for us to judge him hard so long as
+ he pays quiet and regular as he do. I know how to manage young gentlemen,
+ you know how to cook for them, and what I says is, let each stick to his
+ own business and then there won't be any trouble. Take them muffins down,
+ Liza, and be sure you have no words with that young woman. His lot is
+ cruel hard, and if he's crossed he do swear worse than any one I've ever
+ served.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's a little better,' said Bessie, sitting down to the tea. 'You
+ needn't wait, thank you, Mrs. Beeton.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I had no intention of doing such, I do assure you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie made no answer whatever. This, she knew, was the way in which real
+ ladies routed their foes, and when one is a barmaid at a first-class
+ public-house one may become a real lady at ten minutes' notice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her eyes fell on Dick opposite her and she was both shocked and
+ displeased. There were droppings of food all down the front of his coat;
+ the mouth under the ragged ill-grown beard drooped sullenly; the forehead
+ was lined and contracted; and on the lean temples the hair was a dusty
+ indeterminate colour that might or might not have been called gray. The
+ utter misery and self-abandonment of the man appealed to her, and at the
+ bottom of her heart lay the wicked feeling that he was humbled and brought
+ low who had once humbled her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh! it is good to hear you moving about,' said Dick, rubbing his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tell us all about your bar successes, Bessie, and the way you live now.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind that. I'm quite respectable, as you'd see by looking at me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You don't seem to live too well. What made you go blind that sudden? Why
+ isn't there any one to look after you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was too thankful for the sound of her voice to resent the tone of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was cut across the head a long time ago, and that ruined my eyes. I
+ don't suppose anybody thinks it worth while to look after me any more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Why should they?&mdash;and Mr. Beeton really does everything I want.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't you know any gentlemen and ladies, then, while you was&mdash;well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A few, but I don't care to have them looking at me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I suppose that's why you've growed a beard. Take it off, it don't become
+ you.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Good gracious, child, do you imagine that I think of what becomes of me
+ these days?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You ought. Get that taken off before I come here again. I suppose I can
+ come, can't I?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'd be only too grateful if you did. I don't think I treated you very
+ well in the old days. I used to make you angry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Very angry, you did.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry for it, then. Come and see me when you can and as often as you
+ can. God knows, there isn't a soul in the world to take that trouble
+ except you and Mr. Beeton.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A lot of trouble he's taking and she too.' This with a toss of the head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They've let you do anyhow and they haven't done anything for you. I've
+ only to look and see that much. I'll come, and I'll be glad to come, but
+ you must go and be shaved, and you must get some other clothes&mdash;those
+ ones aren't fit to be seen.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have heaps somewhere,' he said helplessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know you have. Tell Mr. Beeton to give you a new suit and I'll brush it
+ and keep it clean. You may be as blind as a barn-door, Mr. Heldar, but it
+ doesn't excuse you looking like a sweep.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do I look like a sweep, then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, I'm sorry for you. I'm that sorry for you!' she cried impulsively,
+ and took Dick's hands. Mechanically, he lowered his head as if to kiss&mdash;she
+ was the only woman who had taken pity on him, and he was not too proud for
+ a little pity now. She stood up to go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nothing o' that kind till you look more like a gentleman. It's quite easy
+ when you get shaved, and some clothes.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could hear her drawing on her gloves and rose to say good-bye. She
+ passed behind him, kissed him audaciously on the back of the neck, and ran
+ away as swiftly as on the day when she had destroyed the Melancolia.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'To think of me kissing Mr. Heldar,' she said to herself, 'after all he's
+ done to me and all! Well, I'm sorry for him, and if he was shaved he
+ wouldn't be so bad to look at, but... Oh them Beetons, how shameful
+ they've treated him! I know Beeton's wearing his shirt on his back to-day
+ just as well as if I'd aired it. To-morrow, I'll see... I wonder if he has
+ much of his own. It might be worth more than the bar&mdash;I wouldn't have
+ to do any work&mdash;and just as respectable as if no one knew.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick was not grateful to Bessie for her parting gift. He was acutely
+ conscious of it in the nape of his neck throughout the night, but it
+ seemed, among very many other things, to enforce the wisdom of getting
+ shaved.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was shaved accordingly in the morning, and felt the better for it. A
+ fresh suit of clothes, white linen, and the knowledge that some one in the
+ world said that she took an interest in his personal appearance made him
+ carry himself almost upright; for the brain was relieved for a while from
+ thinking of Maisie, who, under other circumstances, might have given that
+ kiss and a million others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let us consider,' said he, after lunch. 'The girl can't care, and it's a
+ toss-up whether she comes again or not, but if money can buy her to look
+ after me she shall be bought. Nobody else in the world would take the
+ trouble, and I can make it worth her while. She's a child of the gutter
+ holding brevet rank as a barmaid; so she shall have everything she wants
+ if she'll only come and talk and look after me.' He rubbed his newly shorn
+ chin and began to perplex himself with the thought of her not coming. 'I
+ suppose I did look rather a sweep,' he went on. 'I had no reason to look
+ otherwise. I knew things dropped on my clothes, but it didn't matter. It
+ would be cruel if she didn't come. She must. Maisie came once, and that
+ was enough for her. She was quite right. She had something to work for.
+ This creature has only beer-handles to pull, unless she has deluded some
+ young man into keeping company with her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fancy being cheated for the sake of a counter-jumper! We're falling pretty
+ low.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Something cried aloud within him:&mdash;This will hurt more than anything
+ that has gone before. It will recall and remind and suggest and tantalise,
+ and in the end drive you mad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know it, I know it!' Dick cried, clenching his hands despairingly;
+ 'but, good heavens! is a poor blind beggar never to get anything out of
+ his life except three meals a day and a greasy waistcoat? I wish she'd
+ come.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the afternoon time she came, because there was no young man in
+ her life just then, and she thought of material advantages which would
+ allow her to be idle for the rest of her days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shouldn't have known you,' she said approvingly. 'You look as you used
+ to look&mdash;a gentleman that was proud of himself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't you think I deserve another kiss, then?' said Dick, flushing a
+ little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Maybe&mdash;but you won't get it yet. Sit down and let's see what I can
+ do for you. I'm certain sure Mr. Beeton cheats you, now that you can't go
+ through the housekeeping books every month. Isn't that true?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You'd better come and housekeep for me then, Bessie.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Couldn't do it in these chambers&mdash;you know that as well as I do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know, but we might go somewhere else, if you thought it worth your
+ while.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'd try to look after you, anyhow; but I shouldn't care to have to work
+ for both of us.' This was tentative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do you remember where I used to keep my bank-book?' said he. 'Torp took
+ it to be balanced just before he went away. Look and see.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was generally under the tobacco-jar. Ah!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh! Four thousand two hundred and ten pounds nine shillings and a penny!
+ Oh my!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You can have the penny. That's not bad for one year's work. Is that and a
+ hundred and twenty pounds a year good enough?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The idleness and the pretty clothes were almost within her reach now, but
+ she must, by being housewifely, show that she deserved them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; but you'd have to move, and if we took an inventory, I think we'd
+ find that Mr. Beeton has been prigging little things out of the rooms here
+ and there. They don't look as full as they used.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind, we'll let him have them. The only thing I'm particularly
+ anxious to take away is that picture I used you for&mdash;when you used to
+ swear at me. We'll pull out of this place, Bess, and get away as far as
+ ever we can.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh yes,' she said uneasily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't know where I can go to get away from myself, but I'll try, and
+ you shall have all the pretty frocks that you care for. You'll like that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Give me that kiss now, Bess. Ye gods! it's good to put one's arm round a
+ woman's waist again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came the fulfilment of the prophecy within the brain. If his arm were
+ thus round Maisie's waist and a kiss had just been given and taken between
+ them,&mdash;why then... He pressed the girl more closely to himself
+ because the pain whipped him. She was wondering how to explain a little
+ accident to the Melancolia. At any rate, if this man really desired the
+ solace of her company&mdash;and certainly he would relapse into his
+ original slough if she withdrew it&mdash;he would not be more than just a
+ little vexed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be delightful at least to see what would happen, and by her
+ teachings it was good for a man to stand in certain awe of his companion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She laughed nervously, and slipped out of his reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I shouldn't worrit about that picture if I was you,' she began, in the
+ hope of turning his attention.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's at the back of all my canvases somewhere. Find it, Bess; you know it
+ as well as I do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know&mdash;but&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But what? You've wit enough to manage the sale of it to a dealer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Women haggle much better than men. It might be a matter of eight or nine
+ hundred pounds to&mdash;to us. I simply didn't like to think about it for
+ a long time. It was mixed up with my life so.&mdash;But we'll cover up our
+ tracks and get rid of everything, eh? Make a fresh start from the
+ beginning, Bess.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she began to repent very much indeed, because she knew the value of
+ money. Still, it was probable that the blind man was overestimating the
+ value of his work. Gentlemen, she knew, were absurdly particular about
+ their things. She giggled as a nervous housemaid giggles when she tries to
+ explain the breakage of a pipe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm very sorry, but you remember I was&mdash;I was angry with you before
+ Mr. Torpenhow went away?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You were very angry, child; and on my word I think you had some right to
+ be.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then I&mdash;but aren't you sure Mr. Torpenhow didn't tell you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tell me what? Good gracious, what are you making such a fuss about when
+ you might just as well be giving me another kiss?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was beginning to learn, not for the first time in his experience, that
+ kissing is a cumulative poison. The more you get of it, the more you want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie gave the kiss promptly, whispering, as she did so, 'I was so angry
+ I rubbed out that picture with the turpentine. You aren't angry, are you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What? Say that again.' The man's hand had closed on her wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I rubbed it out with turps and the knife,' faltered Bessie. 'I thought
+ you'd only have to do it over again. You did do it over again, didn't you?
+ Oh, let go of my wrist; you're hurting me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Isn't there anything left of the thing?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'N'nothing that looks like anything. I'm sorry&mdash;I didn't know you'd
+ take on about it; I only meant to do it in fun. You aren't going to hit
+ me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hit you! No! Let's think.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not relax his hold upon her wrist but stood staring at the carpet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he shook his head as a young steer shakes it when the lash of the
+ stock-whip cross his nose warns him back to the path on to the shambles
+ that he would escape. For weeks he had forced himself not to think of the
+ Melancolia, because she was a part of his dead life. With Bessie's return
+ and certain new prospects that had developed themselves, the Melancolia&mdash;lovelier
+ in his imagination than she had ever been on canvas&mdash;reappeared. By
+ her aid he might have procured mor money wherewith to amuse Bess and to
+ forget Maisie, as well as another taste of an almost forgotten success.
+ Now, thanks to a vicious little housemaid's folly, there was nothing to
+ look for&mdash;not even the hope that he might some day take an abiding
+ interest in the housemaid. Worst of all, he had been made to appear
+ ridiculous in Maisie's eyes. A woman will forgive the man who has ruined
+ her life's work so long as he gives her love; a man may forgive those who
+ ruin the love of his life, but he will never forgive the destruction of
+ his work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tck&mdash;tck&mdash;tck,' said Dick between his teeth, and then laughed
+ softly. 'It's an omen, Bessie, and&mdash;a good many things considered, it
+ serves me right for doing what I have done. By Jove! that accounts for
+ Maisie's running away. She must have thought me perfectly mad&mdash;small
+ blame to her! The whole picture ruined, isn't it so? What made you do it?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Because I was that angry. I'm not angry now&mdash;I'm awful sorry.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wonder.&mdash;It doesn't matter, anyhow. I'm to blame for making the
+ mistake.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What mistake?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Something you wouldn't understand, dear. Great heavens! to think that a
+ little piece of dirt like you could throw me out of stride!' Dick was
+ talking to himself as Bessie tried to shake off his grip on her wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I ain't a piece of dirt, and you shouldn't call me so! I did it 'cause I
+ hated you, and I'm only sorry now 'cause you're&mdash;'cause you're&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Exactly&mdash;because I'm blind. There's noting like tact in little
+ things.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie began to sob. She did not like being shackled against her will; she
+ was afraid of the blind face and the look upon it, and was sorry too that
+ her great revenge had only made Dick laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Don't cry,' he said, and took her into his arms. 'You only did what you
+ thought right.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I&mdash;I ain't a little piece of dirt, and if you say that I'll never
+ come to you again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You don't know what you've done to me. I'm not angry&mdash;indeed, I'm
+ not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be quiet for a minute.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie remained in his arms shrinking. Dick's first thought was connected
+ with Maisie, and it hurt him as white-hot iron hurts an open sore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not for nothing is a man permitted to ally himself to the wrong woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first pang&mdash;the first sense of things lost is but the prelude to
+ the play, for the very just Providence who delights in causing pain has
+ decreed that the agony shall return, and that in the midst of keenest
+ pleasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They know this pain equally who have forsaken or been forsaken by the love
+ of their life, and in their new wives' arms are compelled to realise it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is better to remain alone and suffer only the misery of being alone, so
+ long as it is possible to find distraction in daily work. When that
+ resource goes the man is to be pitied and left alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These things and some others Dick considered while he was holding Bessie
+ to his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Though you mayn't know it,' he said, raising his head, 'the Lord is a
+ just and a terrible God, Bess; with a very strong sense of humour. It
+ serves me right&mdash;how it serves me right! Torp could understand it if
+ he were here; he must have suffered something at your hands, child, but
+ only for a minute or so. I saved him. Set that to my credit, some one.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Let me go,' said Bess, her face darkening. 'Let me go.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'All in good time. Did you ever attend Sunday school?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never. Let me go, I tell you; you're making fun of me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Indeed, I'm not. I'm making fun of myself.... Thus. "He saved others,
+ himself he cannot save." It isn't exactly a school-board text.' He
+ released her wrist, but since he was between her and the door, she could
+ not escape. 'What an enormous amount of mischief one little woman can do!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm sorry; I'm awful sorry about the picture.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm not. I'm grateful to you for spoiling it.... What were we talking
+ about before you mentioned the thing?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'About getting away&mdash;and money. Me and you going away.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course. We will get away&mdash;that is to say, I will.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And me?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You shall have fifty whole pounds for spoiling a picture.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then you won't&mdash;&mdash;?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm afraid not, dear. Think of fifty pounds for pretty things all to
+ yourself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You said you couldn't do anything without me.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That was true a little while ago. I'm better now, thank you. Get me my
+ hat.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'S'pose I don't?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Beeton will, and you'll lose fifty pounds. That's all. Get it.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bessie cursed under her breath. She had pitied the man sincerely, had
+ kissed him with almost equal sincerity, for he was not unhandsome; it
+ pleased her to be in a way and for a time his protector, and above all
+ there were four thousand pounds to be handled by some one. Now through a
+ slip of the tongue and a little feminine desire to give a little, not too
+ much, pain she had lost the money, the blessed idleness and the pretty
+ things, the companionship, and the chance of looking outwardly as
+ respectable as a real lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now fill me a pipe. Tobacco doesn't taste, but it doesn't matter, and
+ I'll think things out. What's the day of the week, Bess?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Tuesday.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Then Thursday's mail-day. What a fool&mdash;what a blind fool I have
+ been!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Twenty-two pounds covers my passage home again. Allow ten for additional
+ expenses. We must put up at Madam Binat's for old time's sake. Thirty-two
+ pounds altogether. Add a hundred for the cost of the last trip&mdash;Gad,
+ won't Torp stare to see me!&mdash;a hundred and thirty-two leaves
+ seventy-eight for baksheesh&mdash;I shall need it&mdash;and to play with.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What are you crying for, Bess? It wasn't your fault, child; it was mine
+ altogether. Oh, you funny little opossum, mop your eyes and take me out!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I want the pass-book and the check-book. Stop a minute. Four thousand
+ pounds at four per cent&mdash;that's safe interest&mdash;means a hundred
+ and sixty pounds a year; one hundred and twenty pounds a hear&mdash;also
+ safe&mdash;is two eighty, and two hundred and eighty pounds added to three
+ hundred a year means gilded luxury for a single woman. Bess, we'll go to
+ the bank.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richer by two hundred and ten pounds stored in his money-belt, Dick caused
+ Bessie, now thoroughly bewildered, to hurry from the bank to the P. and O.
+ offices, where he explained things tersely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Port Said, single first; cabin as close to the baggage-hatch as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What ship's going?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The Colgong,' said the clerk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She's a wet little hooker. Is it Tilbury and a tender, or Galleons and
+ the docks?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Galleons. Twelve-forty, Thursday.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thanks. Change, please. I can't see very well&mdash;will you count it
+ into my hand?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If they all took their passages like that instead of talking about their
+ trunks, life would be worth something,' said the clerk to his neighbour,
+ who was trying to explain to a harassed mother of many that condensed milk
+ is just as good for babes at sea as daily dairy. Being nineteen and
+ unmarried, he spoke with conviction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'We are now,' quoth Dick, as they returned to the studio, patting the
+ place where his money-belt covered ticket and money, 'beyond the reach of
+ man, or devil, or woman&mdash;which is much more important. I've had three
+ little affairs to carry through before Thursday, but I needn't ask you to
+ help, Bess. Come here on Thursday morning at nine. We'll breakfast, and
+ you shall take me down to Galleons Station.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are you going to do?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Going away, of course. What should I stay for?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But you can't look after yourself?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can do anything. I didn't realise it before, but I can. I've done a
+ great deal already. Resolution shall be treated to one kiss if Bessie
+ doesn't object.' Strangely enough, Bessie objected and Dick laughed. 'I
+ suppose you're right. Well, come at nine the day after to-morrow and
+ you'll get your money.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Shall I sure?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I don't bilk, and you won't know whether I do or not unless you come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Oh, but it's long and long to wait! Good-bye, Bessie,&mdash;send Beeton
+ here as you go out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The housekeeper came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What are all the fittings of my rooms worth?' said Dick, imperiously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ''Tisn't for me to say, sir. Some things is very pretty and some is wore
+ out dreadful.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'm insured for two hundred and seventy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Insurance policies is no criterion, though I don't say&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, damn your longwindedness! You've made your pickings out of me and the
+ other tenants. Why, you talked of retiring and buying a public-house the
+ other day. Give a straight answer to a straight question.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Fifty,' said Mr. Beeton, without a moment's hesitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Double it; or I'll break up half my sticks and burn the rest.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He felt his way to a bookstand that supported a pile of sketch-books, and
+ wrenched out one of the mahogany pillars.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That's sinful, sir,' said the housekeeper, alarmed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's my own. One hundred or&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'One hundred it is. It'll cost me three and six to get that there pilaster
+ mended.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I thought so. What an out and out swindler you must have been to spring
+ that price at once!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I hope I've done nothing to dissatisfy any of the tenants, least of all
+ you, sir.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Never mind that. Get me the money to-morrow, and see that all my clothes
+ are packed in the little brown bullock-trunk. I'm going.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But the quarter's notice?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I'll pay forfeit. Look after the packing and leave me alone.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton discussed this new departure with his wife, who decided that
+ Bessie was at the bottom of it all. Her husband took a more charitable
+ view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It's very sudden&mdash;but then he was always sudden in his ways. Listen
+ to him now!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a sound of chanting from Dick's room.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'We'll never come back any more, boys,
+ We'll never come back no more;
+ We'll go to the deuce on any excuse,
+ And never come back no more!
+
+ Oh say we're afloat or ashore, boys,
+ Oh say we're afloat or ashore;
+ But we'll never come back any more, boys,
+ We'll never come back no more!'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'Mr. Beeton! Mr. Beeton! Where the deuce is my pistol?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Quick, he's going to shoot himself&mdash;'avin' gone mad!' said Mrs.
+ Beeton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Beeton addressed Dick soothingly, but it was some time before the
+ latter, threshing up and down his bedroom, could realise the intention of
+ the promises to 'find everything to-morrow, sir.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, you copper-nosed old fool&mdash;you impotent Academician!' he shouted
+ at last. 'Do you suppose I want to shoot myself? Take the pistol in your
+ silly shaking hand then. If you touch it, it will go off, because it's
+ loaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It's among my campaign-kit somewhere&mdash;in the parcel at the bottom of
+ the trunk.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long ago Dick had carefully possessed himself of a forty-pound weight
+ field-equipment constructed by the knowledge of his own experience. It was
+ this put-away treasure that he was trying to find and rehandle. Mr.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beeton whipped the revolver out of its place on the top of the package,
+ and Dick drove his hand among the khaki coat and breeches, the blue cloth
+ leg-bands, and the heavy flannel shirts doubled over a pair of swan-neck
+ spurs. Under these and the water-bottle lay a sketch-book and a pigskin
+ case of stationery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'These we don't want; you can have them, Mr. Beeton. Everything else I'll
+ keep. Pack 'em on the top right-hand side of my trunk. When you've done
+ that come into the studio with your wife. I want you both. Wait a minute;
+ get me a pen and a sheet of notepaper.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is not an easy thing to write when you cannot see, and Dick had
+ particular reasons for wishing that his work should be clear. So he began,
+ following his right hand with his left: '"The badness of this writing is
+ because I am blind and cannot see my pen." H'mph!&mdash;even a lawyer
+ can't mistake that. It must be signed, I suppose, but it needn't be
+ witnessed. Now an inch lower&mdash;why did I never learn to use a
+ type-writer?&mdash;"This is the last will and testament of me, Richard
+ Heldar. I am in sound bodily and mental health, and there is no previous
+ will to revoke."&mdash;That's all right. Damn the pen! Whereabouts on the
+ paper was I?&mdash;"I leave everything that I possess in the world,
+ including four thousand pounds, and two thousand seven hundred and twenty
+ eight pounds held for me"&mdash;oh, I can't get this straight.' He tore
+ off half the sheet and began again with the caution about the handwriting.
+ Then: 'I leave all the money I possess in the world to'&mdash;here
+ followed Maisie's name, and the names of the two banks that held the
+ money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It mayn't be quite regular, but no one has a shadow of a right to dispute
+ it, and I've given Maisie's address. Come in, Mr. Beeton. This is my
+ signature; I want you and your wife to witness it. Thanks. To-morrow you
+ must take me to the landlord and I'll pay forfeit for leaving without
+ notice, and I'll lodge this paper with him in case anything happens while
+ I'm away. Now we're going to light up the studio stove. Stay with me, and
+ give me my papers as I want 'em.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one knows until he has tried how fine a blaze a year's accumulation of
+ bills, letters, and dockets can make. Dick stuffed into the stove every
+ document in the studio&mdash;saving only three unopened letters; destroyed
+ sketch-books, rough note-books, new and half-finished canvases alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What a lot of rubbish a tenant gets about him if he stays long enough in
+ one place, to be sure,' said Mr. Beeton, at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He does. Is there anything more left?' Dick felt round the walls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not a thing, and the stove's nigh red-hot.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Excellent, and you've lost about a thousand pounds' worth of sketches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ho! ho! Quite a thousand pounds' worth, if I can remember what I used to
+ be.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes, sir,' politely. Mr. Beeton was quite sure that Dick had gone mad,
+ otherwise he would have never parted with his excellent furniture for a
+ song. The canvas things took up storage room and were much better out of
+ the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There remained only to leave the little will in safe hands: that could not
+ be accomplished to to-morrow. Dick groped about the floor picking up the
+ last pieces of paper, assured himself again and again that there remained
+ no written word or sign of his past life in drawer or desk, and sat down
+ before the stove till the fire died out and the contracting iron cracked
+ in the silence of the night.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With a heart of furious fancies,
+ Whereof I am commander;
+ With a burning spear and a horse of air,
+ To the wilderness I wander.
+
+ With a knight of ghosts and shadows
+ I summoned am to tourney&mdash;
+ Ten leagues beyond the wide world's end,
+ Methinks it is no journey.
+
+ &mdash;Tom a' Bedlam's Song.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ 'GOOD-BYE, Bess; I promised you fifty. Here's a hundred&mdash;all that I
+ got for my furniture from Beeton. That will keep you in pretty frocks for
+ some time. You've been a good little girl, all things considered, but
+ you've given me and Torpenhow a fair amount of trouble.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Give Mr. Torpenhow my love if you see him, won't you?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Of course I will, dear. Now take me up the gang-plank and into the cabin.
+ Once aboard the lugger and the maid is&mdash;and I am free, I mean.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who'll look after you on this ship?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The head-steward, if there's any use in money. The doctor when we come to
+ Port Said, if I know anything of P. and O. doctors. After that, the Lord
+ will provide, as He used to do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bess found Dick his cabin in the wild turmoil of a ship full of
+ leavetakers and weeping relatives. Then he kissed her, and laid himself
+ down in his bunk until the decks should be clear. He who had taken so long
+ to move about his own darkened rooms well understood the geography of a
+ ship, and the necessity of seeing to his own comforts was as wine to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before the screw began to thrash the ship along the Docks he had been
+ introduced to the head-steward, had royally tipped him, secured a good
+ place at table, opened out his baggage, and settled himself down with joy
+ in the cabin. It was scarcely necessary to feel his way as he moved about,
+ for he knew everything so well. Then God was very kind: a deep sleep of
+ weariness came upon him just as he would have thought of Maisie, and he
+ slept till the steamer had cleared the mouth of the Thames and was lifting
+ to the pulse of the Channel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rattle of the engines, the reek of oil and paint, and a very familiar
+ sound in the next cabin roused him to his new inheritance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, it's good to be alive again!' He yawned, stretched himself
+ vigorously, and went on deck to be told that they were almost abreast of
+ the lights of Brighton. This is no more open water than Trafalgal Square
+ is a common; the free levels begin at Ushant; but none the less Dick could
+ feel the healing of the sea at work upon him already. A boisterous little
+ cross-swell swung the steamer disrespectfully by the nose; and one wave
+ breaking far aft spattered the quarterdeck and the pile of new
+ deck-chairs. He heard the foam fall with the clash of broken glass, was
+ stung in the face by a cupful, and sniffing luxuriously, felt his way to
+ the smoking-room by the wheel. There a strong b reeze found him, blew his
+ cap off and left him bareheaded in the doorway, and the smoking-room
+ steward, understanding that he was a voyager of experience, said that the
+ weather would be stiff in the chops off the Channel and more than half a
+ gale in the Bay. These things fell as they were foretold, and Dick enjoyed
+ himself to the utmost. It is allowable and even necessary at sea to lay
+ firm hold upon tables, stanchions, and ropes in moving from place to
+ place. On land the man who feels with his hands is patently blind. At sea
+ even a blind man who is not sea-sick can jest with the doctor over the
+ weakness of his fellows. Dick told the doctor many tales&mdash;and these
+ are coin of more value than silver if properly handled&mdash;smoked with
+ him till unholy hours of the night, and so won his short-lived regard that
+ he promised Dick a few hours of his time when they came to Port Said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the sea roared or was still as the winds blew, and the engines sang
+ their song day and night, and the sun grew stronger day by day, and Tom
+ the Lascar barber shaved Dick of a morning under the opened hatch-grating
+ where the cool winds blew, and the awnings were spread and the passengers
+ made merry, and at last they came to Port Said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Take me,' said Dick, to the doctor, 'to Madame Binat's&mdash;if you know
+ where that is.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Whew!' said the doctor, 'I do. There's not much to choose between 'em;
+ but I suppose you're aware that that's one of the worst houses in the
+ place. They'll rob you to begin with, and knife you later.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not they. Take me there, and I can look after myself.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he was brought to Madame Binat's and filled his nostrils with the
+ well-remembered smell of the East, that runs without a change from the
+ Canal head to Hong-Kong, and his mouth with the villainous Lingua Franca
+ of the Levant. The heat smote him between the shoulder-blades with the
+ buffet of an old friend, his feet slipped on the sand, and his coat-sleeve
+ was warm as new-baked bread when he lifted it to his nose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Binat smiled with the smile that knows no astonishment when Dick
+ entered the drinking-shop which was one source of her gains. But for a
+ little accident of complete darkness he could hardly realise that he had
+ ever quitted the old life that hummed in his ears. Somebody opened a
+ bottle of peculiarly strong Schiedam. The smell reminded Dick of Monsieur
+ Binat, who, by the way, had spoken of art and degradation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Binat was dead; Madame said as much when the doctor departed, scandalised,
+ so far as a ship's doctor can be, at the warmth of Dick's reception. Dick
+ was delighted at it. 'They remember me here after a year. They have
+ forgotten me across the water by this time. Madame, I want a long talk
+ with you when you're at liberty. It is good to be back again.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the evening she set an iron-topped cafe-table out on the sands, and
+ Dick and she sat by it, while the house behind them filled with riot,
+ merriment, oaths, and threats. The stars came out and the lights of the
+ shipping in the harbour twinkled by the head of the Canal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. The war is good for trade, my friend; but what dost thou do here? We
+ have not forgotten thee.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was over there in England and I went blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But there was the glory first. We heard of it here, even here&mdash;I and
+ Binat; and thou hast used the head of Yellow 'Tina&mdash;she is still
+ alive&mdash;so often and so well that 'Tina laughed when the papers
+ arrived by the mail-boats. It was always something that we here could
+ recognise in the paintings. And then there was always the glory and the
+ money for thee.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am not poor&mdash;I shall pay you well.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not to me. Thou hast paid for everything.' Under her breath, 'Mon Dieu,
+ to be blind and so young! What horror!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick could not see her face with the pity on it, or his own with the
+ discoloured hair at the temples. He did not feel the need of pity; he was
+ too anxious to get to the front once more, and explained his desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And where? The Canal is full of the English ships. Sometimes they fire as
+ they used to do when the war was here&mdash;ten years ago. Beyond Cairo
+ there is fighting, but how canst thou go there without a correspondent's
+ passport? And in the desert there is always fighting, but that is
+ impossible also,' said she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must go to Suakin.' He knew, thanks to Alf's readings, that Torpenhow
+ was at work with the column that was protecting the construction of the
+ Suakin-Berber line. P. and O. steamers do not touch at that port, and,
+ besides, Madame Binat knew everybody whose help or advice was worth
+ anything. They were not respectable folk, but they could cause things to
+ be accomplished, which is much more important when there is work toward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But at Suakin they are always fighting. That desert breeds men always&mdash;and
+ always more men. And they are so bold! Why to Suakin?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My friend is there.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thy friend! Chtt! Thy friend is death, then.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Madame Binat dropped a fat arm on the table-top, filled Dick's glass anew,
+ and looked at him closely under the stars. There was no need that he
+ should bow his head in assent and say&mdash;'No. He is a man, but&mdash;if
+ it should arrive... blamest thou?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I blame?' she laughed shrilly. 'Who am I that I should blame any one&mdash;except
+ those who try to cheat me over their consommations. But it is very
+ terrible.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I must go to Suakin. Think for me. A great deal has changed within the
+ year, and the men I knew are not here. The Egyptian lighthouse steamer
+ goes down the Canal to Suakin&mdash;and the post-boats&mdash;But even then&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Do not think any longer. I know, and it is for me to think. Thou shalt go&mdash;thou
+ shalt go and see thy friend. Be wise. Sit here until the house is a little
+ quiet&mdash;I must attend to my guests&mdash;and afterwards go to bed.
+ Thou shalt go, in truth, thou shalt go.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'To-morrow?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'As soon as may be.' She was talking as though he were a child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He sat at the table listening to the voices in the harbour and the
+ streets, and wondering how soon the end would come, till Madame Binat
+ carried him off to bed and ordered him to sleep. The house shouted and
+ sang and danced and revelled, Madame Binat moving through it with one eye
+ on the liquor payments and the girls and the other on Dick's interests. To
+ this latter end she smiled upon scowling and furtive Turkish officers of
+ fellaheen regiments, and more than kind to camel agents of no nationality
+ whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the early morning, being then appropriately dressed in a flaming red
+ silk ball-dress, with a front of tarnished gold embroidery and a necklace
+ of plate-glass diamonds, she made chocolate and carried it in to Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It is only I, and I am of discreet age, eh? Drink and eat the roll too.
+ Thus in France mothers bring their sons, when those behave wisely, the
+ morning chocolate.' She sat down on the side of the bed whispering:&mdash;'It
+ is all arranged. Thou wilt go by the lighthouse boat. That is a bribe of
+ ten pounds English. The captain is never paid by the Government. The boat
+ comes to Suakin in four days. There will go with thee George, a Greek
+ muleteer. Another bribe of ten pounds. I will pay; they must not know of
+ thy money. George will go with thee as far as he goes with his mules. Then
+ he comes back to me, for his well-beloved is here, and if I do not receive
+ a telegram from Suakin saying that thou art well, the girl answers for
+ George.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thank you.' He reached out sleepily for the cup. 'You are much too kind,
+ Madame.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If there were anything that I might do I would say, stay here and be
+ wise; but I do not think that would be best for thee.' She looked at her
+ liquor-stained dress with a sad smile. 'Nay, thou shalt go, in truth, thou
+ shalt go. It is best so. My boy, it is best so.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She stooped and kissed Dick between the eyes. 'That is for good-morning,'
+ she said, going away. 'When thou art dressed we will speak to George and
+ make everything ready. But first we must open the little trunk. Give me
+ the keys.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The amount of kissing lately has been simply scandalous. I shall expect
+ Torp to kiss me next. He is more likely to swear at me for getting in his
+ way, though. Well, it won't last long.&mdash;Ohe, Madame, help me to my
+ toilette of the guillotine! There will be no chance of dressing properly
+ out yonder.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was rummaging among his new campaign-kit, and rowelling his hands with
+ the spurs. There are two says of wearing well-oiled ankle-jacks, spotless
+ blue bands, khaki coat and breeches, and a perfectly pipeclayed helmet.
+ The right way is the way of the untired man, master of himself, setting
+ out upon an expedition, well pleased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Everything must be very correct,' Dick explained. 'It will become dirty
+ afterwards, but now it is good to feel well dressed. Is everything as it
+ should be?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He patted the revolver neatly hidden under the fulness of the blouse on
+ the right hip and fingered his collar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I can do no more,' Madame said, between laughing and crying. 'Look at
+ thyself&mdash;but I forgot.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am very content.' He stroked the creaseless spirals of his leggings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now let us go and see the captain and George and the lighthouse boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be quick, Madame.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But thou canst not be seen by the harbour walking with me in the
+ daylight. Figure to yourself if some English ladies&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There are no English ladies; and if there are, I have forgotten them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take me there.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In spite of this burning impatience it was nearly evening ere the
+ lighthouse boat began to move. Madame had said a great deal both to George
+ and the captain touching the arrangements that were to be made for Dick's
+ benefit. Very few men who had the honour of her acquaintance cared to
+ disregard Madame's advice. That sort of contempt might end in being knifed
+ by a stranger in a gambling hell upon surprisingly short provocation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For six days&mdash;two of them were wasted in the crowded Canal&mdash;the
+ little steamer worked her way to Suakin, where she was to pick up the
+ superintendent of the lighthouse; and Dick made it his business to
+ propitiate George, who was distracted with fears for the safety of his
+ light-of-love and half inclined to make Dick responsible for his own
+ discomfort. When they arrived George took him under his wing, and together
+ they entered the red-hot seaport, encumbered with the material and wastage
+ of the Suakin-Berger line, from locomotives in disconsolate fragments to
+ mounds of chairs and pot-sleepers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'If you keep with me,' said George, 'nobody will ask for passports or what
+ you do. They are all very busy.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes; but I should like to hear some of the Englishmen talk. They might
+ remember me. I was known here a long time ago&mdash;when I was some one
+ indeed.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A long time ago is a very long time ago here. The graveyards are full.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now listen. This new railway runs out so far as Tanai-el-Hassan&mdash;that
+ is seven miles. Then there is a camp. They say that beyond Tanai-el-Hassan
+ the English troops go forward, and everything that they require will be
+ brought to them by this line.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Ah! Base camp. I see. That's a better business than fighting Fuzzies in
+ the open.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For this reason even the mules to up in the iron-train.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Iron what?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It is all covered with iron, because it is still being shot at.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'An armoured train. Better and better! Go on, faithful George.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And I go up with my mules to-night. Only those who particularly require
+ to go to the camp go out with the train. They begin to shoot not far from
+ the city.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'The dears&mdash;they always used to!' Dick snuffed the smell of parched
+ dust, heated iron, and flaking paint with delight. Certainly the old life
+ was welcoming him back most generously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'When I have got my mules together I go up to-night, but you must first
+ send a telegram of Port Said, declaring that I have done you no harm.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Madame has you well in hand. Would you stick a knife into me if you had
+ the chance?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I have no chance,' said the Greek. 'She is there with that woman.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I see. It's a bad thing to be divided between love of woman and the
+ chance of loot. I sympathise with you, George.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They went to the telegraph-office unquestioned, for all the world was
+ desperately busy and had scarcely time to turn its head, and Suakin was
+ the last place under sky that would be chosen for holiday-ground. On their
+ return the voice of an English subaltern asked Dick what he was doing. The
+ blue goggles were over his eyes and he walked with his hand on George's
+ elbow as he replied&mdash;'Egyptian Government&mdash;mules. My orders are
+ to give them over to the A.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ C. G. at Tanai-el-Hassan. Any occasion to show my papers?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, certainly not. I beg your pardon. I'd no right to ask, but not seeing
+ your face before I&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I go out in the train to-night, I suppose,' said Dick, boldly. 'There
+ will be no difficulty in loading up the mules, will there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You can see the horse-platforms from here. You must have them loaded up
+ early.' The young man went away wondering what sort of broken-down waif
+ this might be who talked like a gentleman and consorted with Greek
+ muleteers. Dick felt unhappy. To outface an English officer is no small
+ thing, but the bluff loses relish when one plays it from the utter dark,
+ and stumbles up and down rough ways, thinking and eternally thinking of
+ what might have been if things had fallen out otherwise, and all had been
+ as it was not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George shared his meal with Dick and went off to the mule-lines. His
+ charge sat alone in a shed with his face in his hands. Before his
+ tight-shut eyes danced the face of Maisie, laughing, with parted lips.
+ There was a great bustle and clamour about him. He grew afraid and almost
+ called for George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I say, have you got your mules ready?' It was the voice of the subaltern
+ over his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'My man's looking after them. The&mdash;the fact is I've a touch of
+ ophthalmia and can't see very well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'By Jove! that's bad. You ought to lie up in hospital for a while. I've
+ had a turn of it myself. It's as bad as being blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'So I find it. When does this armoured train go?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'At six o'clock. It takes an hour to cover the seven miles.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Are the Fuzzies on the rampage&mdash;eh?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'About three nights a week. Fact is I'm in acting command of the
+ night-train. It generally runs back empty to Tanai for the night.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Big camp at Tanai, I suppose?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Pretty big. It has to feed our desert-column somehow.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is that far off?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Between thirty and forty miles&mdash;in an infernal thirsty country.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is the country quiet between Tanai and our men?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'More or less. I shouldn't care to cross it alone, or with a subaltern's
+ command for the matter of that, but the scouts get through it in some
+ extraordinary fashion.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They always did.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Have you been here before, then?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I was through most of the trouble when it first broke out.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'In the service and cashiered,' was the subaltern's first thought, so he
+ refrained from putting any questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'There's you man coming up with the mules. It seems rather queer&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That I should be mule-leading?' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I didn't mean to say so, but it is. Forgive me&mdash;it's beastly
+ impertinence I know, but you speak like a man who has been at a public
+ school. There's no mistaking the tone.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I am a public school man.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I thought so. I say, I don't want to hurt your feelings, but you're a
+ little down on your luck, aren't you? I saw you sitting with your head in
+ your hands, and that's why I spoke.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thanks. I am about as thoroughly and completely broke as a man need be.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Suppose&mdash;I mean I'm a public school man myself. Couldn't I perhaps&mdash;take
+ it as a loan y'know and&mdash;&mdash;'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'You're much too good, but on my honour I've as much money as I want.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ... I tell you what you could do for me, though, and put me under an
+ everlasting obligation. Let me come into the bogie truck of the train.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a fore-truck, isn't there?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Yes. How d'you know?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I've been in an armoured train before. Only let me see&mdash;hear some of
+ the fun I mean, and I'll be grateful. I go at my own risk as a
+ non-combatant.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man thought for a minute. 'All right,' he said. 'We're supposed
+ to be an empty train, and there's no one to blow me up at the other end.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George and a horde of yelling amateur assistants had loaded up the mules,
+ and the narrow-gauge armoured train, plated with three-eighths inch
+ boiler-plate till it looked like one long coffin, stood ready to start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two bogie trucks running before the locomotive were completely covered in
+ with plating, except that the leading one was pierced in front for the
+ muzzle of a machine-gun, and the second at either side for lateral fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trucks together made one long iron-vaulted chamber in which a score of
+ artillerymen were rioting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Whitechapel&mdash;last train! Ah, I see yer kissin' in the first class
+ there!' somebody shouted, just as Dick was clamouring into the forward
+ truck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Lordy! 'Ere's a real live passenger for the Kew, Tanai, Acton, and Ealin'
+ train. Echo, sir. Speshul edition! Star, sir.'&mdash;'Shall I get you a
+ foot-warmer?' said another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Thanks. I'll pay my footing,' said Dick, and relations of the most
+ amiable were established ere silence came with the arrival of the
+ subaltern, and the train jolted out over the rough track.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'This is an immense improvement on shooting the unimpressionable Fuzzy in
+ the open,' said Dick, from his place in the corner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh, but he's still unimpressed. There he goes!' said the subaltern, as a
+ bullet struck the outside of the truck. 'We always have at least one
+ demonstration against the night-train. Generally they attack the
+ rear-truck, where my junior commands. He gets all the fun of the fair.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not to-night though! Listen!' said Dick. A flight of heavy-handed bullets
+ was succeeded by yelling and shouts. The children of the desert valued
+ their nightly amusement, and the train was an excellent mark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is it worth giving them half a hopper full?' the subaltern asked of the
+ engine, which was driven by a Lieutenant of Sappers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I should think so! This is my section of the line. They'll be playing old
+ Harry with my permanent way if we don't stop 'em.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Right O!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Hrrmph!' said the machine gun through all its five noses as the subaltern
+ drew the lever home. The empty cartridges clashed on the floor and the
+ smoke blew back through the truck. There was indiscriminate firing at the
+ rear of the train, and return fire from the darkness without and unlimited
+ howling. Dick stretched himself on the floor, wild with delight at the
+ sounds and the smells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'God is very good&mdash;I never thought I'd hear this again. Give 'em
+ hell, men. Oh, give 'em hell!' he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The train stopped for some obstruction on the line ahead and a party went
+ out to reconnoitre, but came back, cursing, for spades. The children of
+ the desert had piled sand and gravel on the rails, and twenty minutes were
+ lost in clearing it away. Then the slow progress recommenced, to be varied
+ with more shots, more shoutings, the steady clack and kick of the machine
+ guns, and a final difficulty with a half-lifted rail ere the train came
+ under the protection of the roaring camp at Tanai-el-Hassan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now, you see why it takes an hour and a half to fetch her through,' said
+ the subaltern, unshipping the cartridge-hopper above his pet gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It was a lark, though. I only wish it had lasted twice as long. How
+ superb it must have looked from outside!' said Dick, sighing regretfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It palls after the first few nights. By the way, when you've settled
+ about your mules, come and see what we can find to eat in my tent. I'm
+ Bennil of the Gunners&mdash;in the artillery lines&mdash;and mind you
+ don't fall over my tent-ropes in the dark.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But it was all dark to Dick. He could only smell the camels, the
+ hay-bales, the cooking, the smoky fires, and the tanned canvas of the
+ tents as he stood, where he had dropped from the train, shouting for
+ George. There was a sound of light-hearted kicking on the iron skin of the
+ rear trucks, with squealing and grunting. George was unloading the mules.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The engine was blowing off steam nearly in Dick's ear; a cold wind of the
+ desert danced between his legs; he was hungry, and felt tired and dirty&mdash;so
+ dirty that he tried to brush his coat with his hands. That was a hopeless
+ job; he thrust his hands into his pockets and began to count over the many
+ times that he had waited in strange or remote places for trains or camels,
+ mules or horses, to carry him to his business. In those days he could see&mdash;few
+ men more clearly&mdash;and the spectacle of an armed camp at dinner under
+ the stare was an ever fresh pleasure to the eye. There was colour, light,
+ and motion, without which no man has much pleasure in living. This night
+ there remained for him only one more journey through the darkness that
+ never lifts to tell a man how far he has travelled. Then he would grip
+ Torpenhow's hand again&mdash;Torpenhow, who was alive and strong, and
+ lived in the midst of the action that had once made the reputation of a
+ man called Dick Heldar: not in the least to be confused with the blind,
+ bewildered vagabond who seemed to answer to the same name. Yes, he would
+ find Torpenhow, and come as near to the old life as might be. Afterwards
+ he would forget everything: Bessie, who had wrecked the Melancolia and so
+ nearly wrecked his life; Beeton, who lived in a strange unreal city full
+ of tin-tacks and gas-plugs and matters that no men needed; that irrational
+ being who had offered him love and loyalty for nothing, but had not signed
+ her name; and most of all Maisie, who, from her own point of view, was
+ undeniably right in all she did, but oh, at this distance, so
+ tantalisingly fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George's hand on his arm pulled him back to the situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And what now?' said George.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Oh yes of course. What now? Take me to the camel-men. Take me to where
+ the scouts sit when they come in from the desert. They sit by their
+ camels, and the camels eat grain out of a black blanket held up at the
+ corners, and the men eat by their side just like camels. Take me there!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The camp was rough and rutty, and Dick stumbled many times over the stumps
+ of scrub. The scouts were sitting by their beasts, as Dick knew they
+ would. The light of the dung-fires flickered on their bearded faces, and
+ the camels bubbled and mumbled beside them at rest. It was no part of
+ Dick's policy to go into the desert with a convoy of supplies. That would
+ lead to impertinent questions, and since a blind non-combatant is not
+ needed at the front, he would probably be forced to return to Suakin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He must go up alone, and go immediately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Now for one last bluff&mdash;the biggest of all,' he said. 'Peace be with
+ you, brethren!' The watchful George steered him to the circle of the
+ nearest fire. The heads of the camel-sheiks bowed gravely, and the camels,
+ scenting a European, looked sideways curiously like brooding hens, half
+ ready to get to their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A beast and a driver to go to the fighting line to-night,' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A Mulaid?' said a voice, scornfully naming the best baggage-breed that he
+ knew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A Bisharin,' returned Dick, with perfect gravity. 'A Bisharin without
+ saddle-galls. Therefore no charge of thine, shock-head.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three minutes passed. Then&mdash;'We be knee-haltered for the
+ night. There is no going out from the camp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not for money?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'H'm! Ah! English money?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another depressing interval of silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'How much?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Twenty-five pounds English paid into the hand of the driver at my
+ journey's end, and as much more into the hand of the camel-sheik here, to
+ be paid when the driver returns.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was royal payment, and the sheik, who knew that he would get his
+ commission on this deposit, stirred in Dick's behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'For scarcely one night's journey&mdash;fifty pounds. Land and wells and
+ good trees and wives to make a man content for the rest of his days. Who
+ speaks?' said Dick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I,' said a voice. 'I will go&mdash;but there is no going from the camp.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Fool! I know that a camel can break his knee-halter, and the sentries do
+ not fire if one goes in chase. Twenty-five pounds and another twenty-five
+ pounds. But the beast must be a good Bisharin; I will take no
+ baggage-camel.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the bargaining began, and at the end of half an hour the first
+ deposit was paid over to the sheik, who talked in low tones to the driver.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dick heard the latter say: 'A little way out only. Any baggage-beast will
+ serve. Am I a fool to waste my cattle for a blind man?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'And though I cannot see'&mdash;Dick lifted his voice a little&mdash;'yet
+ I carry that which has six eyes, and the driver will sit before me. If we
+ do not reach the English troops in the dawn he will be dead.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'But where, in God's name, are the troops?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Unless thou knowest let another man ride. Dost thou know? Remember it
+ will be life or death to thee.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I know,' said the driver, sullenly. 'Stand back from my beast. I am going
+ to slip him.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Not so swiftly. George, hold the camel's head a moment. I want to feel
+ his cheek.' The hands wandered over the hide till they found the branded
+ half-circle that is the mark of the Biharin, the light-built riding-camel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'That is well. Cut this one loose. Remember no blessing of God comes on
+ those who try to cheat the blind.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men chuckled by the fires at the camel-driver's discomfiture. He had
+ intended to substitute a slow, saddle-galled baggage-colt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Stand back!' one shouted, lashing the Biharin under the belly with a
+ quirt. Dick obeyed as soon as he felt the nose-string tighten in his hand,&mdash;and
+ a cry went up, 'Illaha! Aho! He is loose.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a roar and a grunt the Biharin rose to his feet and plunged forward
+ toward the desert, his driver following with shouts and lamentation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ George caught Dick's arm and hurried him stumbling and tripping past a
+ disgusted sentry who was used to stampeding camels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What's the row now?' he cried.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Every stitch of my kit on that blasted dromedary,' Dick answered, after
+ the manner of a common soldier.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go on, and take care your throat's not cut out side&mdash;you and your
+ dromedary's.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outcries ceased when the camel had disappeared behind a hillock, and
+ his driver had called him back and made him kneel down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Mount first,' said Dick. Then climbing into the second seat and gently
+ screwing the pistol muzzle into the small of his companion's back, 'Go on
+ in God's name, and swiftly. Good-bye, George. Remember me to Madame, and
+ have a good time with your girl. Get forward, child of the Pit!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later he was shut up in a great silence, hardly broken by
+ the creaking of the saddle and the soft pad of the tireless feet. Dick
+ adjusted himself comfortably to the rock and pitch of the pace, girthed
+ his belt tighter, and felt the darkness slide past. For an hour he was
+ conscious only of the sense of rapid progress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'A good camel,' he said at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'He was never underfed. He is my own and clean bred,' the driver replied.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go on.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His head dropped on his chest and he tried to think, but the tenor of his
+ thoughts was broken because he was very sleepy. In the half doze in seemed
+ that he was learning a punishment hymn at Mrs. Jennett's. He had committed
+ some crime as bad as Sabbath-breaking, and she had locked him up in his
+ bedroom. But he could never repeat more than the first two lines of the
+ hymn&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Israel of the Lord believed Out of the land of bondage came.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He said them over and over thousands of times. The driver turned in the
+ saddle to see if there were any chance of capturing the revolver and
+ ending the ride. Dick roused, struck him over the head with the butt, and
+ stormed himself wide awake. Somebody hidden in a clump of camel-thorn
+ shouted as the camel toiled up rising ground. A shot was fired, and the
+ silence shut down again, bringing the desire to sleep. Dick could think no
+ longer. He was too tired and stiff and cramped to do more than nod
+ uneasily from time to time, waking with a start and punching the driver
+ with the pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is there a moon?' he asked drowsily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'She is near her setting.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I wish that I could see her. Halt the camel. At least let me hear the
+ desert talk.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The man obeyed. Out of the utter stillness came one breath of wind. It
+ rattled the dead leaves of a shrub some distance away and ceased. A
+ handful of dry earth detached itself from the edge of a rail trench and
+ crumbled softly to the bottom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go on. The night is very cold.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those who have watched till the morning know how the last hour before the
+ light lengthens itself into many eternities. It seemed to Dick that he had
+ never since the beginning of original darkness done anything at all save
+ jolt through the air. Once in a thousand years he would finger the
+ nailheads on the saddle-front and count them all carefully. Centuries
+ later he would shift his revolver from his right hand to his left and
+ allow the eased arm to drop down at his side. From the safe distance of
+ London he was watching himself thus employed,&mdash;watching critically.
+ Yet whenever he put out his hand to the canvas that he might paint the
+ tawny yellow desert under the glare of the sinking moon, the black shadow
+ of a camel and the two bowed figures atop, that hand held a revolver and
+ the arm was numbed from wrist to collar-bone. Moreover, he was in the
+ dark, and could see no canvas of any kind whatever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The driver grunted, and Dick was conscious of a change in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'I smell the dawn,' he whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'It is here, and yonder are the troops. Have I done well?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The camel stretched out its neck and roared as there came down wind the
+ pungent reek of camels in the square.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go on. We must get there swiftly. Go on.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'They are moving in their camp. There is so much dust that I cannot see
+ what they do.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Am I in better case? Go forward.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They could hear the hum of voices ahead, the howling and the bubbling of
+ the beasts and the hoarse cries of the soldiers girthing up for the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two or three shots were fired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Is that at us? Surely they can see that I am English,' Dick spoke
+ angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Nay, it is from the desert,' the driver answered, cowering in his saddle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Go forward, my child! Well it is that the dawn did not uncover us an hour
+ ago.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The camel headed straight for the column and the shots behind multiplied.
+ The children of the desert had arranged that most uncomfortable of
+ surprises, a dawn attack for the English troops, and were getting their
+ distance by snap-shots at the only moving object without the square.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What luck! What stupendous and imperial luck!' said Dick. 'It's "just
+ before the battle, mother." Oh, God has been most good to me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Only'&mdash;the agony of the thought made him screw up his eyes for an
+ instant&mdash;'Maisie...'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Allahu! We are in,' said the man, as he drove into the rearguard and the
+ camel knelt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Who the deuce are you? Despatches or what? What's the strength of the
+ enemy behind that ridge? How did you get through?' asked a dozen voices.
+ For all answer Dick took a long breath, unbuckled his belt, and shouted
+ from the saddle at the top of a wearied and dusty voice, 'Torpenhow! Ohe,
+ Torp! Coo-ee, Tor-pen-how.'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bearded man raking in the ashes of a fire for a light to his pipe moved
+ very swiftly towards that cry, as the rearguard, facing about, began to
+ fire at the puffs of smoke from the hillocks around. Gradually the
+ scattered white cloudlets drew out into the long lines of banked white
+ that hung heavily in the stillness of the dawn before they turned over
+ wave-like and glided into the valleys. The soldiers in the square were
+ coughing and swearing as their own smoke obstructed their view, and they
+ edged forward to get beyond it. A wounded camel leaped to its feet and
+ roared aloud, the cry ending in a bubbling grunt. Some one had cut its
+ throat to prevent confusion. Then came the thick sob of a man receiving
+ his death-wound from a bullet; then a yell of agony and redoubled firing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no time to ask any questions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Get down, man! Get down behind the camel!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'No. Put me, I pray, in the forefront of the battle.' Dick turned his face
+ to Torpenhow and raised his hand to set his helmet straight, but,
+ miscalculating the distance, knocked it off. Torpenhow saw that his hair
+ was gray on the temples, and that his face was the face of an old man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'Come down, you damned fool! Dickie, come off!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Dick came obediently, but as a tree falls, pitching sideways from the
+ Bisharin's saddle at Torpenhow's feet. His luck had held to the last, even
+ to the crowning mercy of a kindly bullet through his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torpenhow knelt under the lee of the camel, with Dick's body in his arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+
+ The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
+
+ 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 Light That Failed
+
+ Author: Rudyard Kipling
+
+ Release Date: December 23, 2008 [EBook #2876]
+ Last Updated: February 24, 2016
+
+ Language: English
+
+ Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+ *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LIGHT THAT FAILED ***
+
+
+
+
+ Produced by David Reed, and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LIGHT THAT FAILED
+
+
+By Rudyard Kipling
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ So we settled it all when the storm was done
+ As comf'y as comf'y could be;
+ And I was to wait in the barn, my dears,
+ Because I was only three;
+ And Teddy would run to the rainbow's foot,
+ Because he was five and a man;
+ And that's how it all began, my dears,
+ And that's how it all began.
+
+ --Big Barn Stories.
+'WHAT do you think she'd do if she caught us? We oughtn't to have it,
+you know,' said Maisie.
+
+'Beat me, and lock you up in your bedroom,' Dick answered, without
+hesitation. 'Have you got the cartridges?'
+
+'Yes; they're in my pocket, but they are joggling horribly. Do pin-fire
+cartridges go off of their own accord?'
+
+'Don't know. Take the revolver, if you are afraid, and let me carry
+them.'
+
+'I'm not afraid.' Maisie strode forward swiftly, a hand in her pocket
+and her chin in the air. Dick followed with a small pin-fire revolver.
+
+The children had discovered that their lives would be unendurable
+without pistol-practice. After much forethought and self-denial, Dick
+had saved seven shillings and sixpence, the price of a badly constructed
+Belgian revolver. Maisie could only contribute half a crown to the
+syndicate for the purchase of a hundred cartridges. 'You can save better
+than I can, Dick,' she explained; 'I like nice things to eat, and it
+doesn't matter to you. Besides, boys ought to do these things.'
+
+Dick grumbled a little at the arrangement, but went out and made the
+purchase, which the children were then on their way to test. Revolvers
+did not lie in the scheme of their daily life as decreed for them by the
+guardian who was incorrectly supposed to stand in the place of a mother
+to these two orphans. Dick had been under her care for six years, during
+which time she had made her profit of the allowances supposed to be
+expended on his clothes, and, partly through thoughtlessness, partly
+through a natural desire to pain,--she was a widow of some years anxious
+to marry again,--had made his days burdensome on his young shoulders.
+
+Where he had looked for love, she gave him first aversion and then hate.
+
+Where he growing older had sought a little sympathy, she gave him
+ridicule. The many hours that she could spare from the ordering of her
+small house she devoted to what she called the home-training of Dick
+Heldar. Her religion, manufactured in the main by her own intelligence
+and a keen study of the Scriptures, was an aid to her in this matter. At
+such times as she herself was not personally displeased with Dick, she
+left him to understand that he had a heavy account to settle with his
+Creator; wherefore Dick learned to loathe his God as intensely as he
+loathed Mrs. Jennett; and this is not a wholesome frame of mind for the
+young. Since she chose to regard him as a hopeless liar, when dread of
+pain drove him to his first untruth, he naturally developed into a liar,
+but an economical and self-contained one, never throwing away the least
+unnecessary fib, and never hesitating at the blackest, were it only
+plausible, that might make his life a little easier. The treatment
+taught him at least the power of living alone,--a power that was of
+service to him when he went to a public school and the boys laughed at
+his clothes, which were poor in quality and much mended. In the holidays
+he returned to the teachings of Mrs. Jennett, and, that the chain of
+discipline might not be weakened by association with the world, was
+generally beaten, on one account or another, before he had been twelve
+hours under her roof.
+
+The autumn of one year brought him a companion in bondage, a
+long-haired, gray-eyed little atom, as self-contained as himself, who
+moved about the house silently and for the first few weeks spoke only
+to the goat that was her chiefest friend on earth and lived in the
+back-garden. Mrs. Jennett objected to the goat on the grounds that
+he was un-Christian,--which he certainly was. 'Then,' said the
+atom, choosing her words very deliberately, 'I shall write to my
+lawyer-peoples and tell them that you are a very bad woman. Amomma
+is mine, mine, mine!' Mrs. Jennett made a movement to the hall, where
+certain umbrellas and canes stood in a rack. The atom understood as
+clearly as Dick what this meant. 'I have been beaten before,' she said,
+still in the same passionless voice; 'I have been beaten worse than you
+can ever beat me. If you beat me I shall write to my lawyer-peoples
+and tell them that you do not give me enough to eat. I am not afraid of
+you.' Mrs. Jennett did not go into the hall, and the atom, after a pause
+to assure herself that all danger of war was past, went out, to weep
+bitterly on Amomma's neck.
+
+Dick learned to know her as Maisie, and at first mistrusted her
+profoundly, for he feared that she might interfere with the small
+liberty of action left to him. She did not, however; and she volunteered
+no friendliness until Dick had taken the first steps. Long before the
+holidays were over, the stress of punishment shared in common drove the
+children together, if it were only to play into each other's hands as
+they prepared lies for Mrs. Jennett's use. When Dick returned to school,
+Maisie whispered, 'Now I shall be all alone to take care of myself;
+but,' and she nodded her head bravely, 'I can do it. You promised to
+send Amomma a grass collar. Send it soon.' A week later she asked for
+that collar by return of post, and was not pleased when she learned that
+it took time to make. When at last Dick forwarded the gift, she forgot
+to thank him for it.
+
+Many holidays had come and gone since that day, and Dick had grown into
+a lanky hobbledehoy more than ever conscious of his bad clothes. Not
+for a moment had Mrs. Jennett relaxed her tender care of him, but the
+average canings of a public school--Dick fell under punishment about
+three times a month--filled him with contempt for her powers. 'She
+doesn't hurt,' he explained to Maisie, who urged him to rebellion, 'and
+she is kinder to you after she has whacked me.' Dick shambled through
+the days unkempt in body and savage in soul, as the smaller boys of the
+school learned to know, for when the spirit moved him he would hit them,
+cunningly and with science. The same spirit made him more than once try
+to tease Maisie, but the girl refused to be made unhappy. 'We are both
+miserable as it is,' said she. 'What is the use of trying to make things
+worse? Let's find things to do, and forget things.'
+
+The pistol was the outcome of that search. It could only be used on the
+muddiest foreshore of the beach, far away from the bathing-machines and
+pierheads, below the grassy slopes of Fort Keeling. The tide ran out
+nearly two miles on that coast, and the many-coloured mud-banks, touched
+by the sun, sent up a lamentable smell of dead weed. It was late in the
+afternoon when Dick and Maisie arrived on their ground, Amomma trotting
+patiently behind them.
+
+'Mf!' said Maisie, sniffing the air. 'I wonder what makes the sea so
+smelly? I don't like it!'
+
+'You never like anything that isn't made just for you,' said Dick
+bluntly. 'Give me the cartridges, and I'll try first shot. How far does
+one of these little revolvers carry?'
+
+'Oh, half a mile,' said Maisie, promptly. 'At least it makes an awful
+noise. Be careful with the cartridges; I don't like those jagged
+stick-up things on the rim. Dick, do be careful.'
+
+'All right. I know how to load. I'll fire at the breakwater out there.'
+
+He fired, and Amomma ran away bleating. The bullet threw up a spurt of
+mud to the right of the wood-wreathed piles.
+
+'Throws high and to the right. You try, Maisie. Mind, it's loaded all
+round.'
+
+Maisie took the pistol and stepped delicately to the verge of the mud,
+her hand firmly closed on the butt, her mouth and left eye screwed up.
+
+Dick sat down on a tuft of bank and laughed. Amomma returned very
+cautiously. He was accustomed to strange experiences in his afternoon
+walks, and, finding the cartridge-box unguarded, made investigations
+with his nose. Maisie fired, but could not see where the bullet went.
+
+'I think it hit the post,' she said, shading her eyes and looking out
+across the sailless sea.
+
+'I know it has gone out to the Marazion Bell-buoy,' said Dick, with a
+chuckle. 'Fire low and to the left; then perhaps you'll get it. Oh, look
+at Amomma!--he's eating the cartridges!'
+
+Maisie turned, the revolver in her hand, just in time to see Amomma
+scampering away from the pebbles Dick threw after him. Nothing is sacred
+to a billy-goat. Being well fed and the adored of his mistress, Amomma
+had naturally swallowed two loaded pin-fire cartridges. Maisie hurried
+up to assure herself that Dick had not miscounted the tale.
+
+'Yes, he's eaten two.'
+
+'Horrid little beast! Then they'll joggle about inside him and blow up,
+and serve him right.... Oh, Dick! have I killed you?'
+
+Revolvers are tricky things for young hands to deal with. Maisie could
+not explain how it had happened, but a veil of reeking smoke separated
+her from Dick, and she was quite certain that the pistol had gone off
+in his face. Then she heard him sputter, and dropped on her knees beside
+him, crying, 'Dick, you aren't hurt, are you? I didn't mean it.'
+
+'Of course you didn't, said Dick, coming out of the smoke and wiping his
+cheek. 'But you nearly blinded me. That powder stuff stings awfully.'
+A neat little splash of gray led on a stone showed where the bullet had
+gone. Maisie began to whimper.
+
+'Don't,' said Dick, jumping to his feet and shaking himself. 'I'm not a
+bit hurt.'
+
+'No, but I might have killed you,' protested Maisie, the corners of her
+mouth drooping. 'What should I have done then?'
+
+'Gone home and told Mrs. Jennett.' Dick grinned at the thought; then,
+softening, 'Please don't worry about it. Besides, we are wasting time.
+
+We've got to get back to tea. I'll take the revolver for a bit.'
+
+Maisie would have wept on the least encouragement, but Dick's
+indifference, albeit his hand was shaking as he picked up the pistol,
+restrained her. She lay panting on the beach while Dick methodically
+bombarded the breakwater. 'Got it at last!' he exclaimed, as a lock of
+weed flew from the wood.
+
+'Let me try,' said Maisie, imperiously. 'I'm all right now.'
+
+They fired in turns till the rickety little revolver nearly shook itself
+to pieces, and Amomma the outcast--because he might blow up at any
+moment--browsed in the background and wondered why stones were thrown
+at him. Then they found a balk of timber floating in a pool which
+was commanded by the seaward slope of Fort Keeling, and they sat down
+together before this new target.
+
+'Next holidays,' said Dick, as the now thoroughly fouled revolver kicked
+wildly in his hand, 'we'll get another pistol,--central fire,--that will
+carry farther.'
+
+'There won't be any next holidays for me,' said Maisie. 'I'm going
+away.'
+
+'Where to?'
+
+'I don't know. My lawyers have written to Mrs. Jennett, and I've got to
+be educated somewhere,--in France, perhaps,--I don't know where; but I
+shall be glad to go away.'
+
+'I shan't like it a bit. I suppose I shall be left. Look here, Maisie,
+is it really true you're going? Then these holidays will be the last
+I shall see anything of you; and I go back to school next week. I
+wish----'
+
+The young blood turned his cheeks scarlet. Maisie was picking
+grass-tufts and throwing them down the slope at a yellow sea-poppy
+nodding all by itself to the illimitable levels of the mud-flats and the
+milk-white sea beyond.
+
+'I wish,' she said, after a pause, 'that I could see you again sometime.
+
+You wish that, too?'
+
+'Yes, but it would have been better if--if--you had--shot straight over
+there--down by the breakwater.'
+
+Maisie looked with large eyes for a moment. And this was the boy
+who only ten days before had decorated Amomma's horns with cut-paper
+ham-frills and turned him out, a bearded derision, among the public
+ways! Then she dropped her eyes: this was not the boy.
+
+'Don't be stupid,' she said reprovingly, and with swift instinct
+attacked the side-issue. 'How selfish you are! Just think what I should
+have felt if that horrid thing had killed you! I'm quite miserable
+enough already.'
+
+'Why? Because you're going away from Mrs. Jennett?'
+
+'No.'
+
+'From me, then?'
+
+No answer for a long time. Dick dared not look at her. He felt, though
+he did not know, all that the past four years had been to him, and this
+the more acutely since he had no knowledge to put his feelings in words.
+
+'I don't know,' she said. 'I suppose it is.'
+
+'Maisie, you must know. I'm not supposing.'
+
+'Let's go home,' said Maisie, weakly.
+
+But Dick was not minded to retreat.
+
+'I can't say things,' he pleaded, 'and I'm awfully sorry for teasing you
+about Amomma the other day. It's all different now, Maisie, can't you
+see? And you might have told me that you were going, instead of leaving
+me to find out.'
+
+'You didn't. I did tell. Oh, Dick, what's the use of worrying?'
+
+'There isn't any; but we've been together years and years, and I didn't
+know how much I cared.'
+
+'I don't believe you ever did care.'
+
+'No, I didn't; but I do,--I care awfully now, Maisie,' he
+gulped,--'Maisie, darling, say you care too, please.'
+
+'I do, indeed I do; but it won't be any use.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+'Because I am going away.'
+
+'Yes, but if you promise before you go. Only say--will you?' A second
+'darling' came to his lips more easily than the first. There were
+few endearments in Dick's home or school life; he had to find them by
+instinct. Dick caught the little hand blackened with the escaped gas of
+the revolver.
+
+'I promise,' she said solemnly; 'but if I care there is no need for
+promising.'
+
+'And do you care?' For the first time in the past few minutes their eyes
+met and spoke for them who had no skill in speech....
+
+'Oh, Dick, don't! Please don't! It was all right when we said
+good-morning; but now it's all different!' Amomma looked on from afar.
+
+He had seen his property quarrel frequently, but he had never seen
+kisses exchanged before. The yellow sea-poppy was wiser, and nodded its
+head approvingly. Considered as a kiss, that was a failure, but since it
+was the first, other than those demanded by duty, in all the world that
+either had ever given or taken, it opened to them new worlds, and every
+one of them glorious, so that they were lifted above the consideration
+of any worlds at all, especially those in which tea is necessary, and
+sat still, holding each other's hands and saying not a word.
+
+'You can't forget now,' said Dick, at last. There was that on his cheek
+that stung more than gunpowder.
+
+'I shouldn't have forgotten anyhow,' said Maisie, and they looked at
+each other and saw that each was changed from the companion of an hour
+ago to a wonder and a mystery they could not understand. The sun began
+to set, and a night-wind thrashed along the bents of the foreshore.
+
+'We shall be awfully late for tea,' said Maisie. 'Let's go home.'
+
+'Let's use the rest of the cartridges first,' said Dick; and he helped
+Maisie down the slope of the fort to the sea,--a descent that she was
+quite capable of covering at full speed. Equally gravely Maisie took the
+grimy hand. Dick bent forward clumsily; Maisie drew the hand away, and
+Dick blushed.
+
+'It's very pretty,' he said.
+
+'Pooh!' said Maisie, with a little laugh of gratified vanity. She stood
+close to Dick as he loaded the revolver for the last time and fired
+over the sea with a vague notion at the back of his head that he was
+protecting Maisie from all the evils in the world. A puddle far across
+the mud caught the last rays of the sun and turned into a wrathful red
+disc. The light held Dick's attention for a moment, and as he raised his
+revolver there fell upon him a renewed sense of the miraculous, in
+that he was standing by Maisie who had promised to care for him for an
+indefinite length of time till such date as---- A gust of the growing
+wind drove the girl's long black hair across his face as she stood with
+her hand on his shoulder calling Amomma 'a little beast,' and for a
+moment he was in the dark,--a darkness that stung. The bullet went
+singing out to the empty sea.
+
+'Spoilt my aim,' said he, shaking his head. 'There aren't any more
+cartridges; we shall have to run home.' But they did not run. They
+walked very slowly, arm in arm. And it was a matter of indifference to
+them whether the neglected Amomma with two pin-fire cartridges in his
+inside blew up or trotted beside them; for they had come into a golden
+heritage and were disposing of it with all the wisdom of all their
+years.
+
+'And I shall be----' quoth Dick, valiantly. Then he checked himself: 'I
+don't know what I shall be. I don't seem to be able to pass any exams,
+but I can make awful caricatures of the masters. Ho! Ho!'
+
+'Be an artist, then,' said Maisie. 'You're always laughing at my trying
+to draw; and it will do you good.'
+
+'I'll never laugh at anything you do,' he answered. 'I'll be an artist,
+and I'll do things.'
+
+'Artists always want money, don't they?'
+
+'I've got a hundred and twenty pounds a year of my own. My guardians
+tell me I'm to have it when I come of age. That will be enough to begin
+with.'
+
+'Ah, I'm rich,' said Maisie. 'I've got three hundred a year all my own
+when I'm twenty-one. That's why Mrs. Jennett is kinder to me than she is
+to you. I wish, though, that I had somebody that belonged to me,--just a
+father or a mother.'
+
+'You belong to me,' said Dick, 'for ever and ever.'
+
+'Yes, we belong--for ever. It's very nice.' She squeezed his arm. The
+kindly darkness hid them both, and, emboldened because he could only
+just see the profile of Maisie's cheek with the long lashes veiling the
+gray eyes, Dick at the front door delivered himself of the words he had
+been boggling over for the last two hours.
+
+'And I--love you, Maisie,' he said, in a whisper that seemed to him to
+ring across the world,--the world that he would to-morrow or the next
+day set out to conquer.
+
+There was a scene, not, for the sake of discipline, to be reported,
+when Mrs. Jennett would have fallen upon him, first for disgraceful
+unpunctuality, and secondly for nearly killing himself with a forbidden
+weapon.
+
+'I was playing with it, and it went off by itself,' said Dick, when the
+powder-pocked cheek could no longer be hidden, 'but if you think you're
+going to lick me you're wrong. You are never going to touch me again.
+
+Sit down and give me my tea. You can't cheat us out of that, anyhow.'
+
+Mrs. Jennett gasped and became livid. Maisie said nothing, but
+encouraged Dick with her eyes, and he behaved abominably all that
+evening. Mrs. Jennett prophesied an immediate judgment of Providence and
+a descent into Tophet later, but Dick walked in Paradise and would not
+hear. Only when he was going to bed Mrs. Jennett recovered and asserted
+herself. He had bidden Maisie good-night with down-dropped eyes and from
+a distance.
+
+'If you aren't a gentleman you might try to behave like one,' said Mrs.
+Jennett, spitefully. 'You've been quarrelling with Maisie again.'
+This meant that the usual good-night kiss had been omitted. Maisie,
+white to the lips, thrust her cheek forward with a fine air of
+indifference, and was duly pecked by Dick, who tramped out of the room
+red as fire. That night he dreamed a wild dream. He had won all the
+world and brought it to Maisie in a cartridge-box, but she turned it
+over with her foot, and, instead of saying 'Thank you,' cried--'Where is
+the grass collar you promised for Amomma? Oh, how selfish you are!'
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+ Then we brought the lances down, then the bugles blew,
+ When we went to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two,
+ Ridin', ridin', ridin', two an' two,
+ Ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra,
+ All the way to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two.
+
+ --Barrack-Room Ballad.
+'I'M NOT angry with the British public, but I wish we had a few thousand
+of them scattered among these rooks. They wouldn't be in such a hurry
+to get at their morning papers then. Can't you imagine the regulation
+householder--Lover of Justice, Constant Reader, Paterfamilias, and all
+that lot--frizzling on hot gravel?'
+
+'With a blue veil over his head, and his clothes in strips. Has any man
+here a needle? I've got a piece of sugar-sack.'
+
+'I'll lend you a packing-needle for six square inches of it then. Both
+my knees are worn through.'
+
+'Why not six square acres, while you're about it? But lend me the
+needle, and I'll see what I can do with the selvage. I don't think
+there's enough to protect my royal body from the cold blast as it is.
+What are you doing with that everlasting sketch-book of yours, Dick?'
+
+'Study of our Special Correspondent repairing his wardrobe,' said
+Dick, gravely, as the other man kicked off a pair of sorely worn
+riding-breeches and began to fit a square of coarse canvas over the most
+obvious open space. He grunted disconsolately as the vastness of the
+void developed itself.
+
+'Sugar-bags, indeed! Hi! you pilot man there! lend me all the sails for
+that whale-boat.'
+
+A fez-crowned head bobbed up in the stern-sheets, divided itself into
+exact halves with one flashing grin, and bobbed down again. The man of
+the tattered breeches, clad only in a Norfolk jacket and a gray flannel
+shirt, went on with his clumsy sewing, while Dick chuckled over the
+sketch.
+
+Some twenty whale-boats were nuzzling a sand-bank which was dotted
+with English soldiery of half a dozen corps, bathing or washing their
+clothes. A heap of boat-rollers, commissariat-boxes, sugar-bags,
+and flour- and small-arm-ammunition-cases showed where one of the
+whale-boats had been compelled to unload hastily; and a regimental
+carpenter was swearing aloud as he tried, on a wholly insufficient
+allowance of white lead, to plaster up the sun-parched gaping seams of
+the boat herself.
+
+'First the bloomin' rudder snaps,' said he to the world in general;
+'then the mast goes; an' then, s' 'help me, when she can't do nothin'
+else, she opens 'erself out like a cock-eyes Chinese lotus.'
+
+'Exactly the case with my breeches, whoever you are,' said the tailor,
+without looking up. 'Dick, I wonder when I shall see a decent shop
+again.'
+
+There was no answer, save the incessant angry murmur of the Nile as it
+raced round a basalt-walled bend and foamed across a rock-ridge half
+a mile upstream. It was as though the brown weight of the river would
+drive the white men back to their own country. The indescribable scent
+of Nile mud in the air told that the stream was falling and the next
+few miles would be no light thing for the whale-boats to overpass. The
+desert ran down almost to the banks, where, among gray, red, and black
+hillocks, a camel-corps was encamped. No man dared even for a day lose
+touch of the slow-moving boats; there had been no fighting for weeks
+past, and throughout all that time the Nile had never spared them. Rapid
+had followed rapid, rock rock, and island-group island-group, till the
+rank and file had long since lost all count of direction and very
+nearly of time. They were moving somewhere, they did not know why, to do
+something, they did not know what. Before them lay the Nile, and at the
+other end of it was one Gordon, fighting for the dear life, in a town
+called Khartoum. There were columns of British troops in the desert,
+or in one of the many deserts; there were yet more columns waiting to
+embark on the river; there were fresh drafts waiting at Assioot and
+Assuan; there were lies and rumours running over the face of the
+hopeless land from Suakin to the Sixth Cataract, and men supposed
+generally that there must be some one in authority to direct the general
+scheme of the many movements. The duty of that particular river-column
+was to keep the whale-boats afloat in the water, to avoid trampling
+on the villagers' crops when the gangs 'tracked' the boats with lines
+thrown from midstream, to get as much sleep and food as was possible,
+and, above all, to press on without delay in the teeth of the churning
+Nile.
+
+With the soldiers sweated and toiled the correspondents of the
+newspapers, and they were almost as ignorant as their companions. But
+it was above all things necessary that England at breakfast should be
+amused and thrilled and interested, whether Gordon lived or died, or
+half the British army went to pieces in the sands. The Soudan campaign
+was a picturesque one, and lent itself to vivid word-painting. Now and
+again a 'Special' managed to get slain,--which was not altogether
+a disadvantage to the paper that employed him,--and more often the
+hand-to-hand nature of the fighting allowed of miraculous escapes which
+were worth telegraphing home at eighteenpence the word. There were many
+correspondents with many corps and columns,--from the veterans who had
+followed on the heels of the cavalry that occupied Cairo in '82, what
+time Arabi Pasha called himself king, who had seen the first miserable
+work round Suakin when the sentries were cut up nightly and the scrub
+swarmed with spears, to youngsters jerked into the business at the
+end of a telegraph-wire to take the places of their betters killed or
+invalided.
+
+Among the seniors--those who knew every shift and change in the
+perplexing postal arrangements, the value of the seediest, weediest
+Egyptian garron offered for sale in Cairo or Alexandria, who could talk
+a telegraph-clerk into amiability and soothe the ruffled vanity of
+a newly appointed staff-officer when press regulations became
+burdensome--was the man in the flannel shirt, the black-browed
+Torpenhow. He represented the Central Southern Syndicate in the
+campaign, as he had represented it in the Egyptian war, and elsewhere.
+The syndicate did not concern itself greatly with criticisms of
+attack and the like. It supplied the masses, and all it demanded was
+picturesqueness and abundance of detail; for there is more joy in
+England over a soldier who insubordinately steps out of square to rescue
+a comrade than over twenty generals slaving even to baldness at the
+gross details of transport and commissariat.
+
+He had met at Suakin a young man, sitting on the edge of a recently
+abandoned redoubt about the size of a hat-box, sketching a clump of
+shell-torn bodies on the gravel plain.
+
+'What are you for?' said Torpenhow. The greeting of the correspondent is
+that of the commercial traveller on the road.
+
+'My own hand,' said the young man, without looking up. 'Have you any
+tobacco?'
+
+Torpenhow waited till the sketch was finished, and when he had looked at
+it said, 'What's your business here?'
+
+'Nothing; there was a row, so I came. I'm supposed to be doing something
+down at the painting-slips among the boats, or else I'm in charge of the
+condenser on one of the water-ships. I've forgotten which.'
+
+'You've cheek enough to build a redoubt with,' said Torpenhow, and took
+stock of the new acquaintance. 'Do you always draw like that?'
+
+The young man produced more sketches. 'Row on a Chinese pig-boat,' said
+he, sententiously, showing them one after another.--'Chief mate dirked
+by a comprador.--Junk ashore off Hakodate.--Somali muleteer being
+flogged.--Star-shelled bursting over camp at Berbera.--Slave-dhow being
+chased round Tajurrah Bah.--Soldier lying dead in the moonlight outside
+Suakin.--throat cut by Fuzzies.'
+
+'H'm!' said Torpenhow, 'can't say I care for Verestchagin-and-water
+myself, but there's no accounting for tastes. Doing anything now, are
+you?'
+
+'No. I'm amusing myself here.'
+
+Torpenhow looked at the sketches again, and nodded. 'Yes, you're right
+to take your first chance when you can get it.'
+
+He rode away swiftly through the Gate of the Two War-Ships, rattled
+across the causeway into the town, and wired to his syndicate, 'Got man
+here, picture-work. Good and cheap. Shall I arrange? Will do letterpress
+with sketches.'
+
+The man on the redoubt sat swinging his legs and murmuring, 'I knew the
+chance would come, sooner or later. By Gad, they'll have to sweat for it
+if I come through this business alive!'
+
+In the evening Torpenhow was able to announce to his friend that
+the Central Southern Agency was willing to take him on trial, paying
+expenses for three months. 'And, by the way, what's your name?' said
+Torpenhow.
+
+'Heldar. Do they give me a free hand?'
+
+'They've taken you on chance. You must justify the choice. You'd better
+stick to me. I'm going up-country with a column, and I'll do what I can
+for you. Give me some of your sketches taken here, and I'll send
+'em along.' To himself he said, 'That's the best bargain the Central
+southern has ever made; and they got me cheaply enough.'
+
+So it came to pass that, after some purchase of horse-flesh and
+arrangements financial and political, Dick was made free of the New
+and Honourable Fraternity of war correspondents, who all possess the
+inalienable right of doing as much work as they can and getting as much
+for it as Providence and their owners shall please. To these things are
+added in time, if the brother be worthy, the power of glib speech that
+neither man nor woman can resist when a meal or a bed is in question,
+the eye of a horse-cope, the skill of a cook, the constitution of a
+bullock, the digestion of an ostrich, and an infinite adaptability to
+all circumstances. But many die before they attain to this degree, and
+the past-masters in the craft appear for the most part in dress-clothes
+when they are in England, and thus their glory is hidden from the
+multitude.
+
+Dick followed Torpenhow wherever the latter's fancy chose to lead him,
+and between the two they managed to accomplish some work that almost
+satisfied themselves. It was not an easy life in any way, and under its
+influence the two were drawn very closely together, for they ate from
+the same dish, they shared the same water-bottle, and, most binding tie
+of all, their mails went off together. It was Dick who managed to make
+gloriously drunk a telegraph-clerk in a palm hut far beyond the Second
+Cataract, and, while the man lay in bliss on the floor, possessed
+himself of some laboriously acquired exclusive information, forwarded
+by a confiding correspondent of an opposition syndicate, made a careful
+duplicate of the matter, and brought the result to Torpenhow, who said
+that all was fair in love or war correspondence, and built an excellent
+descriptive article from his rival's riotous waste of words. It was
+Torpenhow who--but the tale of their adventures, together and apart,
+from Philae to the waste wilderness of Herawi and Muella, would fill
+many books. They had been penned into a square side by side, in deadly
+fear of being shot by over-excited soldiers; they had fought with
+baggage-camels in the chill dawn; they had jogged along in silence
+under blinding sun on indefatigable little Egyptian horses; and they had
+floundered on the shallows of the Nile when the whale-boat in which
+they had found a berth chose to hit a hidden rock and rip out half her
+bottom-planks.
+
+Now they were sitting on the sand-bank, and the whale-boats were
+bringing up the remainder of the column.
+
+'Yes,' said Torpenhow, as he put the last rude stitches into his
+over-long-neglected gear, 'it has been a beautiful business.'
+
+'The patch or the campaign?' said Dick. 'Don't think much of either,
+myself.'
+
+'You want the Euryalus brought up above the Third Cataract, don't you?
+and eighty-one-ton guns at Jakdul? Now, I'm quite satisfied with my
+breeches.' He turned round gravely to exhibit himself, after the manner
+of a clown.
+
+'It's very pretty. Specially the lettering on the sack. G.B.T.
+Government Bullock Train. That's a sack from India.'
+
+'It's my initials,--Gilbert Belling Torpenhow. I stole the cloth on
+purpose.
+
+What the mischief are the camel-corps doing yonder?' Torpenhow shaded
+his eyes and looked across the scrub-strewn gravel.
+
+A bugle blew furiously, and the men on the bank hurried to their arms
+and accoutrements.
+
+'"Pisan soldiery surprised while bathing,"' remarked Dick, calmly.
+
+'D'you remember the picture? It's by Michael Angelo; all beginners copy
+it. That scrub's alive with enemy.'
+
+The camel-corps on the bank yelled to the infantry to come to them, and
+a hoarse shouting down the river showed that the remainder of the
+column had wind of the trouble and was hastening to take share in it.
+As swiftly as a reach of still water is crisped by the wind, the
+rock-strewn ridges and scrub-topped hills were troubled and alive with
+armed men.
+
+Mercifully, it occurred to these to stand far off for a time, to shout
+and gesticulate joyously. One man even delivered himself of a long
+story. The camel-corps did not fire. They were only too glad of a little
+breathing-space, until some sort of square could be formed. The men on
+the sand-bank ran to their side; and the whale-boats, as they toiled up
+within shouting distance, were thrust into the nearest bank and emptied
+of all save the sick and a few men to guard them. The Arab orator ceased
+his outcries, and his friends howled.
+
+'They look like the Mahdi's men,' said Torpenhow, elbowing himself
+into the crush of the square; 'but what thousands of 'em there are! The
+tribes hereabout aren't against us, I know.'
+
+'Then the Mahdi's taken another town,' said Dick, 'and set all these
+yelping devils free to show us up. Lend us your glass.'
+
+'Our scouts should have told us of this. We've been trapped,' said a
+subaltern. 'Aren't the camel guns ever going to begin? Hurry up, you
+men!'
+
+There was no need of any order. The men flung themselves panting against
+the sides of the square, for they had good reason to know that whoso
+was left outside when the fighting began would very probably die in
+an extremely unpleasant fashion. The little hundred-and-fifty-pound
+camel-guns posted at one corner of the square opened the ball as the
+square moved forward by its right to get possession of a knoll of rising
+ground. All had fought in this manner many times before, and there
+was no novelty in the entertainment; always the same hot and stifling
+formation, the smell of dust and leather, the same boltlike rush of
+the enemy, the same pressure on the weakest side, the few minutes of
+hand-to-hand scuffle, and then the silence of the desert, broken only
+by the yells of those whom their handful of cavalry attempted to pursue.
+They had become careless. The camel-guns spoke at intervals, and the
+square slouched forward amid the protesting of the camels. Then came the
+attack of three thousand men who had not learned from books that it is
+impossible for troops in close order to attack against breech-loading
+fire.
+
+A few dropping shots heralded their approach, and a few horsemen led,
+but the bulk of the force was naked humanity, mad with rage, and armed
+with the spear and the sword. The instinct of the desert, where there
+is always much war, told them that the right flank of the square was the
+weakest, for they swung clear of the front. The camel-guns shelled them
+as they passed and opened for an instant lanes through their midst, most
+like those quick-closing vistas in a Kentish hop-garden seen when the
+train races by at full speed; and the infantry fire, held till the
+opportune moment, dropped them in close-packing hundreds. No civilised
+troops in the world could have endured the hell through which they came,
+the living leaping high to avoid the dying who clutched at their heels,
+the wounded cursing and staggering forward, till they fell--a torrent
+black as the sliding water above a mill-dam--full on the right flank of
+the square.
+
+Then the line of the dusty troops and the faint blue desert sky overhead
+went out in rolling smoke, and the little stones on the heated ground
+and the tinder-dry clumps of scrub became matters of surpassing
+interest, for men measured their agonised retreat and recovery by these
+things, counting mechanically and hewing their way back to chosen pebble
+and branch. There was no semblance of any concerted fighting. For aught
+the men knew, the enemy might be attempting all four sides of the square
+at once. Their business was to destroy what lay in front of them, to
+bayonet in the back those who passed over them, and, dying, to drag
+down the slayer till he could be knocked on the head by some avenging
+gun-butt.
+
+Dick waited with Torpenhow and a young doctor till the stress grew
+unendurable. It was hopeless to attend to the wounded till the attack
+was repulsed, so the three moved forward gingerly towards the weakest
+side of the square. There was a rush from without, the short hough-hough
+of the stabbing spears, and a man on a horse, followed by thirty or
+forty others, dashed through, yelling and hacking. The right flank of
+the square sucked in after them, and the other sides sent help. The
+wounded, who knew that they had but a few hours more to live, caught at
+the enemy's feet and brought them down, or, staggering into a discarded
+rifle, fired blindly into the scuffle that raged in the centre of the
+square.
+
+Dick was conscious that somebody had cut him violently across his
+helmet, that he had fired his revolver into a black, foam-flecked face
+which forthwith ceased to bear any resemblance to a face, and that
+Torpenhow had gone down under an Arab whom he had tried to 'collar low,'
+and was turning over and over with his captive, feeling for the man's
+eyes. The doctor jabbed at a venture with a bayonet, and a helmetless
+soldier fired over Dick's shoulder: the flying grains of powder stung
+his cheek. It was to Torpenhow that Dick turned by instinct. The
+representative of the Central Southern Syndicate had shaken himself
+clear of his enemy, and rose, wiping his thumb on his trousers. The
+Arab, both hands to his forehead, screamed aloud, then snatched up his
+spear and rushed at Torpenhow, who was panting under shelter of Dick's
+revolver. Dick fired twice, and the man dropped limply. His upturned
+face lacked one eye. The musketry-fire redoubled, but cheers mingled
+with it. The rush had failed and the enemy were flying. If the heart of
+the square were shambles, the ground beyond was a butcher's shop. Dick
+thrust his way forward between the maddened men. The remnant of the
+enemy were retiring, as the few--the very few--English cavalry rode down
+the laggards.
+
+Beyond the lines of the dead, a broad blood-stained Arab spear cast
+aside in the retreat lay across a stump of scrub, and beyond this again
+the illimitable dark levels of the desert. The sun caught the steel
+and turned it into a red disc. Some one behind him was saying, 'Ah,
+get away, you brute!' Dick raised his revolver and pointed towards the
+desert. His eye was held by the red splash in the distance, and the
+clamour about him seemed to die down to a very far-away whisper, like
+the whisper of a level sea. There was the revolver and the red light....
+and the voice of some one scaring something away, exactly as had fallen
+somewhere before,--a darkness that stung. He fired at random, and the
+bullet went out across the desert as he muttered, 'Spoilt my aim. There
+aren't any more cartridges. We shall have to run home.' He put his hand
+to his head and brought it away covered with blood.
+
+'Old man, you're cut rather badly,' said Torpenhow. 'I owe you something
+for this business. Thanks. Stand up! I say, you can't be ill here.'
+
+Throughout the night, when the troops were encamped by the whale-boats,
+a black figure danced in the strong moonlight on the sand-bar and
+shouted that Khartoum the accursed one was dead,--was dead,--was
+dead,--that two steamers were rock-staked on the Nile outside the city,
+and that of all their crews there remained not one; and Khartoum was
+dead,--was dead,--was dead!
+
+But Torpenhow took no heed. He was watching Dick, who called aloud to
+the restless Nile for Maisie,--and again Maisie!
+
+'Behold a phenomenon,' said Torpenhow, rearranging the blanket. 'Here
+is a man, presumably human, who mentions the name of one woman only. And
+I've seen a good deal of delirium, too.--Dick, here's some fizzy drink.'
+
+'Thank you, Maisie,' said Dick.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+ So he thinks he shall take to the sea again
+ For one more cruise with his buccaneers,
+ To singe the beard of the King of Spain,
+ And capture another Dean of Jaen
+ And sell him in Algiers.--A Dutch Picture.--Longfellow
+THE SOUDAN campaign and Dick's broken head had been some months ended
+and mended, and the Central Southern Syndicate had paid Dick a certain
+sum on account for work done, which work they were careful to assure him
+was not altogether up to their standard. Dick heaved the letter into
+the Nile at Cairo, cashed the draft in the same town, and bade a warm
+farewell to Torpenhow at the station.
+
+'I am going to lie up for a while and rest,' said Torpenhow. 'I don't
+know where I shall live in London, but if God brings us to meet, we
+shall meet.
+
+Are you starying here on the off-chance of another row? There will be
+none till the Southern Soudan is reoccupied by our troops. Mark that.
+
+Good-bye; bless you; come back when your money's spent; and give me your
+address.'
+
+Dick loitered in Cairo, Alexandria, Ismailia, and Port Said,--especially
+Port Said. There is iniquity in many parts of the world, and vice in
+all, but the concentrated essence of all the iniquities and all the
+vices in all the continents finds itself at Port Said. And through the
+heart of that sand-bordered hell, where the mirage flickers day long
+above the Bitter Lake, move, if you will only wait, most of the men and
+women you have known in this life. Dick established himself in quarters
+more riotous than respectable. He spent his evenings on the quay, and
+boarded many ships, and saw very many friends,--gracious Englishwomen
+with whom he had talked not too wisely in the veranda of Shepherd's
+Hotel, hurrying war correspondents, skippers of the contract troop-ships
+employed in the campaign, army officers by the score, and others of less
+reputable trades.
+
+He had choice of all the races of the East and West for studies, and
+the advantage of seeing his subjects under the influence of strong
+excitement, at the gaming-tables, saloons, dancing-hells, and elsewhere.
+For recreation there was the straight vista of the Canal, the blazing
+sands, the procession of shipping, and the white hospitals where the
+English soldiers lay. He strove to set down in black and white and
+colour all that Providence sent him, and when that supply was ended
+sought about for fresh material. It was a fascinating employment, but
+it ran away with his money, and he had drawn in advance the hundred and
+twenty pounds to which he was entitled yearly. 'Now I shall have to work
+and starve!' thought he, and was addressing himself to this new fate
+when a mysterious telegram arrived from Torpenhow in England, which
+said, 'Come back, quick; you have caught on. Come.'
+
+A large smile overspread his face. 'So soon! that's a good hearing,'
+said he to himself. 'There will be an orgy to-night. I'll stand or fall
+by my luck. Faith, it's time it came!' He deposited half of his funds
+in the hands of his well-known friends Monsieur and Madame Binat, and
+ordered himself a Zanzibar dance of the finest. Monsieur Binat was
+shaking with drink, but Madame smiles sympathetically--'Monsieur needs
+a chair, of course, and of course Monsieur will sketch; Monsieur amuses
+himself strangely.'
+
+Binat raised a blue-white face from a cot in the inner room. 'I
+understand,' he quavered. 'We all know Monsieur. Monsieur is an artist,
+as I have been.' Dick nodded. 'In the end,' said Binat, with gravity,
+'Monsieur will descend alive into hell, as I have descended.' And he
+laughed.
+
+'You must come to the dance, too,' said Dick; 'I shall want you.'
+
+'For my face? I knew it would be so. For my face? My God! and for my
+degradation so tremendous! I will not. Take him away. He is a devil.
+Or at least do thou, Celeste, demand of him more.' The excellent Binat
+began to kick and scream.
+
+'All things are for sale in Port Said,' said Madame. 'If my husband
+comes it will be so much more. Eh, 'how you call--'alf a sovereign.'
+
+The money was paid, and the mad dance was held at night in a walled
+courtyard at the back of Madame Binat's house. The lady herself, in
+faded mauve silk always about to slide from her yellow shoulders,
+played the piano, and to the tin-pot music of a Western waltz the naked
+Zanzibari girls danced furiously by the light of kerosene lamps. Binat
+sat upon a chair and stared with eyes that saw nothing, till the whirl
+of the dance and the clang of the rattling piano stole into the drink
+that took the place of blood in his veins, and his face glistened. Dick
+took him by the chin brutally and turned that face to the light. Madame
+Binat looked over her shoulder and smiled with many teeth. Dick leaned
+against the wall and sketched for an hour, till the kerosene lamps began
+to smell, and the girls threw themselves panting on the hard-beaten
+ground. Then he shut his book with a snap and moved away, Binat plucking
+feebly at his elbow. 'Show me,' he whimpered. 'I too was once an artist,
+even I!' Dick showed him the rough sketch. 'Am I that?' he screamed.
+'Will you take that away with you and show all the world that it is
+I,--Binat?' He moaned and wept.
+
+'Monsieur has paid for all,' said Madame. 'To the pleasure of seeing
+Monsieur again.'
+
+The courtyard gate shut, and Dick hurried up the sandy street to the
+nearest gambling-hell, where he was well known. 'If the luck holds, it's
+an omen; if I lose, I must stay here.' He placed his money picturesquely
+about the board, hardly daring to look at what he did. The luck held.
+
+Three turns of the wheel left him richer by twenty pounds, and he went
+down to the shipping to make friends with the captain of a decayed
+cargo-steamer, who landed him in London with fewer pounds in his pocket
+than he cared to think about.
+
+A thin gray fog hung over the city, and the streets were very cold; for
+summer was in England.
+
+'It's a cheerful wilderness, and it hasn't the knack of altering much,'
+Dick thought, as he tramped from the Docks westward. 'Now, what must I
+do?'
+
+The packed houses gave no answer. Dick looked down the long lightless
+streets and at the appalling rush of traffic. 'Oh, you rabbit-hutches!'
+said he, addressing a row of highly respectable semi-detached
+residences. 'Do you know what you've got to do later on? You have to
+supply me with men-servants and maid-servants,'--here he smacked his
+lips,--'and the peculiar treasure of kings. Meantime I'll find clothes
+and boots, and presently I will return and trample on you.' He stepped
+forward energetically; he saw that one of his shoes was burst at the
+side. As he stooped to make investigations, a man jostled him into the
+gutter. 'All right,' he said.
+
+'That's another nick in the score. I'll jostle you later on.'
+
+Good clothes and boots are not cheap, and Dick left his last shop with
+the certainty that he would be respectably arrayed for a time, but with
+only fifty shillings in his pocket. He returned to streets by the Docks,
+and lodged himself in one room, where the sheets on the bed were almost
+audibly marked in case of theft, and where nobody seemed to go to bed at
+all. When his clothes arrived he sought the Central Southern Syndicate
+for Torpenhow's address, and got it, with the intimation that there was
+still some money waiting for him.
+
+'How much?' said Dick, as one who habitually dealt in millions.
+
+'Between thirty and forty pounds. If it would be any convenience to
+you, of course we could let you have it at once; but we usually settle
+accounts monthly.'
+
+'If I show that I want anything now, I'm lost,' he said to himself. 'All
+I need I'll take later on.' Then, aloud, 'It's hardly worth while; and
+I'm going to the country for a month, too. Wait till I come back, and
+I'll see about it.'
+
+'But we trust, Mr. Heldar, that you do not intend to sever your
+connection with us?'
+
+Dick's business in life was the study of faces, and he watched the
+speaker keenly. 'That man means something,' he said. 'I'll do no
+business till I've seen Torpenhow. There's a big deal coming.' So he
+departed, making no promises, to his one little room by the Docks. And
+that day was the seventh of the month, and that month, he reckoned with
+awful distinctness, had thirty-one days in it!
+
+It is not easy for a man of catholic tastes and healthy appetites to
+exist for twenty-four days on fifty shillings. Nor is it cheering to
+begin the experiment alone in all the loneliness of London. Dick paid
+seven shillings a week for his lodging, which left him rather less than
+a shilling a day for food and drink. Naturally, his first purchase was
+of the materials of his craft; he had been without them too long. Half
+a day's investigations and comparison brought him to the conclusion that
+sausages and mashed potatoes, twopence a plate, were the best food.
+Now, sausages once or twice a week for breakfast are not unpleasant.
+As lunch, even, with mashed potatoes, they become monotonous. At dinner
+they are impertinent. At the end of three days Dick loathed sausages,
+and, going forth, pawned his watch to revel on sheep's head, which
+is not as cheap as it looks, owing to the bones and the gravy. Then
+he returned to sausages and mashed potatoes. Then he confined himself
+entirely to mashed potatoes for a day, and was unhappy because of pain
+in his inside. Then he pawned his waistcoat and his tie, and thought
+regretfully of money thrown away in times past. There are few things
+more edifying unto Art than the actual belly-pinch of hunger, and
+Dick in his few walks abroad,--he did not care for exercise; it raised
+desires that could not be satisfied--found himself dividing mankind into
+two classes,--those who looked as if they might give him something to
+eat, and those who looked otherwise. 'I never knew what I had to learn
+about the human face before,' he thought; and, as a reward for his
+humility, Providence caused a cab-driver at a sausage-shop where Dick
+fed that night to leave half eaten a great chunk of bread. Dick took
+it,--would have fought all the world for its possession,--and it cheered
+him.
+
+The month dragged through at last, and, nearly prancing with impatience,
+he went to draw his money. Then he hastened to Torpenhow's address
+and smelt the smell of cooking meats all along the corridors of the
+chambers. Torpenhow was on the top floor, and Dick burst into his room,
+to be received with a hug which nearly cracked his ribs, as Torpenhow
+dragged him to the light and spoke of twenty different things in the
+same breath.
+
+'But you're looking tucked up,' he concluded.
+
+'Got anything to eat?' said Dick, his eye roaming round the room.
+
+'I shall be having breakfast in a minute. What do you say to sausages?'
+
+'No, anything but sausages! Torp, I've been starving on that accursed
+horse-flesh for thirty days and thirty nights.'
+
+'Now, what lunacy has been your latest?'
+
+Dick spoke of the last few weeks with unbridled speech. Then he opened
+his coat; there was no waistcoat below. 'I ran it fine, awfully fine,
+but I've just scraped through.'
+
+'You haven't much sense, but you've got a backbone, anyhow. Eat, and
+talk afterwards.' Dick fell upon eggs and bacon and gorged till he could
+gorge no more. Torpenhow handed him a filled pipe, and he smoked as men
+smoke who for three weeks have been deprived of good tobacco.
+
+'Ouf!' said he. 'That's heavenly! Well?'
+
+'Why in the world didn't you come to me?'
+
+'Couldn't; I owe you too much already, old man. Besides I had a sort of
+superstition that this temporary starvation--that's what it was, and it
+hurt--would bring me luck later. It's over and done with now, and none
+of the syndicate know how hard up I was. Fire away. What's the exact
+state of affairs as regards myself?'
+
+'You had my wire? You've caught on here. People like your work
+immensely. I don't know why, but they do. They say you have a fresh
+touch and a new way of drawing things. And, because they're chiefly
+home-bred English, they say you have insight. You're wanted by half a
+dozen papers; you're wanted to illustrate books.'
+
+Dick grunted scornfully.
+
+'You're wanted to work up your smaller sketches and sell them to the
+dealers. They seem to think the money sunk in you is a good investment.
+
+Good Lord! who can account for the fathomless folly of the public?'
+
+'They're a remarkably sensible people.'
+
+'They are subject to fits, if that's what you mean; and you happen to be
+the object of the latest fit among those who are interested in what
+they call Art. Just now you're a fashion, a phenomenon, or whatever you
+please. I appeared to be the only person who knew anything about you
+here, and I have been showing the most useful men a few of the sketches
+you gave me from time to time. Those coming after your work on the
+Central Southern Syndicate appear to have done your business. You're in
+luck.'
+
+'Huh! call it luck! Do call it luck, when a man has been kicking about
+the world like a dog, waiting for it to come! I'll luck 'em later on. I
+want a place to work first.'
+
+'Come here,' said Torpenhow, crossing the landing. 'This place is a big
+box room really, but it will do for you. There's your skylight, or
+your north light, or whatever window you call it, and plenty of room to
+thrash about in, and a bedroom beyond. What more do you need?'
+
+'Good enough,' said Dick, looking round the large room that took up a
+third of a top story in the rickety chambers overlooking the Thames. A
+pale yellow sun shone through the skylight and showed the much dirt of
+the place. Three steps led from the door to the landing, and three
+more to Torpenhow's room. The well of the staircase disappeared into
+darkness, pricked by tiny gas-jets, and there were sounds of men talking
+and doors slamming seven flights below, in the warm gloom.
+
+'Do they give you a free hand here?' said Dick, cautiously. He was
+Ishmael enough to know the value of liberty.
+
+'Anything you like; latch-keys and license unlimited. We are permanent
+tenants for the most part here. 'Tisn't a place I would recommend for a
+Young Men's Christian Association, but it will serve. I took these rooms
+for you when I wired.'
+
+'You're a great deal too kind, old man.'
+
+'You didn't suppose you were going away from me, did you?' Torpenhow put
+his hand on Dick's shoulder, and the two walked up and down the room,
+henceforward to be called the studio, in sweet and silent communion.
+They heard rapping at Torpenhow's door. 'That's some ruffian come up
+for a drink,' said Torpenhow; and he raised his voice cheerily. There
+entered no one more ruffianly than a portly middle-aged gentleman in
+a satin-faced frockcoat. His lips were parted and pale, and there were
+deep pouches under the eyes.
+
+'Weak heart,' said Dick to himself, and, as he shook hands, 'very weak
+heart. His pulse is shaking his fingers.'
+
+The man introduced himself as the head of the Central Southern Syndicate
+and 'one of the most ardent admirers of your work, Mr. Heldar. I assure
+you, in the name of the syndicate, that we are immensely indebted to
+you; and I trust, Mr. Heldar, you won't forget that we were largely
+instrumental in bringing you before the public.' He panted because of
+the seven flights of stairs.
+
+Dick glanced at Torpenhow, whose left eyelid lay for a moment dead on
+his cheek.
+
+'I shan't forget,' said Dick, every instinct of defence roused in him.
+
+'You've paid me so well that I couldn't, you know. By the way, when I am
+settled in this place I should like to send and get my sketches. There
+must be nearly a hundred and fifty of them with you.'
+
+'That is er--is what I came to speak about. I fear we can't allow it
+exactly, Mr. Heldar. In the absence of any specified agreement, the
+sketches are our property, of course.'
+
+'Do you mean to say that you are going to keep them?'
+
+'Yes; and we hope to have your help, on your own terms, Mr. Heldar, to
+assist us in arranging a little exhibition, which, backed by our name
+and the influence we naturally command among the press, should be of
+material service to you. Sketches such as yours----'
+
+'Belong to me. You engaged me by wire, you paid me the lowest rates you
+dared. You can't mean to keep them! Good God alive, man, they're all
+I've got in the world!'
+
+Torpenhow watched Dick's face and whistled.
+
+Dick walked up and down, thinking. He saw the whole of his little stock
+in trade, the first weapon of his equipment, annexed at the outset of
+his campaign by an elderly gentleman whose name Dick had not caught
+aright, who said that he represented a syndicate, which was a thing for
+which Dick had not the least reverence. The injustice of the proceedings
+did not much move him; he had seen the strong hand prevail too often in
+other places to be squeamish over the moral aspects of right and wrong.
+
+But he ardently desired the blood of the gentleman in the frockcoat, and
+when he spoke again it was with a strained sweetness that Torpenhow knew
+well for the beginning of strife.
+
+'Forgive me, sir, but you have no--no younger man who can arrange this
+business with me?'
+
+'I speak for the syndicate. I see no reason for a third party to----'
+
+'You will in a minute. Be good enough to give back my sketches.'
+
+The man stared blankly at Dick, and then at Torpenhow, who was leaning
+against the wall. He was not used to ex-employees who ordered him to be
+good enough to do things.
+
+'Yes, it is rather a cold-blooded steal,' said Torpenhow, critically;
+'but I'm afraid, I am very much afraid, you've struck the wrong man. Be
+careful, Dick; remember, this isn't the Soudan.'
+
+'Considering what services the syndicate have done you in putting your
+name before the world----'
+
+This was not a fortunate remark; it reminded Dick of certain vagrant
+years lived out in loneliness and strife and unsatisfied desires. The
+memory did not contrast well with the prosperous gentleman who proposed
+to enjoy the fruit of those years.
+
+'I don't know quite what to do with you,' began Dick, meditatively. 'Of
+course you're a thief, and you ought to be half killed, but in your case
+you'd probably die. I don't want you dead on this floor, and, besides,
+it's unlucky just as one's moving in. Don't hit, sir; you'll only excite
+yourself.'
+
+He put one hand on the man's forearm and ran the other down the plump
+body beneath the coat. 'My goodness!' said he to Torpenhow, 'and this
+gray oaf dares to be a thief! I have seen an Esneh camel-driver have the
+black hide taken off his body in strips for stealing half a pound of wet
+dates, and he was as tough as whipcord. This things' soft all over--like
+a woman.'
+
+There are few things more poignantly humiliating than being handled by
+a man who does not intend to strike. The head of the syndicate began to
+breathe heavily. Dick walked round him, pawing him, as a cat paws a
+soft hearth-rug. Then he traced with his forefinger the leaden pouches
+underneath the eyes, and shook his head. 'You were going to steal my
+things,--mine, mine, mine!--you, who don't know when you may die.
+
+Write a note to your office,--you say you're the head of it,--and order
+them to give Torpenhow my sketches,--every one of them. Wait a minute:
+your hand's shaking. Now!' He thrust a pocket-book before him. The note
+was written. Torpenhow took it and departed without a word, while Dick
+walked round and round the spellbound captive, giving him such advice as
+he conceived best for the welfare of his soul. When Torpenhow returned
+with a gigantic portfolio, he heard Dick say, almost soothingly, 'Now,
+I hope this will be a lesson to you; and if you worry me when I have
+settled down to work with any nonsense about actions for assault,
+believe me, I'll catch you and manhandle you, and you'll die. You
+haven't very long to live, anyhow. Go! Imshi, Vootsak,--get out!' The
+man departed, staggering and dazed. Dick drew a long breath: 'Phew! what
+a lawless lot these people are! The first thing a poor orphan meets is
+gang robbery, organised burglary! Think of the hideous blackness of that
+man's mind! Are my sketches all right, Torp?'
+
+'Yes; one hundred and forty-seven of them. Well, I must say, Dick,
+you've begun well.'
+
+'He was interfering with me. It only meant a few pounds to him, but it
+was everything to me. I don't think he'll bring an action. I gave him
+some medical advice gratis about the state of his body. It was cheap at
+the little flurry it cost him. Now, let's look at my things.'
+
+Two minutes later Dick had thrown himself down on the floor and was deep
+in the portfolio, chuckling lovingly as he turned the drawings over and
+thought of the price at which they had been bought.
+
+The afternoon was well advanced when Torpenhow came to the door and saw
+Dick dancing a wild saraband under the skylight.
+
+'I builded better than I knew, Torp,' he said, without stopping the
+dance.
+
+'They're good! They're damned good! They'll go like flame! I shall have
+an exhibition of them on my own brazen hook. And that man would have
+cheated me out of it! Do you know that I'm sorry now that I didn't
+actually hit him?'
+
+'Go out,' said Torpenhow,--'go out and pray to be delivered from the
+sin of arrogance, which you never will be. Bring your things up from
+whatever place you're staying in, and we'll try to make this barn a
+little more shipshape.'
+
+'And then--oh, then,' said Dick, still capering, 'we will spoil the
+Egyptians!'
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+ The wolf-cub at even lay hid in the corn,
+ When the smoke of the cooking hung gray:
+ He knew where the doe made a couch for her fawn,
+ And he looked to his strength for his prey.
+
+ But the moon swept the smoke-wreaths away.
+
+ And he turned from his meal in the villager's close,
+ And he bayed to the moon as she rose.
+
+ --In Seonee.
+'WELL, and how does success taste?' said Torpenhow, some three months
+later. He had just returned to chambers after a holiday in the country.
+
+'Good,' said Dick, as he sat licking his lips before the easel in the
+studio.
+
+'I want more,--heaps more. The lean years have passed, and I approve of
+these fat ones.'
+
+'Be careful, old man. That way lies bad work.'
+
+Torpenhow was sprawling in a long chair with a small fox-terrier asleep
+on his chest, while Dick was preparing a canvas. A dais, a background,
+and a lay-figure were the only fixed objects in the place. They rose
+from a wreck of oddments that began with felt-covered water-bottles,
+belts, and regimental badges, and ended with a small bale of second-hand
+uniforms and a stand of mixed arms. The mark of muddy feet on the dais
+showed that a military model had just gone away. The watery autumn
+sunlight was falling, and shadows sat in the corners of the studio.
+
+'Yes,' said Dick, deliberately, 'I like the power; I like the fun; I
+like the fuss; and above all I like the money. I almost like the
+people who make the fuss and pay the money. Almost. But they're a queer
+gang,--an amazingly queer gang!'
+
+'They have been good enough to you, at any rate, than tin-pot exhibition
+of your sketches must have paid. Did you see that the papers called it
+the "Wild Work Show"?'
+
+'Never mind. I sold every shred of canvas I wanted to; and, on my word,
+I believe it was because they believed I was a self-taught flagstone
+artist.
+
+I should have got better prices if I worked my things on wool or
+scratched them on camel-bone instead of using mere black and white and
+colour. Verily, they are a queer gang, these people. Limited isn't the
+word to describe 'em. I met a fellow the other day who told me that
+it was impossible that shadows on white sand should be
+blue,--ultramarine,--as they are. I found out, later, that the man had
+been as far as Brighton beach; but he knew all about Art, confound him.
+He gave me a lecture on it, and recommended me to go to school to learn
+technique. I wonder what old Kami would have said to that.'
+
+'When were you under Kami, man of extraordinary beginnings?'
+
+'I studied with him for two years in Paris. He taught by personal
+magnetism. All he ever said was, "Continuez, mes enfants," and you had
+to make the best you could of that. He had a divine touch, and he knew
+something about colour. Kami used to dream colour; I swear he could
+never have seen the genuine article; but he evolved it; and it was
+good.'
+
+'Recollect some of those views in the Soudan?' said Torpenhow, with a
+provoking drawl.
+
+Dick squirmed in his place. 'Don't! It makes me want to get out there
+again. What colour that was! Opal and umber and amber and claret and
+brick-red and sulphur--cockatoo-crest--sulphur--against brown, with a
+nigger-black rock sticking up in the middle of it all, and a decorative
+frieze of camels festooning in front of a pure pale turquoise sky.' He
+began to walk up and down. 'And yet, you know, if you try to give these
+people the thing as God gave it, keyed down to their comprehension and
+according to the powers He has given you----'
+
+'Modest man! Go on.'
+
+'Half a dozen epicene young pagans who haven't even been to Algiers will
+tell you, first, that your notion is borrowed, and, secondly, that it
+isn't Art.
+
+''This comes of my leaving town for a month. Dickie, you've been
+promenading among the toy-shops and hearing people talk.'
+
+'I couldn't help it,' said Dick, penitently. 'You weren't here, and it
+was lonely these long evenings. A man can't work for ever.'
+
+'A man might have gone to a pub, and got decently drunk.'
+
+'I wish I had; but I forgathered with some men of sorts. They said they
+were artists, and I knew some of them could draw,--but they wouldn't
+draw. They gave me tea,--tea at five in the afternoon!--and talked about
+Art and the state of their souls. As if their souls mattered. I've heard
+more about Art and seen less of her in the last six months than in
+the whole of my life. Do you remember Cassavetti, who worked for some
+continental syndicate, out with the desert column? He was a regular
+Christmas-tree of contraptions when he took the field in full fig, with
+his water-bottle, lanyard, revolver, writing-case, housewife, gig-lamps,
+and the Lord knows what all. He used to fiddle about with 'em and show
+us how they worked; but he never seemed to do much except fudge his
+reports from the Nilghai. See?'
+
+'Dear old Nilghai! He's in town, fatter than ever. He ought to be up
+here this evening. I see the comparison perfectly. You should have kept
+clear of all that man-millinery. Serves you right; and I hope it will
+unsettle your mind.'
+
+'It won't. It has taught me what Art--holy sacred Art--means.'
+
+'You've learnt something while I've been away. What is Art?'
+
+'Give 'em what they know, and when you've done it once do it again.'
+
+Dick dragged forward a canvas laid face to the wall. 'Here's a sample
+of real Art. It's going to be a facsimile reproduction for a weekly. I
+called it "His Last Shot." It's worked up from the little water-colour
+I made outside El Maghrib. Well, I lured my model, a beautiful rifleman,
+up here with drink; I drored him, and I redrored him, and I redrored
+him, and I made him a flushed, dishevelled, bedevilled scallawag, with
+his helmet at the back of his head, and the living fear of death in his
+eye, and the blood oozing out of a cut over his ankle-bone. He wasn't
+pretty, but he was all soldier and very much man.'
+
+'Once more, modest child!'
+
+Dick laughed. 'Well, it's only to you I'm talking. I did him just as
+well as I knew how, making allowance for the slickness of oils. Then the
+art-manager of that abandoned paper said that his subscribers wouldn't
+like it. It was brutal and coarse and violent,--man being naturally
+gentle when he's fighting for his life. They wanted something more
+restful, with a little more colour. I could have said a good deal, but
+you might as well talk to a sheep as an art-manager. I took my "Last
+Shot" back. Behold the result! I put him into a lovely red coat without
+a speck on it. That is Art. I polished his boots,--observe the high
+light on the toe. That is Art. I cleaned his rifle,--rifles are always
+clean on service,--because that is Art.
+
+I pipeclayed his helmet,--pipeclay is always used on active service, and
+is indispensable to Art. I shaved his chin, I washed his hands, and gave
+him an air of fatted peace. Result, military tailor's pattern-plate.
+Price, thank Heaven, twice as much as for the first sketch, which was
+moderately decent.'
+
+'And do you suppose you're going to give that thing out as your work?'
+
+'Why not? I did it. Alone I did it, in the interests of sacred,
+home-bred Art and Dickenson's Weekly.'
+
+Torpenhow smoked in silence for a while. Then came the verdict,
+delivered from rolling clouds: 'If you were only a mass of blathering
+vanity, Dick, I wouldn't mind,--I'd let you go to the deuce on your own
+mahl-stick; but when I consider what you are to me, and when I find
+that to vanity you add the twopenny-halfpenny pique of a twelve-year-old
+girl, then I bestir myself in your behalf. Thus!'
+
+The canvas ripped as Torpenhow's booted foot shot through it, and the
+terrier jumped down, thinking rats were about.
+
+'If you have any bad language to use, use it. You have not. I continue.
+
+You are an idiot, because no man born of woman is strong enough to take
+liberties with his public, even though they be--which they ain't--all
+you say they are.'
+
+'But they don't know any better. What can you expect from creatures born
+and bred in this light?' Dick pointed to the yellow fog. 'If they want
+furniture-polish, let them have furniture-polish, so long as they pay
+for it.
+
+They are only men and women. You talk as if they were gods.'
+
+'That sounds very fine, but it has nothing to do with the case. They are
+the people you have to do work for, whether you like it or not. They
+are your masters. Don't be deceived, Dickie, you aren't strong enough to
+trifle with them,--or with yourself, which is more important.
+
+Moreover,--Come back, Binkie: that red daub isn't going
+anywhere,--unless you take precious good care, you will fall under the
+damnation of the check-book, and that's worse than death. You will get
+drunk--you're half drunk already--on easily acquired money. For that
+money and your own infernal vanity you are willing to deliberately turn
+out bad work. You'll do quite enough bad work without knowing it. And,
+Dickie, as I love you and as I know you love me, I am not going to let
+you cut off your nose to spite your face for all the gold in England.
+That's settled. Now swear.'
+
+'Don't know, said Dick. 'I've been trying to make myself angry, but
+I can't, you're so abominably reasonable. There will be a row on
+Dickenson's Weekly, I fancy.'
+
+'Why the Dickenson do you want to work on a weekly paper? It's slow
+bleeding of power.'
+
+'It brings in the very desirable dollars,' said Dick, his hands in his
+pockets.
+
+Torpenhow watched him with large contempt. 'Why, I thought it was a
+man!' said he. 'It's a child.'
+
+'No, it isn't,' said Dick, wheeling quickly. 'You've no notion what the
+certainty of cash means to a man who has always wanted it badly.
+
+Nothing will pay me for some of my life's joys; on that Chinese
+pig-boat, for instance, when we ate bread and jam for every meal,
+because Ho-Wang wouldn't allow us anything better, and it all tasted of
+pig,--Chinese pig. I've worked for this, I've sweated and I've starved
+for this, line on line and month after month. And now I've got it I am
+going to make the most of it while it lasts. Let them pay--they've no
+knowledge.'
+
+'What does Your Majesty please to want? You can't smoke more than you
+do; you won't drink; you're a gross feeder; and you dress in the dark,
+by the look of you. You wouldn't keep a horse the other day when I
+suggested, because, you said, it might fall lame, and whenever you cross
+the street you take a hansom. Even you are not foolish enough to suppose
+that theatres and all the live things you can buy thereabouts mean Life.
+
+What earthly need have you for money?'
+
+'It's there, bless its golden heart,' said Dick. 'It's there all the
+time.
+
+Providence has sent me nuts while I have teeth to crack 'em with. I
+haven't yet found the nut I wish to crack, but I'm keeping my teeth
+filed.
+
+Perhaps some day you and I will go for a walk round the wide earth.'
+
+'With no work to do, nobody to worry us, and nobody to compete with? You
+would be unfit to speak to in a week. Besides, I shouldn't go. I don't
+care to profit by the price of a man's soul,--for that's what it would
+mean.
+
+Dick, it's no use arguing. You're a fool.'
+
+'Don't see it. When I was on that Chinese pig-boat, our captain got
+credit for saving about twenty-five thousand very seasick little pigs,
+when our old tramp of a steamer fell foul of a timber-junk. Now, taking
+those pigs as a parallel----'
+
+'Oh, confound your parallels! Whenever I try to improve your soul, you
+always drag in some anecdote from your very shady past. Pigs aren't the
+British public; and self-respect is self-respect the world over. Go
+out for a walk and try to catch some self-respect. And, I say, if the
+Nilghai comes up this evening can I show him your diggings?'
+
+'Surely. You'll be asking whether you must knock at my door, next.' And
+Dick departed, to take counsel with himself in the rapidly gathering
+London fog.
+
+Half an hour after he had left, the Nilghai laboured up the staircase.
+He was the chiefest, as he was the youngest, of the war correspondents,
+and his experiences dated from the birth of the needle-gun. Saving only
+his ally, Keneu the Great War Eagle, there was no man higher in the
+craft than he, and he always opened his conversation with the news that
+there would be trouble in the Balkans in the spring. Torpenhow laughed
+as he entered.
+
+'Never mind the trouble in the Balkans. Those little states are always
+screeching. You've heard about Dick's luck?'
+
+'Yes; he has been called up to notoriety, hasn't he? I hope you keep him
+properly humble. He wants suppressing from time to time.'
+
+'He does. He's beginning to take liberties with what he thinks is his
+reputation.'
+
+'Already! By Jove, he has cheek! I don't know about his reputation, but
+he'll come a cropper if he tries that sort of thing.'
+
+'So I told him. I don't think he believes it.'
+
+'They never do when they first start off. What's that wreck on the
+ground there?'
+
+'Specimen of his latest impertinence.' Torpenhow thrust the torn edges
+of the canvas together and showed the well-groomed picture to the
+Nilghai, who looked at it for a moment and whistled.
+
+'It's a chromo,' said he,--'a chromo-litholeomargarine fake! What
+possessed him to do it? And yet how thoroughly he has caught the note
+that catches a public who think with their boots and read with their
+elbows! The cold-blooded insolence of the work almost saves it; but
+he mustn't go on with this. Hasn't he been praised and cockered up too
+much? You know these people here have no sense of proportion. They'll
+call him a second Detaille and a third-hand Meissonier while his fashion
+lasts. It's windy diet for a colt.'
+
+'I don't think it affects Dick much. You might as well call a young
+wolf a lion and expect him to take the compliment in exchange for a
+shin-bone.
+
+Dick's soul is in the bank. He's working for cash.'
+
+'Now he has thrown up war work, I suppose he doesn't see that the
+obligations of the service are just the same, only the proprietors are
+changed.'
+
+'How should he know? He thinks he is his own master.'
+
+'Does he? I could undeceive him for his good, if there's any virtue in
+print. He wants the whiplash.'
+
+'Lay it on with science, then. I'd flay him myself, but I like him too
+much.'
+
+'I've no scruples. He had the audacity to try to cut me out with a woman
+at Cairo once. I forgot that, but I remember now.'
+
+'Did he cut you out?'
+
+'You'll see when I have dealt with him. But, after all, what's the
+good? Leave him alone and he'll come home, if he has any stuff in him,
+dragging or wagging his tail behind him. There's more in a week of life
+than in a lively weekly. None the less I'll slate him. I'll slate him
+ponderously in the Cataclysm.'
+
+'Good luck to you; but I fancy nothing short of a crowbar would make
+Dick wince. His soul seems to have been fired before we came across him.
+
+He's intensely suspicious and utterly lawless.'
+
+'Matter of temper,' said the Nilghai. 'It's the same with horses. Some
+you wallop and they work, some you wallop and they jib, and some you
+wallop and they go out for a walk with their hands in their pockets.'
+
+'That's exactly what Dick has done,' said Torpenhow. 'Wait till he comes
+back. In the meantime, you can begin your slating here. I'll show you
+some of his last and worst work in his studio.'
+
+Dick had instinctively sought running water for a comfort to his mood of
+mind. He was leaning over the Embankment wall, watching the rush of the
+Thames through the arches of Westminster Bridge. He began by thinking of
+Torpenhow's advice, but, as of custom, lost himself in the study of the
+faces flocking past. Some had death written on their features, and Dick
+marvelled that they could laugh. Others, clumsy and coarse-built for
+the most part, were alight with love; others were merely drawn and lined
+with work; but there was something, Dick knew, to be made out of them
+all. The poor at least should suffer that he might learn, and the rich
+should pay for the output of his learning. Thus his credit in the world
+and his cash balance at the bank would be increased. So much the better
+for him. He had suffered. Now he would take toll of the ills of others.
+
+The fog was driven apart for a moment, and the sun shone, a blood-red
+wafer, on the water. Dick watched the spot till he heard the voice of
+the tide between the piers die down like the wash of the sea at low
+tide. A girl hard pressed by her lover shouted shamelessly, 'Ah, get
+away, you beast!' and a shift of the same wind that had opened the fog
+drove across Dick's face the black smoke of a river-steamer at her berth
+below the wall. He was blinded for the moment, then spun round and found
+himself face to face with--Maisie.
+
+There was no mistaking. The years had turned the child to a woman, but
+they had not altered the dark-gray eyes, the thin scarlet lips, or the
+firmly modelled mouth and chin; and, that all should be as it was of
+old, she wore a closely fitting gray dress.
+
+Since the human soul is finite and not in the least under its own
+command, Dick, advancing, said 'Halloo!' after the manner of schoolboys,
+and Maisie answered, 'Oh, Dick, is that you?' Then, against his will,
+and before the brain newly released from considerations of the cash
+balance had time to dictate to the nerves, every pulse of Dick's body
+throbbed furiously and his palate dried in his mouth. The fog shut down
+again, and Maisie's face was pearl-white through it. No word was spoken,
+but Dick fell into step at her side, and the two paced the Embankment
+together, keeping the step as perfectly as in their afternoon excursions
+to the mud-flats. Then Dick, a little hoarsely--'What has happened to
+Amomma?'
+
+'He died, Dick. Not cartridges; over-eating. He was always greedy. Isn't
+it funny?'
+
+'Yes. No. Do you mean Amomma?'
+
+'Ye--es. No. This. Where have you come from?'
+
+'Over there,' He pointed eastward through the fog. 'And you?'
+
+'Oh, I'm in the north,--the black north, across all the Park. I am very
+busy.'
+
+'What do you do?'
+
+'I paint a great deal. That's all I have to do.'
+
+'Why, what's happened? You had three hundred a year.'
+
+'I have that still. I am painting; that's all.'
+
+'Are you alone, then?'
+
+'There's a girl living with me. Don't walk so fast, Dick; you're out of
+step.'
+
+'Then you noticed it too?'
+
+'Of course I did. You're always out of step.'
+
+'So I am. I'm sorry. You went on with the painting?'
+
+'Of course. I said I should. I was at the Slade, then at Merton's in _St.
+John's Wood_, the big studio, then I pepper-potted,--I mean I went to the
+National,--and now I'm working under Kami.'
+
+'But Kami is in Paris surely?'
+
+'No; he has his teaching studio in Vitry-sur-Marne. I work with him in
+the summer, and I live in London in the winter. I'm a householder.'
+
+'Do you sell much?'
+
+'Now and again, but not often. There is my 'bus. I must take it or lose
+half an hour. Good-bye, Dick.'
+
+'Good-bye, Maisie. Won't you tell me where you live? I must see you
+again; and perhaps I could help you. I--I paint a little myself.'
+
+'I may be in the Park to-morrow, if there is no working light. I walk
+from the Marble Arch down and back again; that is my little excursion.
+But of course I shall see you again.' She stepped into the omnibus and
+was swallowed up by the fog.
+
+'Well--I--am--damned!' exclaimed Dick, and returned to the chambers.
+
+Torpenhow and the Nilghai found him sitting on the steps to the studio
+door, repeating the phrase with an awful gravity.
+
+'You'll be more damned when I'm done with you,' said the Nilghai,
+upheaving his bulk from behind Torpenhow's shoulder and waving a sheaf
+of half-dry manuscript. 'Dick, it is of common report that you are
+suffering from swelled head.'
+
+'Halloo, Nilghai. Back again? How are the Balkans and all the little
+Balkans? One side of your face is out of drawing, as usual.'
+
+'Never mind that. I am commissioned to smite you in print. Torpenhow
+refuses from false delicacy. I've been overhauling the pot-boilers in
+your studio. They are simply disgraceful.'
+
+'Oho! that's it, is it? If you think you can slate me, you're wrong. You
+can only describe, and you need as much room to turn in, on paper, as a
+P. and O. cargo-boat. But continue, and be swift. I'm going to bed.'
+
+'H'm! h'm! h'm! The first part only deals with your pictures. Here's
+the peroration: "For work done without conviction, for power wasted on
+trivialities, for labour expended with levity for the deliberate purpose
+of winning the easy applause of a fashion-driven public----" 'That's
+"His Last Shot," second edition. Go on.'
+
+'----"public, there remains but one end,--the oblivion that is preceded
+by toleration and cenotaphed with contempt. From that fate Mr. Heldar
+has yet to prove himself out of danger."'
+
+'Wow--wow--wow--wow--wow!' said Dick, profanely. 'It's a clumsy ending
+and vile journalese, but it's quite true. And yet,'--he sprang to his
+feet and snatched at the manuscript,--'you scarred, deboshed, battered
+old gladiator! you're sent out when a war begins, to minister to the
+blind, brutal, British public's bestial thirst for blood. They have
+no arenas now, but they must have special correspondents. You're a fat
+gladiator who comes up through a trap-door and talks of what he's seen.
+You stand on precisely the same level as an energetic bishop, an affable
+actress, a devastating cyclone, or--mine own sweet self. And you
+presume to lecture me about my work! Nilghai, if it were worth while I'd
+caricature you in four papers!'
+
+The Nilghai winced. He had not thought of this.
+
+'As it is, I shall take this stuff and tear it small--so!' The
+manuscript fluttered in slips down the dark well of the staircase. 'Go
+home, Nilghai,' said Dick; 'go home to your lonely little bed, and leave
+me in peace. I am about to turn in till to-morrow.'
+
+'Why, it isn't seven yet!' said Torpenhow, with amazement.
+
+'It shall be two in the morning, if I choose,' said Dick, backing to the
+studio door. 'I go to grapple with a serious crisis, and I shan't want
+any dinner.'
+
+The door shut and was locked.
+
+'What can you do with a man like that?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Leave him alone. He's as mad as a hatter.'
+
+At eleven there was a kicking on the studio door. 'Is the Nilghai with
+you still?' said a voice from within. 'Then tell him he might have
+condensed the whole of his lumbering nonsense into an epigram: "Only
+the free are bond, and only the bond are free." Tell him he's an idiot,
+Torp, and tell him I'm another.'
+
+'All right. Come out and have supper. You're smoking on an empty
+stomach.'
+
+There was no answer.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+ 'I have a thousand men,' said he,
+ 'To wait upon my will,
+ And towers nine upon the Tyne,
+ And three upon the Till.'
+
+ 'And what care I for you men,' said she,
+ 'Or towers from Tyne to Till,
+ Sith you must go with me,' she said,
+ 'To wait upon my will?'
+
+ Sir Hoggie and the Fairies
+NEXT morning Torpenhow found Dick sunk in deepest repose of tobacco.
+
+'Well, madman, how d'you feel?'
+
+'I don't know. I'm trying to find out.'
+
+'You had much better do some work.'
+
+'Maybe; but I'm in no hurry. I've made a discovery. Torp, there's too
+much Ego in my Cosmos.'
+
+'Not really! Is this revelation due to my lectures, or the Nilghai's?'
+
+'It came to me suddenly, all on my own account. Much too much Ego; and
+now I'm going to work.'
+
+He turned over a few half-finished sketches, drummed on a new canvas,
+cleaned three brushes, set Binkie to bite the toes of the lay figure,
+rattled through his collection of arms and accoutrements, and then went
+out abruptly, declaring that he had done enough for the day.
+
+'This is positively indecent,' said Torpenhow, 'and the first time that
+Dick has ever broken up a light morning. Perhaps he has found out
+that he has a soul, or an artistic temperament, or something equally
+valuable.
+
+That comes of leaving him alone for a month. Perhaps he has been going
+out of evenings. I must look to this.' He rang for the bald-headed old
+housekeeper, whom nothing could astonish or annoy.
+
+'Beeton, did Mr. Heldar dine out at all while I was out of town?'
+
+'Never laid 'is dress-clothes out once, sir, all the time. Mostly 'e
+dined in; but 'e brought some most remarkable young gentlemen up 'ere
+after theatres once or twice. Remarkable fancy they was. You gentlemen
+on the top floor does very much as you likes, but it do seem to me, sir,
+droppin' a walkin'-stick down five flights o' stairs an' then goin'
+down four abreast to pick it up again at half-past two in the mornin',
+singin,' "Bring back the whiskey, Willie darlin,'"--not once or twice,
+but scores o' times,--isn't charity to the other tenants. What I say is,
+"Do as you would be done by." That's my motto.'
+
+'Of course! of course! I'm afraid the top floor isn't the quietest in
+the house.'
+
+'I make no complaints, sir. I have spoke to Mr. Heldar friendly, an'
+he laughed, an' did me a picture of the missis that is as good as a
+coloured print. It 'asn't the high shine of a photograph, but what I say
+is, "Never look a gift-horse in the mouth." Mr. Heldar's dress-clothes
+'aven't been on him for weeks.'
+
+'Then it's all right,' said Torpenhow to himself. 'Orgies are healthy,
+and Dick has a head of his own, but when it comes to women making
+eyes I'm not so certain,--Binkie, never you be a man, little dorglums.
+They're contrary brutes, and they do things without any reason.'
+
+Dick had turned northward across the Park, but he was walking in the
+spirit on the mud-flats with Maisie. He laughed aloud as he remembered
+the day when he had decked Amomma's horns with the ham-frills, and
+Maisie, white with rage, had cuffed him. How long those four years
+seemed in review, and how closely Maisie was connected with every hour
+of them! Storm across the sea, and Maisie in a gray dress on the beach,
+sweeping her drenched hair out of her eyes and laughing at the homeward
+race of the fishing-smacks; hot sunshine on the mud-flats, and Maisie
+sniffing scornfully, with her chin in the air; Maisie flying before
+the wind that threshed the foreshore and drove the sand like small shot
+about her ears; Maisie, very composed and independent, telling lies to
+Mrs. Jennett while Dick supported her with coarser perjuries; Maisie
+picking her way delicately from stone to stone, a pistol in her hand
+and her teeth firm-set; and Maisie in a gray dress sitting on the
+grass between the mouth of a cannon and a nodding yellow sea-poppy. The
+pictures passed before him one by one, and the last stayed the longest.
+
+Dick was perfectly happy with a quiet peace that was as new to his mind
+as it was foreign to his experiences. It never occurred to him that
+there might be other calls upon his time than loafing across the Park in
+the forenoon.
+
+'There's a good working light now,' he said, watching his shadow
+placidly. 'Some poor devil ought to be grateful for this. And there's
+Maisie.'
+
+She was walking towards him from the Marble Arch, and he saw that no
+mannerism of her gait had been changed. It was good to find her still
+Maisie, and, so to speak, his next-door neighbour. No greeting passed
+between them, because there had been none in the old days.
+
+'What are you doing out of your studio at this hour?' said Dick, as one
+who was entitled to ask.
+
+'Idling. Just idling. I got angry with a chin and scraped it out. Then I
+left it in a little heap of paint-chips and came away.'
+
+'I know what palette-knifing means. What was the piccy?'
+
+'A fancy head that wouldn't come right,--horrid thing!'
+
+'I don't like working over scraped paint when I'm doing flesh. The grain
+comes up woolly as the paint dries.'
+
+'Not if you scrape properly.' Maisie waved her hand to illustrate her
+methods. There was a dab of paint on the white cuff. Dick laughed.
+
+'You're as untidy as ever.'
+
+'That comes well from you. Look at your own cuff.'
+
+'By Jove, yes! It's worse than yours. I don't think we've much altered
+in anything. Let's see, though.' He looked at Maisie critically. The
+pale blue haze of an autumn day crept between the tree-trunks of the
+Park and made a background for the gray dress, the black velvet toque
+above the black hair, and the resolute profile.
+
+'No, there's nothing changed. How good it is! D'you remember when I
+fastened your hair into the snap of a hand-bag?'
+
+Maisie nodded, with a twinkle in her eyes, and turned her full face to
+Dick.
+
+'Wait a minute,' said he. 'That mouth is down at the corners a little.
+
+Who's been worrying you, Maisie?'
+
+'No one but myself. I never seem to get on with my work, and yet I try
+hard enough, and Kami says----'
+
+'"Continuez, mesdemoiselles. Continuez toujours, mes enfants." Kami is
+depressing. I beg your pardon.'
+
+'Yes, that's what he says. He told me last summer that I was doing
+better and he'd let me exhibit this year.'
+
+'Not in this place, surely?'
+
+'Of course not. The Salon.'
+
+'You fly high.'
+
+'I've been beating my wings long enough. Where do you exhibit, Dick?'
+
+'I don't exhibit. I sell.'
+
+'What is your line, then?'
+
+'Haven't you heard?' Dick's eyes opened. Was this thing possible? He
+cast about for some means of conviction. They were not far from the
+Marble Arch. 'Come up Oxford Street a little and I'll show you.'
+
+A small knot of people stood round a print-shop that Dick knew well.
+
+'Some reproduction of my work inside,' he said, with suppressed triumph.
+Never before had success tasted so sweet upon the tongue. 'You see the
+sort of things I paint. D'you like it?'
+
+Maisie looked at the wild whirling rush of a field-battery going into
+action under fire. Two artillery-men stood behind her in the crowd.
+
+'They've chucked the off lead-'orse' said one to the other. ''E's tore
+up awful, but they're makin' good time with the others. That lead-driver
+drives better nor you, Tom. See 'ow cunnin' 'e's nursin' 'is 'orse.'
+
+'Number Three'll be off the limber, next jolt,' was the answer.
+
+'No, 'e won't. See 'ow 'is foot's braced against the iron? 'E's all
+right.'
+
+Dick watched Maisie's face and swelled with joy--fine, rank, vulgar
+triumph. She was more interested in the little crowd than in the
+picture.
+
+That was something that she could understand.
+
+'And I wanted it so! Oh, I did want it so!' she said at last, under her
+breath.
+
+'Me,--all me!' said Dick, placidly. 'Look at their faces. It hits 'em.
+They don't know what makes their eyes and mouths open; but I know. And I
+know my work's right.'
+
+'Yes. I see. Oh, what a thing to have come to one!'
+
+'Come to one, indeed! I had to go out and look for it. What do you
+think?'
+
+'I call it success. Tell me how you got it.'
+
+They returned to the Park, and Dick delivered himself of the saga of his
+own doings, with all the arrogance of a young man speaking to a woman.
+
+From the beginning he told the tale, the I--I--I's flashing through the
+records as telegraph-poles fly past the traveller. Maisie listened and
+nodded her head. The histories of strife and privation did not move her
+a hair's-breadth. At the end of each canto he would conclude, 'And that
+gave me some notion of handling colour,' or light, or whatever it might
+be that he had set out to pursue and understand. He led her breathless
+across half the world, speaking as he had never spoken in his life
+before.
+
+And in the flood-tide of his exaltation there came upon him a great
+desire to pick up this maiden who nodded her head and said, 'I
+understand. Go on,'--to pick her up and carry her away with him, because
+she was Maisie, and because she understood, and because she was his
+right, and a woman to be desired above all women.
+
+Then he checked himself abruptly. 'And so I took all I wanted,' he said,
+'and I had to fight for it. Now you tell.'
+
+Maisie's tale was almost as gray as her dress. It covered years of
+patient toil backed by savage pride that would not be broken, though
+dealers laughed, and fogs delayed work, and Kami was unkind and even
+sarcastic, and girls in other studios were painfully polite. It had a
+few bright spots, in pictures accepted at provincial exhibitions, but
+it wound up with the oft repeated wail, 'And so you see, Dick, I had no
+success, though I worked so hard.'
+
+Then pity filled Dick. Even thus had Maisie spoken when she could not
+hit the breakwater, half an hour before she had kissed him. And that had
+happened yesterday.
+
+'Never mind,' he said. 'I'll tell you something, if you'll believe it.'
+The words were shaping themselves of their own accord. 'The whole thing,
+lock, stock, and barrel, isn't worth one big yellow sea-poppy below Fort
+Keeling.'
+
+Maisie flushed a little. 'It's all very well for you to talk, but you've
+had the success and I haven't.'
+
+'Let me talk, then. I know you'll understand. Maisie, dear, it sounds a
+bit absurd, but those ten years never existed, and I've come back again.
+It really is just the same. Can't you see? You're alone now and I'm
+alone.
+
+What's the use of worrying? Come to me instead, darling.'
+
+Maisie poked the gravel with her parasol. They were sitting on a bench.
+
+'I understand,' she said slowly. 'But I've got my work to do, and I must
+do it.'
+
+'Do it with me, then, dear. I won't interrupt.'
+
+'No, I couldn't. It's my work,--mine,--mine,--mine! I've been alone all
+my life in myself, and I'm not going to belong to anybody except myself.
+I remember things as well as you do, but that doesn't count. We were
+babies then, and we didn't know what was before us. Dick, don't be
+selfish. I think I see my way to a little success next year. Don't take
+it away from me.'
+
+'I beg your pardon, darling. It's my fault for speaking stupidly. I
+can't expect you to throw up all your life just because I'm back. I'll
+go to my own place and wait a little.'
+
+'But, Dick, I don't want you to--go--out of--my life, now you've just
+come back.'
+
+'I'm at your orders; forgive me.' Dick devoured the troubled little face
+with his eyes. There was triumph in them, because he could not conceive
+that Maisie should refuse sooner or later to love him, since he loved
+her.
+
+'It's wrong of me,' said Maisie, more slowly than before; 'it's wrong
+and selfish; but, oh, I've been so lonely! No, you misunderstand. Now
+I've seen you again,--it's absurd, but I want to keep you in my life.'
+
+'Naturally. We belong.'
+
+'We don't; but you always understood me, and there is so much in my work
+that you could help me in. You know things and the ways of doing things.
+You must.'
+
+'I do, I fancy, or else I don't know myself. Then you won't care to lose
+sight of me altogether, and--you want me to help you in your work?'
+
+'Yes; but remember, Dick, nothing will ever come of it. That's why I
+feel so selfish. Can't things stay as they are? I do want your help.'
+
+'You shall have it. But let's consider. I must see your pics first, and
+overhaul your sketches, and find out about your tendencies. You should
+see what the papers say about my tendencies! Then I'll give you good
+advice, and you shall paint according. Isn't that it, Maisie?'
+
+Again there was triumph in Dick's eye.
+
+'It's too good of you,--much too good. Because you are consoling
+yourself with what will never happen, and I know that, and yet I want to
+keep you. Don't blame me later, please.'
+
+'I'm going into the matter with my eyes open. Moreover the Queen can
+do no wrong. It isn't your selfishness that impresses me. It's your
+audacity in proposing to make use of me.'
+
+'Pooh! You're only Dick,--and a print-shop.'
+
+'Very good: that's all I am. But, Maisie, you believe, don't you, that I
+love you? I don't want you to have any false notions about brothers and
+sisters.'
+
+Maisie looked up for a moment and dropped her eyes.
+
+'It's absurd, but--I believe. I wish I could send you away before you
+get angry with me. But--but the girl that lives with me is red-haired,
+and an impressionist, and all our notions clash.'
+
+'So do ours, I think. Never mind. Three months from to-day we shall be
+laughing at this together.'
+
+Maisie shook her head mournfully. 'I knew you wouldn't understand, and
+it will only hurt you more when you find out. Look at my face, Dick, and
+tell me what you see.'
+
+They stood up and faced each other for a moment. The fog was gathering,
+and it stifled the roar of the traffic of London beyond the railings.
+Dick brought all his painfully acquired knowledge of faces to bear on
+the eyes, mouth, and chin underneath the black velvet toque.
+
+'It's the same Maisie, and it's the same me,' he said. 'We've both nice
+little wills of our own, and one or other of us has to be broken. Now
+about the future. I must come and see your pictures some day,--I suppose
+when the red-haired girl is on the premises.'
+
+'Sundays are my best times. You must come on Sundays. There are such
+heaps of things I want to talk about and ask your advice about. Now I
+must get back to work.'
+
+'Try to find out before next Sunday what I am,' said Dick. 'Don't take
+my word for anything I've told you. Good-bye, darling, and bless you.'
+
+Maisie stole away like a little gray mouse. Dick watched her till she
+was out of sight, but he did not hear her say to herself, very soberly,
+'I'm a wretch,--a horrid, selfish wretch. But it's Dick, and Dick will
+understand.'
+
+No one has yet explained what actually happens when an irresistible
+force meets the immovable post, though many have thought deeply, even as
+Dick thought. He tried to assure himself that Maisie would be led in
+a few weeks by his mere presence and discourse to a better way of
+thinking. Then he remembered much too distinctly her face and all that
+was written on it.
+
+'If I know anything of heads,' he said, 'there's everything in that face
+but love. I shall have to put that in myself; and that chin and mouth
+won't be won for nothing. But she's right. She knows what she wants, and
+she's going to get it. What insolence! Me! Of all the people in the wide
+world, to use me! But then she's Maisie. There's no getting over that
+fact; and it's good to see her again. This business must have been
+simmering at the back of my head for years.... She'll use me as I used
+Binat at Port Said.
+
+She's quite right. It will hurt a little. I shall have to see her every
+Sunday,--like a young man courting a housemaid. She's sure to come
+around; and yet--that mouth isn't a yielding mouth. I shall be wanting
+to kiss her all the time, and I shall have to look at her pictures,--I
+don't even know what sort of work she does yet,--and I shall have to
+talk about Art,--Woman's Art! Therefore, particularly and perpetually,
+damn all varieties of Art. It did me a good turn once, and now it's in
+my way. I'll go home and do some Art.'
+
+Half-way to the studio, Dick was smitten with a terrible thought. The
+figure of a solitary woman in the fog suggested it.
+
+'She's all alone in London, with a red-haired impressionist girl, who
+probably has the digestion of an ostrich. Most red-haired people have.
+
+Maisie's a bilious little body. They'll eat like lone women,--meals at
+all hours, and tea with all meals. I remember how the students in Paris
+used to pig along. She may fall ill at any minute, and I shan't be able
+to help.
+
+Whew! this is ten times worse than owning a wife.'
+
+Torpenhow entered the studio at dusk, and looked at Dick with eyes full
+of the austere love that springs up between men who have tugged at the
+same oar together and are yoked by custom and use and the intimacies of
+toil. This is a good love, and, since it allows, and even encourages,
+strife, recrimination, and brutal sincerity, does not die, but grows,
+and is proof against any absence and evil conduct.
+
+Dick was silent after he handed Torpenhow the filled pipe of council. He
+thought of Maisie and her possible needs. It was a new thing to think of
+anybody but Torpenhow, who could think for himself. Here at last was an
+outlet for that cash balance. He could adorn Maisie barbarically with
+jewelry,--a thick gold necklace round that little neck, bracelets
+upon the rounded arms, and rings of price upon her hands,--the cool,
+temperate, ringless hands that he had taken between his own. It was an
+absurd thought, for Maisie would not even allow him to put one ring on
+one finger, and she would laugh at golden trappings. It would be better
+to sit with her quietly in the dusk, his arm around her neck and her
+face on his shoulder, as befitted husband and wife. Torpenhow's boots
+creaked that night, and his strong voice jarred. Dick's brows contracted
+and he murmured an evil word because he had taken all his success as a
+right and part payment for past discomfort, and now he was checked in
+his stride by a woman who admitted all the success and did not instantly
+care for him.
+
+'I say, old man,' said Torpenhow, who had made one or two vain attempts
+at conversation, 'I haven't put your back up by anything I've said
+lately, have I?'
+
+'You! No. How could you?'
+
+'Liver out of order?'
+
+'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a liver. I'm only a bit
+worried about things in general. I suppose it's my soul.'
+
+'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a soul. What business have
+you with luxuries of that kind?'
+
+'It came of itself. Who's the man that says that we're all islands
+shouting lies to each other across seas of misunderstanding?'
+
+'He's right, whoever he is,--except about the misunderstanding. I don't
+think we could misunderstand each other.'
+
+The blue smoke curled back from the ceiling in clouds. Then Torpenhow,
+insinuatingly--'Dick, is it a woman?'
+
+'Be hanged if it's anything remotely resembling a woman; and if you
+begin to talk like that, I'll hire a red-brick studio with white paint
+trimmings, and begonias and petunias and blue Hungarias to play among
+three-and-sixpenny pot-palms, and I'll mount all my pics in aniline-dye
+plush plasters, and I'll invite every woman who maunders over what her
+guide-books tell her is Art, and you shall receive 'em, Torp,--in a
+snuff-brown velvet coat with yellow trousers and an orange tie. You'll
+like that?'
+
+'Too thin, Dick. A better man than you once denied with cursing and
+swearing. You've overdone it, just as he did. It's no business of mine,
+of course, but it's comforting to think that somewhere under the stars
+there's saving up for you a tremendous thrashing. Whether it'll come
+from heaven or earth, I don't know, but it's bound to come and break you
+up a little. You want hammering.'
+
+Dick shivered. 'All right,' said he. 'When this island is disintegrated,
+it will call for you.'
+
+'I shall come round the corner and help to disintegrate it some more.
+
+We're talking nonsense. Come along to a theatre.'
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+ 'And you may lead a thousand men,
+ Nor ever draw the rein,
+ But ere ye lead the Faery Queen
+ 'Twill burst your heart in twain.'
+
+ He has slipped his foot from the stirrup-bar,
+ The bridle from his hand,
+ And he is bound by hand and foot
+ To the Queen o' Faery-land.
+
+ Sir Hoggie and the Fairies.
+SOME weeks later, on a very foggy Sunday, Dick was returning across the
+Park to his studio. 'This,' he said, 'is evidently the thrashing that
+Torp meant. It hurts more than I expected; but the Queen can do no
+wrong; and she certainly has some notion of drawing.'
+
+He had just finished a Sunday visit to Maisie,--always under the green
+eyes of the red-haired impressionist girl, whom he learned to hate
+at sight,--and was tingling with a keen sense of shame. Sunday after
+Sunday, putting on his best clothes, he had walked over to the untidy
+house north of the Park, first to see Maisie's pictures, and then to
+criticise and advise upon them as he realised that they were productions
+on which advice would not be wasted. Sunday after Sunday, and his love
+grew with each visit, he had been compelled to cram his heart back from
+between his lips when it prompted him to kiss Maisie several times and
+very much indeed. Sunday after Sunday, the head above the heart had
+warned him that Maisie was not yet attainable, and that it would be
+better to talk as connectedly as possible upon the mysteries of the
+craft that was all in all to her. Therefore it was his fate to endure
+weekly torture in the studio built out over the clammy back garden of a
+frail stuffy little villa where nothing was ever in its right place and
+nobody ever called,--to endure and to watch Maisie moving to and fro
+with the teacups. He abhorred tea, but, since it gave him a little
+longer time in her presence, he drank it devoutly, and the red-haired
+girl sat in an untidy heap and eyed him without speaking. She was always
+watching him.
+
+Once, and only once, when she had left the studio, Maisie showed him
+an album that held a few poor cuttings from provincial papers,--the
+briefest of hurried notes on some of her pictures sent to outlying
+exhibitions. Dick stooped and kissed the paint-smudged thumb on the open
+page. 'Oh, my love, my love,' he muttered, 'do you value these things?
+Chuck 'em into the waste-paper basket!'
+
+'Not till I get something better,' said Maisie, shutting the book.
+
+Then Dick, moved by no respect for his public and a very deep regard for
+the maiden, did deliberately propose, in order to secure more of these
+coveted cuttings, that he should paint a picture which Maisie should
+sign.
+
+'That's childish,' said Maisie, 'and I didn't think it of you. It must
+be my work. Mine,--mine,--mine!'
+
+'Go and design decorative medallions for rich brewers' houses. You are
+thoroughly good at that.' Dick was sick and savage.
+
+'Better things than medallions, Dick,' was the answer, in tones that
+recalled a gray-eyed atom's fearless speech to Mrs. Jennett. Dick would
+have abased himself utterly, but that other girl trailed in.
+
+Next Sunday he laid at Maisie's feet small gifts of pencils that could
+almost draw of themselves and colours in whose permanence he believed,
+and he was ostentatiously attentive to the work in hand. It demanded,
+among other things, an exposition of the faith that was in him.
+
+Torpenhow's hair would have stood on end had he heard the fluency with
+which Dick preached his own gospel of Art.
+
+A month before, Dick would have been equally astonished; but it was
+Maisie's will and pleasure, and he dragged his words together to make
+plain to her comprehension all that had been hidden to himself of the
+whys and wherefores of work. There is not the least difficulty in doing
+a thing if you only know how to do it; the trouble is to explain your
+method.
+
+'I could put this right if I had a brush in my hand,' said Dick,
+despairingly, over the modelling of a chin that Maisie complained would
+not 'look flesh,'--it was the same chin that she had scraped out with
+the palette knife,--'but I find it almost impossible to teach you.
+There's a queer grim, Dutch touch about your painting that I like; but
+I've a notion that you're weak in drawing. You foreshorten as though you
+never used the model, and you've caught Kami's pasty way of dealing with
+flesh in shadow. Then, again, though you don't know it yourself, you
+shirk hard work. Suppose you spend some of your time on line alone. Line
+doesn't allow of shirking. Oils do, and three square inches of flashy,
+tricky stuff in the corner of a pic sometimes carry a bad thing off,--as
+I know. That's immoral. Do line-work for a little while, and then I can
+tell more about your powers, as old Kami used to say.'
+
+Maisie protested; she did not care for the pure line.
+
+'I know,' said Dick. 'You want to do your fancy heads with a bunch of
+flowers at the base of the neck to hide bad modelling.' The red-haired
+girl laughed a little. 'You want to do landscapes with cattle knee-deep
+in grass to hide bad drawing. You want to do a great deal more than
+you can do. You have sense of colour, but you want form. Colour's a
+gift,--put it aside and think no more about it,--but form you can be
+drilled into.
+
+Now, all your fancy heads--and some of them are very good--will keep you
+exactly where you are. With line you must go forward or backward, and it
+will show up all your weaknesses.'
+
+'But other people----' began Maisie.
+
+'You mustn't mind what other people do. If their souls were your soul,
+it would be different. You stand and fall by your own work, remember,
+and it's waste of time to think of any one else in this battle.'
+
+Dick paused, and the longing that had been so resolutely put away came
+back into his eyes. He looked at Maisie, and the look asked as plainly
+as words, Was it not time to leave all this barren wilderness of canvas
+and counsel and join hands with Life and Love?
+
+Maisie assented to the new programme of schooling so adorably that Dick
+could hardly restrain himself from picking her up then and there and
+carrying her off to the nearest registrar's office. It was the implicit
+obedience to the spoken word and the blank indifference to the unspoken
+desire that baffled and buffeted his soul. He held authority in that
+house,--authority limited, indeed, to one-half of one afternoon in
+seven, but very real while it lasted. Maisie had learned to appeal
+to him on many subjects, from the proper packing of pictures to the
+condition of a smoky chimney. The red-haired girl never consulted him
+about anything.
+
+On the other hand, she accepted his appearances without protest, and
+watched him always. He discovered that the meals of the establishment
+were irregular and fragmentary. They depended chiefly on tea, pickles,
+and biscuit, as he had suspected from the beginning. The girls were
+supposed to market week and week about, but they lived, with the help of
+a charwoman, as casually as the young ravens. Maisie spent most of her
+income on models, and the other girl revelled in apparatus as refined
+as her work was rough. Armed with knowledge, dear-bought from the Docks,
+Dick warned Maisie that the end of semi-starvation meant the crippling
+of power to work, which was considerably worse than death.
+
+Maisie took the warning, and gave more thought to what she ate and
+drank. When his trouble returned upon him, as it generally did in the
+long winter twilights, the remembrance of that little act of domestic
+authority and his coercion with a hearth-brush of the smoky drawing-room
+chimney stung Dick like a whip-lash.
+
+He conceived that this memory would be the extreme of his sufferings,
+till one Sunday, the red-haired girl announced that she would make a
+study of Dick's head, and that he would be good enough to sit still,
+and--quite as an afterthought--look at Maisie. He sat, because he could
+not well refuse, and for the space of half an hour he reflected on all
+the people in the past whom he had laid open for the purposes of his
+own craft. He remembered Binat most distinctly,--that Binat who had once
+been an artist and talked about degradation.
+
+It was the merest monochrome roughing in of a head, but it presented the
+dumb waiting, the longing, and, above all, the hopeless enslavement of
+the man, in a spirit of bitter mockery.
+
+'I'll buy it,' said Dick, promptly, 'at your own price.'
+
+'My price is too high, but I dare say you'll be as grateful if----' The
+wet sketch, fluttered from the girl's hand and fell into the ashes of
+the studio stove. When she picked it up it was hopelessly smudged.
+
+'Oh, it's all spoiled!' said Maisie. 'And I never saw it. Was it like?'
+
+'Thank you,' said Dick under his breath to the red-haired girl, and he
+removed himself swiftly.
+
+'How that man hates me!' said the girl. 'And how he loves you, Maisie!'
+
+'What nonsense? I knew Dick's very fond of me, but he had his work to
+do, and I have mine.'
+
+'Yes, he is fond of you, and I think he knows there is something in
+impressionism, after all. Maisie, can't you see?'
+
+'See? See what?'
+
+'Nothing; only, I know that if I could get any man to look at me as that
+man looks at you, I'd--I don't know what I'd do. But he hates me. Oh,
+how he hates me!'
+
+She was not altogether correct. Dick's hatred was tempered with
+gratitude for a few moments, and then he forgot the girl entirely. Only
+the sense of shame remained, and he was nursing it across the Park
+in the fog. 'There'll be an explosion one of these days,' he said
+wrathfully. 'But it isn't Maisie's fault; she's right, quite right, as
+far as she knows, and I can't blame her. This business has been going on
+for three months nearly.
+
+Three months!--and it cost me ten years' knocking about to get at the
+notion, the merest raw notion, of my work. That's true; but then I
+didn't have pins, drawing-pins, and palette-knives, stuck into me every
+Sunday.
+
+Oh, my little darling, if ever I break you, somebody will have a very
+bad time of it. No, she won't. I'd be as big a fool about her as I
+am now. I'll poison that red-haired girl on my wedding-day,--she's
+unwholesome,--and now I'll pass on these present bad times to Torp.'
+
+Torpenhow had been moved to lecture Dick more than once lately on the
+sin of levity, and Dick had listened and replied not a word. In the weeks
+between the first few Sundays of his discipline he had flung himself
+savagely into his work, resolved that Maisie should at least know the
+full stretch of his powers. Then he had taught Maisie that she must
+not pay the least attention to any work outside her own, and Maisie had
+obeyed him all too well. She took his counsels, but was not interested
+in his pictures.
+
+'Your things smell of tobacco and blood,' she said once. 'Can't you do
+anything except soldiers?'
+
+'I could do a head of you that would startle you,' thought
+Dick,--this was before the red-haired girl had brought him under
+the guillotine,--but he only said, 'I am very sorry,' and harrowed
+Torpenhow's soul that evening with blasphemies against Art. Later,
+insensibly and to a large extent against his own will, he ceased to
+interest himself in his own work.
+
+For Maisie's sake, and to soothe the self-respect that it seemed to him
+he lost each Sunday, he would not consciously turn out bad stuff, but,
+since Maisie did not care even for his best, it were better not to
+do anything at all save wait and mark time between Sunday and Sunday.
+Torpenhow was disgusted as the weeks went by fruitless, and then
+attacked him one Sunday evening when Dick felt utterly exhausted after
+three hours' biting self-restraint in Maisie's presence. There was
+Language, and Torpenhow withdrew to consult the Nilghai, who had come in
+to talk continental politics.
+
+'Bone-idle, is he? Careless, and touched in the temper?' said the
+Nilghai.
+
+'It isn't worth worrying over. Dick is probably playing the fool with a
+woman.'
+
+'Isn't that bad enough?'
+
+'No. She may throw him out of gear and knock his work to pieces for
+a while. She may even turn up here some day and make a scene on the
+staircase: one never knows. But until Dick speaks of his own accord you
+had better not touch him. He is no easy-tempered man to handle.'
+
+'No; I wish he were. He is such an aggressive, cocksure, you-be-damned
+fellow.'
+
+'He'll get that knocked out of him in time. He must learn that he can't
+storm up and down the world with a box of moist tubes and a slick brush.
+
+You're fond of him?'
+
+'I'd take any punishment that's in store for him if I could; but the
+worst of it is, no man can save his brother.'
+
+'No, and the worser of it is, there is no discharge in this war. Dick
+must learn his lesson like the rest of us. Talking of war, there'll be
+trouble in the Balkans in the spring.'
+
+'That trouble is long coming. I wonder if we could drag Dick out there
+when it comes off?'
+
+Dick entered the room soon afterwards, and the question was put to him.
+
+'Not good enough,' he said shortly. 'I'm too comf'y where I am.'
+
+'Surely you aren't taking all the stuff in the papers seriously?' said
+the Nilghai. 'Your vogue will be ended in less than six months,--the
+public will know your touch and go on to something new,--and where will
+you be then?'
+
+'Here, in England.'
+
+'When you might be doing decent work among us out there? Nonsense! I
+shall go, the Keneu will be there, Torp will be there, Cassavetti will
+be there, and the whole lot of us will be there, and we shall have as
+much as ever we can do, with unlimited fighting and the chance for you
+of seeing things that would make the reputation of three Verestchagins.'
+
+'Um!' said Dick, pulling at his pipe.
+
+'You prefer to stay here and imagine that all the world is gaping at
+your pictures? Just think how full an average man's life is of his own
+pursuits and pleasures. When twenty thousand of him find time to look
+up between mouthfuls and grunt something about something they aren't
+the least interested in, the net result is called fame, reputation, or
+notoriety, according to the taste and fancy of the speller my lord.'
+
+'I know that as well as you do. Give me credit for a little gumption.'
+
+'Be hanged if I do!'
+
+'Be hanged, then; you probably will be,--for a spy, by excited Turks.
+
+Heigh-ho! I'm weary, dead weary, and virtue has gone out of me.' Dick
+dropped into a chair, and was fast asleep in a minute.
+
+'That's a bad sign,' said the Nilghai, in an undertone.
+
+Torpenhow picked the pipe from the waistcoat where it was beginning to
+burn, and put a pillow behind the head. 'We can't help; we can't help,'
+he said. 'It's a good ugly sort of old cocoanut, and I'm fond of it.
+There's the scar of the wipe he got when he was cut over in the square.'
+
+'Shouldn't wonder if that has made him a trifle mad.'
+
+'I should. He's a most businesslike madman.'
+
+Then Dick began to snore furiously.
+
+'Oh, here, no affection can stand this sort of thing. Wake up, Dick, and
+go and sleep somewhere else, if you intend to make a noise about it.'
+
+'When a cat has been out on the tiles all night,' said the Nilghai, in
+his beard, 'I notice that she usually sleeps all day. This is natural
+history.'
+
+Dick staggered away rubbing his eyes and yawning. In the night-watches
+he was overtaken with an idea, so simple and so luminous that he
+wondered he had never conceived it before. It was full of craft. He
+would seek Maisie on a week-day,--would suggest an excursion, and would
+take her by train to Fort Keeling, over the very ground that they two
+had trodden together ten years ago.
+
+'As a general rule,' he explained to his chin-lathered reflection in the
+morning, 'it isn't safe to cross an old trail twice. Things remind one
+of things, and a cold wind gets up, and you feel sad; but this is an
+exception to every rule that ever was. I'll go to Maisie at once.'
+
+Fortunately, the red-haired girl was out shopping when he arrived, and
+Maisie in a paint-spattered blouse was warring with her canvas. She was
+not pleased to see him; for week-day visits were a stretch of the bond;
+and it needed all his courage to explain his errand.
+
+'I know you've been working too hard,' he concluded, with an air of
+authority. 'If you do that, you'll break down. You had much better
+come.'
+
+'Where?' said Maisie, wearily. She had been standing before her easel
+too long, and was very tired.
+
+'Anywhere you please. We'll take a train to-morrow and see where it
+stops. We'll have lunch somewhere, and I'll bring you back in the
+evening.'
+
+'If there's a good working light to-morrow, I lose a day.' Maisie
+balanced the heavy white chestnut palette irresolutely.
+
+Dick bit back an oath that was hurrying to his lips. He had not yet
+learned patience with the maiden to whom her work was all in all.
+
+'You'll lose ever so many more, dear, if you use every hour of working
+light. Overwork's only murderous idleness. Don't be unreasonable. I'll
+call for you to-morrow after breakfast early.'
+
+'But surely you are going to ask----'
+
+'No, I am not. I want you and nobody else. Besides, she hates me as much
+as I hate her. She won't care to come. To-morrow, then; and pray that we
+get sunshine.'
+
+Dick went away delighted, and by consequence did no work whatever.
+
+He strangled a wild desire to order a special train, but bought a great
+gray kangaroo cloak lined with glossy black marten, and then retired
+into himself to consider things.
+
+'I'm going out for the day to-morrow with Dick,' said Maisie to the
+red-haired girl when the latter returned, tired, from marketing in the
+Edgware road.
+
+'He deserves it. I shall have the studio floor thoroughly scrubbed while
+you're away. It's very dirty.'
+
+Maisie had enjoyed no sort of holiday for months and looked forward to
+the little excitement, but not without misgivings.
+
+'There's nobody nicer than Dick when he talks sensibly, she though,
+but I'm sure he'll be silly and worry me, and I'm sure I can't tell him
+anything he'd like to hear. If he'd only be sensible, I should like him
+so much better.'
+
+Dick's eyes were full of joy when he made his appearance next morning
+and saw Maisie, gray-ulstered and black-velvet-hatted, standing in the
+hallway. Palaces of marble, and not sordid imitation of grained wood,
+were surely the fittest background for such a divinity. The red-haired
+girl drew her into the studio for a moment and kissed her hurriedly.
+
+Maisie's eyebrows climbed to the top of her forehead; she was altogether
+unused to these demonstrations. 'Mind my hat,' she said, hurrying away,
+and ran down the steps to Dick waiting by the hansom.
+
+'Are you quite warm enough! Are you sure you wouldn't like some more
+breakfast? Put the cloak over your knees.'
+
+'I'm quite comf'y, thanks. Where are we going, Dick? Oh, do stop singing
+like that. People will think we're mad.'
+
+'Let 'em think,--if the exertion doesn't kill them. They don't know who
+we are, and I'm sure I don't care who they are. My faith, Maisie, you're
+looking lovely!'
+
+Maisie stared directly in front of her and did not reply. The wind of a
+keen clear winter morning had put colour into her cheeks. Overhead,
+the creamy-yellow smoke-clouds were thinning away one by one against a
+pale-blue sky, and the improvident sparrows broke off from water-spout
+committees and cab-rank cabals to clamour of the coming of spring.
+
+'It will be lovely weather in the country,' said Dick.
+
+'But where are we going?'
+
+'Wait and see.'
+
+The stopped at Victoria, and Dick sought tickets. For less than half the
+fraction of an instant it occurred to Maisie, comfortably settled by the
+waiting-room fire, that it was much more pleasant to send a man to the
+booking-office than to elbow one's own way through the crowd. Dick put
+her into a Pullman,--solely on account of the warmth there; and she
+regarded the extravagance with grave scandalised eyes as the train moved
+out into the country.
+
+'I wish I knew where we are going,' she repeated for the twentieth time.
+
+The name of a well-remembered station flashed by, towards the end of the
+run, and Maisie was delighted.
+
+'Oh, Dick, you villain!'
+
+'Well, I thought you might like to see the place again. You haven't been
+here since the old times, have you?'
+
+'No. I never cared to see Mrs. Jennett again; and she was all that was
+ever there.'
+
+'Not quite. Look out a minute. There's the windmill above the
+potato-fields; they haven't built villas there yet; d'you remember when
+I shut you up in it?'
+
+'Yes. How she beat you for it! I never told it was you.'
+
+'She guessed. I jammed a stick under the door and told you that I was
+burying Amomma alive in the potatoes, and you believed me. You had a
+trusting nature in those days.'
+
+They laughed and leaned to look out, identifying ancient landmarks with
+many reminiscences. Dick fixed his weather eye on the curve of Maisie's
+cheek, very near his own, and watched the blood rise under the clear
+skin. He congratulated himself upon his cunning, and looked that the
+evening would bring him a great reward.
+
+When the train stopped they went out to look at an old town with new
+eyes. First, but from a distance, they regarded the house of Mrs.
+Jennett.
+
+'Suppose she should come out now, what would you do?' said Dick, with
+mock terror.
+
+'I should make a face.'
+
+'Show, then,' said Dick, dropping into the speech of childhood.
+
+Maisie made that face in the direction of the mean little villa, and
+Dick laughed.
+
+'"This is disgraceful,"' said Maisie, mimicking Mrs. Jennett's tone.
+
+'"Maisie, you run in at once, and learn the collect, gospel, and epistle
+for the next three Sundays. After all I've taught you, too, and three
+helps every Sunday at dinner! Dick's always leading you into mischief.
+If you aren't a gentleman, Dick, you might at least--"'
+
+The sentence ended abruptly. Maisie remembered when it had last been
+used.
+
+'"Try to behave like one,"' said Dick, promptly. 'Quite right. Now we'll
+get some lunch and go on to Fort Keeling,--unless you'd rather drive
+there?'
+
+'We must walk, out of respect to the place. How little changed it all
+is!'
+
+They turned in the direction of the sea through unaltered streets,
+and the influence of old things lay upon them. Presently they passed
+a confectioner's shop much considered in the days when their joint
+pocket-money amounted to a shilling a week.
+
+'Dick, have you any pennies?' said Maisie, half to herself.
+
+'Only three; and if you think you're going to have two of 'em to buy
+peppermints with, you're wrong. She says peppermints aren't ladylike.'
+
+Again they laughed, and again the colour came into Maisie's cheeks as
+the blood boiled through Dick's heart. After a large lunch they went
+down to the beach and to Fort Keeling across the waste, wind-bitten land
+that no builder had thought it worth his while to defile. The winter
+breeze came in from the sea and sang about their ears.
+
+'Maisie,' said Dick, 'your nose is getting a crude Prussian blue at the
+tip.
+
+I'll race you as far as you please for as much as you please.'
+
+She looked round cautiously, and with a laugh set off, swiftly as the
+ulster allowed, till she was out of breath.
+
+'We used to run miles,' she panted. 'It's absurd that we can't run now.'
+
+'Old age, dear. This it is to get fat and sleek in town. When I wished
+to pull your hair you generally ran for three miles, shrieking at the
+top of your voice. I ought to know, because those shrieks of yours were
+meant to call up Mrs. Jennett with a cane and----'
+
+'Dick, I never got you a beating on purpose in my life.'
+
+'No, of course you never did. Good heavens! look at the sea.'
+
+'Why, it's the same as ever!' said Maisie.
+
+Torpenhow had gathered from Mr. Beeton that Dick, properly dressed and
+shaved, had left the house at half-past eight in the morning with a
+travelling-rug over his arm. The Nilghai rolled in at mid-day for chess
+and polite conversation.
+
+'It's worse than anything I imagined,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Oh, the everlasting Dick, I suppose! You fuss over him like a hen with
+one chick. Let him run riot if he thinks it'll amuse him. You can whip a
+young pup off feather, but you can't whip a young man.'
+
+'It isn't a woman. It's one woman; and it's a girl.'
+
+'Where's your proof?'
+
+'He got up and went out at eight this morning,--got up in the middle of
+the night, by Jove! a thing he never does except when he's on service.
+
+Even then, remember, we had to kick him out of his blankets before the
+fight began at El-Maghrib. It's disgusting.'
+
+'It looks odd; but maybe he's decided to buy a horse at last. He might
+get up for that, mightn't he?'
+
+'Buy a blazing wheelbarrow! He'd have told us if there was a horse in
+the wind. It's a girl.'
+
+'Don't be certain. Perhaps it's only a married woman.'
+
+'Dick has some sense of humour, if you haven't. Who gets up in the gray
+dawn to call on another man's wife? It's a girl.'
+
+'Let it be a girl, then. She may teach him that there's somebody else in
+the world besides himself.'
+
+'She'll spoil his hand. She'll waste his time, and she'll marry him, and
+ruin his work for ever. He'll be a respectable married man before we can
+stop him, and--he'll ever go on the long trail again.'
+
+'All quite possible, but the earth won't spin the other way when that
+happens.... No! ho! I'd give something to see Dick "go wooing with the
+boys." Don't worry about it. These things be with Allah, and we can only
+look on. Get the chessmen.'
+
+The red-haired girl was lying down in her own room, staring at the
+ceiling. The footsteps of people on the pavement sounded, as they grew
+indistinct in the distance, like a many-times-repeated kiss that was
+all one long kiss. Her hands were by her side, and they opened and shut
+savagely from time to time.
+
+The charwoman in charge of the scrubbing of the studio knocked at her
+door: 'Beg y' pardon, miss, but in cleanin' of a floor there's two,
+not to say three, kind of soap, which is yaller, an' mottled, an'
+disinfectink.
+
+Now, jist before I took my pail into the passage I thought it would be
+pre'aps jest as well if I was to come up 'ere an' ask you what sort of
+soap you was wishful that I should use on them boards. The yaller soap,
+miss----'
+
+There was nothing in the speech to have caused the paroxysm of fury
+that drove the red-haired girl into the middle of the room, almost
+shouting--'Do you suppose I care what you use? Any kind will do!--any
+kind!'
+
+The woman fled, and the red-haired girl looked at her own reflection in
+the glass for an instant and covered her face with her hands. It was as
+though she had shouted some shameless secret aloud.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+ Roses red and roses white
+ Plucked I for my love's delight.
+
+ She would none of all my posies,--
+ Bade me gather her blue roses.
+
+ Half the world I wandered through,
+ Seeking where such flowers grew;
+ Half the world unto my quest
+ Answered but with laugh and jest.
+
+ It may be beyond the grave
+ She shall find what she would have.
+
+ Mine was but an idle quest,--
+ Roses white and red are best!--Blue Roses
+THE SEA had not changed. Its waters were low on the mud-banks, and
+the Marazion Bell-buoy clanked and swung in the tide-way. On the white
+beach-sand dried stumps of sea-poppy shivered and chattered.
+
+'I don't see the old breakwater,' said Maisie, under her breath.
+
+'Let's be thankful that we have as much as we have. I don't believe
+they've mounted a single new gun on the fort since we were here. Come
+and look.'
+
+They came to the glacis of Fort Keeling, and sat down in a nook
+sheltered from the wind under the tarred throat of a forty-pounder
+cannon.
+
+'Now, if Ammoma were only here!' said Maisie.
+
+For a long time both were silent. Then Dick took Maisie's hand and
+called her by her name.
+
+She shook her head and looked out to sea.
+
+'Maisie, darling, doesn't it make any difference?'
+
+'No!' between clenched teeth. 'I'd--I'd tell you if it did; but it
+doesn't, Oh, Dick, please be sensible.'
+
+'Don't you think that it ever will?'
+
+'No, I'm sure it won't.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+Maisie rested her chin on her hand, and, still regarding the sea, spoke
+hurriedly--'I know what you want perfectly well, but I can't give it to
+you, Dick. It isn't my fault; indeed, it isn't. If I felt that I
+could care for any one----But I don't feel that I care. I simply don't
+understand what the feeling means.'
+
+'Is that true, dear?'
+
+'You've been very good to me, Dickie; and the only way I can pay you
+back is by speaking the truth. I daren't tell a fib. I despise myself
+quite enough as it is.'
+
+'What in the world for?'
+
+'Because--because I take everything that you give me and I give you
+nothing in return. It's mean and selfish of me, and whenever I think of
+it it worries me.'
+
+'Understand once for all, then, that I can manage my own affairs, and if
+I choose to do anything you aren't to blame. You haven't a single thing
+to reproach yourself with, darling.'
+
+'Yes, I have, and talking only makes it worse.'
+
+'Then don't talk about it.'
+
+'How can I help myself? If you find me alone for a minute you are always
+talking about it; and when you aren't you look it. You don't know how I
+despise myself sometimes.'
+
+'Great goodness!' said Dick, nearly jumping to his feet. 'Speak the
+truth now, Maisie, if you never speak it again! Do I--does this worrying
+bore you?'
+
+'No. It does not.'
+
+'You'd tell me if it did?'
+
+'I should let you know, I think.'
+
+'Thank you. The other thing is fatal. But you must learn to forgive
+a man when he's in love. He's always a nuisance. You must have known
+that?'
+
+Maisie did not consider the last question worth answering, and Dick was
+forced to repeat it.
+
+'There were other men, of course. They always worried just when I was in
+the middle of my work, and wanted me to listen to them.'
+
+'Did you listen?'
+
+'At first; and they couldn't understand why I didn't care. And they used
+to praise my pictures; and I thought they meant it. I used to be proud
+of the praise, and tell Kami, and--I shall never forget--once Kami
+laughed at me.'
+
+'You don't like being laughed at, Maisie, do you?'
+
+'I hate it. I never laugh at other people unless--unless they do bad
+work.
+
+Dick, tell me honestly what you think of my pictures generally,--of
+everything of mine that you've seen.'
+
+'"Honest, honest, and honest over!"' quoted Dick from a catchword of
+long ago. 'Tell me what Kami always says.'
+
+Maisie hesitated. 'He--he says that there is feeling in them.'
+
+'How dare you tell me a fib like that? Remember, I was under Kami for
+two years. I know exactly what he says.'
+
+'It isn't a fib.'
+
+'It's worse; it's a half-truth. Kami says, when he puts his head on one
+side,--so,--"Il y a du sentiment, mais il n'y a pas de parti pris."' He
+rolled the r threateningly, as Kami used to do.
+
+'Yes, that is what he says; and I'm beginning to think that he is
+right.'
+
+'Certainly he is.' Dick admitted that two people in the world could do
+and say no wrong. Kami was the man.
+
+'And now you say the same thing. It's so disheartening.'
+
+'I'm sorry, but you asked me to speak the truth. Besides, I love you
+too much to pretend about your work. It's strong, it's patient
+sometimes,--not always,--and sometimes there's power in it, but there's
+no special reason why it should be done at all. At least, that's how it
+strikes me.'
+
+'There's no special reason why anything in the world should ever be
+done. You know that as well as I do. I only want success.'
+
+'You're going the wrong way to get it, then. Hasn't Kami ever told you
+so?'
+
+'Don't quote Kami to me. I want to know what you think. My work's bad,
+to begin with.'
+
+'I didn't say that, and I don't think it.'
+
+'It's amateurish, then.'
+
+'That it most certainly is not. You're a work-woman, darling, to your
+boot-heels, and I respect you for that.'
+
+'You don't laugh at me behind my back?'
+
+'No, dear. You see, you are more to me than any one else. Put this cloak
+thing round you, or you'll get chilled.'
+
+Maisie wrapped herself in the soft marten skins, turning the gray
+kangaroo fur to the outside.
+
+'This is delicious,' she said, rubbing her chin thoughtfully along the
+fur.
+
+'Well? Why am I wrong in trying to get a little success?'
+
+'Just because you try. Don't you understand, darling? Good work has
+nothing to do with--doesn't belong to--the person who does it. It's put
+into him or her from outside.'
+
+'But how does that affect----'
+
+'Wait a minute. All we can do is to learn how to do our work, to be
+masters of our materials instead of servants, and never to be afraid of
+anything.'
+
+'I understand that.'
+
+'Everything else comes from outside ourselves. Very good. If we sit down
+quietly to work out notions that are sent to us, we may or we may not
+do something that isn't bad. A great deal depends on being master of the
+bricks and mortar of the trade. But the instant we begin to think
+about success and the effect of our work--to play with one eye on the
+gallery--we lose power and touch and everything else. At least that's
+how I have found it. Instead of being quiet and giving every power
+you possess to your work, you're fretting over something which you can
+neither help nor hinder by a minute. See?'
+
+'It's so easy for you to talk in that way. People like what you do.
+Don't you ever think about the gallery?'
+
+'Much too often; but I'm always punished for it by loss of power. It's
+as simple as the Rule of Three. If we make light of our work by using
+it for our own ends, our work will make light of us, and, as we're the
+weaker, we shall suffer.'
+
+'I don't treat my work lightly. You know that it's everything to me.'
+
+'Of course; but, whether you realise it or not, you give two strokes
+for yourself to one for your work. It isn't your fault, darling. I do
+exactly the same thing, and know that I'm doing it. Most of the French
+schools, and all the schools here, drive the students to work for their
+own credit, and for the sake of their pride. I was told that all
+the world was interested in my work, and everybody at Kami's talked
+turpentine, and I honestly believed that the world needed elevating and
+influencing, and all manner of impertinences, by my brushes. By Jove, I
+actually believed that! When my little head was bursting with a notion
+that I couldn't handle because I hadn't sufficient knowledge of my
+craft, I used to run about wondering at my own magnificence and getting
+ready to astonish the world.'
+
+'But surely one can do that sometimes?'
+
+'Very seldom with malice aforethought, darling. And when it's done it's
+such a tiny thing, and the world's so big, and all but a millionth part
+of it doesn't care. Maisie, come with me and I'll show you something of
+the size of the world. One can no more avoid working than eating,--that
+goes on by itself,--but try to see what you are working for. I know such
+little heavens that I could take you to,--islands tucked away under the
+Line.
+
+You sight them after weeks of crashing through water as black as black
+marble because it's so deep, and you sit in the fore-chains day after
+day and see the sun rise almost afraid because the sea's so lonely.'
+
+'Who is afraid?--you, or the sun?'
+
+'The sun, of course. And there are noises under the sea, and sounds
+overhead in a clear sky. Then you find your island alive with hot moist
+orchids that make mouths at you and can do everything except talk.
+
+There's a waterfall in it three hundred feet high, just like a sliver of
+green jade laced with silver; and millions of wild bees live up in the
+rocks; and you can hear the fat cocoanuts falling from the palms; and
+you order an ivory-white servant to sling you a long yellow hammock with
+tassels on it like ripe maize, and you put up your feet and hear the
+bees hum and the water fall till you go to sleep.'
+
+'Can one work there?'
+
+'Certainly. One must do something always. You hang your canvas up in a
+palm tree and let the parrots criticise. When they scuffle you heave a
+ripe custard-apple at them, and it bursts in a lather of cream. There
+are hundreds of places. Come and see them.'
+
+'I don't quite like that place. It sounds lazy. Tell me another.'
+
+'What do you think of a big, red, dead city built of red sandstone,
+with raw green aloes growing between the stones, lying out neglected on
+honey-coloured sands? There are forty dead kings there, Maisie, each in
+a gorgeous tomb finer than all the others. You look at the palaces and
+streets and shops and tanks, and think that men must live there,
+till you find a wee gray squirrel rubbing its nose all alone in the
+market-place, and a jewelled peacock struts out of a carved doorway and
+spreads its tail against a marble screen as fine pierced as point-lace.
+Then a monkey--a little black monkey--walks through the main square to
+get a drink from a tank forty feet deep. He slides down the creepers to
+the water's edge, and a friend holds him by the tail, in case he should
+fall in.'
+
+'Is that all true?'
+
+'I have been there and seen. Then evening comes, and the lights change
+till it's just as though you stood in the heart of a king-opal. A little
+before sundown, as punctually as clockwork, a big bristly wild boar,
+with all his family following, trots through the city gate, churning the
+foam on his tusks. You climb on the shoulder of a blind black stone god
+and watch that pig choose himself a palace for the night and stump in
+wagging his tail. Then the night-wind gets up, and the sands move, and
+you hear the desert outside the city singing, "Now I lay me down to
+sleep," and everything is dark till the moon rises. Maisie, darling,
+come with me and see what the world is really like. It's very lovely,
+and it's very horrible,--but I won't let you see anything horrid,--and
+it doesn't care for your life or mine for pictures or anything else
+except doing its own work and making love. Come, and I'll show you how
+to brew sangaree, and sling a hammock, and--oh, thousands of things, and
+you'll see for yourself what colour means, and we'll find out together
+what love means, and then, maybe, we shall be allowed to do some good
+work. Come away!'
+
+'Why?' said Maisie.
+
+'How can you do anything until you have seen everything, or as much as
+you can? And besides, darling, I love you. Come along with me. You
+have no business here; you don't belong to this place; you're half a
+gipsy,--your face tells that; and I--even the smell of open water makes
+me restless. Come across the sea and be happy!'
+
+He had risen to his feet, and stood in the shadow of the gun, looking
+down at the girl. The very short winter afternoon had worn away, and,
+before they knew, the winter moon was walking the untroubled sea. Long
+ruled lines of silver showed where a ripple of the rising tide was
+turning over the mud-banks. The wind had dropped, and in the intense
+stillness they could hear a donkey cropping the frosty grass many yards
+away. A faint beating, like that of a muffled drum, came out of the
+moon-haze.
+
+'What's that?' said Maisie, quickly. 'It sounds like a heart beating.
+
+Where is it?'
+
+Dick was so angry at this sudden wrench to his pleadings that he could
+not trust himself to speak, and in this silence caught the sound. Maisie
+from her seat under the gun watched him with a certain amount of fear.
+
+She wished so much that he would be sensible and cease to worry her with
+over-sea emotion that she both could and could not understand. She was
+not prepared, however, for the change in his face as he listened.
+
+'It's a steamer,' he said,--'a twin-screw steamer, by the beat. I can't
+make her out, but she must be standing very close in-shore. Ah!' as the
+red of a rocket streaked the haze, 'she's standing in to signal before
+she clears the Channel.'
+
+'Is it a wreck?' said Maisie, to whom these words were as Greek.
+
+Dick's eyes were turned to the sea. 'Wreck! What nonsense! She's only
+reporting herself. Red rocket forward--there's a green light aft now,
+and two red rockets from the bridge.'
+
+'What does that mean?'
+
+'It's the signal of the Cross Keys Line running to Australia. I wonder
+which steamer it is.' The note of his voice had changed; he seemed to
+be talking to himself, and Maisie did not approve of it. The moonlight
+broke the haze for a moment, touching the black sides of a long steamer
+working down Channel. 'Four masts and three funnels--she's in deep
+draught, too. That must be the Barralong, or the Bhutia. No, the Bhutia
+has a clopper bow. It's the Barralong, to Australia. She'll lift the
+Southern Cross in a week,--lucky old tub!--oh, lucky old tub!'
+
+He stared intently, and moved up the slope of the fort to get a better
+view, but the mist on the sea thickened again, and the beating of the
+screws grew fainter. Maisie called to him a little angrily, and he
+returned, still keeping his eyes to seaward. 'Have you ever seen the
+Southern Cross blazing right over your head?' he asked. 'It's superb!'
+
+'No,' she said shortly, 'and I don't want to. If you think it's so
+lovely, why don't you go and see it yourself?'
+
+She raised her face from the soft blackness of the marten skins about
+her throat, and her eyes shone like diamonds. The moonlight on the gray
+kangaroo fur turned it to frosted silver of the coldest.
+
+'By Jove, Maisie, you look like a little heathen idol tucked up there.'
+The eyes showed that they did not appreciate the compliment. 'I'm
+sorry,' he continued. 'The Southern Cross isn't worth looking at unless
+someone helps you to see. That steamer's out of hearing.'
+
+'Dick,' she said quietly, 'suppose I were to come to you now,--be quiet
+a minute,--just as I am, and caring for you just as much as I do.'
+
+'Not as a brother, though? You said you didn't--in the Park.'
+
+'I never had a brother. Suppose I said, "Take me to those places, and in
+time, perhaps, I might really care for you," what would you do?'
+
+'Send you straight back to where you came from, in a cab. No, I
+wouldn't; I'd let you walk. But you couldn't do it, dear. And I wouldn't
+run the risk. You're worth waiting for till you can come without
+reservation.'
+
+'Do you honestly believe that?'
+
+'I have a hazy sort of idea that I do. Has it never struck you in that
+light?'
+
+'Ye--es. I feel so wicked about it.'
+
+'Wickeder than usual?'
+
+'You don't know all I think. It's almost too awful to tell.'
+
+'Never mind. You promised to tell me the truth--at least.'
+
+'It's so ungrateful of me, but--but, though I know you care for me, and
+I like to have you with me, I'd--I'd even sacrifice you, if that would
+bring me what I want.'
+
+'My poor little darling! I know that state of mind. It doesn't lead to
+good work.'
+
+'You aren't angry? Remember, I do despise myself.'
+
+'I'm not exactly flattered,--I had guessed as much before,--but I'm not
+angry. I'm sorry for you. Surely you ought to have left a littleness
+like that behind you, years ago.'
+
+'You've no right to patronise me! I only want what I have worked for so
+long. It came to you without any trouble, and--and I don't think it's
+fair.'
+
+'What can I do? I'd give ten years of my life to get you what you want.
+
+But I can't help you; even I can't help.'
+
+A murmur of dissent from Maisie. He went on--'And I know by what you
+have just said that you're on the wrong road to success. It isn't got
+at by sacrificing other people,--I've had that much knocked into me;
+you must sacrifice yourself, and live under orders, and never think for
+yourself, and never have real satisfaction in your work except just at
+the beginning, when you're reaching out after a notion.'
+
+'How can you believe all that?'
+
+'There's no question of belief or disbelief. That's the law, and you
+take it or refuse it as you please. I try to obey, but I can't, and
+then my work turns bad on my hands. Under any circumstances, remember,
+four-fifths of everybody's work must be bad. But the remnant is worth
+the trouble for its own sake.'
+
+'Isn't it nice to get credit even for bad work?'
+
+'It's much too nice. But---- May I tell you something? It isn't a pretty
+tale, but you're so like a man that I forget when I'm talking to you.'
+
+'Tell me.'
+
+'Once when I was out in the Soudan I went over some ground that we had
+been fighting on for three days. There were twelve hundred dead; and we
+hadn't time to bury them.'
+
+'How ghastly!'
+
+'I had been at work on a big double-sheet sketch, and I was wondering
+what people would think of it at home. The sight of that field taught
+me a good deal. It looked just like a bed of horrible toadstools in all
+colours, and--I'd never seen men in bulk go back to their beginnings
+before. So I began to understand that men and women were only material
+to work with, and that what they said or did was of no consequence.
+See? Strictly speaking, you might just as well put your ear down to the
+palette to catch what your colours are saying.'
+
+'Dick, that's disgraceful!'
+
+'Wait a minute. I said, strictly speaking. Unfortunately, everybody must
+be either a man or a woman.'
+
+'I'm glad you allow that much.'
+
+'In your case I don't. You aren't a woman. But ordinary people, Maisie,
+must behave and work as such. That's what makes me so savage.' He hurled
+a pebble towards the sea as he spoke. 'I know that it is outside my
+business to care what people say; I can see that it spoils my output
+if I listen to 'em; and yet, confound it all,'--another pebble flew
+seaward,--'I can't help purring when I'm rubbed the right way. Even when
+I can see on a man's forehead that he is lying his way through a clump
+of pretty speeches, those lies make me happy and play the mischief with
+my hand.'
+
+'And when he doesn't say pretty things?'
+
+'Then, belovedest,'--Dick grinned,--'I forget that I am the steward of
+these gifts, and I want to make that man love and appreciate my work
+with a thick stick. It's too humiliating altogether; but I suppose even
+if one were an angel and painted humans altogether from outside, one
+would lose in touch what one gained in grip.'
+
+Maisie laughed at the idea of Dick as an angel.
+
+'But you seem to think,' she said, 'that everything nice spoils your
+hand.'
+
+'I don't think. It's the law,--just the same as it was at Mrs.
+Jennett's.
+
+Everything that is nice does spoil your hand. I'm glad you see so
+clearly.'
+
+'I don't like the view.'
+
+'Nor I. But--have got orders: what can do? Are you strong enough to face
+it alone?'
+
+'I suppose I must.'
+
+'Let me help, darling. We can hold each other very tight and try to
+walk straight. We shall blunder horribly, but it will be better than
+stumbling apart. Maisie, can't you see reason?'
+
+'I don't think we should get on together. We should be two of a trade,
+so we should never agree.'
+
+'How I should like to meet the man who made that proverb! He lived in a
+cave and ate raw bear, I fancy. I'd make him chew his own arrow-heads.
+
+Well?'
+
+'I should be only half married to you. I should worry and fuss about my
+work, as I do now. Four days out of the seven I'm not fit to speak to.'
+
+'You talk as if no one else in the world had ever used a brush.
+D'you suppose that I don't know the feeling of worry and bother and
+can't-get-at-ness? You're lucky if you only have it four days out of the
+seven. What difference would that make?'
+
+'A great deal--if you had it too.'
+
+'Yes, but I could respect it. Another man might not. He might laugh at
+you. But there's no use talking about it. If you can think in that way
+you can't care for me--yet.'
+
+The tide had nearly covered the mud-banks and twenty little ripples
+broke on the beach before Maisie chose to speak.
+
+'Dick,' she said slowly, 'I believe very much that you are better than I
+am.'
+
+'This doesn't seem to bear on the argument--but in what way?'
+
+'I don't quite know, but in what you said about work and things; and
+then you're so patient. Yes, you're better than I am.'
+
+Dick considered rapidly the murkiness of an average man's life. There
+was nothing in the review to fill him with a sense of virtue. He lifted
+the hem of the cloak to his lips.
+
+'Why,' said Maisie, making as though she had not noticed, 'can you see
+things that I can't? I don't believe what you believe; but you're right,
+I believe.'
+
+'If I've seen anything, God knows I couldn't have seen it but for you,
+and I know that I couldn't have said it except to you. You seemed to
+make everything clear for a minute; but I don't practice what I preach.
+You would help me.... There are only us two in the world for all
+purposes, and--and you like to have me with you?'
+
+'Of course I do. I wonder if you can realise how utterly lonely I am!'
+
+'Darling, I think I can.'
+
+'Two years ago, when I first took the little house, I used to walk up
+and down the back-garden trying to cry. I never can cry. Can you?'
+
+'It's some time since I tried. What was the trouble? Overwork?'
+
+'I don't know; but I used to dream that I had broken down, and had no
+money, and was starving in London. I thought about it all day, and it
+frightened me--oh, how it frightened me!'
+
+'I know that fear. It's the most terrible of all. It wakes me up in the
+night sometimes. You oughtn't to know anything about it.'
+
+'How do you know?'
+
+'Never mind. Is your three hundred a year safe?'
+
+'It's in Consols.'
+
+'Very well. If any one comes to you and recommends a better
+investment,--even if I should come to you,--don't you listen. Never
+shift the money for a minute, and never lend a penny of it,--even to the
+red-haired girl.'
+
+'Don't scold me so! I'm not likely to be foolish.'
+
+'The earth is full of men who'd sell their souls for three hundred a
+year; and women come and talk, and borrow a five-pound note here and a
+ten-pound note there; and a woman has no conscience in a money debt.
+
+Stick to your money, Maisie, for there's nothing more ghastly in the
+world than poverty in London. It's scared me. By Jove, it put the fear
+into me! And one oughtn't to be afraid of anything.'
+
+To each man is appointed his particular dread,--the terror that, if he
+does not fight against it, must cow him even to the loss of his manhood.
+Dick's experience of the sordid misery of want had entered into the
+deeps of him, and, lest he might find virtue too easy, that memory stood
+behind him, tempting to shame, when dealers came to buy his wares. As
+the Nilghai quaked against his will at the still green water of a lake
+or a mill-dam, as Torpenhow flinched before any white arm that could cut
+or stab and loathed himself for flinching, Dick feared the poverty he
+had once tasted half in jest. His burden was heavier than the burdens of
+his companions.
+
+Maisie watched the face working in the moonlight.
+
+'You've plenty of pennies now,' she said soothingly.
+
+'I shall never have enough,' he began, with vicious emphasis. Then,
+laughing, 'I shall always be three-pence short in my accounts.'
+
+'Why threepence?'
+
+'I carried a man's bag once from Liverpool Street Station to
+Blackfriar's Bridge. It was a sixpenny job,--you needn't laugh; indeed
+it was,--and I wanted the money desperately. He only gave me threepence;
+and he hadn't even the decency to pay in silver. Whatever money I make,
+I shall never get that odd threepence out of the world.'
+
+This was not language befitting the man who had preached of the sanctity
+of work. It jarred on Maisie, who preferred her payment in applause,
+which, since all men desire it, must be of her right. She hunted for her
+little purse and gravely took out a threepenny bit.
+
+'There it is,' she said. 'I'll pay you, Dickie; and don't worry any
+more; it isn't worth while. Are you paid?'
+
+'I am,' said the very human apostle of fair craft, taking the coin. 'I'm
+paid a thousand times, and we'll close that account. It shall live on my
+watch-chain; and you're an angel, Maisie.'
+
+'I'm very cramped, and I'm feeling a little cold. Good gracious! the
+cloak is all white, and so is your moustache! I never knew it was so
+chilly.'
+
+A light frost lay white on the shoulder of Dick's ulster. He, too, had
+forgotten the state of the weather. They laughed together, and with that
+laugh ended all serious discourse.
+
+They ran inland across the waste to warm themselves, then turned to look
+at the glory of the full tide under the moonlight and the intense black
+shadows of the furze bushes. It was an additional joy to Dick that
+Maisie could see colour even as he saw it,--could see the blue in the
+white of the mist, the violet that is in gray palings, and all things
+else as they are,--not of one hue, but a thousand. And the moonlight
+came into Maisie's soul, so that she, usually reserved, chattered of
+herself and of the things she took interest in,--of Kami, wisest of
+teachers, and of the girls in the studio,--of the Poles, who will kill
+themselves with overwork if they are not checked; of the French, who
+talk at great length of much more than they will ever accomplish; of
+the slovenly English, who toil hopelessly and cannot understand that
+inclination does not imply power; of the Americans, whose rasping
+voices in the hush of a hot afternoon strain tense-drawn nerves to
+breaking-point, and whose suppers lead to indigestion; of tempestuous
+Russians, neither to hold nor to bind, who tell the girls ghost-stories
+till the girls shriek; of stolid Germans, who come to learn one thing,
+and, having mastered that much, stolidly go away and copy pictures for
+evermore. Dick listened enraptured because it was Maisie who spoke. He
+knew the old life.
+
+'It hasn't changed much,' he said. 'Do they still steal colours at
+lunch-time?'
+
+'Not steal. Attract is the word. Of course they do. I'm good--I only
+attract ultramarine; but there are students who'd attract flake-white.'
+
+'I've done it myself. You can't help it when the palettes are hung up.
+
+Every colour is common property once it runs down,--even though you
+do start it with a drop of oil. It teaches people not to waste their
+tubes.'
+
+'I should like to attract some of your colours, Dick. Perhaps I might
+catch your success with them.'
+
+'I mustn't say a bad word, but I should like to. What in the world,
+which you've just missed a lovely chance of seeing, does success or want
+of success, or a three-storied success, matter compared with---- No, I
+won't open that question again. It's time to go back to town.'
+
+'I'm sorry, Dick, but----'
+
+'You're much more interested in that than you are in me.'
+
+'I don't know, I don't think I am.'
+
+'What will you give me if I tell you a sure short-cut to everything you
+want,--the trouble and the fuss and the tangle and all the rest? Will
+you promise to obey me?'
+
+'Of course.'
+
+'In the first place, you must never forget a meal because you happen
+to be at work. You forgot your lunch twice last week,' said Dick, at a
+venture, for he knew with whom he was dealing.'
+
+'No, no,--only once, really.'
+
+'That's bad enough. And you mustn't take a cup of tea and a biscuit in
+place of a regular dinner, because dinner happens to be a trouble.'
+
+'You're making fun of me!'
+
+'I never was more in earnest in my life. Oh, my love, my love, hasn't
+it dawned on you yet what you are to me? Here's the whole earth in a
+conspiracy to give you a chill, or run over you, or drench you to the
+skin, or cheat you out of your money, or let you die of overwork and
+underfeeding, and I haven't the mere right to look after you. Why, I
+don't even know if you have sense enough to put on warm things when the
+weather's cold.'
+
+'Dick, you're the most awful boy to talk to--really! How do you suppose
+I managed when you were away?'
+
+'I wasn't here, and I didn't know. But now I'm back I'd give everything
+I have for the right of telling you to come in out of the rain.'
+
+'Your success too?'
+
+This time it cost Dick a severe struggle to refrain from bad words.
+
+'As Mrs. Jennett used to say, you're a trial, Maisie! You've been cooped
+up in the schools too long, and you think every one is looking at you.
+
+There aren't twelve hundred people in the world who understand pictures.
+The others pretend and don't care. Remember, I've seen twelve hundred
+men dead in toadstool-beds. It's only the voice of the tiniest little
+fraction of people that makes success. The real world doesn't care a
+tinker's--doesn't care a bit. For aught you or I know, every man in the
+world may be arguing with a Maisie of his own.'
+
+'Poor Maisie!'
+
+'Poor Dick, I think. Do you believe while he's fighting for what's
+dearer than his life he wants to look at a picture? And even if he did,
+and if all the world did, and a thousand million people rose up and
+shouted hymns to my honour and glory, would that make up to me for the
+knowledge that you were out shopping in the Edgware Road on a rainy day
+without an umbrella? Now we'll go to the station.'
+
+'But you said on the beach----' persisted Maisie, with a certain fear.
+
+Dick groaned aloud: 'Yes, I know what I said. My work is everything I
+have, or am, or hope to be, to me, and I believe I've learnt the law
+that governs it; but I've some lingering sense of fun left,--though
+you've nearly knocked it out of me. I can just see that it isn't
+everything to all the world. Do what I say, and not what I do.'
+
+Maisie was careful not to reopen debatable matters, and they returned to
+London joyously. The terminus stopped Dick in the midst of an eloquent
+harangue on the beauties of exercise. He would buy Maisie a horse,--such
+a horse as never yet bowed head to bit,--would stable it, with a
+companion, some twenty miles from London, and Maisie, solely for her
+health's sake should ride with him twice or thrice a week.
+
+'That's absurd,' said she. 'It wouldn't be proper.'
+
+'Now, who in all London to-night would have sufficient interest or
+audacity to call us two to account for anything we chose to do?'
+
+Maisie looked at the lamps, the fog, and the hideous turmoil. Dick was
+right; but horseflesh did not make for Art as she understood it.
+
+'You're very nice sometimes, but you're very foolish more times. I'm not
+going to let you give me horses, or take you out of your way to-night.
+I'll go home by myself. Only I want you to promise me something. You
+won't think any more about that extra threepence, will you? Remember,
+you've been paid; and I won't allow you to be spiteful and do bad work
+for a little thing like that. You can be so big that you mustn't be
+tiny.'
+
+This was turning the tables with a vengeance. There remained only to put
+Maisie into her hansom.
+
+'Good-bye,' she said simply. 'You'll come on Sunday. It has been a
+beautiful day, Dick. Why can't it be like this always?'
+
+'Because love's like line-work: you must go forward or backward; you
+can't stand still. By the way, go on with your line-work. Good-night,
+and, for my--for my sake, take care of yourself.'
+
+He turned to walk home, meditating. The day had brought him nothing that
+he hoped for, but--surely this was worth many days--it had brought him
+nearer to Maisie. The end was only a question of time now, and the prize
+well worth the waiting. By instinct, once more, he turned to the river.
+
+'And she understood at once,' he said, looking at the water. 'She found
+out my pet besetting sin on the spot, and paid it off. My God, how she
+understood! And she said I was better than she was! Better than she
+was!' He laughed at the absurdity of the notion. 'I wonder if girls
+guess at one-half a man's life. They can't, or--they wouldn't marry us.'
+He took her gift out of his pocket, and considered it in the light of a
+miracle and a pledge of the comprehension that, one day, would lead to
+perfect happiness. Meantime, Maisie was alone in London, with none to
+save her from danger. And the packed wilderness was very full of danger.
+
+Dick made his prayer to Fate disjointedly after the manner of the
+heathen as he threw the piece of silver into the river. If any evil were
+to befall, let him bear the burden and let Maisie go unscathed, since
+the threepenny piece was dearest to him of all his possessions. It was
+a small coin in itself, but Maisie had given it, and the Thames held it,
+and surely the Fates would be bribed for this once.
+
+The drowning of the coin seemed to cut him free from thought of Maisie
+for the moment. He took himself off the bridge and went whistling to his
+chambers with a strong yearning for some man-talk and tobacco after his
+first experience of an entire day spent in the society of a woman.
+There was a stronger desire at his heart when there rose before him an
+unsolicited vision of the Barralong dipping deep and sailing free for
+the Southern Cross.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+ And these two, as I have told you,
+ Were the friends of Hiawatha,
+ Chibiabos, the musician,
+ And the very strong man, Kwasind.
+
+ --Hiawatha.
+TORPENHOW was paging the last sheets of some manuscript, while the
+Nilghai, who had come for chess and remained to talk tactics, was
+reading through the first part, commenting scornfully the while.
+
+'It's picturesque enough and it's sketchy,' said he; 'but as a serious
+consideration of affairs in Eastern Europe, it's not worth much.'
+
+'It's off my hands at any rate.... Thirty-seven, thirty-eight,
+thirty-nine slips altogether, aren't there? That should make between
+eleven and twelve pages of valuable misinformation. Heigho!' Torpenhow
+shuffled the writing together and hummed--
+
+ Young lambs to sell, young lambs to sell,
+ If I'd as much money as I could tell,
+ I never would cry, Young lambs to sell!
+Dick entered, self-conscious and a little defiant, but in the best of
+tempers with all the world.
+
+'Back at last?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'More or less. What have you been doing?'
+
+'Work. Dickie, you behave as though the Bank of England were behind you.
+Here's Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday gone and you haven't done a line.
+It's scandalous.'
+
+'The notions come and go, my children--they come and go like our
+'baccy,' he answered, filling his pipe. 'Moreover,' he stooped to thrust
+a spill into the grate, 'Apollo does not always stretch his---- Oh,
+confound your clumsy jests, Nilghai!'
+
+'This is not the place to preach the theory of direct inspiration,'
+said the Nilghai, returning Torpenhow's large and workmanlike bellows to
+their nail on the wall. 'We believe in cobblers' wax. La!--where you sit
+down.'
+
+'If you weren't so big and fat,' said Dick, looking round for a weapon,
+'I'd----'
+
+'No skylarking in my rooms. You two smashed half my furniture last time
+you threw the cushions about. You might have the decency to say How
+d'you do? to Binkie. Look at him.'
+
+Binkie had jumped down from the sofa and was fawning round Dick's knee,
+and scratching at his boots.
+
+'Dear man!' said Dick, snatching him up, and kissing him on the black
+patch above his right eye. 'Did ums was, Binks? Did that ugly Nilghai
+turn you off the sofa? Bite him, Mr. Binkie.' He pitched him on the
+Nilghai's stomach, as the big man lay at ease, and Binkie pretended to
+destroy the Nilghai inch by inch, till a sofa cushion extinguished him,
+and panting he stuck out his tongue at the company.
+
+'The Binkie-boy went for a walk this morning before you were up, Torp.
+
+I saw him making love to the butcher at the corner when the shutters
+were being taken down--just as if he hadn't enough to eat in his own
+proper house,' said Dick.
+
+'Binks, is that a true bill?' said Torpenhow, severely. The little dog
+retreated under the sofa cushion, and showed by the fat white back of
+him that he really had no further interest in the discussion.
+
+'Strikes me that another disreputable dog went for a walk, too,' said
+the Nilghai. 'What made you get up so early? Torp said you might be
+buying a horse.'
+
+'He knows it would need three of us for a serious business like that.
+No, I felt lonesome and unhappy, so I went out to look at the sea, and
+watch the pretty ships go by.'
+
+'Where did you go?'
+
+'Somewhere on the Channel. Progly or Snigly, or some watering-place was
+its name; I've forgotten; but it was only two hours' run from London and
+the ships went by.'
+
+'Did you see anything you knew?'
+
+'Only the Barralong outwards to Australia, and an Odessa grain-boat
+loaded down by the head. It was a thick day, but the sea smelt good.'
+
+'Wherefore put on one's best trousers to see the Barralong?' said
+Torpenhow, pointing.
+
+'Because I've nothing except these things and my painting duds. Besides,
+I wanted to do honour to the sea.'
+
+'Did She make you feel restless?' asked the Nilghai, keenly.
+
+'Crazy. Don't speak of it. I'm sorry I went.'
+
+Torpenhow and the Nilghai exchanged a look as Dick, stooping, busied
+himself among the former's boots and trees.
+
+'These will do,' he said at last; 'I can't say I think much of your
+taste in slippers, but the fit's the thing.' He slipped his feet into a
+pair of sock-like sambhur-skin foot coverings, found a long chair, and
+lay at length.
+
+'They're my own pet pair,' Torpenhow said. 'I was just going to put them
+on myself.'
+
+'All your reprehensible selfishness. Just because you see me happy for a
+minute, you want to worry me and stir me up. Find another pair.'
+
+'Good for you that Dick can't wear your clothes, Torp. You two live
+communistically,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Dick never has anything that I can wear. He's only useful to sponge
+upon.'
+
+'Confound you, have you been rummaging round among my clothes, then?'
+said Dick. 'I put a sovereign in the tobacco-jar yesterday. How do you
+expect a man to keep his accounts properly if you----'
+
+Here the Nilghai began to laugh, and Torpenhow joined him.
+
+'Hid a sovereign yesterday! You're no sort of financier. You lent me a
+fiver about a month back. Do you remember?' Torpenhow said.
+
+'Yes, of course.'
+
+'Do you remember that I paid it you ten days later, and you put it at
+the bottom of the tobacco?'
+
+'By Jove, did I? I thought it was in one of my colour-boxes.'
+
+'You thought! About a week ago I went into your studio to get some
+'baccy and found it.'
+
+'What did you do with it?'
+
+'Took the Nilghai to a theatre and fed him.'
+
+'You couldn't feed the Nilghai under twice the money--not though you
+gave him Army beef. Well, I suppose I should have found it out sooner or
+later. What is there to laugh at?'
+
+'You're a most amazing cuckoo in many directions,' said the Nilghai,
+still chuckling over the thought of the dinner. 'Never mind. We had both
+been working very hard, and it was your unearned increment we spent, and
+as you're only a loafer it didn't matter.'
+
+'That's pleasant--from the man who is bursting with my meat, too. I'll
+get that dinner back one of these days. Suppose we go to a theatre now.'
+
+'Put our boots on,--and dress,--and wash?' The Nilghai spoke very
+lazily.
+
+'I withdraw the motion.'
+
+'Suppose, just for a change--as a startling variety, you know--we, that
+is to say we, get our charcoal and our canvas and go on with our work.'
+
+Torpenhow spoke pointedly, but Dick only wriggled his toes inside the
+soft leather moccasins.
+
+'What a one-ideaed clucker that is! If I had any unfinished figures on
+hand, I haven't any model; if I had my model, I haven't any spray, and I
+never leave charcoal unfixed overnight; and if I had my spray and twenty
+photographs of backgrounds, I couldn't do anything to-night. I don't
+feel that way.'
+
+'Binkie-dog, he's a lazy hog, isn't he?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Very good, I will do some work,' said Dick, rising swiftly. 'I'll fetch
+the Nungapunga Book, and we'll add another picture to the Nilghai Saga.'
+
+'Aren't you worrying him a little too much?' asked the Nilghai, when
+Dick had left the room.
+
+'Perhaps, but I know what he can turn out if he likes. It makes me
+savage to hear him praised for past work when I know what he ought to
+do. You and I are arranged for----'
+
+'By Kismet and our own powers, more's the pity. I have dreamed of a good
+deal.'
+
+'So have I, but we know our limitations now. I'm dashed if I know what
+Dick's may be when he gives himself to his work. That's what makes me so
+keen about him.'
+
+'And when all's said and done, you will be put aside--quite rightly--for
+a female girl.'
+
+'I wonder... Where do you think he has been to-day?'
+
+'To the sea. Didn't you see the look in his eyes when he talked about
+her? He's as restless as a swallow in autumn.'
+
+'Yes; but did he go alone?'
+
+'I don't know, and I don't care, but he has the beginnings of the
+go-fever upon him. He wants to up-stakes and move out. There's no
+mistaking the signs. Whatever he may have said before, he has the call
+upon him now.'
+
+'It might be his salvation,' Torpenhow said.
+
+'Perhaps--if you care to take the responsibility of being a saviour.'
+
+Dick returned with the big clasped sketch-book that the Nilghai knew
+well and did not love too much. In it Dick had drawn all manner of
+moving incidents, experienced by himself or related to him by the
+others, of all the four corners of the earth. But the wider range of the
+Nilghai's body and life attracted him most. When truth failed he
+fell back on fiction of the wildest, and represented incidents in the
+Nilghai's career that were unseemly,--his marriages with many African
+princesses, his shameless betrayal, for Arab wives, of an army corps to
+the Mahdi, his tattooment by skilled operators in Burmah, his
+interview (and his fears) with the yellow headsman in the blood-stained
+execution-ground of Canton, and finally, the passings of his spirit into
+the bodies of whales, elephants, and toucans. Torpenhow from time to
+time had added rhymed descriptions, and the whole was a curious piece of
+art, because Dick decided, having regard to the name of the book which
+being interpreted means 'naked,' that it would be wrong to draw the
+Nilghai with any clothes on, under any circumstances. Consequently the
+last sketch, representing that much-enduring man calling on the War
+Office to press his claims to the Egyptian medal, was hardly delicate.
+He settled himself comfortably on Torpenhow's table and turned over the
+pages.
+
+'What a fortune you would have been to Blake, Nilghai!' he said.
+'There's a succulent pinkness about some of these sketches that's
+more than life-like. "The Nilghai surrounded while bathing by the
+Mahdieh"--that was founded on fact, eh?'
+
+'It was very nearly my last bath, you irreverent dauber. Has Binkie come
+into the Saga yet?'
+
+'No; the Binkie-boy hasn't done anything except eat and kill cats.
+Let's see. Here you are as a stained-glass saint in a church. Deuced
+decorative lines about your anatomy; you ought to be grateful for being
+handed down to posterity in this way. Fifty years hence you'll exist in
+rare and curious facsimiles at ten guineas each. What shall I try this
+time? The domestic life of the Nilghai?'
+
+'Hasn't got any.'
+
+'The undomestic life of the Nilghai, then. Of course. Mass-meeting of
+his wives in Trafalgar Square. That's it. They came from the ends of the
+earth to attend Nilghai's wedding to an English bride. This shall be an
+epic. It's a sweet material to work with.'
+
+'It's a scandalous waste of time,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Don't worry; it keeps one's hand in--specially when you begin without
+the pencil.' He set to work rapidly. 'That's Nelson's Column. Presently
+the Nilghai will appear shinning up it.'
+
+'Give him some clothes this time.'
+
+'Certainly--a veil and an orange-wreath, because he's been married.'
+
+'Gad, that's clever enough!' said Torpenhow over his shoulder, as Dick
+brought out of the paper with three twirls of the brush a very fat back
+and labouring shoulder pressed against stone.
+
+'Just imagine,' Dick continued, 'if we could publish a few of these dear
+little things every time the Nilghai subsidises a man who can write, to
+give the public an honest opinion of my pictures.'
+
+'Well, you'll admit I always tell you when I have done anything of that
+kind. I know I can't hammer you as you ought to be hammered, so I give
+the job to another. Young Maclagan, for instance----'
+
+'No-o--one half-minute, old man; stick your hand out against the dark of
+the wall-paper--you only burble and call me names. That left shoulder's
+out of drawing. I must literally throw a veil over that. Where's my
+pen-knife? Well, what about Maclagan?'
+
+'I only gave him his riding-orders to--to lambast you on general
+principles for not producing work that will last.'
+
+'Whereupon that young fool,'--Dick threw back his head and shut one
+eye as he shifted the page under his hand,--'being left alone with an
+ink-pot and what he conceived were his own notions, went and spilt them
+both over me in the papers. You might have engaged a grown man for the
+business, Nilghai. How do you think the bridal veil looks now, Torp?'
+
+'How the deuce do three dabs and two scratches make the stuff stand away
+from the body as it does?' said Torpenhow, to whom Dick's methods were
+always new.
+
+'It just depends on where you put 'em. If Maclagan had know that much
+about his business he might have done better.'
+
+'Why don't you put the damned dabs into something that will stay, then?'
+insisted the Nilghai, who had really taken considerable trouble in
+hiring for Dick's benefit the pen of a young gentleman who devoted most
+of his waking hours to an anxious consideration of the aims and ends of
+Art, which, he wrote, was one and indivisible.
+
+'Wait a minute till I see how I am going to manage my procession of
+wives. You seem to have married extensively, and I must rough 'em in
+with the pencil--Medes, Parthians, Edomites.... Now, setting aside the
+weakness and the wickedness and--and the fat-headedness of deliberately
+trying to do work that will live, as they call it, I'm content with the
+knowledge that I've done my best up to date, and I shan't do anything
+like it again for some hours at least--probably years. Most probably
+never.'
+
+'What! any stuff you have in stock your best work?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Anything you've sold?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Oh no. It isn't here and it isn't sold. Better than that, it can't be
+sold, and I don't think any one knows where it is. I'm sure I don't....
+And yet more and more wives, on the north side of the square. Observe
+the virtuous horror of the lions!'
+
+'You may as well explain,' said Torpenhow, and Dick lifted his head from
+the paper.
+
+'The sea reminded me of it,' he said slowly. 'I wish it hadn't. It
+weighs some few thousand tons--unless you cut it out with a cold
+chisel.'
+
+'Don't be an idiot. You can't pose with us here,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'There's no pose in the matter at all. It's a fact. I was loafing from
+Lima to Auckland in a big, old, condemned passenger-ship turned into
+a cargo-boat and owned by a second-hand Italian firm. She was a crazy
+basket. We were cut down to fifteen ton of coal a day, and we thought
+ourselves lucky when we kicked seven knots an hour out of her. Then
+we used to stop and let the bearings cool down, and wonder whether the
+crack in the shaft was spreading.'
+
+'Were you a steward or a stoker in those days?'
+
+'I was flush for the time being, so I was a passenger, or else I
+should have been a steward, I think,' said Dick, with perfect gravity,
+returning to the procession of angry wives. 'I was the only other
+passenger from Lima, and the ship was half empty, and full of rats and
+cockroaches and scorpions.'
+
+'But what has this to do with the picture?'
+
+'Wait a minute. She had been in the China passenger trade and her lower
+decks had bunks for two thousand pigtails. Those were all taken down,
+and she was empty up to her nose, and the lights came through the port
+holes--most annoying lights to work in till you got used to them. I
+hadn't anything to do for weeks. The ship's charts were in pieces and
+our skipper daren't run south for fear of catching a storm. So he did
+his best to knock all the Society Islands out of the water one by one,
+and I went into the lower deck, and did my picture on the port side as
+far forward in her as I could go. There was some brown paint and some
+green paint that they used for the boats, and some black paint for
+ironwork, and that was all I had.'
+
+'The passengers must have thought you mad.'
+
+'There was only one, and it was a woman; but it gave me the notion of my
+picture.'
+
+'What was she like?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'She was a sort of Negroid-Jewess-Cuban; with morals to match. She
+couldn't read or write, and she didn't want to, but she used to come
+down and watch me paint, and the skipper didn't like it, because he was
+paying her passage and had to be on the bridge occasionally.'
+
+'I see. That must have been cheerful.'
+
+'It was the best time I ever had. To begin with, we didn't know whether
+we should go up or go down any minute when there was a sea on; and when
+it was calm it was paradise; and the woman used to mix the paints
+and talk broken English, and the skipper used to steal down every few
+minutes to the lower deck, because he said he was afraid of fire.
+So, you see, we could never tell when we might be caught, and I had a
+splendid notion to work out in only three keys of colour.'
+
+'What was the notion?'
+
+'Two lines in Poe--
+
+Neither the angels in Heaven above nor the demons down under the sea,
+Can ever dissever my soul from the soul of the beautiful Annabel Lee.
+
+It came out of the sea--all by itself. I drew that fight, fought out in
+green water over the naked, choking soul, and the woman served as the
+model for the devils and the angels both--sea-devils and sea-angels,
+and the soul half drowned between them. It doesn't sound much, but when
+there was a good light on the lower deck it looked very fine and creepy.
+It was seven by fourteen feet, all done in shifting light for shifting
+light.'
+
+'Did the woman inspire you much?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'She and the sea between them--immensely. There was a heap of bad
+drawing in that picture. I remember I went out of my way to foreshorten
+for sheer delight of doing it, and I foreshortened damnably, but for all
+that it's the best thing I've ever done; and now I suppose the ship's
+broken up or gone down. Whew! What a time that was!'
+
+'What happened after all?'
+
+'It all ended. They were loading her with wool when I left the ship, but
+even the stevedores kept the picture clear to the last. The eyes of the
+demons scared them, I honestly believe.'
+
+'And the woman?'
+
+'She was scared too when it was finished. She used to cross herself
+before she went down to look at it. Just three colours and no chance of
+getting any more, and the sea outside and unlimited love-making inside,
+and the fear of death atop of everything else, O Lord!' He had ceased to
+look at the sketch, but was staring straight in front of him across the
+room.
+
+'Why don't you try something of the same kind now?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Because those things come not by fasting and prayer. When I find a
+cargo-boat and a Jewess-Cuban and another notion and the same old life,
+I may.'
+
+'You won't find them here,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'No, I shall not.' Dick shut the sketch-book with a bang. 'This room's
+as hot as an oven. Open the window, some one.'
+
+He leaned into the darkness, watching the greater darkness of London
+below him. The chambers stood much higher than the other houses,
+commanding a hundred chimneys--crooked cowls that looked like sitting
+cats as they swung round, and other uncouth brick and zinc mysteries
+supported by iron stanchions and clamped by 8-pieces. Northward the
+lights of Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square threw a copper-coloured
+glare above the black roofs, and southward by all the orderly lights of
+the Thames. A train rolled out across one of the railway bridges, and
+its thunder drowned for a minute the dull roar of the streets. The
+Nilghai looked at his watch and said shortly, 'That's the Paris
+night-mail. You can book from here to St. Petersburg if you choose.'
+
+Dick crammed head and shoulders out of the window and looked across the
+river. Torpenhow came to his side, while the Nilghai passed over quietly
+to the piano and opened it. Binkie, making himself as large as possible,
+spread out upon the sofa with the air of one who is not to be lightly
+disturbed.
+
+'Well,' said the Nilghai to the two pairs of shoulders, 'have you never
+seen this place before?'
+
+A steam-tug on the river hooted as she towed her barges to wharf. Then
+the boom of the traffic came into the room. Torpenhow nudged Dick.
+
+'Good place to bank in--bad place to bunk in, Dickie, isn't it?'
+
+Dick's chin was in his hand as he answered, in the words of a general
+not without fame, still looking out on the darkness--'"My God, what a
+city to loot!"'
+
+Binkie found the night air tickling his whiskers and sneezed
+plaintively.
+
+'We shall give the Binkie-dog a cold,' said Torpenhow. 'Come in,' and
+they withdrew their heads. 'You'll be buried in Kensal Green, Dick,
+one of these days, if it isn't closed by the time you want to go
+there--buried within two feet of some one else, his wife and his
+family.'
+
+'Allah forbid! I shall get away before that time comes. Give a man room
+to stretch his legs, Mr. Binkie.' Dick flung himself down on the sofa
+and tweaked Binkie's velvet ears, yawning heavily the while.
+
+'You'll find that wardrobe-case very much out of tune,' Torpenhow said
+to the Nilghai. 'It's never touched except by you.'
+
+'A piece of gross extravagance,' Dick grunted. 'The Nilghai only comes
+when I'm out.'
+
+'That's because you're always out. Howl, Nilghai, and let him hear.'
+
+'The life of the Nilghai is fraud and slaughter, His writings are
+watered Dickens and water; But the voice of the Nilghai raised on high
+Makes even the Mahdieh glad to die!'
+
+Dick quoted from Torpenhow's letterpress in the Nungapunga Book.
+
+'How do they call moose in Canada, Nilghai?'
+
+The man laughed. Singing was his one polite accomplishment, as many
+Press-tents in far-off lands had known.
+
+'What shall I sing?' said he, turning in the chair.
+
+'"Moll Roe in the Morning,"' said Torpenhow, at a venture.
+
+'No,' said Dick, sharply, and the Nilghai opened his eyes. The old
+chanty whereof he, among a very few, possessed all the words was not
+a pretty one, but Dick had heard it many times before without wincing.
+Without prelude he launched into that stately tune that calls together
+and troubles the hearts of the gipsies of the sea--
+
+'Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies, Farewell and adieu to you,
+ladies of Spain.'
+
+Dick turned uneasily on the sofa, for he could hear the bows of the
+Barralong crashing into the green seas on her way to the Southern Cross.
+
+Then came the chorus--
+
+'We'll rant and we'll roar like true British sailors, We'll rant and
+we'll roar across the salt seas, Until we take soundings in the Channel
+of Old England From Ushant to Scilly 'tis forty-five leagues.'
+
+'Thirty-five-thirty-five,' said Dick, petulantly. 'Don't tamper with
+Holy Writ. Go on, Nilghai.'
+
+'The first land we made it was called the Deadman,' and they sang to the
+end very vigourously.
+
+'That would be a better song if her head were turned the other way--to
+the Ushant light, for instance,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Flinging his arms about like a mad windmill,' said Torpenhow. 'Give us
+something else, Nilghai. You're in fine fog-horn form tonight.'
+
+'Give us the "Ganges Pilot"; you sang that in the square the night
+before El-Maghrib. By the way, I wonder how many of the chorus are alive
+to-night,' said Dick.
+
+Torpenhow considered for a minute. 'By Jove! I believe only you and I.
+
+Raynor, Vicery, and Deenes--all dead; Vincent caught smallpox in Cairo,
+carried it here and died of it. Yes, only you and I and the Nilghai.'
+
+'Umph! And yet the men here who've done their work in a well-warmed
+studio all their lives, with a policeman at each corner, say that I
+charge too much for my pictures.'
+
+'They are buying your work, not your insurance policies, dear child,'
+said the Nilghai.
+
+'I gambled with one to get at the other. Don't preach. Go on with the
+"Pilot." Where in the world did you get that song?'
+
+'On a tombstone,' said the Nilghai. 'On a tombstone in a distant land. I
+made it an accompaniment with heaps of base chords.'
+
+'Oh, Vanity! Begin.' And the Nilghai began--
+
+'I have slipped my cable, messmates, I'm drifting down with the tide, I
+have my sailing orders, while yet an anchor ride.
+
+And never on fair June morning have I put out to sea With clearer
+conscience or better hope, or a heart more light and free.
+
+'Shoulder to shoulder, Joe, my boy, into the crowd like a wedge Strike
+with the hangers, messmates, but do not cut with the edge.
+
+Cries Charnock, "Scatter the faggots, double that Brahmin in two, The
+tall pale widow for me, Joe, the little brown girl for you!"
+
+'Young Joe (you're nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark? Katie has
+soft fair blue eyes, who blackened yours?--Why, hark!'
+
+They were all singing now, Dick with the roar of the wind of the open
+sea about his ears as the deep bass voice let itself go.
+
+ 'The morning gun--
+ Ho, steady! the arquebuses to me!
+ I ha' sounded the Dutch High Admiral's heart
+ As my lead doth sound the sea.
+'Sounding, sounding the Ganges, floating down with the tide, Moore me
+close to Charnock, next to my nut-brown bride.
+
+My blessing to Kate at Fairlight--Holwell, my thanks to you; Steady! We
+steer for heaven, through sand-drifts cold and blue.'
+
+'Now what is there in that nonsense to make a man restless?' said Dick,
+hauling Binkie from his feet to his chest.
+
+'It depends on the man,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'The man who has been down to look at the sea,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I didn't know she was going to upset me in this fashion.'
+
+'That's what men say when they go to say good-bye to a woman. It's more
+easy though to get rid of three women than a piece of one's life and
+surroundings.'
+
+'But a woman can be----' began Dick, unguardedly.
+
+'A piece of one's life,' continued Torpenhow. 'No, she can't. His face
+darkened for a moment. 'She says she wants to sympathise with you and
+help you in your work, and everything else that clearly a man must
+do for himself. Then she sends round five notes a day to ask why the
+dickens you haven't been wasting your time with her.'
+
+'Don't generalise,' said the Nilghai. 'By the time you arrive at
+five notes a day you must have gone through a good deal and behaved
+accordingly.
+
+Shouldn't begin these things, my son.'
+
+'I shouldn't have gone down to the sea,' said Dick, just a little
+anxious to change the conversation. 'And you shouldn't have sung.'
+
+'The sea isn't sending you five notes a day,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'No, but I'm fatally compromised. She's an enduring old hag, and
+I'm sorry I ever met her. Why wasn't I born and bred and dead in a
+three-pair back?'
+
+'Hear him blaspheming his first love! Why in the world shouldn't you
+listen to her?' said Torpenhow.
+
+Before Dick could reply the Nilghai lifted up his voice with a shout
+that shook the windows, in 'The Men of the Sea,' that begins, as all
+know, 'The sea is a wicked old woman,' and after reading through eight
+lines whose imagery is truthful, ends in a refrain, slow as the clacking
+of a capstan when the boat comes unwillingly up to the bars where the
+men sweat and tramp in the shingle.
+
+ '"Ye that bore us, O restore us!
+ She is kinder than ye;
+ For the call is on our heart-strings!"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+The Nilghai sang that verse twice, with simple cunning, intending that
+Dick should hear. But Dick was waiting for the farewell of the men to
+their wives.
+
+ '"Ye that love us, can ye move us?
+ She is dearer than ye;
+ And your sleep will be the sweeter,"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+The rough words beat like the blows of the waves on the bows of the
+rickety boat from Lima in the days when Dick was mixing paints, making
+love, drawing devils and angels in the half dark, and wondering whether
+the next minute would put the Italian captain's knife between his
+shoulder-blades. And the go-fever which is more real than many doctors'
+diseases, waked and raged, urging him who loved Maisie beyond anything
+in the world, to go away and taste the old hot, unregenerate life
+again,--to scuffle, swear, gamble, and love light loves with his
+fellows; to take ship and know the sea once more, and by her beget
+pictures; to talk to Binat among the sands of Port Said while Yellow
+'Tina mixed the drinks; to hear the crackle of musketry, and see the
+smoke roll outward, thin and thicken again till the shining black faces
+came through, and in that hell every man was strictly responsible for
+his own head, and his own alone, and struck with an unfettered arm. It
+was impossible, utterly impossible, but--
+
+ '"Oh, our fathers in the churchyard,
+ She is older than ye,
+ And our graves will be the greener,"
+ Said The Men of the Sea.'
+'What is there to hinder?' said Torpenhow, in the long hush that
+followed the song.
+
+'You said a little time since that you wouldn't come for a walk round
+the world, Torp.'
+
+'That was months ago, and I only objected to your making money for
+travelling expenses. You've shot your bolt here and it has gone home. Go
+away and do some work, and see some things.'
+
+'Get some of the fat off you; you're disgracefully out of condition,'
+said the Nilghai, making a plunge from the chair and grasping a handful
+of Dick generally over the right ribs. 'Soft as putty--pure tallow born
+of over-feeding. Train it off, Dickie.'
+
+'We're all equally gross, Nilghai. Next time you have to take the field
+you'll sit down, wink your eyes, gasp, and die in a fit.'
+
+'Never mind. You go away on a ship. Go to Lima again, or to Brazil.
+
+There's always trouble in South America.'
+
+'Do you suppose I want to be told where to go? Great Heavens, the only
+difficulty is to know where I'm to stop. But I shall stay here, as I
+told you before.'
+
+'Then you'll be buried in Kensal Green and turn into adipocere with the
+others,' said Torpenhow. 'Are you thinking of commissions in hand? Pay
+forfeit and go. You've money enough to travel as a king if you please.'
+
+'You've the grisliest notions of amusement, Torp. I think I see myself
+shipping first class on a six-thousand-ton hotel, and asking the third
+engineer what makes the engines go round, and whether it isn't very warm
+in the stokehold. Ho! ho! I should ship as a loafer if ever I shipped at
+all, which I'm not going to do. I shall compromise, and go for a small
+trip to begin with.'
+
+'That's something at any rate. Where will you go?' said Torpenhow. 'It
+would do you all the good in the world, old man.'
+
+The Nilghai saw the twinkle in Dick's eye, and refrained from speech.
+
+'I shall go in the first place to Rathray's stable, where I shall hire
+one horse, and take him very carefully as far as Richmond Hill. Then I
+shall walk him back again, in case he should accidentally burst into a
+lather and make Rathray angry. I shall do that to-morrow, for the sake
+of air and exercise.'
+
+'Bah!' Dick had barely time to throw up his arm and ward off the cushion
+that the disgusted Torpenhow heaved at his head.
+
+'Air and exercise indeed,' said the Nilghai, sitting down heavily on
+Dick.
+
+'Let's give him a little of both. Get the bellows, Torp.'
+
+At this point the conference broke up in disorder, because Dick would
+not open his mouth till the Nilghai held his nose fast, and there was
+some trouble in forcing the nozzle of the bellows between his teeth; and
+even when it was there he weakly tried to puff against the force of
+the blast, and his cheeks blew up with a great explosion; and the enemy
+becoming helpless with laughter he so beat them over the head with a
+soft sofa cushion that that became unsewn and distributed its feathers,
+and Binkie, interfering in Torpenhow's interests, was bundled into the
+half-empty bag and advised to scratch his way out, which he did after
+a while, travelling rapidly up and down the floor in the shape of an
+agitated green haggis, and when he came out looking for satisfaction,
+the three pillars of his world were picking feathers out of their hair.
+
+'A prophet has no honour in his own country,' said Dick, ruefully,
+dusting his knees. 'This filthy fluff will never brush off my legs.'
+
+'It was all for your own good,' said the Nilghai. 'Nothing like air and
+exercise.'
+
+'All for your good,' said Torpenhow, not in the least with reference to
+past clowning. 'It would let you focus things at their proper worth and
+prevent your becoming slack in this hothouse of a town. Indeed it would,
+old man. I shouldn't have spoken if I hadn't thought so. Only, you make
+a joke of everything.'
+
+'Before God I do no such thing,' said Dick, quickly and earnestly. 'You
+don't know me if you think that.'
+
+I don't think it,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'How can fellows like ourselves, who know what life and death really
+mean, dare to make a joke of anything? I know we pretend it, to save
+ourselves from breaking down or going to the other extreme. Can't I see,
+old man, how you're always anxious about me, and try to advise me to
+make my work better? Do you suppose I don't think about that myself? But
+you can't help me--you can't help me--not even you. I must play my own
+hand alone in my own way.'
+
+'Hear, hear,' from the Nilghai.
+
+'What's the one thing in the Nilghai Saga that I've never drawn in
+the Nungapunga Book?' Dick continued to Torpenhow, who was a little
+astonished at the outburst.
+
+Now there was one blank page in the book given over to the sketch that
+Dick had not drawn of the crowning exploit in the Nilghai's life; when
+that man, being young and forgetting that his body and bones belonged to
+the paper that employed him, had ridden over sunburned slippery grass
+in the rear of Bredow's brigade on the day that the troopers flung
+themselves at Caurobert's artillery, and for aught they knew twenty
+battalions in front, to save the battered 24th German Infantry, to give
+time to decide the fate of Vionville, and to learn ere their remnant
+came back to Flavigay that cavalry can attack and crumple and break
+unshaken infantry. Whenever he was inclined to think over a life that
+might have been better, an income that might have been larger, and
+a soul that might have been considerably cleaner, the Nilghai would
+comfort himself with the thought, 'I rode with Bredow's brigade at
+Vionville,' and take heart for any lesser battle the next day might
+bring.
+
+'I know,' he said very gravely. 'I was always glad that you left it
+out.'
+
+'I left it out because Nilghai taught me what the Germany army learned
+then, and what Schmidt taught their cavalry. I don't know German.
+
+What is it? "Take care of the time and the dressing will take care of
+itself." I must ride my own line to my own beat, old man.'
+
+'Tempe ist richtung. You've learned your lesson well,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'He must go alone. He speaks truth, Torp.'
+
+'Maybe I'm as wrong as I can be--hideously wrong. I must find that out
+for myself, as I have to think things out for myself, but I daren't turn
+my head to dress by the next man. It hurts me a great deal more than you
+know not to be able to go, but I cannot, that's all. I must do my own
+work and live my own life in my own way, because I'm responsible for
+both.
+
+Only don't think I frivol about it, Torp. I have my own matches and
+sulphur, and I'll make my own hell, thanks.'
+
+There was an uncomfortable pause. Then Torpenhow said blandly, 'What did
+the Governor of North Carolina say to the Governor of South Carolina?'
+
+'Excellent notion. It is a long time between drinks. There are the
+makings of a very fine prig in you, Dick,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I've liberated my mind, estimable Binkie, with the feathers in his
+mouth.' Dick picked up the still indignant one and shook him tenderly.
+
+'You're tied up in a sack and made to run about blind, Binkie-wee,
+without any reason, and it has hurt your little feelings. Never mind.
+Sic volo, sic jubeo, stet pro ratione voluntas, and don't sneeze in my
+eye because I talk Latin. Good-night.'
+
+He went out of the room.
+
+'That's distinctly one for you,' said the Nilghai. 'I told you it was
+hopeless to meddle with him. He's not pleased.'
+
+'He'd swear at me if he weren't. I can't make it out. He has the
+go-fever upon him and he won't go. I only hope that he mayn't have to go
+some day when he doesn't want to,' said Torpenhow.
+
+In his own room Dick was settling a question with himself--and the
+question was whether all the world, and all that was therein, and a
+burning desire to exploit both, was worth one threepenny piece thrown
+into the Thames.
+
+'It came of seeing the sea, and I'm a cur to think about it,' he
+decided.
+
+'After all, the honeymoon will be that tour--with reservations; only...
+only I didn't realise that the sea was so strong. I didn't feel it so
+much when I was with Maisie. These damnable songs did it. He's beginning
+again.'
+
+But it was only Herrick's Nightpiece to Julia that the Nilghai sang,
+and before it was ended Dick reappeared on the threshold, not altogether
+clothed indeed, but in his right mind, thirsty and at peace.
+
+The mood had come and gone with the rising and the falling of the tide
+by Fort Keeling.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ 'If I have taken the common clay
+ And wrought it cunningly
+ In the shape of a god that was digged a clod,
+ The greater honour to me.'
+
+ 'If thou hast taken the common clay,
+ And thy hands be not free
+ From the taint of the soil, thou hast made thy spoil
+ The greater shame to thee.'--The Two Potters.
+HE DID no work of any kind for the rest of the week. Then came another
+Sunday. He dreaded and longed for the day always, but since the
+red-haired girl had sketched him there was rather more dread than desire
+in his mind.
+
+He found that Maisie had entirely neglected his suggestions about
+line-work. She had gone off at score filled with some absurd notion for a
+'fancy head.' It cost Dick something to command his temper.
+
+'What's the good of suggesting anything?' he said pointedly.
+
+'Ah, but this will be a picture,--a real picture; and I know that Kami
+will let me send it to the Salon. You don't mind, do you?'
+
+'I suppose not. But you won't have time for the Salon.'
+
+Maisie hesitated a little. She even felt uncomfortable.
+
+'We're going over to France a month sooner because of it. I shall get
+the idea sketched out here and work it up at Kami's.
+
+Dick's heart stood still, and he came very near to being disgusted with
+his queen who could do no wrong. 'Just when I thought I had made some
+headway, she goes off chasing butterflies. It's too maddening!'
+
+There was no possibility of arguing, for the red-haired girl was in the
+studio. Dick could only look unutterable reproach.
+
+'I'm sorry,' he said, 'and I think you make a mistake. But what's the
+idea of your new picture?'
+
+'I took it from a book.'
+
+'That's bad, to begin with. Books aren't the places for pictures.
+And----'
+
+'It's this,' said the red-haired girl behind him. 'I was reading it to
+Maisie the other day from The City of Dreadful Night. D'you know the
+book?'
+
+'A little. I am sorry I spoke. There are pictures in it. What has taken
+her fancy?'
+
+'The description of the Melancolia--
+
+ 'Her folded wings as of a mighty eagle,
+ But all too impotent to lift the regal
+ Robustness of her earth-born strength and pride.
+And here again. (Maisie, get the tea, dear.)
+
+ 'The forehead charged with baleful thoughts and dreams,
+ The household bunch of keys, the housewife's gown,
+ Voluminous indented, and yet rigid
+ As though a shell of burnished metal frigid,
+ Her feet thick-shod to tread all weakness down.'
+There was no attempt to conceal the scorn of the lazy voice. Dick
+winced.
+
+'But that has been done already by an obscure artist by the name of
+Durer,' said he. 'How does the poem run?--
+
+'Three centuries and threescore years ago, With phantasies of his
+peculiar thought.
+
+You might as well try to rewrite Hamlet. It will be a waste of time.
+
+'No, it won't,' said Maisie, putting down the teacups with a clatter to
+reassure herself. 'And I mean to do it. Can't you see what a beautiful
+thing it would make?'
+
+'How in perdition can one do work when one hasn't had the proper
+training? Any fool can get a notion. It needs training to drive the
+thing through,--training and conviction; not rushing after the first
+fancy.' Dick spoke between his teeth.
+
+'You don't understand,' said Maisie. 'I think I can do it.'
+
+Again the voice of the girl behind him--
+
+ 'Baffled and beaten back, she works on still;
+ Weary and sick of soul, she works the more.
+ Sustained by her indomitable will,
+ The hands shall fashion, and the brain shall pore,
+ And all her sorrow shall be turned to labour----
+I fancy Maisie means to embody herself in the picture.'
+
+'Sitting on a throne of rejected pictures? No, I shan't, dear. The
+notion in itself has fascinated me.--Of course you don't care for fancy
+heads, Dick.
+
+I don't think you could do them. You like blood and bones.'
+
+'That's a direct challenge. If you can do a Melancolia that isn't merely
+a sorrowful female head, I can do a better one; and I will, too. What
+d'you know about Melacolias?' Dick firmly believed that he was even then
+tasting three-quarters of all the sorrow in the world.
+
+'She was a woman,' said Maisie, 'and she suffered a great deal,--till
+she could suffer no more. Then she began to laugh at it all, and then I
+painted her and sent her to the Salon.'
+
+The red-haired girl rose up and left the room, laughing.
+
+Dick looked at Maisie humbly and hopelessly.
+
+'Never mind about the picture,' he said. 'Are you really going back to
+Kami's for a month before your time?'
+
+'I must, if I want to get the picture done.'
+
+'And that's all you want?'
+
+'Of course. Don't be stupid, Dick.'
+
+'You haven't the power. You have only the ideas--the ideas and the
+little cheap impulses. How you could have kept at your work for ten
+years steadily is a mystery to me. So you are really going,--a month
+before you need?'
+
+'I must do my work.'
+
+'Your work--bah!... No, I didn't mean that. It's all right, dear. Of
+course you must do your work, and--I think I'll say good-bye for this
+week.'
+
+'Won't you even stay for tea? 'No, thank you. Have I your leave to
+go, dear? There's nothing more you particularly want me to do, and the
+line-work doesn't matter.'
+
+'I wish you could stay, and then we could talk over my picture. If only
+one single picture's a success, it draws attention to all the others. I
+know some of my work is good, if only people could see. And you needn't
+have been so rude about it.'
+
+'I'm sorry. We'll talk the Melancolia over some one of the other
+Sundays.
+
+There are four more--yes, one, two, three, four--before you go.
+Good-bye, Maisie.'
+
+Maisie stood by the studio window, thinking, till the red-haired girl
+returned, a little white at the corners of her lips.
+
+'Dick's gone off,' said Maisie. 'Just when I wanted to talk about the
+picture. Isn't it selfish of him?'
+
+Her companion opened her lips as if to speak, shut them again, and went
+on reading The City of Dreadful Night.
+
+Dick was in the Park, walking round and round a tree that he had chosen
+as his confidante for many Sundays past. He was swearing audibly, and
+when he found that the infirmities of the English tongue hemmed in his
+rage, he sought consolation in Arabic, which is expressly designed for
+the use of the afflicted. He was not pleased with the reward of his
+patient service; nor was he pleased with himself; and it was long before
+he arrived at the proposition that the queen could do no wrong.
+
+'It's a losing game,' he said. 'I'm worth nothing when a whim of hers
+is in question. But in a losing game at Port Said we used to double
+the stakes and go on. She do a Melancolia! She hasn't the power, or the
+insight, or the training. Only the desire. She's cursed with the curse
+of Reuben. She won't do line-work, because it means real work; and yet
+she's stronger than I am. I'll make her understand that I can beat her
+on her own Melancolia. Even then she wouldn't care. She says I can only
+do blood and bones. I don't believe she has blood in her veins. All the
+same I love her; and I must go on loving her; and if I can humble her
+inordinate vanity I will. I'll do a Melancolia that shall be something
+like a Melancolia--"the Melancolia that transcends all wit." I'll do it
+at once, con--bless her.'
+
+He discovered that the notion would not come to order, and that he could
+not free his mind for an hour from the thought of Maisie's departure.
+He took very small interest in her rough studies for the Melancolia when
+she showed them next week. The Sundays were racing past, and the time
+was at hand when all the church bells in London could not ring
+Maisie back to him. Once or twice he said something to Binkie about
+'hermaphroditic futilities,' but the little dog received so many
+confidences both from Torpenhow and Dick that he did not trouble his
+tulip-ears to listen.
+
+Dick was permitted to see the girls off. They were going by the Dover
+night-boat; and they hoped to return in August. It was then February,
+and Dick felt that he was being hardly used. Maisie was so busy
+stripping the small house across the Park, and packing her canvases,
+that she had not time for thought. Dick went down to Dover and wasted
+a day there fretting over a wonderful possibility. Would Maisie at the
+very last allow him one small kiss? He reflected that he might capture
+her by the strong arm, as he had seem women captured in the Southern
+Soudan, and lead her away; but Maisie would never be led. She would turn
+her gray eyes upon him and say, 'Dick, how selfish you are!' Then his
+courage would fail him. It would be better, after all, to beg for that
+kiss.
+
+Maisie looked more than usually kissable as she stepped from the
+night-mail on to the windy pier, in a gray waterproof and a little gray
+cloth travelling-cap. The red-haired girl was not so lovely. Her green
+eyes were hollow and her lips were dry. Dick saw the trunks aboard, and
+went to Maisie's side in the darkness under the bridge. The mail-bags
+were thundering into the forehold, and the red-haired girl was watching
+them.
+
+'You'll have a rough passage to-night,' said Dick. 'It's blowing
+outside. I suppose I may come over and see you if I'm good?'
+
+'You mustn't. I shall be busy. At least, if I want you I'll send for
+you. But I shall write from Vitry-sur-Marne. I shall have heaps of
+things to consult you about. Oh, Dick, you have been so good to me!--so
+good to me!'
+
+'Thank you for that, dear. It hasn't made any difference, has it?'
+
+'I can't tell a fib. It hasn't--in that way. But don't think I'm not
+grateful.'
+
+'Damn the gratitude!' said Dick, huskily, to the paddle-box.
+
+'What's the use of worrying? You know I should ruin your life, and you'd
+ruin mine, as things are now. You remember what you said when you were
+so angry that day in the Park? One of us has to be broken.
+
+Can't you wait till that day comes?'
+
+'No, love. I want you unbroken--all to myself.'
+
+Maisie shook her head. 'My poor Dick, what can I say!'
+
+'Don't say anything. Give me a kiss. Only one kiss, Maisie. I'll swear
+I won't take any more. You might as well, and then I can be sure you're
+grateful.'
+
+Maisie put her cheek forward, and Dick took his reward in the darkness.
+
+It was only one kiss, but, since there was no time-limit specified, it
+was a long one. Maisie wrenched herself free angrily, and Dick stood
+abashed and tingling from head to toe.
+
+'Good-bye, darling. I didn't mean to scare you. I'm sorry. Only--keep
+well and do good work,--specially the Melancolia. I'm going to do
+one, too. Remember me to Kami, and be careful what you drink. Country
+drinking-water is bad everywhere, but it's worse in France. Write to
+me if you want anything, and good-bye. Say good-bye to the
+whatever-you-call-um girl, and--can't I have another kiss? No. You're
+quite right. Good-bye.'
+
+I shout told him that it was not seemly to charge the mail-bag incline.
+He reached the pier as the steamer began to move off, and he followed
+her with his heart.
+
+'And there's nothing--nothing in the wide world--to keep us apart except
+her obstinacy. These Calais night-boats are much too small. I'll get
+Torp to write to the papers about it. She's beginning to pitch already.'
+
+Maisie stood where Dick had left her till she heard a little gasping
+cough at her elbow. The red-haired girl's eyes were alight with cold
+flame.
+
+'He kissed you!' she said. 'How could you let him, when he wasn't
+anything to you? How dared you to take a kiss from him? Oh, Maisie,
+let's go to the ladies' cabin. I'm sick,--deadly sick.'
+
+'We aren't into open water yet. Go down, dear, and I'll stay here.
+I don't like the smell of the engines.... Poor Dick! He deserved
+one,--only one.
+
+But I didn't think he'd frighten me so.'
+
+Dick returned to town next day just in time for lunch, for which he had
+telegraphed. To his disgust, there were only empty plates in the studio.
+
+He lifted up his voice like the bears in the fairy-tale, and Torpenhow
+entered, looking guilty.
+
+'H'sh!' said he. 'Don't make such a noise. I took it. Come into my
+rooms, and I'll show you why.'
+
+Dick paused amazed at the threshold, for on Torpenhow's sofa lay a
+girl asleep and breathing heavily. The little cheap sailor-hat, the
+blue-and-white dress, fitter for June than for February, dabbled with
+mud at the skirts, the jacket trimmed with imitation Astrakhan and
+ripped at the shoulder-seams, the one-and-elevenpenny umbrella, and,
+above all, the disgraceful condition of the kid-topped boots, declared
+all things.
+
+'Oh, I say, old man, this is too bad! You mustn't bring this sort up
+here.
+
+They steal things from the rooms.'
+
+'It looks bad, I admit, but I was coming in after lunch, and she
+staggered into the hall. I thought she was drunk at first, but it was
+collapse. I couldn't leave her as she was, so I brought her up here and
+gave her your lunch. She was fainting from want of food. She went fast
+asleep the minute she had finished.'
+
+'I know something of that complaint. She's been living on sausages,
+I suppose. Torp, you should have handed her over to a policeman for
+presuming to faint in a respectable house. Poor little wretch! Look at
+the face! There isn't an ounce of immorality in it. Only folly,--slack,
+fatuous, feeble, futile folly. It's a typical head. D'you notice how
+the skull begins to show through the flesh padding on the face and
+cheek-bone?'
+
+'What a cold-blooded barbarian it is! Don't hit a woman when she's down.
+Can't we do anything? She was simply dropping with starvation.
+
+She almost fell into my arms, and when she got to the food she ate like
+a wild beast. It was horrible.'
+
+'I can give her money, which she would probably spend in drinks. Is she
+going to sleep for ever?'
+
+The girl opened her eyes and glared at the men between terror and
+effrontery.
+
+'Feeling better?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Yes. Thank you. There aren't many gentlemen that are as kind as you
+are. Thank you.'
+
+'When did you leave service?' said Dick, who had been watching the
+scarred and chapped hands.
+
+'How did you know I was in service? I was. General servant. I didn't
+like it.'
+
+'And how do you like being your own mistress?'
+
+'Do I look as if I liked it?'
+
+'I suppose not. One moment. Would you be good enough to turn your face
+to the window?'
+
+The girl obeyed, and Dick watched her face keenly,--so keenly that she
+made as if to hide behind Torpenhow.
+
+'The eyes have it,' said Dick, walking up and down. 'They are superb
+eyes for my business. And, after all, every head depends on the eyes.
+This has been sent from heaven to make up for--what was taken away. Now
+the weekly strain's off my shoulders, I can get to work in earnest.
+
+Evidently sent from heaven. Yes. Raise your chin a little, please.'
+
+'Gently, old man, gently. You're scaring somebody out of her wits,' said
+Torpenhow, who could see the girl trembling.
+
+'Don't let him hit me! Oh, please don't let him hit me! I've been hit
+cruel to-day because I spoke to a man. Don't let him look at me like
+that! He's reg'lar wicked, that one. Don't let him look at me like that,
+neither! Oh, I feel as if I hadn't nothing on when he looks at me like
+that!'
+
+The overstrained nerves in the frail body gave way, and the girl wept
+like a little child and began to scream. Dick threw open the window, and
+Torpenhow flung the door back.
+
+'There you are,' said Dick, soothingly. 'My friend here can call for a
+policeman, and you can run through that door. Nobody is going to hurt
+you.'
+
+The girl sobbed convulsively for a few minutes, and then tried to laugh.
+
+'Nothing in the world to hurt you. Now listen to me for a minute. I'm
+what they call an artist by profession. You know what artists do?'
+
+'They draw the things in red and black ink on the pop-shop labels.'
+
+'I dare say. I haven't risen to pop-shop labels yet. Those are done by
+the Academicians. I want to draw your head.'
+
+'What for?'
+
+'Because it's pretty. That is why you will come to the room across the
+landing three times a week at eleven in the morning, and I'll give you
+three quid a week just for sitting still and being drawn. And there's a
+quid on account.'
+
+'For nothing? Oh, my!' The girl turned the sovereign in her hand, and
+with more foolish tears, 'Ain't neither o' you two gentlemen afraid of
+my bilking you?'
+
+'No. Only ugly girls do that. Try and remember this place. And, by the
+way, what's your name?'
+
+'I'm Bessic,--Bessie---- It's no use giving the rest. Bessie
+Broke,--Stone-broke, if you like. What's your names? But there,--no one
+ever gives the real ones.'
+
+Dick consulted Torpenhow with his eyes.
+
+'My name's Heldar, and my friend's called Torpenhow; and you must be
+sure to come here. Where do you live?'
+
+'South-the-water,--one room,--five and sixpence a week. Aren't you
+making fun of me about that three quid?'
+
+'You'll see later on. And, Bessie, next time you come, remember, you
+needn't wear that paint. It's bad for the skin, and I have all the
+colours you'll be likely to need.'
+
+Bessie withdrew, scrubbing her cheek with a ragged pocket-handkerchief.
+The two men looked at each other.
+
+'You're a man,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'I'm afraid I've been a fool. It isn't our business to run about the
+earth reforming Bessie Brokes. And a woman of any kind has no right on
+this landing.'
+
+'Perhaps she won't come back.'
+
+'She will if she thinks she can get food and warmth here. I know she
+will, worse luck. But remember, old man, she isn't a woman; she's my
+model; and be careful.'
+
+'The idea! She's a dissolute little scarecrow,--a gutter-snippet and
+nothing more.'
+
+'So you think. Wait till she has been fed a little and freed from fear.
+That fair type recovers itself very quickly. You won't know her in a
+week or two, when that abject fear has died out of her eyes. She'll be
+too happy and smiling for my purposes.'
+
+'But surely you're not taking her out of charity?--to please me?'
+
+'I am not in the habit of playing with hot coals to please anybody. She
+has been sent from heaven, as I may have remarked before, to help me
+with my Melancolia.'
+
+'Never heard a word about the lady before.'
+
+'What's the use of having a friend, if you must sling your notions at
+him in words? You ought to know what I'm thinking about. You've heard me
+grunt lately?'
+
+'Even so; but grunts mean anything in your language, from bad 'baccy to
+wicked dealers. And I don't think I've been much in your confidence for
+some time.'
+
+'It was a high and soulful grunt. You ought to have understood that
+it meant the Melancolia.' Dick walked Torpenhow up and down the room,
+keeping silence. Then he smote him in the ribs, 'Now don't you see it?
+Bessie's abject futility, and the terror in her eyes, welded on to one
+or two details in the way of sorrow that have come under my experience
+lately. Likewise some orange and black,--two keys of each. But I can't
+explain on an empty stomach.'
+
+'It sounds mad enough. You'd better stick to your soldiers, Dick,
+instead of maundering about heads and eyes and experiences.'
+
+'Think so?' Dick began to dance on his heels, singing--
+
+'They're as proud as a turkey when they hold the ready cash, You ought
+to 'ear the way they laugh an' joke; They are tricky an' they're funny
+when they've got the ready money,--Ow! but see 'em when they're all
+stone-broke.'
+
+Then he sat down to pour out his heart to Maisie in a four-sheet letter
+of counsel and encouragement, and registered an oath that he would get
+to work with an undivided heart as soon as Bessie should reappear.
+
+The girl kept her appointment unpainted and unadorned, afraid and
+overbold by turns. When she found that she was merely expected to sit
+still, she grew calmer, and criticised the appointments of the studio
+with freedom and some point. She liked the warmth and the comfort and
+the release from fear of physical pain. Dick made two or three studies
+of her head in monochrome, but the actual notion of the Melancolia would
+not arrive.
+
+'What a mess you keep your things in!' said Bessie, some days later,
+when she felt herself thoroughly at home. 'I s'pose your clothes are
+just as bad.
+
+Gentlemen never think what buttons and tape are made for.'
+
+'I buy things to wear, and wear 'em till they go to pieces. I don't know
+what Torpenhow does.'
+
+Bessie made diligent inquiry in the latter's room, and unearthed a bale
+of disreputable socks. 'Some of these I'll mend now,' she said, 'and
+some I'll take home. D'you know, I sit all day long at home doing
+nothing, just like a lady, and no more noticing them other girls in
+the house than if they was so many flies. I don't have any unnecessary
+words, but I put 'em down quick, I can tell you, when they talk to me.
+No; it's quite nice these days. I lock my door, and they can only
+call me names through the keyhole, and I sit inside, just like a lady,
+mending socks. Mr. Torpenhow wears his socks out both ends at once.'
+
+'Three quid a week from me, and the delights of my society. No socks
+mended. Nothing from Torp except a nod on the landing now and again, and
+all his socks mended. Bessie is very much a woman,' thought Dick; and he
+looked at her between half-shut eyes. Food and rest had transformed the
+girl, as Dick knew they would.
+
+'What are you looking at me like that for?' she said quickly. 'Don't.
+You look reg'lar bad when you look that way. You don't think much o' me,
+do you?'
+
+'That depends on how you behave.'
+
+Bessie behaved beautifully. Only it was difficult at the end of a
+sitting to bid her go out into the gray streets. She very much preferred
+the studio and a big chair by the stove, with some socks in her lap as
+an excuse for delay. Then Torpenhow would come in, and Bessie would
+be moved to tell strange and wonderful stories of her past, and still
+stranger ones of her present improved circumstances. She would make them
+tea as though she had a right to make it; and once or twice on these
+occasions Dick caught Torpenhow's eyes fixed on the trim little figure,
+and because Bessie's flittings about the room made Dick ardently long
+for Maisie, he realised whither Torpenhow's thoughts were tending. And
+Bessie was exceedingly careful of the condition of Torpenhow's linen.
+She spoke very little to him, but sometimes they talked together on the
+landing.
+
+'I was a great fool,' Dick said to himself. 'I know what red firelight
+looks like when a man's tramping through a strange town; and ours is a
+lonely, selfish sort of life at the best. I wonder Maisie doesn't feel
+that sometimes. But I can't order Bessie away. That's the worst of
+beginning things. One never knows where they stop.'
+
+One evening, after a sitting prolonged to the last limit of the light,
+Dick was roused from a nap by a broken voice in Torpenhow's room. He
+jumped to his feet. 'Now what ought I to do? It looks foolish to go
+in.--Oh, bless you, Binkie!' The little terrier thrust Torpenhow's door
+open with his nose and came out to take possession of Dick's chair. The
+door swung wide unheeded, and Dick across the landing could see Bessie
+in the half-light making her little supplication to Torpenhow. She was
+kneeling by his side, and her hands were clasped across his knee.
+
+'I know,--I know,' she said thickly. ''Tisn't right o' me to do this,
+but I can't help it; and you were so kind,--so kind; and you never took
+any notice o' me. And I've mended all your things so carefully,--I did.
+Oh, please, 'tisn't as if I was asking you to marry me. I wouldn't think
+of it.
+
+But you--couldn't you take and live with me till Miss Right comes along?
+I'm only Miss Wrong, I know, but I'd work my hands to the bare bone for
+you. And I'm not ugly to look at. Say you will!'
+
+Dick hardly recognised Torpenhow's voice in reply--'But look here. It's
+no use. I'm liable to be ordered off anywhere at a minute's notice if a
+war breaks out. At a minute's notice--dear.'
+
+'What does that matter? Until you go, then. Until you go. 'Tisn't much
+I'm asking, and--you don't know how good I can cook.' She had put an arm
+round his neck and was drawing his head down.
+
+'Until--I--go, then.'
+
+'Torp,' said Dick, across the landing. He could hardly steady his voice.
+
+'Come here a minute, old man. I'm in trouble'--'Heaven send he'll listen
+to me!' There was something very like an oath from Bessie's lips. She
+was afraid of Dick, and disappeared down the staircase in panic, but
+it seemed an age before Torpenhow entered the studio. He went to the
+mantelpiece, buried his head on his arms, and groaned like a wounded
+bull.
+
+'What the devil right have you to interfere?' he said, at last.
+
+'Who's interfering with which? Your own sense told you long ago you
+couldn't be such a fool. It was a tough rack, St. Anthony, but you're
+all right now.'
+
+'I oughtn't to have seen her moving about these rooms as if they
+belonged to her. That's what upset me. It gives a lonely man a sort of
+hankering, doesn't it?' said Torpenhow, piteously.
+
+'Now you talk sense. It does. But, since you aren't in a condition
+to discuss the disadvantages of double housekeeping, do you know what
+you're going to do?'
+
+'I don't. I wish I did.'
+
+'You're going away for a season on a brilliant tour to regain tone.
+You're going to Brighton, or Scarborough, or Prawle Point, to see the
+ships go by. And you're going at once. Isn't it odd? I'll take care of
+Binkie, but out you go immediately. Never resist the devil. He holds the
+bank. Fly from him. Pack your things and go.'
+
+'I believe you're right. Where shall I go?'
+
+'And you call yourself a special correspondent! Pack first and inquire
+afterwards.'
+
+An hour later Torpenhow was despatched into the night for a hansom.
+
+'You'll probably think of some place to go to while you're moving,' said
+Dick. 'On to Euston, to begin with, and--oh yes--get drunk to-night.'
+
+He returned to the studio, and lighted more candles, for he found the
+room very dark.
+
+'Oh, you Jezebel! you futile little Jezebel! Won't you hate me
+to-morrow!--Binkie, come here.'
+
+Binkie turned over on his back on the hearth-rug, and Dick stirred him
+with a meditative foot.
+
+'I said she was not immoral. I was wrong. She said she could cook. That
+showed premeditated sin. Oh, Binkie, if you are a man you will go to
+perdition; but if you are a woman, and say that you can cook, you will
+go to a much worse place.'
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+ What's you that follows at my side?--
+ The foe that ye must fight, my lord.--
+ That hirples swift as I can ride?--
+ The shadow of the night, my lord.--
+ Then wheel my horse against the foe!--
+ He's down and overpast, my lord.
+
+ Ye war against the sunset glow;
+ The darkness gathers fast, my lord.
+
+ --The Fight of Heriot's Ford.
+'THIS is a cheerful life,' said Dick, some days later. 'Torp's away;
+Bessie hates me; I can't get at the notion of the Melancolia; Maisie's
+letters are scrappy; and I believe I have indigestion. What give a man
+pains across the head and spots before his eyes, Binkie? Shall us take
+some liver pills?'
+
+Dick had just gone through a lively scene with Bessie. She had for the
+fiftieth time reproached him for sending Torpenhow away. She explained
+her enduring hatred for Dick, and made it clear to him that she only sat
+for the sake of his money. 'And Mr. Torpenhow's ten times a better man
+than you,' she concluded.
+
+'He is. That's why he went away. I should have stayed and made love to
+you.'
+
+The girl sat with her chin on her hand, scowling. 'To me! I'd like to
+catch you! If I wasn't afraid o' being hung I'd kill you. That's what
+I'd do.
+
+D'you believe me?'
+
+Dick smiled wearily. It is not pleasant to live in the company of a
+notion that will not work out, a fox-terrier that cannot talk, and a
+woman who talks too much. He would have answered, but at that moment
+there unrolled itself from one corner of the studio a veil, as it were,
+of the flimsiest gauze. He rubbed his eyes, but the gray haze would not
+go.
+
+'This is disgraceful indigestion. Binkie, we will go to a medicine-man.
+We can't have our eyes interfered with, for by these we get our bread;
+also mutton-chop bones for little dogs.'
+
+The doctor was an affable local practitioner with white hair, and he
+said nothing till Dick began to describe the gray film in the studio.
+
+'We all want a little patching and repairing from time to time,' he
+chirped. 'Like a ship, my dear sir,--exactly like a ship. Sometimes the
+hull is out of order, and we consult the surgeon; sometimes the
+rigging, and then I advise; sometimes the engines, and we go to the
+brain-specialist; sometimes the look-out on the bridge is tired, and
+then we see an oculist. I should recommend you to see an oculist. A
+little patching and repairing from time to time is all we want. An
+oculist, by all means.'
+
+Dick sought an oculist,--the best in London. He was certain that the
+local practitioner did not know anything about his trade, and more
+certain that Maisie would laugh at him if he were forced to wear
+spectacles.
+
+'I've neglected the warnings of my lord the stomach too long. Hence
+these spots before the eyes, Binkie. I can see as well as I ever could.'
+
+As he entered the dark hall that led to the consulting-room a man
+cannoned against him. Dick saw the face as it hurried out into the
+street.
+
+'That's the writer-type. He has the same modelling of the forehead as
+Torp. He looks very sick. Probably heard something he didn't like.'
+
+Even as he thought, a great fear came upon Dick, a fear that made him
+hold his breath as he walked into the oculist's waiting room, with the
+heavy carved furniture, the dark-green paper, and the sober-hued prints
+on the wall. He recognised a reproduction of one of his own sketches.
+
+Many people were waiting their turn before him. His eye was caught by a
+flaming red-and-gold Christmas-carol book. Little children came to that
+eye-doctor, and they needed large-type amusement.
+
+'That's idolatrous bad Art,' he said, drawing the book towards himself.
+
+'From the anatomy of the angels, it has been made in Germany.' He opened
+in mechanically, and there leaped to his eyes a verse printed in red
+ink--
+
+ The next good joy that Mary had,
+ It was the joy of three,
+ To see her good Son Jesus Christ
+ Making the blind to see;
+ Making the blind to see, good Lord,
+ And happy we may be.
+
+ Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
+ To all eternity!
+Dick read and re-read the verse till his turn came, and the doctor
+was bending above him seated in an arm-chair. The blaze of the
+gas-microscope in his eyes made him wince. The doctor's hand touched the
+scar of the sword-cut on Dick's head, and Dick explained briefly how he
+had come by it. When the flame was removed, Dick saw the doctor's face,
+and the fear came upon him again. The doctor wrapped himself in a
+mist of words. Dick caught allusions to 'scar,' 'frontal bone,' 'optic
+nerve,' 'extreme caution,' and the 'avoidance of mental anxiety.'
+
+'Verdict?' he said faintly. 'My business is painting, and I daren't
+waste time. What do you make of it?'
+
+Again the whirl of words, but this time they conveyed a meaning.
+
+'Can you give me anything to drink?'
+
+Many sentences were pronounced in that darkened room, and the prisoners
+often needed cheering. Dick found a glass of liqueur brandy in his hand.
+
+'As far as I can gather,' he said, coughing above the spirit, 'you call
+it decay of the optic nerve, or something, and therefore hopeless. What
+is my time-limit, avoiding all strain and worry?'
+
+'Perhaps one year.'
+
+'My God! And if I don't take care of myself?'
+
+'I really could not say. One cannot ascertain the exact amount of injury
+inflicted by the sword-cut. The scar is an old one, and--exposure to the
+strong light of the desert, did you say?--with excessive application to
+fine work? I really could not say?'
+
+'I beg your pardon, but it has come without any warning. If you will
+let me, I'll sit here for a minute, and then I'll go. You have been very
+good in telling me the truth. Without any warning; without any warning.
+
+Thanks.'
+
+Dick went into the street, and was rapturously received by Binkie.
+
+'We've got it very badly, little dog! Just as badly as we can get it.
+We'll go to the Park to think it out.'
+
+They headed for a certain tree that Dick knew well, and they sat down to
+thin, because his legs were trembling under him and there was cold fear
+at the pit of his stomach.
+
+'How could it have come without any warning? It's as sudden as being
+shot. It's the living death, Binkie. We're to be shut up in the dark in
+one year if we're careful, and we shan't see anybody, and we shall
+never have anything we want, not though we live to be a hundred!' Binkie
+wagged his tail joyously. 'Binkie, we must think. Let's see how it
+feels to be blind.' Dick shut his eyes, and flaming commas and
+Catherine-wheels floated inside the lids. Yet when he looked across the
+Park the scope of his vision was not contracted. He could see perfectly,
+until a procession of slow-wheeling fireworks defiled across his
+eyeballs.
+
+'Little dorglums, we aren't at all well. Let's go home. If only Torp
+were back, now!'
+
+But Torpenhow was in the south of England, inspecting dockyards in the
+company of the Nilghai. His letters were brief and full of mystery.
+
+Dick had never asked anybody to help him in his joys or his sorrows. He
+argued, in the loneliness of his studio, henceforward to be decorated
+with a film of gray gauze in one corner, that, if his fate were
+blindness, all the Torpenhows in the world could not save him. 'I can't
+call him off his trip to sit down and sympathise with me. I must pull
+through this business alone,' he said. He was lying on the sofa, eating
+his moustache and wondering what the darkness of the night would be
+like. Then came to his mind the memory of a quaint scene in the Soudan.
+A soldier had been nearly hacked in two by a broad-bladed Arab spear.
+For one instant the man felt no pain. Looking down, he saw that his
+life-blood was going from him. The stupid bewilderment on his face
+was so intensely comic that both Dick and Torpenhow, still panting and
+unstrung from a fight for life, had roared with laughter, in which the
+man seemed as if he would join, but, as his lips parted in a sheepish
+grin, the agony of death came upon him, and he pitched grunting at their
+feet. Dick laughed again, remembering the horror. It seemed so exactly
+like his own case.
+
+'But I have a little more time allowed me,' he said. He paced up and
+down the room, quietly at first, but afterwards with the hurried feet of
+fear. It was as though a black shadow stood at his elbow and urged him
+to go forward; and there were only weaving circles and floating pin-dots
+before his eyes.
+
+'We need to be calm, Binkie; we must be calm.' He talked aloud for the
+sake of distraction. 'This isn't nice at all. What shall we do? We must
+do something. Our time is short. I shouldn't have believed that this
+morning; but now things are different. Binkie, where was Moses when the
+light went out?'
+
+Binkie smiled from ear to ear, as a well-bred terrier should, but made
+no suggestion.
+
+'"Were there but world enough and time, This coyness, Binkie, were not
+crime.... But at my back I always hear----"' He wiped his forehead,
+which was unpleasantly damp. 'What can I do? What can I do? I haven't
+any notions left, and I can't think connectedly, but I must do
+something, or I shall go off my head.'
+
+The hurried walk recommenced, Dick stopping every now and again to drag
+forth long-neglected canvases and old note-books; for he turned to his
+work by instinct, as a thing that could not fail. 'You won't do, and you
+won't do,' he said, at each inspection. 'No more soldiers. I couldn't
+paint 'em. Sudden death comes home too nearly, and this is battle and
+murder for me.'
+
+The day was failing, and Dick thought for a moment that the twilight
+of the blind had come upon him unaware. 'Allah Almighty!' he cried
+despairingly, 'help me through the time of waiting, and I won't whine
+when my punishment comes. What can I do now, before the light goes?'
+
+There was no answer. Dick waited till he could regain some sort of
+control over himself. His hands were shaking, and he prided himself on
+their steadiness; he could feel that his lips were quivering, and the
+sweat was running down his face. He was lashed by fear, driven forward
+by the desire to get to work at once and accomplish something, and
+maddened by the refusal of his brain to do more than repeat the news
+that he was about to go blind. 'It's a humiliating exhibition,' he
+thought, 'and I'm glad Torp isn't here to see. The doctor said I was to
+avoid mental worry.
+
+Come here and let me pet you, Binkie.'
+
+The little dog yelped because Dick nearly squeezed the bark out of him.
+
+Then he heard the man speaking in the twilight, and, doglike, understood
+that his trouble stood off from him--'Allah is good, Binkie. Not quite
+so gentle as we could wish, but we'll discuss that later. I think I see
+my way to it now. All those studies of Bessie's head were nonsense, and
+they nearly brought your master into a scrape. I hold the notion now as
+clear as crystal,--"the Melancolia that transcends all wit." There shall
+be Maisie in that head, because I shall never get Maisie; and Bess, of
+course, because she knows all about Melancolia, though she doesn't know
+she knows; and there shall be some drawing in it, and it shall all end
+up with a laugh. That's for myself. Shall she giggle or grin? No, she
+shall laugh right out of the canvas, and every man and woman that ever
+had a sorrow of their own shall--what is it the poem says?--
+
+ 'Understand the speech and feel a stir
+ Of fellowship in all disastrous fight.
+"In all disastrous fight"? That's better than painting the thing merely
+to pique Maisie. I can do it now because I have it inside me. Binkie,
+I'm going to hold you up by your tail. You're an omen. Come here.'
+
+Binkie swung head downward for a moment without speaking.
+
+'Rather like holding a guinea-pig; but you're a brave little dog, and
+you don't yelp when you're hung up. It is an omen.'
+
+Binkie went to his own chair, and as often as he looked saw Dick walking
+up and down, rubbing his hands and chuckling. That night Dick wrote a
+letter to Maisie full of the tenderest regard for her health, but saying
+very little about his own, and dreamed of the Melancolia to be born. Not
+till morning did he remember that something might happen to him in the
+future.
+
+He fell to work, whistling softly, and was swallowed up in the clean,
+clear joy of creation, which does not come to man too often, lest he
+should consider himself the equal of his God, and so refuse to die at
+the appointed time. He forgot Maisie, Torpenhow, and Binkie at his feet,
+but remembered to stir Bessie, who needed very little stirring, into a
+tremendous rage, that he might watch the smouldering lights in her eyes.
+
+He threw himself without reservation into his work, and did not think of
+the doom that was to overtake him, for he was possessed with his notion,
+and the things of this world had no power upon him.
+
+'You're pleased to-day,' said Bessie.
+
+Dick waved his mahl-stick in mystic circles and went to the sideboard
+for a drink. In the evening, when the exaltation of the day had died
+down, he went to the sideboard again, and after some visits became
+convinced that the eye-doctor was a liar, since he could still see
+everything very clearly.
+
+He was of opinion that he would even make a home for Maisie, and that
+whether she liked it or not she should be his wife. The mood passed next
+morning, but the sideboard and all upon it remained for his comfort.
+
+Again he set to work, and his eyes troubled him with spots and dashes
+and blurs till he had taken counsel with the sideboard, and the
+Melancolia both on the canvas and in his own mind appeared lovelier than
+ever. There was a delightful sense of irresponsibility upon him, such
+as they feel who walking among their fellow-men know that the
+death-sentence of disease is upon them, and, seeing that fear is but
+waste of the little time left, are riotously happy. The days passed
+without event.
+
+Bessie arrived punctually always, and, though her voice seemed to Dick
+to come from a distance, her face was always very near. The Melancolia
+began to flame on the canvas, in the likeness of a woman who had known
+all the sorrow in the world and was laughing at it. It was true that the
+corners of the studio draped themselves in gray film and retired into
+the darkness, that the spots in his eyes and the pains across his head
+were very troublesome, and that Maisie's letters were hard to read and
+harder still to answer. He could not tell her of his trouble, and he
+could not laugh at her accounts of her own Melancolia which was always
+going to be finished. But the furious days of toil and the nights of
+wild dreams made amends for all, and the sideboard was his best friend
+on earth.
+
+Bessie was singularly dull. She used to shriek with rage when Dick
+stared at her between half-closed eyes. Now she sulked, or watched him
+with disgust, saying very little.
+
+Torpenhow had been absent for six weeks. An incoherent note heralded his
+return. 'News! great news!' he wrote. 'The Nilghai knows, and so
+does the Keneu. We're all back on Thursday. Get lunch and clean your
+accoutrements.'
+
+Dick showed Bessie the letter, and she abused him for that he had ever
+sent Torpenhow away and ruined her life.
+
+'Well,' said Dick, brutally, 'you're better as you are, instead of
+making love to some drunken beast in the street.' He felt that he had
+rescued Torpenhow from great temptation.
+
+'I don't know if that's any worse than sitting to a drunken beast in a
+studio. You haven't been sober for three weeks. You've been soaking the
+whole time; and yet you pretend you're better than me!'
+
+'What d'you mean?' said Dick.
+
+'Mean! You'll see when Mr. Torpenhow comes back.'
+
+It was not long to wait. Torpenhow met Bessie on the staircase without a
+sign of feeling. He had news that was more to him than many Bessies, and
+the Keneu and the Nilghai were trampling behind him, calling for Dick.
+
+'Drinking like a fish,' Bessie whispered. 'He's been at it for nearly a
+month.' She followed the men stealthily to hear judgment done.
+
+They came into the studio, rejoicing, to be welcomed over effusively by
+a drawn, lined, shrunken, haggard wreck,--unshaven, blue-white about
+the nostrils, stooping in the shoulders, and peering under his eyebrows
+nervously. The drink had been at work as steadily as Dick.
+
+'Is this you?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'All that's left of me. Sit down. Binkie's quite well, and I've been
+doing some good work.' He reeled where he stood.
+
+'You've done some of the worst work you've ever done in your life. Man
+alive, you're----'
+
+Torpenhow turned to his companions appealingly, and they left the room
+to find lunch elsewhere. Then he spoke; but, since the reproof of a
+friend is much too sacred and intimate a thing to be printed, and since
+Torpenhow used figures and metaphors which were unseemly, and contempt
+untranslatable, it will never be known what was actually said to Dick,
+who blinked and winked and picked at his hands. After a time the culprit
+began to feel the need of a little self-respect. He was quite sure that
+he had not in any way departed from virtue, and there were reasons, too,
+of which Torpenhow knew nothing. He would explain.
+
+He rose, tried to straighten his shoulders, and spoke to the face he
+could hardly see.
+
+'You are right,' he said. 'But I am right, too. After you went away I
+had some trouble with my eyes. So I went to an oculist, and he turned a
+gasogene--I mean a gas-engine--into my eye. That was very long ago. He
+said, "Scar on the head,--sword-cut and optic nerve." Make a note of
+that. So I am going blind. I have some work to do before I go blind, and
+I suppose that I must do it. I cannot see much now, but I can see best
+when I am drunk. I did not know I was drunk till I was told, but I must
+go on with my work. If you want to see it, there it is.' He pointed to
+the all but finished Melancolia and looked for applause.
+
+Torpenhow said nothing, and Dick began to whimper feebly, for joy at
+seeing Torpenhow again, for grief at misdeeds--if indeed they were
+misdeeds--that made Torpenhow remote and unsympathetic, and for childish
+vanity hurt, since Torpenhow had not given a word of praise to his
+wonderful picture.
+
+Bessie looked through the keyhole after a long pause, and saw the two
+walking up and down as usual, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's shoulder.
+
+Hereat she said something so improper that it shocked even Binkie,
+who was dribbling patiently on the landing with the hope of seeing his
+master again.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ The lark will make her hymn to God,
+ The partridge call her brood,
+ While I forget the heath I trod,
+ The fields wherein I stood.
+
+ 'Tis dule to know not night from morn,
+ But deeper dule to know
+ I can but hear the hunter's horn
+ That once I used to blow.
+
+ --The Only Son.
+IT WAS the third day after Torpenhow's return, and his heart was heavy.
+
+'Do you mean to tell me that you can't see to work without whiskey? It's
+generally the other way about.'
+
+'Can a drunkard swear on his honour?' said Dick.
+
+'Yes, if he has been as good a man as you.'
+
+'Then I give you my word of honour,' said Dick, speaking hurriedly
+through parched lips. 'Old man, I can hardly see your face now. You've
+kept me sober for two days,--if I ever was drunk,--and I've done no
+work.
+
+Don't keep me back any more. I don't know when my eyes may give out.
+
+The spots and dots and the pains and things are crowding worse than
+ever. I swear I can see all right when I'm--when I'm moderately screwed,
+as you say. Give me three more sittings from Bessie and all--the stuff
+I want, and the picture will be done. I can't kill myself in three days.
+It only means a touch of D. T. at the worst.'
+
+'If I give you three days more will you promise me to stop work and--the
+other thing, whether the picture's finished or not?'
+
+'I can't. You don't know what that picture means to me. But surely you
+could get the Nilghai to help you, and knock me down and tie me up. I
+shouldn't fight for the whiskey, but I should for the work.'
+
+'Go on, then. I give you three days; but you're nearly breaking my
+heart.'
+
+Dick returned to his work, toiling as one possessed; and the yellow
+devil of whiskey stood by him and chased away the spots in his eyes. The
+Melancolia was nearly finished, and was all or nearly all that he had
+hoped she would be. Dick jested with Bessie, who reminded him that he
+was 'a drunken beast'; but the reproof did not move him.
+
+'You can't understand, Bess. We are in sight of land now, and soon we
+shall lie back and think about what we've done. I'll give you three
+months' pay when the picture's finished, and next time I have any more
+work in hand--but that doesn't matter. Won't three months' pay make you
+hate me less?'
+
+'No, it won't! I hate you, and I'll go on hating you. Mr. Torpenhow
+won't speak to me any more. He's always looking at maps.'
+
+Bessie did not say that she had again laid siege to Torpenhow, or that
+at the end of our passionate pleading he had picked her up, given her a
+kiss, and put her outside the door with the recommendation not to be a
+little fool. He spent most of his time in the company of the Nilghai,
+and their talk was of war in the near future, the hiring of transports,
+and secret preparations among the dockyards. He did not wish to see Dick
+till the picture was finished.
+
+'He's doing first-class work,' he said to the Nilghai, 'and it's quite
+out of his regular line. But, for the matter of that, so's his infernal
+soaking.'
+
+'Never mind. Leave him alone. When he has come to his senses again we'll
+carry him off from this place and let him breathe clean air. Poor Dick!
+I don't envy you, Torp, when his eyes fail.'
+
+'Yes, it will be a case of "God help the man who's chained to our
+Davie." The worst is that we don't know when it will happen, and I
+believe the uncertainty and the waiting have sent Dick to the whiskey
+more than anything else.'
+
+'How the Arab who cut his head open would grin if he knew!'
+
+'He's at perfect liberty to grin if he can. He's dead. That's poor
+consolation now.'
+
+In the afternoon of the third day Torpenhow heard Dick calling for him.
+
+'All finished!' he shouted. 'I've done it! Come in! Isn't she a beauty?
+Isn't she a darling? I've been down to hell to get her; but isn't she
+worth it?'
+
+Torpenhow looked at the head of a woman who laughed,--a full-lipped,
+hollow-eyed woman who laughed from out of the canvas as Dick had
+intended she would.
+
+'Who taught you how to do it?' said Torpenhow. 'The touch and notion
+have nothing to do with your regular work. What a face it is! What eyes,
+and what insolence!' Unconsciously he threw back his head and laughed
+with her. 'She's seen the game played out,--I don't think she had a good
+time of it,--and now she doesn't care. Isn't that the idea?'
+
+'Exactly.'
+
+'Where did you get the mouth and chin from? They don't belong to Bess.'
+
+'They're--some one else's. But isn't it good? Isn't it thundering good?
+Wasn't it worth the whiskey? I did it. Alone I did it, and it's the best
+I can do.' He drew his breath sharply, and whispered, 'Just God! what
+could I not do ten years hence, if I can do this now!--By the way, what
+do you think of it, Bess?'
+
+The girl was biting her lips. She loathed Torpenhow because he had taken
+no notice of her.
+
+'I think it's just the horridest, beastliest thing I ever saw,' she
+answered, and turned away.
+
+'More than you will be of that way of thinking, young woman.--Dick,
+there's a sort of murderous, viperine suggestion in the poise of the
+head that I don't understand,' said Torpenhow.
+
+That's trick-work,' said Dick, chuckling with delight at being
+completely understood. 'I couldn't resist one little bit of sheer
+swagger. It's a French trick, and you wouldn't understand; but it's got
+at by slewing round the head a trifle, and a tiny, tiny foreshortening
+of one side of the face from the angle of the chin to the top of the
+left ear. That, and deepening the shadow under the lobe of the ear. It
+was flagrant trick-work; but, having the notion fixed, I felt entitled
+to play with it,--Oh, you beauty!'
+
+'Amen! She is a beauty. I can feel it.'
+
+'So will every man who has any sorrow of his own,' said Dick, slapping
+his thigh. 'He shall see his trouble there, and, by the Lord Harry, just
+when he's feeling properly sorry for himself he shall throw back his
+head and laugh,--as she is laughing. I've put the life of my heart
+and the light of my eyes into her, and I don't care what comes.... I'm
+tired,--awfully tired. I think I'll get to sleep. Take away the whiskey,
+it has served its turn, and give Bessie thirty-six quid, and three over
+for luck. Cover the picture.'
+
+He dropped asleep in the long chair, hid face white and haggard, almost
+before he had finished the sentence. Bessie tried to take Torpenhow's
+hand. 'Aren't you never going to speak to me any more?' she said; but
+Torpenhow was looking at Dick.
+
+'What a stock of vanity the man has! I'll take him in hand to-morrow and
+make much of him. He deserves it.--Eh! what was that, Bess?'
+
+'Nothing. I'll put things tidy here a little, and then I'll go. You
+couldn't give me that three months' pay now, could you? He said you were
+to.'
+
+Torpenhow gave her a check and went to his own rooms. Bessie faithfully
+tidied up the studio, set the door ajar for flight, emptied half a
+bottle of turpentine on a duster, and began to scrub the face of the
+Melancolia viciously. The paint did not smudge quickly enough. She took
+a palette-knife and scraped, following each stroke with the wet duster.
+In five minutes the picture was a formless, scarred muddle of colours.
+She threw the paint-stained duster into the studio stove, stuck out her
+tongue at the sleeper, and whispered, 'Bilked!' as she turned to run
+down the staircase. She would never see Torpenhow any more, but she had
+at least done harm to the man who had come between her and her desire
+and who used to make fun of her. Cashing the check was the very cream of
+the jest to Bessie. Then the little privateer sailed across the Thames,
+to be swallowed up in the gray wilderness of South-the-Water.
+
+Dick slept till late in the evening, when Torpenhow dragged him off
+to bed. His eyes were as bright as his voice was hoarse. 'Let's have
+another look at the picture,' he said, insistently as a child.
+
+'You--go--to--bed,' said Torpenhow. 'You aren't at all well, though you
+mayn't know it. You're as jumpy as a cat.'
+
+'I reform to-morrow. Good-night.'
+
+As he repassed through the studio, Torpenhow lifted the cloth above the
+picture, and almost betrayed himself by outcries: 'Wiped out!--scraped
+out and turped out! He's on the verge of jumps as it is. That's
+Bess,--the little fiend! Only a woman could have done that!-with the ink
+not dry on the check, too! Dick will be raving mad to-morrow. It was all
+my fault for trying to help gutter-devils. Oh, my poor Dick, the Lord is
+hitting you very hard!'
+
+Dick could not sleep that night, partly for pure joy, and partly because
+the well-known Catherine-wheels inside his eyes had given place to
+crackling volcanoes of many-coloured fire. 'Spout away,' he said aloud.
+
+'I've done my work, and now you can do what you please.' He lay still,
+staring at the ceiling, the long-pent-up delirium of drink in his
+veins, his brain on fire with racing thoughts that would not stay to be
+considered, and his hands crisped and dry. He had just discovered that
+he was painting the face of the Melancolia on a revolving dome ribbed
+with millions of lights, and that all his wondrous thoughts stood
+embodied hundreds of feet below his tiny swinging plank, shouting
+together in his honour, when something cracked inside his temples like
+an overstrained bowstring, the glittering dome broke inward, and he was
+alone in the thick night.
+
+'I'll go to sleep. The room's very dark. Let's light a lamp and see how
+the Melancolia looks. There ought to have been a moon.'
+
+It was then that Torpenhow heard his name called by a voice that he did
+not know,--in the rattling accents of deadly fear.
+
+'He's looked at the picture,' was his first thought, as he hurried
+into the bedroom and found Dick sitting up and beating the air with his
+hands.
+
+'Torp! Torp! where are you? For pity's sake, come to me!'
+
+'What's the matter?'
+
+Dick clutched at his shoulder. 'Matter! I've been lying here for hours
+in the dark, and you never heard me. Torp, old man, don't go away. I'm
+all in the dark. In the dark, I tell you!'
+
+Torpenhow held the candle within a foot of Dick's eyes, but there was no
+light in those eyes. He lit the gas, and Dick heard the flame catch. The
+grip of his fingers on Torpenhow's shoulder made Torpenhow wince.
+
+'Don't leave me. You wouldn't leave me alone now, would you? I can't
+see. D'you understand? It's black,--quite black,--and I feel as if I was
+falling through it all.'
+
+'Steady does it.' Torpenhow put his arm round Dick and began to rock him
+gently to and fro.
+
+'That's good. Now don't talk. If I keep very quiet for a while, this
+darkness will lift. It seems just on the point of breaking. H'sh!' Dick
+knit his brows and stared desperately in front of him. The night air was
+chilling Torpenhow's toes.
+
+'Can you stay like that a minute?' he said. 'I'll get my dressing-gown
+and some slippers.'
+
+Dick clutched the bed-head with both hands and waited for the darkness
+to clear away. 'What a time you've been!' he cried, when Torpenhow
+returned. 'It's as black as ever. What are you banging about in the
+door-way?'
+
+'Long chair,--horse-blanket,--pillow. Going to sleep by you. Lie down
+now; you'll be better in the morning.'
+
+'I shan't!' The voice rose to a wail. 'My God! I'm blind! I'm blind, and
+the darkness will never go away.' He made as if to leap from the bed,
+but Torpenhow's arms were round him, and Torpenhow's chin was on his
+shoulder, and his breath was squeezed out of him. He could only gasp,
+'Blind!' and wriggle feebly.
+
+'Steady, Dickie, steady!' said the deep voice in his ear, and the grip
+tightened. 'Bite on the bullet, old man, and don't let them think you're
+afraid,' The grip could draw no closer. Both men were breathing heavily.
+
+Dick threw his head from side to side and groaned.
+
+'Let me go,' he panted. 'You're cracking my ribs. We-we mustn't let them
+think we're afraid, must we,--all the powers of darkness and that lot?'
+
+'Lie down. It's all over now.'
+
+'Yes,' said Dick, obediently. 'But would you mind letting me hold your
+hand? I feel as if I wanted something to hold on to. One drops through
+the dark so.'
+
+Torpenhow thrust out a large and hairy paw from the long chair. Dick
+clutched it tightly, and in half an hour had fallen asleep. Torpenhow
+withdrew his hand, and, stooping over Dick, kissed him lightly on the
+forehead, as men do sometimes kiss a wounded comrade in the hour of
+death, to ease his departure.
+
+In the gray dawn Torpenhow heard Dick talking to himself. He was adrift
+on the shoreless tides of delirium, speaking very quickly--'It's a
+pity,--a great pity; but it's helped, and it must be eaten, Master
+George. Sufficient unto the day is the blindness thereof, and, further,
+putting aside all Melancolias and false humours, it is of obvious
+notoriety--such as mine was--that the queen can do no wrong. Torp
+doesn't know that. I'll tell him when we're a little farther into the
+desert.
+
+What a bungle those boatmen are making of the steamer-ropes! They'll
+have that four-inch hawser chafed through in a minute. I told you
+so--there she goes! White foam on green water, and the steamer slewing
+round. How good that looks! I'll sketch it. No, I can't. I'm afflicted
+with ophthalmia. That was one of the ten plagues of Egypt, and it
+extends up the Nile in the shape of cataract. Ha! that's a joke, Torp.
+Laugh, you graven image, and stand clear of the hawser.... It'll knock
+you into the water and make your dress all dirty, Maisie dear.'
+
+'Oh!' said Torpenhow. 'This happened before. That night on the river.'
+
+'She'll be sure to say it's my fault if you get muddy, and you're quite
+near enough to the breakwater. Maisie, that's not fair. Ah! I knew you'd
+miss.
+
+Low and to the left, dear. But you've no conviction. Don't be angry,
+darling. I'd cut my hand off if it would give you anything more than
+obstinacy. My right hand, if it would serve.'
+
+'Now we mustn't listen. Here's an island shouting across seas of
+misunderstanding with a vengeance. But it's shouting truth, I fancy,'
+said Torpenhow.
+
+The babble continued. It all bore upon Maisie. Sometimes Dick lectured
+at length on his craft, then he cursed himself for his folly in being
+enslaved. He pleaded to Maisie for a kiss--only one kiss--before she
+went away, and called to her to come back from Vitry-sur-Marne, if she
+would; but through all his ravings he bade heaven and earth witness that
+the queen could do no wrong.
+
+Torpenhow listened attentively, and learned every detail of Dick's life
+that had been hidden from him. For three days Dick raved through the
+past, and then a natural sleep. 'What a strain he has been running
+under, poor chap!' said Torpenhow. 'Dick, of all men, handing himself
+over like a dog! And I was lecturing him on arrogance! I ought to have
+known that it was no use to judge a man. But I did it. What a demon that
+girl must be! Dick's given her his life,--confound him!--and she's given
+him one kiss apparently.'
+
+'Torp,' said Dick, from the bed, 'go out for a walk. You've been here
+too long. I'll get up. Hi! This is annoying. I can't dress myself. Oh,
+it's too absurd!'
+
+Torpenhow helped him into his clothes and led him to the big chair
+in the studio. He sat quietly waiting under strained nerves for
+the darkness to lift. It did not lift that day, nor the next. Dick
+adventured on a voyage round the walls. He hit his shins against the
+stove, and this suggested to him that it would be better to crawl on all
+fours, one hand in front of him. Torpenhow found him on the floor.
+
+'I'm trying to get the geography of my new possessions,' said he. 'D'you
+remember that nigger you gouged in the square? Pity you didn't keep the
+odd eye. It would have been useful. Any letters for me? Give me all the
+ones in fat gray envelopes with a sort of crown thing outside. They're
+of no importance.'
+
+Torpenhow gave him a letter with a black M. on the envelope flap. Dick
+put it into his pocket. There was nothing in it that Torpenhow might
+not have read, but it belonged to himself and to Maisie, who would never
+belong to him.
+
+'When she finds that I don't write, she'll stop writing. It's better
+so. I couldn't be any use to her now,' Dick argued, and the tempter
+suggested that he should make known his condition. Every nerve in him
+revolted. 'I have fallen low enough already. I'm not going to beg for
+pity. Besides, it would be cruel to her.' He strove to put Maisie out of
+his thoughts; but the blind have many opportunities for thinking, and as
+the tides of his strength came back to him in the long employless days
+of dead darkness, Dick's soul was troubled to the core. Another letter,
+and another, came from Maisie. Then there was silence, and Dick sat by
+the window, the pulse of summer in the air, and pictured her being won
+by another man, stronger than himself. His imagination, the keener for
+the dark background it worked against, spared him no single detail that
+might send him raging up and down the studio, to stumble over the stove
+that seemed to be in four places at once. Worst of all, tobacco would
+not taste in the darkness. The arrogance of the man had disappeared, and
+in its place were settled despair that Torpenhow knew, and blind passion
+that Dick confided to his pillow at night. The intervals between
+the paroxysms were filled with intolerable waiting and the weight of
+intolerable darkness.
+
+'Come out into the Park,' said Torpenhow. 'You haven't stirred out since
+the beginning of things.'
+
+'What's the use? There's no movement in the dark; and, besides,'--he
+paused irresolutely at the head of the stairs,--'something will run over
+me.'
+
+'Not if I'm with you. Proceed gingerly.'
+
+The roar of the streets filled Dick with nervous terror, and he clung to
+Torpenhow's arm. 'Fancy having to feel for a gutter with your foot!' he
+said petulantly, as he turned into the Park. 'Let's curse God and die.'
+
+'Sentries are forbidden to pay unauthorised compliments. By Jove, there
+are the Guards!'
+
+Dick's figure straightened. 'Let's get near 'em. Let's go in and look.
+Let's get on the grass and run. I can smell the trees.'
+
+'Mind the low railing. That's all right!' Torpenhow kicked out a tuft
+of grass with his heel. 'Smell that,' he said. 'Isn't it good?' Dick
+sniffed luxuriously. 'Now pick up your feet and run.' They approached
+as near to the regiment as was possible. The clank of bayonets being
+unfixed made Dick's nostrils quiver.
+
+'Let's get nearer. They're in column, aren't they?'
+
+'Yes. How did you know?'
+
+'Felt it. Oh, my men!--my beautiful men!' He edged forward as though he
+could see. 'I could draw those chaps once. Who'll draw 'em now?'
+
+'They'll move off in a minute. Don't jump when the band begins.'
+
+'Huh! I'm not a new charger. It's the silences that hurt. Nearer,
+Torp!--nearer! Oh, my God, what wouldn't I give to see 'em for a
+minute!--one half-minute!'
+
+He could hear the armed life almost within reach of him, could hear the
+slings tighten across the bandsman's chest as he heaved the big drum
+from the ground.
+
+'Sticks crossed above his head,' whispered Torpenhow.
+
+'I know. I know! Who should know if I don't? H'sh!'
+
+The drum-sticks fell with a boom, and the men swung forward to the crash
+of the band. Dick felt the wind of the massed movement in his face,
+heard the maddening tramp of feet and the friction of the pouches on the
+belts. The big drum pounded out the tune. It was a music-hall refrain
+that made a perfect quickstep--
+
+ He must be a man of decent height,
+ He must be a man of weight,
+ He must come home on a Saturday night
+ In a thoroughly sober state;
+ He must know how to love me,
+ And he must know how to kiss;
+ And if he's enough to keep us both
+ I can't refuse him bliss.
+'What's the matter?' said Torpenhow, as he saw Dick's head fall when the
+last of the regiment had departed.
+
+'Nothing. I feel a little bit out of the running,--that's all. Torp,
+take me back. Why did you bring me out?'
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+ There were three friends that buried the fourth,
+ The mould in his mouth and the dust in his eyes
+ And they went south and east, and north,--
+ The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.
+
+ There were three friends that spoke of the dead,--
+ The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.--
+ 'And would he were with us now,' they said,
+ 'The sun in our face and the wind in our eyes.'
+
+ --Ballad.
+THE NILGHAI was angry with Torpenhow. Dick had been sent to bed,--blind
+men are ever under the orders of those who can see,--and since he had
+returned from the Park had fluently sworn at Torpenhow because he was
+alive, and all the world because it was alive and could see, while he,
+Dick, was dead in the death of the blind, who, at the best, are only
+burdens upon their associates. Torpenhow had said something about a Mrs.
+Gummidge, and Dick had retired in a black fury to handle and re-handle
+three unopened letters from Maisie.
+
+The Nilghai, fat, burly, and aggressive, was in Torpenhow's rooms.
+
+Behind him sat the Keneu, the Great War Eagle, and between them lay a
+large map embellished with black-and-white-headed pins.
+
+'I was wrong about the Balkans,' said the Nilghai. 'But I'm not wrong
+about this business. The whole of our work in the Southern Soudan
+must be done over again. The public doesn't care, of course, but the
+government does, and they are making their arrangements quietly. You
+know that as well as I do.'
+
+'I remember how the people cursed us when our troops withdrew from
+Omdurman. It was bound to crop up sooner or later. But I can't go,' said
+Torpenhow. He pointed through the open door; it was a hot night. 'Can
+you blame me?'
+
+The Keneu purred above his pipe like a large and very happy cat--'Don't
+blame you in the least. It's uncommonly good of you, and all the rest
+of it, but every man--even you, Torp--must consider his work. I know it
+sounds brutal, but Dick's out of the race,--down,--gastados expended,
+finished, done for. He has a little money of his own. He won't starve,
+and you can't pull out of your slide for his sake. Think of your own
+reputation.'
+
+'Dick's was five times bigger than mine and yours put together.'
+
+'That was because he signed his name to everything he did. It's all
+ended now. You must hold yourself in readiness to move out. You can
+command your own prices, and you do better work than any three of us.'
+
+'Don't tell me how tempting it is. I'll stay here to look after Dick
+for a while. He's as cheerful as a bear with a sore head, but I think he
+likes to have me near him.'
+
+The Nilghai said something uncomplimentary about soft-headed fools who
+throw away their careers for other fools. Torpenhow flushed angrily. The
+constant strain of attendance on Dick had worn his nerves thin.
+
+'There remains a third fate,' said the Keneu, thoughtfully. 'Consider
+this, and be not larger fools than necessary. Dick is--or rather
+was--an able-bodied man of moderate attractions and a certain amount of
+audacity.'
+
+'Oho!' said the Nilghai, who remembered an affair at Cairo. 'I begin to
+see,--Torp, I'm sorry.'
+
+Torpenhow nodded forgiveness: 'You were more sorry when he cut you out,
+though.--Go on, Keneu.'
+
+'I've often thought, when I've seen men die out in the desert, that if
+the news could be sent through the world, and the means of transport
+were quick enough, there would be one woman at least at each man's
+bedside.'
+
+'There would be some mighty quaint revelations. Let us be grateful
+things are as they are,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Let us rather reverently consider whether Torp's three-cornered
+ministrations are exactly what Dick needs just now.--What do you think
+yourself, Torp?'
+
+'I know they aren't. But what can I do?'
+
+'Lay the matter before the board. We are all Dick's friends here. You've
+been most in his life.'
+
+'But I picked it up when he was off his head.'
+
+'The greater chance of its being true. I thought we should arrive. Who
+is she?'
+
+Then Torpenhow told a tale in plain words, as a special correspondent
+who knows how to make a verbal precis should tell it. The men listened
+without interruption.
+
+'Is it possible that a man can come back across the years to his
+calf-love?' said the Keneu. 'Is it possible?'
+
+'I give the facts. He says nothing about it now, but he sits fumbling
+three letters from her when he thinks I'm not looking. What am I to do?'
+
+'Speak to him,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Oh yes! Write to her,--I don't know her full name, remember,--and ask
+her to accept him out of pity. I believe you once told Dick you were
+sorry for him, Nilghai. You remember what happened, eh? Go into the
+bedroom and suggest full confession and an appeal to this Maisie
+girl, whoever she is. I honestly believe he'd try to kill you; and the
+blindness has made him rather muscular.'
+
+'Torpenhow's course is perfectly clear,' said the Keneu. 'He will go to
+Vitry-sur-Marne, which is on the Bezieres-Landes Railway,--single track
+from Tourgas. The Prussians shelled it out in '70 because there was a
+poplar on the top of a hill eighteen hundred yards from the church spire
+There's a squadron of cavalry quartered there,--or ought to be. Where
+this studio Torp spoke about may be I cannot tell. That is Torp's
+business. I have given him his route. He will dispassionately explain
+the situation to the girl, and she will come back to Dick,--the more
+especially because, to use Dick's words, "there is nothing but her
+damned obstinacy to keep them apart."'
+
+'And they have four hundred and twenty pounds a year between 'em.
+
+Dick never lost his head for figures, even in his delirium. You haven't
+the shadow of an excuse for not going,' said the Nilghai.
+
+Torpenhow looked very uncomfortable. 'But it's absurd and impossible. I
+can't drag her back by the hair.'
+
+'Our business--the business for which we draw our money--is to do absurd
+and impossible things,--generally with no reason whatever except to
+amuse the public. Here we have a reason. The rest doesn't matter. I
+shall share these rooms with the Nilghai till Torpenhow returns. There
+will be a batch of unbridled "specials" coming to town in a little
+while, and these will serve as their headquarters. Another reason for
+sending Torpenhow away. Thus Providence helps those who help others,
+and'--here the Keneu dropped his measured speech--'we can't have you
+tied by the leg to Dick when the trouble begins. It's your only chance
+of getting away; and Dick will be grateful.'
+
+'He will,--worse luck! I can but go and try. I can't conceive a woman in
+her senses refusing Dick.'
+
+'Talk that out with the girl. I have seen you wheedle an angry Mahdieh
+woman into giving you dates. This won't be a tithe as difficult. You had
+better not be here to-morrow afternoon, because the Nilghai and I will
+be in possession. It is an order. Obey.'
+
+'Dick,' said Torpenhow, next morning, 'can I do anything for you?'
+
+'No! Leave me alone. How often must I remind you that I'm blind?'
+
+'Nothing I could go for to fetch for to carry for to bring?'
+
+'No. Take those infernal creaking boots of yours away.'
+
+'Poor chap!' said Torpenhow to himself. 'I must have been sitting on his
+nerves lately. He wants a lighter step.' Then, aloud, 'Very well. Since
+you're so independent, I'm going off for four or five days. Say good-bye
+at least. The housekeeper will look after you, and Keneu has my rooms.'
+
+Dick's face fell. 'You won't be longer than a week at the outside? I
+know I'm touched in the temper, but I can't get on without you.'
+
+'Can't you? You'll have to do without me in a little time, and you'll be
+glad I'm gone.'
+
+Dick felt his way back to the big chair, and wondered what these things
+might mean. He did not wish to be tended by the housekeeper, and yet
+Torpenhow's constant tenderness jarred on him. He did not exactly know
+what he wanted. The darkness would not lift, and Maisie's unopened
+letters felt worn and old from much handling. He could never read them
+for himself as long as life endured; but Maisie might have sent him some
+fresh ones to play with. The Nilghai entered with a gift,--a piece of
+red modelling-wax. He fancied that Dick might find interest in using his
+hands. Dick poked and patted the stuff for a few minutes, and, 'Is it
+like anything in the world?' he said drearily. 'Take it away. I may get
+the touch of the blind in fifty years. Do you know where Torpenhow has
+gone?'
+
+The Nilghai knew nothing. 'We're staying in his rooms till he comes
+back. Can we do anything for you?'
+
+'I'd like to be left alone, please. Don't think I'm ungrateful; but I'm
+best alone.'
+
+The Nilghai chuckled, and Dick resumed his drowsy brooding and sullen
+rebellion against fate. He had long since ceased to think about the work
+he had done in the old days, and the desire to do more work had departed
+from him. He was exceedingly sorry for himself, and the completeness
+of his tender grief soothed him. But his soul and his body cried for
+Maisie--Maisie who would understand. His mind pointed out that Maisie,
+having her own work to do, would not care. His experience had taught him
+that when money was exhausted women went away, and that when a man was
+knocked out of the race the others trampled on him. 'Then at the least,'
+said Dick, in reply, 'she could use me as I used Binat,--for some sort
+of a study. I wouldn't ask more than to be near her again, even though I
+knew that another man was making love to her. Ugh! what a dog I am!'
+
+A voice on the staircase began to sing joyfully--
+
+'When we go--go--go away from here, Our creditors will weep and they
+will wail, Our absence much regretting when they find that they've been
+getting Out of England by next Tuesday's Indian mail.'
+
+Following the trampling of feet, slamming of Torpenhow's door, and the
+sound of voices in strenuous debate, some one squeaked, 'And see, you
+good fellows, I have found a new water-bottle--firs'-class patent--eh,
+how you say? Open himself inside out.'
+
+Dick sprang to his feet. He knew the voice well. 'That's Cassavetti,
+come back from the Continent. Now I know why Torp went away. There's a
+row somewhere, and--I'm out of it!'
+
+The Nilghai commanded silence in vain. 'That's for my sake,' Dick said
+bitterly. 'The birds are getting ready to fly, and they wouldn't
+tell me. I can hear Morten-Sutherland and Mackaye. Half the War
+Correspondents in London are there;--and I'm out of it.'
+
+He stumbled across the landing and plunged into Torpenhow's room. He
+could feel that it was full of men. 'Where's the trouble?' said he. 'In
+the Balkans at last? Why didn't some one tell me?'
+
+'We thought you wouldn't be interested,' said the Nilghai, shamefacedly.
+
+'It's in the Soudan, as usual.'
+
+'You lucky dogs! Let me sit here while you talk. I shan't be a skeleton
+at the feast.--Cassavetti, where are you? Your English is as bad as
+ever.'
+
+Dick was led into a chair. He heard the rustle of the maps, and the talk
+swept forward, carrying him with it. Everybody spoke at once, discussing
+press censorships, railway-routes, transport, water-supply, the
+capacities of generals,--these in language that would have horrified a
+trusting public,--ranting, asserting, denouncing, and laughing at the
+top of their voices. There was the glorious certainty of war in the
+Soudan at any moment. The Nilghai said so, and it was well to be in
+readiness. The Keneu had telegraphed to Cairo for horses; Cassavetti
+had stolen a perfectly inaccurate list of troops that would be ordered
+forward, and was reading it out amid profane interruptions, and the
+Keneu introduced to Dick some man unknown who would be employed as war
+artist by the Central Southern Syndicate. 'It's his first outing,' said
+the Keneu. 'Give him some tips--about riding camels.'
+
+'Oh, those camels!' groaned Cassavetti. 'I shall learn to ride him
+again, and now I am so much all soft! Listen, you good fellows. I know
+your military arrangement very well. There will go the Royal Argalshire
+Sutherlanders. So it was read to me upon best authority.'
+
+A roar of laughter interrupted him.
+
+'Sit down,' said the Nilghai. 'The lists aren't even made out in the War
+Office.'
+
+'Will there be any force at Suakin?' said a voice.
+
+Then the outcries redoubled, and grew mixed, thus: 'How many Egyptian
+troops will they use?--God help the Fellaheen!--There's a railway
+in Plumstead marshes doing duty as a fives-court.--We shall have the
+Suakin-Berber line built at last.--Canadian voyageurs are too careful.
+Give me a half-drunk Krooman in a whale-boat.--Who commands the Desert
+column?--No, they never blew up the big rock in the Ghineh bend. We
+shall have to be hauled up, as usual.--Somebody tell me if there's an
+Indian contingent, or I'll break everybody's head.--Don't tear the
+map in two.--It's a war of occupation, I tell you, to connect with the
+African companies in the South.--There's Guinea-worm in most of the
+wells on that route.' Then the Nilghai, despairing of peace, bellowed
+like a fog-horn and beat upon the table with both hands.
+
+'But what becomes of Torpenhow?' said Dick, in the silence that
+followed.
+
+'Torp's in abeyance just now. He's off love-making somewhere, I
+suppose,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'He said he was going to stay at home,' said the Keneu.
+
+'Is he?' said Dick, with an oath. 'He won't. I'm not much good now, but
+if you and the Nilghai hold him down I'll engage to trample on him till
+he sees reason. He'll stay behind, indeed! He's the best of you all.
+There'll be some tough work by Omdurman. We shall come there to stay,
+this time.
+
+But I forgot. I wish I were going with you.'
+
+'So do we all, Dickie,' said the Keneu.
+
+'And I most of all,' said the new artist of the Central Southern
+Syndicate.
+
+'Could you tell me----'
+
+'I'll give you one piece of advice,' Dick answered, moving towards
+the door. 'If you happen to be cut over the head in a scrimmage, don't
+guard.
+
+Tell the man to go on cutting. You'll find it cheapest in the end.
+Thanks for letting me look in.'
+
+'There's grit in Dick,' said the Nilghai, an hour later, when the room
+was emptied of all save the Keneu.
+
+'It was the sacred call of the war-trumpet. Did you notice how he
+answered to it? Poor fellow! Let's look at him,' said the Keneu.
+
+The excitement of the talk had died away. Dick was sitting by the studio
+table, with his head on his arms, when the men came in. He did not
+change his position.
+
+'It hurts,' he moaned. 'God forgive me, but it hurts cruelly; and yet,
+y'know, the world has a knack of spinning round all by itself. Shall I
+see Torp before he goes?'
+
+'Oh, yes. You'll see him,' said the Nilghai.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+ The sun went down an hour ago,
+ I wonder if I face towards home;
+ If I lost my way in the light of day
+ How shall I find it now night is come?
+
+ --Old Song.
+'MAISIE, come to bed.'
+
+'It's so hot I can't sleep. Don't worry.'
+
+Maisie put her elbows on the window-sill and looked at the moonlight on
+the straight, poplar-flanked road. Summer had come upon Vitry-sur-Marne
+and parched it to the bone. The grass was dry-burnt in the meadows, the
+clay by the bank of the river was caked to brick, the roadside flowers
+were long since dead, and the roses in the garden hung withered on their
+stalks. The heat in the little low bedroom under the eaves was almost
+intolerable. The very moonlight on the wall of Kami's studio across
+the road seemed to make the night hotter, and the shadow of the big
+bell-handle by the closed gate cast a bar of inky black that caught
+Maisie's eye and annoyed her.
+
+'Horrid thing! It should be all white,' she murmured. 'And the gate
+isn't in the middle of the wall, either. I never noticed that before.'
+
+Maisie was hard to please at that hour. First, the heat of the past few
+weeks had worn her down; secondly, her work, and particularly the study
+of a female head intended to represent the Melancolia and not finished
+in time for the Salon, was unsatisfactory; thirdly, Kami had said as
+much two days before; fourthly,--but so completely fourthly that it was
+hardly worth thinking about,--Dick, her property, had not written to
+her for more than six weeks. She was angry with the heat, with Kami, and
+with her work, but she was exceedingly angry with Dick.
+
+She had written to him three times,--each time proposing a fresh
+treatment of her Melancolia. Dick had taken no notice of these
+communications. She had resolved to write no more. When she returned
+to England in the autumn--for her pride's sake she could not return
+earlier--she would speak to him. She missed the Sunday afternoon
+conferences more than she cared to admit. All that Kami said was,
+'Continuez, mademoiselle, continuez toujours,' and he had been repeating
+the wearisome counsel through the hot summer, exactly like a cicada,--an
+old gray cicada in a black alpaca coat, white trousers, and a huge felt
+hat.
+
+But Dick had tramped masterfully up and down her little studio north
+of the cool green London park, and had said things ten times worse than
+continuez, before he snatched the brush out of her hand and showed her
+where the error lay. His last letter, Maisie remembered, contained
+some trivial advice about not sketching in the sun or drinking water at
+wayside farmhouses; and he had said that not once, but three times,--as
+if he did not know that Maisie could take care of herself.
+
+But what was he doing, that he could not trouble to write? A murmur of
+voices in the road made her lean from the window. A cavalryman of the
+little garrison in the town was talking to Kami's cook. The moonlight
+glittered on the scabbard of his sabre, which he was holding in his hand
+lest it should clank inopportunely. The cook's cap cast deep shadows on
+her face, which was close to the conscript's. He slid his arm round her
+waist, and there followed the sound of a kiss.
+
+'Faugh!' said Maisie, stepping back.
+
+'What's that?' said the red-haired girl, who was tossing uneasily
+outside her bed.
+
+'Only a conscript kissing the cook,' said Maisie.
+
+'They've gone away now.' She leaned out of the window again, and put a
+shawl over her nightgown to guard against chills. There was a very small
+night-breeze abroad, and a sun-baked rose below nodded its head as one
+who knew unutterable secrets. Was it possible that Dick should turn his
+thoughts from her work and his own and descend to the degradation of
+Suzanne and the conscript? He could not! The rose nodded its head and
+one leaf therewith. It looked like a naughty little devil scratching its
+ear.
+
+Dick could not, 'because,' thought Maisie, 'he is mine,--mine,--mine. He
+said he was. I'm sure I don't care what he does. It will only spoil his
+work if he does; and it will spoil mine too.'
+
+The rose continued to nod in the futile way peculiar to flowers. There
+was no earthly reason why Dick should not disport himself as he chose,
+except that he was called by Providence, which was Maisie, to assist
+Maisie in her work. And her work was the preparation of pictures that
+went sometimes to English provincial exhibitions, as the notices in the
+scrap-book proved, and that were invariably rejected by the Salon when
+Kami was plagued into allowing her to send them up. Her work in the
+future, it seemed, would be the preparation of pictures on exactly
+similar lines which would be rejected in exactly the same way----The
+red-haired girl threshed distressfully across the sheets. 'It's too hot
+to sleep,' she moaned; and the interruption jarred.
+
+Exactly the same way. Then she would divide her years between the little
+studio in England and Kami's big studio at Vitry-sur-Marne. No, she
+would go to another master, who should force her into the success that
+was her right, if patient toil and desperate endeavour gave one a
+right to anything. Dick had told her that he had worked ten years to
+understand his craft. She had worked ten years, and ten years were
+nothing. Dick had said that ten years were nothing,--but that was in
+regard to herself only. He had said--this very man who could not find
+time to write--that he would wait ten years for her, and that she was
+bound to come back to him sooner or later. He had said this in the
+absurd letter about sunstroke and diphtheria; and then he had stopped
+writing. He was wandering up and down moonlit streets, kissing cooks.
+She would like to lecture him now,--not in her nightgown, of course,
+but properly dressed, severely and from a height. Yet if he was kissing
+other girls he certainly would not care whether she lectured him or not.
+He would laugh at her. Very good.
+
+She would go back to her studio and prepare pictures that went, etc.,
+etc.
+
+The mill-wheel of thought swung round slowly, that no section of it
+might be slurred over, and the red-haired girl tossed and turned behind
+her.
+
+Maisie put her chin in her hands and decided that there could be no
+doubt whatever of the villainy of Dick. To justify herself, she began,
+unwomanly, to weigh the evidence. There was a boy, and he had said he
+loved her. And he kissed her,--kissed her on the cheek,--by a yellow
+sea-poppy that nodded its head exactly like the maddening dry rose in
+the garden. Then there was an interval, and men had told her that they
+loved her--just when she was busiest with her work. Then the boy came
+back, and at their very second meeting had told her that he loved her.
+Then he had---- But there was no end to the things he had done. He
+had given her his time and his powers. He had spoken to her of
+Art, housekeeping, technique, teacups, the abuse of pickles as a
+stimulant,--that was rude,--sable hair-brushes,--he had given her the
+best in her stock,--she used them daily; he had given her advice that
+she profited by, and now and again--a look. Such a look! The look of a
+beaten hound waiting for the word to crawl to his mistress's feet. In
+return she had given him nothing whatever, except--here she brushed her
+mouth against the open-work sleeve of her nightgown--the privilege of
+kissing her once. And on the mouth, too. Disgraceful! Was that not
+enough, and more than enough? and if it was not, had he not cancelled
+the debt by not writing and--probably kissing other girls? 'Maisie,
+you'll catch a chill. Do go and lie down,' said the wearied voice of her
+companion. 'I can't sleep a wink with you at the window.'
+
+Maisie shrugged her shoulders and did not answer. She was reflecting
+on the meannesses of Dick, and on other meannesses with which he had
+nothing to do. The moonlight would not let her sleep. It lay on the
+skylight of the studio across the road in cold silver; she stared at it
+intently and her thoughts began to slide one into the other. The shadow
+of the big bell-handle in the wall grew short, lengthened again, and
+faded out as the moon went down behind the pasture and a hare came
+limping home across the road. Then the dawn-wind washed through the
+upland grasses, and brought coolness with it, and the cattle lowed by
+the drought-shrunk river. Maisie's head fell forward on the window-sill,
+and the tangle of black hair covered her arms.
+
+'Maisie, wake up. You'll catch a chill.'
+
+'Yes, dear; yes, dear.' She staggered to her bed like a wearied child,
+and as she buried her face in the pillows she muttered, 'I think--I
+think....
+
+But he ought to have written.'
+
+Day brought the routine of the studio, the smell of paint and
+turpentine, and the monotone wisdom of Kami, who was a leaden artist,
+but a golden teacher if the pupil were only in sympathy with him. Maisie
+was not in sympathy that day, and she waited impatiently for the end of
+the work.
+
+She knew when it was coming; for Kami would gather his black alpaca
+coat into a bunch behind him, and, with faded blue eyes that saw neither
+pupils nor canvas, look back into the past to recall the history of one
+Binat. 'You have all done not so badly,' he would say. 'But you shall
+remember that it is not enough to have the method, and the art, and
+the power, nor even that which is touch, but you shall have also
+the conviction that nails the work to the wall. Of the so many I
+taught,'--here the students would begin to unfix drawing-pins or get
+their tubes together,--'the very so many that I have taught, the best
+was Binat. All that comes of the study and the work and the knowledge
+was to him even when he came. After he left me he should have done all
+that could be done with the colour, the form, and the knowledge. Only,
+he had not the conviction. So to-day I hear no more of Binat,--the best
+of my pupils,--and that is long ago. So to-day, too, you will be glad
+to hear no more of me. Continuez, mesdemoiselles, and, above all, with
+conviction.'
+
+He went into the garden to smoke and mourn over the lost Binat as the
+pupils dispersed to their several cottages or loitered in the studio to
+make plans for the cool of the afternoon.
+
+Maisie looked at her very unhappy Melancolia, restrained a desire to
+grimace before it, and was hurrying across the road to write a letter
+to Dick, when she was aware of a large man on a white troop-horse. How
+Torpenhow had managed in the course of twenty hours to find his way to
+the hearts of the cavalry officers in quarters at Vitry-sur-Marne, to
+discuss with them the certainty of a glorious revenge for France, to
+reduce the colonel to tears of pure affability, and to borrow the best
+horse in the squadron for the journey to Kami's studio, is a mystery
+that only special correspondents can unravel.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' said he. 'It seems an absurd question to ask, but
+the fact is that I don't know her by any other name: Is there any young
+lady here that is called Maisie?'
+
+'I am Maisie,' was the answer from the depths of a great sun-hat.
+
+'I ought to introduce myself,' he said, as the horse capered in the
+blinding white dust. 'My name is Torpenhow. Dick Heldar is my best
+friend, and--and--the fact is that he has gone blind.'
+
+'Blind!' said Maisie, stupidly. 'He can't be blind.'
+
+'He has been stone-blind for nearly two months.'
+
+Maisie lifted up her face, and it was pearly white. 'No! No! Not blind!
+I won't have him blind!'
+
+'Would you care to see for yourself?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Now,--at once?'
+
+'Oh, no! The Paris train doesn't go through this place till to-night.
+There will be ample time.'
+
+'Did Mr. Heldar send you to me?'
+
+'Certainly not. Dick wouldn't do that sort of thing. He's sitting in
+his studio, turning over some letters that he can't read because he's
+blind.'
+
+There was a sound of choking from the sun-hat. Maisie bowed her head
+and went into the cottage, where the red-haired girl was on a sofa,
+complaining of a headache.
+
+'Dick's blind!' said Maisie, taking her breath quickly as she steadied
+herself against a chair-back. 'My Dick's blind!'
+
+'What?' The girl was on the sofa no longer.
+
+'A man has come from England to tell me. He hasn't written to me for six
+weeks.'
+
+'Are you going to him?'
+
+'I must think.'
+
+'Think! I should go back to London and see him and I should kiss his
+eyes and kiss them and kiss them until they got well again! If you don't
+go I shall. Oh, what am I talking about? You wicked little idiot! Go to
+him at once. Go!'
+
+Torpenhow's neck was blistering, but he preserved a smile of infinite
+patience as Maisie appeared bareheaded in the sunshine.
+
+'I am coming,' said she, her eyes on the ground.
+
+'You will be at Vitry Station, then, at seven this evening.' This was
+an order delivered by one who was used to being obeyed. Maisie said
+nothing, but she felt grateful that there was no chance of disputing
+with this big man who took everything for granted and managed a
+squealing horse with one hand. She returned to the red-haired girl,
+who was weeping bitterly, and between tears, kisses,--very few of
+those,--menthol, packing, and an interview with Kami, the sultry
+afternoon wore away.
+
+Thought might come afterwards. Her present duty was to go to Dick,--Dick
+who owned the wondrous friend and sat in the dark playing with her
+unopened letters.
+
+'But what will you do,' she said to her companion.
+
+'I? Oh, I shall stay here and--finish your Melancolia,' she said,
+smiling pitifully. 'Write to me afterwards.'
+
+That night there ran a legend through Vitry-sur-Marne of a mad
+Englishman, doubtless suffering from sunstroke, who had drunk all the
+officers of the garrison under the table, had borrowed a horse from the
+lines, and had then and there eloped, after the English custom, with one
+of those more mad English girls who drew pictures down there under the
+care of that good Monsieur Kami.
+
+'They are very droll,' said Suzanne to the conscript in the moonlight
+by the studio wall. 'She walked always with those big eyes that saw
+nothing, and yet she kisses me on both cheeks as though she were my
+sister, and gives me--see--ten francs!'
+
+The conscript levied a contribution on both gifts; for he prided himself
+on being a good soldier.
+
+Torpenhow spoke very little to Maisie during the journey to Calais;
+but he was careful to attend to all her wants, to get her a compartment
+entirely to herself, and to leave her alone. He was amazed of the ease
+with which the matter had been accomplished.
+
+'The safest thing would be to let her think things out. By Dick's
+showing,--when he was off his head,--she must have ordered him about
+very thoroughly. Wonder how she likes being under orders.'
+
+Maisie never told. She sat in the empty compartment often with her eyes
+shut, that she might realise the sensation of blindness. It was an order
+that she should return to London swiftly, and she found herself at last
+almost beginning to enjoy the situation. This was better than looking
+after luggage and a red-haired friend who never took any interest in her
+surroundings. But there appeared to be a feeling in the air that she,
+Maisie,--of all people,--was in disgrace. Therefore she justified her
+conduct to herself with great success, till Torpenhow came up to her
+on the steamer and without preface began to tell the story of Dick's
+blindness, suppressing a few details, but dwelling at length on the
+miseries of delirium. He stopped before he reached the end, as though he
+had lost interest in the subject, and went forward to smoke. Maisie was
+furious with him and with herself.
+
+She was hurried on from Dover to London almost before she could ask for
+breakfast, and--she was past any feeling of indignation now--was bidden
+curtly to wait in a hall at the foot of some lead-covered stairs while
+Torpenhow went up to make inquiries. Again the knowledge that she was
+being treated like a naughty little girl made her pale cheeks flame. It
+was all Dick's fault for being so stupid as to go blind.
+
+Torpenhow led her up to a shut door, which he opened very softly. Dick
+was sitting by the window, with his chin on his chest. There were three
+envelopes in his hand, and he turned them over and over. The big man
+who gave orders was no longer by her side, and the studio door snapped
+behind her.
+
+Dick thrust the letters into his pocket as he heard the sound. 'Hullo,
+Torp! Is that you? I've been so lonely.'
+
+His voice had taken the peculiar flatness of the blind. Maisie pressed
+herself up into a corner of the room. Her heart was beating furiously,
+and she put one hand on her breast to keep it quiet. Dick was staring
+directly at her, and she realised for the first time that he was blind.
+
+Shutting her eyes in a rail-way carriage to open them when she pleased
+was child's play. This man was blind though his eyes were wide open.
+
+'Torp, is that you? They said you were coming.' Dick looked puzzled and
+a little irritated at the silence.
+
+'No; it's only me,' was the answer, in a strained little whisper. Maisie
+could hardly move her lips.
+
+'H'm!' said Dick, composedly, without moving. 'This is a new phenomenon.
+Darkness I'm getting used to; but I object to hearing voices.'
+
+Was he mad, then, as well as blind, that he talked to himself? Maisie's
+heart beat more wildly, and she breathed in gasps. Dick rose and began
+to feel his way across the room, touching each table and chair as he
+passed. Once he caught his foot on a rug, and swore, dropping on his
+knees to feel what the obstruction might be. Maisie remembered him
+walking in the Park as though all the earth belonged to him, tramping
+up and down her studio two months ago, and flying up the gangway of the
+Channel steamer. The beating of her heart was making her sick, and Dick
+was coming nearer, guided by the sound of her breathing. She put out a
+hand mechanically to ward him off or to draw him to herself, she did not
+know which. It touched his chest, and he stepped back as though he had
+been shot.
+
+'It's Maisie!' said he, with a dry sob. 'What are you doing here?'
+
+'I came--I came--to see you, please.'
+
+Dick's lips closed firmly.
+
+'Won't you sit down, then? You see, I've had some bother with my eyes,
+and----'
+
+'I know. I know. Why didn't you tell me?'
+
+'I couldn't write.'
+
+'You might have told Mr. Torpenhow.'
+
+'What has he to do with my affairs?'
+
+'He--he brought me from Vitry-sur-Marne. He thought I ought to see you.'
+
+'Why, what has happened? Can I do anything for you? No, I can't. I
+forgot.'
+
+'Oh, Dick, I'm so sorry! I've come to tell you, and---- Let me take you
+back to your chair.'
+
+'Don't! I'm not a child. You only do that out of pity. I never meant to
+tell you anything about it. I'm no good now. I'm down and done for. Let
+me alone!'
+
+He groped back to his chair, his chest labouring as he sat down.
+
+Maisie watched him, and the fear went out of her heart, to be followed
+by a very bitter shame. He had spoken a truth that had been hidden from
+the girl through every step of the impetuous flight to London; for he
+was, indeed, down and done for--masterful no longer but rather a little
+abject; neither an artist stronger than she, nor a man to be looked up
+to--only some blind one that sat in a chair and seemed on the point of
+crying. She was immensely and unfeignedly sorry for him--more sorry than
+she had ever been for any one in her life, but not sorry enough to deny
+his words.
+
+So she stood still and felt ashamed and a little hurt, because she had
+honestly intended that her journey should end triumphantly; and now she
+was only filled with pity most startlingly distinct from love.
+
+'Well?' said Dick, his face steadily turned away. 'I never meant to
+worry you any more. What's the matter?'
+
+He was conscious that Maisie was catching her breath, but was as
+unprepared as herself for the torrent of emotion that followed. She had
+dropped into a chair and was sobbing with her face hidden in her hands.
+
+'I can't--I can't!' she cried desperately. 'Indeed, I can't. It isn't my
+fault.
+
+I'm so sorry. Oh, Dickie, I'm so sorry.'
+
+Dick's shoulders straightened again, for the words lashed like a whip.
+
+Still the sobbing continued. It is not good to realise that you have
+failed in the hour of trial or flinched before the mere possibility of
+making sacrifices.
+
+'I do despise myself--indeed I do. But I can't. Oh, Dickie, you wouldn't
+ask me--would you?' wailed Maisie.
+
+She looked up for a minute, and by chance it happened that Dick's eyes
+fell on hers. The unshaven face was very white and set, and the lips
+were trying to force themselves into a smile. But it was the worn-out
+eyes that Maisie feared. Her Dick had gone blind and left in his place
+some one that she could hardly recognise till he spoke.
+
+'Who is asking you to do anything, Maisie? I told you how it would be.
+
+What's the use of worrying? For pity's sake don't cry like that; it
+isn't worth it.'
+
+'You don't know how I hate myself. Oh, Dick, help me--help me!' The
+passion of tears had grown beyond her control and was beginning to alarm
+the man. He stumbled forward and put his arm round her, and her head
+fell on his shoulder.
+
+'Hush, dear, hush! Don't cry. You're quite right, and you've nothing to
+reproach yourself with--you never had. You're only a little upset by the
+journey, and I don't suppose you've had any breakfast. What a brute Torp
+was to bring you over.'
+
+'I wanted to come. I did indeed,' she protested.
+
+'Very well. And now you've come and seen, and I'm--immensely grateful.
+
+When you're better you shall go away and get something to eat. What sort
+of a passage did you have coming over?'
+
+Maisie was crying more subduedly, for the first time in her life glad
+that she had something to lean against. Dick patted her on the shoulder
+tenderly but clumsily, for he was not quite sure where her shoulder
+might be.
+
+She drew herself out of his arms at last and waited, trembling and most
+unhappy. He had felt his way to the window to put the width of the room
+between them, and to quiet a little the tumult in his heart.
+
+'Are you better now?' he said.
+
+'Yes, but--don't you hate me?'
+
+'I hate you? My God! I?'
+
+'Isn't--isn't there anything I could do for you, then? I'll stay here
+in England to do it, if you like. Perhaps I could come and see you
+sometimes.'
+
+'I think not, dear. It would be kindest not to see me any more, please.
+I don't want to seem rude, but--don't you think--perhaps you had almost
+better go now.'
+
+He was conscious that he could not bear himself as a man if the strain
+continued much longer.
+
+'I don't deserve anything else. I'll go, Dick. Oh, I'm so miserable.'
+
+'Nonsense. You've nothing to worry about; I'd tell you if you had. Wait
+a moment, dear. I've got something to give you first. I meant it for
+you ever since this little trouble began. It's my Melancolia; she was a
+beauty when I last saw her. You can keep her for me, and if ever you're
+poor you can sell her. She's worth a few hundreds at any state of the
+market.' He groped among his canvases. 'She's framed in black. Is this
+a black frame that I have my hand on? There she is. What do you think of
+her?'
+
+He turned a scarred formless muddle of paint towards Maisie, and the
+eyes strained as though they would catch her wonder and surprise. One
+thing and one thing only could she do for him.
+
+'Well?'
+
+The voice was fuller and more rounded, because the man knew he was
+speaking of his best work. Maisie looked at the blur, and a lunatic
+desire to laugh caught her by the throat. But for Dick's sake--whatever
+this mad blankness might mean--she must make no sign. Her voice choked
+with hard-held tears as she answered, still gazing at the wreck--'Oh,
+Dick, it is good!'
+
+He heard the little hysterical gulp and took it for tribute. 'Won't you
+have it, then? I'll send it over to your house if you will.'
+
+'I? Oh yes--thank you. Ha! ha!' If she did not fly at once the laughter
+that was worse than tears would kill her. She turned and ran, choking
+and blinded, down the staircases that were empty of life to take refuge
+in a cab and go to her house across the Parks. There she sat down in the
+dismantled drawing-room and thought of Dick in his blindness, useless
+till the end of life, and of herself in her own eyes. Behind the sorrow,
+the shame, and the humiliation, lay fear of the cold wrath of the
+red-haired girl when Maisie should return. Maisie had never feared her
+companion before. Not until she found herself saying, 'Well, he never
+asked me,' did she realise her scorn of herself.
+
+And that is the end of Maisie.
+
+For Dick was reserved more searching torment. He could not realise at
+first that Maisie, whom he had ordered to go had left him without a word
+of farewell. He was savagely angry against Torpenhow, who had brought
+upon him this humiliation and troubled his miserable peace. Then his
+dark hour came and he was alone with himself and his desires to get what
+help he could from the darkness. The queen could do no wrong, but in
+following the right, so far as it served her work, she had wounded her
+one subject more than his own brain would let him know.
+
+'It's all I had and I've lost it,' he said, as soon as the misery
+permitted clear thinking. 'And Torp will think that he has been so
+infernally clever that I shan't have the heart to tell him. I must think
+this out quietly.'
+
+'Hullo!' said Torpenhow, entering the studio after Dick had enjoyed two
+hours of thought. 'I'm back. Are you feeling any better?'
+
+'Torp, I don't know what to say. Come here.' Dick coughed huskily,
+wondering, indeed, what he should say, and how to say it temperately.
+
+'What's the need for saying anything? Get up and tramp.' Torpenhow was
+perfectly satisfied.
+
+They walked up and down as of custom, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's
+shoulder, and Dick buried in his own thoughts.
+
+'How in the world did you find it all out?' said Dick, at last.
+
+'You shouldn't go off your head if you want to keep secrets, Dickie. It
+was absolutely impertinent on my part; but if you'd seen me rocketing
+about on a half-trained French troop-horse under a blazing sun you'd
+have laughed. There will be a charivari in my rooms to-night. Seven
+other devils----'
+
+'I know--the row in the Southern Soudan. I surprised their councils the
+other day, and it made me unhappy. Have you fixed your flint to go? Who
+d'you work for?'
+
+'Haven't signed any contracts yet. I wanted to see how your business
+would turn out.'
+
+'Would you have stayed with me, then, if--things had gone wrong?' He put
+his question cautiously.
+
+'Don't ask me too much. I'm only a man.'
+
+'You've tried to be an angel very successfully.'
+
+'Oh ye--es!... Well, do you attend the function to-night? We shall
+be half screwed before the morning. All the men believe the war's a
+certainty.'
+
+'I don't think I will, old man, if it's all the same to you. I'll stay
+quiet here.'
+
+'And meditate? I don't blame you. You observe a good time if ever a man
+did.'
+
+That night there was a tumult on the stairs. The correspondents poured
+in from theatre, dinner, and music-hall to Torpenhow's room that they
+might discuss their plan of campaign in the event of military operations
+becoming a certainty. Torpenhow, the Keneu, and the Nilghai had bidden
+all the men they had worked with to the orgy; and Mr. Beeton, the
+housekeeper, declared that never before in his checkered experience had
+he seen quite such a fancy lot of gentlemen. They waked the chambers
+with shoutings and song; and the elder men were quite as bad as the
+younger. For the chances of war were in front of them, and all knew what
+those meant.
+
+Sitting in his own room a little perplexed by the noise across the
+landing, Dick suddenly began to laugh to himself.
+
+'When one comes to think of it the situation is intensely comic.
+Maisie's quite right--poor little thing. I didn't know she could cry
+like that before; but now I know what Torp thinks, I'm sure he'd be
+quite fool enough to stay at home and try to console me--if he knew.
+Besides, it isn't nice to own that you've been thrown over like a broken
+chair. I must carry this business through alone--as usual. If there
+isn't a war, and Torp finds out, I shall look foolish, that's all. If
+there is a way I mustn't interfere with another man's chances. Business
+is business, and I want to be alone--I want to be alone. What a row
+they're making!'
+
+Somebody hammered at the studio door.
+
+'Come out and frolic, Dickie,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I should like to, but I can't. I'm not feeling frolicsome.'
+
+'Then, I'll tell the boys and they'll drag you like a badger.'
+
+'Please not, old man. On my word, I'd sooner be left alone just now.'
+
+'Very good. Can we send anything in to you? Fizz, for instance.
+
+Cassavetti is beginning to sing songs of the Sunny South already.'
+
+For one minute Dick considered the proposition seriously.
+
+'No, thanks, I've a headache already.'
+
+'Virtuous child. That's the effect of emotion on the young. All my
+congratulations, Dick. I also was concerned in the conspiracy for your
+welfare.'
+
+'Go to the devil--oh, send Binkie in here.'
+
+The little dog entered on elastic feet, riotous from having been
+made much of all the evening. He had helped to sing the choruses;
+but scarcely inside the studio he realised that this was no place for
+tail-wagging, and settled himself on Dick's lap till it was bedtime.
+Then he went to bed with Dick, who counted every hour as it struck, and
+rose in the morning with a painfully clear head to receive Torpenhow's
+more formal congratulations and a particular account of the last night's
+revels.
+
+'You aren't looking very happy for a newly accepted man,' said
+Torpenhow.
+
+'Never mind that--it's my own affair, and I'm all right. Do you really
+go?'
+
+'Yes. With the old Central Southern as usual. They wired, and I accepted
+on better terms than before.'
+
+'When do you start?'
+
+'The day after to-morrow--for Brindisi.'
+
+'Thank God.' Dick spoke from the bottom of his heart.
+
+'Well, that's not a pretty way of saying you're glad to get rid of me.
+But men in your condition are allowed to be selfish.'
+
+'I didn't mean that. Will you get a hundred pounds cashed for me before
+you leave?'
+
+'That's a slender amount for housekeeping, isn't it?'
+
+'Oh, it's only for--marriage expenses.'
+
+Torpenhow brought him the money, counted it out in fives and tens, and
+carefully put it away in the writing table.
+
+'Now I suppose I shall have to listen to his ravings about his girl
+until I go. Heaven send us patience with a man in love!' he said to
+himself.
+
+But never a word did Dick say of Maisie or marriage. He hung in the
+doorway of Torpenhow's room when the latter was packing and asked
+innumerable questions about the coming campaign, till Torpenhow began to
+feel annoyed.
+
+'You're a secretive animal, Dickie, and you consume your own smoke,
+don't you?' he said on the last evening.
+
+'I--I suppose so. By the way, how long do you think this war will last?'
+
+'Days, weeks, or months. One can never tell. It may go on for years.'
+
+'I wish I were going.'
+
+'Good Heavens! You're the most unaccountable creature! Hasn't it
+occurred to you that you're going to be married--thanks to me?'
+
+'Of course, yes. I'm going to be married--so I am. Going to be married.
+
+I'm awfully grateful to you. Haven't I told you that?'
+
+'You might be going to be hanged by the look of you,' said Torpenhow.
+
+And the next day Torpenhow bade him good-bye and left him to the
+loneliness he had so much desired.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+ Yet at the last, ere our spearmen had found him,
+ Yet at the last, ere a sword-thrust could save,
+ Yet at the last, with his masters around him,
+ He of the Faith spoke as master to slave;
+ Yet at the last, tho' the Kafirs had maimed him,
+ Broken by bondage and wrecked by the reiver,--
+ Yet at the last, tho' the darkness had claimed him,
+ He called upon Allah and died a believer.
+
+ --Kizzilbashi.
+'BEG your pardon, Mr. Heldar, but--but isn't nothin' going to happen?'
+said Mr. Beeton.
+
+'No!' Dick had just waked to another morning of blank despair and his
+temper was of the shortest.
+
+''Tain't my regular business, o' course, sir; and what I say is, "Mind
+your own business and let other people mind theirs;" but just before Mr.
+Torpenhow went away he give me to understand, like, that you might be
+moving into a house of your own, so to speak--a sort of house with rooms
+upstairs and downstairs where you'd be better attended to, though I try
+to act just by all our tenants. Don't I?'
+
+'Ah! That must have been a mad-house. I shan't trouble you to take me
+there yet. Get me my breakfast, please, and leave me alone.'
+
+'I hope I haven't done anything wrong, sir, but you know I hope that as
+far as a man can I tries to do the proper thing by all the gentlemen in
+chambers--and more particular those whose lot is hard--such as you, for
+instance, Mr. Heldar. You likes soft-roe bloater, don't you? Soft-roe
+bloaters is scarcer than hard-roe, but what I says is, "Never mind a
+little extra trouble so long as you give satisfaction to the tenants."'
+
+Mr. Beeton withdrew and left Dick to himself. Torpenhow had been long
+away; there was no more rioting in the chambers, and Dick had settled
+down to his new life, which he was weak enough to consider nothing
+better than death.
+
+It is hard to live alone in the dark, confusing the day and night;
+dropping to sleep through sheer weariness at mid-day, and rising
+restless in the chill of the dawn. At first Dick, on his awakenings,
+would grope along the corridors of the chambers till he heard some one
+snore. Then he would know that the day had not yet come, and return
+wearily to his bedroom.
+
+Later he learned not to stir till there was a noise and movement in the
+house and Mr. Beeton advised him to get up. Once dressed--and dressing,
+now that Torpenhow was away, was a lengthy business, because collars,
+ties, and the like hid themselves in far corners of the room, and search
+meant head-beating against chairs and trunks--once dressed, there was
+nothing whatever to do except to sit still and brood till the three
+daily meals came. Centuries separated breakfast from lunch and lunch
+from dinner, and though a man prayed for hundreds of years that his
+mind might be taken from him, God would never hear. Rather the mind
+was quickened and the revolving thoughts ground against each other as
+millstones grind when there is no corn between; and yet the brain would
+not wear out and give him rest. It continued to think, at length, with
+imagery and all manner of reminiscences. It recalled Maisie and past
+success, reckless travels by land and sea, the glory of doing work and
+feeling that it was good, and suggested all that might have happened had
+the eyes only been faithful to their duty. When thinking ceased
+through sheer weariness, there poured into Dick's soul tide on tide of
+overwhelming, purposeless fear--dread of starvation always, terror
+lest the unseen ceiling should crush down upon him, fear of fire in the
+chambers and a louse's death in red flame, and agonies of fiercer horror
+that had nothing to do with any fear of death. Then Dick bowed his head,
+and clutching the arms of his chair fought with his sweating self till
+the tinkle of plates told him that something to eat was being set before
+him.
+
+Mr. Beeton would bring the meal when he had time to spare, and
+Dick learned to hang upon his speech, which dealt with badly fitted
+gas-plugs, waste-pipes out of repair, little tricks for driving
+picture-nails into walls, and the sins of the charwoman or the
+housemaids. In the lack of better things the small gossip of a servant's
+hall becomes immensely interesting, and the screwing of a washer on a
+tap an event to be talked over for days.
+
+Once or twice a week, too, Mr. Beeton would take Dick out with him when
+he went marketing in the morning to haggle with tradesmen over fish,
+lamp-wicks, mustard, tapioca, and so forth, while Dick rested his weight
+first on one foot and then on the other and played aimlessly with the
+tins and string-ball on the counter. Then they would perhaps meet one of
+Mr. Beeton's friends, and Dick, standing aside a little, would hold his
+peace till Mr. Beeton was willing to go on again.
+
+The life did not increase his self-respect. He abandoned shaving as a
+dangerous exercise, and being shaved in a barber's shop meant exposure
+of his infirmity. He could not see that his clothes were properly
+brushed, and since he had never taken any care of his personal
+appearance he became every known variety of sloven. A blind man cannot
+deal with cleanliness till he has been some months used to the darkness.
+If he demand attendance and grow angry at the want of it, he must assert
+himself and stand upright. Then the meanest menial can see that he is
+blind and, therefore, of no consequence. A wise man will keep his eyes
+on the floor and sit still. For amusement he may pick coal lump by lump
+out of the scuttle with the tongs and pile it in a little heap in the
+fender, keeping count of the lumps, which must all be put back again,
+one by one and very carefully. He may set himself sums if he cares to
+work them out; he may talk to himself or to the cat if she chooses to
+visit him; and if his trade has been that of an artist, he may sketch
+in the air with his forefinger; but that is too much like drawing a pig
+with the eyes shut. He may go to his bookshelves and count his books,
+ranging them in order of their size; or to his wardrobe and count his
+shirts, laying them in piles of two or three on the bed, as they suffer
+from frayed cuffs or lost buttons.
+
+Even this entertainment wearies after a time; and all the times are
+very, very long.
+
+Dick was allowed to sort a tool-chest where Mr. Beeton kept hammers,
+taps and nuts, lengths of gas-pipes, oil-bottles, and string.
+
+'If I don't have everything just where I know where to look for it, why,
+then, I can't find anything when I do want it. You've no idea, sir, the
+amount of little things that these chambers uses up,' said Mr. Beeton.
+
+Fumbling at the handle of the door as he went out: 'It's hard on you,
+sir, I do think it's hard on you. Ain't you going to do anything, sir?'
+
+'I'll pay my rent and messing. Isn't that enough?'
+
+'I wasn't doubting for a moment that you couldn't pay your way, sir; but
+I 'ave often said to my wife, "It's 'ard on 'im because it isn't as
+if he was an old man, nor yet a middle-aged one, but quite a young
+gentleman. That's where it comes so 'ard."'
+
+'I suppose so,' said Dick, absently. This particular nerve through long
+battering had ceased to feel--much.
+
+'I was thinking,' continued Mr. Beeton, still making as if to go, 'that
+you might like to hear my boy Alf read you the papers sometimes of an
+evening. He do read beautiful, seeing he's only nine.'
+
+'I should be very grateful,' said Dick. 'Only let me make it worth his
+while.'
+
+'We wasn't thinking of that, sir, but of course it's in your own 'ands;
+but only to 'ear Alf sing "A Boy's best Friend is 'is Mother!" Ah!'
+
+'I'll hear him sing that too. Let him come this evening with the
+newspapers.'
+
+Alf was not a nice child, being puffed up with many school-board
+certificates for good conduct, and inordinately proud of his singing.
+Mr. Beeton remained, beaming, while the child wailed his way through
+a song of some eight eight-line verses in the usual whine of a young
+Cockney, and, after compliments, left him to read Dick the foreign
+telegrams. Ten minutes later Alf returned to his parents rather pale and
+scared.
+
+''E said 'e couldn't stand it no more,' he explained.
+
+'He never said you read badly, Alf?' Mrs. Beeton spoke.
+
+'No. 'E said I read beautiful. Said 'e never 'eard any one read like
+that, but 'e said 'e couldn't abide the stuff in the papers.'
+
+'P'raps he's lost some money in the Stocks. Were you readin' him about
+Stocks, Alf?'
+
+'No; it was all about fightin' out there where the soldiers is gone--a
+great long piece with all the lines close together and very hard words
+in it. 'E give me 'arf a crown because I read so well. And 'e says the
+next time there's anything 'e wants read 'e'll send for me.'
+
+'That's good hearing, but I do think for all the half-crown--put it into
+the kicking-donkey money-box, Alf, and let me see you do it--he might
+have kept you longer. Why, he couldn't have begun to understand how
+beautiful you read.'
+
+'He's best left to hisself--gentlemen always are when they're
+downhearted,' said Mr. Beeton.
+
+Alf's rigorously limited powers of comprehending Torpenhow's special
+correspondence had waked the devil of unrest in Dick. He could hear,
+through the boy's nasal chant, the camels grunting in the squares behind
+the soldiers outside Suakin; could hear the men swearing and chaffing
+across the cooking pots, and could smell the acrid wood-smoke as it
+drifted over camp before the wind of the desert.
+
+That night he prayed to God that his mind might be taken from him,
+offering for proof that he was worthy of this favour the fact that he
+had not shot himself long ago. That prayer was not answered, and indeed
+Dick knew in his heart of hearts that only a lingering sense of humour
+and no special virtue had kept him alive. Suicide, he had persuaded
+himself, would be a ludicrous insult to the gravity of the situation as
+well as a weak-kneed confession of fear.
+
+'Just for the fun of the thing,' he said to the cat, who had taken
+Binkie's place in his establishment, 'I should like to know how long
+this is going to last. I can live for a year on the hundred pounds
+Torp cashed for me. I must have two or three thousand at least in the
+Bank--twenty or thirty years more provided for, that is to say. Then I
+fall back on my hundred and twenty a year, which will be more by that
+time. Let's consider.
+
+Twenty-five--thirty-five--a man's in his prime then,
+they say--forty-five--a middle-aged man just entering
+politics--fifty-five--"died at the comparatively early age of
+fifty-five," according to the newspapers. Bah! How these Christians funk
+death! Sixty-five--we're only getting on in years. Seventy-five is
+just possible, though. Great hell, cat O! fifty years more of solitary
+confinement in the dark! You'll die, and Beeton will die, and Torp will
+die, and Mai--everybody else will die, but I shall be alive and kicking
+with nothing to do. I'm very sorry for myself. I should like some one
+else to be sorry for me. Evidently I'm not going mad before I die, but
+the pain's just as bad as ever. Some day when you're vivisected, cat O!
+they'll tie you down on a little table and cut you open--but don't be
+afraid; they'll take precious good care that you don't die. You'll live,
+and you'll be very sorry then that you weren't sorry for me. Perhaps
+Torp will come back or... I wish I could go to Torp and the Nilghai,
+even though I were in their way.'
+
+Pussy left the room before the speech was ended, and Alf, as he entered,
+found Dick addressing the empty hearth-rug.
+
+'There's a letter for you, sir,' he said. 'Perhaps you'd like me to read
+it.'
+
+'Lend it to me for a minute and I'll tell you.'
+
+The outstretched hand shook just a little and the voice was not
+over-steady. It was within the limits of human possibility that--that
+was no letter from Maisie. He knew the heft of three closed envelopes
+only too well. It was a foolish hope that the girl should write to
+him, for he did not realise that there is a wrong which admits of no
+reparation though the evildoer may with tears and the heart's best love
+strive to mend all. It is best to forget that wrong whether it be caused
+or endured, since it is as remediless as bad work once put forward.
+
+'Read it, then,' said Dick, and Alf began intoning according to the
+rules of the Board School--'"I could have given you love, I could have
+given you loyalty, such as you never dreamed of. Do you suppose I cared
+what you were? But you chose to whistle everything down the wind for
+nothing. My only excuse for you is that you are so young." 'That's all,'
+he said, returning the paper to be dropped into the fire.
+
+'What was in the letter?' asked Mrs. Beeton, when Alf returned.
+
+'I don't know. I think it was a circular or a tract about not whistlin'
+at everything when you're young.'
+
+'I must have stepped on something when I was alive and walking about and
+it has bounced up and hit me. God help it, whatever it is--unless it was
+all a joke. But I don't know any one who'd take the trouble to play a
+joke on me.... Love and loyalty for nothing. It sounds tempting enough.
+
+I wonder whether I have lost anything really?'
+
+Dick considered for a long time but could not remember when or how he
+had put himself in the way of winning these trifles at a woman's hands.
+
+Still, the letter as touching on matters that he preferred not to think
+about stung him into a fit of frenzy that lasted for a day and night.
+When his heart was so full of despair that it would hold no more,
+body and soul together seemed to be dropping without check through the
+darkness.
+
+Then came fear of darkness and desperate attempts to reach the light
+again. But there was no light to be reached. When that agony had left
+him sweating and breathless, the downward flight would recommence till
+the gathering torture of it spurred him into another fight as hopeless
+as the first. Followed some few minutes of sleep in which he dreamed
+that he saw. Then the procession of events would repeat itself till he
+was utterly worn out and the brain took up its everlasting consideration
+of Maisie and might-have-beens.
+
+At the end of everything Mr. Beeton came to his room and volunteered to
+take him out. 'Not marketing this time, but we'll go into the Parks if
+you like.'
+
+'Be damned if I do,' quoth Dick. 'Keep to the streets and walk up and
+down. I like to hear the people round me.'
+
+This was not altogether true. The blind in the first stages of their
+infirmity dislike those who can move with a free stride and unlifted
+arms--but Dick had no earthly desire to go to the Parks. Once and
+only once since Maisie had shut her door he had gone there under Alf's
+charge. Alf forgot him and fished for minnows in the Serpentine with
+some companions. After half an hour's waiting Dick, almost weeping with
+rage and wrath, caught a passer-by, who introduced him to a friendly
+policeman, who led him to a four-wheeler opposite the Albert Hall. He
+never told Mr. Beeton of Alf's forgetfulness, but... this was not the
+manner in which he was used to walk the Parks aforetime.
+
+'What streets would you like to walk down, then?' said Mr. Beeton,
+sympathetically. His own ideas of a riotous holiday meant picnicking
+on the grass of Green Park with his family, and half a dozen paper bags
+full of food.
+
+'Keep to the river,' said Dick, and they kept to the river, and the rush
+of it was in his ears till they came to Blackfriars Bridge and struck
+thence on to the Waterloo Road, Mr. Beeton explaining the beauties of
+the scenery as he went on.
+
+'And walking on the other side of the pavement,' said he, 'unless I'm
+much mistaken, is the young woman that used to come to your rooms to
+be drawed. I never forgets a face and I never remembers a name, except
+paying tenants, o' course!'
+
+'Stop her,' said Dick. 'It's Bessie Broke. Tell her I'd like to speak to
+her again. Quick, man!'
+
+Mr. Beeton crossed the road under the noses of the omnibuses and
+arrested Bessie then on her way northward. She recognised him as the
+man in authority who used to glare at her when she passed up Dick's
+staircase, and her first impulse was to run.
+
+'Wasn't you Mr. Heldar's model?' said Mr. Beeton, planting himself in
+front of her. 'You was. He's on the other side of the road and he'd like
+to see you.'
+
+'Why?' said Bessie, faintly. She remembered--indeed had never for long
+forgotten--an affair connected with a newly finished picture.
+
+'Because he has asked me to do so, and because he's most particular
+blind.'
+
+'Drunk?'
+
+'No. 'Orspital blind. He can't see. That's him over there.'
+
+Dick was leaning against the parapet of the bridge as Mr. Beeton pointed
+him out--a stub-bearded, bowed creature wearing a dirty magenta-coloured
+neckcloth outside an unbrushed coat. There was nothing to fear from such
+an one. Even if he chased her, Bessie thought, he could not follow far.
+She crossed over, and Dick's face lighted up. It was long since a woman
+of any kind had taken the trouble to speak to him.
+
+'I hope you're well, Mr. Heldar?' said Bessie, a little puzzled. Mr.
+Beeton stood by with the air of an ambassador and breathed responsibly.
+
+'I'm very well indeed, and, by Jove! I'm glad to see--hear you, I mean,
+Bess. You never thought it worth while to turn up and see us again after
+you got your money. I don't know why you should. Are you going anywhere
+in particular just now?'
+
+'I was going for a walk,' said Bessie.
+
+'Not the old business?' Dick spoke under his breath.
+
+'Lor, no! I paid my premium'--Bessie was very proud of that word--'for a
+barmaid, sleeping in, and I'm at the bar now quite respectable. Indeed I
+am.'
+
+Mr. Beeton had no special reason to believe in the loftiness of human
+nature. Therefore he dissolved himself like a mist and returned to his
+gas-plugs without a word of apology. Bessie watched the flight with a
+certain uneasiness; but so long as Dick appeared to be ignorant of the
+harm that had been done to him...
+
+'It's hard work pulling the beer-handles,' she went on, 'and they've got
+one of them penny-in-the-slot cash-machines, so if you get wrong by a
+penny at the end of the day--but then I don't believe the machinery is
+right. Do you?'
+
+'I've only seen it work. Mr. Beeton.'
+
+'He's gone.
+
+'I'm afraid I must ask you to help me home, then. I'll make it worth
+your while. You see.' The sightless eyes turned towards her and Bessie
+saw.
+
+'It isn't taking you out of your way?' he said hesitatingly. 'I can ask
+a policeman if it is.'
+
+'Not at all. I come on at seven and I'm off at four. That's easy hours.'
+
+'Good God!--but I'm on all the time. I wish I had some work to do too.
+
+Let's go home, Bess.'
+
+He turned and cannoned into a man on the sidewalk, recoiling with an
+oath. Bessie took his arm and said nothing--as she had said nothing when
+he had ordered her to turn her face a little more to the light. They
+walked for some time in silence, the girl steering him deftly through
+the crowd.
+
+'And where's--where's Mr. Torpenhow?' she inquired at last.
+
+'He has gone away to the desert.'
+
+'Where's that?'
+
+Dick pointed to the right. 'East--out of the mouth of the river,' said
+he.
+
+'Then west, then south, and then east again, all along the under-side
+of Europe. Then south again, God knows how far.' The explanation did
+not enlighten Bessie in the least, but she held her tongue and looked to
+Dick's path till they came to the chambers.
+
+'We'll have tea and muffins,' he said joyously. 'I can't tell you,
+Bessie, how glad I am to find you again. What made you go away so
+suddenly?'
+
+'I didn't think you'd want me any more,' she said, emboldened by his
+ignorance.
+
+'I didn't, as a matter of fact--but afterwards--At any rate I'm glad
+you've come. You know the stairs.'
+
+So Bessie led him home to his own place--there was no one to hinder--and
+shut the door of the studio.
+
+'What a mess!' was her first word. 'All these things haven't been looked
+after for months and months.'
+
+'No, only weeks, Bess. You can't expect them to care.'
+
+'I don't know what you expect them to do. They ought to know what you've
+paid them for. The dust's just awful. It's all over the easel.'
+
+'I don't use it much now.'
+
+'All over the pictures and the floor, and all over your coat. I'd like
+to speak to them housemaids.'
+
+'Ring for tea, then.' Dick felt his way to the one chair he used by
+custom.
+
+Bessie saw the action and, as far as in her lay, was touched. But there
+remained always a keen sense of new-found superiority, and it was in her
+voice when she spoke.
+
+'How long have you been like this?' she said wrathfully, as though the
+blindness were some fault of the housemaids.
+
+'How?'
+
+'As you are.'
+
+'The day after you went away with the check, almost as soon as my
+picture was finished; I hardly saw her alive.'
+
+'Then they've been cheating you ever since, that's all. I know their
+nice little ways.'
+
+A woman may love one man and despise another, but on general feminine
+principles she will do her best to save the man she despises from being
+defrauded. Her loved one can look to himself, but the other man, being
+obviously an idiot, needs protection.
+
+'I don't think Mr. Beeton cheats much,' said Dick. Bessie was flouncing
+up and down the room, and he was conscious of a keen sense of enjoyment
+as he heard the swish of her skirts and the light step between.
+
+'Tea and muffins,' she said shortly, when the ring at the bell was
+answered; 'two teaspoonfuls and one over for the pot. I don't want
+the old teapot that was here when I used to come. It don't draw. Get
+another.'
+
+The housemaid went away scandalised, and Dick chuckled. Then he began to
+cough as Bessie banged up and down the studio disturbing the dust.
+
+'What are you trying to do?'
+
+'Put things straight. This is like unfurnished lodgings. How could you
+let it go so?'
+
+'How could I help it? Dust away.'
+
+She dusted furiously, and in the midst of all the pother entered Mrs.
+Beeton. Her husband on his return had explained the situation, winding
+up with the peculiarly felicitous proverb, 'Do unto others as you would
+be done by.' She had descended to put into her place the person who
+demanded muffins and an uncracked teapot as though she had a right to
+both.
+
+'Muffins ready yet?' said Bess, still dusting. She was no longer a drab
+of the streets but a young lady who, thanks to Dick's check, had paid
+her premium and was entitled to pull beer-handles with the best. Being
+neatly dressed in black she did not hesitate to face Mrs. Beeton, and
+there passed between the two women certain regards that Dick would have
+appreciated. The situation adjusted itself by eye. Bessie had won, and
+Mrs. Beeton returned to cook muffins and make scathing remarks about
+models, hussies, trollops, and the like, to her husband.
+
+'There's nothing to be got of interfering with him, Liza,' he said.
+'Alf, you go along into the street to play. When he isn't crossed he's
+as kindly as kind, but when he's crossed he's the devil and all. We took
+too many little things out of his rooms since he was blind to be that
+particular about what he does. They ain't no objects to a blind man, of
+course, but if it was to come into court we'd get the sack. Yes, I did
+introduce him to that girl because I'm a feelin' man myself.'
+
+'Much too feelin'!' Mrs. Beeton slapped the muffins into the dish, and
+thought of comely housemaids long since dismissed on suspicion.
+
+'I ain't ashamed of it, and it isn't for us to judge him hard so long
+as he pays quiet and regular as he do. I know how to manage young
+gentlemen, you know how to cook for them, and what I says is, let each
+stick to his own business and then there won't be any trouble. Take them
+muffins down, Liza, and be sure you have no words with that young woman.
+His lot is cruel hard, and if he's crossed he do swear worse than any
+one I've ever served.'
+
+'That's a little better,' said Bessie, sitting down to the tea. 'You
+needn't wait, thank you, Mrs. Beeton.'
+
+'I had no intention of doing such, I do assure you.'
+
+Bessie made no answer whatever. This, she knew, was the way in
+which real ladies routed their foes, and when one is a barmaid at a
+first-class public-house one may become a real lady at ten minutes'
+notice.
+
+Her eyes fell on Dick opposite her and she was both shocked and
+displeased. There were droppings of food all down the front of his
+coat; the mouth under the ragged ill-grown beard drooped sullenly; the
+forehead was lined and contracted; and on the lean temples the hair was
+a dusty indeterminate colour that might or might not have been called
+gray. The utter misery and self-abandonment of the man appealed to
+her, and at the bottom of her heart lay the wicked feeling that he was
+humbled and brought low who had once humbled her.
+
+'Oh! it is good to hear you moving about,' said Dick, rubbing his hands.
+
+'Tell us all about your bar successes, Bessie, and the way you live
+now.'
+
+'Never mind that. I'm quite respectable, as you'd see by looking at me.
+
+You don't seem to live too well. What made you go blind that sudden? Why
+isn't there any one to look after you?'
+
+Dick was too thankful for the sound of her voice to resent the tone of
+it.
+
+'I was cut across the head a long time ago, and that ruined my eyes. I
+don't suppose anybody thinks it worth while to look after me any more.
+
+Why should they?--and Mr. Beeton really does everything I want.'
+
+'Don't you know any gentlemen and ladies, then, while you was--well?'
+
+'A few, but I don't care to have them looking at me.'
+
+'I suppose that's why you've growed a beard. Take it off, it don't
+become you.'
+
+'Good gracious, child, do you imagine that I think of what becomes of me
+these days?'
+
+'You ought. Get that taken off before I come here again. I suppose I can
+come, can't I?'
+
+'I'd be only too grateful if you did. I don't think I treated you very
+well in the old days. I used to make you angry.'
+
+'Very angry, you did.'
+
+'I'm sorry for it, then. Come and see me when you can and as often as
+you can. God knows, there isn't a soul in the world to take that trouble
+except you and Mr. Beeton.'
+
+'A lot of trouble he's taking and she too.' This with a toss of the
+head.
+
+'They've let you do anyhow and they haven't done anything for you. I've
+only to look and see that much. I'll come, and I'll be glad to come, but
+you must go and be shaved, and you must get some other clothes--those
+ones aren't fit to be seen.'
+
+'I have heaps somewhere,' he said helplessly.
+
+'I know you have. Tell Mr. Beeton to give you a new suit and I'll brush
+it and keep it clean. You may be as blind as a barn-door, Mr. Heldar,
+but it doesn't excuse you looking like a sweep.'
+
+'Do I look like a sweep, then?'
+
+'Oh, I'm sorry for you. I'm that sorry for you!' she cried impulsively,
+and took Dick's hands. Mechanically, he lowered his head as if to
+kiss--she was the only woman who had taken pity on him, and he was not
+too proud for a little pity now. She stood up to go.
+
+'Nothing o' that kind till you look more like a gentleman. It's quite
+easy when you get shaved, and some clothes.'
+
+He could hear her drawing on her gloves and rose to say good-bye. She
+passed behind him, kissed him audaciously on the back of the neck, and
+ran away as swiftly as on the day when she had destroyed the Melancolia.
+
+'To think of me kissing Mr. Heldar,' she said to herself, 'after all
+he's done to me and all! Well, I'm sorry for him, and if he was shaved
+he wouldn't be so bad to look at, but... Oh them Beetons, how shameful
+they've treated him! I know Beeton's wearing his shirt on his back
+to-day just as well as if I'd aired it. To-morrow, I'll see... I wonder
+if he has much of his own. It might be worth more than the bar--I
+wouldn't have to do any work--and just as respectable as if no one
+knew.'
+
+Dick was not grateful to Bessie for her parting gift. He was acutely
+conscious of it in the nape of his neck throughout the night, but it
+seemed, among very many other things, to enforce the wisdom of getting
+shaved.
+
+He was shaved accordingly in the morning, and felt the better for it. A
+fresh suit of clothes, white linen, and the knowledge that some one in
+the world said that she took an interest in his personal appearance made
+him carry himself almost upright; for the brain was relieved for a while
+from thinking of Maisie, who, under other circumstances, might have
+given that kiss and a million others.
+
+'Let us consider,' said he, after lunch. 'The girl can't care, and it's
+a toss-up whether she comes again or not, but if money can buy her to
+look after me she shall be bought. Nobody else in the world would take
+the trouble, and I can make it worth her while. She's a child of the
+gutter holding brevet rank as a barmaid; so she shall have everything
+she wants if she'll only come and talk and look after me.' He rubbed his
+newly shorn chin and began to perplex himself with the thought of her
+not coming. 'I suppose I did look rather a sweep,' he went on. 'I had
+no reason to look otherwise. I knew things dropped on my clothes, but
+it didn't matter. It would be cruel if she didn't come. She must. Maisie
+came once, and that was enough for her. She was quite right. She had
+something to work for. This creature has only beer-handles to pull,
+unless she has deluded some young man into keeping company with her.
+
+Fancy being cheated for the sake of a counter-jumper! We're falling
+pretty low.'
+
+Something cried aloud within him:--This will hurt more than anything
+that has gone before. It will recall and remind and suggest and
+tantalise, and in the end drive you mad.
+
+'I know it, I know it!' Dick cried, clenching his hands despairingly;
+'but, good heavens! is a poor blind beggar never to get anything out of
+his life except three meals a day and a greasy waistcoat? I wish she'd
+come.'
+
+Early in the afternoon time she came, because there was no young man in
+her life just then, and she thought of material advantages which would
+allow her to be idle for the rest of her days.
+
+'I shouldn't have known you,' she said approvingly. 'You look as you
+used to look--a gentleman that was proud of himself.'
+
+'Don't you think I deserve another kiss, then?' said Dick, flushing a
+little.
+
+'Maybe--but you won't get it yet. Sit down and let's see what I can do
+for you. I'm certain sure Mr. Beeton cheats you, now that you can't go
+through the housekeeping books every month. Isn't that true?'
+
+'You'd better come and housekeep for me then, Bessie.'
+
+'Couldn't do it in these chambers--you know that as well as I do.'
+
+'I know, but we might go somewhere else, if you thought it worth your
+while.'
+
+'I'd try to look after you, anyhow; but I shouldn't care to have to work
+for both of us.' This was tentative.
+
+Dick laughed.
+
+'Do you remember where I used to keep my bank-book?' said he. 'Torp took
+it to be balanced just before he went away. Look and see.'
+
+'It was generally under the tobacco-jar. Ah!'
+
+'Well?'
+
+'Oh! Four thousand two hundred and ten pounds nine shillings and a
+penny! Oh my!'
+
+'You can have the penny. That's not bad for one year's work. Is that and
+a hundred and twenty pounds a year good enough?'
+
+The idleness and the pretty clothes were almost within her reach now,
+but she must, by being housewifely, show that she deserved them.
+
+'Yes; but you'd have to move, and if we took an inventory, I think we'd
+find that Mr. Beeton has been prigging little things out of the rooms
+here and there. They don't look as full as they used.'
+
+'Never mind, we'll let him have them. The only thing I'm particularly
+anxious to take away is that picture I used you for--when you used to
+swear at me. We'll pull out of this place, Bess, and get away as far as
+ever we can.'
+
+'Oh yes,' she said uneasily.
+
+'I don't know where I can go to get away from myself, but I'll try,
+and you shall have all the pretty frocks that you care for. You'll like
+that.
+
+Give me that kiss now, Bess. Ye gods! it's good to put one's arm round a
+woman's waist again.'
+
+Then came the fulfilment of the prophecy within the brain. If his arm
+were thus round Maisie's waist and a kiss had just been given and taken
+between them,--why then... He pressed the girl more closely to himself
+because the pain whipped him. She was wondering how to explain a little
+accident to the Melancolia. At any rate, if this man really desired the
+solace of her company--and certainly he would relapse into his original
+slough if she withdrew it--he would not be more than just a little
+vexed.
+
+It would be delightful at least to see what would happen, and by
+her teachings it was good for a man to stand in certain awe of his
+companion.
+
+She laughed nervously, and slipped out of his reach.
+
+'I shouldn't worrit about that picture if I was you,' she began, in the
+hope of turning his attention.
+
+'It's at the back of all my canvases somewhere. Find it, Bess; you know
+it as well as I do.'
+
+'I know--but--'
+
+'But what? You've wit enough to manage the sale of it to a dealer.
+
+Women haggle much better than men. It might be a matter of eight or nine
+hundred pounds to--to us. I simply didn't like to think about it for
+a long time. It was mixed up with my life so.--But we'll cover up
+our tracks and get rid of everything, eh? Make a fresh start from the
+beginning, Bess.'
+
+Then she began to repent very much indeed, because she knew the value of
+money. Still, it was probable that the blind man was overestimating the
+value of his work. Gentlemen, she knew, were absurdly particular about
+their things. She giggled as a nervous housemaid giggles when she tries
+to explain the breakage of a pipe.
+
+'I'm very sorry, but you remember I was--I was angry with you before Mr.
+Torpenhow went away?'
+
+'You were very angry, child; and on my word I think you had some right
+to be.'
+
+'Then I--but aren't you sure Mr. Torpenhow didn't tell you?'
+
+'Tell me what? Good gracious, what are you making such a fuss about when
+you might just as well be giving me another kiss?'
+
+He was beginning to learn, not for the first time in his experience,
+that kissing is a cumulative poison. The more you get of it, the more
+you want.
+
+Bessie gave the kiss promptly, whispering, as she did so, 'I was so
+angry I rubbed out that picture with the turpentine. You aren't angry,
+are you?'
+
+'What? Say that again.' The man's hand had closed on her wrist.
+
+'I rubbed it out with turps and the knife,' faltered Bessie. 'I thought
+you'd only have to do it over again. You did do it over again, didn't
+you? Oh, let go of my wrist; you're hurting me.'
+
+'Isn't there anything left of the thing?'
+
+'N'nothing that looks like anything. I'm sorry--I didn't know you'd take
+on about it; I only meant to do it in fun. You aren't going to hit me?'
+
+'Hit you! No! Let's think.'
+
+He did not relax his hold upon her wrist but stood staring at the
+carpet.
+
+Then he shook his head as a young steer shakes it when the lash of the
+stock-whip cross his nose warns him back to the path on to the shambles
+that he would escape. For weeks he had forced himself not to think of
+the Melancolia, because she was a part of his dead life. With Bessie's
+return and certain new prospects that had developed themselves, the
+Melancolia--lovelier in his imagination than she had ever been on
+canvas--reappeared. By her aid he might have procured mor money
+wherewith to amuse Bess and to forget Maisie, as well as another
+taste of an almost forgotten success. Now, thanks to a vicious little
+housemaid's folly, there was nothing to look for--not even the hope that
+he might some day take an abiding interest in the housemaid. Worst of
+all, he had been made to appear ridiculous in Maisie's eyes. A woman
+will forgive the man who has ruined her life's work so long as he gives
+her love; a man may forgive those who ruin the love of his life, but he
+will never forgive the destruction of his work.
+
+'Tck--tck--tck,' said Dick between his teeth, and then laughed softly.
+'It's an omen, Bessie, and--a good many things considered, it serves me
+right for doing what I have done. By Jove! that accounts for Maisie's
+running away. She must have thought me perfectly mad--small blame to
+her! The whole picture ruined, isn't it so? What made you do it?'
+
+'Because I was that angry. I'm not angry now--I'm awful sorry.'
+
+'I wonder.--It doesn't matter, anyhow. I'm to blame for making the
+mistake.'
+
+'What mistake?'
+
+'Something you wouldn't understand, dear. Great heavens! to think that
+a little piece of dirt like you could throw me out of stride!' Dick was
+talking to himself as Bessie tried to shake off his grip on her wrist.
+
+'I ain't a piece of dirt, and you shouldn't call me so! I did it 'cause
+I hated you, and I'm only sorry now 'cause you're--'cause you're----'
+
+'Exactly--because I'm blind. There's noting like tact in little things.'
+
+Bessie began to sob. She did not like being shackled against her will;
+she was afraid of the blind face and the look upon it, and was sorry too
+that her great revenge had only made Dick laugh.
+
+'Don't cry,' he said, and took her into his arms. 'You only did what you
+thought right.'
+
+'I--I ain't a little piece of dirt, and if you say that I'll never come
+to you again.'
+
+'You don't know what you've done to me. I'm not angry--indeed, I'm not.
+
+Be quiet for a minute.'
+
+Bessie remained in his arms shrinking. Dick's first thought was
+connected with Maisie, and it hurt him as white-hot iron hurts an open
+sore.
+
+Not for nothing is a man permitted to ally himself to the wrong woman.
+
+The first pang--the first sense of things lost is but the prelude to
+the play, for the very just Providence who delights in causing pain has
+decreed that the agony shall return, and that in the midst of keenest
+pleasure.
+
+They know this pain equally who have forsaken or been forsaken by
+the love of their life, and in their new wives' arms are compelled to
+realise it.
+
+It is better to remain alone and suffer only the misery of being alone,
+so long as it is possible to find distraction in daily work. When that
+resource goes the man is to be pitied and left alone.
+
+These things and some others Dick considered while he was holding Bessie
+to his heart.
+
+'Though you mayn't know it,' he said, raising his head, 'the Lord is a
+just and a terrible God, Bess; with a very strong sense of humour. It
+serves me right--how it serves me right! Torp could understand it if
+he were here; he must have suffered something at your hands, child, but
+only for a minute or so. I saved him. Set that to my credit, some one.'
+
+'Let me go,' said Bess, her face darkening. 'Let me go.'
+
+'All in good time. Did you ever attend Sunday school?'
+
+'Never. Let me go, I tell you; you're making fun of me.'
+
+'Indeed, I'm not. I'm making fun of myself.... Thus. "He saved others,
+himself he cannot save." It isn't exactly a school-board text.' He
+released her wrist, but since he was between her and the door, she could
+not escape. 'What an enormous amount of mischief one little woman can
+do!'
+
+'I'm sorry; I'm awful sorry about the picture.'
+
+'I'm not. I'm grateful to you for spoiling it.... What were we talking
+about before you mentioned the thing?'
+
+'About getting away--and money. Me and you going away.'
+
+'Of course. We will get away--that is to say, I will.'
+
+'And me?'
+
+'You shall have fifty whole pounds for spoiling a picture.'
+
+'Then you won't----?'
+
+'I'm afraid not, dear. Think of fifty pounds for pretty things all to
+yourself.'
+
+'You said you couldn't do anything without me.'
+
+'That was true a little while ago. I'm better now, thank you. Get me my
+hat.'
+
+'S'pose I don't?'
+
+'Beeton will, and you'll lose fifty pounds. That's all. Get it.'
+
+Bessie cursed under her breath. She had pitied the man sincerely, had
+kissed him with almost equal sincerity, for he was not unhandsome; it
+pleased her to be in a way and for a time his protector, and above all
+there were four thousand pounds to be handled by some one. Now through
+a slip of the tongue and a little feminine desire to give a little,
+not too much, pain she had lost the money, the blessed idleness and the
+pretty things, the companionship, and the chance of looking outwardly as
+respectable as a real lady.
+
+'Now fill me a pipe. Tobacco doesn't taste, but it doesn't matter, and
+I'll think things out. What's the day of the week, Bess?'
+
+'Tuesday.'
+
+'Then Thursday's mail-day. What a fool--what a blind fool I have been!
+
+Twenty-two pounds covers my passage home again. Allow ten for additional
+expenses. We must put up at Madam Binat's for old time's sake.
+Thirty-two pounds altogether. Add a hundred for the cost of the last
+trip--Gad, won't Torp stare to see me!--a hundred and thirty-two leaves
+seventy-eight for baksheesh--I shall need it--and to play with.
+
+What are you crying for, Bess? It wasn't your fault, child; it was mine
+altogether. Oh, you funny little opossum, mop your eyes and take me out!
+
+I want the pass-book and the check-book. Stop a minute. Four thousand
+pounds at four per cent--that's safe interest--means a hundred and sixty
+pounds a year; one hundred and twenty pounds a year--also safe--is two
+eighty, and two hundred and eighty pounds added to three hundred a year
+means gilded luxury for a single woman. Bess, we'll go to the bank.'
+
+Richer by two hundred and ten pounds stored in his money-belt, Dick
+caused Bessie, now thoroughly bewildered, to hurry from the bank to the
+P. and O. offices, where he explained things tersely.
+
+'Port Said, single first; cabin as close to the baggage-hatch as
+possible.
+
+What ship's going?'
+
+'The Colgong,' said the clerk.
+
+'She's a wet little hooker. Is it Tilbury and a tender, or Galleons and
+the docks?'
+
+'Galleons. Twelve-forty, Thursday.'
+
+'Thanks. Change, please. I can't see very well--will you count it into
+my hand?'
+
+'If they all took their passages like that instead of talking about
+their trunks, life would be worth something,' said the clerk to his
+neighbour, who was trying to explain to a harassed mother of many that
+condensed milk is just as good for babes at sea as daily dairy. Being
+nineteen and unmarried, he spoke with conviction.
+
+'We are now,' quoth Dick, as they returned to the studio, patting the
+place where his money-belt covered ticket and money, 'beyond the reach
+of man, or devil, or woman--which is much more important. I've had three
+little affairs to carry through before Thursday, but I needn't ask you
+to help, Bess. Come here on Thursday morning at nine. We'll breakfast,
+and you shall take me down to Galleons Station.'
+
+'What are you going to do?'
+
+'Going away, of course. What should I stay for?'
+
+'But you can't look after yourself?'
+
+'I can do anything. I didn't realise it before, but I can. I've done a
+great deal already. Resolution shall be treated to one kiss if Bessie
+doesn't object.' Strangely enough, Bessie objected and Dick laughed.
+'I suppose you're right. Well, come at nine the day after to-morrow and
+you'll get your money.'
+
+'Shall I sure?'
+
+'I don't bilk, and you won't know whether I do or not unless you come.
+
+Oh, but it's long and long to wait! Good-bye, Bessie,--send Beeton here
+as you go out.'
+
+The housekeeper came.
+
+'What are all the fittings of my rooms worth?' said Dick, imperiously.
+
+''Tisn't for me to say, sir. Some things is very pretty and some is wore
+out dreadful.'
+
+'I'm insured for two hundred and seventy.'
+
+'Insurance policies is no criterion, though I don't say----'
+
+'Oh, damn your longwindedness! You've made your pickings out of me and
+the other tenants. Why, you talked of retiring and buying a public-house
+the other day. Give a straight answer to a straight question.'
+
+'Fifty,' said Mr. Beeton, without a moment's hesitation.
+
+'Double it; or I'll break up half my sticks and burn the rest.'
+
+He felt his way to a bookstand that supported a pile of sketch-books,
+and wrenched out one of the mahogany pillars.
+
+'That's sinful, sir,' said the housekeeper, alarmed.
+
+'It's my own. One hundred or----'
+
+'One hundred it is. It'll cost me three and six to get that there
+pilaster mended.'
+
+'I thought so. What an out and out swindler you must have been to spring
+that price at once!'
+
+'I hope I've done nothing to dissatisfy any of the tenants, least of all
+you, sir.'
+
+'Never mind that. Get me the money to-morrow, and see that all my
+clothes are packed in the little brown bullock-trunk. I'm going.'
+
+'But the quarter's notice?'
+
+'I'll pay forfeit. Look after the packing and leave me alone.'
+
+Mr. Beeton discussed this new departure with his wife, who decided that
+Bessie was at the bottom of it all. Her husband took a more charitable
+view.
+
+'It's very sudden--but then he was always sudden in his ways. Listen to
+him now!'
+
+There was a sound of chanting from Dick's room.
+
+ 'We'll never come back any more, boys,
+ We'll never come back no more;
+ We'll go to the deuce on any excuse,
+ And never come back no more!
+
+ Oh say we're afloat or ashore, boys,
+ Oh say we're afloat or ashore;
+ But we'll never come back any more, boys,
+ We'll never come back no more!'
+'Mr. Beeton! Mr. Beeton! Where the deuce is my pistol?'
+
+'Quick, he's going to shoot himself--'avin' gone mad!' said Mrs. Beeton.
+
+Mr. Beeton addressed Dick soothingly, but it was some time before the
+latter, threshing up and down his bedroom, could realise the intention
+of the promises to 'find everything to-morrow, sir.'
+
+'Oh, you copper-nosed old fool--you impotent Academician!' he shouted
+at last. 'Do you suppose I want to shoot myself? Take the pistol in your
+silly shaking hand then. If you touch it, it will go off, because it's
+loaded.
+
+It's among my campaign-kit somewhere--in the parcel at the bottom of the
+trunk.'
+
+Long ago Dick had carefully possessed himself of a forty-pound weight
+field-equipment constructed by the knowledge of his own experience. It
+was this put-away treasure that he was trying to find and rehandle. Mr.
+Beeton whipped the revolver out of its place on the top of the package,
+and Dick drove his hand among the khaki coat and breeches, the blue
+cloth leg-bands, and the heavy flannel shirts doubled over a pair of
+swan-neck spurs. Under these and the water-bottle lay a sketch-book and
+a pigskin case of stationery.
+
+'These we don't want; you can have them, Mr. Beeton. Everything else
+I'll keep. Pack 'em on the top right-hand side of my trunk. When you've
+done that come into the studio with your wife. I want you both. Wait a
+minute; get me a pen and a sheet of notepaper.'
+
+It is not an easy thing to write when you cannot see, and Dick had
+particular reasons for wishing that his work should be clear. So he
+began, following his right hand with his left: '"The badness of this
+writing is because I am blind and cannot see my pen." H'mph!--even a
+lawyer can't mistake that. It must be signed, I suppose, but it
+needn't be witnessed. Now an inch lower--why did I never learn to use
+a type-writer?--"This is the last will and testament of me, Richard
+Heldar. I am in sound bodily and mental health, and there is no previous
+will to revoke."--That's all right. Damn the pen! Whereabouts on the
+paper was I?--"I leave everything that I possess in the world, including
+four thousand pounds, and two thousand seven hundred and twenty eight
+pounds held for me"--oh, I can't get this straight.' He tore off half
+the sheet and began again with the caution about the handwriting.
+Then: 'I leave all the money I possess in the world to'--here followed
+Maisie's name, and the names of the two banks that held the money.
+
+'It mayn't be quite regular, but no one has a shadow of a right to
+dispute it, and I've given Maisie's address. Come in, Mr. Beeton.
+This is my signature; I want you and your wife to witness it. Thanks.
+To-morrow you must take me to the landlord and I'll pay forfeit for
+leaving without notice, and I'll lodge this paper with him in case
+anything happens while I'm away. Now we're going to light up the studio
+stove. Stay with me, and give me my papers as I want 'em.'
+
+No one knows until he has tried how fine a blaze a year's accumulation
+of bills, letters, and dockets can make. Dick stuffed into the stove
+every document in the studio--saving only three unopened letters;
+destroyed sketch-books, rough note-books, new and half-finished canvases
+alike.
+
+'What a lot of rubbish a tenant gets about him if he stays long enough
+in one place, to be sure,' said Mr. Beeton, at last.
+
+'He does. Is there anything more left?' Dick felt round the walls.
+
+'Not a thing, and the stove's nigh red-hot.'
+
+'Excellent, and you've lost about a thousand pounds' worth of sketches.
+
+Ho! ho! Quite a thousand pounds' worth, if I can remember what I used to
+be.'
+
+'Yes, sir,' politely. Mr. Beeton was quite sure that Dick had gone mad,
+otherwise he would have never parted with his excellent furniture for a
+song. The canvas things took up storage room and were much better out of
+the way.
+
+There remained only to leave the little will in safe hands: that could
+not be accomplished till to-morrow. Dick groped about the floor picking
+up the last pieces of paper, assured himself again and again that there
+remained no written word or sign of his past life in drawer or desk,
+and sat down before the stove till the fire died out and the contracting
+iron cracked in the silence of the night.
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+ With a heart of furious fancies,
+ Whereof I am commander;
+ With a burning spear and a horse of air,
+ To the wilderness I wander.
+
+ With a knight of ghosts and shadows
+ I summoned am to tourney--
+ Ten leagues beyond the wide world's end,
+ Methinks it is no journey.
+
+ --Tom a' Bedlam's Song.
+'GOOD-BYE, Bess; I promised you fifty. Here's a hundred--all that I got
+for my furniture from Beeton. That will keep you in pretty frocks for
+some time. You've been a good little girl, all things considered, but
+you've given me and Torpenhow a fair amount of trouble.'
+
+'Give Mr. Torpenhow my love if you see him, won't you?'
+
+'Of course I will, dear. Now take me up the gang-plank and into the
+cabin. Once aboard the lugger and the maid is--and I am free, I mean.'
+
+'Who'll look after you on this ship?'
+
+'The head-steward, if there's any use in money. The doctor when we come
+to Port Said, if I know anything of P. and O. doctors. After that, the
+Lord will provide, as He used to do.'
+
+Bess found Dick his cabin in the wild turmoil of a ship full of
+leavetakers and weeping relatives. Then he kissed her, and laid himself
+down in his bunk until the decks should be clear. He who had taken so
+long to move about his own darkened rooms well understood the geography
+of a ship, and the necessity of seeing to his own comforts was as wine
+to him.
+
+Before the screw began to thrash the ship along the Docks he had been
+introduced to the head-steward, had royally tipped him, secured a good
+place at table, opened out his baggage, and settled himself down with
+joy in the cabin. It was scarcely necessary to feel his way as he moved
+about, for he knew everything so well. Then God was very kind: a deep
+sleep of weariness came upon him just as he would have thought of
+Maisie, and he slept till the steamer had cleared the mouth of the
+Thames and was lifting to the pulse of the Channel.
+
+The rattle of the engines, the reek of oil and paint, and a very
+familiar sound in the next cabin roused him to his new inheritance.
+
+'Oh, it's good to be alive again!' He yawned, stretched himself
+vigorously, and went on deck to be told that they were almost abreast of
+the lights of Brighton. This is no more open water than Trafalgar Square
+is a common; the free levels begin at Ushant; but none the less Dick
+could feel the healing of the sea at work upon him already. A boisterous
+little cross-swell swung the steamer disrespectfully by the nose; and
+one wave breaking far aft spattered the quarterdeck and the pile of new
+deck-chairs. He heard the foam fall with the clash of broken glass, was
+stung in the face by a cupful, and sniffing luxuriously, felt his way to
+the smoking-room by the wheel. There a strong breeze found him, blew
+his cap off and left him bareheaded in the doorway, and the smoking-room
+steward, understanding that he was a voyager of experience, said that
+the weather would be stiff in the chops off the Channel and more than
+half a gale in the Bay. These things fell as they were foretold, and
+Dick enjoyed himself to the utmost. It is allowable and even necessary
+at sea to lay firm hold upon tables, stanchions, and ropes in moving
+from place to place. On land the man who feels with his hands is
+patently blind. At sea even a blind man who is not sea-sick can jest
+with the doctor over the weakness of his fellows. Dick told the doctor
+many tales--and these are coin of more value than silver if properly
+handled--smoked with him till unholy hours of the night, and so won his
+short-lived regard that he promised Dick a few hours of his time when
+they came to Port Said.
+
+And the sea roared or was still as the winds blew, and the engines sang
+their song day and night, and the sun grew stronger day by day, and
+Tom the Lascar barber shaved Dick of a morning under the opened
+hatch-grating where the cool winds blew, and the awnings were spread and
+the passengers made merry, and at last they came to Port Said.
+
+'Take me,' said Dick, to the doctor, 'to Madame Binat's--if you know
+where that is.'
+
+'Whew!' said the doctor, 'I do. There's not much to choose between 'em;
+but I suppose you're aware that that's one of the worst houses in the
+place. They'll rob you to begin with, and knife you later.'
+
+'Not they. Take me there, and I can look after myself.'
+
+So he was brought to Madame Binat's and filled his nostrils with the
+well-remembered smell of the East, that runs without a change from the
+Canal head to Hong-Kong, and his mouth with the villainous Lingua Franca
+of the Levant. The heat smote him between the shoulder-blades with
+the buffet of an old friend, his feet slipped on the sand, and his
+coat-sleeve was warm as new-baked bread when he lifted it to his nose.
+
+Madame Binat smiled with the smile that knows no astonishment when Dick
+entered the drinking-shop which was one source of her gains. But for a
+little accident of complete darkness he could hardly realise that he
+had ever quitted the old life that hummed in his ears. Somebody opened
+a bottle of peculiarly strong Schiedam. The smell reminded Dick of
+Monsieur Binat, who, by the way, had spoken of art and degradation.
+
+Binat was dead; Madame said as much when the doctor departed,
+scandalised, so far as a ship's doctor can be, at the warmth of Dick's
+reception. Dick was delighted at it. 'They remember me here after a
+year. They have forgotten me across the water by this time. Madame, I
+want a long talk with you when you're at liberty. It is good to be back
+again.'
+
+In the evening she set an iron-topped cafe-table out on the sands, and
+Dick and she sat by it, while the house behind them filled with riot,
+merriment, oaths, and threats. The stars came out and the lights of the
+shipping in the harbour twinkled by the head of the Canal.
+
+'Yes. The war is good for trade, my friend; but what dost thou do here?
+We have not forgotten thee.'
+
+'I was over there in England and I went blind.'
+
+'But there was the glory first. We heard of it here, even here--I
+and Binat; and thou hast used the head of Yellow 'Tina--she is still
+alive--so often and so well that 'Tina laughed when the papers arrived
+by the mail-boats. It was always something that we here could recognise
+in the paintings. And then there was always the glory and the money for
+thee.'
+
+'I am not poor--I shall pay you well.'
+
+'Not to me. Thou hast paid for everything.' Under her breath, 'Mon Dieu,
+to be blind and so young! What horror!'
+
+Dick could not see her face with the pity on it, or his own with the
+discoloured hair at the temples. He did not feel the need of pity; he
+was too anxious to get to the front once more, and explained his desire.
+
+'And where? The Canal is full of the English ships. Sometimes they fire
+as they used to do when the war was here--ten years ago. Beyond Cairo
+there is fighting, but how canst thou go there without a correspondent's
+passport? And in the desert there is always fighting, but that is
+impossible also,' said she.
+
+'I must go to Suakin.' He knew, thanks to Alf's readings, that Torpenhow
+was at work with the column that was protecting the construction of the
+Suakin-Berber line. P. and O. steamers do not touch at that port, and,
+besides, Madame Binat knew everybody whose help or advice was worth
+anything. They were not respectable folk, but they could cause things to
+be accomplished, which is much more important when there is work toward.
+
+'But at Suakin they are always fighting. That desert breeds men
+always--and always more men. And they are so bold! Why to Suakin?'
+
+'My friend is there.
+
+'Thy friend! Chtt! Thy friend is death, then.'
+
+Madame Binat dropped a fat arm on the table-top, filled Dick's glass
+anew, and looked at him closely under the stars. There was no need that
+he should bow his head in assent and say--'No. He is a man, but--if it
+should arrive... blamest thou?'
+
+'I blame?' she laughed shrilly. 'Who am I that I should blame any
+one--except those who try to cheat me over their consommations. But it
+is very terrible.'
+
+'I must go to Suakin. Think for me. A great deal has changed within the
+year, and the men I knew are not here. The Egyptian lighthouse steamer
+goes down the Canal to Suakin--and the post-boats--But even then----'
+
+'Do not think any longer. I know, and it is for me to think. Thou shalt
+go--thou shalt go and see thy friend. Be wise. Sit here until the house
+is a little quiet--I must attend to my guests--and afterwards go to bed.
+Thou shalt go, in truth, thou shalt go.'
+
+'To-morrow?'
+
+'As soon as may be.' She was talking as though he were a child.
+
+He sat at the table listening to the voices in the harbour and the
+streets, and wondering how soon the end would come, till Madame Binat
+carried him off to bed and ordered him to sleep. The house shouted and
+sang and danced and revelled, Madame Binat moving through it with
+one eye on the liquor payments and the girls and the other on Dick's
+interests. To this latter end she smiled upon scowling and furtive
+Turkish officers of fellaheen regiments, and more than kind to camel
+agents of no nationality whatever.
+
+In the early morning, being then appropriately dressed in a flaming
+red silk ball-dress, with a front of tarnished gold embroidery and a
+necklace of plate-glass diamonds, she made chocolate and carried it in
+to Dick.
+
+'It is only I, and I am of discreet age, eh? Drink and eat the roll too.
+Thus in France mothers bring their sons, when those behave wisely, the
+morning chocolate.' She sat down on the side of the bed whispering:--'It
+is all arranged. Thou wilt go by the lighthouse boat. That is a bribe
+of ten pounds English. The captain is never paid by the Government. The
+boat comes to Suakin in four days. There will go with thee George, a
+Greek muleteer. Another bribe of ten pounds. I will pay; they must not
+know of thy money. George will go with thee as far as he goes with his
+mules. Then he comes back to me, for his well-beloved is here, and if
+I do not receive a telegram from Suakin saying that thou art well, the
+girl answers for George.'
+
+'Thank you.' He reached out sleepily for the cup. 'You are much too
+kind, Madame.'
+
+'If there were anything that I might do I would say, stay here and be
+wise; but I do not think that would be best for thee.' She looked at her
+liquor-stained dress with a sad smile. 'Nay, thou shalt go, in truth,
+thou shalt go. It is best so. My boy, it is best so.'
+
+She stooped and kissed Dick between the eyes. 'That is for
+good-morning,' she said, going away. 'When thou art dressed we will
+speak to George and make everything ready. But first we must open the
+little trunk. Give me the keys.'
+
+'The amount of kissing lately has been simply scandalous. I shall expect
+Torp to kiss me next. He is more likely to swear at me for getting in
+his way, though. Well, it won't last long.--Ohe, Madame, help me to my
+toilette of the guillotine! There will be no chance of dressing properly
+out yonder.'
+
+He was rummaging among his new campaign-kit, and rowelling his hands
+with the spurs. There are two ways of wearing well-oiled ankle-jacks,
+spotless blue bands, khaki coat and breeches, and a perfectly pipeclayed
+helmet. The right way is the way of the untired man, master of himself,
+setting out upon an expedition, well pleased.
+
+'Everything must be very correct,' Dick explained. 'It will become dirty
+afterwards, but now it is good to feel well dressed. Is everything as it
+should be?'
+
+He patted the revolver neatly hidden under the fulness of the blouse on
+the right hip and fingered his collar.
+
+'I can do no more,' Madame said, between laughing and crying. 'Look at
+thyself--but I forgot.'
+
+'I am very content.' He stroked the creaseless spirals of his leggings.
+
+'Now let us go and see the captain and George and the lighthouse boat.
+
+Be quick, Madame.'
+
+'But thou canst not be seen by the harbour walking with me in the
+daylight. Figure to yourself if some English ladies----'
+
+'There are no English ladies; and if there are, I have forgotten them.
+
+Take me there.'
+
+In spite of this burning impatience it was nearly evening ere the
+lighthouse boat began to move. Madame had said a great deal both to
+George and the captain touching the arrangements that were to be made
+for Dick's benefit. Very few men who had the honour of her acquaintance
+cared to disregard Madame's advice. That sort of contempt might end in
+being knifed by a stranger in a gambling hell upon surprisingly short
+provocation.
+
+For six days--two of them were wasted in the crowded Canal--the
+little steamer worked her way to Suakin, where she was to pick up the
+superintendent of the lighthouse; and Dick made it his business to
+propitiate George, who was distracted with fears for the safety of his
+light-of-love and half inclined to make Dick responsible for his own
+discomfort. When they arrived George took him under his wing, and
+together they entered the red-hot seaport, encumbered with the material
+and wastage of the Suakin-Berger line, from locomotives in disconsolate
+fragments to mounds of chairs and pot-sleepers.
+
+'If you keep with me,' said George, 'nobody will ask for passports or
+what you do. They are all very busy.'
+
+'Yes; but I should like to hear some of the Englishmen talk. They might
+remember me. I was known here a long time ago--when I was some one
+indeed.'
+
+'A long time ago is a very long time ago here. The graveyards are full.
+
+Now listen. This new railway runs out so far as Tanai-el-Hassan--that is
+seven miles. Then there is a camp. They say that beyond Tanai-el-Hassan
+the English troops go forward, and everything that they require will be
+brought to them by this line.'
+
+'Ah! Base camp. I see. That's a better business than fighting Fuzzies in
+the open.'
+
+'For this reason even the mules go up in the iron-train.'
+
+'Iron what?'
+
+'It is all covered with iron, because it is still being shot at.'
+
+'An armoured train. Better and better! Go on, faithful George.'
+
+'And I go up with my mules to-night. Only those who particularly require
+to go to the camp go out with the train. They begin to shoot not far
+from the city.'
+
+'The dears--they always used to!' Dick snuffed the smell of parched
+dust, heated iron, and flaking paint with delight. Certainly the old
+life was welcoming him back most generously.
+
+'When I have got my mules together I go up to-night, but you must first
+send a telegram of Port Said, declaring that I have done you no harm.'
+
+'Madame has you well in hand. Would you stick a knife into me if you had
+the chance?'
+
+'I have no chance,' said the Greek. 'She is there with that woman.'
+
+'I see. It's a bad thing to be divided between love of woman and the
+chance of loot. I sympathise with you, George.'
+
+They went to the telegraph-office unquestioned, for all the world was
+desperately busy and had scarcely time to turn its head, and Suakin was
+the last place under sky that would be chosen for holiday-ground. On
+their return the voice of an English subaltern asked Dick what he was
+doing. The blue goggles were over his eyes and he walked with his hand
+on George's elbow as he replied--'Egyptian Government--mules. My orders
+are to give them over to the A. C. G. at Tanai-el-Hassan. Any occasion
+to show my papers?'
+
+'Oh, certainly not. I beg your pardon. I'd no right to ask, but not
+seeing your face before I----'
+
+'I go out in the train to-night, I suppose,' said Dick, boldly. 'There
+will be no difficulty in loading up the mules, will there?'
+
+'You can see the horse-platforms from here. You must have them loaded up
+early.' The young man went away wondering what sort of broken-down
+waif this might be who talked like a gentleman and consorted with Greek
+muleteers. Dick felt unhappy. To outface an English officer is no small
+thing, but the bluff loses relish when one plays it from the utter dark,
+and stumbles up and down rough ways, thinking and eternally thinking
+of what might have been if things had fallen out otherwise, and all had
+been as it was not.
+
+George shared his meal with Dick and went off to the mule-lines. His
+charge sat alone in a shed with his face in his hands. Before his
+tight-shut eyes danced the face of Maisie, laughing, with parted lips.
+There was a great bustle and clamour about him. He grew afraid and
+almost called for George.
+
+'I say, have you got your mules ready?' It was the voice of the
+subaltern over his shoulder.
+
+'My man's looking after them. The--the fact is I've a touch of
+ophthalmia and can't see very well.
+
+'By Jove! that's bad. You ought to lie up in hospital for a while. I've
+had a turn of it myself. It's as bad as being blind.'
+
+'So I find it. When does this armoured train go?'
+
+'At six o'clock. It takes an hour to cover the seven miles.'
+
+'Are the Fuzzies on the rampage--eh?'
+
+'About three nights a week. Fact is I'm in acting command of the
+night-train. It generally runs back empty to Tanai for the night.'
+
+'Big camp at Tanai, I suppose?'
+
+'Pretty big. It has to feed our desert-column somehow.'
+
+'Is that far off?'
+
+'Between thirty and forty miles--in an infernal thirsty country.'
+
+'Is the country quiet between Tanai and our men?'
+
+'More or less. I shouldn't care to cross it alone, or with a subaltern's
+command for the matter of that, but the scouts get through it in some
+extraordinary fashion.'
+
+'They always did.'
+
+'Have you been here before, then?'
+
+'I was through most of the trouble when it first broke out.'
+
+'In the service and cashiered,' was the subaltern's first thought, so he
+refrained from putting any questions.
+
+'There's your man coming up with the mules. It seems rather queer----'
+
+'That I should be mule-leading?' said Dick.
+
+'I didn't mean to say so, but it is. Forgive me--it's beastly
+impertinence I know, but you speak like a man who has been at a public
+school. There's no mistaking the tone.'
+
+'I am a public school man.'
+
+'I thought so. I say, I don't want to hurt your feelings, but you're a
+little down on your luck, aren't you? I saw you sitting with your head
+in your hands, and that's why I spoke.'
+
+'Thanks. I am about as thoroughly and completely broke as a man need
+be.'
+
+'Suppose--I mean I'm a public school man myself. Couldn't I
+perhaps--take it as a loan y'know and----'
+
+'You're much too good, but on my honour I've as much money as I want.
+
+... I tell you what you could do for me, though, and put me under an
+everlasting obligation. Let me come into the bogie truck of the train.
+
+There is a fore-truck, isn't there?'
+
+'Yes. How d'you know?'
+
+'I've been in an armoured train before. Only let me see--hear some
+of the fun I mean, and I'll be grateful. I go at my own risk as a
+non-combatant.'
+
+The young man thought for a minute. 'All right,' he said. 'We're
+supposed to be an empty train, and there's no one to blow me up at the
+other end.'
+
+George and a horde of yelling amateur assistants had loaded up the
+mules, and the narrow-gauge armoured train, plated with three-eighths
+inch boiler-plate till it looked like one long coffin, stood ready to
+start.
+
+Two bogie trucks running before the locomotive were completely covered
+in with plating, except that the leading one was pierced in front for
+the muzzle of a machine-gun, and the second at either side for lateral
+fire.
+
+The trucks together made one long iron-vaulted chamber in which a score
+of artillerymen were rioting.
+
+'Whitechapel--last train! Ah, I see yer kissin' in the first class
+there!' somebody shouted, just as Dick was clamouring into the forward
+truck.
+
+'Lordy! 'Ere's a real live passenger for the Kew, Tanai, Acton, and
+Ealin' train. Echo, sir. Speshul edition! Star, sir.'--'Shall I get you
+a foot-warmer?' said another.
+
+'Thanks. I'll pay my footing,' said Dick, and relations of the most
+amiable were established ere silence came with the arrival of the
+subaltern, and the train jolted out over the rough track.
+
+'This is an immense improvement on shooting the unimpressionable Fuzzy
+in the open,' said Dick, from his place in the corner.
+
+'Oh, but he's still unimpressed. There he goes!' said the subaltern, as
+a bullet struck the outside of the truck. 'We always have at least
+one demonstration against the night-train. Generally they attack the
+rear-truck, where my junior commands. He gets all the fun of the fair.'
+
+'Not to-night though! Listen!' said Dick. A flight of heavy-handed
+bullets was succeeded by yelling and shouts. The children of the desert
+valued their nightly amusement, and the train was an excellent mark.
+
+'Is it worth giving them half a hopper full?' the subaltern asked of the
+engine, which was driven by a Lieutenant of Sappers.
+
+'I should think so! This is my section of the line. They'll be playing
+old Harry with my permanent way if we don't stop 'em.'
+
+'Right O!'
+
+'Hrrmph!' said the machine gun through all its five noses as the
+subaltern drew the lever home. The empty cartridges clashed on the floor
+and the smoke blew back through the truck. There was indiscriminate
+firing at the rear of the train, and return fire from the darkness
+without and unlimited howling. Dick stretched himself on the floor, wild
+with delight at the sounds and the smells.
+
+'God is very good--I never thought I'd hear this again. Give 'em hell,
+men. Oh, give 'em hell!' he cried.
+
+The train stopped for some obstruction on the line ahead and a party
+went out to reconnoitre, but came back, cursing, for spades. The
+children of the desert had piled sand and gravel on the rails, and
+twenty minutes were lost in clearing it away. Then the slow progress
+recommenced, to be varied with more shots, more shoutings, the steady
+clack and kick of the machine guns, and a final difficulty with a
+half-lifted rail ere the train came under the protection of the roaring
+camp at Tanai-el-Hassan.
+
+'Now, you see why it takes an hour and a half to fetch her through,'
+said the subaltern, unshipping the cartridge-hopper above his pet gun.
+
+'It was a lark, though. I only wish it had lasted twice as long.
+How superb it must have looked from outside!' said Dick, sighing
+regretfully.
+
+'It palls after the first few nights. By the way, when you've settled
+about your mules, come and see what we can find to eat in my tent. I'm
+Bennil of the Gunners--in the artillery lines--and mind you don't fall
+over my tent-ropes in the dark.'
+
+But it was all dark to Dick. He could only smell the camels, the
+hay-bales, the cooking, the smoky fires, and the tanned canvas of the
+tents as he stood, where he had dropped from the train, shouting for
+George. There was a sound of light-hearted kicking on the iron skin of
+the rear trucks, with squealing and grunting. George was unloading the
+mules.
+
+The engine was blowing off steam nearly in Dick's ear; a cold wind of
+the desert danced between his legs; he was hungry, and felt tired and
+dirty--so dirty that he tried to brush his coat with his hands. That was
+a hopeless job; he thrust his hands into his pockets and began to count
+over the many times that he had waited in strange or remote places for
+trains or camels, mules or horses, to carry him to his business. In
+those days he could see--few men more clearly--and the spectacle of an
+armed camp at dinner under the stars was an ever fresh pleasure to the
+eye. There was colour, light, and motion, without which no man has much
+pleasure in living. This night there remained for him only one more
+journey through the darkness that never lifts to tell a man how far he
+has travelled. Then he would grip Torpenhow's hand again--Torpenhow, who
+was alive and strong, and lived in the midst of the action that had once
+made the reputation of a man called Dick Heldar: not in the least to be
+confused with the blind, bewildered vagabond who seemed to answer to
+the same name. Yes, he would find Torpenhow, and come as near to the old
+life as might be. Afterwards he would forget everything: Bessie, who had
+wrecked the Melancolia and so nearly wrecked his life; Beeton, who lived
+in a strange unreal city full of tin-tacks and gas-plugs and matters
+that no men needed; that irrational being who had offered him love
+and loyalty for nothing, but had not signed her name; and most of all
+Maisie, who, from her own point of view, was undeniably right in all she
+did, but oh, at this distance, so tantalisingly fair.
+
+George's hand on his arm pulled him back to the situation.
+
+'And what now?' said George.
+
+'Oh yes of course. What now? Take me to the camel-men. Take me to where
+the scouts sit when they come in from the desert. They sit by their
+camels, and the camels eat grain out of a black blanket held up at the
+corners, and the men eat by their side just like camels. Take me there!'
+
+The camp was rough and rutty, and Dick stumbled many times over the
+stumps of scrub. The scouts were sitting by their beasts, as Dick knew
+they would. The light of the dung-fires flickered on their bearded
+faces, and the camels bubbled and mumbled beside them at rest. It was no
+part of Dick's policy to go into the desert with a convoy of
+supplies. That would lead to impertinent questions, and since a blind
+non-combatant is not needed at the front, he would probably be forced to
+return to Suakin.
+
+He must go up alone, and go immediately.
+
+'Now for one last bluff--the biggest of all,' he said. 'Peace be with
+you, brethren!' The watchful George steered him to the circle of the
+nearest fire. The heads of the camel-sheiks bowed gravely, and the
+camels, scenting a European, looked sideways curiously like brooding
+hens, half ready to get to their feet.
+
+'A beast and a driver to go to the fighting line to-night,' said Dick.
+
+'A Mulaid?' said a voice, scornfully naming the best baggage-breed that
+he knew.
+
+'A Bisharin,' returned Dick, with perfect gravity. 'A Bisharin without
+saddle-galls. Therefore no charge of thine, shock-head.'
+
+Two or three minutes passed. Then--'We be knee-haltered for the night.
+There is no going out from the camp.'
+
+'Not for money?'
+
+'H'm! Ah! English money?'
+
+Another depressing interval of silence.
+
+'How much?'
+
+'Twenty-five pounds English paid into the hand of the driver at my
+journey's end, and as much more into the hand of the camel-sheik here,
+to be paid when the driver returns.'
+
+This was royal payment, and the sheik, who knew that he would get his
+commission on this deposit, stirred in Dick's behalf.
+
+'For scarcely one night's journey--fifty pounds. Land and wells and
+good trees and wives to make a man content for the rest of his days. Who
+speaks?' said Dick.
+
+'I,' said a voice. 'I will go--but there is no going from the camp.'
+
+'Fool! I know that a camel can break his knee-halter, and the sentries
+do not fire if one goes in chase. Twenty-five pounds and another
+twenty-five pounds. But the beast must be a good Bisharin; I will take
+no baggage-camel.'
+
+Then the bargaining began, and at the end of half an hour the first
+deposit was paid over to the sheik, who talked in low tones to the
+driver.
+
+Dick heard the latter say: 'A little way out only. Any baggage-beast
+will serve. Am I a fool to waste my cattle for a blind man?'
+
+'And though I cannot see'--Dick lifted his voice a little--'yet I carry
+that which has six eyes, and the driver will sit before me. If we do not
+reach the English troops in the dawn he will be dead.'
+
+'But where, in God's name, are the troops?'
+
+'Unless thou knowest let another man ride. Dost thou know? Remember it
+will be life or death to thee.'
+
+'I know,' said the driver, sullenly. 'Stand back from my beast. I am
+going to slip him.'
+
+'Not so swiftly. George, hold the camel's head a moment. I want to feel
+his cheek.' The hands wandered over the hide till they found the
+branded half-circle that is the mark of the Biharin, the light-built
+riding-camel.
+
+'That is well. Cut this one loose. Remember no blessing of God comes on
+those who try to cheat the blind.'
+
+The men chuckled by the fires at the camel-driver's discomfiture. He had
+intended to substitute a slow, saddle-galled baggage-colt.
+
+'Stand back!' one shouted, lashing the Biharin under the belly with a
+quirt. Dick obeyed as soon as he felt the nose-string tighten in his
+hand,--and a cry went up, 'Illaha! Aho! He is loose.'
+
+With a roar and a grunt the Biharin rose to his feet and plunged forward
+toward the desert, his driver following with shouts and lamentation.
+
+George caught Dick's arm and hurried him stumbling and tripping past a
+disgusted sentry who was used to stampeding camels.
+
+'What's the row now?' he cried.
+
+'Every stitch of my kit on that blasted dromedary,' Dick answered, after
+the manner of a common soldier.
+
+'Go on, and take care your throat's not cut outside--you and your
+dromedary's.'
+
+The outcries ceased when the camel had disappeared behind a hillock, and
+his driver had called him back and made him kneel down.
+
+'Mount first,' said Dick. Then climbing into the second seat and gently
+screwing the pistol muzzle into the small of his companion's back, 'Go
+on in God's name, and swiftly. Good-bye, George. Remember me to Madame,
+and have a good time with your girl. Get forward, child of the Pit!'
+
+A few minutes later he was shut up in a great silence, hardly broken by
+the creaking of the saddle and the soft pad of the tireless feet. Dick
+adjusted himself comfortably to the rock and pitch of the pace, girthed
+his belt tighter, and felt the darkness slide past. For an hour he was
+conscious only of the sense of rapid progress.
+
+'A good camel,' he said at last.
+
+'He was never underfed. He is my own and clean bred,' the driver
+replied.
+
+'Go on.'
+
+His head dropped on his chest and he tried to think, but the tenor of
+his thoughts was broken because he was very sleepy. In the half doze in
+seemed that he was learning a punishment hymn at Mrs. Jennett's. He had
+committed some crime as bad as Sabbath-breaking, and she had locked him
+up in his bedroom. But he could never repeat more than the first two
+lines of the hymn--
+
+When Israel of the Lord beloved
+
+Out of the land of bondage came.
+
+He said them over and over thousands of times. The driver turned in the
+saddle to see if there were any chance of capturing the revolver and
+ending the ride. Dick roused, struck him over the head with the
+butt, and stormed himself wide awake. Somebody hidden in a clump of
+camel-thorn shouted as the camel toiled up rising ground. A shot was
+fired, and the silence shut down again, bringing the desire to sleep.
+Dick could think no longer. He was too tired and stiff and cramped to
+do more than nod uneasily from time to time, waking with a start and
+punching the driver with the pistol.
+
+'Is there a moon?' he asked drowsily.
+
+'She is near her setting.'
+
+'I wish that I could see her. Halt the camel. At least let me hear the
+desert talk.'
+
+The man obeyed. Out of the utter stillness came one breath of wind.
+It rattled the dead leaves of a shrub some distance away and ceased. A
+handful of dry earth detached itself from the edge of a rail trench and
+crumbled softly to the bottom.
+
+'Go on. The night is very cold.'
+
+Those who have watched till the morning know how the last hour before
+the light lengthens itself into many eternities. It seemed to Dick that
+he had never since the beginning of original darkness done anything at
+all save jolt through the air. Once in a thousand years he would
+finger the nailheads on the saddle-front and count them all carefully.
+Centuries later he would shift his revolver from his right hand to his
+left and allow the eased arm to drop down at his side. From the safe
+distance of London he was watching himself thus employed,--watching
+critically. Yet whenever he put out his hand to the canvas that he might
+paint the tawny yellow desert under the glare of the sinking moon, the
+black shadow of a camel and the two bowed figures atop, that hand held a
+revolver and the arm was numbed from wrist to collar-bone. Moreover, he
+was in the dark, and could see no canvas of any kind whatever.
+
+The driver grunted, and Dick was conscious of a change in the air.
+
+'I smell the dawn,' he whispered.
+
+'It is here, and yonder are the troops. Have I done well?'
+
+The camel stretched out its neck and roared as there came down wind the
+pungent reek of camels in the square.
+
+'Go on. We must get there swiftly. Go on.'
+
+'They are moving in their camp. There is so much dust that I cannot see
+what they do.'
+
+'Am I in better case? Go forward.'
+
+They could hear the hum of voices ahead, the howling and the bubbling of
+the beasts and the hoarse cries of the soldiers girthing up for the day.
+
+Two or three shots were fired.
+
+'Is that at us? Surely they can see that I am English,' Dick spoke
+angrily.
+
+'Nay, it is from the desert,' the driver answered, cowering in his
+saddle.
+
+'Go forward, my child! Well it is that the dawn did not uncover us an
+hour ago.'
+
+The camel headed straight for the column and the shots behind
+multiplied. The children of the desert had arranged that most
+uncomfortable of surprises, a dawn attack for the English troops, and
+were getting their distance by snap-shots at the only moving object
+without the square.
+
+'What luck! What stupendous and imperial luck!' said Dick. 'It's "just
+before the battle, mother." Oh, God has been most good to me!
+
+Only'--the agony of the thought made him screw up his eyes for an
+instant--'Maisie...'
+
+'Allahu! We are in,' said the man, as he drove into the rearguard and
+the camel knelt.
+
+'Who the deuce are you? Despatches or what? What's the strength of the
+enemy behind that ridge? How did you get through?' asked a dozen voices.
+For all answer Dick took a long breath, unbuckled his belt, and shouted
+from the saddle at the top of a wearied and dusty voice, 'Torpenhow!
+Ohe, Torp! Coo-ee, Tor-pen-how.'
+
+A bearded man raking in the ashes of a fire for a light to his pipe
+moved very swiftly towards that cry, as the rearguard, facing about,
+began to fire at the puffs of smoke from the hillocks around. Gradually
+the scattered white cloudlets drew out into the long lines of banked
+white that hung heavily in the stillness of the dawn before they turned
+over wave-like and glided into the valleys. The soldiers in the square
+were coughing and swearing as their own smoke obstructed their view, and
+they edged forward to get beyond it. A wounded camel leaped to its feet
+and roared aloud, the cry ending in a bubbling grunt. Some one had
+cut its throat to prevent confusion. Then came the thick sob of a
+man receiving his death-wound from a bullet; then a yell of agony and
+redoubled firing.
+
+There was no time to ask any questions.
+
+'Get down, man! Get down behind the camel!'
+
+'No. Put me, I pray, in the forefront of the battle.' Dick turned his
+face to Torpenhow and raised his hand to set his helmet straight, but,
+miscalculating the distance, knocked it off. Torpenhow saw that his hair
+was gray on the temples, and that his face was the face of an old man.
+
+'Come down, you damned fool! Dickie, come off!'
+
+And Dick came obediently, but as a tree falls, pitching sideways from
+the Bisharin's saddle at Torpenhow's feet. His luck had held to the
+last, even to the crowning mercy of a kindly bullet through his head.
+
+Torpenhow knelt under the lee of the camel, with Dick's body in his
+arms.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ End of Project Gutenberg's The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
+
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+Project Gutenberg Etext The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
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+Title: The Light That Failed
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+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN ETEXTS*Ver.04.07.00*END*
+
+
+
+
+
+Prepared by David Reed haradda@aol.com or davidr@inconnect.com
+
+
+
+
+
+The Light That Failed
+
+by Rudyard Kipling
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+ So we settled it all when the storm was done
+ As comf'y as comf'y could be;
+ And I was to wait in the barn, my dears,
+ Because I was only three;
+ And Teddy would run to the rainbow's foot,
+ Because he was five and a man;
+ And that's how it all began, my dears,
+ And that's how it all began. -- Big Barn Stories.
+
+ 'WHAT do you think she'd do if she caught us? We oughtn't to have it,
+ you know,' said Maisie.
+
+ 'Beat me, and lock you up in your bedroom,' Dick answered, without
+ hesitation. 'Have you got the cartridges?'
+
+ "Yes; they're in my pocket, but they are joggling horribly. Do pin-fire
+ cartridges go off of their own accord?'
+
+ 'Don't know. Take the revolver, if you are afraid, and let me carry
+ them.'
+
+ "I'm not afraid.' Maisie strode forward swiftly, a hand in her pocket
+ and her chin in the air. Dick followed with a small pin-fire revolver.
+
+ The children had discovered that their lives would be unendurable
+ without pistol-practice. After much forethought and self-denial, Dick
+ had saved seven shillings and sixpence, the price of a badly constructed
+ Belgian revolver. Maisie could only contribute half a crown to the
+ syndicate for the purchase of a hundred cartridges. 'You can save better
+ than I can, Dick,' she explained; 'I like nice things to eat, and it
+ doesn't matter to you. Besides, boys ought to do these things.'
+
+ Dick grumbled a little at the arrangement, but went out and made the
+ purchase, which the children were then on their way to test. Revolvers
+ did not lie in the scheme of their daily life as decreed for them by the
+ guardian who was incorrectly supposed to stand in the place of a mother
+ to these two orphans. Dick had been under her care for six years, during
+ which time she had made her profit of the allowances supposed to be
+ expended on his clothes, and, partly through thoughtlessness, partly
+ through a natural desire to pain,--she was a widow of some years anxious
+ to marry again,--had made his days burdensome on his young shoulders.
+
+ Where he had looked for love, she gave him first aversion and then hate.
+
+ Where he growing older had sought a little sympathy, she gave him
+ ridicule. The many hours that she could spare from the ordering of her
+ small house she devoted to what she called the home-training of Dick
+ Heldar. Her religion, manufactured in the main by her own intelligence
+ and a keen study of the Scriptures, was an aid to her in this matter. At
+ such times as she herself was not personally displeased with Dick, she
+ left him to understand that he had a heavy account to settle with his
+ Creator; wherefore Dick learned to loathe his God as intensely as he
+ loathed Mrs. Jennett; and this is not a wholesome frame of mind for the
+ young. Since she chose to regard him as a hopeless liar, but an
+ economical and self-contained one, never throwing away the least
+ unnecessary fib, and never hesitating at the blackest, were it only
+ plausible, that might make his life a little easier. The treatment
+ taught him at least the power of living alone,--a power that was of
+ service to him when he went to a public school and the boys laughed at
+ his clothes, which were poor in quality and much mended. In the holidays
+ he returned to the teachings of Mrs. Jennett, and, that the chain of
+ discipline might not be weakened by association with the world, was
+ generally beaten, on one account or another, before he had been twelve
+ hours under her roof.
+
+ The autumn of one year brought him a companion in bondage, a
+ long-haired, gray-eyed little atom, as self-contained as himself, who
+ moved about the house silently and for the first few weeks spoke only to
+ the goat that was her chiefest friend on earth and lived in the
+ back-garden. Mrs. Jennett objected to the goat on the grounds that he
+ was un-Christian,--which he certainly was. 'Then,' said the atom,
+ choosing her words very deliberately, 'I shall write to my
+ lawyer-peoples and tell them that you are a very bad woman. Amomma is
+ mine, mine, mine!' Mrs. Jennett made a movement to the hall, where
+ certain umbrellas and canes stood in a rack. The atom understood as
+ clearly as Dick what this meant. 'I have been beaten before,' she said,
+ still in the same passionless voice; 'I have been beaten worse than you
+ can ever beat me. If you beat me I shall write to my lawyer-peoples and
+ tell them that you do not give me enough to eat. I am not afraid of
+ you.' Mrs. Jennett did not go into the hall, and the atom, after a pause
+ to assure herself that all danger of war was past, went out, to weep
+ bitterly on Amomma's neck.
+
+ Dick learned to know her as Maisie, and at first mistrusted her
+ profoundly, for he feared that she might interfere with the small
+ liberty of action left to him. She did not, however; and she volunteered
+ no friendliness until Dick had taken the first steps. Long before the
+ holidays were over, the stress of punishment shared in common drove the
+ children together, if it were only to play into each other's hands as
+ they prepared lies for Mrs. Jennett's use. When Dick returned to school,
+ Maisie whispered, 'Now I shall be all alone to take care of myself;
+ but,' and she nodded her head bravely, 'I can do it. You promised to
+ send Amomma a grass collar. Send it soon.' A week later she asked for
+ that collar by return of post, and wa not pleased when she learned that
+ it took time to make. When at last Dick forwarded the gift, she forgot
+ to thank him for it.
+
+ Many holidays had come and gone since that day, and Dick had grown into
+ a lanky hobbledehoy more than ever conscious of his bad clothes. Not for
+ a moment had Mrs. Jennett relaxed her tender care of him, but the
+ average canings of a public school--Dick fell under punishment about
+ three times a month--filled him with contempt for her powers. 'She
+ doesn't hurt,' he explained to Maisie, who urged him to rebellion, 'and
+ she is kinder to you after she has whacked me.' Dick shambled through
+ the days unkempt in body and savage in soul, as the smaller boys of the
+ school learned to know, for when the spirit moved him he would hit them,
+ cunningly and with science. The same spirit made him more than once try
+ to tease Maisie, but the girl refused to be made unhappy. 'We are both
+ miserable as it is,' said she. 'What is the use of trying to make things
+ worse? Let's find things to do, and forget things.'
+
+ The pistol was the outcome of that search. It could only be used on the
+ muddiest foreshore of the beach, far away from the bathing-machines and
+ pierheads, below the grassy slopes of Fort Keeling. The tide ran out
+ nearly two miles on that coast, and the many-coloured mud-banks, touched
+ by the sun, sent up a lamentable smell of dead weed. It was late in the
+ afternoon when Dick and Maisie arrived on their ground, Amomma trotting
+ patiently behind them.
+
+ 'Mf!' said Maisie, sniffing the air. 'I wonder what makes the sea so
+ smelly? I don't like it!'
+
+ 'You never like anything that isn't made just for you,' said Dick
+ bluntly. 'Give me the cartridges, and I'll try first shot. How far does
+ one of these little revolvers carry?'
+
+ 'Oh, half a mile,' said Maisie, promptly. 'At least it makes an awful
+ noise. Be careful with the cartridges; I don't like those jagged
+ stick-up things on the rim. Dick, do be careful.'
+
+ 'All right. I know how to load. I'll fire at the breakwater out there.'
+
+ He fired, and Amomma ran away bleating. The bullet threw up a spurt of
+ mud to the right of the wood-wreathed piles.
+
+ 'Throws high and to the right. You try, Maisie. Mind, it's loaded all
+ round.'
+
+ Maisie took the pistol and stepped delicately to the verge of the mud,
+ her hand firmly closed on the butt, her mouth and left eye screwed up.
+
+ Dick sat down on a tuft of bank and laughed. Amomma returned very
+ cautiously. He was accustomed to strange experiences in his afternoon
+ walks, and, finding the cartridge-box unguarded, made investigations
+ with his nose. Maisie fired, but could not see where the bullet went.
+
+ 'I think it hit the post,' she said, shading her eyes and looking out
+ across the sailless sea.
+
+ 'I know it has gone out to the Marazion Bell-buoy,' said Dick, with a
+ chuckle. 'Fire low and to the left; then perhaps you'll get it. Oh, look
+ at Amomma!--he's eating the cartridges!'
+
+ Maisie turned, the revolver in her hand, just in time to see Amomma
+ scampering away from the pebbles Dick threw after him. Nothing is sacred
+ to a billy-goat. Being well fed and the adored of his mistress, Amomma
+ had naturally swallowed two loaded pin-fire cartridges. Maisie hurried
+ up to assure herself that Dick had not miscounted the tale.
+
+ 'Yes, he's eaten two.'
+
+ 'Horrid little beast! Then they'll joggle about inside him and blow up,
+ and serve him right. . . . Oh, Dick! have I killed you?'
+
+ Revolvers are tricky things for young hands to deal with. Maisie could
+ not explain how it had happened, but a veil of reeking smoke separated
+ her from Dick, and she was quite certain that the pistol had gone off in
+ his face. Then she heard him sputter, and dropped on her knees beside
+ him, crying, 'Dick, you aren't hurt, are you? I didn't mean it.'
+
+ 'Of course you didn't, said Dick, coming out of the smoke and wiping his
+ cheek. 'But you nearly blinded me. That powder stuff stings awfully.' A
+ neat little splash of gray led on a stone showed where the bullet had
+ gone. Maisie began to whimper.
+
+ 'Don't,' said Dick, jumping to his feet and shaking himself. 'I'm not a
+ bit hurt.'
+
+ 'No, but I might have killed you,' protested Maisie, the corners of her
+ mouth drooping. 'What should I have done then?'
+
+ 'Gone home and told Mrs. Jennett.' Dick grinned at the thought; then,
+ softening, 'Please don't worry about it. Besides, we are wasting time.
+
+ We've got to get back to tea. I'll take the revolver for a bit.'
+
+ Maisie would have wept on the least encouragement, but Dick's
+ indifference, albeit his hand was shaking as he picked up the pistol,
+ restrained her. She lay panting on the beach while Dick methodically
+ bombarded the breakwater. 'Got it at last!' he exclaimed, as a lock of
+ weed flew from the wood.
+
+ 'Let me try,' said Maisie, imperiously. 'I'm all right now.'
+
+ They fired in turns till the rickety little revolver nearly shook itself
+ to pieces, and Amomma the outcast--because he might blow up at any
+ moment--browsed in the background and wondered why stones were thrown at
+ him. Then they found a balk of timber floating in a pool which was
+ commanded by the seaward slope of Fort Keeling, and they sat down
+ together before this new target.
+
+ 'Next holidays,' said Dick, as the now thoroughly fouled revolver kicked
+ wildly in his hand, 'we'll get another pistol,--central fire,--that will
+ carry farther.'
+
+ 'There won't b any next holidays for me,' said Maisie. 'I'm going away.'
+
+ 'Where to?'
+
+ 'I don't know. My lawyers have written to Mrs. Jennett, and I've got to
+ be educated somewhere,--in France, perhaps,--I don't know where; but I
+ shall be glad to go away.'
+
+ 'I shan't like it a bit. I suppose I shall be left. Look here, Maisie,
+ is it really true you're going? Then these holidays will be the last I
+ shall see anything of you; and I go back to school next week. I
+ wish----'
+
+ The young blood turned his cheeks scarlet. Maisie was picking
+ grass-tufts and throwing them down the slope at a yellow sea-poppy
+ nodding all by itself to the illimitable levels of the mud-flats and the
+ milk-white sea beyond.
+
+ 'I wish,' she said, after a pause, 'that I could see you again sometime.
+
+ You wish that, too?'
+
+ 'Yes, but it would have been better if--if--you had--shot straight over
+ there--down by the breakwater.'
+
+ Maisie looked with large eyes for a moment. And this was the boy who
+ only ten days before had decorated Amomma's horns with cut-paper
+ ham-frills and turned him out, a bearded derision, among the public
+ ways! Then she dropped her eyes: this was not the boy.
+
+ 'Don't be stupid,' she said reprovingly, and with swift instinct
+ attacked the side-issue. 'How selfish you are! Just think what I should
+ have felt if that horrid thing had killed you! I'm quite miserable
+ enough already.'
+
+ 'Why? Because you're going away from Mrs. Jennett?'
+
+ 'No.'
+
+ 'From me, then?'
+
+ No answer for a long time. Dick dared not look at her. He felt, though
+ he did not know, all that the past four years had been to him, and this
+ the more acutely since he had no knowledge to put his feelings in words.
+
+ 'I don't know,' she said. 'I suppose it is.'
+
+ 'Maisie, you must know. I'm not supposing.'
+
+ 'Let's go home,' said Maisie, weakly.
+
+ But Dick was not minded to retreat.
+
+ 'I can't say things,' he pleaded, 'and I'm awfully sorry for teasing you
+ about Amomma the other day. It's all different now, Maisie, can't you
+ see? And you might have told me that you were going, instead of leaving
+ me to find out.'
+
+ 'You didn't. I did tell. Oh, Dick, what's the use of worrying?'
+
+ 'There isn't any; but we've been together years and years, and I didn't
+ know how much I cared.'
+
+ 'I don't believe you ever did care.'
+
+ 'No, I didn't; but I do,--I care awfully now, Maisie,' he
+ gulped,--'Maisie, darling, say you care too, please.'
+
+ 'I do, indeed I do; but it won't be any use.'
+
+ 'Why?'
+
+ 'Because I am going away.'
+
+ 'Yes, but if you promise before you go. Only say--will you?' A second
+ 'darling' came to his lips more easily than the first. There were few
+ endearments in Dick's home or school life; he had to find them by
+ instinct. Dick caught the little hand blackened with the escaped gas of
+ the revolver.
+
+ 'I promise,' she said solemnly; 'but if I care there is no need for
+ promising.'
+
+ 'And do you care?' For the first time in the past few minutes their eyes
+ met and spoke for them who had no skill in speech. . . .
+
+ 'Oh, Dick, don't! Please don't! It was all right when we said
+ good-morning; but now it's all different!' Amomma looked on from afar.
+
+ He had seen his property quarrel frequently, but he had never seen
+ kisses exchanged before. The yellow sea-poppy was wiser, and nodded its
+ head approvingly. Considered as a kiss, that was a failure, but since it
+ was the first, other than those demanded by duty, in all the world that
+ either had ever given or taken, it opened to them new worlds, and every
+ one of them glorious, so that they were lifted above the consideration
+ of any worlds at all, especially those in which tea is necessary, and
+ sat still, holding each other's hands and saying not a word.
+
+ 'You can't forget now,' said Dick, at last. There was that on his cheek
+ that stung more than gunpowder.
+
+ 'I shouldn't have forgotten anyhow,' said Maisie, and they looked at
+ each other and saw that each was changed from the companion of an hour
+ ago to a wonder and a mystery they could not understand. The sun began
+ to set, and a night-wind thrashed along the bents of the foreshore.
+
+ 'We shall be awfully late for tea,' said Maisie. 'Let's go home.'
+
+ 'Let's use the rest of the cartridges first,' said Dick; and he helped
+ Maisie down the slope of the fort to the sea,--a descent that she was
+ quite capable of covering at full speed. Equally gravely Maisie took the
+ grimy hand. Dick bent forward clumsily; Maisie drew the hand away, and
+ Dick blushed.
+
+ 'It's very pretty,' he said.
+
+ 'Pooh!' said Maisie, with a little laugh of gratified vanity. She stood
+ close to Dick as he loaded the revolver for the last time and fired over
+ the sea with a vague notion at the back of his head that he was
+ protecting Maisie from all the evils in the world. A puddle far across
+ the mud caught the last rays of the sun and turned into a wrathful red
+ disc. The light held Dick's attention for a moment, and as he raised his
+ revolver there fell upon him a renewed sense of the miraculous, in that
+ he was standing by Maisie who had promised to care for him for an
+ indefinite length of time till such date as---- A gust of the growing
+ wind drove the girl's long black hair across his face as she stood with
+ her hand on his shoulder calling Amomma 'a little beast,' and for a
+ moment he was in the dark,--a darkness that stung. The bullet went
+ singing out to the empty sea.
+
+ 'Spoilt my aim,' said he, shaking his head. 'There aren't any more
+ cartridges; we shall have to run home.' But they did not run. They
+ walked very slowly, arm in arm. And it was a matter of indifference to
+ them whether the neglected Amomma with two pin-fire cartridges in his
+ inside blew up or trotted beside them; for they had come into a golden
+ heritage and were disposing of it with all the wisdom of all their
+ years.
+
+ 'And I shall be----' quoth Dick, valiantly. Then he checked himself: 'I
+ don't know what I shall be. I don't seem to be able to pass any exams,
+ but I can make awful caricatures of the masters. Ho! Ho!'
+
+ 'Be an artist, then,' said Maisie. 'You're always laughing at my trying
+ to draw; and it will do you good.'
+
+ 'I'll never laugh at anything you do,' he answered. 'I'll be an artist,
+ and I'll do things.'
+
+ 'Artists always want money, don't they?'
+
+ 'I've got a hundred and twenty pounds a year of my own. My guardians
+ tell me I'm to have it when I come of age. That will be enough to begin
+ with.'
+
+ 'Ah, I'm rich,' said Maisie. 'I've got three hundred a year all my own
+ when I'm twenty-one. That's why Mrs. Jennett is kinder to me than she is
+ to you. I wish, though, that I had somebody that belonged to me,--just a
+ father or a mother.'
+
+ 'You belong to me,' said Dick, 'for ever and ever.'
+
+ 'Yes, we belong--for ever. It's very nice.' She squeezed his arm. The
+ kindly darkness hid them both, and, emboldened because he could only
+ just see the profile of Maisie's cheek with the long lashes veiling the
+ gray eyes, Dick at the front door delivered himself of the words he had
+ been boggling over for the last two hours.
+
+ 'And I--love you, Maisie,' he said, in a whisper that seemed to him to
+ ring across the world,--the world that he would to-morrow or the next
+ day set out to conquer.
+
+ There was a scene, not, for the sake of discipline, to be reported, when
+ Mrs. Jennett would have fallen upon him, first for disgraceful
+ unpunctuality, and secondly for nearly killing himself with a forbidden
+ weapon.
+
+ 'I was playing with it, and it went off by itself,' said Dick, when the
+ powder-pocked cheek could no longer be hidden, 'but if you think you're
+ going to lick me you're wrong. You are never going to touch me again.
+
+ Sit down and give me my tea. You can't cheat us out of that, anyhow.'
+
+ Mrs. Jennett gasped and became livid. Maisie said nothing, but
+ encouraged Dick with her eyes, and he behaved abominably all that
+ evening. Mrs. Jennett prophesied an immediate judgment of Providence and
+ a descent into Tophet later, but Dick walked in Paradise and would not
+ hear. Only when he was going to bed Mrs. Jennett recovered and asserted
+ herself. He had bidden Maisie good-night with down-dropped eyes and from
+ a distance.
+
+ 'If you aren't a gentleman you might try to behave like one,' said Mrs.
+
+ Jennett, spitefully. 'You've been quarrelling with Maisie again.'
+
+ This meant that the usual good-night kiss had been omitted. Maisie,
+ white to the lips, thrust her cheek forward with a fine air of
+ indifference, and was duly pecked by Dick, who tramped out of the room
+ red as fire. That night he dreamed a wild dream. He had won all the
+ world and brought it to Maisie in a cartridge-box, but she turned it
+ over with her foot, and, instead of saying 'Thank you,' cried--
+ 'Where is the grass collar you promised for Amomma? Oh, how selfish you
+ are!'?
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Then we brought the lances down, then the bugles blew,
+When we went to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two,
+Ridin', ridin', ridin', two an' two,
+Ta-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra-ra,
+All the way to Kandahar, ridin' two an' two.
+
+--Barrack-Room Ballad.
+
+'I'M NOT angry with the British public, but I wish we had a few
+thousand of them scattered among these rooks. They wouldn't be in such
+a hurry to get at their morning papers then. Can't you imagine the
+regulation householder--Lover of Justice, Constant Reader,
+Paterfamilias, and all that lot--frizzling on hot gravel?'
+
+'With a blue veil over his head, and his clothes in strips. Has any man
+here a needle? I've got a piece of sugar-sack.'
+
+'I'll lend you a packing-needle for six square inches of it then. Both my
+knees are worn through.'
+
+'Why not six square acres, while you're about it? But lend me the needle,
+and I'll see what I can do with the selvage. I don't think there's enough to
+protect my royal body from the cold blast as it is. What are you doing
+with that everlasting sketch-book of yours, Dick?'
+
+'Study of our Special Correspondent repairing his wardrobe,' said Dick,
+gravely, as the other man kicked off a pair of sorely worn
+riding-breeches and began to fit a square of coarse canvas over the most
+obvious open space. He grunted disconsolately as the vastness of the void
+developed itself.
+
+'Sugar-bags, indeed! Hi! you pilot man there! lend me all the sails for
+that whale-boat.'
+
+A fez-crowned head bobbed up in the stern-sheets, divided itself into
+exact halves with one flashing grin, and bobbed down again. The man of
+the tattered breeches, clad only in a Norfolk jacket and a gray flannel
+shirt, went on with his clumsy sewing, while Dick chuckled over the
+sketch.
+
+Some twenty whale-boats were nuzzling a sand-bank which was dotted
+with English soldiery of half a dozen corps, bathing or washing their
+clothes. A heap of boat-rollers, commissariat-boxes, sugar-bags, and
+flour- and small-arm-ammunition-cases showed where one of the
+whale-boats had been compelled to unload hastily; and a regimental
+carpenter was swearing aloud as he tried, on a wholly insufficient
+allowance of white lead, to plaster up the sun-parched gaping seams of
+the boat herself.
+
+'First the bloomin' rudder snaps,' said he to the world in general; 'then
+the mast goes; an' then, s' 'help me, when she can't do nothin' else, she
+opens 'erself out like a cock-eyes Chinese lotus.'
+
+'Exactly the case with my breeches, whoever you are,' said the tailor,
+without looking up. 'Dick, I wonder when I shall see a decent shop again.'
+
+There was no answer, save the incessant angry murmur of the Nile as it
+raced round a basalt-walled bend and foamed across a rock-ridge half a
+mile upstream. It was as though the brown weight of the river would
+drive the white men back to their own country. The indescribable scent
+of Nile mud in the air told that the stream was falling and the next few
+miles would be no light thing for the whale-boats to overpass. The desert
+ran down almost to the banks, where, among gray, red, and black
+hillocks, a camel-corps was encamped. No man dared even for a day lose
+touch of the slow-moving boats; there had been no fighting for weeks
+past, and throughout all that time the Nile had never spared them. Rapid
+had followed rapid, rock rock, and island-group island-group, till the
+rank and file had long since lost all count of direction and very nearly of
+time. They were moving somewhere, they did not know why, to do
+something, they did not know what. Before them lay the Nile, and at the
+other end of it was one Gordon, fighting for the dear life, in a town called
+Khartoum. There were columns of British troops in the desert, or in one
+of the many deserts; there were yet more columns waiting to embark on
+the river; there were fresh drafts waiting at Assioot and Assuan; there
+were lies and rumours running over the face of the hopeless land from
+Suakin to the Sixth Cataract, and men supposed generally that there
+must be some one in authority to direct the general scheme of the many
+movements. The duty of that particular river-column was to keep the
+whale-boats afloat in the water, to avoid trampling on the villagers' crops
+when the gangs 'tracked' the boats with lines thrown from midstream, to
+get as much sleep and food as was possible, and, above all, to press on
+without delay in the teeth of the churning Nile.
+
+With the soldiers sweated and toiled the correspondents of the
+newspapers, and they were almost as ignorant as their companions. But
+it was above all things necessary that England at breakfast should be
+amused and thrilled and interested, whether Gordon lived or died, or
+half the British army went to pieces in the sands. The Soudan campaign
+was a picturesque one, and lent itself to vivid word-painting. Now and
+again a 'Special' managed to get slain,--which was not altogether a
+disadvantage to the paper that employed him,--and more often the
+hand-to-hand nature of the fighting allowed of miraculous escapes which
+were worth telegraphing home at eighteenpence the word. There were
+many correspondents with many corps and columns,--from the veterans
+who had followed on the heels of the cavalry that occupied Cairo in '82,
+what time Arabi Pasha called himself king, who had seen the first
+miserable work round Suakin when the sentries were cut up nightly and
+the scrub swarmed with spears, to youngsters jerked into the business at
+the end of a telegraph-wire to take the places of their betters killed or
+invalided.
+
+Among the seniors--those who knew every shift and change in the
+perplexing postal arrangements, the value of the seediest, weediest
+Egyptian garron offered for sale in Cairo or Alexandria, who could talk a
+telegraph-clerk into amiability and soothe the ruffled vanity of a newly
+appointed staff-officer when press regulations became burdensome--was
+the man in the flannel shirt, the black-browed Torpenhow. He
+represented the Central Southern Syndicate in the campaign, as he had
+represented it in the Egyptian war, and elsewhere. The syndicate did not
+concern itself greatly with criticisms of attack and the like. It supplied
+the masses, and all it demanded was picturesqueness and abundance of
+detail; for there is more joy in England over a soldier who
+insubordinately steps out of square to rescue a comrade than over twenty
+generals slaving even to baldness at the gross details of transport and
+commissariat.
+
+He had met at Suakin a young man, sitting on the edge of a recently
+abandoned redoubt about the size of a hat-box, sketching a clump of
+shell-torn bodies on the gravel plain.
+
+'What are you for?' said Torpenhow. The greeting of the correspondent
+is that of the commercial traveller on the road.
+
+'My own hand,' said the young man, without looking up. 'Have you any
+tobacco?'
+
+Torpenhow waited till the sketch was finished, and when he had looked
+at it said, 'What's your business here?'
+
+'Nothing; there was a row, so I came. I'm supposed to be doing something
+down at the painting-slips among the boats, or else I'm in charge of the
+condenser on one of the water-ships. I've forgotten which.'
+
+'You've cheek enough to build a redoubt with,' said Torpenhow, and took
+stock of the new acquaintance. 'Do you always draw like that?'
+
+The young man produced more sketches. 'Row on a Chinese pig-boat,'
+
+said he, sententiously, showing them one after another.--'Chief mate
+dirked by a comprador.--Junk ashore off Hakodate.--Somali muleteer
+being flogged.--Star-shelled bursting over camp at Berbera.--Slave-dhow
+being chased round Tajurrah Bah.--Soldier lying dead in the moonlight
+outside Suakin.--throat cut by Fuzzies.'
+
+'H'm!' said Torpenhow, 'can't say I care for Verestchagin-and-water
+myself, but there's no accounting for tastes. Doing anything now, are
+you?'
+
+'No. I'm amusing myself here.'
+
+Torpenhow looked at the sketches again, and nodded. 'Yes, you're right
+to take your first chance when you can get it.'
+
+He rode away swiftly through the Gate of the Two War-Ships, rattled
+across the causeway into the town, and wired to his syndicate, 'Got man
+here, picture-work. Good and cheap. Shall I arrange? Will do letterpress
+with sketches.'
+
+The man on the redoubt sat swinging his legs and murmuring, 'I knew
+the chance would come, sooner or later. By Gad, they'll have to sweat for
+it if I come through this business alive!'
+
+In the evening Torpenhow was able to announce to his friend that the
+Central Southern Agency was willing to take him on trial, paying
+expenses for three months. 'And, by the way, what's your name?' said
+Torpenhow.
+
+'Heldar. Do they give me a free hand?'
+
+'They've taken you on chance. You must justify the choice. You'd better
+stick to me. I'm going up-country with a column, and I'll do what I can
+for you. Give me some of your sketches taken here, and I'll send 'em
+along.' To himself he said, 'That's the best bargain the Central southern
+has ever made; and they got me cheaply enough.'
+
+So it came to pass that, after some purchase of horse-flesh and
+arrangements financial and political, Dick was made free of the New and
+Honourable Fraternity of war correspondents, who all possess the
+inalienable right of doing as much work as they can and getting as much
+for it as Providence and their owners shall please. To these things are
+added in time, if the brother be worthy, the power of glib speech that
+neither man nor woman can resist when a meal or a bed is in question,
+the eye of a horse-cope, the skill of a cook, the constitution of a bullock,
+the digestion of an ostrich, and an infinite adaptability to all
+circumstances. But many die before they attain to this degree, and the
+past-masters in the craft appear for the most part in dress-clothes when
+they are in England, and thus their glory is hidden from the multitude.
+
+Dick followed Torpenhow wherever the latter's fancy chose to lead him,
+and between the two they managed to accomplish some work that almost
+satisfied themselves. It was not an easy life in any way, and under its
+influence the two were drawn ver closely together, for they ate from the
+same dish, they shared the same water-bottle, and, most binding tie of all,
+their mails went off together. It was Dick who managed to make
+gloriously drunk a telegraph-clerk in a palm hut far beyond the Second
+Cataract, and, while the man lay in bliss on the floor, possessed himself of
+some laboriously acquired exclusive information, forwarded by a
+confiding correspondent of an opposition syndicate, made a careful
+duplicate of the matter, and brought the result to Torpenhow, who said
+that all was fair in love or war correspondence, and built an excellent
+descriptive article from his rival's riotous waste of words. It was
+Torpenhow who--but the tale of their adventures, together and apart,
+from Philae to the waste wilderness of Herawi and Muella, would fill
+many books. They had been penned into a square side by side, in deadly
+fear of being shot by over-excited soldiers; they had fought with
+baggage-camels in the chill dawn; they had jogged along in silence under
+blinding sun on indefatigable little Egyptian horses; and they had
+floundered on the shallows of the Nile when the whale-boat in which they
+had found a berth chose to hit a hidden rock and rip out half her
+bottom-planks.
+
+Now they were sitting on the sand-bank, and the whale-boats were
+bringing up the remainder of the column.
+
+'Yes,' said Torpenhow, as he put the last rude stitches into his
+over-long-neglected gear, 'it has been a beautiful business.'
+
+'The patch or the campaign?' said Dick. 'Don't think much of either,
+myself.'
+
+'You want the Euryalus brought up above the Third Cataract, don't you?
+and eighty-one-ton guns at Jakdul? Now, I'm quite satisfied with my
+breeches.' He turned round gravely to exhibit himself, after the manner
+of a clown.
+
+'It's very pretty. Specially the lettering on the sack. G.B.T. Government
+Bullock Train. That's a sack from India.'
+
+'It's my initials,--Gilbert Belling Torpenhow. I stole the cloth on purpose.
+
+What the mischief are the camel-corps doing yonder?' Torpenhow
+shaded his eyes and looked across the scrub-strewn gravel.
+
+A bugle blew furiously, and the men on the bank hurried to their arms
+and accoutrements.
+
+'"Pisan soldiery surprised while bathing,"' remarked Dick, calmly.
+
+'D'you remember the picture? It's by Michael Angelo; all beginners copy
+it. That scrub's alive with enemy.'
+
+The camel-corps on the bank yelled to the infantry to come to them, and
+a hoarse shouting down the river showed that the remainder of the
+column had wind of the trouble and was hastening to take share in it. As
+swiftly as a reach of still water is crisped by the wind, the rock-strewn
+ridges and scrub-topped hills were troubled and alive with armed men.
+
+Mercifully, it occurred to these to stand far off for a time, to shout and
+gesticulate joyously. One man even delivered himself of a long story. The
+camel-corps did not fire. They were only too glad of a little
+breathing-space, until some sort of square could be formed. The men on
+the sand-bank ran to their side; and the whale-boats, as they toiled up
+within shouting distance, were thrust into the nearest bank and emptied
+of all save the sick and a few men to guard them. The Arab orator ceased
+his outcries, and his friends howled.
+
+'They look like the Mahdi's men,' said Torpenhow, elbowing himself into
+the crush of the square; 'but what thousands of 'em there are! The tribes
+hereabout aren't against us, I know.'
+
+'Then the Mahdi's taken another town,' said Dick, 'and set all these
+yelping devils free to show us up. Lend us your glass.'
+
+'Our scouts should have told us of this. We've been trapped,' said a
+subaltern. 'Aren't the camel guns ever going to begin? Hurry up, you
+men!'
+
+There was no need of any order. The men flung themselves panting
+against the sides of the square, for they had good reason to know that
+whoso was left outside when the fighting began would very probably die
+in an extremely unpleasant fashion. The little hundred-and-fifty-pound
+camel-guns posted at one corner of the square opened the ball as the
+square moved forward by its right to get possession of a knoll of rising
+ground. All had fought in this manner many times before, and there was
+no novelty in the entertainment; always the same hot and stifling
+formation, the smell of dust and leather, the same boltlike rush of the
+enemy, the same pressure on the weakest side, the few minutes of
+hand-to-hand scuffle, and then the silence of the desert, broken only by
+the yells of those whom their handful of cavalry attempted to purse. They
+had become careless. The camel-guns spoke at intervals, and the square
+slouched forward amid the protesting of the camels. Then came the
+attack of three thousand men who had not learned from books that it is
+impossible for troops in close order to attack against breech-loading fire.
+
+A few dropping shots heralded their approach, and a few horsemen led,
+but the bulk of the force was naked humanity, mad with rage, and armed
+with the spear and the sword. The instinct of the desert, where there is
+always much war, told them that the right flank of the square was the
+weakest, for they swung clear of the front. The camel-guns shelled them
+as they passed and opened for an instant lanes through their midst, most
+like those quick-closing vistas in a Kentish hop-garden seen when the
+train races by at full speed; and the infantry fire, held till the opportune
+moment, dropped them in close-packing hundreds. No civilised troops in
+the world could have endured the hell through which they came, the
+living leaping high to avoid the dying who clutched at their heels, the
+wounded cursing and staggering forward, till they fell--a torrent black as
+the sliding water above a mill-dam--full on the right flank of the square.
+
+Then the line of the dusty troops and the faint blue desert sky overhead
+went out in rolling smoke, and the little stones on the heated ground ant
+the tinder-dry clumps of scrub became matters of surpassing interest, for
+men measured their agonised retreat and recovery by these things,
+counting mechanically and hewing their way back to chosen pebble and
+branch. There was no semblance of any concerted fighting. For aught the
+men knew, the enemy might be attempting all four sides of the square at
+once. Their business was to destroy what lay in front of them, to bayonet
+in the back those who passed over them, and, dying, to drag down the
+slayer till he could be knocked on the head by some avenging gun-butt.
+
+Dick waited with Torpenhow and a young doctor till the stress grew
+unendurable. It was hopeless to attend to the wounded till the attack was
+repulsed, so the three moved forward gingerly towards the weakest side
+of the square. There was a rush from without, the short hough-hough of
+the stabbing spears, and a man on a horse, followed by thirty or forty
+others, dashed through, yelling and hacking. The right flank of the
+square sucked in after them, and the other sides sent help. The wounded,
+who knew that they had but a few hours more to live, caught at the
+enemy's feet and brought them down, or, staggering into a discarded
+rifle, fired blindly into the scuffle that raged in the centre of the square.
+
+Dick was conscious that somebody had cut him violently across his
+helmet, that he had fired his revolver into a black, foam-flecked face
+which forthwith ceased to bear any resemblance to a face, and that
+Torpenhow had gone down under an Arab whom he had tried to 'collar
+low,' and was turning over and over with his captive, feeling for the
+man's eyes. The doctor jabbed at a venture with a bayonet, and a
+helmetless soldier fired over Dick's shoulder: the flying grains of powder
+stung his cheek. It was to Torpenhow that Dick turned by instinct. The
+representative of the Central Southern Syndicate had shaken himself
+clear of his enemy, and rose, wiping his thumb on his trousers. The Arab,
+both hands to his forehead, screamed aloud, then snatched up his spear
+and rushed at Torpenhow, who was panting under shelter of Dick's
+revolver. Dick fired twice, and the man dropped limply. His upturned
+face lacked one eye. The musketry-fire redoubled, but cheers mingled
+with it. The rush had failed and the enemy were flying. If the heart of the
+square were shambles, the ground beyond was a butcher's shop. Dick
+thrust his way forward between the maddened men. The remnant of the
+enemy were retiring, as the few--the very few--English cavalry rode
+down the laggards.
+
+Beyond the lines of the dead, a broad blood-stained Arab spear cast aside
+in the retreat lay across a stump of scrub, and beyond this again the
+illimitable dark levels of the desert. The sun caught the steel and turned
+it into a red disc. Some one behind him was saying, 'Ah, get away, you
+brute!' Dick raised his revolver and pointed towards the desert. His eye
+was held by the red spash in the distance, and the clamour about him
+seemed to die down to a very far-away whisper, like the whisper of a
+level sea. There was the revolver and the red light. . . . and the voice of
+some one scaring something away, exactly as had fallen somewhere
+before,--a darkness that stung. He fired at random, and the bullet went
+out across the desert as he muttered, 'Spoilt my aim. There aren't any
+more cartridges. We shall have to run home.' He put his hand to his head
+and brought it away covered with blood.
+
+'Old man, you're cut rather badly,' said Torpenhow. 'I owe you
+something for this business. Thanks. Stand up! I say, you can't be ill
+here.'
+
+Throughout the night, when the troops were encamped by the
+whale-boats, a black figure danced in the strong moonlight on the
+sand-bar and shouted that Khartoum the accursed one was dead,--was
+dead,--was dead,--that two steamers were rock-staked on the Nile outside
+the city, and that of all their crews there remained not one; and
+Khartoum was dead,--was dead,--was dead!
+
+But Torpenhow took no heed. He was watching Dick, who called aloud to
+the restless Nile for Maisie,--and again Maisie!?
+
+'Behold a phenomenon,' said Torpenhow, rearranging the blanket. 'Here
+is a man, presumably human, who mentions the name of one woman
+only. And I've seen a good deal of delirium, too.--Dick, here's some fizzy
+drink.'
+
+'Thank you, Maisie,' said Dick.
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+So he thinks he shall take to the sea again
+For one more cruise with his buccaneers,
+To singe the beard of the King of Spain,
+And capture another Dean of Jaen
+And sell him in Algiers.--A Dutch Picture. Longfellow
+
+THE SOUDAN campaign and Dick's broken head had been some months
+ended and mended, and the Central Southern Syndicate had paid Dick a
+certain sum on account for work done, which work they were careful to
+assure him was not altogether up to their standard. Dick heaved the
+letter into the Nile at Cairo, cashed the draft in the same town, and bade
+a warm farewell to Torpenhow at the station.
+
+'I am going to lie up for a while and rest,' said Torpenhow. 'I don't know
+where I shall live in London, but if God brings us to meet, we shall meet.
+
+Are you starying here on the off-chance of another row? There will be
+none till the Southern Soudan is reoccupied by our troops. Mark that.
+
+Good-bye; bless you; come back when your money's spent; and give me
+your address.'
+
+Dick loitered in Cairo, Alexandria, Ismailia, and Port Said,--especially
+Port Said. There is iniquity in many parts of the world, and vice in all,
+but the concentrated essence of all the iniquities and all the vices in all
+the continents finds itself at Port Said. And through the heart of that
+sand-bordered hell, where the mirage flickers day long above the Bitter
+Lake, move, if you will only wait, most of the men and women you have
+known in this life. Dick established himself in quarters more riotous than
+respectable. He spent his evenings on the quay, and boarded many ships,
+and saw very many friends,--gracious Englishwomen with whom he had
+talked not too wisely in the veranda of Shepherd's Hotel, hurrying war
+correspondents, skippers of the contract troop-ships employed in the
+campaign, army officers by the score, and others of less reputable trades.
+
+He had choice of all the races of the East and West for studies, and the
+advantage of seeing his subjects under the influence of strong excitement,
+at the gaming-tables, saloons, dancing-hells, and elsewhere. For
+recreation there was the straight vista of the Canal, the blazing sands,
+the procession of shipping, and the white hospitals where the English
+soldiers lay. He strove to set down in black and white and colour all that
+Providence sent him, and when that supply was ended sought about for
+fresh material. It was a fascinating employment, but it ran away with his
+money, and he had drawn in advance the hundred and twenty pounds to
+which he was entitled yearly. 'Now I shall have to work and starve!'
+
+thought he, and was addressing himself to this new fate when a
+mysterious telegram arrived from Torpenhow in England, which said,
+'Come back, quick; you have caught on. Come.'
+
+A large smile overspread his face. 'So soon! that's a good hearing,' said
+he to himself. 'There will be an orgy to-night. I'll stand or fall by my
+luck. Faith, it's time it came!' He deposited half of his funds in the hands
+of his well-known friends Monsieur and Madame Binat, and ordered
+himself a Zanzibar dance of the finest. Monsieur Binat was shaking with
+drink, but Madame smiles sympathetically--
+'Monsieur needs a chair, of course, and of course Monsieur will sketch;
+Monsieur amuses himself strangely.'
+
+Binat raised a blue-white face from a cot in the inner room. 'I
+understand,' he quavered. 'We all know Monsieur. Monsieur is an artist,
+as I have been.' Dick nodded. 'In the end,' said Binat, with gravity,
+'Monsieur will descend alive into hell, as I have descended.' And he
+laughed.
+
+'You must come to the dance, too,' said Dick; 'I shall want you.'
+
+'For my face? I knew it would be so. For my face? My God! and for my
+degradation so tremendous! I will not. Take him away. He is a devil. Or
+at least do thou, Celeste, demand of him more.' The excellent Binat began
+to kick and scream.
+
+'All things are for sale in Port Said,' said Madame. 'If my husband comes
+it will be so much more. Eh, 'how you call--'alf a sovereign.'
+
+The money was paid, and the mad dance was held at night in a walled
+courtyard at the back of Madame Binat's house. The lady herself, in
+faded mauve silk always about to slide from her yellow shoulders, played
+the piano, and to the tin-pot music of a Western waltz the naked
+Zanzibari girls danced furiously by the light of kerosene lamps. Binat sat
+upon a chair and stared with eyes that saw nothing, till the whirl of the
+dance and the clang of the rattling piano stole into the drink that took the
+place of blood in his veins, and his face glistened. Dick took him by the
+chin brutally and turned that face to the light. Madame Binat looked
+over her shoulder and smiled with many teeth. Dick leaned against the
+wall and sketched for an hour, till the kerosene lamps began to smell, and
+the girls threw themselves panting on the hard-beaten ground. Then he
+shut his book with a snap and moved away, Binat plucking feebly at his
+elbow. 'Show me,' he whimpered. 'I too was once an artist, even I!' Dick
+showed him the rough sketch. 'Am I that?' he screamed. 'Will you take
+that away with you and show all the world that it is I,--Binat?' He
+moaned and wept.
+
+'Monsieur has paid for all,' said Madame. 'To the pleasure of seeing
+Monsieur again.'
+
+The courtyard gate shut, and Dick hurried up the sandy street to the
+nearest gambling-hell, where he was well known. 'If the luck holds, it's
+an omen; if I lose, I must stay here.' He placed his money picturesquely
+about the board, hardly daring to look at what he did. The luck held.
+
+Three turns of the wheel left him richer by twenty pounds, and he went
+down to the shipping to make friends with the captain of a decayed
+cargo-steamer, who landed him in London with fewer pounds in his
+pocket than he cared to think about.
+
+A thin gray fog hung over the city, and the streets were very cold; for
+summer was in England.
+
+'It's a cheerful wilderness, and it hasn't the knack of altering much,' Dick
+thought, as he tramped from the Docks westward. 'Now, what must I
+do?'
+
+The packed houses gave no answer. Dick looked down the long lightless
+streets and at the appalling rush of traffic. 'Oh, you rabbit-hutches!' said
+he, addressing a row of highly respectable semi-detached residences. 'Do
+you know what you've got to do later on? You have to supply me with
+men-servants and maid-servants,'--here he smacked his lips,--'and the
+peculiar treasure of kings. Meantime I'll clothes and boots, and presently
+I will return and trample on you.' He stepped forward energetically; he
+saw that one of his shoes was burst at the side. As he stooped to make
+investigations, a man jostled him into the gutter. 'All right,' he said.
+
+'That's another nick in the score. I'll jostle you later on.'
+
+Good clothes and boots are not cheap, and Dick left his last shop with the
+certainty that he would be respectably arrayed for a time, but with only
+fifty shillings in his pocket. He returned to streets by the Docks, and
+lodged himself in one room, where the sheets on the bed were almost
+audibly marked in case of theft, and where nobody seemed to go to bed at
+all. When his clothes arrived he sought the Central Southern Syndicate
+for Torpenhow's address, and got it, with the intimation that there was
+still some money waiting for him.
+
+'How much?' said Dick, as one who habitually dealt in millions.
+
+'Between thirty and forty pounds. If it would be any convenience to you,
+of course we could let you have it at once; but we usually settle accounts
+monthly.'
+
+'If I show that I want anything now, I'm lost,' he said to himself. 'All I
+need I'll take later on.' Then, aloud, 'It's hardly worth while; and I'm
+going to the country for a month, too. Wait till I come back, and I'll see
+about it.'
+
+'But we trust, Mr. Heldar, that you do not intend to sever your
+connection with us?'
+
+Dick's business in life was the study of faces, and he watched the speaker
+keenly. 'That man means something,' he said. 'I'll do no business till I've
+seen Torpenhow. There's a big deal coming.' So he departed, making no
+promises, to his one little room by the Docks. And that day was the
+seventh of the month, and that month, he reckoned with awful
+distinctness, had thirty-one days in it!?
+
+It is not easy for a man of catholic tastes and healthy appetites to exist for
+twenty-four days on fifty shillings. Nor is it cheering to begin the
+experiment alone in all the loneliness of London. Dick paid seven shillings
+a week for his lodging, which left him rather less than a shilling a day for
+food and drink. Naturally, his first purchase was of the materials of his
+craft; he had been without them too long. Half a day's investigations and
+comparison brought him to the conclusion that sausages and mashed
+potatoes, twopence a plate, were the best food. Now, sausages once or
+twice a week for breakfast are not unpleasant. As lunch, even, with
+mashed potatoes, they become monotonous. At dinner they are
+impertinent. At the end of three days Dick loathed sausages, and, going,
+forth, pawned his watch to revel on sheep's head, which is not as cheap
+as it looks, owing to the bones and the gravy. Then he returned to
+sausages and mashed potatoes. Then he confined himself entirely to
+mashed potatoes for a day, and was unhappy because of pain in his
+inside. Then he pawned his waistcoat and his tie, and thought regretfully
+of money thrown away in times past. There are few things more edifying
+unto Art than the actual belly-pinch of hunger, and Dick in his few walks
+abroad,--he did not care for exercise; it raised desires that could not be
+satisfied--found himself dividing mankind into two classes,--those who
+looked as if they might give him something to eat, and those who looked
+otherwise. 'I never knew what I had to learn about the human face
+before,' he thought; and, as a reward for his humility, Providence caused
+a cab-driver at a sausage-shop where Dick fed that night to leave half
+eaten a great chunk of bread. Dick took it,--would have fought all the
+world for its possession,--and it cheered him.
+
+The month dragged through at last, and, nearly prancing with
+impatience, he went to draw his money. Then he hastened to
+Torpenhow's address and smelt the smell of cooking meats all along the
+corridors of the chambers. Torpenhow was on the top floor, and Dick
+burst into his room, to be received with a hug which nearly cracked his
+ribs, as Torpenhow dragged him tot he light and spoke of twenty
+different things in the same breath.
+
+'But you're looking tucked up,' he concluded.
+
+'Got anything to eat?' said Dick, his eye roaming round the room.
+
+'I shall be having breakfast in a minute. What do you say to sausages?'
+
+'No, anything but sausages! Torp, I've been starving on that accursed
+horse-flesh for thirty days and thirty nights.'
+
+'Now, what lunacy has been your latest?'
+
+Dick spoke of the last few weeks with unbridled speech. Then he opened
+his coat; there was no waistcoat below. 'I ran it fine, awfully fine, but
+I've just scraped through.'
+
+'You haven't much sense, but you've got a backbone, anyhow. Eat, and
+talk afterwards.' Dick fell upon eggs and bacon and gorged till he could
+gorge no more. Torpenhow handed him a filled pipe, and he smoked as
+men smoke who for three weeks have been deprived of good tobacco.
+
+'Ouf!' said he. 'That's heavenly! Well?'
+
+'Why in the world didn't you come to me?'
+
+'Couldn't; I owe you too much already, old man. Besides I had a sort of
+superstition that this temporary starvation--that's what it was, and it
+hurt--would bring me luck later. It's over and done with now, and none
+of the syndicate know how hard up I was. Fire away. What's the exact
+state of affairs as regards myself?'
+
+'You had my wire? You've caught on here. People like your work
+immensely. I don't know why, but they do. They say you have a fresh
+touch and a new way of drawing things. And, because they're chiefly
+home-bred English, they say you have insight. You're wanted by half a
+dozen papers; you're wanted to illustrate books.'
+
+Dick grunted scornfully.
+
+'You're wanted to work up your smaller sketches and sell them to the
+dealers. They seem to think the money sunk in you is a good investment.
+
+Good Lord! who can account for the fathomless folly of the public?'
+
+'They're a remarkably sensible people.'
+
+'They are subject to fits, if that's what you mean; and you happen to be
+the object of the latest fit among those who are interested in what they
+call Art. Just now you're a fashion, a phenomenon, or whatever you
+please. I appeared to be the only person who knew anything about you
+here, and I have been showing the most useful men a few of the sketches
+you gave me from time to time. Those coming after your work on the
+Central Southern Syndicate appear to have done your business. You're
+in luck.'
+
+'Huh! call it luck! Do call it luck, when a man has been kicking about the
+world like a dog, waiting for it to come! I'll luck 'em later on. I want a
+place to work first.'
+
+'Come here,' said Torpenhow, crossing the landing. 'This place is a big
+box room really, but it will do for you. There's your skylight, or your
+north light, or whatever window you call it, and plenty of room to thrash
+about in, and a bedroom beyond. What more do you need?'
+
+'Good enough,' said Dick, looking round the large room that took up a
+third of a top story in the rickety chambers overlooking the Thames. A
+pale yellow sun shone through the skylight and showed the much dirt of
+the place. Three steps led from the door to the landing, and three more to
+Torpenhow's room. The well of the staircase disappeared into darkness,
+pricked by tiny gas-jets, and there were sounds of men talking and doors
+slamming seven flights below, in the warm gloom.
+
+'Do they give you a free hand here?' said Dick, cautiously. He was
+Ishmael enough to know the value of liberty.
+
+'Anything you like; latch-keys and license unlimited. We are permanent
+tenants for the most part here. 'Tisn't a place I would recommend for a
+Young Men's Christian Association, but it will serve. I took these rooms
+for you when I wired.'
+
+'You're a great deal too kind, old man.'
+
+'You didn't suppose you were going away from me, did you?' Torpenhow
+put his hand on Dick's shoulder, and the two walked up and down the
+room, henceforward to be called the studio, in sweet and silent
+communion. They heard rapping at Torpenhow's door. 'That's some
+ruffian come up for a drink,' said Torpenhow; and he raised his voice
+cheerily. There entered no one more ruffianly than a portly middle-aged
+gentleman in a satin-faced frockcoat. His lips were parted and pale, and
+there were deep pouches under the eyes.
+
+'Weak heart,' said Dick to himself, and, as he shook hands, 'very weak
+heart. His pulse is shaking his fingers.'
+
+The man introduced himself as the head of the Central Southern
+Syndicate and 'one of the most ardent admirers of your work, Mr.
+
+Heldar. I assure you, in the name of the syndicate, that we are immensely
+indebted to you; and I trust, Mr. Heldar, you won't forget that we were
+largely instrumental in bringing you before the public.' He panted
+because of the seven flights of stairs.
+
+Dick glanced at Torpenhow, whose left eyelid lay for a moment dead on
+his cheek.
+
+'I shan't forget,' said Dick, every instinct of defence roused in him.
+
+'You've paid me so well that I couldn't, you know. By the way, when I
+am settled in this place I should like to send and get my sketches. There
+must be nearly a hundred and fifty of them with you.'
+
+'That is er--is what I came to speak about. I fear we can't allow it
+exactly, Mr. Heldar. In the absence of any specified agreement, the
+sketches are our property, of course.'
+
+'Do you mean to say that you are going to keep them?'
+
+'Yes; and we hope to have your help, on your own terms, Mr. Heldar, to
+assist us in arranging a little exhibition, which, backed by our name and
+the influence we naturally command among the press, should be of
+material service to you. Sketches such as yours----'
+
+'Belong to me. You engaged me by wire, you paid me the lowest rates you
+dared. You can't mean to keep them! Good God alive, man, they're all
+I've got in the world!'
+
+Torpenhow watched Dick's face and whistled.
+
+Dick walked up and down, thinking. He saw the whole of his little stock
+in trade, the first weapon of his equipment, annexed at the outset of his
+campaign by an elderly gentleman whose name Dick had not caught
+aright, who said that he represented a syndicate, which was a thing for
+which Dick had not the least reverence. The injustice of the proceedings
+did not much move him; he had seen the strong hand prevail too often in
+other places to be squeamish over the moral aspects of right and wrong.
+
+But he ardently desired the blood of the gentleman in the frockcoat, and
+when he spoke again, and when he spoke again it was with a strained
+sweetness that Torpenhow knew well for the beginning of strife.
+
+'Forgive me, sir, but you have no--no younger man who can arrange this
+business with me?'
+
+'I speak for the syndicate. I see no reason for a third party to----'
+
+'You will in a minute. Be good enough to give back my sketches.'
+
+The man stared blankly at Dick, and then at Torpenhow, who was
+leaning against the wall. He was not used to ex-employees who ordered
+him to be good enough to do things.
+
+'Yes, it is rather a cold-blooded steal,' said Torpenhow, critically; 'but
+I'm afraid, I am very much afraid, you've struck the wrong man. Be
+careful, Dick; remember, this isn't the Soudan.'
+
+'Considering what services the syndicate have done you in putting your
+name before the world----'
+
+This was not a fortunate remark; it reminded Dick of certain vagrant
+years lived out in loneliness and strife and unsatisfied desires. The
+memory did not contrast well with the prosperous gentleman who
+proposed to enjoy the fruit of those years.
+
+'I don't know quite what to do with you,' began Dick, meditatively. 'Of
+course you're a thief, and you ought to be half killed, but in your case
+you'd probably die. I don't want you dead on this floor, and, besides, it's
+unlucky just as one's moving in. Don't hit, sir; you'll only excite yourself.'
+
+He put one hand on the man's forearm and ran the other down the plump
+body beneath the coat. 'My goodness!' said he to Torpenhow, 'and this
+gray oaf dares to be a thief! I have seen an Esneh camel-driver have the
+black hide taken off his body in strips for stealing half a pound of wet
+dates, and he was as tough as whipcord. This things' soft all over--like a
+woman.'
+
+There are few things more poignantly humiliating than being handled by
+a man who does not intend to strike. The head of the syndicate began to
+breathe heavily. Dick walked round him, pawing him, as a cat paws a soft
+hearth-rug. Then he traced with his forefinger the leaden pouches
+underneath the eyes, and shook his head. 'You were going to steal my
+things,--mine, mine, mine!--you, who don't know when you may die.
+
+Write a note to your office,--you say you're the head of it,--and order
+them to give Torpenhow my sketches,--every one of them. Wait a minute:
+your hand's shaking. Now!' He thrust a pocket-book before him. The note
+was written. Torpenhow took it and departed without a word, while Dick
+walked round and round the spellbound captive, giving him such advice
+as he conceived best for the welfare of his soul. When Torpenhow
+returned with a gigantic portfolio, he heard Dick say, almost soothingly,
+'Now, I hope this will be a lesson to you; and if you worry me when I
+have settled down to work with any nonsense about actions for assault,
+believe me, I'll catch you and manhandle you, and you'll die. You haven't
+very long to live, anyhow. Go! Imshi, Vootsak,--get out!' The man
+departed, staggering and dazed. Dick drew a long breath: 'Phew! what a
+lawless lot these people are! The first thing a poor orphan meets is gang
+robbery, organised burglary! Think of the hideous blackness of that
+man's mind! Are my sketches all right, Torp?'
+
+'Yes; one hundred and forty-seven of them. Well, I must say, Dick, you've
+begun well.'
+
+'He was interfering with me. It only meant a few pounds to him, but it
+was everything to me. I don't think he'll bring an action. I gave him some
+medical advice gratis about the state of his body. It was cheap at the little
+flurry it cost him. Now, let's look at my things.'
+
+Two minutes later Dick had thrown himself down on the floor and was
+deep in the portfolio, chuckling lovingly as he turned the drawings over
+and thought of the price at which they had been bought.
+
+The afternoon was well advanced when Torpenhow came to the door and
+saw Dick dancing a wild saraband under the skylight.
+
+'I builded better than I knew, Torp,' he said, without stopping the dance.
+
+'They're good! They're damned good! They'll go like flame! I shall have
+an exhibition of them on my own brazen hook. And that man would have
+cheated me out of it! Do you know that I'm sorry now that I didn't
+actually hit him?'
+
+'Go out,' said Torpenhow,--'go out and pray to be delivered from the sin
+of arrogance, which you never will be. Bring your things up from
+whatever place you're staying in, and we'll try to make this barn a little
+more shipshape.'
+
+'And then--oh, then,' said Dick, still capering, 'we will spoil the
+Egyptians!'?
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+The wolf-cub at even lay hid in the corn,
+When the smoke of the cooking hung gray:
+He knew where the doe made a couch for her fawn,
+And he looked to his strength for his prey.
+
+But the moon swept the smoke-wreaths away.
+
+And he turned from his meal in the villager's close,
+And he bayed to the moon as she rose.--In Seonee.?
+
+'WELL, and how does success taste?' said Torpenhow, some three
+months later. He had just returned to chambers after a holiday in the
+country.
+
+'Good,' said Dick, as he sat licking his lips before the easel in the studio.
+
+'I want more,--heaps more. The lean years have passed, and I approve of
+these fat ones.'
+
+'Be careful, old man. That way lies bad work.'
+
+Torpenhow was sprawling in a long chair with a small fox-terrier asleep
+on his chest, while Dick was preparing a canvas. A dais, a background,
+and a lay-figure were the only fixed objects in the place. They rose from
+a wreck of oddments that began with felt-covered water-bottles, belts,
+and regimental badges, and ended with a small bale of second-hand
+uniforms and a stand of mixed arms. The mark of muddy feet on the dais
+showed that a military model had just gone away. The watery autumn
+sunlight was falling, and shadows sat in the corners of the studio.
+
+'Yes,' said Dick, deliberately, 'I like the power; I like the fun; I like the
+fuss; and above all I like the money. I almost like the people who make
+the fuss and pay the money. Almost. But they're a queer gang,--an
+amazingly queer gang!'
+
+'They have been good enough to you, at any rate. Than tin-pot exhibition
+of your sketches must have paid. Did you see that the papers called it the
+"Wild Work Show"?'
+
+'Never mind. I sold every shred of canvas I wanted to; and, on my word,
+I believe it was because they believed I was a self-taught flagstone artist.
+
+I should have got better prices if I worked my things on wool or
+scratched them on camel-bone instead of using mere black and white and
+colour. Verily, they are a queer gang, these people. Limited isn't the
+word to describe 'em. I met a fellow the other day who told me that it
+was impossible that shadows on white sand should be
+blue,--ultramarine,--as they are. I found out, later, that the man had been
+as far as Brighton beach; but he knew all about Art, confound him. He
+gave me a lecture on it, and recommended me to go to school to learn
+technique. I wonder what old Kami would have said to that.'
+
+'When were you under Kami, man of extraordinary beginnings?'
+
+'I studied with him for two years in Paris. He taught by personal
+magnetism. All he ever said was, "Continuez, mes enfants," and you had
+to make the best you could of that. He had a divine touch, and he knew
+something about colour. Kami used to dream colour; I swear he could
+never have seen the genuine article; but he evolved it; and it was good.'
+
+'Recollect some of those views in the Soudan?' said Torpenhow, with a
+provoking drawl.
+
+Dick squirmed in his place. 'Don't! It makes me want to get out there
+again. What colour that was! Opal and umber and amber and claret and
+brick-red and sulphur--cockatoo-crest--sulphur--against brown, with a
+nigger-black rock sticking up in the middle of it all, and a decorative
+frieze of camels festooning in front of a pure pale turquoise sky.' He
+began to walk up and down. 'And yet, you know, if you try to give these
+people the thing as God gave it, keyed down to their comprehension and
+according to the powers He has given you----'
+
+'Modest man! Go on.'
+
+'Half a dozen epicene young pagans who haven't even been to Algiers
+will tell you, first, that your notion is borrowed, and, secondly, that it
+isn't Art.
+
+''This comes of my leaving town for a month. Dickie, you've been
+promenading among the toy-shops and hearing people talk.'
+
+'I couldn't help it,' said Dick, penitently. 'You weren't here, and it was
+lonely these long evenings. A man can't work for ever.'
+
+'A man might have gone to a pub, and got decently drunk.'
+
+'I wish I had; but I forgathered with some men of sorts. They said they
+were artists, and I knew some of them could draw,--but they wouldn't
+draw. They gave me tea,--tea at five in the afternoon!--and talked about
+Art and the state of their souls. As if their souls mattered. I've heard
+more about Art and seen less of her in the last six months than in the
+whole of my life. Do you remember Cassavetti, who worked for some
+continental syndicate, out with the desert column? He was a regular
+Christmas-tree of contraptions when he took the field in full fig, with his
+water-bottle, lanyard, revolver, writing-case, housewife, gig-lamps, and
+the Lord knows what all. He used to fiddle about with 'em and show us
+how they worked; but he never seemed to do much except fudge his
+reports from the Nilghai. See?'
+
+'Dear old Nilghai! He's in town, fatter than ever. He ought to be up here
+this evening. I see the comparison perfectly. You should have kept clear
+of all that man-millinery. Serves you right; and I hope it will unsettle
+your mind.'
+
+'It won't. It has taught me what Art--holy sacred Art--means.'
+
+'You've learnt something while I've been away. What is Art?'
+
+'Give 'em what they know, and when you've done it once do it again.'
+
+Dick dragged forward a canvas laid face to the wall. 'Here's a sample of
+real Art. It's going to be a facsimile reproduction for a weekly. I called it
+"His Last Shot." It's worked up from the little water-colour I made
+outside El Maghrib. Well, I lured my model, a beautiful rifleman, up
+here with drink; I drored him, and I redrored him, and I redrored him,
+and I made him a flushed, dishevelled, bedevilled scallawag, with his
+helmet at the back of his head, and the living fear of death in his eye, and
+the blood oozing out of a cut over his ankle-bone. He wasn't pretty, but
+he was all soldier and very much man.'
+
+'Once more, modest child!'
+
+Dick laughed. 'Well, it's only to you I'm talking. I did him just as well as
+I knew how, making allowance for the slickness of oils. Then the
+art-manager of that abandoned paper said that his subscribers wouldn't
+like it. It was brutal and coarse and violent,--man being naturally gentle
+when he's fighting for his life. They wanted something more restful, with
+a little more colour. I could have said a good deal, but you might as well
+talk to a sheep as an art-manager. I took my "Last Shot" back. Behold
+the result! I put him into a lovely red coat without a speck on it. That is
+Art. I polished his boots,--observe the high light on the toe. That is Art. I
+cleaned his rifle,--rifles are always clean on service,--because that is Art.
+
+I pipeclayed his helmet,--pipeclay is always used on active service, and is
+indispensable to Art. I shaved his chin, I washed his hands, and gave him
+an air of fatted peace. Result, military tailor's pattern-plate. Price, thank
+Heaven, twice as much as for the first sketch, which was moderately
+decent.'
+
+'And do you suppose you're going to give that thing out as your work?'
+
+'Why not? I did it. Alone I did it, in the interests of sacred, home-bred
+Art and Dickenson's Weekly.'
+
+Torpenhow smoked in silence for a while. Then came the verdict,
+delivered from rolling clouds: 'If you were only a mass of blathering
+vanity, Dick, I wouldn't mind,--I'd let you go to the deuce on your own
+mahl-stick; but when I consider what you are to me, and when I find that
+to vanity you add the twopenny-halfpenny pique of a twelve-year-old
+girl, then I bestir myself in your behalf. Thus!'
+
+The canvas ripped as Torpenhow's booted foot shot through it, and the
+terrier jumped down, thinking rats were about.
+
+'If you have any bad language to use, use it. You have not. I continue.
+
+You are an idiot, because no man born of woman is strong enough to take
+liberties with his public, even though they be--which they ain't--all you
+say they are.'
+
+'But they don't know any better. What can you expect from creatures
+born and bred in this light?' Dick pointed to the yellow fog. 'If they want
+furniture-polish, let them have furniture-polish, so long as they pay for it.
+
+They are only men and women. You talk as if they were gods.'
+
+'That sounds very fine, but it has nothing to do with the case. They are
+they people you have to do work for, whether you like it or not. They are
+your masters. Don't be deceived, Dickie, you aren't strong enough to
+trifle with them,--or with yourself, which is more important.
+
+Moreover,--Come back, Binkie: that red daub isn't going
+anywhere,--unless you take precious good care, you will fall under the
+damnation of the check-book, and that's worse than death. You will get
+drunk--you-re half drunk already--on easily acquired money. For that
+money and you own infernal vanity you are willing to deliberately turn
+out bad work. You'll do quite enough bad work without knowing it. And,
+Dickie, as I love you and as I know you love me, I am not going to let you
+cut off your nose to spite your face for all the gold in England. That's
+settled. Now swear.'
+
+'Don't know, said Dick. 'I've been trying to make myself angry, but I
+can't, you're so abominably reasonable. There will be a row on
+Dickenson's Weekly, I fancy.'
+
+'Why the Dickenson do you want to work on a weekly paper? It's slow
+bleeding of power.'
+
+'It brings in the very desirable dollars,' said Dick, his hands in his
+pockets.
+
+Torpenhow watched him with large contempt. 'Why, I thought it was a
+man!' said he. 'It's a child.'
+
+'No, it isn't,' said Dick, wheeling quickly. 'You've no notion owhat the
+certainty of cash means to a man who has always wanted it badly.
+
+Nothing will pay me for some of my life's joys; on that Chinese pig-boat,
+for instance, when we ate bread and jam for every meal, because
+Ho-Wang wouldn't allow us anything better, and it all tasted of
+pig,--Chinese pig. I've worked for this, I've sweated and I've starved for
+this, line on line and month after month. And now I've got it I am going
+to make the most of it while it lasts. Let them pay--they've no knowledge.'
+
+'What does Your Majesty please to want? You can't smoke more than
+you do; you won't drink; you're a gross feeder; and you dress in the
+dark, by the look of you. You wouldn't keep a horse the other day when I
+suggested, because, you said, it might fall lame, and whenever you cross
+the street you take a hansom. Even you are not foolish enough to suppose
+that theatres and all the live things you can by thereabouts mean Life.
+
+What earthly need have you for money?'
+
+'It's there, bless its golden heart,' said Dick. 'It's there all the time.
+
+Providence has sent me nuts while I have teeth to crack 'em with. I
+haven't yet found the nut I wish to crack, but I'm keeping my teeth filed.
+
+Perhaps some day you and I will go for a walk round the wide earth.'
+
+'With no work to do, nobody to worry us, and nobody to compete with?
+You would be unfit to speak to in a week. Besides, I shouldn't go. I don't
+care to profit by the price of a man's soul,--for that's what it would mean.
+
+Dick, it's no use arguing. You're a fool.'
+
+'Don't see it. When I was on that Chinese pig-boat, our captain got credit
+for saving about twenty-five thousand very seasick little pigs, when our
+old tramp of a steamer fell foul of a timber-junk. Now, taking those pigs
+as a parallel----'
+
+'Oh, confound your parallels! Whenever I try to improve your soul, you
+always drag in some anecdote from your very shady past. Pigs aren't the
+British public; and self-respect is self-respect the world over. Go out for
+a walk and try to catch some self-respect. And, I say, if the Nilghai comes
+up this evening can I show him your diggings?'
+
+'Surely.' And Dick departed, to take counsel with himself in the rapidly
+gathering London fog.
+
+Half an hour after he had left, the Nilghai laboured up the staircase. He
+was the chiefest, as he was the youngest, of the war correspondents, and
+his experiences dated from the birth of the needle-gun. Saving only his
+ally, Keneu the Great War Eagle, there was no man higher in the craft
+than he, and he always opened his conversation with the news that there
+would be trouble in the Balkans in the spring. Torpenhow laughed as he
+entered.
+
+'Never mind the trouble in the Balkans. Those little states are always
+screeching. You've heard about Dick's luck?'
+
+'Yes; he has been called up to notoriety, hasn't he? I hope you keep him
+properly humble. He wants suppressing from time to time.'
+
+'He does. He's beginning to take liberties with what he thinks is his
+reputation.'
+
+'Already! By Jove, he has cheek! I don't know about his reputation, but
+he'll come a cropper if he tries that sort of thing.'
+
+'So I told him. I don't think he believes it.'
+
+'They never do when they first start off. What's that wreck on the
+ground there?'
+
+'Specimen of his latest impertinence.' Torpenhow thrust the torn edges of
+the canvas together and showed the well-groomed picture to the Nilghai,
+who looked at it for a moment and whistled.
+
+'It's a chromo,' said he,--'a chromo-litholeomargarine fake! What
+possessed him to do it? And yet how thoroughly he has caught the note
+that catches a public who think with their boots and read with their
+elbows! The cold-blooded insolence of the work almost saves it; but he
+mustn't go on with this. Hasn't he been praised and cockered up too
+much? You know these people here have no sense of proportion. They'll
+call him a second Detaille and a third-hand Meissonier while his fashion
+lasts. It's windy diet for a colt.'
+
+'I don't think it affects Dick much. You might as well call a young wolf a
+lion and expect him to take the compliment in exchange for a shin-bone.
+
+Dick's soul is in the bank. He's working for cash.'
+
+'Now he has thrown up war work, I suppose he doesn't see that the
+obligations of the service are just the same, only the proprietors are
+changed.'
+
+'How should he know? He thinks he is his own master.'
+
+'Does he? I could undeceive him for his good, if there's any virtue in
+print. He wants the whiplash.'
+
+'Lay it on with science, then. I'd flay him myself, but I like him too
+much.'
+
+'I've no scruples. He had the audacity to try to cut me out with a woman
+at Cairo once. I forgot that, but I remember now.'
+
+'Did he cut you out?'
+
+'You'll see when I have dealt with him. But, after all, what's the good?
+Leave him alone and he'll come home, if he has any stuff in him,
+dragging or wagging his tail behind him. There's more in a week of life
+than in a lively weekly. None the less I'll slate him. I'll slate him
+ponderously in the Cataclysm.'
+
+'Good luck to you; but I fancy nothing short of a crowbar would make
+Dick wince. His soul seems to have been fired before we came across him.
+
+He's intensely suspicious and utterly lawless.'
+
+'Matter of temper,' said the Nilghai. 'It's the same with horses. Some you
+wallop and they work, some you wallop and they jib, and some you
+wallop and they go out for a walk with their hands in their pockets.'
+
+'That's exactly what Dick has done,' said Torpenhow. 'Wait till he comes
+back. In the meantime, you can begin your slating here. I'll show you
+some of his last and worst work in his studio.'
+
+Dick had instinctively sought running water for a comfort to his mood of
+mind. He was leaning over the Embankment wall, watching the rush of
+the Thames through the arches of Westminster Bridge. He began by
+thinking of Torpenhow's advice, but, as of custom, lost himself in the
+study of the faces flocking past. Some had death written on their
+features, and Dick marvelled that they could laugh. Others, clumsy and
+coarse-built for the most part, were alight with love; others were merely
+drawn and lined with work; but there was something, Dick knew, to be
+made out of them all. The poor at least should suffer that he might learn,
+and the rich should pay for the output of his learning. Thus his credit in
+the world and his cash balance at the bank would be increased. So much
+the better for him. He had suffered. Now he would take toll of the ills of
+others.
+
+The fog was driven apart for a moment, and the sun shone, a blood-red
+wafer, on the water. Dick watched the spot till he heard the voice of the
+tide between the piers die down like the wash of the sea at low tide. A girl
+hard pressed by her lover shouted shamelessly, 'Ah, get away, you beast!'
+
+and a shift of the same wind that had opened the fog drove across Dick's
+face the black smoke of a river-steamer at her berth below the wall. He
+was blinded for the moment, then spun round and found himself face to
+face with--Maisie.
+
+There was no mistaking. The years had turned the child to a woman, but
+they had not altered the dark-gray eyes, the thin scarlet lips, or the
+firmly modelled mouth and chin; and, that all should be as it was of old,
+she wore a closely fitting gray dress.
+
+Since the human soul is finite and not in the least under its own
+command, Dick, advancing, said 'Halloo!' after the manner of
+schoolboys, and Maisie answered, 'Oh, Dick, is that you?' Then, against
+his will, and before the brain newly released from considerations of the
+cash balance had time to dictate to the nerves, every pulse of Dick's body
+throbbed furiously and his palate dried in his mouth. The fog shut down
+again, and Maisie's face was pearl-white through it. No word was
+spoken, but Dick fell into step at her side, and the two paced the
+Embankment together, keeping the step as perfectly as in their afternoon
+excursions to the mud-flats. Then Dick, a little hoarsely--
+'What has happened to Amomma?'
+
+'He died, Dick. Not cartridges; over-eating. He was always greedy. Isn't
+it funny?'
+
+'Yes. No. Do you mean Amomma?'
+
+'Ye--es. No. This. Where have you come from?'
+
+'Over there,' He pointed eastward through the fog. 'And you?'
+
+'Oh, I'm in the north,--the black north, across all the Park. I am very
+busy.'
+
+'What do you do?'
+
+'I paint a great deal. That's all I have to do.'
+
+'Why, what's happened? You had three hundred a year.'
+
+'I have that still. I am painting; that's all.'
+
+'Are you alone, then?'
+
+'There's a girl living with me. Don't walk so fast, Dick; you're out of
+step.'
+
+'Then you noticed it too?'
+
+'Of course I did. You're always out of step.'
+
+'So I am. I'm sorry. You went on with the painting?'
+
+'Of course. I said I should. I was at the Slade, then at Merton's in St.
+
+John's Wood, the big studio, then I pepper-potted,--I mean I went to the
+National,--and now I'm working under Kami.'
+
+'But Kami is in Paris surely?'
+
+'No; he has his teaching studio in Vitry-sur-Marne. I work with him in
+the summer, and I live in London in the winter. I'm a householder.'
+
+'Do you sell much?'
+
+'Now and again, but not often. There is my 'bus. I must take it or lose
+half an hour. Good-bye, Dick.'
+
+'Good-bye, Maisie. Won't you tell me where you live? I must see you
+again; and perhaps I could help you. I--I paint a little myself.'
+
+'I may be in the Park to-morrow, if there is no working light. I walk from
+the Marble Arch down and back again; that is my little excursion. But of
+course I shall see you again.' She stepped into the omnibus and was
+swallowed up by the fog.
+
+'Well--I--am--damned!' exclaimed Dick, and returned to the chambers.
+
+Torpenhow and the Nilghai found him sitting on the steps to the stgudio
+door, repeating the phrase with an awful gravity.
+
+'You'll be more damned when I'm done with you,' said the Nilghai,
+upheaving his bulk from behind Torpenhow's shoulder and waving a
+sheaf of half-dry manuscript. 'Dick, it is of common report that you are
+suffering from swelled head.'
+
+'Halloo, Nilghai. Back again? How are the Balkans and all the little
+Balkans? One side of your face is out of drawing, as usual.'
+
+'Never mind that. I am commissioned to smite you in print. Torpenhow
+refuses from false delicacy. I've been overhauling the pot-boilers in your
+studio. They are simply disgraceful.'
+
+'Oho! that's it, is it? If you think you can slate me, you're wrong. You
+can only describe, and you need as much room to turn in, on paper, as a
+P. and O. cargo-boat. But continue, and be swift. I'm going to bed.'
+
+'H'm! h'm! h'm! The first part only deals with your pictures. Here's the
+peroration: "For work done without conviction, for power wasted on
+trivialities, for labour expended with levity for the deliberate purpose of
+winning the easy applause of a fashion-driven public----"
+'That's "His Last Shot," second edition. Go on.'
+
+'----"public, there remains but one end,--the oblivion that is preceded by
+toleration and cenotaphed with contempt. From that fate Mr. Heldar has
+yet to prove himself out of danger.'
+
+'Wow--wow--wow--wow--wow!' said Dick, profanely. 'It's a clumsy ending
+and vile journalese, but it's quite true. And yet,'--he sprang to his feet
+and snatched at the manuscript,--'you scarred, deboshed, battered old
+gladiator! you're sent out when a war begins, to minister to the blind,
+brutal, British public's bestial thirst for blood. They have no arenas now,
+but they must have special correspondents. You're a fat gladiator who
+comes up through a trap-door and talks of what he's seen. You stand on
+precisely the same level as an energetic bishop, an affable actress, a
+devastating cyclone, or--mine own sweet self. And you presume to lecture
+me about my work! Nilghai, if it were worth while I'd caricature you in
+four papers!'
+
+The Nilghai winced. He had not thought of this.
+
+'As it is, I shall take this stuff and tear it small--so!' The manuscript
+fluttered in slips down the dark well of the staircase. 'Go home, Nilghai,'
+
+said Dick; 'go home to your lonely little bed, and leave me in peace. I am
+about to turn in till to-morrow.'
+
+'Why, it isn't seven yet!' said Torpenhow, with amazement.
+
+'It shall be two in the morning, if I choose,' said Dick, backing to the
+studio door. 'I go to grapple with a serious crisis, and I shan't want any
+dinner.'
+
+The door shut and was locked.
+
+'What can you do with a man like that?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Leave him alone. He's as mad as a hatter.'
+
+At eleven there was a kicking on the studio door. 'Is the Nilghai with you
+still?' said a voice from within. 'Then tell him he might have condensed
+the whole of his lumbering nonsense into an epigram: "Only the free are
+bond, and only the bond are free." Tell him he's an idiot, Torp, and tell
+him I'm another.'
+
+'All right. Come out and have supper. You're smoking on an empty
+stomach.'
+
+There was no answer.
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+'I have a thousand men,' said he,
+'To wait upon my will,
+And towers nine upon the Tyne,
+And three upon the Till.'?
+
+'And what care I for you men,' said she,
+'Or towers from Tyne to Till,
+Sith you must go with me,' she said,
+'To wait upon my will?'
+
+Sir Hoggie and the Fairies
+
+NEXT morning Torpenhow found Dick sunk in deepest repose of
+tobacco.
+
+'Well, madman, how d'you feel?'
+
+'I don't know. I'm trying to find out.'
+
+'You had much better do some work.'
+
+'Maybe; but I'm in no hurry. I've made a discovery. Torp, there's too
+much Ego in my Cosmos.'
+
+'Not really! Is this revelation due to my lectures, or the Nilghai's?'
+
+'It came to me suddenly, all on my own account. Much too much Ego;
+and now I'm going to work.'
+
+He turned over a few half-finished sketches, drummed on a new canvas,
+cleaned three brushes, set Binkie to bite the toes of the lay figure, rattled
+through his collection of arms and accoutrements, and then went out
+abruptly, declaring that he had done enough for the day.
+
+'This is positively indecent,' said Torpenhow, 'and the first time that
+Dick has ever broken up a light morning. Perhaps he has found out that
+he has a soul, or an artistic temperament, or something equally valuable.
+
+That comes of leaving him alone for a month. Perhaps he has been going
+out of evenings. I must look to this.' He rang for the bald-headed old
+housekeeper, whom nothing could astonish or annoy.
+
+'Beeton, did Mr. Heldar dine out at all while I was out of town?'
+
+'Never laid 'is dress-clothes out once, sir, all the time. Mostly 'e dined in;
+but 'e brought some most remarkable young gentlemen up 'ere after
+theatres once or twice. Remarkable fancy they was. You gentlemen on
+the top floor does very much as you likes, but it do seem to me, sir,
+droppin' a walkin'-stick down five flights o' stairs an' then goin' down
+four abreast to pick it up again at half-past two in the mornin', singin'
+
+"Bring back the whiskey, Willie darlin,'"--not once or twice, but scores
+o' times,--isn't charity to the other tenants. What I say is, "Do as you
+would be done by." That's my motto.'
+
+'Of course! of course! I'm afraid the top floor isn't the quietest in the
+house.'
+
+'I make no complaints, sir. I have spoke to Mr. Heldar friendly, an' he
+laughed, an' did me a picture of the missis that is as good as a coloured
+print. It 'asn't the high shine of a photograph, but what I say is, "Never
+look a gift-horse in the mouth." Mr. Heldar's dress-clothes 'aven't been
+on him for weeks.'
+
+'Then it's all right,' said Torpenhow to himself. 'Orgies are healthy, and
+Dick has a head of his own, but when it comes to women making eyes I'm
+not so certain,--Binkie, never you be a man, little dorglums. They're
+contrary brutes, and they do things without any reason.'
+
+Dick had turned northward across the Park, but he was walking in the
+spirit on the mud-flats with Maisie. He laughed aloud as he remembered
+the day when he had decked Amomma's horns with the ham-frills, and
+Maisie, white with rage, had cuffed him. How long those four years
+seemed in review, and how closely Maisie was connected with every hour
+of them! Storm across the sea, and Maisie in a gray dress on the beach,
+sweeping her drenched hair out of her eyes and laughing at the
+homeward race of the fishing-smacks; hot sunshine on the mud-flats, and
+Maisie sniffing scornfully, with her chin in the air; Maisie flying before
+the wind that threshed the foreshore and drove the sand like small shot
+about her ears; Maisie, very composed and independent, telling lies to
+Mrs. Jennett while Dick supported her with coarser perjuries; Maisie
+picking her way delicately from stone to stone, a pistol in her hand and
+her teeth firm-set; and Maisie in a gray dress sitting on the grass
+between the mouth of a cannon and a nodding yellow sea-poppy. The
+pictures passed before him one by one, and the last stayed the longest.
+
+Dick was perfectly happy with a quiet peace that was as new to his mind
+as it was foreign to his experiences. It never occurred to him that there
+might be other calls upon his time than loafing across the Park in the
+forenoon.
+
+'There's a good working light now,' he said, watching his shadow
+placidly. 'Some poor devil ought to be grateful for this. And there's
+Maisie.'
+
+She was walking towards him from the Marble Arch, and he saw that no
+mannerism of her gait had been changed. It was good to find her still
+Maisie, and, so to speak, his next-door neighbour. No greeting passed
+between them, because there had been none in the old days.
+
+'What are you doing out of your studio at this hour?' said Dick, as one
+who was entitled to ask.
+
+'Idling. Just idling. I got angry with a chin and scraped it out. Then I left
+it in a little heap of paint-chips and came away.'
+
+'I know what palette-knifing means. What was the piccy?'
+
+'A fancy head that wouldn't come right,--horrid thing!'
+
+'I don't like working over scraped paint when I'm doing flesh. The grain
+comes up woolly as the paint dries.'
+
+'Not if you scrape properly.' Maisie waved her hand to illustrate her
+methods. There was a dab of paint on the white cuff. Dick laughed.
+
+'You're as untidy as ever.'
+
+'That comes well from you. Look at your own cuff.'
+
+'By Jove, yes! It's worse than yours. I don't think we've much altered in
+anything. Let's see, though.' He looked at Maisie critically. The pale blue
+haze of an autumn day crept between the tree-trunks of the Park and
+made a background for the gray dress, the black velvet toque above the
+black hair, and the resolute profile.
+
+'No, there's nothing changed. How good it is! D'you remember when I
+fastened your hair into the snap of a hand-bag?'
+
+Maisie nodded, with a twinkle in her eyes, and turned her full face to
+Dick.
+
+'Wait a minute,' said he. 'That mouth is down at the corners a little.
+
+Who's been worrying you, Maisie?'
+
+'No one but myself. I never seem to get on with my work, and yet I try
+hard enough, and Kami says----'
+
+'"Continuez, mesdemoiselles. Continuez toujours, mes enfants." Kami is
+depressing. I beg your pardon.'
+
+'Yes, that's what he says. He told me last summer that I was doing better
+and he'd let me exhibit this year.'
+
+'Not in this place, surely?'
+
+'Of course not. The Salon.'
+
+'You fly high.'
+
+'I've been beating my wings long enough. Where do you exhibit, Dick?'
+
+'I don't exhibit. I sell.'
+
+'What is your line, then?'
+
+'Haven't you heard?' Dick's eyes opened. Was this thing possible? He
+cast about for some means of conviction. They were not far from the
+Marble Arch. 'Come up Oxford Street a little and I'll show you.'
+
+A small knot of people stood round a print-shop that Dick knew well.
+
+'Some reproduction of my work inside,' he said, with suppressed
+triumph. Never before had success tasted so sweet upon the tongue. 'You
+see the sort of things I paint. D'you like it?'
+
+Maisie looked at the wild whirling rush of a field-battery going into
+action under fire. Two artillery-men stood behind her in the crowd.
+
+'They've chucked the off lead-'orse' said one to the other. ''E's tore up
+awful, but they're makin' good time with the others. That lead-driver
+drives better nor you, Tom. See 'ow cunnin' 'e's nursin' 'is 'orse.'
+
+'Number Three'll be off the limber, next jolt,' was the answer.
+
+'No, 'e won't. See 'ow 'is foot's braced against the iron? 'E's all right.'
+
+Dick watched Maisie's face and swelled with joy--fine, rank, vulgar
+triumph. She was more interested in the little crowd than in the picture.
+
+That was something that she could understand.
+
+'And I wanted it so! Oh, I did want it so!' she said at last, under her
+breath.
+
+'Me,--all me!' said Dick, placidly. 'Look at their faces. It hits 'em. They
+don't know what makes their eyes and mouths open; but I know. And I
+know my work's right.'
+
+'Yes. I see. Oh, what a thing to have come to one!'
+
+'Come to one, indeed! I had to go out and look for it. What do you think?'
+
+'I call it success. Tell me how you got it.'
+
+They returned to the Park, and Dick delivered himself of the saga of his
+own doings, with all the arrogance of a young man speaking to a woman.
+
+From the beginning he told the tale, the I--I--I's flashing through the
+records as telegraph-poles fly past the traveller. Maisie listened and
+nodded her head. The histories of strife and privation did not move her a
+hair's-breadth. At the end of each canto he would conclude, 'And that
+gave me some notion of handling colour,' or light, or whatever it might
+be that he had set out to pursue and understand. He led her breathless
+across half the world, speaking as he had never spoken in his life before.
+
+And in the flood-tide of his exaltation there came upon him a great desire
+to pick up this maiden who nodded her head and said, 'I understand. Go
+on,'--to pick her up and carry her away with him, because she was
+Maisie, and because she understood, and because she was his right, and a
+woman to be desired above all women.
+
+Then he checked himself abruptly. 'And so I took all I wanted,' he said,
+'and I had to fight for it. Now you tell.'
+
+Maisie's tale was almost as gray as her dress. It covered years of patient
+toil backed by savage pride that would not be broken thought dealers
+laughed, and fogs delayed work, and Kami was unkind and even
+sarcastic, and girls in other studios were painfully polite. It had a few
+bright spots, in pictures accepted at provincial exhibitions, but it wound
+up with the oft repeated wail, 'And so you see, Dick, I had no success,
+though I worked so hard.'
+
+Then pity filled Dick. Even thus had Maisie spoken when she could not
+hit the breakwater, half an hour before she had kissed him. And that had
+happened yesterday.
+
+'Never mind,' he said. 'I'll tell you something, if you'll believe it.' The
+words were shaping themselves of their own accord. 'The whole thing,
+lock, stock, and barrel, isn't worth one big yellow sea-poppy below Fort
+Keeling.'
+
+Maisie flushed a little. 'It's all very well for you to talk, but you've had
+the success and I haven't.'
+
+'Let me talk, then. I know you'll understand. Maisie, dear, it sounds a bit
+absurd, but5 those ten years never existed, and I've come back again. It
+really is just the same. Can't you see? You're alone now and I'm alone.
+
+What's the use of worrying? Come to me instead, darling.'
+
+Maisie poked the gravel with her parasol. They were sitting on a bench.
+
+'I understand,' she said slowly. 'But I've got my work to do, and I must
+do it.'
+
+'Do it with me, then, dear. I won't interrupt.'
+
+'No, I couldn't. It's my work,--mine,--mine,--mine! I've been alone all my
+life in myself, and I'm not going to belong to anybody except myself. I
+remember things as well as you do, but that doesn't count. We were
+babies then, and we didn't know what was before us. Dick, don't be
+selfish. I think I see my way to a little success next year. Don't take it
+away from me.'
+
+'I beg your pardon, darling. It's my fault for speaking stupidly. I can't
+expect you to throw up all your life just because I'm back. I'll go to my
+own place and wait a little.'
+
+'But, Dick, I don't want you to--go--out of--my life, now you've just come
+back.'
+
+'I'm at your orders; forgive me.' Dick devoured the troubled little face
+with his eyes. There was triumph in them, because he could not conceive
+that Maisie should refuse sooner or later to love him, since he loved her.
+
+'It's wrong of me,' said Maisie, more slowly than before; 'it's wrong and
+selfish; but, oh, I've been so lonely! No, you misunderstand. Now I've
+seen you again,--it's absurd, but I want to keep you in my life.'
+
+'Naturally. We belong.'
+
+'We don't; but you always understood me, and there is so much in my
+work that you could help me in. You know things and the ways of doing
+things. You must.'
+
+'I do, I fancy, or else I don't know myself. Then you won't care to lose
+sight of me altogether, and--you want me to help you in your work?'
+
+'Yes; but remember, Dick, nothing will ever come of it. That's why I feel
+so selfish. Can't things stay as they are? I do want your help.'
+
+'You shall have it. But let's consider. I must see your pics first, and
+overhaul your sketches, and find out about your tendencies. You should
+see what the papers say about my tendencies! Then I'll give you good
+advice, and you shall paint according. Isn't that it, Maisie?'
+
+Again there was triumph in Dick's eye.
+
+'It's too good of you,--much too good. Because you are consoling yourself
+with what will never happen, and I know that, and yet I want to keep
+you. Don't blame me later, please.'
+
+'I'm going into the matter with my eyes open. Moreover the Queen can
+do no wrong. It isn't your selfishness that impresses me. It's your
+audacity in proposing to make use of me.'
+
+'Pooh! You're only Dick,--and a print-shop.'
+
+'Very good: that's all I am. But, Maisie, you believe, don't you, that I love
+you? I don't want you to have any false notions about brothers and
+sisters.'
+
+Maisie looked up for a moment and dropped her eyes.
+
+'It's absurd, but--I believe. I wish I could send you away before you get
+angry with me. But--but the girl that lives with me is red-haired, and an
+impressionist, and all our notions clash.'
+
+'So do ours, I think. Never mind. Three months from to-day we shall be
+laughing at this together.'
+
+Maisie shook her head mournfully. 'I knew you wouldn't understand,
+and it will only hurt you more when you find out. Look at my face, Dick,
+and tell me what you see.'
+
+They stood up and faced each other for a moment. The fog was
+gathering, and it stifled the roar of the traffic of London beyond the
+railings. Dick brought all his painfully acquired knowledge of faces to
+bear on the eyes, mouth, and chin underneath the black velvet toque.
+
+'It's the same Maisie, and it's the same me,' he said. 'We've both nice
+little wills of our own, and one or other of us has to be broken. Now about
+the future. I must come and see your pictures some day,--I suppose when
+the red-haired girl is on the premises.'
+
+'Sundays are my best times. You must come on Sundays. There are such
+heaps of things I want to talk about and ask your advice about. Now I
+must get back to work.'
+
+'Try to find out before next Sunday what I am,' said Dick. 'Don't take my
+word for anything I've told you. Good-bye, darling, and bless you.'
+
+Maisie stole away like a little gray mouse. Dick watched her till she was
+out of sight, but he did not hear her say to herself, very soberly, 'I'm a
+wretch,--a horrid, selfish wretch. But it's Dick, and Dick will
+understand.'
+
+No one has yet explained what actually happens when an irresistible
+force meets the immovable post, though many have thought deeply, even
+as Dick thought. He tried to assure himself that Maisie would be led in a
+few weeks by his mere presence and discourse to a better way of
+thinking. Then he remembered much too distinctly her face and all that
+was written on it.
+
+'If I know anything of heads,' he said, 'there's everything in that face but
+love. I shall have to put that in myself; and that chin and mouth won't be
+won for nothing. But she's right. She knows what she wants, and she's
+going to get it. What insolence! Me! Of all the people in the wide world,
+to use me! But then she's Maisie. There's no getting over that fact; and
+it's good to see her again. This business must have been simmering at the
+back of my head for years. . . . She'll use me as I used Binat at Port Said.
+
+She's quite right. It will hurt a little. I shall have to see her every
+Sunday,--like a young man courting a housemaid. She's sure to come
+around; and yet--that mouth isn't a yielding mouth. I shall be wanting to
+kiss her all the time, and I shall have to look at her pictures,--I don't even
+know what sort of work she does yet,--and I shall have to talk about
+Art,--Woman's Art! Therefore, particularly and perpetually, damn all
+varieties of Art. It did me a good turn once, and now it's in my way. I'll
+go home and do some Art.'
+
+Half-way to the studio, Dick was smitten with a terrible thought. The
+figure of a solitary woman in the fog suggested it.
+
+'She's all alone in London, with a red-haired impressionist girl, who
+probably has the digestion of an ostrich. Most red-haired people have.
+
+Maisie's a bilious little body. They'll eat like lone women,--meals at all
+hours, and tea with all meals. I remember how the students in Paris used
+to pig along. She may fall ill at any minute, and I shan't be able to help.
+
+Whew! this is ten times worse than owning a wife.'
+
+Torpenhow entered the studio at dusk, and looked at Dick with eyes full
+of the austere love that springs up between men who have tugged at the
+same oar together and are yoked by custom and use and the intimacies of
+toil. This is a good love, and, since it allows, and even encourages, strife,
+recrimination, and brutal sincerity, does not die, but grows, and is proof
+against any absence and evil conduct.
+
+Dick was silent after he handed Torpenhow the filled pipe of council. He
+thought of Maisie and her possible needs. It was a new thing to think of
+anybody but Torpenhow, who could think for himself. Here at last was
+an outlet for that cash balance. He could adorn Maisie barbarically with
+jewelry,--a thick gold necklace round that little neck, bracelets upon the
+rounded arms, and rings of price upon her hands,--thie cool, temperate,
+ringless hands that he had taken between his own. It was an absurd
+thought, for Maisie would not even allow him to put one ring on one
+finger, and she would laugh at golden trappings. It would be better to sit
+with her quietly in the dusk, his arm around her neck and her face on his
+shoulder, as befitted husband and wife. Torpenhow's boots creaked that
+night, and his strong voice jarred. Dick's brows contracted and he
+murmured an evil word because he had taken all his success as a right
+and part payment for past discomfort, and now he was checked in his
+stride by a woman who admitted all the success and did not instantly
+care for him.
+
+'I say, old man,' said Torpenhow, who had made one or two vain
+attempts at conversation, 'I haven't put your back up by anything I've
+said lately, have I?'
+
+'You! No. How could you?'
+
+'Liver out of order?'
+
+'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a liver. I'm only a bit
+worried about things in general. I suppose it's my soul.'
+
+'The truly healthy man doesn't know he has a soul. What business have
+you with luxuries of that kind?'
+
+'It came of itself. Who's the man that says that we're all islands shouting
+lies to each other across seas of misunderstanding?'
+
+'He's right, whoever he is,--except about the misunderstanding. I don't
+think we could misunderstand each other.'
+
+The blue smoke curled back from the ceiling in clouds. Then Torpenhow,
+insinuatingly--
+'Dick, is it a woman?'
+
+'Be hanged if it's anything remotely resembling a woman; and if you
+begin to talk like that, I'll hire a red-brick studio with white paint
+trimmings, and begonias and petunias and blue Hungarias to play among
+three-and-sixpenny pot-palms, and I'll mount all my pics in aniline-dye
+plush plasters, and I'll invite every woman who maunders over what her
+guide-books tell her is Art, and you shall receive 'em, Torp,--in a
+snuff-brown velvet coat with yellow trousers and an orange tie. You'll
+like that?'
+
+'Too thin, Dick. A better man than you once denied with cursing and
+swearing. You've overdone it, just as he did. It's no business of mine, of
+course, but it's comforting to think that somewhere under the stars
+there's saving up for you a tremendous thrashing. Whether it'll come
+from heaven or earth, I don't know, but it's bound to come and break you
+up a little. You want hammering.'
+
+Dick shivered. 'All right,' said he. 'When this island is disintegrated, it
+will call for you.'
+
+'I shall come round the corner and help to disintegrate it some more.
+
+We're talking nonsense. Come along to a theatre.'?
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+'And you may lead a thousand men,
+Nor ever draw the rein,
+But ere ye lead the Faery Queen
+'Twill burst your heart in twain.'?
+
+He has slipped his foot from the stirrup-bar,
+The bridle from his hand,
+And he is bound by hand and foot
+To the Queen o' Faery-land.
+
+Sir Hoggie and the Fairies.
+
+SOME weeks later, on a very foggy Sunday, Dick was returning across
+the Park to his studio. 'This,' he said, 'is evidently the thrashing that
+Torp meant. It hurts more than I expected; but the Queen can do no
+wrong; and she certainly has some notion of drawing.'
+
+He had just finished a Sunday visit to Maisie,--always under the green
+eyes of the red-haired impressionist girl, whom he learned to hate at
+sight,--and was tingling with a keen sense of shame. Sunday after
+Sunday, putting on his best clothes, he had walked over to the untidy
+house north of the Park, first to see Maisie's pictures, and then to
+criticise and advise upon them as he realised that they were productions
+on which advice would not be wasted. Sunday after Sunday, and his love
+grew with each visit, he had been compelled to cram his heart back from
+between his lips when it prompted him to kiss Maisie several times and
+very much indeed. Sunday after Sunday, the head above the heart had
+warned him that Maisie was not yet attainable, and that it would be
+better to talk as connectedly as possible upon the mysteries of the craft
+that was all in all to her. Therefore it was his fate to endure weekly
+torture in the studio built out over the clammy back garden of a frail
+stuffy little villa where nothing was ever in its right place and nobody
+every called,--to endure and to watch Maisie moving to and fro with the
+teacups. He abhorred tea, but, since it gave him a little longer time in her
+presence, he drank it devoutly, and the red-haired girl sat in an untidy
+heap and eyed him without speaking. She was always watching him.
+
+Once, and only once, when she had left the studio, Maisie showed him an
+album that held a few poor cuttings from provincial papers,--the briefest
+of hurried notes on some of her pictures sent to outlying exhibitions. Dick
+stooped and kissed the paint-smudged thumb on the open page. 'Oh, my
+love, my love,' he muttered, 'do you value these things? Chuck 'em into
+the waste-paper basket!'
+
+'Not till I get something better,' said Maisie, shutting the book.
+
+Then Dick, moved by no respect for his public and a very deep regard for
+the maiden, did deliberately propose, in order to secure more of these
+coveted cuttings, that he should paint a picture which Maisie should sign.
+
+'That's childish,' said Maisie, 'and I didn't think it of you. It must be my
+work. Mine,--mine,--mine!'
+
+'Go and design decorative medallions for rich brewers' houses. You are
+thoroughly good at that.' Dick was sick and savage.
+
+'Better things than medallions, Dick,' was the answer, in tones that
+recalled a gray-eyed atom's fearless speech to Mrs. Jennett. Dick would
+have abased himself utterly, but that other girl trailed in.
+
+Next Sunday he laid at Maisie's feet small gifts of pencils that could
+almost draw of themselves and colours in whose permanence he believed,
+and he was ostentatiously attentive to the work in hand. It demanded,
+among other things, an exposition of the faith that was in him.
+
+Torpenhow's hair would have stood on end had he heard the fluency
+with which Dick preached his own gospel of Art.
+
+A month before, Dick would have been equally astonished; but it was
+Maisie's will and pleasure, and he dragged his words together to make
+plain to her comprehension all that had been hidden to himself of the
+whys and wherefores of work. There is not the least difficulty in doing a
+thing if you only know how to do it; the trouble is to explain your
+method.
+
+'I could put this right if I had a brush in my hand,' said Dick,
+despairingly, over the modelling of a chin that Maisie complained would
+not 'look flesh,'--it was the same chin that she had scraped out with the
+palette knife,--'but I find it almost impossible to teach you. There's a
+queer grin, Dutch touch about your painting that I like; but I've a notion
+that you're weak in drawing. You foreshorten as though you never used
+the model, and you've caught Kami's pasty way of dealing with flesh in
+shadow. Then, again, though you don't know it yourself, you shirk hard
+work. Suppose you spend some of your time on line lone. Line doesn't
+allow of shirking. Oils do, and three square inches of flashy, tricky stuff
+in the corner of a pic sometimes carry a bad thing off,--as I know. That's
+immoral. Do line-work for a little while, and then I can tell more about
+your powers, as old Kami used to say.'
+
+Maisie protested; she did not care for the pure line.
+
+'I know,' said Dick. 'You want to do your fancy heads with a bunch of
+flowers at the base of the neck to hide bad modelling.' The red-haired girl
+laughed a little. 'You want to do landscapes with cattle knee-deep in
+grass to hide bad drawing. You want to do a great deal more than you
+can do. You have sense of colour, but you want form. Colour's a gift,--put
+it aside and think no more about it,--but form you can be drilled into.
+
+Now, all your fancy heads--and some of them are very good--will keep
+you exactly where you are. With line you must go forward or backward,
+and it will show up all your weaknesses.'
+
+'But other people----' began Maisie.
+
+'You mustn't mind what other people do. If their souls were your soul, it
+would be different. You stand and fall by your own work, remember, and
+it's waste of time to think of any one else in this battle.'
+
+Dick paused, and the longing that had been so resolutely put away came
+back into his eyes. He looked at Maisie, and the look asked as plainly as
+words, Was it not time to leave all this barren wilderness of canvas and
+counsel and join hands with Life and Love?
+
+Maisie assented to the new programme of schooling so adorably that
+Dick could hardly restrain himself from picking her up then and there
+and carrying her off to the nearest registrar's office. It was the implicit
+obedience to the spoken word and the blank indifference to the unspoken
+desire that baffled and buffeted his soul. He held authority in that
+house,--authority limited, indeed, to one-half of one afternoon in seven,
+but very real while it lasted. Maisie had learned to appeal to him on
+many subjects, from the proper packing of pictures to the condition of a
+smoky chimney. The red-haired girl never consulted him about anything.
+
+On the other hand, she accepted his appearances without protest, and
+watched him always. He discovered that the meals of the establishment
+were irregular and fragmentary. They depended chiefly on tea, pickles,
+and biscuit, as he had suspected from the beginning. The girls were
+supposed to market week and week about, but they lived, with the help of
+a charwoman, as casually as the young ravens. Maisie spent most of her
+income on models, and the other girl revelled in apparatus as refined as
+her work was rough. Armed with knowledge, dear-bought from the
+Docks, Dick warned Maisie that the end of semi-starvation meant the
+crippling of power to work, which was considerably worse than death.
+
+Maisie took the warning, and gave more thought to what she ate and
+drank. When his trouble returned upon him, as it generally did in the
+long winter twilights, the remembrance of that little act of domestic
+authority and his coercion with a hearth-brush of the smoky
+drawing-room chimney stung Dick like a whip-lash.
+
+He conceived that this memory would be the extreme of his sufferings,
+till one Sunday, the red-haired girl announced that she would make a
+study of Dick's head, and that he would be good enough to sit still,
+and--quite as an afterthought--look at Maisie. He sat, because he could
+not well refuse, and for the space of half an hour he reflected on all the
+people in the past whom he had laid open for the purposes of his own
+craft. He remembered Binat most distinctly,--that Binat who had once
+been an artist and talked about degradation.
+
+It was the merest monochrome roughing in of a head, but it presented the
+dumb waiting, the longing, and, above all, the hopeless enslavement of
+the man, in a spirit of bitter mockery.
+
+'I'll buy it,' said Dick, promptly, 'at your own price.'
+
+'My price is too high, but I dare say you'll be as grateful if----' The wet
+sketch, fluttered from the girl's hand and fell into the ashes of the studio
+stove. When she picked it up it was hopelessly smudged.
+
+'Oh, it's all spoiled!' said Maisie. 'And I never saw it. Was it like?'
+
+'Thank you,' said Dick under his breath to the red-haired girl, and he
+removed himself swiftly.
+
+'How that man hates me!' said the girl. 'And how he loves you, Maisie!'
+
+'What nonsense? I knew Dick's very fond of me, but he had his work to
+do, and I have mine.'
+
+'Yes, he is fond of you, and I think he knows there is something in
+impressionism, after all. Maisie, can't you see?'
+
+'See? See what?'
+
+'Nothing; only, I know that if I could get any man to look at me as that
+man looks at you, I'd--I don't know what I'd do. But he hates me. Oh,
+how he hates me!'
+
+She was not altogether correct. Dick's hatred was tempered with
+gratitude for a few moments, and then he forgot the girl entirely. Only
+the sense of shame remained, and he was nursing it across the Park in the
+fog. 'There'll be an explosion one of these days,' he said wrathfully. 'But
+it isn't Maisie's fault; she's right, quite right, as far as she knows, and I
+can't blame her. This business has been going on for three months nearly.
+
+Three months!--and it cost me ten years' knocking about to get at the
+notion, the merest raw notion, of my work. That's true; but then I didn't
+have pins, drawing-pins, and palette-knives, stuck into me every Sunday.
+
+Oh, my little darling, if ever I break you, somebody will have a very bad
+time of it. No, she won't. I'd be as big a fool about her as I am now. I'll
+poison that red-haired girl on my wedding-day,--she's
+unwholesome,--and now I'll pass on these present bad times to Torp.'
+
+Torpenhow had been moved to lecture Dick more than once lately on the
+sin of levity, and Dick and listened and replied not a word. In the weeks
+between the first few Sundays of his discipline he had flung himself
+savagely into his work, resolved that Maisie should at least know the full
+stretch of his powers. Then he had taught Maisie that she must not pay
+the least attention to any work outside her own, and Maisie had obeyed
+him all too well. She took his counsels, but was not interested in his
+pictures.
+
+'Your things smell of tobacco and blood,' she said once. 'Can't you do
+anything except soldiers?'
+
+'I could do a head of you that would startle you,' thought Dick,--this was
+before the red-haired girl had brought him under the guillotine,--but he
+only said, 'I am very sorry,' and harrowed Torpenhow's soul that
+evening with blasphemies against Art. Later, insensibly and to a large
+extent against his own will, he ceased to interest himself in his own work.
+
+For Maisie's sake, and to soothe the self-respect that it seemed to him he
+lost each Sunday, he would not consciously turn out bad stuff, but, since
+Maisie did not care even for his best, it were better not to do anything at
+all save wait and mark time between Sunday and Sunday. Torpenhow
+was disgusted as the weeks went by fruitless, and then attacked him one
+Sunday evening when Dick felt utterly exhausted after three hours'
+
+biting self-restraint in Maisie's presence. There was Language, and
+Torpenhow withdrew to consult the Nilghai, who had come it to talk
+continental politics.
+
+'Bone-idle, is he? Careless, and touched in the temper?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'It isn't worth worrying over. Dick is probably playing the fool with a
+woman.'
+
+'Isn't that bad enough?'
+
+'No. She may throw him out of gear and knock his work to pieces for a
+while. She may even turn up here some day and make a scene on the
+staircase: one never knows. But until Dick speaks of his own accord you
+had better not touch him. He is no easy-tempered man to handle.'
+
+'No; I wish he were. He is such an aggressive, cocksure, you-be-damned
+fellow.'
+
+'He'll get that knocked out of him in time. He must learn that he can't
+storm up and down the world with a box of moist tubes and a slick brush.
+
+You're fond of him?'
+
+'I'd take any punishment that's in store for him if I could; but the worst
+of it is, no man can save his brother.'
+
+'No, and the worser of it is, there is no discharge in this war. Dick must
+learn his lesson like the rest of us. Talking of war, there'll be trouble in
+the Balkans in the spring.'
+
+'That trouble is long coming. I wonder if we could drag Dick out there
+when it comes off?'
+
+Dick entered the room soon afterwards, and the question was put to him.
+
+'Not good enough,' he said shortly. 'I'm too comf'y where I am.'
+
+'Surely you aren't taking all the stuff in the papers seriously?' said the
+Nilghai. 'Your vogue will be ended in less than six months,--the public
+will know your touch and go on to something new,--and where will you
+be then?'
+
+'Here, in England.'
+
+'When you might be doing decent work among us out there? Nonsense! I
+shall go, the Keneu will be there, Torp will be there, Cassavetti will be
+there, and the whole lot of us will be there, and we shall have as much as
+ever we can do, with unlimited fighting and the chance for you of seeing
+things that would make the reputation of three Verestchagins.'
+
+'Um!' said Dick, pulling at his pipe.
+
+'You prefer to stay here and imagine that all the world is gaping at your
+pictures? Just think how full an average man's life is of his own pursuits
+and pleasures. When twenty thousand of him find time to look up
+between mouthfuls and grunt something about something they aren't the
+least interested in, the net result is called fame, reputation, or notoriety,
+according to the taste and fancy of the speller my lord.'
+
+'I know that as well as you do. Give me credit for a little gumption.'
+
+'Be hanged if I do!'
+
+'Be hanged, then; you probably will be,--for a spy, by excited Turks.
+
+Heigh-ho! I'm weary, dead weary, and virtue has gone out of me.' Dick
+dropped into a chair, and was fast asleep in a minute.
+
+'That's a bad sign,' said the Nilghai, in an undertone.
+
+Torpenhow picked the pipe from the waistcoat where it was beginning to
+burn, and put a pillow behind the head. 'We can't help; we can't help,' he
+said. 'It's a good ugly sort of old cocoanut, and I'm fond of it. There's the
+scar of the wipe he got when he was cut over in the square.'
+
+'Shouldn't wonder if that has made him a trifle mad.'
+
+'I should. He's a most businesslike madman.'
+
+Then Dick began to snore furiously.
+
+'Oh, here, no affection can stand this sort of thing. Wake up, Dick, and go
+and sleep somewhere else, if you intend to make a noise about it.'
+
+'When a cat has been out on the tiles all night,' said the Nilghai, in his
+beard, 'I notice that she usually sleeps all day. This is natural history.'
+
+Dick staggered away rubbing his eyes and yawning. In the night-watches
+he was overtaken with an idea, so simple and so luminous that he
+wondered he had never conceived it before. It was full of craft. He would
+seek Maisie on a week-day,--would suggest an excursion, and would take
+her by train to Fort Keeling, over the very ground that they two had
+trodden together ten years ago.
+
+'As a general rule,' he explained to his chin-lathered reflection in the
+morning, 'it isn't safe to cross an old trail twice. Things remind one of
+things, and a cold wind gets up, and you feel said; but this is an exception
+to every rule that ever was. I'll go to Maisie at once.'
+
+Fortunately, the red-haired girl was out shopping when he arrived, and
+Maisie in a paint-spattered blouse was warring with her canvas. She was
+not pleased to see him; for week-day visits were a stretch of the bond;
+and it needed all his courage to explain his errand.
+
+'I know you've been working too hard,' he concluded, with an air of
+authority. 'If you do that, you'll break down. You had much better come.'
+
+'Where?' said Maisie, wearily. She had been standing before her easel
+too long, and was very tired.
+
+'Anywhere you please. We'll take a train to-morrow and see where it
+stops. We'll have lunch somewhere, and I'll bring you back in the
+evening.'
+
+'If there's a good working light to-morrow, I lose a day.' Maisie balanced
+the heavy white chestnut palette irresolutely.
+
+Dick bit back an oath that was hurrying to his lips. He had not yet
+learned patience with the maiden to whom her work was all in all.
+
+'You'll lose ever so many more, dear, if you use every hour of working
+light. Overwork's only murderous idleness. Don't be unreasonable. I'll
+call for you to-morrow after breakfast early.'
+
+'But surely you are going to ask----'
+
+'No, I am not. I want you and nobody else. Besides, she hates me as much
+as I hate her. She won't care to come. To-morrow, then; and pray that
+we get sunshine.'
+
+Dick went away delighted, and by consequence did no work whatever.
+
+He strangled a wild desire to order a special train, but bought a great
+gray kangaroo cloak lined with glossy black marten, and then retired
+into himself to consider things.
+
+'I'm going out for the day to-morrow with Dick,' said Maisie to the
+red-haired girl when the latter returned, tired, from marketing in the
+Edgware road.
+
+'He deserves it. I shall have the studio floor thoroughly scrubbed while
+you're away. It's very dirty.'
+
+Maisie had enjoyed no sort of holiday for months and looked forward to
+the little excitement, but not without misgivings.
+
+'There's nobody nicer than Dick when he talks sensibly, she though, but
+I'm sure he'll be silly and worry me, and I'm sure I can't tell him
+anything he'd like to hear. If he'd only be sensible, I should like him so
+much better.'
+
+Dick's eyes were full of joy when he made his appearance next morning
+and saw Maisie, gray-ulstered and black-velvet-hatted, standing in the
+hallway. Palaces of marble, and not sordid imitation of grained wood,
+were surely the fittest background for such a divinity. The red-haired
+girl drew her into the studio for a moment and kissed her hurriedly.
+
+Maisie's eyebrows climbed to the top of her forehead; she was altogether
+unused to these demonstrations. 'Mind my hat,' she said, hurrying away,
+and ran down the steps to Dick waiting by the hansom.
+
+'Are you quite warm enough! Are you sure you wouldn't like some more
+breakfast? Put the cloak over you knees.'
+
+'I'm quite comf'y, thanks. Where are we going, Dick? Oh, do stop singing
+like that. People will think we're mad.'
+
+'Let 'em think,--if the exertion doesn't kill them. They don't know who
+we are, and I'm sure I don't care who they are. My faith, Maisie, you're
+looking lovely!'
+
+Maisie stared directly in front of her and did not reply. The wind of a
+keen clear winter morning had put colour into her cheeks. Overhead, the
+creamy-yellow smoke-clouds were thinning away one by one against a
+pale-blue sky, and the improvident sparrows broke off from water-spout
+committees and cab-rank cabals to clamour of the coming of spring.
+
+'It will be lovely weather in the country,' said Dick.
+
+'But where are we going?'
+
+'Wait and see.'
+
+The stopped at Victoria, and Dick sought tickets. For less than half the
+fraction of an instant it occurred to Maisie, comfortably settled by the
+waiting-room fire, that it was much more pleasant to send a man to the
+booking-office than to elbow one's own way through the crowd. Dick put
+her into a Pullman,--solely on account of the warmth there; and she
+regarded the extravagance with grave scandalised eyes as the train
+moved out into the country.
+
+'I wish I knew where we are going,' she repeated for the twentieth time.
+
+The name of a well-remembered station flashed by, towards the end of
+the run, and Maisie was delighted.
+
+'Oh, Dick, you villain!'
+
+'Well, I thought you might like to see the place again. You haven't been
+here since the old times, have you?'
+
+'No. I never cared to see Mrs. Jennett again; and she was all that was
+ever there.'
+
+'Not quite. Look out a minute. There's the windmill above the
+potato-fields; they haven't built villas there yet; d'you remember when I
+shut you up in it?'
+
+'Yes. How she beat you for it! I never told it was you.'
+
+'She guessed. I jammed a stick under the door and told you that I was
+burying Amomma alive in the potatoes, and you believed me. You had a
+trusting nature in those days.'
+
+They laughed and leaned to look out, identifying ancient landmarks with
+many reminiscences. Dick fixed his weather eye on the curve of Maisie's
+cheek, very near his own, and watched the blood rise under the clear
+skin. He congratulated himself upon his cunning, and looked that the
+evening would bring him a great reward.
+
+When the train stopped they went out to look at an old town with new
+eyes. First, but from a distance, they regarded the house of Mrs. Jennett.
+
+'Suppose she should come out now, what would you do?' said Dick, with
+mock terror.
+
+'I should make a face.'
+
+'Show, then,' said Dick, dropping into the speech of childhood.
+
+Maisie made that face in the direction of the mean little villa, and Dick
+laughed.
+
+'"This is disgraceful,"' said Maisie, mimicking Mrs. Jennett's tone.
+
+'"Maisie, you run in at once, and learn the collect, gospel, and epistle for
+the next three Sundays. After all I've taught you, too, and three helps
+every Sunday at dinner! Dick's always leading you into mischief. If you
+aren't a gentleman, Dick, you might at least--"'
+
+The sentence ended abruptly. Maisie remembered when it had last been
+used.
+
+'"Try to behave like one,"' said Dick, promptly. 'Quite right. Now we'll
+get some lunch and go on to Fort Keeling,--unless you'd rather drive
+there?'
+
+'We must walk, out of respect to the place. How little changed it all is!'
+
+They turned in the direction of the sea through unaltered streets, and the
+influence of old things lay upon them. Presently they passed a
+confectioner's shop much considered in the days when their joint
+pocket-money amounted to a shilling a week.
+
+'Dick, have you any pennies?' said Maisie, half to herself.
+
+'Only three; and if you think you're going to have two of 'em to buy
+peppermints with, you're wrong. She says peppermints aren't ladylike.'
+
+Again they laughed, and again the colour came into Maisie's cheeks as
+the blood boiled through Dick's heart. After a large lunch they went
+down to the beach and to Fort Keeling across the waste, wind-bitten land
+that no builder had thought it worth his while to defile. The winter
+breeze came in from the sea and sang about their ears.
+
+'Maisie,' said Dick, 'your nose is getting a crude Prussian blue at the tip.
+
+I'll race you as far as you please for as much as you please.'
+
+She looked round cautiously, and with a laugh set off, swiftly as the
+ulster allowed, till she was out of breath.
+
+'We used to run miles,' she panted. 'It's absurd that we can't run now.'
+
+'Old age, dear. This it is to get fat and sleek in town. When I wished to
+pull you hair you generally ran for three miles, shrieking at the top of
+your voice. I ought to know, because those shrieks of yours were meant to
+call up Mrs. Jennett with a cane and----'
+
+'Dick, I never got you a beating on purpose in my life.'
+
+'No, of course you never did. Good heavens! look at the sea.'
+
+'Why, it's the same as ever!' said Maisie.
+
+Torpenhow had gathered from Mr. Beeton that Dick, properly dressed
+and shaved, had left the house at half-past eight in the morning with a
+travelling-rug over his arm. The Nilghai rolled in at mid-day for chess
+and polite conversation.
+
+'It's worse than anything I imagined,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Oh, the everlasting Dick, I suppose! You fuss over him like a hen with
+one chick. Let him run riot if he thinks it'll amuse him. You can whip a
+young pup off feather, but you can't whip a young man.'
+
+'It isn't a woman. It's one woman; and it's a girl.'
+
+'Where's your proof?'
+
+'He got up and went out at eight this morning,--got up in the middle of
+the night, by Jove! a thing he never does except when he's on service.
+
+Even then, remember, we had to kick him out of his blankets before the
+fight began at El-Maghrib. It's disgusting.'
+
+'It looks odd; but maybe he's decided to buy a horse at last. He might get
+up for that, mightn't he?'
+
+'Buy a blazing wheelbarrow! He'd have told us if there was a horse in
+the wind. It's a girl.'
+
+'Don't be certain. Perhaps it's only a married woman.'
+
+'Dick has some sense of humour, if you haven't. Who gets up in the gray
+dawn to call on another man's wife? It's a girl.'
+
+'Let it be a girl, then. She may teach him that there's somebody else in
+the world besides himself.'
+
+'She'll spoil his hand. She'll waste his time, and she'll marry him, and
+ruin his work for ever. He'll be a respectable married man before we can
+stop him, and--he'll ever go on the long trail again.'
+
+'All quite possible, but the earth won't spin the other way when that
+happens. . . . No! ho! I'd give something to see Dick "go wooing with the
+boys." Don't worry about it. These things be with Allah, and we can only
+look on. Get the chessmen.'?
+
+The red-haired girl was lying down in her own room, staring at the
+ceiling. The footsteps of people on the pavement sounded, as they grew
+indistinct in the distance, like a many-times-repeated kiss that was all one
+long kiss. Her hands were by her side, and they opened and shut savagely
+from time to time.
+
+The charwoman in charge of the scrubbing of the studio knocked at her
+door: 'Beg y' pardon, miss, but in cleanin' of a floor there's two, not to
+say three, kind of soap, which is yaller, an' mottled, an' disinfectink.
+
+Now, jist before I took my pail into the passage I though it would be
+pre'aps jest as well if I was to come up 'ere an' ask you what sort of soap
+you was wishful that I should use on them boards. The yaller soap,
+miss----'
+
+There was nothing in the speech to have caused the paroxysm of fury
+that drove the red-haired girl into the middle of the room, almost
+shouting--
+'Do you suppose I care what you use? Any kind will do!--any kind!'
+
+The woman fled, and the red-haired girl looked at her own reflection in
+the glass for an instant and covered her face with her hands. It was as
+though she had shouted some shameless secret aloud.
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+Roses red and roses white
+Plucked I for my love's delight.
+
+She would none of all my posies,--
+Bade me gather her blue roses.
+
+Half the world I wandered through,
+Seeking where such flowers grew;
+Half the world unto my quest
+Answered but with laugh and jest.
+
+It may be beyond the grave
+She shall find what she would have.
+
+Mine was but an idle quest,--
+Roses white and red are best! -- Blue Roses.?
+
+THE SEA had not changed. Its waters were low on the mud-banks, and
+the Marazion Bell-buoy clanked and swung in the tide-way. On the white
+beach-sand dried stumps of sea-poppy shivered and chattered.
+
+'I don't see the old breakwater,' said Maisie, under her breath.
+
+'Let's be thankful that we have as much as we have. I don't believe
+they've mounted a single new gun on the fort since we were here. Come
+and look.'
+
+They came to the glacis of Fort Keeling, and sat down in a nook sheltered
+from the wind under the tarred throat of a forty-pounder cannon.
+
+'Now, if Ammoma were only here!' said Maisie.
+
+For a long time both were silent. Then Dick took Maisie's hand and
+called her by her name.
+
+She shook her head and looked out to sea.
+
+'Maisie, darling, doesn't it make any difference?'
+
+'No!' between clenched teeth. 'I'd--I'd tell you if it did; but it doesn't, Oh,
+Dick, please be sensible.'
+
+'Don't you think that it ever will?'
+
+'No, I'm sure it won't.'
+
+'Why?'
+
+Maisie rested her chin on her hand, and, still regarding the sea, spoke
+hurriedly--
+'I know what you want perfectly well, but I can't give it to you, Dick. It
+isn't my fault; indeed, it isn't. If I felt that I could care for any one----
+But I don't feel that I care. I simply don't understand what the feeling
+means.'
+
+'Is that true, dear?'
+
+'You've been very good to me, Dickie; and the only way I can pay you
+back is by speaking the truth. I daren't tell a fib. I despise myself quit
+enough as it is.'
+
+'What in the world for?'
+
+'Because--because I take everything that you give me and I give you
+nothing in return. It's mean and selfish of me, and whenever I think of it
+it worries me.'
+
+'Understand once for all, then, that I can manage my own affairs, and if I
+choose to do anything you aren't to blame. You haven't a single thing to
+reproach yourself with, darling.'
+
+'Yes, I have, and talking only makes it worse.'
+
+'Then don't talk about it.'
+
+'How can I help myself? If you find me alone for a minute you are always
+talking about it; and when you aren't you look it. You don't know how I
+despise myself sometimes.'
+
+'Great goodness!' said Dick, nearly jumping to his feet. 'Speak the truth
+now, Maisie, if you never speak it again! Do I--does this worrying bore
+you?'
+
+'No. It does not.'
+
+'You'd tell me if it did?'
+
+'I should let you know, I think.'
+
+'Thank you. The other thing is fatal. But you must learn to forgive a man
+when he's in love. He's always a nuisance. You must have known that?'
+
+Maisie did not consider the last question worth answering, and Dick was
+forced to repeat it.
+
+'There were other men, of course. They always worried just when I was
+in the middle of my work, and wanted me to listen to them.'
+
+'Did you listen?'
+
+'At first; and they couldn't understand why I didn't care. And they used
+to praise my pictures; and I thought they meant it. I used to be proud of
+the praise, and tell Kami, and--I shall never forget--once Kami laughed
+at me.'
+
+'You don't like being laughed at, Maisie, do you?'
+
+'I hate it. I never laugh at other people unless--unless they do bad work.
+
+Dick, tell me honestly what you think of my pictures generally,--of
+everything of mine that you've seen.'
+
+'"Honest, honest, and honest over!"' quoted Dick from a catchword of
+long ago. 'Tell me what Kami always says.'
+
+Maisie hesitated. 'He--he says that there is feeling in them.'
+
+'How dare you tell me a fib like that? Remember, I was under Kami for
+two years. I know exactly what he says.'
+
+'It isn't a fib.'
+
+'It's worse; it's a half-truth. Kami says, when he puts his head on one
+side,--so,--"Il y a du sentiment, mais il n'y a pas de parti pris."' He rolled
+the r threateningly, as Kami used to do.
+
+'Yes, that is what he says; and I'm beginning to think that he is right.'
+
+'Certainly he is.' Dick admitted that two people in the world could do and
+say no wrong. Kami was the man.
+
+'And now you say the same thing. It's so disheartening.'
+
+'I'm sorry, but you asked me to speak the truth. Besides, I love you too
+much to pretend about your work. It's strong, it's patient sometimes,--not
+always,--and sometimes there's power in it, but there's no special reason
+why it should be done at all. At least, that's how it strikes me.'
+
+'There's no special reason why anything in the world should ever be
+done. You know that as well as I do. I only want success.'
+
+'You're going the wrong way to get it, then. Hasn't Kami ever told you
+so?'
+
+'Don't quote Kami to me. I want to know what you think. My work's bad,
+to begin with.'
+
+'I didn't say that, and I don't think it.'
+
+'It's amateurish, then.'
+
+'That it most certainly is not. You're a work-woman, darling, to your
+boot-heels, and I respect you for that.'
+
+'You don't laugh at me behind my back?'
+
+'No, dear. You see, you are more to me than any one else. Put this cloak
+thing round you, or you'll get chilled.'
+
+Maisie wrapped herself in the soft marten skins, turning the gray
+kangaroo fur to the outside.
+
+'This is delicious,' she said, rubbing her chin thoughtfully along the fur.
+
+'Well? Why am I wrong in trying to get a little success?'
+
+'Just because you try. Don't you understand, darling? Good work has
+nothing to do with--doesn't belong to--the person who does it. It's put into
+him or her from outside.'
+
+'But how does that affect----'
+
+'Wait a minute. All we can do is to learn how to do our work, to be
+masters of our materials instead of servants, and never to be afraid of
+anything.'
+
+'I understand that.'
+
+'Everything else comes from outside ourselves. Very good. If we sit down
+quietly to work out notions that are sent to us, we may or we may not do
+something that isn't bad. A great deal depends on being master of the
+bricks and mortar of the trade. But the instant we begin to think about
+success and the effect of our work--to play with one eye on the
+gallery--we lose power and touch and everything else. At least that's how
+I have found it. Instead of being quiet and giving every power you possess
+to your work, you're fretting over something which you can neither help
+no hinder by a minute. See?'
+
+'It's so easy for you to talk in that way. People like what you do. Don't
+you ever think about the gallery?'
+
+'Much too often; but I'm always punished for it by loss of power. It's as
+simple as the Rule of Three. If we make light of our work by using it for
+our own ends, our work will make light of us, and, as we're the weaker,
+we shall suffer.'
+
+'I don't treat my work lightly. You know that it's everything to me.'
+
+'Of course; but, whether you realise it or not, you give two strokes for
+yourself to one for your work. It isn't your fault, darling. I do exactly the
+same thing, and know that I'm doing it. Most of the French schools, and
+all the schools here, drive the students to work for their own credit, and
+for the sake of their pride. I was told that all the world was interested in
+my work, and everybody at Kami's talked turpentine, and I honestly
+believed that the world needed elevating and influencing, and all manner
+of impertinences, by my brushes. By Jove, I actually believed that! When
+my little head was bursting with a notion that I couldn't handle because I
+hadn't sufficient knowledge of my craft, I used to run about wondering at
+my own magnificence and getting ready to astonish the world.'
+
+'But surely one can do that sometimes?'
+
+'Very seldom with malice aforethought, darling. And when it's done it's
+such a tiny thing, and the world's so big, and all but a millionth part of it
+doesn't care. Maisie, come with me and I'll show you something of the
+size of the world. One can no more avoid working than eating,--that goes
+on by itself,--but try to see what you are working for. I know such little
+heavens that I could take you to,--islands tucked away under the Line.
+
+You sight them after weeks of crashing through water as black as black
+marble because it's so deep, and you sit in the fore-chains day after day
+and see the sun rise almost afraid because the sea's so lonely.'
+
+'Who is afraid?--you, or the sun?'
+
+'The sun, of course. And there are noises under the sea, and sounds
+overhead in a clear sky. Then you find your island alive with hot moist
+orchids that make mouths at you and can do everything except talk.
+
+There's a waterfall in it three hundred feet high, just like a sliver of
+green jade laced with silver; and millions of wild bees live up in the
+rocks; and you can hear the fat cocoanuts falling from the palms; and
+you order an ivory-white servant to sling you a long yellow hammock
+with tassels on it like ripe maize, and you put up your feet and hear the
+bees hum and the water fall till you go to sleep.'
+
+'Can one work there?'
+
+'Certainly. One must do something always. You hang your canvas up in a
+palm tree and let the parrots criticise. When the scuffle you heave a ripe
+custard-apple at them, and it bursts in a lather of cream. There are
+hundreds of places. Come and see them.'
+
+'I don't quite like that place. It sounds lazy. Tell me another.'
+
+'What do you think of a big, red, dead city built of red sandstone, with
+raw green aloes growing between the stones, lying out neglected on
+honey-coloured sands? There are forty dead kings there, Maisie, each in
+a gorgeous tomb finer than all the others. You look at the palaces and
+streets and shops and tanks, and think that men must live there, till you
+find a wee gray squirrel rubbing its nose all alone in the market-place,
+and a jewelled peacock struts out of a carved doorway and spreads its
+tail against a marble screen as fine pierced as point-lace. Then a
+monkey--a little black monkey--walks through the main square to get a
+drink from a tank forty feet deep. He slides down the creepers to the
+water's edge, and a friend holds him by the tail, in case he should fall in.'
+
+'Is that all true?'
+
+'I have been there and seen. Then evening comes, and the lights change
+till it's just as though you stood in the heart of a king-opal. A little before
+sundown, as punctually as clockwork, a big bristly wild boar, with all his
+family following, trots through the city gate, churning the foam on his
+tusks. You climb on the shoulder of a blind black stone god and watch
+that pig choose himself a palace for the night and stump in wagging his
+tail. Then the night-wind gets up, and the sands move, and you hear the
+desert outside the city singing, "Now I lay me down to sleep," and
+everything is dark till the moon rises. Maisie, darling, come with me and
+see what the world is really like. It's very lovely, and it's very
+horrible,--but I won't let you see anything horrid,--and it doesn't care
+your life or mine for pictures or anything else except doing its own work
+and making love. Come, and I'll show you how to brew sangaree, and
+sling a hammock, and--oh, thousands of things, and you'll see for yourself
+what colour means, and we'll find out together what love means, and
+then, maybe, we shall be allowed to do some good work. Come away!'
+
+'Why?' said Maisie.
+
+'How can you do anything until you have seen everything, or as much as
+you can? And besides, darling, I love you. Come along with me. You have
+no business here; you don't belong to this place; you're half a
+gipsy,--your face tells that; and I--even the smell of open water makes me
+restless. Come across the sea and be happy!'
+
+He had risen to his feet, and stood in the shadow of the gun, looking down
+at the girl. The very short winter afternoon had worn away, and, before
+they knew, the winter moon was walking the untroubled sea. Long ruled
+lines of silver showed where a ripple of the rising tide was turning over
+the mud-banks. The wind had dropped, and in the intense stillness they
+could hear a donkey cropping the frosty grass many yards away. A faint
+beating, like that of a muffled drum, came out of the moon-haze.
+
+'What's that?' said Maisie, quickly. 'It sounds like a heart beating.
+
+Where is it?'
+
+Dick was so angry at this sudden wrench to his pleadings that he could
+not trust himself to speak, and in this silence caught the sound. Maisie
+from her seat under the gun watched him with a certain amount of fear.
+
+She wished so much that he would be sensible and cease to worry her
+with over-sea emotion that she both could and could not understand. She
+was not prepared, however, for the change in his face as he listened.
+
+'It's a steamer,' he said,--'a twin-screw steamer, by the beat. I can't make
+her out, but she must be standing very close in-shore. Ah!' as the red of a
+rocket streaked the haze, 'she's standing in to signal before she clears the
+Channel.'
+
+'Is it a wreck?' said Maisie, to whom these words were as Greek.
+
+Dick's eyes were turned to the sea. 'Wreck! What nonsense! She's only
+reporting herself. Red rocket forward--there's a green light aft now, and
+two red rockets from the bridge.'
+
+'What does that mean?'
+
+'It's the signal of the Cross Keys Line running to Australia. I wonder
+which steamer it is.' The note of his voice had changed; he seemed to be
+talking to himself, and Maisie did not approve of it. The moonlight broke
+the haze for a moment, touching the black sides of a long steamer
+working down Channel. 'Four masts and three funnels--she's in deep
+draught, too. That must be the Barralong, or the Bhutia. No, the Bhutia
+has a clopper bow. It's the Barralong, to Australia. She'll lift the
+Southern Cross in a week,--lucky old tub!--oh, lucky old tub!'
+
+He stared intently, and moved up the slope of the fort to get a better
+view, but the mist on the sea thickened again, and the beating of the
+screws grew fainter. Maisie called to him a little angrily, and he
+returned, still keeping his eyes to seaward. 'Have you ever seen the
+Southern Cross blazing right over your head?' he asked. 'It's superb!'
+
+'No,' she said shortly, 'and I don't want to. If you think it's so lovely, why
+don't you go and see it yourself?'
+
+She raised her face from the soft blackness of the marten skins about her
+throat, and her eyes shone like diamonds. The moonlight on the gray
+kangaroo fur turned it to frosted silver of the coldest.
+
+'By Jove, Maisie, you look like a little heathen idol tucked up there.' The
+eyes showed that they did not appreciate the compliment. 'I'm sorry,' he
+continued. 'The Southern Cross isn't worth looking at unless someone
+helps you to see. That steamer's out of hearing.'
+
+'Dick,' she said quietly, 'suppose I were to come to you now,--be quiet a
+minute,--just as I am, and caring for you just as much as I do.'
+
+'Not as a brother, though You said you didn't--in the Park.'
+
+'I never had a brother. Suppose I said, "Take me to those places, and in
+time, perhaps, I might really care for you," what would you do?'
+
+'Send you straight back to where you came from, in a cab. No, I
+wouldn't; I'd let you walk. But you couldn't do it, dear. And I wouldn't
+run the risk. You're worth waiting for till you can come without
+reservation.'
+
+'Do you honestly believe that?'
+
+'I have a hazy sort of idea that I do. Has it never struck you in that
+light?'
+
+'Ye--es. I feel so wicked about it.'
+
+'Wickeder than usual?'
+
+'You don't know all I think. It's almost too awful to tell.'
+
+'Never mind. You promised to tell me the truth--at least.'
+
+'It's so ungrateful of me, but--but, though I know you care for me, and I
+like to have you with me, I'd--I'd even sacrifice you, if that would bring
+me what I want.'
+
+'My poor little darling! I know that state of mind. It doesn't lead to good
+work.'
+
+'You aren't angry? Remember, I do despise myself.'
+
+'I'm not exactly flattered,--I had guessed as much before,--but I'm not
+angry. I'm sorry for you. Surely you ought to have left a littleness like
+that behind you, years ago.'
+
+'You've no right to patronise me! I only want what I have worked for so
+long. It came to you without any trouble, and--and I don't think it's fair.'
+
+'What can I do? I'd give ten years of my life to get you what you want.
+
+But I can't help you; even I can't help.'
+
+A murmur of dissent from Maisie. He went on--
+'And I know by what you have just said that you're on the wrong road to
+success. It isn't got at by sacrificing other people,--I've had that much
+knocked into me; you must sacrifice yourself, and live under orders, and
+never think for yourself, and never have real satisfaction in your work
+except just at the beginning, when you're reaching out after a notion.'
+
+'How can you believe all that?'
+
+'There's no question of belief or disbelief. That's the law, and you take it
+or refuse it as you please. I try to obey, but I can't, and then my work
+turns bad on my hands. Under any circumstances, remember, four-fifths
+of everybody's work must be bad. But the remnant is worth the trouble
+for it's own sake.'
+
+'Isn't it nice to get credit even for bad work?'
+
+'It's much too nice. But---- May I tell you something? It isn't a pretty
+tale, but you're so like a man that I forget when I'm talking to you.'
+
+'Tell me.'
+
+'Once when I was out in the Soudan I went over some ground that we
+had been fighting on for three days. There were twelve hundred dead;
+and we hadn't time to bury them.'
+
+'How ghastly!'
+
+'I had been at work on a big double-sheet sketch, and I was wondering
+what people would think of it at home. The sight of that field taught me a
+good deal. It looked just like a bed of horrible toadstools in all colours,
+and--I'd never seen men in bulk go back to their beginnings before. So I
+began to understand that men and women were only material to work
+with, and that what they said or did was of no consequence. See? Strictly
+speaking, you might just as well put your ear down to the palette to catch
+what your colours are saying.'
+
+'Dick, that's disgraceful!'
+
+'Wait a minute. I said, strictly speaking. Unfortunately, everybody must
+be either a man or a woman.'
+
+'I'm glad you allow that much.'
+
+'In your case I don't. You aren't a woman. But ordinary people, Maisie,
+must behave and work as such. That's what makes me so savage.' He
+hurled a pebble towards the sea as he spoke. 'I know that it is outside my
+business to care what people say; I can see that it spoils my output if I
+listen to 'em; and yet, confound it all,'--another pebble flew seaward,--'I
+can't help purring when I'm rubbed the right way. Even when I can see
+on a man's forehead that he is lying his way through a clump of pretty
+speeches, those lies make me happy and play the mischief with my hand.'
+
+'And when he doesn't say pretty things?'
+
+'Then, belovedest,'--Dick grinned,--'I forget that I am the steward of
+these gifts, and I want to make that man love and appreciate my work
+with a thick stick. It's too humiliating altogether; but I suppose even if
+one were an angel and painted humans altogether from outside, one
+would lose in touch what one gained in grip.'
+
+Maisie laughed at the idea of Dick as an angel.
+
+'But you seem to think,' she said, 'that everything nice spoils your hand.'
+
+'I don't think. It's the law,--just the same as it was at Mrs. Jennett's.
+
+Everything that is nice does spoil your hand. I'm glad you see so clearly.'
+
+'I don't like the view.'
+
+'Nor I. But--have got orders: what can do? Are you strong enough to face
+it alone?'
+
+'I suppose I must.'
+
+'Let me help, darling. We can hold each other very tight and try to walk
+straight. We shall blunder horribly, but it will be better than stumbling
+apart. Maisie, can't you see reason?'
+
+'I don't think we should get on together. We should be two of a trade, so
+we should never agree.'
+
+'How I should like to meet the man who made that proverb! He lived in a
+cave and ate raw bear, I fancy. I'd make him chew his own arrow-heads.
+
+Well?'
+
+'I should be only half married to you. I should worry and fuss about my
+work, as I do now. Four days out of the seven I'm not fit to speak to.'
+
+'You talk as if no one else in the world had ever used a brush. D'you
+suppose that I don't know the feeling of worry and bother and
+can't-get-at-ness? You're lucky if you only have it four days out of the
+seven. What difference would that make?'
+
+'A great deal--if you had it too.'
+
+'Yes, but I could respect it. Another man might not. He might laugh at
+you. But there's no use talking about it. If you can think in that way you
+can't care for me--yet.'
+
+The tide had nearly covered the mud-banks and twenty little ripples
+broke on the beach before Maisie chose to speak.
+
+'Dick,' she said slowly, 'I believe very much that you are better than I
+am.'
+
+'This doesn't seem to bear on the argument--but in what way?'
+
+'I don't quite know, but in what you said about work and things; and
+then you're so patient. Yes, you're better than I am.'
+
+Dick considered rapidly the murkiness of an average man's life. There
+was nothing in the review to fill him with a sense of virtue. He lifted the
+hem of the cloak to his lips.
+
+'Why,' said Maisie, making as though she had not noticed, 'can you see
+things that I can't? I don't believe what you believe; but you're right, I
+believe.'
+
+'If I've seen anything, God knows I couldn't have seen it but for you, and
+I know that I couldn't have said it except to you. You seemed to make
+everything clear for a minute; but I don't practice what I preach. You
+would help me. . . . There are only us two in the world for all purposes,
+and--and you like to have me with you?'
+
+'Of course I do. I wonder if you can realise how utterly lonely I am!'
+
+'Darling, I think I can.'
+
+'Two years ago, when I first took the little house, I used to walk up and
+down the back-garden trying to cry. I never can cry. Can you?'
+
+'It's some time since I tried. What was the trouble? Overwork?'
+
+'I don't know; but I used to dream that I had broken down, and had no
+money, and was starving in London. I thought about it all day, and it
+frightened me--oh, how it frightened me!'
+
+'I know that fear. It's the most terrible of all. It wakes me up in the night
+sometimes. You oughtn't to know anything about it.'
+
+'How do you know?'
+
+'Never mind. Is your three hundred a year safe?'
+
+'It's in Consols.'
+
+'Very well. If any one comes to you and recommends a better
+investment,--even if I should come to you,--don't you listen. Never shift
+the money for a minute, and never lend a penny of it,--even to the
+red-haired girl.'
+
+'Don't scold me so! I'm not likely to be foolish.'
+
+'The earth is full of men who'd sell their souls for three hundred a year;
+and women come and talk, and borrow a five-pound note here and a
+ten-pound note there; and a woman has no conscience in a money debt.
+
+Stick to your money, Maisie, for there's nothing more ghastly in the
+world than poverty in London. It's scared me. By Jove, it put the fear
+into me! And one oughtn't to be afraid of anything.'
+
+To each man is appointed his particular dread,--the terror that, if he does
+not fight against it, must cow him even to the loss of his manhood. Dick's
+experience of the sordid misery of want had entered into the deeps of
+him, and, lest he might find virtue too easy, that memory stood behind
+him, tempting to shame, when dealers came to buy his wares. As the
+Nilghai quaked against his will at the still green water of a lake or a
+mill-dam, as Torpenhow flinched before any white arm that could cut or
+stab and loathed himself for flinching, Dick feared the poverty he had
+once tasted half in jest. His burden was heavier than the burdens of his
+companions.
+
+Maisie watched the face working in the moonlight.
+
+'You've plenty of pennies now,' she said soothingly.
+
+'I shall never have enough,' he began, with vicious emphasis. Then,
+laughing, 'I shall always be three-pence short in my accounts.'
+
+'Why threepence?'
+
+'I carried a man's bag once from Liverpool Street Station to Blackfriar's
+Bridge. It was a sixpenny job,--you needn't laugh; indeed it was,--and I
+wanted the money desperately. He only gave me threepence; and he
+hadn't even the decency to pay in silver. Whatever money I make, I shall
+never get that odd threepence out of the world.'
+
+This was not language befitting the man who had preached of the
+sanctity of work. It jarred on Maisie, who preferred her payment in
+applause, which, since all men desire it, must be of he right. She hunted
+for her little purse and gravely took out a threepenny bit.
+
+'There it is,' she said. 'I'll pay you, Dickie; and don't worry any more; it
+isn't worth while. Are you paid?'
+
+'I am,' said the very human apostle of fair craft, taking the coin. 'I'm
+paid a thousand times, and we'll close that account. It shall live on my
+watch-chain; and you're an angel, Maisie.'
+
+'I'm very cramped, and I'm feeling a little cold. Good gracious! the cloak
+is all white, and so is your moustache! I never knew it was so chilly.'
+
+A light frost lay white on the shoulder of Dick's ulster. He, too, had
+forgotten the state of the weather. They laughed together, and with that
+laugh ended all serious discourse.
+
+They ran inland across the waste to warm themselves, then turned to
+look at the glory of the full tide under the moonlight and the intense
+black shadows of the furze bushes. It was an additional joy to Dick that
+Maisie could see colour even as he saw it,--could see the blue in the white
+of the mist, the violet that is in gray palings, and all things else as they
+are,--not of one hue, but a thousand. And the moonlight came into
+Maisie's soul, so that she, usually reserved, chattered of herself and of
+the things she took interest in,--of Kami, wisest of teachers, and of the
+girls in the studio,--of the Poles, who will kill themselves with overwork if
+they are not checked; of the French, who talk at great length of much
+more than they will ever accomplish; of the slovenly English, who toil
+hopelessly and cannot understand that inclination does not imply power;
+of the Americans, whose rasping voices in the hush of a hot afternoon
+strain tense-drawn nerves to breaking-point, and whose suppers lead to
+indigestion; of tempestuous Russians, neither to hold nor to bind, who tell
+the girls ghost-stories till the girls shriek; of stolid Germans, who come to
+learn one thing, and, having mastered that much, stolidly go away and
+copy pictures for evermore. Dick listened enraptured because it was
+Maisie who spoke. He knew the old life.
+
+'It hasn't changed much,' he said. 'Do they still steal colours at
+lunch-time?'
+
+'Not steal. Attract is the word. Of course they do. I'm good--I only attract
+ultramarine; but there are students who'd attract flake-white.'
+
+'I've done it myself. You can't help it when the palettes are hung up.
+
+Every colour is common property once it runs down,--even though you
+do start it with a drop of oil. It teaches people not to waste their tubes.'
+
+'I should like to attract some of your colours, Dick. Perhaps I might catch
+your success with them.'
+
+'I mustn't say a bad word, but I should like to. What in the world, which
+you've just missed a lovely chance of seeing, does success or want of
+success, or a three-storied success, matter compared with---- No, I won't
+open that question again. It's time to go back to town.'
+
+'I'm sorry, Dick, but----'
+
+'You're much more interested in that than you are in me.'
+
+'I don't know, I don't think I am.'
+
+'What will you give me if I tell you a sure short-cut to everything you
+want,--the trouble and the fuss and the tangle and all the rest? Will you
+promise to obey me?'
+
+'Of course.'
+
+'In the first place, you must never forget a meal because you happen to
+be at work. You forgot your lunch twice last week,' said Dick, at a
+venture, for he knew with whom he was dealing.'
+
+'No, no,--only once, really.'
+
+'That's bad enough. And you mustn't take a cup of tea and a biscuit in
+place of a regular dinner, because dinner happens to be a trouble.'
+
+'You're making fun of me!'
+
+'I never was more in earnest in my life. Oh, my love, my love, hasn't it
+dawned on you yet what you are to me? Here's the whole earth in a
+conspiracy to give you a chill, or run over you, or drench you to the skin,
+or cheat you out of your money, or let you die of overwork and
+underfeeding, and I haven't the mere right to look after you. Why, I
+don't even know if you have sense enough to put on warm things when
+the weather's cold.'
+
+'Dick, you're the most awful boy to talk to--really! How do you suppose I
+managed when you were away?'
+
+'I wasn't here, and I didn't know. But now I'm back I'd give everything I
+have for the right of telling you to come in out of the rain.'
+
+'Your success too?'
+
+This time it cost Dick a severe struggle to refrain from bad words.
+
+'As Mrs. Jennett used to say, you're a trial, Maisie! You've been cooped
+up in the schools too long, and you think every one is looking at you.
+
+There aren't twelve hundred people in the world who understand
+pictures. The others pretend and don't care. Remember, I've seen twelve
+hundred men dead in toadstool-beds. It's only the voice of the tiniest little
+fraction of people that makes success. The real world doesn't care a
+tinker's--doesn't care a bit. For aught you or I know, every man in the
+world may be arguing with a Maisie of his own.'
+
+'Poor Maisie!'
+
+'Poor Dick, I think. Do you believe while he's fighting for what's dearer
+than his life he wants to look at a picture? And even if he did, and if all
+the world did, and a thousand million people rose up and shouted hymns
+to my honour and glory, would that make up to me for the knowledge
+that you were out shopping in the Edgware Road on a rainy day without
+an umbrella? Now we'll go to the station.'
+
+'But you said on the beach----' persisted Maisie, with a certain fear.
+
+Dick groaned aloud: 'Yes, I know what I said. My work is everything I
+have, or am, or hope to be, to me, and I believe I've learnt the law that
+governs it; but I've some lingering sense of fun left,--though you've
+nearly knocked it out of me. I can just see that it isn't everything to all
+the world. Do what I say, and not what I do.'
+
+Maisie was careful not to reopen debatable matters, and they returned to
+London joyously. The terminus stopped Dick in the midst of an eloquent
+harangue on the beauties of exercise. He would buy Maisie a horse,--such
+a horse as never yet bowed head to bit,--would stable it, with a
+companion, some twenty miles from London, and Maisie, solely for her
+health's sake should ride with him twice or thrice a week.
+
+'That's absurd,' said she. 'It wouldn't be proper.'
+
+'Now, who in all London to-night would have sufficient interest or
+audacity to call us two to account for anything we chose to do?'
+
+Maisie looked at the lamps, the fog, and the hideous turmoil. Dick was
+right; but horseflesh did not make for Art as she understood it.
+
+'You're very nice sometimes, but you're very foolish more times. I'm not
+going to let you give me horses, or take you out of your way to-night. I'll
+go home by myself. Only I want you to promise me something. You won't
+think any more about that extra threepence, will you? Remember, you've
+been paid; and I won't allow you to be spiteful and do bad work for a
+little thing like that. You can be so big that you mustn't be tiny.'
+
+This was turning the tables with a vengeance. There remained only to
+put Maisie into her hansom.
+
+'Good-bye,' she said simply. 'You'll come on Sunday. It has been a
+beautiful day, Dick. Why can't it be like this always?'
+
+'Because love's like line-work: you must go forward or backward; you
+can't stand still. By the way, go on with your line-work. Good-night, and,
+for my--for my sake, take care of yourself.'
+
+He turned to walk home, meditating. The day had brought him nothing
+that he hoped for, but--surely this was worth many days--it had brought
+him nearer to Maisie. The end was only a question of time now, and the
+prize well worth the waiting. By instinct, once more, he turned to the
+river.
+
+'And she understood at once,' he said, looking at the water. 'She found
+out my pet besetting sin on the spot, and paid it off. My God, how she
+understood! And she said I was better than she was! Better than she
+was!' He laughed at the absurdity of the notion. 'I wonder if girls guess
+at one-half a man's life. They can't, or--they wouldn't marry us.' He took
+her gift out of his pocket, and considered it in the light of a miracle and a
+pledge of the comprehension that, one day, would lead to perfect
+happiness. Meantime, Maisie was alone in London, with none to save her
+from danger. And the packed wilderness was very full of danger.
+
+Dick made his prayer to Fate disjointedly after the manner of the
+heathen as he threw the piece of silver into the river. If any evil were to
+befal, let him bear the burden and let Maisie go unscathed, since the
+threepenny piece was dearest to him of all his possessions. It was a small
+coin in itself, but Maisie had given it, and the Thames held it, and surely
+the Fates would be bribed for this once.
+
+The drowning of the coin seemed to cut him free from thought of Maisie
+for the moment. He took himself off the bridge and went whistling to his
+chambers with a strong yearning for some man-talk and tobacco after his
+first experience of an entire day spent in the society of a woman. There
+was a stronger desire at his heart when there rose before him an
+unsolicited vision of the Barralong dipping deep and sailing free for the
+Southern Cross.
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+And these two, as I have told you,
+Were the friends of Hiawatha,
+Chibiabos, the musician,
+And the very strong man, Kwasind.
+
+--Hiawatha.?
+
+TORPENHOW was paging the last sheets of some manuscript, while the
+Nilghai, who had come for chess and remained to talk tactics, was
+reading through the first part, commenting scornfully the while.
+
+'It's picturesque enough and it's sketchy,' said he; 'but as a serious
+consideration of affairs in Eastern Europe, it's not worth much.'
+
+'It's off my hands at any rate. . . . Thirty-seven, thirty-eight, thirty-nine
+slips altogether, aren't there? That should make between eleven and
+twelve pages of valuable misinformation. Heigho!' Torpenhow shuffled
+the writing together and hummed--
+
+Young lambs to sell, young lambs to sell,
+If I'd as much money as I could tell,
+I never would cry, Young lambs to sell!
+?
+
+Dick entered, self-conscious and a little defiant, but in the best of tempers
+with all the world.
+
+'Back at last?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'More or less. What have you been doing?'
+
+'Work. Dickie, you behave as though the Bank of England were behind
+you. Here's Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday gone and you haven't done a
+line. It's scandalous.'
+
+'The notions come and go, my children--they come and go like our
+'baccy,' he answered, filling his pipe. 'Moreover,' he stooped to thrust a
+spill into the grate, 'Apollo does not always stretch his---- Oh, confound
+your clumsy jests, Nilghai!'
+
+'This is not the place to preach the theory of direct inspiration,' said the
+Nilghai, returning Torpenhow's large and workmanlike bellows to their
+nail on the wall. 'We believe in cobblers' wax. La!--where you sit down.'
+
+'If you weren't so big and fat,' said Dick, looking round for a weapon,
+'I'd----'
+
+'No skylarking in my rooms. You two smashed half my furniture last
+time you threw the cushions about. You might have the decency to say
+How d'you do? to Binkie. Look at him.'
+
+Binkie had jumped down from the sofa and was fawning round Dick's
+knee, and scratching at his boots.
+
+'Dear man!' said Dick, snatching him up, and kissing him on the black
+patch above his right eye. 'Did ums was, Binks? Did that ugly Nilghai
+turn you off the sofa? Bite him, Mr. Binkie.' He pitched him on the
+Nilghai's stomach, as the big man lay at ease, and Binkie pretended to
+destroy the Nilghai inch by inch, till a sofa cushion extinguished him, and
+panting he stuck out his tongue at the company.
+
+'The Binkie-boy went for a walk this morning before you were up, Torp.
+
+I saw him making love to the butcher at the corner when the shutters
+were being taken down--just as if he hadn't enough to eat in his own
+proper house,' said Dick.
+
+'Binks, is that a true bill?' said Torpenhow, severely. The little dog
+retreated under the sofa cushion, and showed by the fat white back of
+him that he really had no further interest in the discussion.
+
+'Strikes me that another disreputable dog went for a walk, too,' said the
+Nilghai. 'What made you get up so early? Torp said you might be buying
+a horse.'
+
+'He knows it would need three of us for a serious business like that. No, I
+felt lonesome and unhappy, so I went out to look at the sea, and watch the
+pretty ships go by.'
+
+'Where did you go?'
+
+'Somewhere on the Channel. Progly or Snigly, or some watering-place
+was its name; I've forgotten; but it was only two hours' run from London
+and the ships went by.'
+
+'Did you see anything you knew?'
+
+'Only the Barralong outwards to Australia, and an Odessa grain-boat
+loaded down by the head. It was a thick day, but the sea smelt good.'
+
+'Wherefore put on one's best trousers to see the Barralong?' said
+Torpenhow, pointing.
+
+'Because I've nothing except these things and my painting duds. Besides,
+I wanted to do honour to the sea.'
+
+'Did She make you feel restless?' asked the Nilghai, keenly.
+
+'Crazy. Don't speak of it. I'm sorry I went.'
+
+Torpenhow and the Nilghai exchanged a look as Dick, stooping, busied
+himself among the former's boots and trees.
+
+'These will do,' he said at last; 'I can't say I think much of your taste in
+slippers, but the fit's the thing.' He slipped his feet into a pair of sock-like
+sambhur-skin foot coverings, found a long chair, and lay at length.
+
+'They're my own pet pair,' Torpenhow said. 'I was just going to put them
+on myself.'
+
+'All your reprehensible selfishness. Just because you see me happy for a
+minute, you want to worry me and stir me up. Find another pair.'
+
+'Good for you that Dick can't wear your clothes, Torp. You two live
+communistically,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Dick never has anything that I can wear. He's only useful to sponge
+upon.'
+
+'Confound you, have you been rummaging round among my clothes,
+then?' said Dick. 'I put a sovereign in the tobacco-jar yesterday. How do
+you expect a man to keep his accounts properly if you----'
+
+Here the Nilghai began to laugh, and Torpenhow joined him.
+
+'Hid a sovereign yesterday! You're no sort of financier. You lent me a
+fiver about a month back. Do you remember?' Torpenhow said.
+
+'Yes, of course.'
+
+'Do you remember that I paid it you ten days later, and you put it at the
+bottom of the tobacco?'
+
+'By Jove, did I? I thought it was in one of my colour-boxes.'
+
+'You thought! About a week ago I went into your studio to get some
+'baccy and found it.'
+
+'What did you do with it?'
+
+'Took the Nilghai to a theatre and fed him.'
+
+'You couldn't feed the Nilghai under twice the money--not though you
+gave him Army beef. Well, I suppose I should have found it out sooner or
+later. What is there to laugh at?'
+
+'You're a most amazing cuckoo in many directions,' said the Nilghai, still
+chuckling over the thought of the dinner. 'Never mind. We had both been
+working very hard, and it was your unearned increment we spent, and as
+you're only a loafer it didn't matter.'
+
+'That's pleasant--from the man who is bursting with my meat, too. I'll get
+that dinner back one of these days. Suppose we go to a theatre now.'
+
+'Put our boots on,--and dress,--and wash?' The Nilghai spoke very lazily.
+
+'I withdraw the motion.'
+
+'Suppose, just for a change--as a startling variety, you know--we, that is
+to say we, get our charcoal and our canvas and go on with our work.'
+
+Torpenhow spoke pointedly, but Dick only wriggled his toes inside the
+soft leather moccasins.
+
+'What a one-ideaed clucker that is! If I had any unfinished figures on
+hand, I haven't any model; if I had my model, I haven't any spray, and I
+never leave charcoal unfixed overnight; and if I had my spray and
+twenty photographs of backgrounds, I couldn't do anything to-night. I
+don't feel that way.'
+
+'Binkie-dog, he's a lazy hog, isn't he?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Very good, I will do some work,' said Dick, rising swiftly. 'I'll fetch the
+Nungapunga Book, and we'll add another picture to the Nilghai Saga.'
+
+'Aren't you worrying him a little too much?' asked the Nilghai, when
+Dick had left the room.
+
+'Perhaps, but I know what he can turn out if he likes. It makes me savage
+to hear him praised for past work when I know what he ought to do. You
+and I are arranged for----'
+
+'By Kismet and our own powers, more's the pity. I have dreamed of a
+good deal.'
+
+'So have I, but we know our limitations now. I'm dashed if I know what
+Dick's may be when he gives himself to his work. That's what makes me
+so keen about him.'
+
+'And when all's said and done, you will be put aside--quite rightly--for a
+female girl.'
+
+'I wonder . . . Where do you think he has been to-day?'
+
+'To the sea. Didn't you see the look in his eyes when he talked about her?
+He's as restless as a swallow in autumn.'
+
+'Yes; but did he go alone?'
+
+'I don't know, and I don't care, but he has the beginnings of the go-fever
+upon him. He wants to up-stakes and move out. There's no mistaking the
+signs. Whatever he may have said before, he has the call upon him now.'
+
+'It might be his salvation,' Torpenhow said.
+
+'Perhaps--if you care to take the responsibility of being a saviour.'
+
+Dick returned with the big clasped sketch-book that the Nilghai knew
+well and did not love too much. In it Dick had drawn all manner of
+moving incidents, experienced by himself or related to him by the others,
+of all the four corners of the earth. But the wider range of the Nilghai's
+body and life attracted him most. When truth failed he fell back on
+fiction of the wildest, and represented incidents in the Nilghai's career
+that were unseemly,--his marriages with many African princesses, his
+shameless betrayal, for Arab wives, of an army corps to the Mahdi, his
+tattooment by skilled operators in Burmah, his interview (and his fears)
+with the yellow headsman in the blood-stained execution-ground of
+Canton, and finally, the passings of his spirit into the bodies of whales,
+elephants, and toucans. Torpenhow from time to time had added rhymed
+descriptions, and the whole was a curious piece of art, because Dick
+decided, having regard to the name of the book which being interpreted
+means 'naked,' that it would be wrong to draw the Nilghai with any
+clothes on, under any circumstances. Consequently the last sketch,
+representing that much-enduring man calling on the War Office to press
+his claims to the Egyptian medal, was hardly delicate. He settled himself
+comfortably on Torpenhow's table and turned over the pages.
+
+'What a fortune you would have been to Blake, Nilghai!' he said. 'There's
+a succulent pinkness about some of these sketches that's more than
+life-like. "The Nilghai surrounded while bathing by the Mahdieh"--that
+was founded on fact, eh?'
+
+'It was very nearly my last bath, you irreverent dauber. Has Binkie come
+into the Saga yet?'
+
+'No; the Binkie-boy hasn't done anything except eat and kill cats. Let's
+see. Here you are as a stained-glass saint in a church. Deuced decorative
+lines about your anatomy; you ought to be grateful for being handed
+down to posterity in this way. Fifty years hence you'll exist in rare and
+curious facsimiles at ten guineas each. What shall I try this time? The
+domestic life of the Nilghai?'
+
+'Hasn't got any.'
+
+'The undomestic life of the Nilghai, then. Of course. Mass-meeting of his
+wives in Trafalgar Square. That's it. They came from the ends of the
+earth to attend Nilghai's wedding to an English bride. This shall be an
+epic. It's a sweet material to work with.'
+
+'It's a scandalous waste of time,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Don't worry; it keeps one's hand in--specially when you begin without
+the pencil.' He set to work rapidly. 'That's Nelson's Column. Presently
+the Nilghai will appear shinning up it.'
+
+'Give him some clothes this time.'
+
+'Certainly--a veil and an orange-wreath, because he's been married.'
+
+'Gad, that's clever enough!' said Torpenhow over his shoulder, as Dick
+brought out of the paper with three twirls of the brush a very fat back
+and labouring shoulder pressed against stone.
+
+'Just imagine,' Dick continued, 'if we could publish a few of these dear
+little things every time the Nilghai subsidises a man who can write, to
+give the public an honest opinion of my pictures.'
+
+'Well, you'll admit I always tell you when I have done anything of that
+kind. I know I can't hammer you as you ought to be hammered, so I give
+the job to another. Young Maclagan, for instance----'
+
+'No-o--one half-minute, old man; stick your hand out against the dark of
+the wall-paper--you only burble and call me names. That left shoulder's
+out of drawing. I must literally throw a veil over that. Where's my
+pen-knife? Well, what about Maclagan?'
+
+'I only gave him his riding-orders to--to lambast you on general
+principles for not producing work that will last.'
+
+'Whereupon that young fool,'--Dick threw back his head and shut one
+eye as he shifted the page under his hand,--'being left alone with an
+ink-pot and what he conceived were his own notions, went and spilt them
+both over me in the papers. You might have engaged a grown man for
+the business, Nilghai. How do you think the bridal veil looks now, Torp?'
+
+'How the deuce do three dabs and two scratches make the stuff stand
+away from the body as it does?' said Torpenhow, to whom Dick's
+methods were always new.
+
+'It just depends on where you put 'em. If Maclagan had know that much
+about his business he might have done better.'
+
+'Why don't you put the damned dabs into something that will stay, then?'
+
+insisted the Nilghai, who had really taken considerable trouble in hiring
+for Dick's benefit the pen of a young gentleman who devoted most of his
+waking hours to an anxious consideration of the aims and ends of Art,
+which, he wrote, was one and indivisible.
+
+'Wait a minute till I see how I am going to manage my procession of
+wives. You seem to have married extensively, and I must rough 'em in
+with the pencil--Medes, Parthians, Edomites. . . . Now, setting aside the
+weakness and the wickedness and--and the fat-headedness of deliberately
+trying to do work that will live, as they call it, I'm content with the
+knowledge that I've done my best up to date, and I shan't do anything
+like it again for some hours at least--probably years. Most probably
+never.'
+
+'What! any stuff you have in stock your best work?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Anything you've sold?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Oh no. It isn't here and it isn't sold. Better than that, it can't be sold, and
+I don't think any one knows where it is. I'm sure I don't. . . . And yet
+more and more wives, on the north side of the square. Observe the
+virtuous horror of the lions!'
+
+'You may as well explain,' said Torpenhow, and Dick lifted his head from
+the paper.
+
+'The sea reminded me of it,' he said slowly. 'I wish it hadn't. It weighs
+some few thousand tons--unless you cut it out with a cold chisel.'
+
+'Don't be an idiot. You can't pose with us here,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'There's no pose in the matter at all. It's a fact. I was loafing from Lima
+to Auckland in a big, old, condemned passenger-ship turned into a
+cargo-boat and owned by a second-had Italian firm. She was a crazy
+basket. We were cut down to fifteen ton of coal a day, and we thought
+ourselves lucky when we kicked seven knots an hour out of her. Then we
+used to stop and let the bearings cool down, and wonder whether the
+crack in the shaft was spreading.'
+
+'Were you a steward or a stoker in those days?'
+
+'I was flush for the time being, so I was a passenger, or else I should have
+been a steward, I think,' said Dick, with perfect gravity, returning to the
+procession of angry wives. 'I was the only other passenger from Lima,
+and the ship was half empty, and full of rats and cockroaches and
+scorpions.'
+
+'But what has this to do with the picture?'
+
+'Wait a minute. She had been in the China passenger trade and her lower
+decks had bunks for two thousand pigtails. Those were all taken down,
+and she was empty up to her nose, and the lights came through the port
+holes--most annoying lights to work in till you got used to them. I hadn't
+anything to do for weeks. The ship's charts were in pieces and our
+skipper daren't run south for fear of catching a storm. So he did his best
+to knock all the Society Islands out of the water one by one, and I went
+into the lower deck, and did my picture on the port side as far forward in
+her as I could go. There was some brown paint and some green paint that
+they used for the boats, and some black paint for ironwork, and that was
+all I had.'
+
+'The passengers must have thought you mad.'
+
+'There was only one, and it was a woman; but it gave me the notion of
+my picture.'
+
+'What was she like?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'She was a sort of Negroid-Jewess-Cuban; with morals to match. She
+couldn't read or write, and she didn't want to, but she used to come down
+and watch me paint, and the skipper didn't like it, because he was paying
+her passage and had to be on the bridge occasionally.'
+
+'I see. That must have been cheerful.'
+
+'It was the best time I ever had. To begin with, we didn't know whether
+we should go up or go down any minute when there was a sea on; and
+when it was calm it was paradise; and the woman used to mix the paints
+and talk broken English, and the skipper used to steal down every few
+minutes to the lower deck, because he said he was afraid of fire. So, you
+see, we could never tell when we might be caught, and I had a splendid
+notion to work out in only three keys of colour.'
+
+'What was the notion?'
+
+'Two lines in Poe--
+
+Neither the angles in Heaven above nor the demons down under the sea,
+Can ever dissever my soul from the soul of the beautiful Annabel Lee.
+
+It came out of the sea--all by itself. I drew that fight, fought out in green
+water over the naked, choking soul, and the woman served as the model
+for the devils and the angels both--sea-devils and sea-angels, and the soul
+half drowned between them. It doesn't sound much, but when there was
+a good light on the lower deck it looked very fine and creepy. It was
+seven by fourteen feet, all done in shifting light for shifting light.'
+
+'Did the woman inspire you much?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'She and the sea between them--immensely. There was a heap of bad
+drawing in that picture. I remember I went out of my way to foreshorten
+for sheer delight of doing it, and I foreshortened damnably, but for all
+that it's the best thing I've ever done; and now I suppose the ship's
+broken up or gone down. Whew! What a time that was!'
+
+'What happened after all?'
+
+'It all ended. They were loading her with wool when I left the ship, but
+even the stevedores kept the picture clear to the last. The eyes of the
+demons scared them, I honestly believe.'
+
+'And the woman?'
+
+'She was scared too when it was finished. She used to cross herself before
+she went down to look at it. Just three colours and no chance of getting
+any more, and the sea outside and unlimited love-making inside, and the
+fear of death atop of everything else, O Lord!' He had ceased to look at
+the sketch, but was staring straight in front of him across the room.
+
+'Why don't you try something of the same kind now?' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Because those things come not by fasting and prayer. When I find a
+cargo-boat and a Jewess-Cuban and another notion and the same old life,
+I may.'
+
+'You won't find them here,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'No, I shall not.' Dick shut the sketch-book with a bang. 'This room's as
+hot as an oven. Open the window, some one.'
+
+He leaned into the darkness, watching the greater darkness of London
+below him. The chambers stood much higher than the other houses,
+commanding a hundred chimneys--crooked cowls that looked like sitting
+cats as they swung round, and other uncouth brick and zinc mysteries
+supported by iron stanchions and clamped by 8-pieces. Northward the
+lights of Piccadilly Circus and Leicester Square threw a copper-coloured
+glare above the black roofs, and southward by all the orderly lights of the
+Thames. A train rolled out across one of the railway bridges, and its
+thunder drowned for a minute the dull roar of the streets. The Nilghai
+looked at his watch and said shortly, 'That's the Paris night-mail. You
+can book from here to St. Petersburg if you choose.'
+
+Dick crammed head and shoulders out of the window and looked across
+the river. Torpenhow came to his side, while the Nilghai passed over
+quietly to the piano and opened it. Binkie, making himself as large as
+possible, spread out upon the sofa with the air of one who is not to be
+lightly disturbed.
+
+'Well,' said the Nilghai to the two pairs of shoulders, 'have you never
+seen this place before?'
+
+A steam-tug on the river hooted as she towed her barges to wharf. Then
+the boom of the traffic came into the room. Torpenhow nudged Dick.
+
+'Good place to bank in--bad place to bunk in, Dickie, isn't it?'
+
+Dick's chin was in his hand as he answered, in the words of a general not
+without fame, still looking out on the darkness--'"My God, what a city to
+loot!"'
+
+Binkie found the night air tickling his whiskers and sneezed plaintively.
+
+'We shall give the Binkie-dog a cold,' said Torpenhow. 'Come in,' and
+they withdrew their heads. 'You'll be buried in Kensal Green, Dick, one
+of these days, if it isn't closed by the time you want to go there--buried
+within two feet of some one else, his wife and his family.'
+
+'Allah forbid! I shall get away before that time comes. Give a man room
+to stretch his legs, Mr. Binkie.' Dick flung himself down on the sofa and
+tweaked Binkie's velvet ears, yawning heavily the while.
+
+'You'll find that wardrobe-case very much out of tune,' Torpenhow said
+to the Nilghai. 'It's never touched except by you.'
+
+'A piece of gross extravagance,' Dick grunted. 'The Nilghai only comes
+when I'm out.'
+
+'That's because you're always out. Howl, Nilghai, and let him hear.'?
+
+'The life of the Nilghai is fraud and slaughter,
+His writings are watered Dickens and water;
+But the voice of the Nilghai raised on high
+Makes even the Mahdieh glad to die!'?
+
+Dick quoted from Torpenhow's letterpress in the Nungapunga Book.
+
+'How do they call moose in Canada, Nilghai?'
+
+The man laughed. Singing was his one polite accomplishment, as many
+Press-tents in far-off lands had known.
+
+'What shall I sing?' said he, turning in the chair.
+
+'"Moll Roe in the Morning,"' said Torpenhow, at a venture.
+
+'No,' said Dick, sharply, and the Nilghai opened his eyes. The old chanty
+whereof he, among a very few, possessed all the words was not a pretty
+one, but Dick had heard it many times before without wincing. Without
+prelude he launched into that stately tune that calls together and troubles
+the hearts of the gipsies of the sea--
+
+'Farewell and adieu to you, Spanish ladies,
+Farewell and adieu to you, ladies of Spain.'?
+
+Dick turned uneasily on the sofa, for he could hear the bows of the
+Barralong crashing into the green seas on her way to the Southern Cross.
+
+Then came the chorus--
+
+'We'll rant and we'll roar like true British sailors,
+We'll rant and we'll roar across the salt seas,
+Until we take soundings in the Channel of Old England
+From Ushant to Scilly 'tis forty-five leagues.'?
+
+'Thirty-five-thirty-five,' said Dick, petulantly. 'Don't tamper with Holy
+Writ. Go on, Nilghai.'?
+
+'The first land we made it was called the Deadman,'?
+
+and they sang to the end very vigourously.
+
+'That would be a better song if her head were turned the other way--to
+the Ushant light, for instance,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Flinging his arms about like a mad windmill,' said Torpenhow. 'Give us
+something else, Nilghai. You're in fine fog-horn form tonight.'
+
+'Give us the "Ganges Pilot"; you sang that in the square the night before
+El-Maghrib. By the way, I wonder how many of the chorus are alive
+to-night,' said Dick.
+
+Torpenhow considered for a minute. 'By Jove! I believe only you and I.
+
+Raynor, Vicery, and Deenes--all dead; Vincent caught smallpox in Cairo,
+carried it here and died of it. Yes, only you and I and the Nilghai.'
+
+'Umph! And yet the men here who've done their work in a well-warmed
+studio all their lives, with a policeman at each corner, say that I charge
+too much for my pictures.'
+
+'They are buying your work, not your insurance policies, dear child,'
+
+said the Nilghai.
+
+'I gambled with one to get at the other. Don't preach. Go on with the
+"Pilot." Where in the world did you get that song?'
+
+'On a tombstone,' said the Nilghai. 'On a tombstone in a distant land. I
+made it an accompaniment with heaps of base chords.'
+
+'Oh, Vanity! Begin.' And the Nilghai began--
+
+'I have slipped my cable, messmates, I'm drifting down with the tide,
+I have my sailing orders, while yet an anchor ride.
+
+And never on fair June morning have I put out to sea
+With clearer conscience or better hope, or a heart more light and free.
+
+'Shoulder to shoulder, Joe, my boy, into the crowd like a wedge
+Strike with the hangers, messmates, but do not cut with the edge.
+
+Cries Charnock, "Scatter the faggots, double that Brahmin in two,
+The tall pale widow for me, Joe, the little brown girl for you!"
+
+'Young Joe (you're nearing sixty), why is your hide so dark?
+Katie has soft fair blue eyes, who blackened yours?--Why, hark!'?
+
+They were all singing now, Dick with the roar of the wind of the open sea
+about his ears as the deep bass voice let itself go.
+
+'The morning gun--Ho, steady! the arquebuses to me!?
+
+I ha' sounded the Dutch High Admiral's heart as my lead doth sound the
+sea.
+
+'Sounding, sounding the Ganges, floating down with the tide,
+Moore me close to Charnock, next to my nut-brown bride.
+
+My blessing to Kate at Fairlight--Holwell, my thanks to you;
+Steady! We steer for heaven, through sand-drifts cold and blue.'?
+
+'Now what is there in that nonsense to make a man restless?' said Dick,
+hauling Binkie from his feet to his chest.
+
+'It depends on the man,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'The man who has been down to look at the sea,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I didn't know she was going to upset me in this fashion.'
+
+'That's what men say when they go to say good-bye to a woman. It's
+more easy though to get rid of three women than a piece of one's life and
+surroundings.'
+
+'But a woman can be----' began Dick, unguardedly.
+
+'A piece of one's life,' continued Torpenhow. 'No, she can't. His face
+darkened for a moment. 'She says she wants to sympathise with you and
+help you in your work, and everything else that clearly a man must do
+for himself. Then she sends round five notes a day to ask why the dickens
+you haven't been wasting your time with her.'
+
+'Don't generalise,' said the Nilghai. 'By the time you arrive at five notes a
+day you must have gone through a good deal and behaved accordingly.
+
+Shouldn't begin these things, my son.'
+
+'I shouldn't have gone down to the sea,' said Dick, just a little anxious to
+change the conversation. 'And you shouldn't have sung.'
+
+'The sea isn't sending you five notes a day,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'No, but I'm fatally compromised. She's an enduring old hag, and I'm
+sorry I ever met her. Why wasn't I born and bred and dead in a
+three-pair back?'
+
+'Hear him blaspheming his first love! Why in the world shouldn't you
+listen to her?' said Torpenhow.
+
+Before Dick could reply the Nilghai lifted up his voice with a shout that
+shook the windows, in 'The Men of the Sea,' that begins, as all know,
+'The sea is a wicked old woman,' and after rading through eight lines
+whose imagery is truthful, ends in a refrain, slow as the clacking of a
+capstan when the boat comes unwillingly up to the bars where the men
+sweat and tramp in the shingle.
+
+'"Ye that bore us, O restore us!?
+
+She is kinder than ye;
+For the call is on our heart-strings!"
+Said The Men of the Sea.'?
+
+The Nilghai sang that verse twice, with simple cunning, intending that
+Dick should hear. But Dick was waiting for the farewell of the men to
+their wives.
+
+'"Ye that love us, can ye move us?
+She is dearer than ye;
+And your sleep will be the sweeter,"
+Said The Men of the Sea.'?
+
+The rough words beat like the blows of the waves on the bows of the
+rickety boat from Lima in the days when Dick was mixing paints, making
+love, drawing devils and angels in the half dark, and wondering whether
+the next minute would put the Italian captain's knife between his
+shoulder-blades. And the go-fever which is more real than many doctors'
+
+diseases, waked and raged, urging him who loved Maisie beyond
+anything in the world, to go away and taste the old hot, unregenerate life
+again,--to scuffle, swear, gamble, and love light loves with his fellows; to
+take ship and know the sea once more, and by her beget pictures; to talk
+to Binat among the sands of Port Said while Yellow 'Tina mixed the
+drinks; to hear the crackle of musketry, and see the smoke roll outward,
+thin and thicken again till the shining black faces came through, and in
+that hell every man was strictly responsible for his own head, and his
+own alone, and struck with an unfettered arm. It was impossible, utterly
+impossible, but--
+
+'"Oh, our fathers in the churchyard,
+She is older than ye,
+And our graves will be the greener,"
+Said The Men of the Sea.'?
+
+'What is there to hinder?' said Torpenhow, in the long hush that
+followed the song.
+
+'You said a little time since that you wouldn't come for a walk round the
+world, Torp.'
+
+'That was months ago, and I only objected to your making money for
+travelling expenses. You've shot your bolt here and it has gone home. Go
+away and do some work, and see some things.'
+
+'Get some of the fat off you; you're disgracefully out of condition,' said
+the Nilghai, making a plunge from the chair and grasping a handful of
+Dick generally over the right ribs. 'Soft as putty--pure tallow born of
+over-feeding. Train it off, Dickie.'
+
+'We're all equally gross, Nilghai. Next time you have to take the field
+you'll sit down, wink your eyes, gasp, and die in a fit.'
+
+'Never mind. You go away on a ship. Go to Lima again, or to Brazil.
+
+There's always trouble in South America.'
+
+'Do you suppose I want to be told where to go? Great Heavens, the only
+difficulty is to know where I'm to stop. But I shall stay here, as I told you
+before.'
+
+'Then you'll be buried in Kensal Green and turn into adipocere with the
+others,' said Torpenhow. 'Are you thinking of commissions in hand? Pay
+forfeit and go. You've money enough to travel as a king if you please.'
+
+'You've the grisliest notions of amusement, Torp. I think I see myself
+shipping first class on a six-thousand-ton hotel, and asking the third
+engineer what makes the engines go round, and whether it isn't very
+warm in the stokehold. Ho! ho! I should ship as a loafer if ever I shipped
+at all, which I'm not going to do. I shall compromise, and go for a small
+trip to begin with.'
+
+'That's something at any rate. Where will you go?' said Torpenhow. 'It
+would do you all the good in the world, old man.'
+
+The Nilghai saw the twinkle in Dick's eye, and refrained from speech.
+
+'I shall go in the first place to Rathray's stable, where I shall hire one
+horse, and take him very carefully as far as Richmond Hill. Then I shall
+walk him back again, in case he should accidentally burst into a lather
+and make Rathray angry. I shall do that to-morrow, for the sake of air
+and exercise.'
+
+'Bah!' Dick had barely time to throw up his arm and ward off the
+cushion that the disgusted Torpenhow heaved at his head.
+
+'Air and exercise indeed,' said the Nilghai, sitting down heavily on Dick.
+
+'Let's give him a little of both. Get the bellows, Torp.'
+
+At this point the conference broke up in disorder, because Dick would not
+open his mouth till the Nilghai held his nose fast, and there was some
+trouble in forcing the nozzle of the bellows between his teeth; and even
+when it was there he weakly tried to puff against the force of the blast,
+and his cheeks blew up with a great explosion; and the enemy becoming
+helpless with laughter he so beat them over the head with a soft sofa
+cushion that that became unsewn and distributed its feathers, and Binkie,
+interfering in Torpenhow's interests, was bundled into the half-empty
+bag and advised to scratch his way out, which he did after a while,
+travelling rapidly up and down the floor in the shape of an agitated green
+haggis, and when he came out looking for satisfaction, the three pillars of
+his world were picking feathers out of their hair.
+
+'A prophet has no honour in his own country,' said Dick, ruefully,
+dusting his knees. 'This filthy fluff will never brush off my legs.'
+
+'It was all for your own good,' said the Nilghai. 'Nothing like air and
+exercise.'
+
+'All for your good,' said Torpenhow, not in the least with reference to
+past clowning. 'It would let you focus things at their proper worth and
+prevent your becoming slack in this hothouse of a town. Indeed it would,
+old man. I shouldn't have spoken if I hadn't thought so. Only, you make a
+joke of everything.'
+
+'Before God I do no such thing,' said Dick, quickly and earnestly. 'You
+don't know me if you think that.'
+
+I don't think it,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'How can fellows like ourselves, who know what life and death really
+mean, dare to make a joke of anything? I know we pretend it, to save
+ourselves from breaking down or going to the other extreme. Can't I see,
+old man, how you're always anxious about me, and try to advise me to
+make my work better? Do you suppose I don't think about that myself?
+But you can't help me--you can't help me--not even you. I must play my
+own hand alone in my own way.'
+
+'Hear, hear,' from the Nilghai.
+
+'What's the one thing in the Nilghai Saga that I've never drawn in the
+Nungapunga Book?' Dick continued to Torpenhow, who was a little
+astonished at the outburst.
+
+Now there was one blank page in the book given over to the sketch that
+Dick had not drawn of the crowning exploit in the Nilghai's life; when
+that man, being young and forgetting that his body and bones belonged to
+the paper that employed him, had ridden over sunburned slippery grass
+in the rear of Bredow's brigade on the day that the troopers flung
+themselves at Caurobert's artillery, and for aught they knew twenty
+battalions in front, to save the battered 24th German Infantry, to give
+time to decide the fate of Vionville, and to learn ere their remnant came
+back to Flavigay that cavalry can attack and crumple and break
+unshaken infantry. Whenever he was inclined to think over a life that
+might have been better, an income that might have been larger, and a
+soul that might have been considerably cleaner, the Nilghai would
+comfort himself with the thought, 'I rode with Bredow's brigade at
+Vionville,' and take heart for any lesser battle the next day might bring.
+
+'I know,' he said very gravely. 'I was always glad that you left it out.'
+
+'I left it out because Nilghai taught me what the Germany army learned
+then, and what Schmidt taught their cavalry. I don't know German.
+
+What is it? "Take care of the time and the dressing will take care of
+itself." I must ride my own line to my own beat, old man.'
+
+'Tempe ist richtung. You've learned your lesson well,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'He must go alone. He speaks truth, Torp.'
+
+'Maybe I'm as wrong as I can be--hideously wrong. I must find that out
+for myself, as I have to think things out for myself, but I daren't turn my
+head to dress by the next man. It hurts me a great deal more than you
+know not to be able to go, but I cannot, that's all. I must do my own work
+and live my own life in my own way, because I'm responsible for both.
+
+Only don't think I frivol about it, Torp. I have my own matches and
+sulphur, and I'll make my own hell, thanks.'
+
+There was an uncomfortable pause. Then Torpenhow said blandly,
+'What did the Governor of North Carolina say to the Governor of South
+Carolina?'
+
+'Excellent notion. It is a long time between drinks. There are the makings
+of a very fine prig in you, Dick,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I've liberated my mind, estimable Binkie, with the feathers in his
+mouth.' Dick picked up the still indignant one and shook him tenderly.
+
+'You're tied up in a sack and made to run about blind, Binkie-wee,
+without any reason, and it has hurt your little feelings. Never mind. Sic
+volo, sic jubeo, stet pro ratione voluntas, and don't sneeze in my eye
+because I talk Latin. Good-night.'
+
+He went out of the room.
+
+'That's distinctly one for you,' said the Nilghai. 'I told you it was hopeless
+to meddle with him. He's not pleased.'
+
+'He'd swear at me if he weren't. I can't make it out. He has the go-fever
+upon him and he won't go. I only hope that he mayn't have to go some
+day when he doesn't want to,' said Torpenhow.
+
+* * * * * *
+In his own room Dick was settling a question with himself--and the
+question was whether all the world, and all that was therein, and a
+burning desire to exploit both, was worth one threepenny piece thrown
+into the Thames.
+
+'It came of seeing the sea, and I'm a cur to think about it,' he decided.
+
+'After all, the honeymoon will be that tour--with reservations; only . . .
+
+only I didn't realise that the sea was so strong. I didn't feel it so much
+when I was with Maisie. These damnable songs did it. He's beginning
+again.'
+
+But it was only Herrick's Nightpiece to Julia that the Nilghai sang, and
+before it was ended Dick reappeared on the threshold, not altogether
+clothed indeed, but in his right mind, thirsty and at peace.
+
+The mood had come and gone with the rising and the falling of the tide
+by Fort Keeling.
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+'If I have taken the common clay
+And wrought it cunningly
+In the shape of a god that was digged a clod,
+The greater honour to me.'?
+
+'If thou hast taken the common clay,
+And thy hands be not free
+From the taint of the soil , thou hast made thy spoil
+The greater shame to thee.'--The Two Potters.?
+
+HE DID no work of any kind for the rest of the week. Then came another
+Sunday. He dreaded and longed for the day always, but since the
+red-haired girl had sketched him there was rather more dread than
+desire in his mind.
+
+He found that Maisie had entirely neglected his suggestions about
+line-work. She had gone off at score filed with some absurd notion for a
+'fancy head.' It cost Dick something to command his temper.
+
+'What's the good of suggesting anything?' he said pointedly.
+
+'Ah, but this will be a picture,--a real picture; and I know that Kami will
+let me send it to the Salon. You don't mind, do you?'
+
+'I suppose not. But you won't have time for the Salon.'
+
+Maisie hesitated a little. She even felt uncomfortable.
+
+'We're going over to France a month sooner because of it. I shall get the
+idea sketched out here and work it up at Kami's.
+
+Dick's heart stood still, and he came very near to being disgusted with his
+queen who could do no wrong. 'Just when I thought I had made some
+headway, she goes off chasing butterflies. It's too maddening!'
+
+There was no possibility of arguing, for the red-haired girl was in the
+studio. Dick could only look unutterable reproach.
+
+'I'm sorry,' he said, 'and I think you make a mistake. But what's the idea
+of your new picture?'
+
+'I took it from a book.'
+
+'That's bad, to begin with. Books aren't the places for pictures. And----'
+
+'It's this,' said the red-haired girl behind him. 'I was reading it to Maisie
+the other day from The City of Dreadful Night. D'you know the book?'
+
+'A little. I am sorry I spoke. There are pictures in it. What has taken her
+fancy?'
+
+'The description of the Melancolia--
+
+'Her folded wings as of a mighty eagle,
+But all too impotent to lift the regal
+Robustness of her earth-born strength and pride.
+
+And here again. (Maisie, get the tea, dear.)
+
+'The forehead charged with baleful thoughts and dreams,
+The household bunch of keys, the housewife's gown,
+Voluminous indented, and yet rigid
+As though a shell of burnished metal frigid,
+Her feet thick-shod to tread all weakness down.'?
+
+There was no attempt to conceal the scorn of the lazy voice. Dick winced.
+
+'But that has been done already by an obscure artist by the name of
+Durer,' said he. 'How does the poem run?--
+
+'Three centuries and threescore years ago,
+With phantasies of his peculiar thought.
+
+You might as well try to rewrite Hamlet. It will be a waste of time.
+
+'No, it won't,' said Maisie, putting down the teacups with a clatter to
+reassure herself. 'And I mean to do it. Can't you see what a beautiful
+thing it would make?'
+
+'How in perdition can one do work when one hasn't had the proper
+training? Any fool can get a notion. It needs training to drive the thing
+through,--training and conviction; not rushing after the first fancy.' Dick
+spoke between his teeth.
+
+'You don't understand,' said Maisie. 'I think I can do it.'
+
+Again the voice of the girl behind him--
+
+'Baffled and beaten back, she works on still;
+Weary and sick of soul, she works the more.
+
+Sustained by her indomitable will,
+The hands shall fashion, and the brain shall pore,
+And all her sorrow shall be turned to labour----
+
+I fancy Maisie means to embody herself in the picture.'
+
+'Sitting on a throne of rejected pictures? No, I shan't, dear. The notion in
+itself has fascinated me.--Of course you don't care for fancy heads, Dick.
+
+I don't think you could do them. You like blood and bones.'
+
+'That's a direct challenge. If you can do a Melancolia that isn't merely a
+sorrowful female head, I can do a better one; and I will, too. What d'you
+know about Melacolias?' Dick firmly believed that he was even then
+tasting three-quarters of all the sorrow in the world.
+
+'She was a woman,' said Maisie, 'and she suffered a great deal,--till she
+could suffer no more. Then she began to laugh at it all, and then I painted
+her and sent her to the Salon.'
+
+The red-haired girl rose up and left the room, laughing.
+
+Dick looked at Maisie humbly and hopelessly.
+
+'Never mind about the picture,' he said. 'Are you really going back to
+Kami's for a month before your time?'
+
+'I must, if I want to get the picture done.'
+
+'And that's all you want?'
+
+'Of course. Don't be stupid, Dick.'
+
+'You haven't the power. You have only the ideas--the ideas and the little
+cheap impulses. How you could have kept at your work for ten years
+steadily is a mystery to me. So you are really going,--a month before you
+need?'
+
+'I must do my work.'
+
+'Your work--bah! . . . No, I didn't mean that. It's all right, dear. Of
+course you must do your work, and--I think I'll say good-bye for this
+week.'
+
+'Won't you even stay for tea?
+'No, thank you. Have I your leave to go, dear? There's nothing more you
+particularly want me to do, and the line-work doesn't matter.'
+
+'I wish you could stay, and then we could talk over my picture. If only
+one single picture's a success, it draws attention to all the others. I know
+some of my work is good, if only people could see. And you needn't have
+been so rude about it.'
+
+'I'm sorry. We'll talk the Melancolia over some one of the other Sundays.
+
+There are four more--yes, one, two, three, four--before you go. Good-bye,
+Maisie.'
+
+Maisie stood by the studio window, thinking, till the red-haired girl
+returned, a little white at the corners of her lips.
+
+'Dick's gone off,' said Maisie. 'Just when I wanted to talk about the
+picture. Isn't it selfish of him?'
+
+Her companion opened her lips as if to speak, shut them again, and went
+on reading The City of Dreadful Night.
+
+Dick was in the Park, walking round and round a tree that he had chosen
+as his confidante for many Sundays past. He was swearing audibly, and
+when he found that the infirmities of the English tongue hemmed in his
+rage, he sought consolation in Arabic, which is expressly designed for the
+use of the afflicted. He was not pleased with the reward of his patient
+service; nor was he pleased with himself; and it was long before he
+arrived at the proposition that the queen could do no wrong.
+
+'It's a losing game,' he said. 'I'm worth nothing when a whim of hers is in
+question. But in a losing game at Port Said we used to double the stakes
+and go on. She do a Melancolia! She hasn't the power, or the insight, or
+the training. Only the desire. She's cursed with the curse of Reuben. She
+won't do line-work, because it means real work; and yet she's stronger
+than I am. I'll make her understand that I can beat her on her own
+Melancolia. Even then she wouldn't care. She says I can only do blood
+and bones. I don't believe she has blood in her veins. All the same I lover
+her; and I must go on loving her; and if I can humble her inordinate
+vanity I will. I'll do a Melancolia that shall be something like a
+Melancolia--"the Melancolia that transcends all wit." I'll do it at once,
+con--bless her.'
+
+He discovered that the notion would not come to order, and that he could
+not free his mind for an hour from the thought of Maisie's departure. He
+took very small interest in her rough studies for the Melancolia when she
+showed them next week. The Sundays were racing past, and the time was
+at hand when all the church bells in London could not ring Maisie back
+to him. Once or twice he said something to Binkie about 'hermaphroditic
+futilities,' but the little dog received so many confidences both from
+Torpenhow and Dick that he did not trouble his tulip-ears to listen.
+
+Dick was permitted to see the girls off. They were going by the Dover
+night-boat; and they hoped to return in August. It was then February,
+and Dick felt that he was being hardly used. Maisie was so busy stripping
+the small house across the Park, and packing her canvases, that she had
+not time for thought. Dick went down to Dover and wasted a day there
+fretting over a wonderful possibility. Would Maisie at the very last allow
+him one small kiss? He reflected that he might capture her by the strong
+arm, as he had seem women captured in the Southern Soudan, and lead
+her away; but Maisie would never be led. She would turn her gray eyes
+upon him and say, 'Dick, how selfish you are!' Then his courage would
+fail him. It would be better, after all, to beg for that kiss.
+
+Maisie looked more than usually kissable as she stepped from the
+night-mail on to the windy pier, in a gray waterproof and a little gray
+cloth travelling-cap. The red-haired girl was not so lovely. Her green
+eyes were hollow and her lips were dry. Dick saw the trunks aboard, and
+went to Maisie's side in the darkness under the bridge. The mail-bags
+were thundering into the forehold, and the red-haired girl was watching
+them.
+
+'You'll have a rough passage to-night,' said Dick. 'It's blowing outside. I
+suppose I may come over and see you if I'm good?'
+
+'You mustn't. I shall be busy. At least, if I want you I'll send for you. But
+I shall write from Vitry-sur-Marne. I shall have heaps of things to
+consult you about. Oh, Dick, you have been so good to me!--so good to
+me!'
+
+'Thank you for that, dear. It hasn't made any difference, has it?'
+
+'I can't tell a fib. It hasn't--in that way. But don't think I'm not grateful.'
+
+'Damn the gratitude!' said Dick, huskily, to the paddle-box.
+
+'What's the use of worrying? You know I should ruin your life, and
+you'd ruin mine, as things are now. You remember what you said when
+you were so angry that day in the Park? One of us has to be broken.
+
+Can't you wait till that day comes?'
+
+'No, love. I want you unbroken--all to myself.'
+
+Maisie shook her head. 'My poor Dick, what can I say!'
+
+'Don't say anything. Give me a kiss. Only one kiss, Maisie. I'll swear I
+won't take any more. You might as well, and then I can be sure you're
+grateful.'
+
+Maisie put her cheek forward, and Dick took his reward in the darkness.
+
+It was only one kiss, but, since there was no time-limit specified, it was a
+long one. Maisie wrenched herself free angrily, and Dick stood abashed
+and tingling from head to toe.
+
+'Good-bye, darling. I didn't mean to scare you. I'm sorry. Only--keep
+well and do good work,--specially the Melancolia. I'm going to do one,
+too. Remember me to Kami, and be careful what you drink. Country
+drinking-water is bad everywhere, but it's worse in France. Write to me
+if you want anything, and good-bye. Say good-bye to the
+whatever-you-call-um girl, and--can't I have another kiss? No. You're
+quite right. Good-bye.'
+
+A should told him that it was not seemly to charge of the mail-bag
+incline. He reached the pier as the steamer began to move off, and he
+followed her with his heart.
+
+'And there's nothing--nothing in the wide world--to keep us apart except
+her obstinacy. These Calais night-boats are much too small. I'll get Torp
+to write to the papers about it. She's beginning to pitch already.'
+
+Maisie stood where Dick had left her till she heard a little gasping cough
+at her elbow. The red-haired girl's eyes were alight with cold flame.
+
+'He kissed you!' she said. 'How could you let him, when he wasn't
+anything to you? How dared you to take a kiss from him? Oh, Maisie,
+let's go to the ladies' cabin. I'm sick,--deadly sick.'
+
+'We aren't into open water yet. Go down, dear, and I'll stay here. I don't
+like the smell of the engines. . . . Poor Dick! He deserved one,--only one.
+
+But I didn't think he'd frighten me so.'
+
+Dick returned to town next day just in time for lunch, for which he had
+telegraphed. To his disgust, there were only empty plates in the studio.
+
+He lifted up his voice like the bears in the fairy-tale, and Torpenhow
+entered, looking guilty.
+
+'H'sh!' said he. 'Don't make such a noise. I took it. Come into my rooms,
+and I'll show you why.'
+
+Dick paused amazed at the threshold, for on Torpenhow's sofa lay a girl
+asleep and breathing heavily. The little cheap sailor-hat, the
+blue-and-white dress, fitter for June than for February, dabbled with
+mud at the skirts, the jacket trimmed with imitation Astrakhan and
+ripped at the shoulder-seams, the one-and-elevenpenny umbrella, and,
+above all, the disgraceful condition of the kid-topped boots, declared all
+things.
+
+'Oh, I say, old man, this is too bad! You mustn't bring this sort up here.
+
+They steal things from the rooms.'
+
+'It looks bad, I admit, but I was coming in after lunch, and she staggered
+into the hall. I thought she was drunk at first, but it was collapse. I
+couldn't leave her as she was, so I brought her up here and gave her your
+lunch. She was fainting from want of food. She went fast asleep the
+minute she had finished.'
+
+'I know something of that complaint. She's been living on sausages, I
+suppose. Torp, you should have handed her over to a policeman for
+presuming to faint in a respectable house. Poor little wretch! Look at the
+face! There isn't an ounce of immorality in it. Only folly,--slack, fatuous,
+feeble, futile folly. It's a typical head. D'you notice how the skull begins
+to show through the flesh padding on the face and cheek-bone?'
+
+'What a cold-blooded barbarian it is! Don't hit a woman when she's
+down. Can't we do anything? She was simply dropping with starvation.
+
+She almost fell into my arms, and when she got to the food she ate like a
+wild beast. It was horrible.'
+
+'I can give her money, which she would probably spend in drinks. Is she
+going to sleep for ever?'
+
+The girl opened her eyes and glared at the men between terror and
+effrontery.
+
+'Feeling better?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Yes. Thank you. There aren't many gentlemen that are as kind as you
+are. Thank you.'
+
+'When did you leave service?' said Dick, who had been watching the
+scarred and chapped hands.
+
+'How did you know I was in service? I was. General servant. I didn't like
+it.'
+
+'And how do you like being your own mistress?'
+
+'Do I look as if I liked it?'
+
+'I suppose not. One moment. Would you be good enough to turn your
+face to the window?'
+
+The girl obeyed, and Dick watched her face keenly,--so keenly that she
+made as if to hide behind Torpenhow.
+
+'The eyes have it,' said Dick, walking up and down. 'They are superb
+eyes for my business. And, after all, every head depends on the eyes. This
+has been sent from heaven to make up for--what was taken away. Now
+the weekly strain's off my shoulders, I can get to work in earnest.
+
+Evidently sent from heaven. Yes. Raise your chin a little, please.'
+
+'Gently, old man, gently. You're scaring somebody out of her wits,' said
+Torpenhow, who could see the girl trembling.
+
+'Don't let him hit me! Oh, please don't let him hit me! I've been hit cruel
+to-day because I spoke to a man. Don't let him look at me like that! He's
+reg'lar wicked, that one. Don't let him look at me like that, neither! Oh, I
+feel as if I hadn't nothing on when he looks at me like that!'
+
+The overstrained nerves in the frail body gave way, and the girl wept like
+a little child and began to scream. Dick threw open the window, and
+Torpenhow flung the door back.
+
+'There you are,' said Dick, soothingly. 'My friend here can call for a
+policeman, and you can run through that door. Nobody is going to hurt
+you.'
+
+The girl sobbed convulsively for a few minutes, and then tried to laugh.
+
+'Nothing in the world to hurt you. Now listen to me for a minute. I'm
+what they call an artist by profession. You know what artists do?'
+
+'They draw the things in red and black ink on the pop-shop labels.'
+
+'I dare say. I haven't risen to pop-shop labels yet. Those are done by the
+Academicians. I want to draw your head.'
+
+'What for?'
+
+'Because it's pretty. That is why you will come to the room across the
+landing three times a week at eleven in the morning, and I'll give you
+three quid a week just for sitting still and being drawn. And there's a
+quid on account.'
+
+'For nothing? Oh, my!' The girl turned the sovereign in her hand, and
+with more foolish tears, 'Ain't neither o' you two gentlemen afraid of my
+bilking you?'
+
+'No. Only ugly girls do that. Try and remember this place. And, by the
+way, what's your name?'
+
+'I'm Bessic,--Bessie---- It's no use giving the rest. Bessie
+Broke,--Stone-broke, if you like. What's your names? But there,--no one
+ever gives the real ones.'
+
+Dick consulted Torpenhow with his eyes.
+
+'My name's Heldar, and my friend's called Torpenhow; and you must be
+sure to come here. Where do you live?'
+
+'South-the-water,--one room,--five and sixpence a week. Aren't you
+making fun of me about that three quid?'
+
+'You'll see later on. And, Bessie, next time you come, remember, you
+needn't wear that paint. It's bad for the skin, and I have all the colours
+you'll be likely to need.'
+
+Bessie withdrew, scrubbing her cheek with a ragged
+pocket-handkerchief. The two men looked at each other.
+
+'You're a man,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'I'm afraid I've been a fool. It isn't our business to run about the earth
+reforming Bessie Brokes. And a woman of any kind has no right on this
+landing.'
+
+'Perhaps she won't come back.'
+
+'She will if she thinks she can get food and warmth here. I know she will,
+worse luck. But remember, old man, she isn't a woman; she's my model;
+and be careful.'
+
+'The idea! She's a dissolute little scarecrow,--a gutter-snippet and
+nothing more.'
+
+'So you think. Wait till she has been fed a little and freed from fear. That
+fair type recovers itself very quickly. You won't know her in a week or
+two, when that abject fear has died out of her eyes. She'll be too happy
+and smiling for my purposes.'
+
+'But surely you're not taking her out of charity?--to please me?'
+
+'I am not in the habit of playing with hot coals to please anybody. She has
+been sent from heaven, as I may have remarked before, to help me with
+my Melancolia.'
+
+'Never heard a word about the lady before.'
+
+'What's the use of having a friend, if you must sling your notions at him
+in words? You ought to know what I'm thinking about. You've heard me
+grunt lately?'
+
+'Even so; but grunts mean anything in your language, from bad 'baccy to
+wicked dealers. And I don't think I've been much in your confidence for
+some time.'
+
+'It was a high and soulful grunt. You ought to have understood that it
+meant the Melancolia.' Dick walked Torpenhow up and down the room,
+keeping silence. Then he smote him in the ribs, 'Now don't you see it?
+Bessie's abject futility, and the terror in her eyes, welded on to one or
+two details in the way of sorrow that have come under my experience
+lately. Likewise some orange and black,--two keys of each. But I can't
+explain on an empty stomach.'
+
+'It sounds mad enough. You'd better stick to your soldiers, Dick, instead
+of maundering about heads and eyes and experiences.'
+
+'Think so?' Dick began to dance on his heels, singing--
+
+'They're as proud as a turkey when they hold the ready cash,
+You ought to 'ear the way they laugh an' joke;
+They are tricky an' they're funny when they've got the ready money,--
+Ow! but see 'em when they're all stone-broke.'?
+
+Then he sat down to pour out his heart to Maisie in a four-sheet letter of
+counsel and encouragement, and registered an oath that he would get to
+work with an undivided heart as soon as Bessie should reappear.
+
+The girl kept her appointment unpainted and unadorned, afraid and
+overbold by turns. When she found that she was merely expected to sit
+still, she grew calmer, and criticised the appointments of the studio with
+freedom and some point. She liked the warmth and the comfort and the
+release from fear of physical pain. Dick made two or three studies of her
+head in monochrome, but the actual notion of the Melancolia would not
+arrive.
+
+'What a mess you keep your things in!' said Bessie, some days later, when
+she felt herself thoroughly at home. 'I s'pose your clothes are just as bad.
+
+Gentlemen never think what buttons and tape are made for.'
+
+'I buy things to wear, and wear 'em till they go to pieces. I don't know
+what Torpenhow does.'
+
+Bessie made diligent inquiry in the latter's room, and unearthed a bale of
+disreputable socks. 'Some of these I'll mend now,' she said, 'and some I'll
+take home. D'you know, I sit all day long at home doing nothing, just like
+a lady, and no more noticing them other girls in the house than if they
+was so many flies. I don't have any unnecessary words, but I put 'em
+down quick, I can tell you, when they talk to me. No; it's quite nice these
+days. I lock my door, and they can only call me names through the
+keyhole, and I sit inside, just like a lady, mending socks. Mr. Torpenhow
+wears his socks out both ends at once.'
+
+'Three quid a week from me, and the delights of my society. No socks
+mended. Nothing from Torp except a nod on the landing now and again,
+and all his socks mended. Bessie is very much a woman,' thought Dick;
+and he looked at her between half-shut eyes. Food and rest had
+transformed the girl, as Dick knew they would.
+
+'What are you looking at me like that for?' she said quickly. 'Don't. You
+look reg'lar bad when you look that way. You don't think much o' me, do
+you?'
+
+'That depends on how you behave.'
+
+Bessie behaved beautifully. Only it was difficult at the end of a sitting to
+bid her go out into the gray streets. She very much preferred the studio
+and a big chair by the stove, with some socks in her lap as an excuse for
+delay. Then Torpenhow would come in, and Bessie would be moved to
+tell strange and wonderful stories of her past, and still stranger ones of
+her present improved circumstances. She would make them tea as though
+she had a right to make it; and once or twice on these occasions Dick
+caught Torpenhow's eyes fixed on the trim little figure, and because
+Bessie'' flittings about the room made Dick ardently long for Maisie, he
+realised whither Torpenhow's thoughts were tending. And Bessie was
+exceedingly careful of the condition of Torpenhow's linen. She spoke
+very little to him, but sometimes they talked together on the landing.
+
+'I was a great fool,' Dick said to himself. 'I know what red firelight looks
+like when a man's tramping through a strange town; and ours is a lonely,
+selfish sort of life at the best. I wonder Maisie doesn't feel that
+sometimes. But I can't order Bessie away. That's the worst of beginning
+things. One never knows where they stop.'
+
+One evening, after a sitting prolonged to the last limit of the light, Dick
+was roused from a nap by a broken voice in Torpenhow's room. He
+jumped to his feet. 'Now what ought I to do? It looks foolish to go in.--Oh,
+bless you, Binkie!' The little terrier thrust Torpenhow's door open with
+his nose and came out to take possession of Dick's chair. The door swung
+wide unheeded, and Dick across the landing could see Bessie in the
+half-light making her little supplication to Torpenhow. She was kneeling
+by his side, and her hands were clasped across his knee.
+
+'I know,--I know,' she said thickly. ''Tisn't right o' me to do this, but I
+can't help it; and you were so kind,--so kind; and you never took any
+notice o' me. And I've mended all your things so carefully,--I did. Oh,
+please, 'tisn't as if I was asking you to marry me. I wouldn't think of it.
+
+But you--couldn't you take and live with me till Miss Right comes along?
+I'm only Miss Wrong, I know, but I'd work my hands to the bare bone
+for you. And I'm not ugly to look at. Say you will!'
+
+Dick hardly recognised Torpenhow's voice in reply--
+'But look here. It's no use. I'm liable to be ordered off anywhere at a
+minute's notice if a war breaks out. At a minute's notice--dear.'
+
+'What does that matter? Until you go, then. Until you go. 'Tisn't much
+I'm asking, and--you don't know how good I can cook.' She had put an
+arm round his neck and was drawing his head down.
+
+'Until--I--go, then.'
+
+'Torp,' said Dick, across the landing. He could hardly steady his voice.
+
+'Come here a minute, old man. I'm in trouble'--'Heaven send he'll listen
+to me!' There was something very like an oath from Bessie's lips. She was
+afraid of Dick, and disappeared down the staircase in panic, but it
+seemed an age before Torpenhow entered the studio. He went to the
+mantelpiece, buried his head on his arms, and groaned like a wounded
+bull.
+
+'What the devil right have you to interfere?' he said, at last.
+
+'Who's interfering with which? Your own sense told you long ago you
+couldn't be such a fool. It was a tough rack, St. Anthony, but you're all
+right now.'
+
+'I oughtn't to have seen her moving about these rooms as if they belonged
+to her. That's what upset me. It gives a lonely man a sort of hankering,
+doesn't it?' said Torpenhow, piteously.
+
+'Now you talk sense. It does. But, since you aren't in a condition to
+discuss the disadvantages of double housekeeping, do you know what
+you're going to do?'
+
+'I don't. I wish I did.'
+
+'You're going away for a season on a brilliant tour to regain tone. You're
+going to Brighton, or Scarborough, or Prawle Point, to see the ships go
+by. And you're going at once. Isn't it odd? I'll take care of Binkie, but out
+you go immediately. Never resist the devil. He holds the bank. Fly from
+him. Pack your things and go.'
+
+'I believe you're right. Where shall I go?'
+
+'And you call yourself a special correspondent! Pack first and inquire
+afterwards.'
+
+An hour later Torpenhow was despatched into the night for a hansom.
+
+'You'll probably think of some place to go to while you're moving,' said
+Dick. 'On to Euston, to begin with, and--oh yes--get drunk to-night.'
+
+He returned to the studio, and lighted more candles, for he found the
+room very dark.
+
+'Oh, you Jezebel! you futile little Jezebel! Won't you hate me
+to-morrow!--Binkie, come here.'
+
+Binkie turned over on his back on the hearth-rug, and Dick stirred him
+with a meditative foot.
+
+'I said she was not immoral. I was wrong. She said she could cook. That
+showed premeditated sin. Oh, Binkie, if you are a man you will go to
+perdition; but if you are a woman, and say that you can cook, you will go
+to a much worse place.'?
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+What's you that follows at my side?--
+The foe that ye must fight, my lord.--
+That hirples swift as I can ride?--
+The shadow of the night, my lord.--
+Then wheel my horse against the foe!--
+He's down and overpast, my lord.
+
+Ye war against the sunset glow;
+The darkness gathers fast, my lord.
+
+-- The Fight of Heriot's Ford.?
+
+'THIS is a cheerful life,' said Dick, some days later. 'Torp's away; Bessie
+hates me; I can't get at the notion of the Melancolia; Maisie's letters are
+scrappy; and I believe I have indigestion. What give a man pains across
+the head and spots before his eyes, Binkie? Shall us take some liver pills?'
+
+Dick had just gone through a lively scene with Bessie. She had for the
+fiftieth time reproached him for sending Torpenhow away. She explained
+her enduring hatred for Dick, and made it clear to him that she only sat
+for the sake of his money. 'And Mr. Torpenhow's ten times a better man
+than you,' she concluded.
+
+'He is. That's why he went away. I should have stayed and made love to
+you.'
+
+The girl sat with her chin on her hand, scowling. 'To me! I'd like to catch
+you! If I wasn't afraid o' being hung I'd kill you. That's what I'd do.
+
+D'you believe me?'
+
+Dick smiled wearily. It is not pleasant to live in the company of a notion
+that will not work out, a fox-terrier that cannot talk, and a woman who
+talks too much. He would have answered, but at that moment there
+unrolled itself from one corner of the studio a veil, as it were, of the
+flimsiest gauze. He rubbed his eyes, but the gray haze would not go.
+
+'This is disgraceful indigestion. Binkie, we will go to a medicine-man. We
+can't have our eyes interfered with, for by these we get our bread; also
+mutton-chop bones for little dogs.'
+
+The doctor was an affable local practitioner with white hair, and he said
+nothing till Dick began to describe the gray film in the studio.
+
+'We all want a little patching and repairing from time to time,' he
+chirped. 'Like a ship, my dear sir,--exactly like a ship. Sometimes the hull
+is out of order, and we consult the surgeon; sometimes the rigging, and
+then I advise; sometimes the engines, and we go to the brain-specialist;
+sometimes the look-out on the bridge is tired, and then we see an oculist. I
+should recommend you to see an oculist. A little patching and repairing
+from time to time is all we want. An oculist, by all means.'
+
+Dick sought an oculist,--the best in London. He was certain that the local
+practitioner did not know anything about his trade, and more certain
+that Maisie would laugh at him if he were forced to wear spectacles.
+
+'I've neglected the warnings of my lord the stomach too long. Hence these
+spots before the eyes, Binkie. I can see as well as I ever could.'
+
+As he entered the dark hall that led to the consulting-room a man
+cannoned against him. Dick saw the face as it hurried out into the street.
+
+'That's the writer-type. He has the same modelling of the forehead as
+Torp. He looks very sick. Probably heard something he didn't like.'
+
+Even as he thought, a great fear came upon Dick, a fear that made him
+hold his breath as he walked into the oculist's waiting room, with the
+heavy carved furniture, the dark-green paper, and the sober-hued prints
+on the wall. He recognised a reproduction of one of his own sketches.
+
+Many people were waiting their turn before him. His eye was caught by
+a flaming red-and-gold Christmas-carol book. Little children came to
+that eye-doctor, and they needed large-type amusement.
+
+'That's idolatrous bad Art,' he said, drawing the book towards himself.
+
+'From the anatomy of the angels, it has been made in Germany.' He
+opened in mechanically, and there leaped to his eyes a verse printed in
+red ink--
+
+The next good joy that Mary had,
+It was the joy of three,
+To see her good Son Jesus Christ
+Making the blind to see;
+Making the blind to see, good Lord,
+And happy we may be.
+
+Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost
+To all eternity!
+?
+
+Dick read and re-read the verse till his turn came, and the doctor was
+bending above him seated in an arm-chair. The blaze of the
+gas-microscope in his eyes made him wince. The doctor's hand touched
+the scar of the sword-cut on Dick's head, and Dick explained briefly how
+he had come by it. When the flame was removed, Dick saw the doctor's
+face, and the fear came upon him again. The doctor wrapped himself in a
+mist of words. Dick caught allusions to 'scar,' 'frontal bone,' 'optic
+nerve,' 'extreme caution,' and the 'avoidance of mental anxiety.'
+
+'Verdict?' he said faintly. 'My business is painting, and I daren't waste
+time. What do you make of it?'
+
+Again the whirl of words, but this time they conveyed a meaning.
+
+'Can you give me anything to drink?'
+
+Many sentences were pronounced in that darkened room, and the
+prisoners often needed cheering. Dick found a glass of liqueur brandy in
+his hand.
+
+'As far as I can gather,' he said, coughing above the spirit, 'you call it
+decay of the optic nerve, or something, and therefore hopeless. What is
+my time-limit, avoiding all strain and worry?'
+
+'Perhaps one year.'
+
+'My God! And if I don't take care of myself?'
+
+'I really could not say. One cannot ascertain the exact amount of injury
+inflicted by the sword-cut. The scar is an old one, and--exposure to the
+strong light of the desert, did you say?--with excessive application to fine
+work? I really could not say?'
+
+'I beg your pardon, but it has come without any warning. If you will let
+me, I'll sit here for a minute, and then I'll go. You have been very good in
+telling me the truth. Without any warning; without any warning.
+
+Thanks.'
+
+Dick went into the street, and was rapturously received by Binkie.
+
+'We've got it very badly, little dog! Just as badly as we can get it. We'll
+go to the Park to think it out.'
+
+They headed for a certain tree that Dick knew well, and they sat down to
+thin, because his legs were trembling under him and there was cold fear
+at the pit of his stomach.
+
+'How could it have come without any warning? It's as sudden as being
+shot. It's the living death, Binkie. We're to be shut up in the dark in one
+year if we're careful, and we shan't see anybody, and we shall never have
+anything we want, not though we live to be a hundred!' Binkie wagged
+his tail joyously. 'Binkie, we must think. Let's see how it feels to be
+blind.' Dick shut his eyes, and flaming commas and Catherine-wheels
+floated inside the lids. Yet when he looked across the Park the scope of
+his vision was not contracted. He could see perfectly, until a procession of
+slow-wheeling fireworks defiled across his eyeballs.
+
+'Little dorglums, we aren't at all well. Let's go home. If only Torp were
+back, now!'
+
+But Torpenhow was in the south of England, inspecting dockyards in the
+company of the Nilghai. His letters were brief and full of mystery.
+
+Dick had never asked anybody to help him in his joys or his sorrows. He
+argued, in the loneliness of his studio, henceforward to be decorated with
+a film of gray gauze in one corner, that, if his fate were blindness, all the
+Torpenhows in the world could not save him. 'I can't call him off his trip
+to sit down and sympathise with me. I must pull through this business
+alone,' he said. He was lying on the sofa, eating his moustache and
+wondering what the darkness of the night would be like. Then came to
+his mind the memory of a quaint scene in the Soudan. A soldier had been
+nearly hacked in two by a broad-bladed Arab spear. For one instant the
+man felt no pain. Looking down, he saw that his life-blood was going
+from him. The stupid bewilderment on his face was so intensely comic
+that both Dick and Torpenhow, still panting and unstrung from a fight
+for life, had roared with laughter, in which the man seemed as if he
+would join, but, as his lips parted in a sheepish grin, the agony of death
+came upon him, and he pitched grunting at their feet. Dick laughed
+again, remembering the horror. It seemed so exactly like his own case.
+
+'But I have a little more time allowed me,' he said. He paced up and
+down the room, quietly at first, but afterwards with the hurried feet of
+fear. It was as though a black shadow stood at his elbow and urged him
+to go forward; and there were only weaving circles and floating pin-dots
+before his eyes.
+
+'We need to be calm, Binkie; we must be calm.' He talked aloud for the
+sake of distraction. 'This isn't nice at all. What shall we do? We must do
+something. Our time is short. I shouldn't have believed that this morning;
+but now things are different. Binkie, where was Moses when the light
+went out?'
+
+Binkie smiled from ear to ear, as a well-bred terrier should, but made no
+suggestion.
+
+'"Were there but world enough and time, This coyness, Binkie, were not
+crime. . . . But at my back I always hear----"' He wiped his forehead,
+which was unpleasantly damp. 'What can I do? What can I do? I haven't
+any notions left, and I can't think connectedly, but I must do something,
+or I shall go off my head.'
+
+The hurried walk recommenced, Dick stopping every now and again to
+drag forth long-neglected canvases and old note-books; for he turned to
+his work by instinct, as a thing that could not fail. 'You won't do, and you
+won't do,' he said, at each inspection. 'No more soldiers. I couldn't paint
+'em. Sudden death comes home too nearly, and this is battle and murder
+for me.'
+
+The day was failing, and Dick thought for a moment that the twilight of
+the blind had come upon him unaware. 'Allah Almighty!' he cried
+despairingly, 'help me through the time of waiting, and I won't whine
+when my punishment comes. What can I do now, before the light goes?'
+
+There was no answer. Dick waited till he could regain some sort of
+control over himself. His hands were shaking, and he prided himself on
+their steadiness; he could feel that his lips were quivering, and the sweat
+was running down his face. He was lashed by fear, driven forward by the
+desire to get to work at once and accomplish something, and maddened
+by the refusal of his brain to do more than repeat the news that he was
+about to go blind. 'It's a humiliating exhibition,' he thought, 'and I'm
+glad Torp isn't here to see. The doctor said I was to avoid mental worry.
+
+Come here and let me pet you, Binkie.'
+
+The little dog yelped because Dick nearly squeezed the bark out of him.
+
+Then he heard the man speaking in the twilight, and, doglike, understood
+that his trouble stood off from him--
+'Allah is good, Binkie. Not quite so gentle as we could wish, but we'll
+discuss that later. I think I see my way to it now. All those studies of
+Bessie's head were nonsense, and they nearly brought your master into a
+scrape. I hold the notion now as clear as crystal,--"the Melancolia that
+transcends all wit." There shall be Maisie in that head, because I shall
+never get Maisie; and Bess, of course, because she knows all about
+Melancolia, though she doesn't know she knows; and there shall be some
+drawing in it, and it shall all end up with a laugh. That's for myself. Shall
+she giggle or grin? No, she shall laugh right out of the canvas, and every
+man and woman that ever had a sorrow of their own shall--what is it the
+poem says?--
+
+'Understand the speech and feel a stir
+Of fellowship in all disastrous fight.
+
+"In all disastrous fight"? That's better than painting the thing merely to
+pique Maisie. I can do it now because I have it inside me. Binkie, I'm
+going to hold you up by your tail. You're an omen. Come here.'
+
+Binkie swung head downward for a moment without speaking.
+
+'Rather like holding a guinea-pig; but you're a brave little dog, and you
+don't yelp when you're hung up. It is an omen.'
+
+Binkie went to his own chair, and as often as he looked saw Dick walking
+up and down, rubbing his hands and chuckling. That night Dick wrote a
+letter to Maisie full of the tenderest regard for her health, but saying
+very little about his own, and dreamed of the Melancolia to be born. Not
+till morning did he remember that something might happen to him in the
+future.
+
+He fell to work, whistling softly, and was swallowed up in the clean, clear
+joy of creation, which does not come to man too often, lest he should
+consider himself the equal of his God, and so refuse to die at the
+appointed time. He forgot Maisie, Torpenhow, and Binkie at his feet, but
+remembered to stir Bessie, who needed very little stirring, into a
+tremendous rage, that he might watch the smouldering lights in her eyes.
+
+He threw himself without reservation into his work, and did not think of
+the doom that was to overtake him, for he was possessed with his notion,
+and the things of this world had no power upon him.
+
+'You're pleased to-day,' said Bessie.
+
+Dick waved his mahl-stick in mystic circles and went to the sideboard for
+a drink. In the evening, when the exaltation of the day had died down, he
+went to the sideboard again, and after some visits became convinced that
+the eye-doctor was a liar, since he could still see everything very clearly.
+
+He was of opinion that he would even make a home for Maisie, and that
+whether she liked it or not she should be his wife. The mood passed next
+morning, but the sideboard and all upon it remained for his comfort.
+
+Again he set to work, and his eyes troubled him with spots and dashes
+and blurs till he had taken counsel with the sideboard, and the
+Melancolia both on the canvas and in his own mind appeared lovelier
+than ever. There was a delightful sense of irresponsibility upon him, such
+as they feel who walking among their fellow-men know that the
+death-sentence of disease is upon them, and, seeing that fear is but waste
+of the little time left, are riotously happy. The days passed without event.
+
+Bessie arrived punctually always, and, though her voice seemed to Dick
+to come from a distance, her face was always very near. The Melancolia
+began to flame on the canvas, in the likeness of a woman who had known
+all the sorrow in the world and was laughing at it. It was true that the
+corners of the studio draped themselves in gray film and retired into the
+darkness, that the spots in his eyes and the pains across his head were
+very troublesome, and that Maisie's letters were hard to read and harder
+still to answer. He could not tell her of his trouble, and he could not
+laugh at her accounts of her own Melancolia which was always going to
+be finished. But the furious days of toil and the nights of wild dreams
+made amends for all, and the sideboard was his best friend on earth.
+
+Bessie was singularly dull. She used to shriek with rage when Dick stared
+at her between half-closed eyes. Now she sulked, or watched him with
+disgust, saying very little.
+
+Torpenhow had been absent for six weeks. An incoherent note heralded
+his return. 'News! great news!' he wrote. 'The Nilghai knows, and so does
+the Keneu. We're all back on Thursday. Get lunch and clean your
+accoutrements.'
+
+Dick showed Bessie the letter, and she abused him for that he had ever
+sent Torpenhow away and ruined her life.
+
+'Well,' said Dick, brutally, 'you're better as you are, instead of making
+love to some drunken beast in the street.' He felt that he had rescued
+Torpenhow from great temptation.
+
+'I don't know if that's any worse than sitting to a drunken beast in a
+studio. You haven't been sober for three weeks. You've been soaking the
+whole time; and yet you pretend you're better than me!'
+
+'What d'you mean?' said Dick.
+
+'Mean! You'll see when Mr. Torpenhow comes back.'
+
+It was not long to wait. Torpenhow met Bessie on the staircase without a
+sign of feeling. He had news that was more to him than many Bessies,
+and the Keneu and the Nilghai were trampling behind him, calling for
+Dick.
+
+'Drinking like a fish,' Bessie whispered. 'He's been at it for nearly a
+month.' She followed the men stealthily to hear judgment done.
+
+They came into the studio, rejoicing, to be welcomed over effusively by a
+drawn, lined, shrunken, haggard wreck,--unshaven, blue-white about the
+nostrils, stooping in the shoulders, and peering under his eyebrows
+nervously. The drink had been at work as steadily as Dick.
+
+'Is this you?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'All that's left of me. Sit down. Binkie's quite well, and I've been doing
+some good work.' He reeled where he stood.
+
+'You've done some of the worst work you've ever done in your life. Man
+alive, you're----'
+
+Torpenhow turned to his companions appealingly, and they left the room
+to find lunch elsewhere. Then he spoke; but, since the reproof of a friend
+is much too sacred and intimate a thing to be printed, and since
+Torpenhow used figures and metaphors which were unseemly, and
+contempt untranslatable, it will never be known what was actually said
+to Dick, who blinked and winked and picked at his hands. After a time
+the culprit began to feel the need of a little self-respect. He was quite sure
+that he had not in any way departed from virtue, and there were reasons,
+too, of which Torpenhow knew nothing. He would explain.
+
+He rose, tried to straighten his shoulders, and spoke to the face he could
+hardly see.
+
+'You are right,' he said. 'But I am right, too. After you went away I had
+some trouble with my eyes. So I went to an oculist, and he turned a
+gasogene--I mean a gas-engine--into my eye. That was very long ago. He
+said, "Scar on the head,--sword-cut and optic nerve." Make a note of
+that. So I am going blind. I have some work to do before I go blind, and I
+suppose that I must do it. I cannot see much now, but I can see best when
+I am drunk. I did not know I was drunk till I was told, but I must go on
+with my work. If you want to see it, there it is.' He pointed to the all but
+finished Melancolia and looked for applause.
+
+Torpenhow said nothing, and Dick began to whimper feebly, for joy at
+seeing Torpenhow again, for grief at misdeeds--if indeed they were
+misdeeds--that made Torpenhow remote and unsympathetic, and for
+childish vanity hurt, since Torpenhow had not given a word of praise to
+his wonderful picture.
+
+Bessie looked through the keyhole after a long pause, and saw the two
+walking up and down as usual, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's shoulder.
+
+Hereat she said something so improper that it shocked even Binkie, who
+was dribbling patiently on the landing with the hope of seeing his master
+again.
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+The lark will make her hymn to God,
+The partridge call her brood,
+While I forget the heath I trod,
+The fields wherein I stood.
+
+'Tis dule to know not night from morn,
+But deeper dule to know
+I can but hear the hunter's horn
+That once I used to blow. -- The Only Son.?
+
+IT WAS the third day after Torpenhow's return, and his heart was
+heavy.
+
+'Do you mean to tell me that you can't see to work without whiskey? It's
+generally the other way about.'
+
+'Can a drunkard swear on his honour?' said Dick.
+
+'Yes, if he has been as god a man as you.'
+
+'Then I give you my word of honour,' said Dick, speaking hurriedly
+through parched lips. 'Old man, I can hardly see your face now. You've
+kept me sober for two days,--if I ever was drunk,--and I've done no work.
+
+Don't keep me back any more. I don't know when my eyes may give out.
+
+The spots and dots and the pains and things are crowding worse than
+ever. I swear I can see all right when I'm--when I'm moderately screwed,
+as you say. Give me three more sittings from Bessie and all--the stuff I
+want, and the picture will be done. I can't kill myself in three days. It
+only means a touch of D. T. at the worst.'
+
+'If I give you three days more will you promise me to stop work and--the
+other thing, whether the picture's finished or not?'
+
+'I can't. You don't know what that picture means to me. But surely you
+could get the Nilghai to help you, and knock me down and tie me up. I
+shouldn't fight for the whiskey, but I should for the work.'
+
+'Go on, then. I give you three days; but you're nearly breaking my
+heart.'
+
+Dick returned to his work, toiling as one possessed; and the yellow devil
+of whiskey stood by him and chased away the spots in his eyes. The
+Melancolia was nearly finished, and was all or nearly all that he had
+hoped she would be. Dick jested with Bessie, who reminded him that he
+was 'a drunken beast'; but the reproof did not move him.
+
+'You can't understand, Bess. We are in sight of land now, and soon we
+shall lie back and think about what we've done. I'll give you three
+months' pay when the picture's finished, and next time I have any more
+work in hand--but that doesn't matter. Won't three months' pay make
+you hate me less?'
+
+'No, it won't! I hate you, and I'll go on hating you. Mr. Torpenhow won't
+speak to me any more. He's always looking at maps.'
+
+Bessie did not say that she had again laid siege to Torpenhow, or that at
+the end of our passionate pleading he had picked her up, given her a kiss,
+and put her outside the door with the recommendation not to be a little
+fool. He spent most of his time in the company of the Nilghai, and their
+talk was of war in the near future, the hiring of transports, and secret
+preparations among the dockyards. He did not wish to see Dick till the
+picture was finished.
+
+'He's doing first-class work,' he said to the Nilghai, 'and it's quite out of
+his regular line. But, for the matter of that, so's his infernal soaking.'
+
+'Never mind. Leave him alone. When he has come to his senses again
+we'll carry him off from this place and let him breathe clean air. Poor
+Dick! I don't envy you, Torp, when his eyes fail.'
+
+'Yes, it will be a case of "God help the man who's chained to our Davie."
+The worst is that we don't know when it will happen, and I believe the
+uncertainty and the waiting have sent Dick to the whiskey more than
+anything else.'
+
+'How the Arab who cut his head open would grin if he knew!'
+
+'He's at perfect liberty to grin if he can. He's dead. That's poor
+consolation now.'
+
+In the afternoon of the third day Torpenhow heard Dick calling for him.
+
+'All finished!' he shouted. 'I've done it! Come in! Isn't she a beauty? Isn't
+she a darling? I've been down to hell to get her; but isn't she worth it?'
+
+Torpenhow looked at the head of a woman who laughed,--a full-lipped,
+hollow-eyed woman who laughed from out of the canvas as Dick had
+intended she would.
+
+'Who taught you how to do it?' said Torpenhow. 'The touch and notion
+have nothing to do with your regular work. What a face it is! What eyes,
+and what insolence!' Unconsciously he threw back his head and laughed
+with her. 'She's seen the game played out,--I don't think she had a good
+time of it,--and now she doesn't care. Isn't that the idea?'
+
+'Exactly.'
+
+'Where did you get the mouth and chin from? They don't belong to Bess.'
+
+'They're--some one else's. But isn't it good? Isn't it thundering good?
+Wasn't it worth the whiskey? I did it. Alone I did it, and it's the best I
+can do.' He drew his breath sharply, and whispered, 'Just God! what
+could I not do ten years hence, if I can do this now!--By the way, what do
+you think of it, Bess?'
+
+The girl was biting her lips. She loathed Torpenhow because he had
+taken no notice of her.
+
+'I think it's just the horridest, beastliest thing I ever saw,' she answered,
+and turned away.
+
+'More than you will be of that way of thinking, young woman.--Dick,
+there's a sort of murderous, viperine suggestion in the poise of the head
+that I don't understand,' said Torpenhow.
+
+That's trick-work,' said Dick, chuckling with delight at being completely
+understood. 'I couldn't resist one little bit of sheer swagger. It's a French
+trick, and you wouldn't understand; but it's got at by slewing round the
+head a trifle, and a tiny, tiny foreshortening of one side of the face from
+the angle of the chin to the top of the left ear. That, and deepening the
+shadow under the lobe of the ear. It was flagrant trick-work; but, having
+the notion fixed, I felt entitled to play with it,--Oh, you beauty!'
+
+'Amen! She is a beauty. I can feel it.'
+
+'So will every man who has any sorrow of his own,' said Dick, slapping
+his thigh. 'He shall see his trouble there, and, by the Lord Harry, just
+when he's feeling properly sorry for himself he shall throw back his head
+and laugh,--as she is laughing. I've put the life of my heart and the light
+of my eyes into her, and I don't care what comes. . . . I'm tired,--awfully
+tired. I think I'll get to sleep. Take away the whiskey, it has served its
+turn, and give Bessie thirty-six quid, and three over for luck. Cover the
+picture.'
+
+He dropped asleep in the long chair, hid face white and haggard, almost
+before he had finished the sentence. Bessie tried to take Torpenhow's
+hand. 'Aren't you never going to speak to me any more?' she said; but
+Torpenhow was looking at Dick.
+
+'What a stock of vanity the man has! I'll take him in hand to-morrow and
+make much of him. He deserves it.--Eh! what was that, Bess?'
+
+'Nothing. I'll put things tidy here a little, and then I'll go. You couldn't
+give the that three months' pay now, could you? He said you were to.'
+
+Torpenhow gave her a check and went to his own rooms. Bessie faithfully
+tidied up the studio, set the door ajar for flight, emptied half a bottle of
+turpentine on a duster, and began to scrub the face of the Melancolia
+viciously. The paint did not smudge quickly enough. She took a
+palette-knife and scraped, following each stroke with the wet duster. In
+five minutes the picture was a formless, scarred muddle of colours. She
+threw the paint-stained duster into the studio stove, stuck out her tongue
+at the sleeper, and whispered, 'Bilked!' as she turned to run down the
+staircase. She would never see Torpenhow any more, but she had at least
+done harm to the man who had come between her and her desire and
+who used to make fun of her. Cashing the check was the very cream of
+the jest to Bessie. Then the little privateer sailed across the Thames, to be
+swallowed up in the gray wilderness of South-the-Water.
+
+Dick slept till late in the evening, when Torpenhow dragged him off to
+bed. His eyes were as bright as his voice was hoarse. 'Let's have another
+look at the picture,' he said, insistently as a child.
+
+'You--go--to--bed,' said Torpenhow. 'You aren't at all well, though you
+mayn't know it. You're as jumpy as a cat.'
+
+'I reform to-morrow. Good-night.'
+
+As he repassed through the studio, Torpenhow lifted the cloth above the
+picture, and almost betrayed himself by outcries: 'Wiped out!--scraped
+out and turped out! He's on the verge of jumps as it is. That's Bess,--the
+little fiend! Only a woman could have done that!-with the ink not dry on
+the check, too! Dick will be raving mad to-morrow. It was all my fault for
+trying to help gutter-devils. Oh, my poor Dick, the Lord is hitting you
+very hard!'
+
+Dick could not sleep that night, partly for pure joy, and partly because
+the well-known Catherine-wheels inside his eyes had given place to
+crackling volcanoes of many-coloured fire. 'Spout away,' he said aloud.
+
+'I've done my work, and now you can do what you please.' He lay still,
+staring at the ceiling, the long-pent-up delirium of drink in his veins, his
+brain on fire with racing thoughts that would not stay to be considered,
+and his hands crisped and dry. He had just discovered that he was
+painting the face of the Melancolia on a revolving dome ribbed with
+millions of lights, and that all his wondrous thoughts stood embodied
+hundreds of feet below his tiny swinging plank, shouting together in his
+honour, when something cracked inside his temples like an overstrained
+bowstring, the glittering dome broke inward, and he was alone in the
+thick night.
+
+'I'll go to sleep. The room's very dark. Let's light a lamp and see how the
+Melancolia looks. There ought to have been a moon.'
+
+It was then that Torpenhow heard his name called by a voice that he did
+not know,--in the rattling accents of deadly fear.
+
+'He's looked at the picture,' was his first thought, as he hurried into the
+bedroom and found Dick sitting up and beating the air with his hands.
+
+'Torp! Torp! where are you? For pity's sake, come to me!'
+
+'What's the matter?'
+
+Dick clutched at his shoulder. 'Matter! I've been lying here for hours in
+the dark, and you never heard me. Torp, old man, don't go away. I'm all
+in the dark. In the dark, I tell you!'
+
+Torpenhow held the candle within a foot of Dick's eyes, but there was no
+light in those eyes. He lit the gas, and Dick heard the flame catch. The
+grip of his fingers on Torpenhow's shoulder made Torpenhow wince.
+
+'Don't leave me. You wouldn't leave me alone now, would you? I can't
+see. D'you understand? It's black,--quite black,--and I feel as if I was
+falling through it all.'
+
+'Steady does it.' Torpenhow put his arm round Dick and began to rock
+him gently to and fro.
+
+'That's good. Now don't talk. If I keep very quiet for a while, this
+darkness will lift. It seems just on the point of breaking. H'sh!' Dick knit
+his brows and stared desperately in front of him. The night air was
+chilling Torpenhow's toes.
+
+'Can you stay like that a minute?' he said. 'I'll get my dressing-gown and
+some slippers.'
+
+Dick clutched the bed-head with both hands and waited for the darkness
+to clear away. 'What a time you've been!' he cried, when Torpenhow
+returned. 'It's as black as ever. What are you banging about in the
+door-way?'
+
+'Long chair,--horse-blanket,--pillow. Going to sleep by you. Lie down
+now; you'll be better in the morning.'
+
+'I shan't!' The voice rose to a wail. 'My God! I'm blind! I'm blind, and
+the darkness will never go away.' He made as if to leap from the bed, but
+Torpenhow's arms were round him, and Torpenhow's chin was on his
+shoulder, and his breath was squeezed out of him. He could only gasp,
+'Blind!' and wriggle feebly.
+
+'Steady, Dickie, steady!' said the deep voice in his ear, and the grip
+tightened. 'Bite on the bullet, old man, and don't let them think you're
+afraid,' The grip could draw no closer. Both men were breathing heavily.
+
+Dick threw his head from side to side and groaned.
+
+'Let me go,' he panted. 'You're cracking my ribs. We-we mustn't let
+them think we're afraid, must we,--all the powers of darkness and that
+lot?'
+
+'Lie down. It's all over now.'
+
+'Yes,' said Dick, obediently. 'But would you mind letting me hold your
+hand? I feel as if I wanted something to hold on to. One drops through
+the dark so.'
+
+Torpenhow thrust out a large and hairy paw from the long chair. Dick
+clutched it tightly, and in half an hour had fallen asleep. Torpenhow
+withdrew his hand, and, stooping over Dick, kissed him lightly on the
+forehead, as men do sometimes kiss a wounded comrade in the hour of
+death, to ease his departure.
+
+In the gray dawn Torpenhow heard Dick talking to himself. He was
+adrift on the shoreless tides of delirium, speaking very quickly--
+'It's a pity,--a great pity; but it's helped, and it must be eaten, Master
+George. Sufficient unto the day is the blindness thereof, and, further,
+putting aside all Melancolias and false humours, it is of obvious
+notoriety--such as mine was--that the queen can do no wrong. Torp
+doesn't know that. I'll tell him when we're a little farther into the desert.
+
+What a bungle those boatmen are making of the steamer-ropes! They'll
+have that four-inch hawser chafed through in a minute. I told you
+so--there she goes! White foam on green water, and the steamer slewing
+round. How good that looks! I'll sketch it. No, I can't. I'm afflicted with
+ophthalmia. That was one of the ten plagues of Egypt, and it extends up
+the Nile in the shape of cataract. Ha! that's a joke, Torp. Laugh, you
+graven image, and stand clear of the hawser. . . . It'll knock you into the
+water and make your dress all dirty, Maisie dear.'
+
+'Oh!' said Torpenhow. 'This happened before. That night on the river.'
+
+'She'll be sure to say it's my fault if you get muddy, and you're quite near
+enough to the breakwater. Maisie, that's not fair. Ah! I knew you'd miss.
+
+Low and to the left, dear. But you've no conviction. Don't be angry,
+darling. I'd cut my hand off if it would give you anything more than
+obstinacy. My right hand, if it would serve.'
+
+'Now we mustn't listen. Here's an island shouting across seas of
+misunderstanding with a vengeance. But it's shouting truth, I fancy,' said
+Torpenhow.
+
+The babble continued. It all bore upon Maisie. Sometimes Dick lectured
+at length on his craft, then he cursed himself for his folly in being
+enslaved. He pleaded to Maisie for a kiss--only one kiss--before she went
+away, and called to her to come back from Vitry-sur-Marne, if she
+would; but through all his ravings he bade heaven and earth witness that
+the queen could do no wrong.
+
+Torpenhow listened attentively, and learned every detail of Dick's life
+that had been hidden from him. For three days Dick raved through the
+past, and then a natural sleep. 'What a strain he has been running under,
+poor chap!' said Torpenhow. 'Dick, of all men, handing himself over like
+a dog! And I was lecturing him on arrogance! I ought to have known that
+it was no use to judge a man. But I did it. What a demon that girl must
+be! Dick's given her his life,--confound him!--and she's given him one kiss
+apparently.'
+
+'Torp,' said Dick, from the bed, 'go out for a walk. You've been here too
+long. I'll get up. Hi! This is annoying. I can't dress myself. Oh, it's too
+absurd!'
+
+Torpenhow helped him into his clothes and led him to the big chair in the
+studio. He sat quietly waiting under strained nerves for the darkness to
+lift. It did not lift that day, nor the next. Dick adventured on a voyage
+round the walls. He hit his shins against the stove, and this suggested to
+him that it would be better to crawl on all fours, one hand in front of
+him. Torpenhow found him on the floor.
+
+'I'm trying to get the geography of my new possessions,' said he. 'D'you
+remember that nigger you gouged in the square? Pity you didn't keep the
+odd eye. It would have been useful. Any letters for me? Give me all the
+ones in fat gray envelopes with a sort of crown thing outside. They're of
+no importance.'
+
+Torpenhow gave him a letter with a black M. on the envelope flap. Dick
+put it into his pocket. There was nothing in it that Torpenhow might not
+have read, but it belonged to himself and to Maisie, who would never
+belong to him.
+
+'When she finds that I don't write, she'll stop writing. It's better so. I
+couldn't be any use to her now,' Dick argued, and the tempter suggested
+that he should make known his condition. Every nerve in him revolted. 'I
+have fallen low enough already. I'm not going to beg for pity. Besides, it
+would be cruel to her.' He strove to put Maisie out of his thoughts; but
+the blind have many opportunities for thinking, and as the tides of his
+strength came back to him in the long employless days of dead darkness,
+Dick's soul was troubled to the core. Another letter, and another, came
+from Maisie. Then there was silence, and Dick sat by the window, the
+pulse of summer in the air, and pictured her being won by another man,
+stronger than himself. His imagination, the keener for the dark
+background it worked against, spared him no single detail that might
+send him raging up and down the studio, to stumble over the stove that
+seemed to be in four places at once. Worst of all, tobacco would not taste
+in the darkness. The arrogance of the man had disappeared, and in its
+place were settled despair that Torpenhow knew, and blind passion that
+Dick confided to his pillow at night. The intervals between the paroxysms
+were filled with intolerable waiting and the weight of intolerable
+darkness.
+
+'Come out into the Park,' said Torpenhow. 'You haven't stirred out since
+the beginning of things.'
+
+'What's the use? There's no movement in the dark; and, besides,'--he
+paused irresolutely at the head of the stairs,--'something will run over
+me.'
+
+'Not if I'm with you. Proceed gingerly.'
+
+The roar of the streets filled Dick with nervous terror, and he clung to
+Torpenhow's arm. 'Fancy having to feel for a gutter with your foot!' he
+said petulantly, as he turned into the Park. 'Let's curse God and die.'
+
+'Sentries are forbidden to pay unauthorised compliments. By Jove, there
+are the Guards!'
+
+Dick's figure straightened. 'Let's get near 'em. Let's go in and look. Let's
+get on the grass and run. I can smell the trees.'
+
+'Mind the low railing. That's all right!' Torpenhow kicked out a tuft of
+grass with his heel. 'Smell that,' he said. 'Isn't it good?' Dick sniffed
+luxuriously. 'Now pick up your feet and run.' They approached as near
+to the regiment as was possible. The clank of bayonets being unfixed
+made Dick's nostrils quiver.
+
+'Let's get nearer. They're in column, aren't they?'
+
+'Yes. How did you know?'
+
+'Felt it. Oh, my men!--my beautiful men!' He edged forward as though he
+could see. 'I could draw those chaps once. Who'll draw 'em now?'
+
+'They'll move off in a minute. Don't jump when the band begins.'
+
+'Huh! I'm not a new charger. It's the silences that hurt. Nearer,
+Torp!--nearer! Oh, my God, what wouldn't I give to see 'em for a
+minute!--one half-minute!'
+
+He could hear the armed life almost within reach of him, could hear the
+slings tighten across the bandsman's chest as he heaved the big drum
+from the ground.
+
+'Sticks crossed above his head,' whispered Torpenhow.
+
+'I know. I know! Who should know if I don't? H'sh!'
+
+The drum-sticks fell with a boom, and the men swung forward to the
+crash of the band. Dick felt the wind of the massed movement in his face,
+heard the maddening tramp of feet and the friction of the pouches on the
+belts. The big drum pounded out the tune. It was a music-hall refrain
+that made a perfect quickstep--
+
+He must be a man of decent height,
+He must be a man of weight,
+He must come home on a Saturday night
+In a thoroughly sober state;
+He must know how to love me,
+And he must know how to kiss;
+And if he's enough to keep us both
+I can't refuse him bliss.
+
+'What's the matter?' said Torpenhow, as he saw Dick's head fall when
+the last of the regiment had departed.
+
+'Nothing. I feel a little bit out of the running,--that's all. Torp, take me
+back. Why did you bring me out?'?
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+There were three friends that buried the fourth,
+The mould in his mouth and the dust in his eyes
+And they went south and east, and north,--
+The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.
+
+There were three friends that spoke of the dead,--
+The strong man fights, but the sick man dies.--
+'And would he were with us now,' they said,
+'The sun in our face and the wind in our eyes.'
+
+-- Ballad.
+
+THE NILGHAI was angry with Torpenhow. Dick had been sent to
+bed,--blind men are ever under the orders of those who can see,--and
+since he had returned from the Park had fluently sworn at Torpenhow
+because he was alive, and all the world because it was alive and could
+see, while he, Dick, was dead in the death of the blind, who, at the best,
+are only burdens upon their associates. Torpenhow had said something
+about a Mrs. Gummidge, and Dick had retired in a black fury to handle
+and re-handle three unopened letters from Maisie.
+
+The Nilghai, fat, burly, and aggressive, was in Torpenhow's rooms.
+
+Behind him sat the Keneu, the Great War Eagle, and between them lay a
+large map embellished with black-and-white-headed pins.
+
+'I was wrong about the Balkans,' said the Nilghai. 'But I'm not wrong
+about this business. The whole of our work in the Southern Soudan must
+be done over again. The public doesn't care, of course, but the
+government does, and they are making their arrangements quietly. You
+know that as well as I do.'
+
+'I remember how the people cursed us when our troops withdrew from
+Omdurman. It was bound to crop up sooner or later. But I can't go,' said
+Torpenhow. He pointed through the open door; it was a hot night. 'Can
+you blame me?'
+
+The Keneu purred above his pipe like a large and very happy cat--
+'Don't blame you in the least. It's uncommonly good of you, and all the
+rest of it, but every man--even you, Torp--must consider his work. I know
+it sounds brutal, but Dick's out of the race,--down,--gastados expended,
+finished, done for. He has a little money of his own. He won't starve, and
+you can't pull out of your slide for his sake. Think of your own
+reputation.'
+
+'Dick's was five times bigger than mine and yours put together.'
+
+'That was because he signed his name to everything he did. It's all ended
+now. You must hold yourself in readiness to move out. You can command
+your own prices, and you do better work than any three of us.'
+
+'Don't tell me how tempting it is. I'll stay here to look after Dick for a
+while. He's as cheerful as a bear with a sore head, but I think he likes to
+have me near him.'
+
+The Nilghai said something uncomplimentary about soft-headed fools
+who throw away their careers for other fools. Torpenhow flushed
+angrily. The constant strain of attendance on Dick had worn his nerves
+thin.
+
+'There remains a third fate,' said the Keneu, thoughtfully. 'Consider this,
+and be not larger fools than necessary. Dick is--or rather was--an
+able-bodied man of moderate attractions and a certain amount of
+audacity.'
+
+'Oho!' said the Nilghai, who remembered an affair at Cairo. 'I begin to
+see,--Torp, I'm sorry.'
+
+Torpenhow nodded forgiveness: 'You were more sorry when he cut you
+out, though.--Go on, Keneu.'
+
+'I've often thought, when I've seen men die out in the desert, that if the
+news could be sent through the world, and the means of transport were
+quick enough, there would be one woman at least at each man's bedside.'
+
+'There would be some mighty quaint revelations. Let us be grateful
+things are as they are,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Let us rather reverently consider whether Torp's three-cornered
+ministrations are exactly what Dick needs just now.--What do you think
+yourself, Torp?'
+
+'I know they aren't. But what can I do?'
+
+'Lay the matter before the board. We are all Dick's friends here. You've
+been most in his life.'
+
+'But I picked it up when he was off his head.'
+
+'The greater chance of its being true. I thought we should arrive. Who is
+she?'
+
+Then Torpenhow told a tale in plain words, as a special correspondent
+who knows how to make a verbal precis should tell it. The men listened
+without interruption.
+
+'Is it possible that a man can come back across the years to his calf-love?'
+
+said the Keneu. 'Is it possible?'
+
+'I give the facts. He says nothing about it now, but he sits fumbling three
+letters from her when he thinks I'm not looking. What am I to do?'
+
+'Speak to him,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'Oh yes! Write to her,--I don't know her full name, remember,--and ask
+her to accept him out of pity. I believe you once told Dick you were sorry
+for him, Nilghai. You remember what happened, eh? Go into the
+bedroom and suggest full confession and an appeal to this Maisie girl,
+whoever she is. I honestly believe he'd try to kill you; and the blindness
+has made him rather muscular.'
+
+'Torpenhow's course is perfectly clear,' said the Keneu. 'He will go to
+Vitry-sur-Marne, which is on the Bezieres-Landes Railway,--single track
+from Tourgas. The Prussians shelled it out in '70 because there was a
+poplar on the top of a hill eighteen hundred yards from the church spire
+There's a squadron of cavalry quartered there,--or ought to be. Where
+this studio Torp spoke about may be I cannot tell. That is Torp's
+business. I have given him his route. He will dispassionately explain the
+situation to the girl, and she will come back to Dick,--the more especially
+because, to use Dick's words, "there is nothing but her damned obstinacy
+to keep them apart."'
+
+'And they have four hundred and twenty pounds a year between 'em.
+
+Dick never lost his head for figures, even in his delirium. You haven't the
+shadow of an excuse for not going,' said the Nilghai.
+
+Torpenhow looked very uncomfortable. 'But it's absurd and impossible. I
+can't drag her back by the hair.'
+
+'Our business--the business for which we draw our money--is to do
+absurd and impossible things,--generally with no reason whatever except
+to amuse the public. Here we have a reason. The rest doesn't matter. I
+shall share these rooms with the Nilghai till Torpenhow returns. There
+will be a batch of unbridled "specials" coming to town in a little while,
+and these will serve as their headquarters. Another reason for sending
+Torpenhow away. Thus Providence helps those who help others,
+and'--here the Keneu dropped his measured speech--'we can't have you
+tied by the leg to Dick when the trouble begins. It's your only chance of
+getting away; and Dick will be grateful.'
+
+'He will,--worse luck! I can but go and try. I can't conceive a woman in
+her senses refusing Dick.'
+
+'Talk that out with the girl. I have seen you wheedle an angry Mahdieh
+woman into giving you dates. This won't be a tithe as difficult. You had
+better not be here to-morrow afternoon, because the Nilghai and I will be
+in possession. It is an order. Obey.'?
+
+'Dick,' said Torpenhow, next morning, 'can I do anything for you?'
+
+'No! Leave me alone. How often must I remind you that I'm blind?'
+
+'Nothing I could go for to fetch for to carry for to bring?'
+
+'No. Take those infernal creaking boots of yours away.'
+
+'Poor chap!' said Torpenhow to himself. 'I must have been sitting on his
+nerves lately. He wants a lighter step.' Then, aloud, 'Very well. Since
+you're so independent, I'm going off for four or five days. Say good-bye
+at least. The housekeeper will look after you, and Keneu has my rooms.'
+
+Dick's face fell. 'You won't be longer than a week at the outside? I know
+I'm touched in the temper, but I can't get on without you.'
+
+'Can't you? You'll have to do without me in a little time, and you'll be
+glad I'm gone.'
+
+Dick felt his way back to the big chair, and wondered what these things
+might mean. He did not wish to be tended by the housekeeper, and yet
+Torpenhow's constant tenderness jarred on him. He did not exactly know
+what he wanted. The darkness would not lift, and Maisie's unopened
+letters felt worn and old from much handling. He could never read them
+for himself as long as life endured; but Maisie might have sent him some
+fresh ones to play with. The Nilghai entered with a gift,--a piece of red
+modelling-wax. He fancied that Dick might find interest in using his
+hands. Dick poked and patted the stuff for a few minutes, and, 'Is it like
+anything in the world?' he said drearily. 'Take it away. I may get the
+touch of the blind in fifty years. Do you know where Torpenhow has
+gone?'
+
+The Nilghai knew nothing. 'We're staying in his rooms till he comes
+back. Can we do anything for you?'
+
+'I'd like to be left alone, please. Don't think I'm ungrateful; but I'm best
+alone.'
+
+The Nilghai chuckled, and Dick resumed his drowsy brooding and sullen
+rebellion against fate. He had long since ceased to think about the work
+he had done in the old days, and the desire to do more work had departed
+from him. He was exceedingly sorry for himself, and the completeness of
+his tender grief soothed him. But his soul and his body cried for
+Maisie--Maisie who would understand. His mind pointed out that Maisie,
+having her own work to do, would not care. His experience had taught
+him that when money was exhausted women went away, and that when a
+man was knocked out of the race the others trampled on him. 'Then at
+the least,' said Dick, in reply, 'she could use me as I used Binat,--for some
+sort of a study. I wouldn't ask more than to be near her again, even
+though I knew that another man was making love to her. Ugh! what a
+dog I am!'
+
+A voice on the staircase began to sing joyfully--
+
+'When we go--go--go away from here,
+Our creditors will weep and they will wail,
+Our absence much regretting when they find that they've been getting
+Out of England by next Tuesday's Indian mail.'?
+
+Following the trampling of feet, slamming of Torpenhow's door, and the
+sound of voices in strenuous debate, some one squeaked, 'And see, you
+good fellows, I have found a new water-bottle--firs'-class patent--eh, how
+you say? Open himself inside out.'
+
+Dick sprang to his feet. He knew the voice well. 'That's Cassavetti, come
+back from the Continent. Now I know why Torp went away. There's a
+row somewhere, and--I'm out of it!'
+
+The Nilghai commanded silence in vain. 'That's for my sake,' Dick said
+bitterly. 'The birds are getting ready to fly, and they wouldn't tell me. I
+can hear Morten-Sutherland and Mackaye. Half the War
+Correspondents in London are there;--and I'm out of it.'
+
+He stumbled across the landing and plunged into Torpenhow's room. He
+could feel that it was full of men. 'Where's the trouble?' said he. 'In the
+Balkans at last? Why didn't some one tell me?'
+
+'We thought you wouldn't be interested,' said the Nilghai, shamefacedly.
+
+'It's in the Soudan, as usual.'
+
+'You lucky dogs! Let me sit here while you talk. I shan't be a skeleton at
+the feast.--Cassavetti, where are you? Your English is as bad as ever.'
+
+Dick was led into a chair. He heard the rustle of the maps, and the talk
+swept forward, carrying him with it. Everybody spoke at once, discussing
+press censorships, railway-routes, transport, water-supply, the capacities
+of generals,--these in language that would have horrified a trusting
+public,--rangint, asserting, denouncing, and laughing at the top of their
+voices. There was the glorious certainty of war in the Soudan at any
+moment. The Nilghai said so, and it was well to be in readiness. The
+Keneu had telegraphed to Cairo for horses; Cassavetti had stolen a
+perfectly inaccurate list of troops that would be ordered forward, and
+was reading it out amid profane interruptions, and the Keneu introduced
+to Dick some man unknown who would be employed as war artist by the
+Central Southern Syndicate. 'It's his first outing,' said the Keneu. 'Give
+him some tips--about riding camels.'
+
+'Oh, those camels!' groaned Cassavetti. 'I shall learn to ride him again,
+and now I am so much all soft! Listen, you good fellows. I know your
+military arrangement very well. There will go the Royal Argalshire
+Sutherlanders. So it was read to me upon best authority.'
+
+A roar of laughter interrupted him.
+
+'Sit down,' said the Nilghai. 'The lists aren't even made out in the War
+Office.'
+
+'Will there be any force at Suakin?' aid a voice.
+
+Then the outcries redoubled, and grew mixed, thus: 'How many
+Egyptian troops will they use?--God help the Fellaheen!--There's a
+railway in Plumstead marshes doing duty as a fives-court.--We shall
+have the Suakin-Berber line built at last.--Canadian voyageurs are too
+careful. Give me a half-drunk Krooman in a whale-boat.--Who
+commands the Desert column?--No, they never blew up the big rock in
+the Ghineh bend. We shall have to be hauled up, as usual.--Somebody tell
+me if there's an Indian contingent, or I'll break everybody's head.--Don't
+tear the map in two.--It's a war of occupation, I tell you, to connect with
+the African companies in the South.--There's Guinea-worm in most of
+the wells on that route.' Then the Nilghai, despairing of peace, bellowed
+like a fog-horn and beat upon the table with both hands.
+
+'But what becomes of Torpenhow?' said Dick, in the silence that
+followed.
+
+'Torp's in abeyance just now. He's off love-making somewhere, I
+suppose,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'He said he was going to stay at home,' said the Keneu.
+
+'Is he?' said Dick, with an oath. 'He won't. I'm not much good now, but if
+you and the Nilghai hold him down I'll engage to trample on him till he
+sees reason. He'll stay behind, indeed! He's the best of you all. There'll be
+some tough work by Omdurman. We shall come there to stay, this time.
+
+But I forgot. I wish I were going with you.'
+
+'So do we all, Dickie,' said the Keneu.
+
+'And I most of all,' said the new artist of the Central Southern Syndicate.
+
+'Could you tell me----'
+
+'I'll give you one piece of advice,' Dick answered, moving towards the
+door. 'If you happen to be cut over the head in a scrimmage, don't guard.
+
+Tell the man to go on cutting. You'll find it cheapest in the end. Thanks
+for letting me look in.'
+
+'There's grit in Dick,' said the Nilghai, an hour later, when the room was
+emptied of all save the Keneu.
+
+'It was the sacred call of the war-trumpet. Did you notice how he
+answered to it? Poor fellow! Let's look at him,' said the Keneu.
+
+The excitement of the talk had died away. Dick was sitting by the studio
+table, with his head on his arms, when the men came in. He did not
+change his position.
+
+'It hurts,' he moaned. 'God forgive me, but it hurts cruelly; and yet,
+y'know, the world has a knack of spinning round all by itself. Shall I see
+Torp before he goes?'
+
+'Oh, yes. You'll see him,' said the Nilghai.
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+The sun went down an hour ago,
+I wonder if I face towards home;
+If I lost my way in the light of day
+How shall I find it now night is come?
+--Old Song.?
+
+'MAISIE, come to bed.'
+
+'It's so hot I can't sleep. Don't worry.'
+
+Maisie put her elbows on the window-sill and looked at the moonlight on
+the straight, poplar-flanked road. Summer had come upon
+Vitry-sur-Marne and parched it to the bone. The grass was dry-burnt in
+the meadows, the clay by the bank of the river was caked to brick, the
+roadside flowers were long since dead, and the roses in the garden hung
+withered on their stalks. The heat in the little low bedroom under the
+eaves was almost intolerable. The very moonlight on the wall of Kami's
+studio across the road seemed to make the night hotter, and the shadow
+of the big bell-handle by the closed gate cast a bar of inky black that
+caught Maisie's eye and annoyed her.
+
+'Horrid thing! It should be all white,' she murmured. 'And the gate isn't
+in the middle of the wall, either. I never noticed that before.'
+
+Maisie was hard to please at that hour. First, the heat of the past few
+weeks had worn her down; secondly, her work, and particularly the
+study of a female head intended to represent the Melancolia and not
+finished in time for the Salon, was unsatisfactory; thirdly, Kami had said
+as much two days before; fourthly,--but so completely fourthly that it
+was hardly worth thinking about,--Dick, her property, had not written to
+her for more than six weeks. She was angry with the heat, with Kami,
+and with her work, but she was exceedingly angry with Dick.
+
+She had written to him three times,--each time proposing a fresh
+treatment of her Melancolia. Dick had taken no notice of these
+communications. She had resolved to write no more. When she returned
+to England in the autumn--for her pride's sake she could not return
+earlier--she would speak to him. She missed the Sunday afternoon
+conferences more than she cared to admit. All that Kami said was,
+'Continuez, mademoiselle, continuez toujours,' and he had been repeating
+the wearisome counsel through the hot summer, exactly like a cicada,--an
+old gray cicada in a black alpaca coat, white trousers, and a huge felt hat.
+
+But Dick had tramped masterfully up and down her little studio north of
+the cool green London park, and had said things ten times worse than
+continuez, before he snatched the brush out of her hand and showed her
+where the error lay. His last letter, Maisie remembered, contained some
+trivial advice about not sketching in the sun or drinking water at wayside
+farmhouses; and he had said that not once, but three times,--as if he did
+not know that Maisie could take care of herself.
+
+But what was he doing, that he could not trouble to write? A murmur of
+voices in the road made her lean from the window. A cavalryman of the
+little garrison in the town was talking to Kami's cook. The moonlight
+glittered on the scabbard of his sabre, which he was holding in his hand
+lest it should clank inopportunely. The cook's cap cast deep shadows on
+her face, which was close to the conscript's. He slid his arm round her
+waist, and there followed the sound of a kiss.
+
+'Faugh!' said Maisie, stepping back.
+
+'What's that?' said the red-haired girl, who was tossing uneasily outside
+her bed.
+
+'Only a conscript kissing the cook,' said Maisie.
+
+'They've gone away now.' She leaned out of the window again, and put a
+shawl over her nightgown to guard against chills. There was a very small
+night-breeze abroad, and a sun-baked rose below nodded its head as one
+who knew unutterable secrets. Was it possible that Dick should turn his
+thoughts from her work and his own and descend to the degradation of
+Suzanne and the conscript? He could not! The rose nodded its head and
+one leaf therewith. It looked like a naughty little devil scratching its ear.
+
+Dick could not, 'because,' thought Maisie, 'he is mind,--mine,--mine. He
+said he was. I'm sure I don't care what he does. It will only spoil his work
+if he does; and it will spoil mine too.'
+
+The rose continued to nod it the futile way peculiar to flowers. There was
+no earthly reason why Dick should not disport himself as he chose, except
+that he was called by Providence, which was Maisie, to assist Maisie in
+her work. And her work was the preparation of pictures that went
+sometimes to English provincial exhibitions, as the notices in the
+scrap-book proved, and that were invariably rejected by the Salon when
+Kami was plagued into allowing her to send them up. Her work in the
+future, it seemed, would be the preparation of pictures on exactly similar
+lines which would be rejected in exactly the same way----
+The red-haired girl threshed distressfully across the sheets. 'It's too hot
+to sleep,' she moaned; and the interruption jarred.
+
+Exactly the same way. Then she would divide her years between the little
+studio in England and Kami's big studio at Vitry-sur-Marne. No, she
+would go to another master, who should force her into the success that
+was her right, if patient toil and desperate endeavour gave one a right to
+anything. Dick had told her that he had worked ten years to understand
+his craft. She had worked ten years, and ten years were nothing. Dick
+had said that ten years were nothing,--but that was in regard to herself
+only. He had said--this very man who could not find time to write--that
+he would wait ten years for her, and that she was bound to come back to
+him sooner or later. He had said this in the absurd letter about sunstroke
+and diphtheria; and then he had stopped writing. He was wandering up
+and down moonlit streets, kissing cooks. She would like to lecture him
+now,--not in her nightgown, of course, but properly dressed, severely and
+from a height. Yet if he was kissing other girls he certainly would not
+care whether she lecture him or not. He would laugh at her. Very good.
+
+She would go back to her studio and prepare pictures that went, etc., etc.
+
+The mill-wheel of thought swung round slowly, that no section of it might
+be slurred over, and the red-haired girl tossed and turned behind her.
+
+Maisie put her chin in her hands and decided that there could be no
+doubt whatever of the villainy of Dick. To justify herself, she began,
+unwomanly, to weigh the evidence. There was a boy, and he had said he
+loved her. And he kissed her,--kissed her on the cheek,--by a yellow
+sea-poppy that nodded its head exactly like the maddening dry rose in the
+garden. Then there was an interval, and men had told her that they loved
+her--just when she was busiest with her work. Then the boy came back,
+and at their very second meeting had told her that he loved her. Then he
+had---- But there was no end to the things he had done. He had given her
+his time and his powers. He had spoken to her of Art, housekeeping,
+technique, teacups, the abuse of pickles as a stimulant,--that was
+rude,--sable hair-brushes,--he had given her the best in her stock,--she
+used them daily; he had given her advice that she profited by, and now
+and again--a look. Such a look! The look of a beaten hound waiting for
+the word to crawl to his mistress's feet. In return she had given him
+nothing whatever, except--here she brushed her mouth against the
+open-work sleeve f her nightgown--the privilege of kissing her once. And
+on the mouth, too. Disgraceful! Was that not enough, and more than
+enough? and if it was not, had he not cancelled the debt by not writing
+and--probably kissing other girls?
+'Maisie, you'll catch a chill. Do go and lie down,' said the wearied voice
+of her companion. 'I can't sleep a wink with you at the window.'
+
+Maisie shrugged her shoulders and did not answer. She was reflecting on
+the meannesses of Dick, and on other meannesses with which he had
+nothing to do. The moonlight would not let her sleep. It lay on the
+skylight of the studio across the road in cold silver; she stared at it
+intently and her thoughts began to slide one into the other. The shadow
+of the big bell-handle in the wall grew short, lengthened again, and faded
+out as the moon went down behind the pasture and a hare came limping
+home across the road. Then the dawn-wind washed through the upland
+grasses, and brought coolness with it, and the cattle lowed by the
+drought-shrunk river. Maisie's head fell forward on the window-sill, and
+the tangle of black hair covered her arms.
+
+'Maisie, wake up. You'll catch a chill.'
+
+'Yes, dear; yes, dear.' She staggered to her bed like a wearied child, and
+as she buried her face in the pillows she muttered, 'I think--I think. . . .
+
+But he ought to have written.'
+
+Day brought the routine of the studio, the smell of paint and turpentine,
+and the monotone wisdom of Kami, who was a leaden artist, but a golden
+teacher if the pupil were only in sympathy with him. Maisie was not in
+sympathy that day, and she waited impatiently for the end of the work.
+
+She knew when it was coming; for Kami would gather his black alpaca
+coat into a bunch behind him, and, with faded flue eyes that saw neither
+pupils nor canvas, look back into the past to recall the history of one
+Binat. 'You have all done not so badly,' he would say. 'But you shall
+remember that it is not enough to have the method, and the art, and the
+power, nor even that which is touch, but you shall have also the
+conviction that nails the work to the wall. Of the so many I taught,'--here
+the students would begin to unfix drawing-pins or get their tubes
+together,--'the very so many that I have taught, the best was Binat. All
+that comes of the study and the work and the knowledge was to him even
+when he came. After he left me he should have done all that could be
+done with the colour, the form, and the knowledge. Only, he had not the
+conviction. So to-day I hear no more of Binat,--the best of my
+pupils,--and that is long ago. So to-day, too, you will be glad to hear no
+more of me. Continuez, mesdemoiselles, and, above all, with conviction.'
+
+He went into the garden to smoke and mourn over the lost Binat as the
+pupils dispersed to their several cottages or loitered in the studio to make
+plans for the cool of the afternoon.
+
+Maisie looked at her very unhappy Melancolia, restrained a desire to
+grimace before it, and was hurrying across the road to write a letter to
+Dick, when she was aware of a large man on a white troop-horse. How
+Torpenhow had managed in the course of twenty hours to find his way to
+the hearts of the cavalry officers in quarters at Vitry-sur-Marne, to
+discuss with them the certainty of a glorious revenge for France, to
+reduce the colonel to tears of pure affability, and to borrow the best
+horse in the squadron for the journey to Kami's studio, is a mystery that
+only special correspondents can unravel.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' said he. 'It seems an absurd question to ask, but the
+fact is that I don't know her by any other name: Is there any young lady
+here that is called Maisie?'
+
+'I am Maisie,' was the answer from the depths of a great sun-hat.
+
+'I ought to introduce myself,' he said, as the horse capered in the blinding
+white dust. 'My name is Torpenhow. Dick Heldar is my best friend,
+and--and--the fact is that he has gone blind.'
+
+'Blind!' said Maisie, stupidly. 'He can't be blind.'
+
+'He has been stone-blind for nearly two months.'
+
+Maisie lifted up her face, and it was pearly white. 'No! No! Not blind! I
+won't have him blind!'
+
+'Would you care to see for yourself?' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Now,--at once?'
+
+'Oh, no! The Paris train doesn't go through this place till to-night. There
+will be ample time.'
+
+'Did Mr. Heldar send you to me?'
+
+'Certainly not. Dick wouldn't do that sort of thing. He's sitting in his
+studio, turning over some letters that he can't read because he's blind.'
+
+There was a sound of choking from the sun-hat. Maisie bowed her head
+and went into the cottage, where the red-haired girl was on a sofa,
+complaining of a headache.
+
+'Dick's blind!' said Maisie, taking her breath quickly as she steadied
+herself against a chair-back. 'My Dick's blind!'
+
+'What?' The girl was on the sofa no longer.
+
+'A man has come from England to tell me. He hasn't written to me for six
+weeks.'
+
+'Are you going to him?'
+
+'I must think.'
+
+'Think! I should go back to London and see him and I should kiss his eyes
+and kiss them and kiss them until they got well again! If you don't go I
+shall. Oh, what am I talking about? You wicked little idiot! Go to him at
+once. Go!'
+
+Torpenhow's neck was blistering, but he preserved a smile of infinite
+patience as Maisie's appeared bareheaded in the sunshine.
+
+'I am coming,' said she, her eyes on the ground.
+
+'You will be at Vitry Station, then, at seven this evening.' This was an
+order delivered by one who was used to being obeyed. Maisie said
+nothing, but she felt grateful that there was no chance of disputing with
+this big man who took everything for granted and managed a squealing
+horse with one hand. She returned to the red-haired girl, who was
+weeping bitterly, and between tears, kisses,--very few of those,--menthol,
+packing, and an interview with Kami, the sultry afternoon wore away.
+
+Thought might come afterwards. Her present duty was to go to
+Dick,--Dick who owned the wondrous friend and sat in the dark playing
+with her unopened letters.
+
+'But what will you do,' she said to her companion.
+
+'I? Oh, I shall stay here and--finish your Melancolia,' she said, smiling
+pitifully. 'Write to me afterwards.'
+
+That night there ran a legend through Vitry-sur-Marne of a mad
+Englishman, doubtless suffering from sunstroke, who had drunk all the
+officers of the garrison under the table, had borrowed a horse from the
+lines, and had then and there eloped, after the English custom, with one
+of those more mad English girls who drew pictures down there under the
+care of that good Monsieur Kami.
+
+'They are very droll,' said Suzanne to the conscript in the moonlight by
+the studio wall. 'She walked always with those big eyes that saw nothing,
+and yet she kisses me on both cheeks as though she were my sister, and
+gives me--see--ten francs!'
+
+The conscript levied a contribution on both gifts; for he prided himself on
+being a good soldier.
+
+Torpenhow spoke very little to Maisie during the journey to Calais; but
+he was careful to attend to all her wants, to get her a compartment
+entirely to herself, and to leave her alone. He was amazed of the ease
+with which the matter had been accomplished.
+
+'The safest thing would be to let her think things out. By Dick's
+showing,--when he was off his head,--she must have ordered him about
+very thoroughly. Wonder how she likes being under orders.'
+
+Maisie never told. She sat in the empty compartment often with her eyes
+shut, that she might realise the sensation of blindness. It was an order
+that she should return to London swiftly, and she found herself at last
+almost beginning to enjoy the situation. This was better than looking
+after luggage and a red-haired friend who never took any interest in her
+surroundings. But there appeared to be a feeling in the air that she,
+Maisie,--of all people,--was in disgrace. Therefore she justified her
+conduct to herself with great success, till Torpenhow came up to her on
+the steamer and without preface began to tell the story of Dick's
+blindness, suppressing a few details, but dwelling at length on the
+miseries of delirium. He stopped before he reached the end, as though he
+had lost interest in the subject, and went forward to smoke. Maisie was
+furious with him and with herself.
+
+She was hurried on from Dover to London almost before she could ask
+for breakfast, and--she was past any feeling of indignation now--was
+bidden curtly to wait in a hall at the foot of some lead-covered stairs
+while Torpenhow went up to make inquiries. Again the knowledge that
+she was being treated like a naughty little girl made her pale cheeks
+flame. It was all Dick's fault for being so stupid as to go blind.
+
+Torpenhow led her up to a shut door, which he opened very softly. Dick
+was sitting by the window, with his chin on his chest. There were three
+envelopes in his hand, and he turned them over and over. The big man
+who gave orders was no longer by her side, and the studio door snapped
+behind her.
+
+Dick thrust the letters into his pocket as he heard the sound. 'Hullo,
+Topr! Is that you? I've been so lonely.'
+
+His voice had taken the peculiar flatness of the blind. Maisie pressed
+herself up into a corner of the room. Her heart was beating furiously,
+and she put one hand on her breast to keep it quiet. Dick was staring
+directly at her, and she realised for the first time that he was blind.
+
+Shutting her eyes in a rail-way carriage to open them when she pleased
+was child's play. This man was blind though his eyes were wide open.
+
+'Torp, is that you? They said you were coming.' Dick looked puzzled and
+a little irritated at the silence.
+
+'No; it's only me,' was the answer, in a strained little whisper. Maisie
+could hardly move her lips.
+
+'H'm!' said Dick, composedly, without moving. 'This is a new
+phenomenon. Darkness I'm getting used to; but I object to hearing voices.'
+
+Was he mad, then, as well as blind, that he talked to himself? Maisie's
+heart beat more wildly, and she breathed in gasps. Dick rose and began
+to feel his way across the room, touching each table and chair as he
+passed. Once he caught his foot on a rug, and swore, dropping on his
+knees to feel what the obstruction might be. Maisie remembered him
+walking in the Park as though all the earth belonged to him, tramping up
+and down her studio two months ago, and flying up the gangway of the
+Channel steamer. The beating of her heart was making her sick, and
+Dick was coming nearer, guided by the sound of her breathing. She put
+out a hand mechanically to ward him off or to draw him to herself, she
+did not know which. It touched his chest, and he stepped back as though
+he had been shot.
+
+'It's Maisie!' said he, with a dry sob. 'What are you doing here?'
+
+'I came--I came--to see you, please.'
+
+Dick's lips closed firmly.
+
+'Won't you sit down, then? You see, I've had some bother with my eyes, and----'
+
+'I know. I know. Why didn't you tell me?'
+
+'I couldn't write.'
+
+'You might have told Mr. Torpenhow.'
+
+'What has he to do with my affairs?'
+
+'He--he brought me from Vitry-sur-Marne. He thought I ought to see you.'
+
+'Why, what has happened? Can I do anything for you? No, I can't. I forgot.'
+
+'Oh, Dick, I'm so sorry! I've come to tell you, and---- Let me take you
+back to your chair.'
+
+'Don't! I'm not a child. You only do that out of pity. I never meant to tell
+you anything about it. I'm no good now. I'm down and done for. Let me alone!'
+
+He groped back to his chair, his chest labouring as he sat down.
+
+Maisie watched him, and the fear went out of her heart, to be followed by
+a very bitter shame. He had spoken a truth that had been hidden from
+the girl through every step of the impetuous flight to London; for he was,
+indeed, down and done for--masterful no longer but rather a little abject;
+neither an artist stronger than she, nor a man to be looked up to--only
+some blind one that sat in a chair and seemed on the point of crying. She
+was immensely and unfeignedly sorry for him--more sorry than she had
+ever been for any one in her life, but not sorry enough to deny his words.
+
+So she stood still and felt ashamed and a little hurt, because she had
+honestly intended that her journey should end triumphantly; and now
+she was only filled with pity most startlingly distinct from love.
+
+'Well?' said Dick, his face steadily turned away. 'I never meant to worry
+you any more. What's the matter?'
+
+He was conscious that Maisie was catching her breath, but was as
+unprepared as herself for the torrent of emotion that followed. She had
+dropped into a chair and was sobbing with her face hidden in her hands.
+
+'I can't--I can't!' she cried desperately. 'Indeed, I can't. It isn't my fault.
+
+I'm so sorry. Oh, Dickie, I'm so sorry.'
+
+Dick's shoulders straightened again, for the words lashed like a whip.
+
+Still the sobbing continued. It is not good to realise that you have failed in
+the hour of trial or flinched before the mere possibility of making sacrifices.
+
+'I do despise myself--indeed I do. But I can't. Oh, Dickie, you wouldn't
+ask me--would you?' wailed Maisie.
+
+She looked up for a minute, and by chance it happened that Dick's eyes
+fell on hers. The unshaven face was very white and set, and the lips were
+trying to force themselves into a smile. But it was the worn-out eyes that
+Maisie feared. Her Dick had gone blind and left in his place some one
+that she could hardly recognise till he spoke.
+
+'Who is asking you to do anything, Maisie? I told you how it would be.
+
+What's the use of worrying? For pity's sake don't cry like that; it isn't
+worth it.'
+
+'You don't know how I hate myself. Oh, Dick, help me--help me!' The
+passion of tears had grown beyond her control and was beginning to
+alarm the man. He stumbled forward and put his arm round her, and her
+head fell on his shoulder.
+
+'Hush, dear, hush! Don't cry. You're quite right, and you've nothing to
+reproach yourself with--you never had. You're only a little upset by the
+journey, and I don't suppose you've had any breakfast. What a brute
+Torp was to bring you over.'
+
+'I wanted to come. I did indeed,' she protested.
+
+'Very well. And now you've come and seen, and I'm--immensely grateful.
+
+When you're better you shall go away and get something to eat. What
+sort of a passage did you have coming over?'
+
+Maisie was crying more subduedly, for the first time in her life glad that
+she had something to lean against. Dick patted her on the shoulder
+tenderly but clumsily, for he was not quite sure where her shoulder
+might be.
+
+She drew herself out of his arms at last and waited, trembling and most
+unhappy. He had felt his way to the window to put the width of the room
+between them, and to quiet a little the tumult in his heart.
+
+'Are you better now?' he said.
+
+'Yes, but--don't you hate me?'
+
+'I hate you? My God! I?'
+
+'Isn't--isn't there anything I could do for you, then? I'll stay here in
+England to do it, if you like. Perhaps I could come and see you sometimes.'
+
+'I think not, dear. It would be kindest not to see me any more, please. I
+don't want to seem rude, but--don't you think--perhaps you had almost
+better go now.'
+
+He was conscious that he could not bear himself as a man if the strain
+continued much longer.
+
+'I don't deserve anything else. I'll go, Dick. Oh, I'm so miserable.'
+
+'Nonsense. You've nothing to worry about; I'd tell you if you had. Wait a
+moment, dear. I've got something to give you first. I meant it for you ever
+since this little trouble began. It's my Melancolia; she was a beauty when
+I last saw her. You can keep her for me, and if ever you're poor you can
+sell her. She's worth a few hundreds at any state of the market.' He
+groped among his canvases. 'She's framed in black. Is this a black frame
+that I have my hand on? There she is. What do you think of her?'
+
+He turned a scarred formless muddle of paint towards Maisie, and the
+eyes strained as though they would catch her wonder and surprise. One
+thing and one thing only could she do for him.
+
+'Well?'
+
+The voice was fuller and more rounded, because the man knew he was
+speaking of his best work. Maisie looked at the blur, and a lunatic desire
+to laugh caught her by the throat. But for Dick's sake--whatever this mad
+blankness might mean--she must make no sign. Her voice choked with
+hard-held tears as she answered, still gazing at the wreck--
+'Oh, Dick, it is good!'
+
+He heard the little hysterical gulp and took it for tribute. 'Won't you
+have it, then? I'll send it over to your house if you will.'
+
+'I? Oh yes--thank you. Ha! ha!' If she did not fly at once the laughter
+that was worse than tears would kill her. She turned and ran, choking
+and blinded, down the staircases that were empty of life to take refuge in
+a cab and go to her house across the Parks. There she sat down in the
+dismantled drawing-room and thought of Dick in his blindness, useless
+till the end of life, and of herself in her own eyes. Behind the sorrow, the
+shame, and the humiliation, lay fear of the cold wrath of the red-haired
+girl when Maisie should return. Maisie had never feared her companion
+before. Not until she found herself saying, 'Well, he never asked me,' did
+she realise her scorn of herself.
+
+And that is the end of Maisie.
+
+* * * * * *
+For Dick was reserved more searching torment. He could not realise at
+first that Maisie, whom he had ordered to go had left him without a word
+of farewell. He was savagely angry against Torpenhow, who had brought
+upon him this humiliation and troubled his miserable peace. Then his
+dark hour came and he was alone with himself and his desires to get
+what help he could from the darkness. The queen could do no wrong, but
+in following the right, so far as it served her work, she had wounded her
+one subject more than his own brain would let him know.
+
+'It's all I had and I've lost it,' he said, as soon as the misery permitted
+clear thinking. 'And Torp will think that he has been so infernally clever
+that I shan't have the heart to tell him. I must think this out quietly.'
+
+'Hullo!' said Torpenhow, entering the studio after Dick had enjoyed two
+hours of thought. 'I'm back. Are you feeling any better?'
+
+'Torp, I don't know what to say. Come here.' Dick coughed huskily,
+wondering, indeed, what he should say, and how to say it temperately.
+
+'What's the need for saying anything? Get up and tramp.' Torpenhow
+was perfectly satisfied.
+
+They walked up and down as of custom, Torpenhow's hand on Dick's
+shoulder, and Dick buried in his own thoughts.
+
+'How in the world did you find it all out?' said Dick, at last.
+
+'You shouldn't go off your head if you want to keep secrets, Dickie. It
+was absolutely impertinent on my part; but if you'd seen me rocketing
+about on a half-trained French troop-horse under a blazing sun you'd
+have laughed. There will be a charivari in my rooms to-night. Seven
+other devils----'
+
+'I know--the row in the Southern Soudan. I surprised their councils the
+other day, and it made me unhappy. Have you fixed your flint to go?
+Who d'you work for?'
+
+'Haven't signed any contracts yet. I wanted to see how your business
+would turn out.'
+
+'Would you have stayed with me, then, if--things had gone wrong?' He
+put his question cautiously.
+
+'Don't ask me too much. I'm only a man.'
+
+'You've tried to be an angel very successfully.'
+
+'Oh ye--es! . . . Well, do you attend the function to-night? We shall be
+half screwed before the morning. All the men believe the war's a certainty.'
+
+'I don't think I will, old man, if it's all the same to you. I'll stay quiet here.'
+
+'And meditate? I don't blame you. You observe a good time if ever a man did.'
+
+That night there was a tumult on the stairs. The correspondents poured
+in from theatre, dinner, and music-hall to Torpenhow's room that they
+might discuss their plan of campaign in the event of military operations
+becoming a certainty. Torpenhow, the Keneu,, and the Nilghai had
+bidden all the men they had worked with to the orgy; and Mr. Beeton,
+the housekeeper, declared that never before in his checkered experience
+had he seen quite such a fancy lot of gentlemen. They waked the
+chambers with shoutings and song; and the elder men were quite as bad
+as the younger. For the chances of war were in front of them, and all
+knew what those meant.
+
+Sitting in his own room a little perplexed by the noise across the landing,
+Dick suddenly began to laugh to himself.
+
+'When one comes to think of it the situation is intensely comic. Maisie's
+quite right--poor little thing. I didn't know she could cry like that before;
+but now I know what Torp thinks, I'm sure he'd be quite fool enough to
+stay at home and try to console me--if he knew. Besides, it isn't nice to
+own that you've been thrown over like a broken chair. I must carry this
+business through alone--as usual. If there isn't a war, and Torp finds out,
+I shall look foolish, that's all. If there is a way I mustn't interfere with
+another man's chances. Business is business, and I want to be alone--I
+want to be alone. What a row they're making!'
+
+Somebody hammered at the studio door.
+
+'Come out and frolic, Dickie,' said the Nilghai.
+
+'I should like to, but I can't. I'm not feeling frolicsome.'
+
+'Then, I'll tell the boys and they'll drag you like a badger.'
+
+'Please not, old man. On my word, I'd sooner be left alone just now.'
+
+'Very good. Can we send anything in to you? Fizz, for instance.
+
+Cassavetti is beginning to sing songs of the Sunny South already.'
+
+For one minute Dick considered the proposition seriously.
+
+'No, thanks, I've a headache already.'
+
+'Virtuous child. That's the effect of emotion on the young. All my
+congratulations, Dick. I also was concerned in the conspiracy for your welfare.'
+
+'Go to the devil--oh, send Binkie in here.'
+
+The little dog entered on elastic feet, riotous from having been made
+much of all the evening. He had helped to sing the choruses; but scarcely
+inside the studio he realised that this was no place for tail-wagging, and
+settled himself on Dick's lap till it was bedtime. Then he went to bed with
+Dick, who counted every hour as it struck, and rose in the morning with
+a painfully clear head to receive Torpenhow's more formal
+congratulations and a particular account of the last night's revels.
+
+'You aren't looking very happy for a newly accepted man,' said Torpenhow.
+
+'Never mind that--it's my own affair, and I'm all right. Do you really go?'
+
+'Yes. With the old Central Southern as usual. They wired, and I accepted
+on better terms than before.'
+
+'When do you start?'
+
+'The day after to-morrow--for Brindisi.'
+
+'Thank God.' Dick spoke from the bottom of his heart.
+
+'Well, that's not a pretty way of saying you're glad to get rid of me. But
+men in your condition are allowed to be selfish.'
+
+'I didn't mean that. Will you get a hundred pounds cashed for me before
+you leave?'
+
+'That's a slender amount for housekeeping, isn't it?'
+
+'Oh, it's only for--marriage expenses.'
+
+Torpenhow brought him the money, counted it out in fives and tens, and
+carefully put it away in the writing table.
+
+'Now I suppose I shall have to listen to his ravings about his girl until I
+go. Heaven send us patience with a man in love!' he said to himself.
+
+But never a word did Dick say of Maisie or marriage. He hung in the
+doorway of Torpenhow's room when the latter was packing and asked
+innumerable questions about the coming campaign, till Torpenhow began
+to feel annoyed.
+
+'You're a secretive animal, Dickie, and you consume your own smoke,
+don't you?' he said on the last evening.
+
+'I--I suppose so. By the way, how long do you think this war will last?'
+
+'Days, weeks, or months. One can never tell. It may go on for years.'
+
+'I wish I were going.'
+
+'Good Heavens! You're the most unaccountable creature! Hasn't it
+occurred to you that you're going to be married--thanks to me?'
+
+'Of course, yes. I'm going to be married--so I am. Going to be married.
+
+I'm awfully grateful to you. Haven't I told you that?'
+
+'You might be going to be hanged by the look of you,' said Torpenhow.
+
+And the next day Torpenhow bade him good-bye and left him to the
+loneliness he had so much desired.
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Yet at the last, ere our spearmen had found him,
+Yet at the last, ere a sword-thrust could save,
+Yet at the last, with his masters around him,
+He of the Faith spoke as master to slave;
+Yet at the last, tho' the Kafirs had maimed him,
+Broken by bondage and wrecked by the reiver,--
+Yet at the last, tho' the darkness had claimed him,
+He called upon Allah and died a believer.
+
+--Kizzilbashi.
+
+'BEG your pardon, Mr. Heldar, but--but isn't nothin' going to happen?'
+
+said Mr. Beeton.
+
+'No!' Dick had just waked to another morning of blank despair and his
+temper was of the shortest.
+
+''Tain't my regular business, o' course, sir; and what I say is, "Mind
+your own business and let other people mind theirs;" but just before Mr.
+
+Torpenhow went away he give me to understand, like, that you might be
+moving into a house of your own, so to speak--a sort of house with rooms
+upstairs and downstairs where you'd be better attended to, though I try
+to act just by all our tenants. Don't I?'
+
+'Ah! That must have been a mad-house. I shan't trouble you to take me
+there yet. Get me my breakfast, please, and leave me alone.'
+
+'I hope I haven't done anything wrong, sir, but you know I hope that as
+far as a man can I tries to do the proper thing by all the gentlemen in
+chambers--and more particular those whose lot is hard--such as you, for
+instance, Mr. Heldar. You likes soft-roe bloater, don't you? Soft-roe
+bloaters is scarcer than hard-roe, but what I says is, "Never mind a little
+extra trouble so long as you give satisfaction to the tenants."'
+
+Mr. Beeton withdrew and left Dick to himself. Torpenhow had been long
+away; there was no more rioting in the chambers, and Dick had settled
+down to his new life, which he was weak enough to consider nothing
+better than death.
+
+It is hard to live alone in the dark, confusing the day and night; dropping
+to sleep through sheer weariness at mid-day, and rising restless in the
+chill of the dawn. At first Dick, on his awakenings, would grope along the
+corridors of the chambers till he heard some one snore. Then he would
+know that the day had not yet come, and return wearily to his bedroom.
+
+Later he learned not to stir till there was a noise and movement in the
+house and Mr. Beeton advised him to get up. Once dressed--and dressing,
+now that Torpenhow was away, was a lengthy business, because collars,
+ties, and the like hid themselves in far corners of the room, and search
+meant head-beating against chairs and trunks--once dressed, there was
+nothing whatever to do except to sit still and brood till the three daily
+meals came. Centuries separated breakfast from lunch and lunch from
+dinner, and though a man prayed for hundreds of years that his mind
+might be taken from him, God would never hear. Rather the mind was
+quickened and the revolving thoughts ground against each other as
+millstones grind when there is no corn between; and yet the brain would
+not wear out and give him rest. It continued to think, at length, with
+imagery and all manner of reminiscences. It recalled Maisie and past
+success, reckless travels by land and sea, the glory of doing work and
+feeling that it was good, and suggested all that might have happened had
+the eyes only been faithful to their duty. When thinking ceased through
+sheer weariness, there poured into Dick's soul tide on tide of
+overwhelming, purposeless fear--dread of starvation always, terror lest
+the unseen ceiling should crush down upon him, fear of fire in the
+chambers and a louse's death in red flame, and agonies of fiercer horror
+that had nothing to do with any fear of death. Then Dick bowed his head,
+and clutching the arms of his chair fought with his sweating self till the
+tinkle of plates told him that something to eat was being set before him.
+
+Mr. Beeton would bring the meal when he had time to spare, and Dick
+learned to hang upon his speech, which dealt with badly fitted gas-plugs,
+waste-pipes out of repair, little tricks for driving picture-nails into walls,
+and the sins of the charwoman or the housemaids. In the lack of better
+things the small gossip of a servant'' hall becomes immensely interesting,
+and the screwing of a washer on a tap an event to be talked over for days.
+
+Once or twice a week, too, Mr. Beeton would take Dick out with him
+when he went marketing in the morning to haggle with tradesmen over
+fish, lamp-wicks, mustard, tapioca, and so forth, while Dick rested his
+weight first on one foot and then on the other and played aimlessly with
+the tins and string-ball on the counter. Then they would perhaps meet
+one of Mr. Beeton's friends, and Dick, standing aside a little, would hold
+his peace till Mr. Beeton was willing to go on again.
+
+The life did not increase his self-respect. He abandoned shaving as a
+dangerous exercise, and being shaved in a barber's shop meant exposure
+of his infirmity. He could not see that his clothes were properly brushed,
+and since he had never taken any care of his personal appearance he
+became every known variety of sloven. A blind man cannot deal with
+cleanliness till he has been some months used to the darkness. If he
+demand attendance and grow angry at the want of it, he must assert
+himself and stand upright. Then the meanest menial can see that he is
+blind and, therefore, of no consequence. A wise man will keep his eyes on
+the floor and sit still. For amusement he may pick coal lump by lump out
+of the scuttle with the tongs and pile it in a little heap in the fender,
+keeping count of the lumps, which must all be put back again, one by one
+and very carefully. He may set himself sums if he cares to work them
+out; he may talk to himself or to the cat if she chooses to visit him; and if
+his trade has been that of an artist, he may sketch in the air with his
+forefinger; but that is too much like drawing a pig with the eyes shut. He
+may go to his bookshelves and count his books, ranging them in order of
+their size; or to his wardrobe and count his shirts, laying them in piles of
+two or three on the bed, as they suffer from frayed cuffs or lost buttons.
+
+Even this entertainment wearies after a time; and all the times are very,
+very long.
+
+Dick was allowed to sort a tool-chest where Mr. Beeton kept hammers,
+taps and nuts, lengths of gas-pipes, oil-bottles, and string.
+
+'If I don't have everything just where I know where to look for it, why,
+then, I can't find anything when I do want it. You've no idea, sir, the
+amount of little things that these chambers uses up,' said Mr. Beeton.
+
+Fumbling at the handle of the door as he went out: 'It's hard on you, sir,
+I do think it's hard on you. Ain't you going to do anything, sir?'
+
+'I'll pay my rent and messing. Isn't that enough?'
+
+'I wasn't doubting for a moment that you couldn't pay your way, sir; but
+I 'ave often said to my wife, "It's 'ard on 'im because it isn't as if he was
+an old man, nor yet a middle-aged one, but quite a young gentleman.
+
+That's where it comes so 'ard."'
+
+'I suppose so,' said Dick, absently. This particular nerve through long
+battering had ceased to feel--much.
+
+'I was thinking,' continued Mr. Beeton, still making as if to go, 'that you
+might like to hear my boy Alf read you the papers sometimes of an
+evening. He do read beautiful, seeing he's only nine.'
+
+'I should be very grateful,' said Dick. 'Only let me make it worth his
+while.'
+
+'We wasn't thinking of that, sir, but of course it's in your own 'ands; but
+only to 'ear Alf sing "A Boy's best Friend is 'is Mother!" Ah!'
+
+'I'll hear him sing that too. Let him come this evening with the
+newspapers.'
+
+Alf was not a nice child, being puffed up with many school-board
+certificates for good conduct, and inordinately proud of his singing. Mr.
+
+Beeton remained, beaming, while the child wailed his way through a
+song of some eight eight-line verses in the usual whine of a young
+Cockney, and, after compliments, left him to read Dick the foreign
+telegrams. Ten minutes later Alf returned to his parents rather pale and
+scared.
+
+''E said 'e couldn't stand it no more,' he explained.
+
+'He never said you read badly, Alf?' Mrs. Beeton spoke.
+
+'No. 'E said I read beautiful. Said 'e never 'eard any one read like that,
+but 'e said 'e couldn't abide the stuff in the papers.'
+
+'P'raps he's lost some money in the Stocks. Were you readin' him about
+Stocks, Alf?'
+
+'No; it was all about fightin' out there where the soldiers is gone--a great
+long piece with all the lines close together and very hard words in it. 'E
+give me 'arf a crown because I read so well. And 'e says the next time
+there's anything 'e wants read 'e'll send for me.'
+
+'That's good hearing, but I do think for all the half-crown--put it into the
+kicking-donkey money-box, Alf, and let me see you do it--he might have
+kept you longer. Why, he couldn't have begun to understand how
+beautiful you read.'
+
+'He's best left to hisself--gentlemen always are when they're
+downhearted,' said Mr. Beeton.
+
+Alf's rigorously limited powers of comprehending Torpenhow's special
+correspondence had waked the devil of unrest in Dick. He could hear,
+through the boy's nasal chant, the camels grunting in the squares behind
+the soldiers outside Suakin; could hear the men swearing and chaffing
+across the cooking pots, and could smell the acrid wood-smoke as it
+drifted over camp before the wind of the desert.
+
+That night he prayed to God that his mind might be taken from him,
+offering for proof that he was worthy of this favour the fact that he had
+not shot himself long ago. That prayer was not answered, and indeed
+Dick knew in his heart of hearts that only a lingering sense of humour
+and no special virtue had kept him alive. Suicide, he had persuaded
+himself, would be a ludicrous insult to the gravity of the situation as well
+as a weak-kneed confession of fear.
+
+'Just for the fun of the thing,' he said to the cat, who had taken Binkie's
+place in his establishment, 'I should like to know how long this is going to
+last. I can live for a year on the hundred pounds Torp cashed for me. I
+must have two or three thousand at least in the Bank--twenty or thirty
+years more provided for, that is to say. Then I fall back on my hundred
+and twenty a year, which will be more by that time. Let's consider.
+
+Twenty-five--thirty-five--a man's in his prime then, they
+say--forty-five--a middle-aged man just entering politics--fifty-five--"died
+at the comparatively early age of fifty-five," according to the
+newspapers. Bah! How these Christians funk death! Sixty-five--we're
+only getting on in years. Seventy-five is just possible, though. Great hell,
+cat O! fifty years more of solitary confinement in the dark! You'll die,
+and Beeton will die, and Torp will die, and Mai--everybody else will die,
+but I shall be alive and kicking with nothing to do. I'm very sorry for
+myself. I should like some one else to be sorry for me. Evidently I'm not
+going ma before I die, but the pain's just as bad as ever. Some day when
+you're vivisected, cat O! they'll tie you down on a little table and cut you
+open--but don't be afraid; they'll take precious good care that you don't
+die. You'll live, and you'll be very sorry then that you weren't sorry for
+me. Perhaps Torp will come back or . . . I wish I could go to Torp and the
+Nilghai, even though I were in their way.'
+
+Pussy left the room before the speech was ended, and Alf, as he entered,
+found Dick addressing the empty hearth-rug.
+
+'There's a letter for you, sir,' he said. 'Perhaps you'd like me to read it.'
+
+'Lend it to me for a minute and I'll tell you.'
+
+The outstretched hand shook just a little and the voice was not
+over-steady. It was within the limits of human possibility that--that was
+no letter from Maisie. He knew the heft of three closed envelopes only too
+well. It was a foolish hope that the girl should write to him, for he did not
+realise that there is a wrong which admits of no reparation though the
+evildoer may with tears and the heart's best love strive to mend all. It is
+best to forget that wrong whether it be caused or endured, since it is as
+remediless as bad work once put forward.
+
+'Read it, then,' said Dick, and Alf began intoning according to the rules
+of the Board School--
+'"I could have given you love, I could have given you loyalty, such as you
+never dreamed of. Do you suppose I cared what you were? But you chose
+to whistle everything down the wind for nothing. My only excuse for you is
+that you are so young."
+'That's all,' he said, returning the paper to be dropped into the fire.
+
+'What was in the letter?' asked Mrs. Beeton, when Alf returned.
+
+'I don't know. I think it was a circular or a tract about not whistlin' at
+everything when you're young.'
+
+'I must have stepped on something when I was alive and walking about
+and it has bounced up and hit me. God help it, whatever it is--unless it
+was all a joke. But I don't know any one who'd take the trouble to play a
+joke on me. . . . Love and loyalty for nothing. It sounds tempting enough.
+
+I wonder whether I have lost anything really?'
+
+Dick considered for a long time but could not remember when or how he
+had put himself in the way of winning these trifles at a woman's hands.
+
+Still, the letter as touching on matters that he preferred not to think
+about stung him into a fit of frenzy that lasted for a day and night. When
+his heart was so full of despair that it would hold no more, body and soul
+together seemed to be dropping without check through the darkness.
+
+Then came fear of darkness and desperate attempts to reach the light
+again. But there was no light to be reached. When that agony had left
+him sweating and breathless, the downward flight would recommence till
+the gathering torture of it spurred him into another fight as hopeless as
+the first. Followed some few minutes of sleep in which he dreamed that
+he saw. Then the procession of events would repeat itself till he was
+utterly worn out and the brain took up its everlasting consideration of
+Maisie and might-have-beens.
+
+At the end of everything Mr. Beeton came to his room and volunteered to
+take him out. 'Not marketing this time, but we'll go into the Parks if you
+like.'
+
+'Be damned if I do,' quoth Dick. 'Keep to the streets and walk up and
+down. I like to hear the people round me.'
+
+This was not altogether true. The blind in the first stages of their
+infirmity dislike those who can move with a free stride and unlifted
+arms--but Dick had no earthly desire to go to the Parks. Once and only
+once since Maisie had shut her door he had gone there under Alf's
+charge. Alf forgot him and fished for minnows in the Serpentine with
+some companions. After half an hour's waiting Dick, almost weeping
+with rage and wrath, caught a passer-by, who introduced him to a
+friendly policeman, who led him to a four-wheeler opposite the Albert
+Hall. He never told Mr. Beeton of Alf's forgetfulness, but . . . this was not
+the manner in which he was used to walk the Parks aforetime.
+
+'What streets would you like to walk down, then?' said Mr. Beeton,
+sympathetically. His own ideas of a riotous holiday meant picnicking on
+the grass of Green Park with his family, and half a dozen paper bags full
+of food.
+
+'Keep to the river,' said Dick, and they kept to the river, and the rush of
+it was in his ears till they came to Blackfriars Bridge and struck thence
+on to the Waterloo Road, Mr. Beeton explaining the beauties of the
+scenery as he went on.
+
+'And walking on the other side of the pavement,' said he, 'unless I'm
+much mistaken, is the young woman that used to come to your rooms to
+be drawed. I never forgets a face and I never remembers a name, except
+paying tenants, o' course!'
+
+'Stop her,' said Dick. 'It's Bessie Broke. Tell her I'd like to speak to her
+again. Quick, man!'
+
+Mr. Beeton crossed the road under the noses of the omnibuses and
+arrested Bessie then on her way northward. She recognised him as the
+man in authority who used to glare at her when she passed up Dick's
+staircase, and her first impulse was to run.
+
+'Wasn't you Mr. Heldar's model?' said Mr. Beeton, planting himself in
+front of her. 'You was. He's on the other side of the road and he'd like to
+see you.'
+
+'Why?' said Bessie, faintly. She remembered--indeed had never for long
+forgotten--an affair connected with a newly finished picture.
+
+'Because he has asked me to do so, and because he's most particular
+blind.'
+
+'Drunk?'
+
+'No. 'Orspital blind. He can't see. That's him over there.'
+
+Dick was leaning against the parapet of the bridge as Mr. Beeton pointed
+him out--a stub-bearded, bowed creature wearing a dirty
+magenta-coloured neckcloth outside an unbrushed coat. There was
+nothing to fear from such an one. Even if he chased her, Bessie thought,
+he could not follow far. She crossed over, and Dick's face lighted up. It
+was long since a woman of any kind had taken the trouble to speak to
+him.
+
+'I hope you're well, Mr. Heldar?' said Bessie, a little puzzled. Mr. Beeton
+stood by with the air of an ambassador and breathed responsibly.
+
+'I'm very well indeed, and, by Jove! I'm glad to see--hear you, I mean,
+Bess. You never thought it worth while to turn up and see us again after
+you got your money. I don't know why you should. Are you going
+anywhere in particular just now?'
+
+'I was going for a walk,' said Bessie.
+
+'Not the old business?' Dick spoke under his breath.
+
+'Lor, no! I paid my premium'--Bessie was very proud of that word--'for a
+barmaid, sleeping in, and I'm at the bar now quite respectable. Indeed I
+am.'
+
+Mr. Beeton had no special reason to believe in the loftiness of human
+nature. Therefore he dissolved himself like a mist and returned to his
+gas-plugs without a word of apology. Bessie watched the flight with a
+certain uneasiness; but so long as Dick appeared to be ignorant of the
+harm that had been done to him . . .
+
+'It's hard work pulling the beer-handles,' she went on, 'and they've got
+one of them penny-in-the-slot cash-machines, so if you get wrong by a
+penny at the end of the day--but then I don't believe the machinery is
+right. Do you?'
+
+'I've only seen it work. Mr. Beeton.'
+
+'He's gone.
+
+'I'm afraid I must ask you to help me home, then. I'll make it worth your
+while. You see.' The sightless eyes turned towards her and Bessie saw.
+
+'It isn't taking you out of your way?' he said hesitatingly. 'I can ask a
+policeman if it is.'
+
+'Not at all. I come on at seven and I'm off at four. That's easy hours.'
+
+'Good God!--but I'm on all the time. I wish I had some work to do too.
+
+Let's go home, Bess.'
+
+He turned and cannoned into a man on the sidewalk, recoiling with an
+oath. Bessie took his arm and said nothing--as she had said nothing when
+he had ordered her to turn her face a little more to the light. They
+walked for some time in silence, the girl steering him deftly through the
+crowd.
+
+'And where's--where's Mr. Torpenhow?' she inquired at last.
+
+'He has gone away to the desert.'
+
+'Where's that?'
+
+Dick pointed to the right. 'East--out of the mouth of the river,' said he.
+
+'Then west, then south, and then east again, all along the under-side of
+Europe. Then south again, God knows how far.' The explanation did not
+enlighten Bessie in the least, but she held her tongue and looked to Dick's
+patch till they came to the chambers.
+
+'We'll have tea and muffins,' he said joyously. 'I can't tell you, Bessie,
+how glad I am to find you again. What made you go away so suddenly?'
+
+'I didn't think you'd want me any more,' she said, emboldened by his
+ignorance.
+
+'I didn't, as a matter of fact--but afterwards-- At any rate I'm glad
+you've come. You know the stairs.'
+
+So Bessie led him home to his own place--there was no one to hinder--and
+shut the door of the studio.
+
+'What a mess!' was her first word. 'All these things haven't been looked
+after for months and months.'
+
+'No, only weeks, Bess. You can't expect them to care.'
+
+'I don't know what you expect them to do. They ought to know what
+you've paid them for. The dust's just awful. It's all over the easel.'
+
+'I don't use it much now.'
+
+'All over the pictures and the floor, and all over your coat. I'd like to
+speak to them housemaids.'
+
+'Ring for tea, then.' Dick felt his way to the one chair he used by custom.
+
+Bessie saw the action and, as far as in her lay, was touched. But there
+remained always a keen sense of new-found superiority, and it was in her
+voice when she spoke.
+
+'How long have you been like this?' she said wrathfully, as though the
+blindness were some fault of the housemaids.
+
+'How?'
+
+'As you are.'
+
+'The day after you went away with the check, almost as soon as my
+picture was finished; I hardly saw her alive.'
+
+'Then they've been cheating you ever since, that's all. I know their nice
+little ways.'
+
+A woman may love one man and despise another, but on general feminine
+principles she will do her best to save the man she despises from being
+defrauded. Her loved one can look to himself, but the other man, being
+obviously an idiot, needs protection.
+
+'I don't think Mr. Beeton cheats much,' said Dick. Bessie was flouncing
+up and down the room, and he was conscious of a keen sense of
+enjoyment as he heard the swish of her skirts and the light step between.
+
+'Tea and muffins,' she said shortly, when the ring at the bell was
+answered; 'two teaspoonfuls and one over for the pot. I don't want the
+old teapot that was here when I used to come. It don't draw. Get
+another.'
+
+The housemaid went away scandalised, and Dick chuckled. Then he
+began to cough as Bessie banged up and down the studio disturbing the
+dust.
+
+'What are you trying to do?'
+
+'Put things straight. This is like unfurnished lodgings. How could you let
+it go so?'
+
+'How could I help it? Dust away.'
+
+She dusted furiously, and in the midst of all the pother entered Mrs.
+
+Beeton. Her husband on his return had explained the situation, winding
+up with the peculiarly felicitous proverb, 'Do unto others as you would
+be done by.' She had descended to put into her place the person who
+demanded muffins and an uncracked teapot as though she had a right to
+both.
+
+'Muffins ready yet?' said Bess, still dusting. She was no longer a drab of
+the streets but a young lady who, thanks to Dick's check, had paid her
+premium and was entitled to pull beer-handles with the best. Being
+neatly dressed in black she did not hesitate to face Mrs. Beeton, and there
+passed between the two women certain regards that Dick would have
+appreciated. The situation adjusted itself by eye. Bessie had won, and
+Mrs. Beeton returned to cook muffins and make scathing remarks about
+models, hussies, trollops, and the like, to her husband.
+
+'There's nothing to be got of interfering with him, Liza,' he said. 'Alf,
+you go along into the street to play. When he isn't crossed he's as kindly
+as kind, but when he's crossed he's the devil and all. We took too many
+little things out of his rooms since he was blind to be that particular
+about what he does. They ain't no objects to a blind man, of course, but if
+it was to come into court we'd get the sack. Yes, I did introduce him to
+that girl because I'm a feelin' man myself.'
+
+'Much too feelin'!' Mrs. Beeton slapped the muffins into the dish, and
+thought of comely housemaids long since dismissed on suspicion.
+
+'I ain't ashamed of it, and it isn't for us to judge him hard so long as he
+pays quiet and regular as he do. I know how to manage young gentlemen,
+you know how to cook for them, and what I says is, let each stick to his
+own business and then there won't be any trouble. Take them muffins
+down, Liza, and be sure you have no words with that young woman. His
+lot is cruel hard, and if he's crossed he do swear worse than any one I've
+ever served.'
+
+'That's a little better,' said Bessie, sitting down to the tea. 'You needn't
+wait, thank you, Mrs. Beeton.'
+
+'I had no intention of doing such, I do assure you.'
+
+Bessie made no answer whatever. This, she knew, was the way in which
+real ladies routed their foes, and when one is a barmaid at a first-class
+public-house one may become a real lady at ten minutes' notice.
+
+Her eyes fell on Dick opposite her and she was both shocked and
+displeased. There were droppings of food all down the front of his coat;
+the mouth under the ragged ill-grown beard drooped sullenly; the
+forehead was lined and contracted; and on the lean temples the hair was
+a dusty indeterminate colour that might or might not have been called
+gray. The utter misery and self-abandonment of the man appealed to her,
+and at the bottom of her heart lay the wicked feeling that he was
+humbled and brought low who had once humbled her.
+
+'Oh! it is good to hear you moving about,' said Dick, rubbing his hands.
+
+'Tell us all about your bar successes, Bessie, and the way you live now.'
+
+'Never mind that. I'm quite respectable, as you'd see by looking at me.
+
+You don't seem to live too well. What made you go blind that sudden?
+Why isn't there any one to look after you?'
+
+Dick was too thankful for the sound of her voice to resent the tone of it.
+
+'I was cut across the head a long time ago, and that ruined my eyes. I
+don't suppose anybody thinks it worth while to look after me any more.
+
+Why should they?--and Mr. Beeton really does everything I want.'
+
+'Don't you know any gentlemen and ladies, then, while you was--well?'
+
+'A few, but I don't care to have them looking at me.'
+
+'I suppose that's why you've growed a beard. Take it off, it don't become
+you.'
+
+'Good gracious, child, do you imagine that I think of what becomes of me
+these days?'
+
+'You ought. Get that taken off before I come here again. I suppose I can
+come, can't I?'
+
+'I'd be only too grateful if you did. I don't think I treated you very well in
+the old days. I used to make you angry.'
+
+'Very angry, you did.'
+
+'I'm sorry for it, then. Come and see me when you can and as often as
+you can. God knows, there isn't a soul in the world to take that trouble
+except you and Mr. Beeton.'
+
+'A lot of trouble he's taking and she too.' This with a toss of the head.
+
+'They've let you do anyhow and they haven't done anything for you. I've
+only to look and see that much. I'll come, and I'll be glad to come, but you
+must go and be shaved, and you must get some other clothes--those ones
+aren't fit to be seen.'
+
+'I have heaps somewhere,' he said helplessly.
+
+'I know you have. Tell Mr. Beeton to give you a new suit and I'll brush it
+and keep it clean. You may be as blind as a barn-door, Mr. Heldar, but it
+doesn't excuse you looking like a sweep.'
+
+'Do I look like a sweep, then?'
+
+'Oh, I'm sorry for you. I'm that sorry for you!' she cried impulsively, and
+took Dick's hands. Mechanically, he lowered his head as if to kiss--she
+was the only woman who had taken pity on him, and he was not too
+proud for a little pity now. She stood up to go.
+
+'Nothing o' that kind till you look more like a gentleman. It's quite easy
+when you get shaved, and some clothes.'
+
+He could hear her drawing on her gloves and rose to say good-bye. She
+passed behind him, kissed him audaciously on the back of the neck, and
+ran away as swiftly as on the day when she had destroyed the
+Melancolia.
+
+'To think of me kissing Mr. Heldar,' she said to herself, 'after all he's
+done to me and all! Well, I'm sorry for him, and if he was shaved he
+wouldn't be so bad to look at, but . . . Oh them Beetons, how shameful
+they've treated him! I know Beeton's wearing his shirt on his back to-day
+just as well as if I'd aired it. To-morrow, I'll see . . . I wonder if he has
+much of his own. It might be worth more than the bar--I wouldn't have
+to do any work--and just as respectable as if no one knew.'
+
+Dick was not grateful to Bessie for her parting gift. He was acutely
+conscious of it in the nape of his neck throughout the night, but it seemed,
+among very many other things, to enforce the wisdom of getting shaved.
+
+He was shaved accordingly in the morning, and felt the better for it. A
+fresh suit of clothes, white linen, and the knowledge that some one in the
+world said that she took an interest in his personal appearance made him
+carry himself almost upright; for the brain was relieved for a while from
+thinking of Maisie, who, under other circumstances, might have given
+that kiss and a million others.
+
+'Let us consider,' said he, after lunch. 'The girl can't care, and it's a
+toss-up whether she comes again or not, but if money can buy her to look
+after me she shall be bought. Nobody else in the world would take the
+trouble, and I can make it worth her while. She's a child of the gutter
+holding brevet rank as a barmaid; so she shall have everything she wants
+if she'll only come and talk and look after me.' He rubbed his newly
+shorn chin and began to perplex himself with the thought of her not
+coming. 'I suppose I did look rather a sweep,' he went on. 'I had no
+reason to look otherwise. I knew things dropped on my clothes, but it
+didn't matter. It would be cruel if she didn't come. She must. Maisie
+came once, and that was enough for her. She was quite right. She had
+something to work for. This creature has only beer-handles to pull,
+unless she has deluded some young man into keeping company with her.
+
+Fancy being cheated for the sake of a counter-jumper! We're falling
+pretty low.'
+
+Something cried aloud within him:--This will hurt more than anything
+that has gone before. It will recall and remind and suggest and tantalise,
+and in the end drive you mad.
+
+'I know it, I know it!' Dick cried, clenching his hands despairingly; 'but,
+good heavens! is a poor blind beggar never to get anything out of his life
+except three meals a day and a greasy waistcoat? I wish she'd come.'
+
+Early in the afternoon time she came, because there was no young man in
+her life just then, and she thought of material advantages which would
+allow her to be idle for the rest of her days.
+
+'I shouldn't have known you,' she said approvingly. 'You look as you
+used to look--a gentleman that was proud of himself.'
+
+'Don't you think I deserve another kiss, then?' said Dick, flushing a little.
+
+'Maybe--but you won't get it yet. Sit down and let's see what I can do for
+you. I'm certain sure Mr. Beeton cheats you, now that you can't go
+through the housekeeping books every month. Isn't that true?'
+
+'You'd better come and housekeep for me then, Bessie.'
+
+'Couldn't do it in these chambers--you know that as well as I do.'
+
+'I know, but we might go somewhere else, if you thought it worth your
+while.'
+
+'I'd try to look after you, anyhow; but I shouldn't care to have to work
+for both of us.' This was tentative.
+
+Dick laughed.
+
+'Do you remember where I used to keep my bank-book?' said he. 'Torp
+took it to be balanced just before he went away. Look and see.'
+
+'It was generally under the tobacco-jar. Ah!'
+
+'Well?'
+
+'Oh! Four thousand two hundred and ten pounds nine shillings and a
+penny! Oh my!'
+
+'You can have the penny. That's not bad for one year's work. Is that and
+a hundred and twenty pounds a year good enough?'
+
+The idleness and the pretty clothes were almost within her reach now,
+but she must, by being housewifely, show that she deserved them.
+
+'Yes; but you'd have to move, and if we took an inventory, I think we'd
+find that Mr. Beeton has been prigging little things out of the rooms here
+and there. They don't look as full as they used.'
+
+'Never mind, we'll let him have them. The only thing I'm particularly
+anxious to take away is that picture I used you for--when you used to
+swear at me. We'll pull out of this place, Bess, and get away as far as
+ever we can.'
+
+'Oh yes,' she said uneasily.
+
+'I don't know where I can go to get away from myself, but I'll try, and
+you shall have all the pretty frocks that you care for. You'll like that.
+
+Give me that kiss now, Bess. Ye gods! it's good to put one's arm round a
+woman's waist again.'
+
+Then came the fulfilment of the prophecy within the brain. If his arm
+were thus round Maisie's waist and a kiss had just been given and taken
+between them,--why then . . . He pressed the girl more closely to himself
+because the pain whipped him. She was wondering how to explain a little
+accident to the Melancolia. At any rate, if this man really desired the
+solace of her company--and certainly he would relapse into his original
+slough if she withdrew it--he would not be more than just a little vexed.
+
+It would be delightful at least to see what would happen, and by her
+teachings it was good for a man to stand in certain awe of his companion.
+
+She laughed nervously, and slipped out of his reach.
+
+'I shouldn't worrit about that picture if I was you,' she began, in the hope
+of turning his attention.
+
+'It's at the back of all my canvases somewhere. Find it, Bess; you know it
+as well as I do.'
+
+'I know--but--'
+
+'But what? You've wit enough to manage the sale of it to a dealer.
+
+Women haggle much better than men. It might be a matter of eight or
+nine hundred pounds to--to us. I simply didn't like to think about it for a
+long time. It was mixed up with my life so.--But we'll cover up our tracks
+and get rid of everything, eh? Make a fresh start from the beginning,
+Bess.'
+
+Then she began to repent very much indeed, because she knew the value
+of money. Still, it was probable that the blind man was overestimating
+the value of his work. Gentlemen, she knew, were absurdly particular
+about their things. She giggled as a nervous housemaid giggles when she
+tries to explain the breakage of a pipe.
+
+'I'm very sorry, but you remember I was--I was angry with you before
+Mr. Torpenhow went away?'
+
+'You were very angry, child; and on my word I think you had some right
+to be.'
+
+'Then I--but aren't you sure Mr. Torpenhow didn't tell you?'
+
+'Tell me what? Good gracious, what are you making such a fuss about
+when you might just as well be giving me another kiss?'
+
+He was beginning to learn, not for the first time in his experience, that
+kissing is a cumulative poison. The more you get of it, the more you want.
+
+Bessie gave the kiss promptly, whispering, as she did so, 'I was so angry I
+rubbed out that picture with the turpentine. You aren't angry, are you?'
+
+'What? Say that again.' The man's hand had closed on her wrist.
+
+'I rubbed it out with turps and the knife,' faltered Bessie. 'I thought
+you'd only have to do it over again. You did do it over again, didn't you?
+Oh, let go of my wrist; you're hurting me.'
+
+'Isn't there anything left of the thing?'
+
+'N'nothing that looks like anything. I'm sorry--I didn't know you'd take
+on about it; I only meant to do it in fun. You aren't going to hit me?'
+
+'Hit you! No! Let's think.'
+
+He did not relax his hold upon her wrist but stood staring at the carpet.
+
+Then he shook his head as a young steer shakes it when the lash of the
+stock-whip cross his nose warns him back to the path on to the shambles
+that he would escape. For weeks he had forced himself not to think of the
+Melancolia, because she was a part of his dead life. With Bessie's return
+and certain new prospects that had developed themselves, the
+Melancolia--lovelier in his imagination than she had ever been on
+canvas--reappeared. By her aid he might have procured mor money
+wherewith to amuse Bess and to forget Maisie, as well as another taste of
+an almost forgotten success. Now, thanks to a vicious little housemaid's
+folly, there was nothing to look for--not even the hope that he might some
+day take an abiding interest in the housemaid. Worst of all, he had been
+made to appear ridiculous in Maisie's eyes. A woman will forgive the
+man who has ruined her life's work so long as he gives her love; a man
+may forgive those who ruin the love of his life, but he will never forgive
+the destruction of his work.
+
+'Tck--tck--tck,' said Dick between his teeth, and then laughed softly. 'It's
+an omen, Bessie, and--a good many things considered, it serves me right
+for doing what I have done. By Jove! that accounts for Maisie's running
+away. She must have thought me perfectly mad--small blame to her! The
+whole picture ruined, isn't it so? What made you do it?'
+
+'Because I was that angry. I'm not angry now--I'm awful sorry.'
+
+'I wonder.--It doesn't matter, anyhow. I'm to blame for making the
+mistake.'
+
+'What mistake?'
+
+'Something you wouldn't understand, dear. Great heavens! to think that
+a little piece of dirt like you could throw me out of stride!' Dick was
+talking to himself as Bessie tried to shake off his grip on her wrist.
+
+'I ain't a piece of dirt, and you shouldn't call me so! I did it 'cause I hated
+you, and I'm only sorry now 'cause you're--'cause you're----'
+
+'Exactly--because I'm blind. There's noting like tact in little things.'
+
+Bessie began to sob. She did not like being shackled against her will; she
+was afraid of the blind face and the look upon it, and was sorry too that
+her great revenge had only made Dick laugh.
+
+'Don't cry,' he said, and took her into his arms. 'You only did what you
+thought right.'
+
+'I--I ain't a little piece of dirt, and if you say that I'll never come to you
+again.'
+
+'You don't know what you've done to me. I'm not angry--indeed, I'm not.
+
+Be quiet for a minute.'
+
+Bessie remained in his arms shrinking. Dick's first thought was
+connected with Maisie, and it hurt him as white-hot iron hurts an open
+sore.
+
+Not for nothing is a man permitted to ally himself to the wrong woman.
+
+The first pang--the first sense of things lost is but the prelude to the play,
+for the very just Providence who delights in causing pain has decreed
+that the agony shall return, and that in the midst of keenest pleasure.
+
+They know this pain equally who have forsaken or been forsaken by the
+love of their life, and in their new wives' arms are compelled to realise it.
+
+It is better to remain alone and suffer only the misery of being alone, so
+long as it is possible to find distraction in daily work. When that resource
+goes the man is to be pitied and left alone.
+
+These things and some others Dick considered while he was holding
+Bessie to his heart.
+
+'Though you mayn't know it,' he said, raising his head, 'the Lord is a just
+and a terrible God, Bess; with a very strong sense of humour. It serves
+me right--how it serves me right! Torp could understand it if he were
+here; he must have suffered something at your hands, child, but only for
+a minute or so. I saved him. Set that to my credit, some one.'
+
+'Let me go,' said Bess, her face darkening. 'Let me go.'
+
+'All in good time. Did you ever attend Sunday school?'
+
+'Never. Let me go, I tell you; you're making fun of me.'
+
+'Indeed, I'm not. I'm making fun of myself. . . . Thus. "He saved others,
+himself he cannot save." It isn't exactly a school-board text.' He released
+her wrist, but since he was between her and the door, she could not
+escape. 'What an enormous amount of mischief one little woman can do!'
+
+'I'm sorry; I'm awful sorry about the picture.'
+
+'I'm not. I'm grateful to you for spoiling it. . . . What were we talking
+about before you mentioned the thing?'
+
+'About getting away--and money. Me and you going away.'
+
+'Of course. We will get away--that is to say, I will.'
+
+'And me?'
+
+'You shall have fifty whole pounds for spoiling a picture.'
+
+'Then you won't----?'
+
+'I'm afraid not, dear. Think of fifty pounds for pretty things all to
+yourself.'
+
+'You said you couldn't do anything without me.'
+
+'That was true a little while ago. I'm better now, thank you. Get me my
+hat.'
+
+'S'pose I don't?'
+
+'Beeton will, and you'll lose fifty pounds. That's all. Get it.'
+
+Bessie cursed under her breath. She had pitied the man sincerely, had
+kissed him with almost equal sincerity, for he was not unhandsome; it
+pleased her to be in a way and for a time his protector, and above all
+there were four thousand pounds to be handled by some one. Now
+through a slip of the tongue and a little feminine desire to give a little, not
+too much, pain she had lost the money, the blessed idleness and the pretty
+things, the companionship, and the chance of looking outwardly as
+respectable as a real lady.
+
+'Now fill me a pipe. Tobacco doesn't taste, but it doesn't matter, and I'll
+think things out. What's the day of the week, Bess?'
+
+'Tuesday.'
+
+'Then Thursday's mail-day. What a fool--what a blind fool I have been!?
+
+Twenty-two pounds covers my passage home again. Allow ten for
+additional expenses. We must put up at Madam Binat's for old time's
+sake. Thirty-two pounds altogether. Add a hundred for the cost of the
+last trip--Gad, won't Torp stare to see me!--a hundred and thirty-two
+leaves seventy-eight for baksheesh--I shall need it--and to play with.
+
+What are you crying for, Bess? It wasn't your fault, child; it was mine
+altogether. Oh, you funny little opossum, mop your eyes and take me out!?
+
+I want the pass-book and the check-book. Stop a minute. Four thousand
+pounds at four per cent--that's safe interest--means a hundred and sixty
+pounds a year; one hundred and twenty pounds a hear--also safe--is two
+eighty, and two hundred and eighty pounds added to three hundred a
+year means gilded luxury for a single woman. Bess, we'll go to the bank.'
+
+Richer by two hundred and ten pounds stored in his money-belt, Dick
+caused Bessie, now thoroughly bewildered, to hurry from the bank to the
+P. and O. offices, where he explained things tersely.
+
+'Port Said, single first; cabin as close to the baggage-hatch as possible.
+
+What ship's going?'
+
+'The Colgong,' said the clerk.
+
+'She's a wet little hooker. Is it Tilbury and a tender, or Galleons and the
+docks?'
+
+'Galleons. Twelve-forty, Thursday.'
+
+'Thanks. Change, please. I can't see very well--will you count it into my
+hand?'
+
+'If they all took their passages like that instead of talking about their
+trunks, life would be worth something,' said the clerk to his neighbour,
+who was trying to explain to a harassed mother of many that condensed
+milk is just as good for babes at sea as daily dairy. Being nineteen and
+unmarried, he spoke with conviction.
+
+'We are now,' quoth Dick, as they returned to the studio, patting the
+place where his money-belt covered ticket and money, 'beyond the reach
+of man, or devil, or woman--which is much more important. I've had
+three little affairs to carry through before Thursday, but I needn't ask
+you to help, Bess. Come here on Thursday morning at nine. We'll
+breakfast, and you shall take me down to Galleons Station.'
+
+'What are you going to do?'
+
+'Going away, of course. What should I stay for?'
+
+'But you can't look after yourself?'
+
+'I can do anything. I didn't realise it before, but I can. I've done a great
+deal already. Resolution shall be treated to one kiss if Bessie doesn't
+object.' Strangely enough, Bessie objected and Dick laughed. 'I suppose
+you're right. Well, come at nine the day after to-morrow and you'll get
+your money.'
+
+'Shall I sure?'
+
+'I don't bilk, and you won't know whether I do or not unless you come.
+
+Oh, but it's long and long to wait! Good-bye, Bessie,--send Beeton here as
+you go out.'
+
+The housekeeper came.
+
+'What are all the fittings of my rooms worth?' said Dick, imperiously.
+
+''Tisn't for me to say, sir. Some things is very pretty and some is wore out
+dreadful.'
+
+'I'm insured for two hundred and seventy.'
+
+'Insurance policies is no criterion, though I don't say----'
+
+'Oh, damn your longwindedness! You've made your pickings out of me
+and the other tenants. Why, you talked of retiring and buying a
+public-house the other day. Give a straight answer to a straight
+question.'
+
+'Fifty,' said Mr. Beeton, without a moment's hesitation.
+
+'Double it; or I'll break up half my sticks and burn the rest.'
+
+He felt his way to a bookstand that supported a pile of sketch-books, and
+wrenched out one of the mahogany pillars.
+
+'That's sinful, sir,' said the housekeeper, alarmed.
+
+'It's my own. One hundred or----'
+
+'One hundred it is. It'll cost me three and six to get that there pilaster
+mended.'
+
+'I thought so. What an out and out swindler you must have been to spring
+that price at once!'
+
+'I hope I've done nothing to dissatisfy any of the tenants, least of all you,
+sir.'
+
+'Never mind that. Get me the money to-morrow, and see that all my
+clothes are packed in the little brown bullock-trunk. I'm going.'
+
+'But the quarter's notice?'
+
+'I'll pay forfeit. Look after the packing and leave me alone.'
+
+Mr. Beeton discussed this new departure with his wife, who decided that
+Bessie was at the bottom of it all. Her husband took a more charitable
+view.
+
+'It's very sudden--but then he was always sudden in his ways. Listen to
+him now!'
+
+There was a sound of chanting from Dick's room.
+
+'We'll never come back any more, boys,
+We'll never come back no more;
+We'll go to the deuce on any excuse,
+And never come back no more!?
+
+Oh say we're afloat or ashore, boys,
+Oh say we're afloat or ashore;
+But we'll never come back any more, boys,
+We'll never come back no more!'?
+
+'Mr. Beeton! Mr. Beeton! Where the deuce is my pistol?'
+
+'Quick, he's going to shoot himself--'avin' gone mad!' said Mrs. Beeton.
+
+Mr. Beeton addressed Dick soothingly, but it was some time before the
+latter, threshing up and down his bedroom, could realise the intention of
+the promises to 'find everything to-morrow, sir.'
+
+'Oh, you copper-nosed old fool--you impotent Academician!' he shouted
+at last. 'Do you suppose I want to shoot myself? Take the pistol in your
+silly shaking hand then. If you touch it, it will go off, because it's loaded.
+
+It's among my campaign-kit somewhere--in the parcel at the bottom of
+the trunk.'
+
+Long ago Dick had carefully possessed himself of a forty-pound weight
+field-equipment constructed by the knowledge of his own experience. It
+was this put-away treasure that he was trying to find and rehandle. Mr.
+
+Beeton whipped the revolver out of its place on the top of the package,
+and Dick drove his hand among the khaki coat and breeches, the blue
+cloth leg-bands, and the heavy flannel shirts doubled over a pair of
+swan-neck spurs. Under these and the water-bottle lay a sketch-book and
+a pigskin case of stationery.
+
+'These we don't want; you can have them, Mr. Beeton. Everything else
+I'll keep. Pack 'em on the top right-hand side of my trunk. When you've
+done that come into the studio with your wife. I want you both. Wait a
+minute; get me a pen and a sheet of notepaper.'
+
+It is not an easy thing to write when you cannot see, and Dick had
+particular reasons for wishing that his work should be clear. So he
+began, following his right hand with his left: '"The badness of this
+writing is because I am blind and cannot see my pen." H'mph!--even a
+lawyer can't mistake that. It must be signed, I suppose, but it needn't be
+witnessed. Now an inch lower--why did I never learn to use a
+type-writer?--"This is the last will and testament of me, Richard Heldar.
+
+I am in sound bodily and mental health, and there is no previous will to
+revoke."--That's all right. Damn the pen! Whereabouts on the paper was
+I?--"I leave everything that I possess in the world, including four
+thousand pounds, and two thousand seven hundred and twenty eight
+pounds held for me"--oh, I can't get this straight.' He tore off half the
+sheet and began again with the caution about the handwriting. Then: 'I
+leave all the money I possess in the world to'--here followed Maisie's
+name, and the names of the two banks that held the money.
+
+'It mayn't be quite regular, but no one has a shadow of a right to dispute
+it, and I've given Maisie's address. Come in, Mr. Beeton. This is my
+signature; I want you and your wife to witness it. Thanks. To-morrow
+you must take me to the landlord and I'll pay forfeit for leaving without
+notice, and I'll lodge this paper with him in case anything happens while
+I'm away. Now we're going to light up the studio stove. Stay with me,
+and give me my papers as I want 'em.'
+
+No one knows until he has tried how fine a blaze a year's accumulation of
+bills, letters, and dockets can make. Dick stuffed into the stove every
+document in the studio--saving only three unopened letters; destroyed
+sketch-books, rough note-books, new and half-finished canvases alike.
+
+'What a lot of rubbish a tenant gets about him if he stays long enough in
+one place, to be sure,' said Mr. Beeton, at last.
+
+'He does. Is there anything more left?' Dick felt round the walls.
+
+'Not a thing, and the stove's nigh red-hot.'
+
+'Excellent, and you've lost about a thousand pounds' worth of sketches.
+
+Ho! ho! Quite a thousand pounds' worth, if I can remember what I used
+to be.'
+
+'Yes, sir,' politely. Mr. Beeton was quite sure that Dick had gone mad,
+otherwise he would have never parted with his excellent furniture for a
+song. The canvas things took up storage room and were much better out
+of the way.
+
+There remained only to leave the little will in safe hands: that could not
+be accomplished to to-morrow. Dick groped about the floor picking up
+the last pieces of paper, assured himself again and again that there
+remained no written word or sign of his past life in drawer or desk, and
+sat down before the stove till the fire died out and the contracting iron
+cracked in the silence of the night.
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+With a heart of furious fancies,
+Whereof I am commander;
+With a burning spear and a horse of air,
+To the wilderness I wander.
+
+With a knight of ghosts and shadows
+I summoned am to tourney--
+Ten leagues beyond the wide world's end,
+Methinks it is no journey.
+
+-- Tom a' Bedlam's Song.?
+
+'GOOD-BYE, Bess; I promised you fifty. Here's a hundred--all that I got
+for my furniture from Beeton. That will keep you in pretty frocks for
+some time. You've been a good little girl, all things considered, but you've
+given me and Torpenhow a fair amount of trouble.'
+
+'Give Mr. Torpenhow my love if you see him, won't you?'
+
+'Of course I will, dear. Now take me up the gang-plank and into the
+cabin. Once aboard the lugger and the maid is--and I am free, I mean.'
+
+'Who'll look after you on this ship?'
+
+'The head-steward, if there's any use in money. The doctor when we
+come to Port Said, if I know anything of P. and O. doctors. After that, the
+Lord will provide, as He used to do.'
+
+Bess found Dick his cabin in the wild turmoil of a ship full of leavetakers
+and weeping relatives. Then he kissed her, and laid himself down in his
+bunk until the decks should be clear. He who had taken so long to move
+about his own darkened rooms well understood the geography of a ship,
+and the necessity of seeing to his own comforts was as wine to him.
+
+Before the screw began to thrash the ship along the Docks he had been
+introduced to the head-steward, had royally tipped him, secured a good
+place at table, opened out his baggage, and settled himself down with joy
+in the cabin. It was scarcely necessary to feel his way as he moved about,
+for he knew everything so well. Then God was very kind: a deep sleep of
+weariness came upon him just as he would have thought of Maisie, and
+he slept till the steamer had cleared the mouth of the Thames and was
+lifting to the pulse of the Channel.
+
+The rattle of the engines, the reek of oil and paint, and a very familiar
+sound in the next cabin roused him to his new inheritance.
+
+'Oh, it's good to be alive again!' He yawned, stretched himself vigorously,
+and went on deck to be told that they were almost abreast of the lights of
+Brighton. This is no more open water than Trafalgal Square is a
+common; the free levels begin at Ushant; but none the less Dick could feel
+the healing of the sea at work upon him already. A boisterous little
+cross-swell swung the steamer disrespectfully by the nose; and one wave
+breaking far aft spattered the quarterdeck and the pile of new
+deck-chairs. He heard the foam fall with the clash of broken glass, was
+stung in the face by a cupful, and sniffing luxuriously, felt his way to the
+smoking-room by the wheel. There a strong b reeze found him, blew his
+cap off and left him bareheaded in the doorway, and the smoking-room
+steward, understanding that he was a voyager of experience, said that
+the weather would be stiff in the chops off the Channel and more than
+half a gale in the Bay. These things fell as they were foretold, and Dick
+enjoyed himself to the utmost. It is allowable and even necessary at sea to
+lay firm hold upon tables, stanchions, and ropes in moving from place to
+place. On land the man who feels with his hands is patently blind. At sea
+even a blind man who is not sea-sick can jest with the doctor over the
+weakness of his fellows. Dick told the doctor many tales--and these are
+coin of more value than silver if properly handled--smoked with him till
+unholy hours of the night, and so won his short-lived regard that he
+promised Dick a few hours of his time when they came to Port Said.
+
+And the sea roared or was still as the winds blew, and the engines sang
+their song day and night, and the sun grew stronger day by day, and Tom
+the Lascar barber shaved Dick of a morning under the opened
+hatch-grating where the cool winds blew, and the awnings were spread
+and the passengers made merry, and at last they came to Port Said.
+
+'Take me,' said Dick, to the doctor, 'to Madame Binat's--if you know
+where that is.'
+
+'Whew!' said the doctor, 'I do. There's not much to choose between 'em;
+but I suppose you're aware that that's one of the worst houses in the
+place. They'll rob you to begin with, and knife you later.'
+
+'Not they. Take me there, and I can look after myself.'
+
+So he was brought to Madame Binat's and filled his nostrils with the
+well-remembered smell of the East, that runs without a change from the
+Canal head to Hong-Kong, and his mouth with the villainous Lingua
+Franca of the Levant. The heat smote him between the shoulder-blades
+with the buffet of an old friend, his feet slipped on the sand, and his
+coat-sleeve was warm as new-baked bread when he lifted it to his nose.
+
+Madame Binat smiled with the smile that knows no astonishment when
+Dick entered the drinking-shop which was one source of her gains. But
+for a little accident of complete darkness he could hardly realise that he
+had ever quitted the old life that hummed in his ears. Somebody opened a
+bottle of peculiarly strong Schiedam. The smell reminded Dick of
+Monsieur Binat, who, by the way, had spoken of art and degradation.
+
+Binat was dead; Madame said as much when the doctor departed,
+scandalised, so far as a ship's doctor can be, at the warmth of Dick's
+reception. Dick was delighted at it. 'They remember me here after a
+year. They have forgotten me across the water by this time. Madame, I
+want a long talk with you when you're at liberty. It is good to be back
+again.'
+
+In the evening she set an iron-topped caf‚-table out on the sands, and
+Dick and she sat by it, while the house behind them filled with riot,
+merriment, oaths, and threats. The stars came out and the lights of the
+shipping in the harbour twinkled by the head of the Canal.
+
+'Yes. The war is good for trade, my friend; but what dost thou do here?
+We have not forgotten thee.'
+
+'I was over there in England and I went blind.'
+
+'But there was the glory first. We heard of it here, even here--I and
+Binat; and thou hast used the head of Yellow 'Tina--she is still alive--so
+often and so well that 'Tina laughed when the papers arrived by the
+mail-boats. It was always something that we here could recognise in the
+paintings. And then there was always the glory and the money for thee.'
+
+'I am not poor--I shall pay you well.'
+
+'Not to me. Thou hast paid for everything.' Under her breath, 'Mon Dieu,
+to be blind and so young! What horror!'
+
+Dick could not see her face with the pity on it, or his own with the
+discoloured hair at the temples. He did not feel the need of pity; he was
+too anxious to get to the front once more, and explained his desire.
+
+'And where? The Canal is full of the English ships. Sometimes they fire
+as they used to do when the war was here--ten years ago. Beyond Cairo
+there is fighting, but how canst thou go there without a correspondent's
+passport? And in the desert there is always fighting, but that is
+impossible also,' said she.
+
+'I must go to Suakin.' He knew, thanks to Alf's readings, that Torpenhow
+was at work with the column that was protecting the construction of the
+Suakin-Berber line. P. and O. steamers do not touch at that port, and,
+besides, Madame Binat knew everybody whose help or advice was worth
+anything. They were not respectable folk, but they could cause things to
+be accomplished, which is much more important when there is work
+toward.
+
+'But at Suakin they are always fighting. That desert breeds men
+always--and always more men. And they are so bold! Why to Suakin?'
+
+'My friend is there.
+
+'Thy friend! Chtt! Thy friend is death, then.'
+
+Madame Binat dropped a fat arm on the table-top, filled Dick's glass
+anew, and looked at him closely under the stars. There was no need that
+he should bow his head in assent and say--
+'No. He is a man, but--if it should arrive . . . blamest thou?'
+
+'I blame?' she laughed shrilly. 'Who am I that I should blame any
+one--except those who try to cheat me over their consommations. But it is
+very terrible.'
+
+'I must go to Suakin. Think for me. A great deal has changed within the
+year, and the men I knew are not here. The Egyptian lighthouse steamer
+goes down the Canal to Suakin--and the post-boats-- But even then----'
+
+'Do not think any longer. I know, and it is for me to think. Thou shalt
+go--thou shalt go and see thy friend. Be wise. Sit here until the house is a
+little quiet--I must attend to my guests--and afterwards go to bed. Thou
+shalt go, in truth, thou shalt go.'
+
+'To-morrow?'
+
+'As soon as may be.' She was talking as though he were a child.
+
+He sat at the table listening to the voices in the harbour and the streets,
+and wondering how soon the end would come, till Madame Binat carried
+him off to bed and ordered him to sleep. The house shouted and sang and
+danced and revelled, Madame Binat moving through it with one eye on
+the liquor payments and the girls and the other on Dick's interests. To
+this latter end she smiled upon scowling and furtive Turkish officers of
+fellaheen regiments, and more than kind to camel agents of no nationality
+whatever.
+
+In the early morning, being then appropriately dressed in a flaming red
+silk ball-dress, with a front of tarnished gold embroidery and a necklace
+of plate-glass diamonds, she made chocolate and carried it in to Dick.
+
+'It is only I, and I am of discreet age, eh? Drink and eat the roll too. Thus
+in France mothers bring their sons, when those behave wisely, the
+morning chocolate.' She sat down on the side of the bed whispering:--
+'It is all arranged. Thou wilt go by the lighthouse boat. That is a bribe of
+ten pounds English. The captain is never paid by the Government. The
+boat comes to Suakin in four days. There will go with thee George, a
+Greek muleteer. Another bribe of ten pounds. I will pay; they must not
+know of thy money. George will go with thee as far as he goes with his
+mules. Then he comes back to me, for his well-beloved is here, and if I do
+not receive a telegram from Suakin saying that thou art well, the girl
+answers for George.'
+
+'Thank you.' He reached out sleepily for the cup. 'You are much too kind,
+Madame.'
+
+'If there were anything that I might do I would say, stay here and be
+wise; but I do not think that would be best for thee.' She looked at her
+liquor-stained dress with a sad smile. 'Nay, thou shalt go, in truth, thou
+shalt go. It is best so. My boy, it is best so.'
+
+She stooped and kissed Dick between the eyes. 'That is for
+good-morning,' she said, going away. 'When thou art dressed we will
+speak to George and make everything ready. But first we must open the
+little trunk. Give me the keys.'
+
+'The amount of kissing lately has been simply scandalous. I shall expect
+Torp to kiss me next. He is more likely to swear at me for getting in his
+way, though. Well, it won't last long.--Ohe, Madame, help me to my
+toilette of the guillotine! There will be no chance of dressing properly out
+yonder.'
+
+He was rummaging among his new campaign-kit, and rowelling his
+hands with the spurs. There are two says of wearing well-oiled
+ankle-jacks, spotless blue bands, khaki coat and breeches, and a perfectly
+pipeclayed helmet. The right way is the way of the untired man, master
+of himself, setting out upon an expedition, well pleased.
+
+'Everything must be very correct,' Dick explained. 'It will become dirty
+afterwards, but now it is good to feel well dressed. Is everything as it
+should be?'
+
+He patted the revolver neatly hidden under the fulness of the blouse on
+the right hip and fingered his collar.
+
+'I can do no more,' Madame said, between laughing and crying. 'Look at
+thyself--but I forgot.'
+
+'I am very content.' He stroked the creaseless spirals of his leggings.
+
+'Now let us go and see the captain and George and the lighthouse boat.
+
+Be quick, Madame.'
+
+'But thou canst not be seen by the harbour walking with me in the
+daylight. Figure to yourself if some English ladies----'
+
+'There are no English ladies; and if there are, I have forgotten them.
+
+Take me there.'
+
+In spite of this burning impatience it was nearly evening ere the
+lighthouse boat began to move. Madame had said a great deal both to
+George and the captain touching the arrangements that were to be made
+for Dick's benefit. Very few men who had the honour of her
+acquaintance cared to disregard Madame's advice. That sort of contempt
+might end in being knifed by a stranger in a gambling hell upon
+surprisingly short provocation.
+
+For six days--two of them were wasted in the crowded Canal--the little
+steamer worked her way to Suakin, where she was to pick up the
+superintendent of the lighthouse; and Dick made it his business to
+propitiate George, who was distracted with fears for the safety of his
+light-of-love and half inclined to make Dick responsible for his own
+discomfort. When they arrived George took him under his wing, and
+together they entered the red-hot seaport, encumbered with the material
+and wastage of the Suakin-Berger line, from locomotives in disconsolate
+fragments to mounds of chairs and pot-sleepers.
+
+'If you keep with me,' said George, 'nobody will ask for passports or
+what you do. They are all very busy.'
+
+'Yes; but I should like to hear some of the Englishmen talk. They might
+remember me. I was known here a long time ago--when I was some one
+indeed.'
+
+'A long time ago is a very long time ago here. The graveyards are full.
+
+Now listen. This new railway runs out so far as Tanai-el-Hassan--that is
+seven miles. Then there is a camp. They say that beyond Tanai-el-Hassan
+the English troops go forward, and everything that they require will be
+brought to them by this line.'
+
+'Ah! Base camp. I see. That's a better business than fighting Fuzzies in
+the open.'
+
+'For this reason even the mules to up in the iron-train.'
+
+'Iron what?'
+
+'It is all covered with iron, because it is still being shot at.'
+
+'An armoured train. Better and better! Go on, faithful George.'
+
+'And I go up with my mules to-night. Only those who particularly
+require to go to the camp go out with the train. They begin to shoot not
+far from the city.'
+
+'The dears--they always used to!' Dick snuffed the smell of parched dust,
+heated iron, and flaking paint with delight. Certainly the old life was
+welcoming him back most generously.
+
+'When I have got my mules together I go up to-night, but you must first
+send a telegram of Port Said, declaring that I have done you no harm.'
+
+'Madame has you well in hand. Would you stick a knife into me if you
+had the chance?'
+
+'I have no chance,' said the Greek. 'She is there with that woman.'
+
+'I see. It's a bad thing to be divided between love of woman and the
+chance of loot. I sympathise with you, George.'
+
+They went to the telegraph-office unquestioned, for all the world was
+desperately busy and had scarcely time to turn its head, and Suakin was
+the last place under sky that would be chosen for holiday-ground. On
+their return the voice of an English subaltern asked Dick what he was
+doing. The blue goggles were over his eyes and he walked with his hand
+on George's elbow as he replied--
+'Egyptian Government--mules. My orders are to give them over to the A.
+
+C. G. at Tanai-el-Hassan. Any occasion to show my papers?'
+
+'Oh, certainly not. I beg your pardon. I'd no right to ask, but not seeing
+your face before I----'
+
+'I go out in the train to-night, I suppose,' said Dick, boldly. 'There will be
+no difficulty in loading up the mules, will there?'
+
+'You can see the horse-platforms from here. You must have them loaded
+up early.' The young man went away wondering what sort of
+broken-down waif this might be who talked like a gentleman and
+consorted with Greek muleteers. Dick felt unhappy. To outface an
+English officer is no small thing, but the bluff loses relish when one plays
+it from the utter dark, and stumbles up and down rough ways, thinking
+and eternally thinking of what might have been if things had fallen out
+otherwise, and all had been as it was not.
+
+George shared his meal with Dick and went off to the mule-lines. His
+charge sat alone in a shed with his face in his hands. Before his tight-shut
+eyes danced the face of Maisie, laughing, with parted lips. There was a
+great bustle and clamour about him. He grew afraid and almost called
+for George.
+
+'I say, have you got your mules ready?' It was the voice of the subaltern
+over his shoulder.
+
+'My man's looking after them. The--the fact is I've a touch of ophthalmia
+and can't see very well.
+
+'By Jove! that's bad. You ought to lie up in hospital for a while. I've had
+a turn of it myself. It's as bad as being blind.'
+
+'So I find it. When does this armoured train go?'
+
+'At six o'clock. It takes an hour to cover the seven miles.'
+
+'Are the Fuzzies on the rampage--eh?'
+
+'About three nights a week. Fact is I'm in acting command of the
+night-train. It generally runs back empty to Tanai for the night.'
+
+'Big camp at Tanai, I suppose?'
+
+'Pretty big. It has to feed our desert-column somehow.'
+
+'Is that far off?'
+
+'Between thirty and forty miles--in an infernal thirsty country.'
+
+'Is the country quiet between Tanai and our men?'
+
+'More or less. I shouldn't care to cross it alone, or with a subaltern's
+command for the matter of that, but the scouts get through it in some
+extraordinary fashion.'
+
+'They always did.'
+
+'Have you been here before, then?'
+
+'I was through most of the trouble when it first broke out.'
+
+'In the service and cashiered,' was the subaltern's first thought, so he
+refrained from putting any questions.
+
+'There's you man coming up with the mules. It seems rather queer----'
+
+'That I should be mule-leading?' said Dick.
+
+'I didn't mean to say so, but it is. Forgive me--it's beastly impertinence I
+know, but you speak like a man who has been at a public school. There's
+no mistaking the tone.'
+
+'I am a public school man.'
+
+'I thought so. I say, I don't want to hurt your feelings, but you're a little
+down on your luck, aren't you? I saw you sitting with your head in your
+hands, and that's why I spoke.'
+
+'Thanks. I am about as thoroughly and completely broke as a man need
+be.'
+
+'Suppose--I mean I'm a public school man myself. Couldn't I
+perhaps--take it as a loan y'know and----'
+
+'You're much too good, but on my honour I've as much money as I want.
+
+. . . I tell you what you could do for me, though, and put me under an
+everlasting obligation. Let me come into the bogie truck of the train.
+
+There is a fore-truck, isn't there?'
+
+'Yes. How d'you know?'
+
+'I've been in an armoured train before. Only let me see--hear some of the
+fun I mean, and I'll be grateful. I go at my own risk as a non-combatant.'
+
+The young man thought for a minute. 'All right,' he said. 'We're
+supposed to be an empty train, and there's no one to blow me up at the
+other end.'
+
+George and a horde of yelling amateur assistants had loaded up the
+mules, and the narrow-gauge armoured train, plated with three-eighths
+inch boiler-plate till it looked like one long coffin, stood ready to start.
+
+Two bogie trucks running before the locomotive were completely covered
+in with plating, except that the leading one was pierced in front for the
+muzzle of a machine-gun, and the second at either side for lateral fire.
+
+The trucks together made one long iron-vaulted chamber in which a
+score of artillerymen were rioting.
+
+'Whitechapel--last train! Ah, I see yer kissin' in the first class there!'
+
+somebody shouted, just as Dick was clamouring into the forward truck.
+
+'Lordy! 'Ere's a real live passenger for the Kew, Tanai, Acton, and
+Ealin' train. Echo, sir. Speshul edition! Star, sir.'--'Shall I get you a
+foot-warmer?' said another.
+
+'Thanks. I'll pay my footing,' said Dick, and relations of the most amiable
+were established ere silence came with the arrival of the subaltern, and
+the train jolted out over the rough track.
+
+'This is an immense improvement on shooting the unimpressionable
+Fuzzy in the open,' said Dick, from his place in the corner.
+
+'Oh, but he's still unimpressed. There he goes!' said the subaltern, as a
+bullet struck the outside of the truck. 'We always have at least one
+demonstration against the night-train. Generally they attack the
+rear-truck, where my junior commands. He gets all the fun of the fair.'
+
+'Not to-night though! Listen!' said Dick. A flight of heavy-handed bullets
+was succeeded by yelling and shouts. The children of the desert valued
+their nightly amusement, and the train was an excellent mark.
+
+'Is it worth giving them half a hopper full?' the subaltern asked of the
+engine, which was driven by a Lieutenant of Sappers.
+
+'I should think so! This is my section of the line. They'll be playing old
+Harry with my permanent way if we don't stop 'em.'
+
+'Right O!'
+
+'Hrrmph!' said the machine gun through all its five noses as the subaltern
+drew the lever home. The empty cartridges clashed on the floor and the
+smoke blew back through the truck. There was indiscriminate firing at
+the rear of the train, and return fire from the darkness without and
+unlimited howling. Dick stretched himself on the floor, wild with delight
+at the sounds and the smells.
+
+'God is very good--I never thought I'd hear this again. Give 'em hell,
+men. Oh, give 'em hell!' he cried.
+
+The train stopped for some obstruction on the line ahead and a party
+went out to reconnoitre, but came back, cursing, for spades. The children
+of the desert had piled sand and gravel on the rails, and twenty minutes
+were lost in clearing it away. Then the slow progress recommenced, to be
+varied with more shots, more shoutings, the steady clack and kick of the
+machine guns, and a final difficulty with a half-lifted rail ere the train
+came under the protection of the roaring camp at Tanai-el-Hassan.
+
+'Now, you see why it takes an hour and a half to fetch her through,' said
+the subaltern, unshipping the cartridge-hopper above his pet gun.
+
+'It was a lark, though. I only wish it had lasted twice as long. How superb
+it must have looked from outside!' said Dick, sighing regretfully.
+
+'It palls after the first few nights. By the way, when you've settled about
+your mules, come and see what we can find to eat in my tent. I'm Bennil
+of the Gunners--in the artillery lines--and mind you don't fall over my
+tent-ropes in the dark.'
+
+But it was all dark to Dick. He could only smell the camels, the hay-bales,
+the cooking, the smoky fires, and the tanned canvas of the tents as he
+stood, where he had dropped from the train, shouting for George. There
+was a sound of light-hearted kicking on the iron skin of the rear trucks,
+with squealing and grunting. George was unloading the mules.
+
+The engine was blowing off steam nearly in Dick's ear; a cold wind of the
+desert danced between his legs; he was hungry, and felt tired and
+dirty--so dirty that he tried to brush his coat with his hands. That was a
+hopeless job; he thrust his hands into his pockets and began to count over
+the many times that he had waited in strange or remote places for trains
+or camels, mules or horses, to carry him to his business. In those days he
+could see--few men more clearly--and the spectacle of an armed camp at
+dinner under the stare was an ever fresh pleasure to the eye. There was
+colour, light, and motion, without which no man has much pleasure in
+living. This night there remained for him only one more journey through
+the darkness that never lifts to tell a man how far he has travelled. Then
+he would grip Torpenhow's hand again--Torpenhow, who was alive and
+strong, and lived in the midst of the action that had once made the
+reputation of a man called Dick Heldar: not in the least to be confused
+with the blind, bewildered vagabond who seemed to answer to the same
+name. Yes, he would find Torpenhow, and come as near to the old life as
+might be. Afterwards he would forget everything: Bessie, who had
+wrecked the Melancolia and so nearly wrecked his life; Beeton, who lived
+in a strange unreal city full of tin-tacks and gas-plugs and matters that
+no men needed; that irrational being who had offered him love and
+loyalty for nothing, but had not signed her name; and most of all Maisie,
+who, from her own point of view, was undeniably right in all she did, but
+oh, at this distance, so tantalisingly fair.
+
+George's hand on his arm pulled him back to the situation.
+
+'And what now?' said George.
+
+'Oh yes of course. What now? Take me to the camel-men. Take me to
+where the scouts sit when they come in from the desert. They sit by their
+camels, and the camels eat grain out of a black blanket held up at the
+corners, and the men eat by their side just like camels. Take me there!'
+
+The camp was rough and rutty, and Dick stumbled many times over the
+stumps of scrub. The scouts were sitting by their beasts, as Dick knew
+they would. The light of the dung-fires flickered on their bearded faces,
+and the camels bubbled and mumbled beside them at rest. It was no part
+of Dick's policy to go into the desert with a convoy of supplies. That
+would lead to impertinent questions, and since a blind non-combatant is
+not needed at the front, he would probably be forced to return to Suakin.
+
+He must go up alone, and go immediately.
+
+'Now for one last bluff--the biggest of all,' he said. 'Peace be with you,
+brethren!' The watchful George steered him to the circle of the nearest
+fire. The heads of the camel-sheiks bowed gravely, and the camels,
+scenting a European, looked sideways curiously like brooding hens, half
+ready to get to their feet.
+
+'A beast and a driver to go to the fighting line to-night,' said Dick.
+
+'A Mulaid?' said a voice, scornfully naming the best baggage-breed that
+he knew.
+
+'A Bisharin,' returned Dick, with perfect gravity. 'A Bisharin without
+saddle-galls. Therefore no charge of thine, shock-head.'
+
+Two or three minutes passed. Then--
+'We be knee-haltered for the night. There is no going out from the camp.'
+
+'Not for money?'
+
+'H'm! Ah! English money?'
+
+Another depressing interval of silence.
+
+'How much?'
+
+'Twenty-five pounds English paid into the hand of the driver at my
+journey's end, and as much more into the hand of the camel-sheik here,
+to be paid when the driver returns.'
+
+This was royal payment, and the sheik, who knew that he would get his
+commission on this deposit, stirred in Dick's behalf.
+
+'For scarcely one night's journey--fifty pounds. Land and wells and good
+trees and wives to make a man content for the rest of his days. Who
+speaks?' said Dick.
+
+'I,' said a voice. 'I will go--but there is no going from the camp.'
+
+'Fool! I know that a camel can break his knee-halter, and the sentries do
+not fire if one goes in chase. Twenty-five pounds and another twenty-five
+pounds. But the beast must be a good Bisharin; I will take no
+baggage-camel.'
+
+Then the bargaining began, and at the end of half an hour the first
+deposit was paid over to the sheik, who talked in low tones to the driver.
+
+Dick heard the latter say: 'A little way out only. Any baggage-beast will
+serve. Am I a fool to waste my cattle for a blind man?'
+
+'And though I cannot see'--Dick lifted his voice a little--'yet I carry that
+which has six eyes, and the driver will sit before me. If we do not reach
+the English troops in the dawn he will be dead.'
+
+'But where, in God's name, are the troops?'
+
+'Unless thou knowest let another man ride. Dost thou know? Remember
+it will be life or death to thee.'
+
+'I know,' said the driver, sullenly. 'Stand back from my beast. I am going
+to slip him.'
+
+'Not so swiftly. George, hold the camel's head a moment. I want to feel
+his cheek.' The hands wandered over the hide till they found the branded
+half-circle that is the mark of the Biharin, the light-built riding-camel.
+
+'That is well. Cut this one loose. Remember no blessing of God comes on
+those who try to cheat the blind.'
+
+The men chuckled by the fires at the camel-driver's discomfiture. He had
+intended to substitute a slow, saddle-galled baggage-colt.
+
+'Stand back!' one shouted, lashing the Biharin under the belly with a
+quirt. Dick obeyed as soon as he felt the nose-string tighten in his
+hand,--and a cry went up, 'Illaha! Aho! He is loose.'
+
+With a roar and a grunt the Biharin rose to his feet and plunged forward
+toward the desert, his driver following with shouts and lamentation.
+
+George caught Dick's arm and hurried him stumbling and tripping past a
+disgusted sentry who was used to stampeding camels.
+
+'What's the row now?' he cried.
+
+'Every stitch of my kit on that blasted dromedary,' Dick answered, after
+the manner of a common soldier.
+
+'Go on, and take care your throat's not cut out side--you and your
+dromedary's.'
+
+The outcries ceased when the camel had disappeared behind a hillock,
+and his driver had called him back and made him kneel down.
+
+'Mount first,' said Dick. Then climbing into the second seat and gently
+screwing the pistol muzzle into the small of his companion's back, 'Go on
+in God's name, and swiftly. Good-bye, George. Remember me to
+Madame, and have a good time with your girl. Get forward, child of the
+Pit!'
+
+A few minutes later he was shut up in a great silence, hardly broken by
+the creaking of the saddle and the soft pad of the tireless feet. Dick
+adjusted himself comfortably to the rock and pitch of the pace, girthed
+his belt tighter, and felt the darkness slide past. For an hour he was
+conscious only of the sense of rapid progress.
+
+'A good camel,' he said at last.
+
+'He was never underfed. He is my own and clean bred,' the driver
+replied.
+
+'Go on.'
+
+His head dropped on his chest and he tried to think, but the tenor of his
+thoughts was broken because he was very sleepy. In the half doze in
+seemed that he was learning a punishment hymn at Mrs. Jennett's. He
+had committed some crime as bad as Sabbath-breaking, and she had
+locked him up in his bedroom. But he could never repeat more than the
+first two lines of the hymn--
+
+When Israel of the Lord believed
+Out of the land of bondage came.
+
+He said them over and over thousands of times. The driver turned in the
+saddle to see if there were any chance of capturing the revolver and
+ending the ride. Dick roused, struck him over the head with the butt, and
+stormed himself wide awake. Somebody hidden in a clump of
+camel-thorn shouted as the camel toiled up rising ground. A shot was
+fired, and the silence shut down again, bringing the desire to sleep. Dick
+could think no longer. He was too tired and stiff and cramped to do more
+than nod uneasily from time to time, waking with a start and punching
+the driver with the pistol.
+
+'Is there a moon?' he asked drowsily.
+
+'She is near her setting.'
+
+'I wish that I could see her. Halt the camel. At least let me hear the
+desert talk.'
+
+The man obeyed. Out of the utter stillness came one breath of wind. It
+rattled the dead leaves of a shrub some distance away and ceased. A
+handful of dry earth detached itself from the edge of a rail trench and
+crumbled softly to the bottom.
+
+'Go on. The night is very cold.'
+
+Those who have watched till the morning know how the last hour before
+the light lengthens itself into many eternities. It seemed to Dick that he
+had never since the beginning of original darkness done anything at all
+save jolt through the air. Once in a thousand years he would finger the
+nailheads on the saddle-front and count them all carefully. Centuries
+later he would shift his revolver from his right hand to his left and allow
+the eased arm to drop down at his side. From the safe distance of London
+he was watching himself thus employed,--watching critically. Yet
+whenever he put out his hand to the canvas that he might paint the
+tawny yellow desert under the glare of the sinking moon, the black
+shadow of a camel and the two bowed figures atop, that hand held a
+revolver and the arm was numbed from wrist to collar-bone. Moreover,
+he was in the dark, and could see no canvas of any kind whatever.
+
+The driver grunted, and Dick was conscious of a change in the air.
+
+'I smell the dawn,' he whispered.
+
+'It is here, and yonder are the troops. Have I done well?'
+
+The camel stretched out its neck and roared as there came down wind
+the pungent reek of camels in the square.
+
+'Go on. We must get there swiftly. Go on.'
+
+'They are moving in their camp. There is so much dust that I cannot see
+what they do.'
+
+'Am I in better case? Go forward.'
+
+They could hear the hum of voices ahead, the howling and the bubbling
+of the beasts and the hoarse cries of the soldiers girthing up for the day.
+
+Two or three shots were fired.
+
+'Is that at us? Surely they can see that I am English,' Dick spoke angrily.
+
+'Nay, it is from the desert,' the driver answered, cowering in his saddle.
+
+'Go forward, my child! Well it is that the dawn did not uncover us an
+hour ago.'
+
+The camel headed straight for the column and the shots behind
+multiplied. The children of the desert had arranged that most
+uncomfortable of surprises, a dawn attack for the English troops, and
+were getting their distance by snap-shots at the only moving object
+without the square.
+
+'What luck! What stupendous and imperial luck!' said Dick. 'It's "just
+before the battle, mother." Oh, God has been most good to me!?
+
+Only'--the agony of the thought made him screw up his eyes for an
+instant--'Maisie . . .'
+
+'Allahu! We are in,' said the man, as he drove into the rearguard and the
+camel knelt.
+
+'Who the deuce are you? Despatches or what? What's the strength of the
+enemy behind that ridge? How did you get through?' asked a dozen
+voices. For all answer Dick took a long breath, unbuckled his belt, and
+shouted from the saddle at the top of a wearied and dusty voice,
+'Torpenhow! Ohe, Torp! Coo-ee, Tor-pen-how.'
+
+A bearded man raking in the ashes of a fire for a light to his pipe moved
+very swiftly towards that cry, as the rearguard, facing about, began to
+fire at the puffs of smoke from the hillocks around. Gradually the
+scattered white cloudlets drew out into the long lines of banked white
+that hung heavily in the stillness of the dawn before they turned over
+wave-like and glided into the valleys. The soldiers in the square were
+coughing and swearing as their own smoke obstructed their view, and
+they edged forward to get beyond it. A wounded camel leaped to its feet
+and roared aloud, the cry ending in a bubbling grunt. Some one had cut
+its throat to prevent confusion. Then came the thick sob of a man
+receiving his death-wound from a bullet; then a yell of agony and
+redoubled firing.
+
+There was no time to ask any questions.
+
+'Get down, man! Get down behind the camel!'
+
+'No. Put me, I pray, in the forefront of the battle.' Dick turned his face to
+Torpenhow and raised his hand to set his helmet straight, but,
+miscalculating the distance, knocked it off. Torpenhow saw that his hair
+was gray on the temples, and that his face was the face of an old man.
+
+'Come down, you damned fool! Dickie, come off!'
+
+And Dick came obediently, but as a tree falls, pitching sideways from the
+Bisharin's saddle at Torpenhow's feet. His luck had held to the last, even
+to the crowning mercy of a kindly bullet through his head.
+
+Torpenhow knelt under the lee of the camel, with Dick's body in his arms.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg Etext The Light That Failed, by Rudyard Kipling
+
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